FLAT rebellion.
For the next fortnight Ernest remained
at the Red Lion, though painfully conscious that he
was sadly wasting his little reserve of funds from
his late tutorship, in order to find out exactly what
the Oswalds’ position would be after the loss
of poor Harry. Towards the end of that time he
took Edie, pale and pretty in her simple new mourning,
out once more into the Bourne Close for half an hour’s
quiet conversation. Very delicate and sweet and
refined that tiny girlish face and figure looked in
the plain unostentatious black and white of her great
sorrow, and Ernest felt as he walked along by her
side that she seemed to lean upon him naturally now;
the loss of her main support and chief advisor in
life seemed to draw her closer and closer every day
to her one remaining prop and future husband.
‘Edie,’ he said to her,
as they rested once more beside the old wooden bridge
across the little river, ’I think it’s
time now we should begin to talk definitely over our
common plans for the future. I know you’d
naturally rather wait a little longer before discussing
them; I wish for both our sakes we could have deferred
it; but time presses, and I’m afraid from what
I hear in the village that things won’t go on
henceforth exactly as they used to do with your dear
father and mother.’
Edie coloured slightly as she answered,
’Then you’ve heard of all that already,
Ernest’—she was learning to call him
‘Ernest’ now quite naturally. ’The
Calcombe tattle has got round to you so soon!
I’m glad of it, though, for it saves me the pain
of having to tell you. Yes, it’s quite
true, and I’m afraid it will be a terrible,
dreadful struggle for poor darling father and mother.’
And the tears came up afresh, as she spoke, into her
big black eyes—too familiar with them of
late to make her even try to brush them away hastily
from Ernest’s sight with her little handkerchief.
‘I’m sorry to know it’s
true,’ Ernest said, taking her hand gently;
’very, very sorry. We must do what we can
to lighten the trouble for them.’
‘Yes,’ Edie replied, looking
at him through her tears; ’I mean to try.
At any rate, I won’t be a burden to them myself
any longer. I’ve written already up to
an agency in London to see whether they can manage
to get me a place as a nursery-governess.’
‘You a governess, Edie!’
Ernest exclaimed hastily, with a gesture of deprecation.
’You a governess! Why, my own precious darling,
you would never do for it!’
‘Oh yes, indeed,’ Edie
answered quickly, ’I really think I could, Ernest.
Of course I don’t know very much—not
judged by a standard like yours or our dear Harry’s.
Harry used to say all a woman could ever know was
to find out how ignorant she was. Dear fellow!
he was so very learned himself he couldn’t understand
the complacency of little perky, half-educated schoolmistresses.
But still, I know quite as much, I think, in my little
way, as a great many girls who get good places in
London as governesses. I can speak French fairly
well, you know, and read German decently; and then
dear Harry took such a lot of pains to make me get
up books that he thought were good for me—history
and so forth—and even to teach me a little,
a very little, Latin. Of course I know I’m
dreadfully ignorant; but not more so, I really believe,
than a great many girls whom people consider quite
well-educated enough to teach their daughters.
After all, the daughters themselves are only women,
too, you see, Ernest, and don’t expect more than
a smattering of book-knowledge, and a few showy fashionable
accomplishments.’
‘My dear Edie,’ Ernest
answered, smiling at her gently in spite of her tearful
earnestness; ’you quite misunderstand me.
It wasn’t that I was thinking of at all.
There are very few governesses and very few women
anywhere who have half the knowledge and accomplishments
and literary taste and artistic culture that you have;
very few who have had the advantage of associating
daily with such a man as poor Harry; and if you really
wanted to get a place of the sort, the mere fact that
you’re Harry’s sister, and that he interested
himself in superintending your education, ought, by
itself, to ensure your getting a very good one.
But what I meant was rather this—I couldn’t
endure to think that you should be put to all the
petty slights and small humiliations that a governess
has always to endure in rich families. You don’t
know what it is, Edie; you can’t imagine the
endless devices for making her feel her dependence
and her artificial inferiority that these great people
have devised in their cleverness and their Christian
condescension. You don’t know what it is,
Edie, and I pray heaven you may never know; but I
do, for I’ve seen it—and, darling,
I can’t let you expose yourself to it.’
