I.
THE JILTING OF JANE.
As I sit writing in my study, I can
hear our Jane bumping her way downstairs with a brush
and dust-pan. She used in the old days to sing
hymn tunes, or the British national song for the time
being, to these instruments, but latterly she has
been silent and even careful over her work. Time
was when I prayed with fervour for such silence, and
my wife with sighs for such care, but now they have
come we are not so glad as we might have anticipated
we should be. Indeed, I would rejoice secretly,
though it may be unmanly weakness to admit it, even
to hear Jane sing “Daisy,” or, by the
fracture of any plate but one of Euphemia’s best
green ones, to learn that the period of brooding has
come to an end.
Yet how we longed to hear the last
of Jane’s young man before we heard the last
of him! Jane was always very free with her conversation
to my wife, and discoursed admirably in the kitchen
on a variety of topics—so well, indeed,
that I sometimes left my study door open—our
house is a small one—to partake of it.
But after William came, it was always William, nothing
but William; William this and William that; and when
we thought William was worked out and exhausted altogether,
then William all over again. The engagement lasted
altogether three years; yet how she got introduced
to William, and so became thus saturated with him,
was always a secret. For my part, I believe it
was at the street corner where the Rev. Barnabas Baux
used to hold an open-air service after evensong on
Sundays. Young Cupids were wont to flit like
moths round the paraffin flare of that centre of High
Church hymn-singing. I fancy she stood singing
hymns there, out of memory and her imagination, instead
of coming home to get supper, and William came up
beside her and said, “Hello!” “Hello
yourself!” she said; and etiquette being satisfied,
they proceeded to talk together.
As Euphemia has a reprehensible way
of letting her servants talk to her, she soon heard
of him. “He is such a respectable
young man, ma’am,” said Jane, “you
don’t know.” Ignoring the slur cast
on her acquaintance, my wife inquired further about
this William.
“He is second porter at Maynard’s,
the draper’s,” said Jane, “and gets
eighteen shillings—nearly a pound—a
week, m’m; and when the head porter leaves he
will be head porter. His relatives are quite superior
people, m’m. Not labouring people at all.
His father was a greengrosher, m’m, and had
a churnor, and he was bankrup’ twice. And
one of his sisters is in a Home for the Dying.
It will be a very good match for me, m’m,”
said Jane, “me being an orphan girl.”
“Then you are engaged to him?” asked my
wife.
“Not engaged, ma’am; but he is saving
money to buy a ring—hammyfist.”
“Well, Jane, when you are properly
engaged to him you may ask him round here on Sunday
afternoons, and have tea with him in the kitchen;”
for my Euphemia has a motherly conception of her duty
towards her maid-servants. And presently the
amethystine ring was being worn about the house, even
with ostentation, and Jane developed a new way of bringing
in the joint so that this gage was evident. The
elder Miss Maitland was aggrieved by it, and told
my wife that servants ought not to wear rings.
But my wife looked it up in Enquire Within
and Mrs. Motherly’s Book of Household Management,
and found no prohibition. So Jane remained with
this happiness added to her love.
The treasure of Jane’s heart
appeared to me to be what respectable people call
a very deserving young man. “William, ma’am,”
said Jane one day suddenly, with ill-concealed complacency,
as she counted out the beer bottles, “William,
ma’am, is a teetotaller. Yes, m’m;
and he don’t smoke. Smoking, ma’am,”
said Jane, as one who reads the heart, “do
make such a dust about. Beside the waste of money.
And the smell. However, I suppose they
got to do it—some of them…”
William was at first a rather shabby
young man of the ready-made black coat school of costume.
He had watery gray eyes, and a complexion appropriate
to the brother of one in a Home for the Dying.
Euphemia did not fancy him very much, even at the
beginning. His eminent respectability was vouched
for by an alpaca umbrella, from which he never allowed
himself to be parted.
“He goes to chapel,” said Jane. “His
papa, ma’am——”
“His what, Jane?”
“His papa, ma’am, was
Church: but Mr. Maynard is a Plymouth Brother,
and William thinks it Policy, ma’am, to go there
too. Mr. Maynard comes and talks to him quite
friendly when they ain’t busy, about using up
all the ends of string, and about his soul. He
takes a lot of notice, do Mr. Maynard, of William,
and the way he saves his soul, ma’am.”
Presently we heard that the head porter
at Maynard’s had left, and that William was
head porter at twenty-three shillings a week.
