She was quite the reverse of beautiful—to
some she was positively unpleasant to look upon; but
that made no difference to Mrs. Thaddeus Perkins,
who, after long experience with domestics, had come
to judge of the value of a servant by her performance
rather than by her appearance. The girl—if
girl she were, for she might have been thirty or sixty,
so far as any one could judge from a merely superficial
glance at her face and figure—was neat of
aspect, and, what was more, she had come well recommended.
She bore upon her face every evidence of respectability
and character, as well as one or two lines which might
have indicated years or toothache—it was
difficult to decide which. On certain days, when
the weather was very warm and she had much to do, the
impression was that the lines meant years, and many
of them, accentuated as they were by her pallor, the
whiteness of her face making the lines seem almost
black in their intensity. When she smiled, however,
which she rarely did—she was solemn enough
to have been a butler—one was impressed
with the idea of hours of pain from a wicked tooth.
At any rate, she was engaged as waitress, and put
in charge of the first floor of the Perkins household.
“I fancy we’ve at last
got a real treasure,” said Mrs. Perkins.
“There’s no nonsense about Jane—I
think.” The last two words were added
apologetically.
“Where did you get her?”
asked Thaddeus. “At an Imbecility Office?”
“I don’t quite know what
you mean—an Imbecility Office?”
“Only my pet, private, and particular
name for it, my dear. You would speak of it
as an Intelligence Office, no doubt,” was the
reply. “My observation of the fruit of
Intelligence Offices has convinced me that they deal
in Imbecility.”
“Not quite,” laughed Mrs.
Perkins. “They look after Domestic Vacancies.”
“Well, they do it with a vengeance,”
said Perkins. “We’ve had more vacancies
in this house to do our cooking and our laundering
and our house-work generally than two able-bodied
men could shake sticks at. It seems to me that
the domestic servant of to-day is fonder of preoccupation
than of occupation.”
“Jane, I think, is different
from the general run,” said Mrs. Perkins.
“As I said, she has no nonsense about her.”
“Is she—an—an
ornament to the scene—pretty, and all that?”
asked Perkins.
“Quite the reverse,” replied
the little house-keeper. “She is as plain
as a—as a—”
“Say hedge-fence and be done
with it,” said Perkins. “I’m
glad of it. What’s the use of providing
a good dinner for your friends if they are going to
spend all their time looking at the waitress?
When I give a dinner it makes me tired to have the
men afterwards speak of the waitress rather than of
the puree or the birds. If any domestic is to
dominate the repast at all it should be the cook.”
“Service counts for a great
deal, though, Ted,” suggested Mrs. Perkins.
“True,” replied Thaddeus;
“but on the whole, when I am starving, give
me a filet bearnaise served by a sailor, rather than
an empty plate brought in in style by a butler of
illustrious lineage and impressive manner.”
Then he added: “I hope she isn’t
too homely, Bess—not a ‘clock-stopper,’
as the saying is. You don’t want people’s
appetites taken away when you’ve worked for hours
on a menu calculated to tickle the palates of your
guests. Would her homeliness—ah—efface
itself, for instance, in the presence of a culinary
creation, or is it likely to overshadow everything
with its ineffaceable completeness?”
“I think she’ll do,”
returned Mrs. Perkins; “especially with your
friends, who, it seems to me, would one and all insist
upon finishing a ‘creation,’ as you call
it, even if lightning should strike the house.”
“From that point of view,”
said he, “I’m confident that Jane will
do.”
So Jane came, and for a year, strange
to relate, was all that her references claimed for
her. She was neat, clean, and capable.
She was sober and industrious. The wine had
never been better served; the dinner had rarely come
to the table so hot. Had she been a butler of
the first magnitude she could not so have discouraged
the idea of acquaintance; her attraction, if anything,
was a combination of her self-effacement and her ugliness.
The latter might have been noticed as she entered
the dining-room; it was soon forgotten in the unconsciously
observed ease with which she went through her work.
“She’s fine,” said
Perkins, after a dinner of twelve covers served by
Jane with a pantry assistant. “I’ve
always had a sneaking notion that nothing short of
a butler could satisfy me, but now I think otherwise.
Jane is perfection, and there is nothing paralyzing
about her, as there is about most of those reduced
swells who wait on tables nowadays.”
In August the family departed for
the mountains, and the house was left in charge of
Jane and the cook, and right faithfully did they fulfil
the requirements of their stewardship. The return
in September found the house cleaned from top to bottom.
The hardwood floors and stairs shone as they had
rarely shone before, and as only an unlimited application
of what is vulgarly termed “elbow-grease”
could make them shine. The linen was immaculate.