To say the truth, at that moment there
rose very vividly before Ernest’s eyes the picture
of poor shy Miss Merivale, the governess at Dunbude
to little Lady Sybil, Lynmouth’s younger sister.
Miss Merivale was a rector’s daughter—an
orphan, and a very nice girl in her way; and Ernest
had often thought to himself while he lived at the
Exmoors’, ’With just the slightest turn
of Fortune’s wheel that might be my own Edie.’
Now, for himself he had never felt any sense of social
inferiority at all at Dunbude; he was an Oxford man,
and by the ordinary courtesy of English society he
was always treated accordingly in every way as an
equal. But there were galling distinctions made
in Miss Merivale’s case which he could not think
of even at the time without a blush of ingenuous shame,
and which he did not like now even to mention to pretty,
shrinking, eager little Edie. One thing alone
was enough to make his cheeks burn whenever he thought
of it—a little thing, and yet how unendurable!
Miss Merivale lunched with the family and with her
pupil in the middle of the day, but she did not dine
with them in the evening. She had tea by herself
instead in Lady Sybil’s little school-room.
Many a time when Ernest had been out walking with
her on the terrace just before dinner, and the dressing-gong
sounded, he had felt almost too ashamed to go in at
the summons and leave the poor little governess out
there alone with her social disabilities. The
gong seemed to raise such a hideous artificial barrier
between himself and that delicately-bred, sensitive,
cultivated English lady. That Edie should be
subjected to such a life of affronts as that was simply
unendurable. True, there are social distinctions
of the sort which even Ernest Le Breton, communist
as he was, could not practically get over; but then
they were distinctions familiarised to the sufferers
from childhood upward, and so perhaps a little less
insupportable. But that Harry Oswald’s sister—that
Edie, his own precious delicate little Edie, a dainty
English wild-flower of the tenderest, should be transplanted
from her own appreciative home to such a chilly and
ungenial soil as that—the very idea of
it was horribly unspeakable.
‘But, Ernest,’ Edie answered,
breaking in upon his bitter meditation, ’I assure
you I wouldn’t mind it a bit. I know—it’s
very dreadful, but then,’—and here
she blushed one of her pretty apologetic little blushes—’you
know I’m used to it. People in business
always are. They expect to be treated just like
servant—now that, I know you’ll
say, is itself a piece of hubris, the expression of
a horrid class prejudice. And so it is, no doubt.
But they do, for all that. As dear Harry used
to say, even the polypes in aristocratic useless sponges
at the sea-bottom won’t have anything to say
to the sponges of commerce. I’m sure nobody
I could meet in a governess’s place could possibly
be worse in that respect than poor old Miss Catherine
Luttrell.’
‘That may be true, Edie darling,’
Ernest answered, not caring to let her know that he
had overheard a specimen of the Calcombe squirearchy,
’but in any case I don’t want you to be
troubled now, either with old Miss Luttrell or any
other bitter old busybodies. I want to speak
seriously to you about a very different project.
Just look at this advertisement.’
He took a scrap of paper from his
pocket and handed it to Edie. It ran thus:—
’Wanted at Pilbury Regis
Grammar School, Dorset, a Third Classical Master.
Must be a Graduate of Oxford or Cambridge; University
Prizeman preferred. If unmarried, to take
house duty. Commence September 20th. Salary,
200L a year. Apply, as above, to the Rev.
J. Greatrex, D.D., Head Master.’
Edie read it through slowly.
‘Well, Ernest?’ she said, looking up from
it into his face. ‘Do you think of taking
this mastership?’
‘If I can get it,’ Ernest
answered. ’You see, I’m not a University
Prizeman, and that may be a difficulty in the way;
but otherwise I’m not unlikely to suit the requirements.
Herbert knows something of the school—he’s
been down there to examine; and Mrs. Greatrex had
a sort of distant bowing acquaintance with my mother;
so I hope their influence might help me into it.’
‘Well, Ernest?’ Edie cried
again, feeling pretty certain in her own heart what
was coming next, and reddening accordingly.
’Well, Edie, in that case, would
you care to marry at once, and try the experiment
of beginning life with me upon two hundred a year?
I know it’s very little, darling, for our wants
and necessities, brought up as you and I have been:
but Herr Max says, you know, it’s as much as
any one family ought ever to spend upon its own gratifications;
and at any rate I dare say you and I could manage
to be very happy upon it, at least for the present.