“He is really kind of over the man who drives
the van,” said Jane, “and him married,
with three children.” And she promised in
the pride of her heart to make interest for us with
William to favour us so that we might get our parcels
of drapery from Maynard’s with exceptional promptitude.
After this promotion a rapidly-increasing
prosperity came upon Jane’s young man.
One day we learned that Mr. Maynard had given William
a book. “‘Smiles’ ‘Elp
Yourself,’ it’s called,” said Jane;
“but it ain’t comic. It tells you
how to get on in the world, and some what William read
to me was lovely, ma’am.”
Euphemia told me of this, laughing,
and then she became suddenly grave. “Do
you know, dear,” she said, “Jane said one
thing I did not like. She had been quiet for
a minute, and then she suddenly remarked, ’William
is a lot above me, ma’am, ain’t he?’”
“I don’t see anything
in that,” I said, though later my eyes were to
be opened.
One Sunday afternoon about that time
I was sitting at my writing-desk— possibly
I was reading a good book—when a something
went by the window. I heard a startled exclamation
behind me, and saw Euphemia with her hands clasped
together and her eyes dilated. “George,”
she said in an awe-stricken whisper, “did you
see?”
Then we both spoke to one another
at the same moment, slowly and solemnly: “A
silk hat! Yellow gloves! A new umbrella!”
“It may be my fancy, dear,”
said Euphemia; “but his tie was very like yours.
I believe Jane keeps him in ties. She told me
a little while ago, in a way that implied volumes
about the rest of your costume, ’The master
do wear pretty ties, ma’am.’
And he echoes all your novelties.”
The young couple passed our window
again on their way to their customary walk. They
were arm in arm. Jane looked exquisitely proud,
happy, and uncomfortable, with new white cotton gloves,
and William, in the silk hat, singularly genteel!
That was the culmination of Jane’s
happiness. When she returned, “Mr. Maynard
has been talking to William, ma’am,” she
said, “and he is to serve customers, just like
the young shop gentlemen, during the next sale.
And if he gets on, he is to be made an assistant,
ma’am, at the first opportunity. He has
got to be as gentlemanly as he can, ma’am; and
if he ain’t, ma’am, he says it won’t
be for want of trying. Mr. Maynard has took a
great fancy to him.”
“He is getting on, Jane,” said
my wife.
“Yes, ma’am,” said Jane thoughtfully;
“he is getting on.”
And she sighed.
That next Sunday as I drank my tea
I interrogated my wife. “How is this Sunday
different from all other Sundays, little woman?
What has happened? Have you altered the curtains,
or re-arranged the furniture, or where is the indefinable
difference of it? Are you wearing your hair in
a new way without warning me? I perceive a change
clearly, and I cannot for the life of me say what
it is.”
Then my wife answered in her most
tragic voice, “George,” she said, “that
William has not come near the place to-day! And
Jane is crying her heart out upstairs.”
There followed a period of silence.
Jane, as I have said, stopped singing about the house,
and began to care for our brittle possessions, which
struck my wife as being a very sad sign indeed.
The next Sunday, and the next, Jane asked to go out,
“to walk with William,” and my wife, who
never attempts to extort confidences, gave her permission,
and asked no questions. On each occasion Jane
came back looking flushed and very determined.
At last one day she became communicative.
“William is being led away,”
she remarked abruptly, with a catching of the breath,
apropos of tablecloths. “Yes, m’m.
She is a milliner, and she can play on the piano.”
“I thought,” said my wife,
“that you went out with him on Sunday.”
“Not out with him, m’m—after
him. I walked along by the side of them, and
told her he was engaged to me.”
“Dear me, Jane, did you? What did they
do?”
“Took no more notice of me than
if I was dirt. So I told her she should suffer
for it.”
“It could not have been a very agreeable walk,
Jane.”
“Not for no parties, ma’am.”
“I wish,” said Jane, “I
could play the piano, ma’am. But anyhow,
I don’t mean to let her get him away
from me. She’s older than him, and her
hair ain’t gold to the roots, ma’am.”
It was on the August Bank Holiday
that the crisis came. We do not clearly know
the details of the fray, but only such fragments as
poor Jane let fall. She came home dusty, excited,
and with her heart hot within her.
The milliner’s mother, the milliner,
and William had made a party to the Art Museum at
South Kensington, I think. Anyhow, Jane had calmly
but firmly accosted them somewhere in the streets,
and asserted her right to what, in spite of the consensus
of literature, she held to be her inalienable property.