Ireland is not freer from snakes than was the house
of Perkins from cobwebs, and no speck of dust except
those on the travellers was visible. It was
evident that even in the absence of the family Jane
was true to her ideals, and the heart of Mrs. Perkins
was glad. Furthermore, Jane had acquired a full
third set of teeth, which seemed to take some of the
lines from her face, and, as Perkins observed, added
materially to the general effect of the surroundings,
although they were distressingly new. But, alas!
they marked the beginning of the end. Jane ceased
to wait upon the table with that solemnity which is
essential to the manner of a “treasure”;
she smiled occasionally, and where hitherto she had
treated the conversation at the table with stolid
indifference, a witticism would invariably now bring
the new teeth unto view.
“Alas!” cried Thaddeus,
“our butleress has evoluted backwards.
She grins like an ordinary waitress.”
It was too true. The possession
of brilliantly white teeth seemed to have brought
with it a desire to show them, which was destructive
of that dignity with which Jane had previously been
hedged about, and substituted for it a less desirable
atmosphere of possible familiarity, which might grow
upon very slight provocation into intimacy, not to
mention a nearer approach to social equality.
“I don’t suppose we can
blame her exactly,” said Perkins, when discussing
one or two of Jane’s lapses from her old-time
standard. “I haven’t a doubt that
if I’d gone for years without teeth, I’d
become a regular Cheshire cat, with a new, complete
edition de luxe of celluloid molars. Still,
I wish she’d paid more attention to the dinner
and less to Mr. Barlow’s conversation last night.
She stood a whole minute, with the salad-bowl in
her hand, waiting for him to reach the point of his
story about the plumber who put a gas-pipe through
Shakespeare’s tenor in Westminster Abbey, and
when he finished, and she smiled, you’d have
thought a dozen gravestones to the deceased’s
memory had been conjured up before us.”
“It’s a small fault, Thaddeus,”
returned Mrs. Perkins, “but I’ll speak
to her about it.”
“Oh, I wouldn’t,”
said Perkins; “let it go; she means well, and
when we got her we didn’t suspect she’d
turn out such a jewel. She’s merely approaching
her norm, that is all. We ought to be thankful
to have had such perfection for one year. It’s
too bad it couldn’t continue; but what perfection
does?”
Nothing, therefore, was said, and
Jane smiled on, yet waited most acceptably and kept
all things decently and in order—for a little
while. Along about Christmas-time a further decadence
and additional flaw in the jewel was discovered, and
it was Perkins himself who discovered it. It
happened one day while he was at work alone in the
house, Mrs. Perkins having gone out shopping.
A friend from Boston appeared—a friend
interested in bric-a-brac and china generally.
Thaddeus, to whom a luncheon in solitary grandeur
was little short of abomination, invited his Boston
friend to stay and share pot-luck with him, knowing,
hypocrite that he was, that pot-luck did not mean
pot-luck at all, but a course luncheon which many
men would have found all-sufficient at dinner.
The Boston friend accepted, and the luncheon was
served by Jane. In the course of the repast
the visitor observed:
“Pretty good china you have, Perkins.”
“Yes,” returned Thaddeus,
“pretty good. I’ve always had a penchant
for china. My mother-in-law thinks I’m
extravagant, and sometimes I think she is right.
You never saw my Capodimonte coffees, did you?”
“No,” replied the Bostonian,
“I never did. Where’d you get ’em?”
“London,” replied Perkins,
“last time I was over. You must see them,
by all means. Ah, Jane, hand Mr. Bunkerrill one
of the Capodimonte coffees.”
“Wan o’ the what, sorr?” asked the
treasure.
Thaddeus blushed. To have his
jewel go back on him at such a crisis was excessively
annoying. “One of those gold after-dinner
coffee-cups—one of the little ones, with
the flowery raised figures,” he said, sharply.
“Oh!” said Jane, “wan
o’ thim with somebody else’s initial on
the bottom?”
“Yes,” said Thaddeus, fuming inwardly.
“Quite a connoisseur, that woman,”
laughed the visitor, as Jane went after the dinner-cup.
“She’s observed the china mark.
She know’s N doesn’t stand for Perkins.”
Thaddeus laughed weakly. “She
probably thinks we got them second-hand,” he
said.
“Very likely you did,”
retorted the Bostonian, and Jane returned with the
desired cup. “An admirable specimen,”
continued the connoisseur; and them, turning the cup
bottom upwards in search of the mark, he disclosed
to his own and Thaddeus’s astonished gaze no
less an object than the remains of a mashed green pea,
a reminiscence of the last Perkins dinner, and conclusive
evidence that at times Jane was not as careful in
the washing of her china as she might have been.
It would be futile and useless for
me to attempt to describe the emotions of Thaddeus.
I fancy a large enough number of us having been through
similar experiences to comprehend the man’s
mortification and his inward wrath. It was too
great to find suitable expression at the moment.