In any case it wnuld be better than being a governess.
Will you risk it, Edie?’
‘To me, Ernest,’ Edie
answered with her unaffected simplicity, ’it
really seems quite a magnificent income. I don’t
suppose any of our friends or neighbours in Calcombe
spend nearly as much as two hundred a year upon their
own families.’
’Ah, yes, they do, darling.
But that isn’t the only thing. Two hundred
a year is a very different matter in quiet, old-world,
little Calcombe and in a fashionable modern watering-place
like Pilbury Regis. We shall have to live in
lodgings, Edie, and live very quietly indeed; but
epen so I think it will be better than for you to
go out and endure the humiliation of becoming a governess.
Then I may understand that, if I can get this mastership,
you’ll consent to be married, Edie, before the
end of September?’
‘Oh, Ernest, that’s dreadfully soon!’
’Yes, it is, darling; but you
must have a very quiet wedding; and I can’t
bear to leave you here now any longer without Harry
to cheer and protect you. Shall we look upon
it as settled?’
Edie blushed and looked down as she
answered almost inaudibly, ‘As you think best,
dear Ernest.’
So that very evening Ernest sent off
an application to Pilbury Regis, together with such
testimonials as he had by him, mentioning at the same
time his intention to marry, and his recent engagement
at Lord Exmoor’s. ’I hope they won’t
make a point about the University Prize, Edie,’
he said timidly; ’but I rather think they don’t
mean to insist upon it. I’m afraid it may
be put in to some extent mainly as a bait to attract
parents. Advertisements are often so very dishonest.
At any rate, we can only try; and if I get it, I shall
be able to call you my little wife in September.’
So soon after poor Harry’s death
he hardly liked to say much about how happy that consciousness
would make him; but he sent off the letter with a
beating heart, and waited anxiously for the head master’s
answer.
‘Maria,’ said Dr. Greatrex
to his wife next morning, turning over the pile of
letters at the breakfast table, ’who do you think
has applied for the third mastership? Very lucky,
really, isn’t it?’
’Considering that there are
some thirty millions of people in England, I believe,
Dr. Greatrex,’ said his wife with dignity, ’that
some seventy of those have answered your advertisement,
and that you haven’t yet given me an opportunity
even of guessing which it is of them all, I’m
sure I can’t say so far whether it’s lucky
or otherwise.’
‘You’re pleased to be
satirical, my dear,’ the doctor answered blandly;
he was in too good a humour to pursue the opening further.
‘But no matter. Well, I’ll tell you,
then; it’s young Le Breton.’
‘Not Lady Le Breton’s
son!’ cried Mrs. Greatrex, forgetting her dignity
in her surprise. ’Well, that certainly is
very lucky. Now, if we could only get her to
come down and stay with us for a week sometimes, after
he’s been here a little while, what a splendid
advertisement it would be for the place, to be sure,
Joseph!’
‘Capital!’ the head master
said, eyeing the letter complacently as he sipped
his coffee. ’A perfect jewel of a master,
I should say, from every possible point of view.
Just the sort of person to attract parents and pupils.
“Allow me to introduce you to our third master,
Mr. Le Breton; I hope Lady Le Breton was quite well
when you heard from her last, Le Breton?” and
all that sort of thing. Depend upon it, Maria,
there’s nothing in the world that makes a middle-class
parent—and our parents are unfortunately
all middle-class—prick up his ears like
the faintest suspicion or echo of a title. “Very
good school,” he goes back and says to his wife
immediately; “we’ll send Tommy there; they
have a master who’s an honourable or something
of the sort; sure to give the boys a thoroughly high
gentlemanly tone.” It’s snobbery,
I admit, sheer snobbery: but between ourselves,
Maria, most people are snobs, and we have to live,
professionally, by accommodating ourselves to their
foolish prejudices.’
‘At the same time, doctor,’
said his wife severely, ’I don’t think
we ought to allow it too freely, at least with the
door open.’
‘You’re quite right, my
dear,’ the head master answered submissively,
rising at the same time to shut the door. ’But
what makes this particular application all the better
is that young Le Breton would come here straight from
the Earl of Exmoor’s where he has been acting
as tutor to the son and heir, Viscount Lynmouth.