She did, I think, go so far as to lay hands on him.
They dealt with her in a crushingly superior way.
They “called a cab.” There was a
“scene,” William being pulled away into
the four-wheeler by his future wife and mother-in-law
from the reluctant hands of our discarded Jane.
There were threats of giving her “in charge.”
“My poor Jane!” said my
wife, mincing veal as though she was mincing William.
“It’s a shame of them. I would think
no more of him. He is not worthy of you.”
“No, m’m,” said Jane. “He
is weak.
“But it’s that woman has
done it,” said Jane. She was never known
to bring herself to pronounce “that woman’s”
name or to admit her girlishness. “I can’t
think what minds some women must have—to
try and get a girl’s young man away from her.
But there, it only hurts to talk about it,” said
Jane.
Thereafter our house rested from William.
But there was something in the manner of Jane’s
scrubbing the front doorstep or sweeping out the rooms,
a certain viciousness, that persuaded me that the
story had not yet ended.
“Please, m’m, may I go
and see a wedding tomorrow?” said Jane one day.
My wife knew by instinct whose wedding.
“Do you think it is wise, Jane?” she said.
“I would like to see the last of him,”
said Jane.
“My dear,” said my wife,
fluttering into my room about twenty minutes after
Jane had started, “Jane has been to the boot-hole
and taken all the left-off boots and shoes, and gone
off to the wedding with them in a bag. Surely
she cannot mean—”
“Jane,” I said, “is
developing character. Let us hope for the best.”
Jane came back with a pale, hard face.
All the boots seemed to be still in her bag, at which
my wife heaved a premature sigh of relief. We
heard her go upstairs and replace the boots with considerable
emphasis.
“Quite a crowd at the wedding,
ma’am,” she said presently, in a purely
conversational style, sitting in our little kitchen,
and scrubbing the potatoes; “and such a lovely
day for them.” She proceeded to numerous
other details, clearly avoiding some cardinal incident.
“It was all extremely respectable
and nice, ma’am; but her father didn’t
wear a black coat, and looked quite out of place, ma’am.
Mr. Piddingquirk—”
“Who?”
“Mr. Piddingquirk—William
that was, ma’am—had white gloves,
and a coat like a clergyman, and a lovely chrysanthemum.
He looked so nice, ma’am. And there was
red carpet down, just like for gentlefolks. And
they say he gave the clerk four shillings, ma’am.
It was a real kerridge they had—not a fly.
When they came out of church there was rice-throwing,
and her two little sisters dropping dead flowers.
And someone threw a slipper, and then I threw a boot—”
“Threw a boot, Jane!”
“Yes, ma’am. Aimed
at her. But it hit him. Yes, ma’am,
hard. Gev him a black eye, I should think.
I only threw that one. I hadn’t the heart
to try again. All the little boys cheered when
it hit him.”
After an interval—“I am sorry the
boot hit him.”
Another pause. The potatoes were
being scrubbed violently. “He always was
a bit above me, you know, ma’am. And he
was led away.”
The potatoes were more than finished.
Jane rose sharply with a sigh, and rapped the basin
down on the table.
“I don’t care,”
she said. “I don’t care a rap.
He will find out his mistake yet. It serves me
right. I was stuck up about him. I ought
not to have looked so high. And I am glad things
are as things are.”
My wife was in the kitchen, seeing
to the higher cookery. After the confession of
the boot-throwing, she must have watched poor Jane
fuming with a certain dismay in those brown eyes of
hers. But I imagine they softened again very
quickly, and then Jane’s must have met them.
“Oh, ma’am,” said
Jane, with an astonishing change of note, “think
of all that might have been! Oh, ma’am,
I could have been so happy! I ought to
have known, but I didn’t know…You’re
very kind to let me talk to you, ma’am…for
it’s hard on me, ma’am…it’s har-r-r-r-d—”
And I gather that Euphemia so far
forgot herself as to let Jane sob out some of the
fullness of her heart on a sympathetic shoulder.
My Euphemia, thank Heaven, has never properly grasped
the importance of “keeping up her position.”
And since that fit of weeping, much of the accent of
bitterness has gone out of Jane’s scrubbing
and brush work.
Indeed, something passed the other
day with the butcher-boy—but that scarcely
belongs to this story. However, Jane is young
still, and time and change are at work with her.
We all have our sorrows, but I do not believe very
much in the existence of sorrows that never heal.