Nothing short of the absolute destruction of the
cup and the annihilation of Jane could have adequately
expressed Perkins’s true feelings. He was
not by nature, however, a scene-maker—it
would have been better if he had been—so
he said nothing, abiding by his rule, which seemed
to be that the man of the house would do better to
reprehend the short-comings of a delinquent servant
by blowing up his wife rather than by going direct
to the core of the trouble and reading the maid a lecture.
A great many men adopt this same method. I
do. It is the easiest, though it is possibly
prompted by that cowardice which is latent with us
all. I never in my life have discharged more
than one servant, and I not only did not do it gracefully,
but discharged the wrong one; since which time I have
left all that sort of work to others more competent
than I. Perkins’s method was precisely thus.
“I’m not going to interfere,”
was his invariable remark in cases of the kind under
discussion; which was unwise, for if he had even scolded
a servant as he did his wife for the servant’s
fault he might have secured better service sooner
or later.
Unfortunately, when Mrs. Perkins reached
home that night she was so very tired with her exertions
in the shops that Thaddeus hadn’t the heart
to tell her what had happened, and when morning came
the episode was forgotten. When it did recur
to his mind it so happened that Mrs. Perkins was out
of reach. The result was that a month had passed
before Mrs. Perkins cane into possession of the facts,
and it was then, of course, too late to mention it
to Jane.
“You should have given her a
good talking to at the time,” said Mrs. Perkins.
“It’s awful! I don’t know
what has got into Jane. My best table-cloth
has got a great hole in it, and she is very careless
with the silver. My fruit-knife last night was
not clean.”
“I suppose you spoke to
her about that?” said Perkins, smiling.
“Not exactly; I sent for another,
and handed her the dirty one,” returned Mrs.
Perkins. “I guess she felt all that I could
have said.”
And time went on, and Jane continued
to decay. She pulled corks from olive-bottles
with the carving-fork prongs and bent them backwards.
She developed a habit of going out and leaving her
work undone. The powdered sugar was allowed
to resolve itself into small, hard, pill-shaped lumps
of various sizes. Breakfast had a way of being
served cold. The coffee was at times merely tepid;
in short, it seemed as if she really ought to be discharged;
but then there was invariably some reason for postponing
the fatal hour. Either her kindness to the children
or a week or two of the old-time efficiency, her unyielding
civility, her scrupulous honesty, her willing acquiescence
in any new duty imposed, an impression that she was
suffering, any one or all of these reasons kept her
on in her place until she became so much a fixture
in the household, so much one of the family, that
the idea of getting rid of her seemed beyond the possibility
of realization. That the axe should fall her
employers knew well, and many a resolve was taken that
at the end of the season she should go, yet neither
Mrs. Perkins nor her husband liked to tell her so.
Her good points were still too potent, although none
could deny that all confidence in her efficiency was
shattered past repair. The situation finally
reached a point where it inspired reflections of a
more or less humorous order.
“I tell you what I think,”
said Thaddeus one evening, after a particularly flagrant
breach on Jane’s part, involving a streak of
cranberry sauce across a supposititiously clean plate:
“you won’t discharge her, Bess, and I
won’t; suppose we send for Mr. Burke, and get
him to do it.”
Mr. Burke was the one reliable man
in town. It didn’t make much difference
what the Perkinses wanted done, they generally sent
for Mr. Burke to do it, largely because when he attempted
a commission he saw it through. A carpenter
and builder by trade, he had for many years looked
after the repairs needful to the Perkins’ dwelling;
he had come often between Thaddeus and unskilled labor;
he had made bookcases which were dreams of convenience
and sufficiently pleasing to the eye; he had “fixed
up” Mrs. Perkins’s garden; he had supplied
the family with a new gardener when the old one had
taken on habits of drink, which destroyed not only
himself but the cabbages; he had kept an eye on the
plumbers; he had put up, taken down, and repaired
awnings—in short, as Perkins said, he was
a “Universal.” Once, when a delicate
piece of bric-a-brac had been broken and the china-mender
asserted that it could not be mended, Perkins had
said, “See if Burke can’t fix it,”
and Burke had fixed it; and as final tribute to this
wonder, Perkins had said, in suffering:
“My dear, I’m afraid I
have appendicitis. Send for Mr. Burke.”
“Mr. Burke!” echoed his wife.
“Yes, Mr. Burke,” moaned
the sufferer. “If my vermiform appendix
is to be removed, I’d rather have Mr. Burke
do it with a chisel and saw than any surgeon I know;
and I won’t take ether either, because it is
such a satisfaction to see him work.”