That’s really admirable, now, isn’t it?
Just consider the advantages of the situation.
A doubtful parent comes to inspect the arrangements;
sniffs at the dormitories, takes the gauge of the studies,
snorts over the playground, condescends to approve
of the fives courts. Then, after doing the usual
Christian principles business and working in the high
moral tone a little, we invite him to lunch, and young
Le Breton to meet him. You remark casually in
the most unconscious and natural fashion—I
admit, my dear, that you do these little things much
better than I do—“Oh, talking of cricket,
Mr. Le Breton, your old pupil, Lord Lynmouth, made
a splendid score the other day at the Eton and Harrow.”
Fixes the wavering parent like a shot. “Third
master something or other in the peerage, and has
been tutor to a son of Lord Exmoor’s. Place
to send your boys to if you want to make perfect gentlemen
of them.” I think we’d better close
at once with this young man’s offer, Maria.
He’s got a very decent degree, too; a first
in Mods and Greats; really very decent.’
‘But will he take a house-mastership
do you think, doctor?’ asked the careful lady.
’No, he won’t; he’s
married or soon going to be. We must let him
off the house duty.’
‘Married!’ said Mrs. Greatrex,
turning it over cautiously. ’Who’s
he going to marry, I wonder? I hope somebody presentable.’
‘Why, of course!’ Dr.
Greatrex answered, as who should feel shocked at the
bare suggestion that a young man of Ernest Le Breton’s
antecedents could conceivably marry otherwise.
’His wife, or rather his wife
that is to be, is a sister, he tells me, of that poor
Mr. Oswald—the famous mathematician, you
know, of Oriel—who got killed, you remember,
by falling off the Matterhorn or somewhere, just the
other day. You must have seen about it in the
“Times.”’
‘I remember,’ Mrs. Greatrex
answered, in placid contentment; ’and I should
say you can’t do better than take him immediately.
It’d be an excellent thing for the school, certainly.
As the third mastership’s worth only two hundred
a year, of course he can’t intend to marry upon
that; so he must have means of his own, which
is always a good thing to encourage in an under-master:
or if his wife has money, that comes in the end to
the same thing. They’ll take a house of
their own, no doubt; and she’ll probably entertain—very
quietly, I daresay; still, a small dinner now and then
gives a very excellent tone to the school in its own
way. Social considerations, as I always say,
Joseph, are all-important in school management; and
I think we may take it for granted that Mr. Le Breton
would be socially a real acquisition.’
So it was shortly settled that Dr.
Greatrex should write back accepting Ernest Le Breton
as third master; and Mrs. Greatrex began immediately
dropping stray allusions to ’Lady Le Breton,
our new master’s mother, you know,’ among
her various acquaintance, especially those with rising
young families. The doctor and she thought a
good deal of this catch they were making in the person
of Ernest Le Breton. Poor souls, they little
knew what sort of social qualities they were letting
themselves in for. A firebrand or a bombshell
would really have been a less remarkable guest to drop
down straight into the prim and proper orthodox society
of Pilbury Regis.
When Ernest received the letter in
which Dr. Greatrex informed him that he might have
the third mastership, he hardly knew how to contain
his joy. He kissed Edie a dozen times over in
his excitement, and sat up late making plans with
her which would have been delightful but for poor
Edie’s lasting sorrow. In a short time it
was all duly arranged, and Ernest began to think that
he must go back to London for a day or two, to let
Lady Le Breton hear of his change of plans, and got
everything in order for their quiet wedding. He
grudged the journey sadly, for he was beginning to
understand now that he must take care of the pence
for Edie’s sake as well as for humanity’s—his
abstraction was individualising itself in concrete
form—but he felt so much at least was demanded
of him by filial duty, and, besides, he had one or
two little matters to settle at Epsilon Terrace which
could not so well be managed in his absence even by
his trusty deputy, Ronald. So he ran up to town
once more in a hurry, and dropped in as if nothing
had happened, at his mother’s house. It
was no unusual matter for him to pass a fortnight at
Wilton Place without finding time to call round at
Epsilon Terrace to see Ronald, and his mother had
not heard at all as yet of his recent change of engagement.
Lady Le Breton listened with severe
displeasure to Ernest’s account of his quarrel
with Lord Exmoor. It was quite unnecessary and
wrong, she said, to prevent Lynmnouth from his innocent
boyish amusements. Pigeon-shooting was practised
by the very best people, and she was quite sure, therefore,
there could be no harm of any sort in it. She
believed the sport was countenanced, not only by bishops,
but even by princes. Pigeons, she supposed, had
been specially created by Providence for our use and
enjoyment—’their final cause being
apparently the manufacture of pigeon-pie,’ Ronald
suggested parenthetically: but we couldn’t
use them without killing them, unfortunately; and
shooting was probably as painless a form of killing
as any other. Peter or somebody, she distinctly
remembered, had been specially commanded to arise,
kill, and eat. To object to pigeon-shooting indeed,
in Lady Le Breton’s opinion, was clearly flying
in the face of Providence. Of Ronald’s muttered
reference to five sparrows being sold for two farthings,
and yet not one of them being forgotten, she would
not condescend to take any notice. However, thank
goodness, the fault was none of hers; she could wash
her hands entirely of all responsibility in the matter.
She had done her best to secure Ernest a good place
in a thoroughly nice family, and if he chose to throw
it up at a moment’s notice for one of his own
absurd communistical fads, it was happily none of
her business. She was glad, at any rate, that
he’d got another berth, with a conscientious,
earnest, Christian man like Dr. Greatrex. ‘And
indeed, Ernest,’ she said, returning once more
to the pigeon-shooting question, ’even your
poor dear papa, who was full of such absurd religious
fancies, didn’t think that sport was unchristian,
I’m certain; for I remember once, when we were
quartered at Moozuffernugger in the North-West Provinces,
he went out into a nullah near our compound one day,
and with his own hand shot a man-eating tiger, which
had carried off three little native children from
the thanah; so that shows that he couldn’t really
object to sport; and I hope you don’t mean to
cast disrespect upon the memory of your own poor father!’.
All of which profound moral and religious observations
Ernest, as in duty bound, received with the most respectful
and acquiescent silence.
And now he had to approach the more
difficult task of breaking to his mother his approaching
marriage with Edie Oswald. He began the subject
as delicately as he could, dwelling strongly upon poor
Harry Oswald’s excellent position as an Oxford
tutor, and upon Herbert’s visit with him to
Switzerland—he knew his mother too well
to suppose that the real merits of the Oswald family
would impress her in any way, as compared with their
accidental social status; and then he went on to speak
as gently as possible about his engagement with little
Edie. At this point, to his exceeding discomfiture,
Lady Le Breton adopted the unusual tactics of bursting
suddenly into a flood of tears.
‘Oh, Ernest,’ she sobbed
out inarticulately through her scented cambric handkerchief,
’for heaven’s sake don’t tell me
that you’ve gone and engaged yourself to that
designing girl! Oh, my poor, poor, misguided
boy! Is there really no way to save you?’
‘No way to save me!’ exclaimed
Ernest, astonished and disconcerted by this unexpected
outburst.
‘Yes, yes!’ Lady Le Breton
went on, almost passionately. ’Can’t
you manage somehow to get yourself out of it?
I hope you haven’t utterly compromised yourself!
Couldn’t dear Herbert go down to What’s-his-name
Pomeroy, and induce the father—a grocer,
if I remember right—induce him, somehow
or other, to compromise the matter?’
‘Compromise!’ cried Ernest,
uncertain whether to laugh or be angry.
‘Yes, compromise it!’
Lady Le Breton answered, endeavouring to calm herself.
’Of course that Machiavellian girl has tried
to drag you into it; and the family have aided and
abetted her; and you’ve been weak and foolish—though
not, I trust, wicked—and allowed them to
get their net closed almost imperceptibly around you.
But it isn’t too late to withdraw even now,
my poor, dear, deluded Ernest. It isn’t
too late to withdraw even now. Think of the disgrace
and shame to the family! Think of your dear brothers
and their blighted prospects! Don’t allow
this designing girl to draw you helplessly into such
an ill-assorted marriage! Reflect upon your own
future happiness! Consider what it will be to
drag on years of your life with a woman, no longer
perhaps externally attractive, whom you could never
possibly respect or love for her own internal qualities!