So, when this happy pair of house-holders
had reached what might be described as the grand climateric
of their patience, and it was finally decided that
Jane’s usefulness was a thing of the past, and
utterly beyond redemption, Thaddeus naturally suggested
turning to his faithful friend, Mr. Burke, to rid
them of their woes, and, indeed, but for Jane’s
own intervention, I fear that course would have proved
the sole alternative to her becoming an irremovable
fixture in the household. But it was Jane herself
who solved the problem.
It was two days after the cranberry
episode that the solution came, and it was in this
wise:
“Did ye send for me?”
Jane asked, suddenly materializing in Mrs. Perkins’s
room.
“No, Jane, I haven’t; why?”
The girl began to shed tears.
“Because—you’d
ought to have, ma’am. I know well enough
that I ain’t satisfactory to you,” she
returned, her voice quivering, “and I can’t
be, and I know you want me to go—and I—I’ve
come to give you notice.”
Then Mrs. Perkins looked at Jane with
sorrow on her countenance, for she had acquired an
affection for her which the maid’s delinquencies
had not been able to efface.
“Can’t you try and do better?” she
asked.
“No, ma’am,” returned
Jane. “Not with the system—never.
Mr. Perkins is too easy, and you do be so soft-hearted
it don’t keep a girl up to her work. When
I first come here, ma’am, not knowin’ ye
well, I was afraid to be anything but what was right,
but the way you took accidents, and a bit of a shortcomin’
once in a while, sort of took away my fear, and I’ve
been goin’ down hill ever since. Servant-girls
is only human, Mrs. Perkins.”
Mrs. Perkins looked at Jane inquiringly.
“We needs to be kept up to our
work just as much as anybody else, and when a lady
like yourself is too easy, it gets a girl into bad
habits, and occasionally it does us good if the gentleman
of the house will swear at us, Mrs. Perkins, and sort
of scare us, so it does. It was that that was
the making of me. The last place I was in, ma’am,
I was so afraid of both the missus and the gentleman
that I didn’t dare to be careless; and I didn’t
dare be careless with you until I found you all the
time a-smilin’, whatever went wrong, and Mr.
Perkins never sayin’ a word, whether the dishes
come to the table clean or not.”
“Well, Jane,” said Mrs.
Perkins, somewhat carried away by this course of reasoning,
“you haven’t been what we hoped—there
is no denying that; but knowing that you were disappointing
us, why couldn’t you have made a special effort?”
“Oh, Mrs. Perkins,” sobbed
the poor woman, “you don’t understand.
We’re all disappointin’ to them we loves,
but—it’s them we fear—”
“Then why aren’t you afraid of us?”
Jane laughed through her tears. The idea was
preposterous.
“Afraid of you and Mr. Perkins?
Ah!” she said, sadly, “if I only could
be—but I can’t. Why, Mrs. Perkins,
if Mr. Perkins should come in here now and swear at
me the way Mr. Barley did when I worked there, I’d
know he was only puttin’ it on, and that inside
he’d be laughin’ at me. No, ma’am,
it’s no use. I feel that I must go, or
I’ll be forever ruined. It was the cranberry
showed me; a girl had ought to be discharged for that.
Dirty dinner plates isn’t excusable, and yet
neither of you said a word, and next week it’ll
be the same way—so I’m goin’.
You won’t send me off, so I’ve got to
do it myself.”
“Very well, Jane,” said
Mrs. Perkins; “if that is the way you feel about
it we’ll have to part, I suppose. I am
sorry, but—”
The sentence was not finished, for
Jane rushed weeping from the room, and within a few
days, her place having been filled, the house knew
her no more, except as an occasional visitor, ostensibly
to see the children. Later she got a place to
her satisfaction, and one night the Perkins were invited
to dine with Jane’s new employers. They
went and found their old-time “butler”
at the very zenith of her powers. She served
the dinner as she had never served one in her palmiest
days in the Perkins’s dining-room; and when all
was over, and when Mrs. Perkins went up-stairs to
don her wrap to return home, she found Jane above
waiting to help her.
“I am glad to see you so happy,
Jane,” she said, as the girl held her cloak.
“Ah, ma’am, I’m not very happy.”
“You ought to be, here. Your work to-night
was perfect.”
“Yes,” said Jane, “it
had to be, for”—here her voice fell
to a whisper—“I don’t dare
let it be different, ma’am. Mrs. Harkins
is a regular divvle, and the ould gentleman—well,
ma’am, he do swear finer ’n any gentleman
I ever met. It’s just the place for me.”
And Jane sighed as her old mistress left her.
“Wasn’t she great, Bess?” said Thaddeus,
on the way home.
“She was, indeed,” replied
Mrs. Perkins, with a smile. “It’s
a pity I’m not a divvle.”
Thaddeus laughed. “That’s
so,” he said; “or that I never learned
to swear like a gentleman, eh?”