Don’t go and wreck your own life, and your brothers’
lives, for any mistaken and Quixotic notions of false
honour! You mayn’t like to throw her over,
after you’ve once been inveigled into saying
“Yes” (and the feeling, though foolish,
does your heart credit); but reflect, my dear boy,
such a promise, so obtained, can hardly be considered
binding upon your conscience! I’ve no doubt
dear Herbert, who’s a capital man of business,
would get them readily enough to agree to a compromise
or a compensation.’
’My dear mother,’said
Ernest white with indignation, but speaking very quietly,
as soon as he could edge in a word, ’you quite
misunderstand the whole question. Edie Oswald
is a lady by nature, with all a lady’s best
feelings—I hate the word because of its
false implications, but I can’t use any other
that will convey to you my meaning—and
I love and admire and respect and worship her with
all my heart and with all my soul. She hasn’t
inveigled me or set her cap at me, as you call it,
in any way; she’s the sweetest, timidest, most
shrinking little thing that ever existed; on the contrary,
it is I who have humbly asked her to accept me, because
I know no other woman to whom I could give my whole
heart so unreservedly. To tell you the truth,
mother, with my ideas and opinions, I could hardly
be happy with any girl of the class that you would
call distinctively ladies: their class prejudices
and their social predilections would jar and grate
upon me at every turn. But Edie Oswald’s
a girl whom I could worship and love without any reserve—whom
I can reverence for her beautiful character, her goodness,
and her delicacy of feeling. She has honoured
me by accepting me, and I’m going to marry her
at the end of this month, and I want, if possible,
to get your consent to the marriage before I do so.
She’s a wife of whom I shall be proud in every
way; I wish I could think she would have equal cause
to be proud of her husband.’
Lady Le Breton threw herself once
more into a paroxysm of tears. ‘Oh, Ernest,’
she cried, ’do spare me! do spare me! This
is too wicked, too unfeeling, too cruel of you altogether!
I knew already you were very selfish and heartless
and headstrong, but I didn’t know you were quite
so unmanageable and so unkind as this. I appeal
to your better nature—for you have
a better nature—I’m sure you have
a better nature: you’re my son, and
you can’t be utterly devoid of good impulses.
I appeal confidently to your better nature to throw
off this unhappy, designing, wicked girl before it
is too late! She has made you forget your duty
to your mother, but not, I hope, irrevocably.
Oh, my poor, dear, wandering boy, won’t you
listen to the voice of reason? won’t you return
once more like the prodigal son, to your neglected
mother and your forgotten duty?’
‘My dear mother,’ Ernest
said, hardly knowing how to answer, ’you will
persist in completely misunderstanding me. I love
Edie Oswald with all my heart; I have promised to
marry her, because she has done me the great and
undeserved honour of accepting me as her future husband;
and even if I wanted to break off the engagement (which
it would break my own heart to do), I certainly couldn’t
break it off now without the most disgraceful and dishonourable
wickedness. That is quite fixed and certain, and
I can’t go back upon it in any way.’
‘Then you insist, you unnatural
boy,’ said Lady Le Breton, wiping her eyes,
and assuming the air of an injured parent, ’you
insist, against my express wish, in marrying this
girl Osborne, or whatever you call her?’
‘Yes, I do, mother,’ Ernest answered quietly.
‘In that case,’ said Lady
Le Breton, coldly, ’I must beg of you that you
won’t bring this lady, whether as your wife or
otherwise, under my roof. I haven’t been
accustomed to associate with the daughters of tradesmen,
and I don’t wish to associate with them now
in any way.’
‘If so,’ Ernest said,
very softly, ’I can’t remain under your
roof myself any longer. I can go nowhere at all
where my future wife will not be received on exactly
the same terms that I am.’
‘Then you had bettor go,’
said Lady Le Breton, in her chilliest manner.
’Ronald, do me the favour to ring ihe bell for
a cab for your brother Ernest.’
‘I shall walk, thank you, mother,’
said Ernest quietly. ’Good morning, dear
Ronald.’
Ronald rose solemnly and opened the
door for him. ’Therefore shall a man leave
his father and mother,’ he said in his clear,
soft voice, ’and shall cleave unto his wife;
and they twain shall be one flesh. Amen.’
Lady Le Breton darted a withering
glance at her younger son as Ernest shut the door
after him, and burst once more into a sudden flood
of uncontrollable tears.