It was a lovely afternoon on
the last day of May. The sea and all the toil
and travail belonging to it was overpass, and Judge
Rawdon, Ruth and Ethel were driving in lazy, blissful
contentment through one of the lovely roads of the
West Riding. On either hand the beautifully cut
hedges were white and sweet, and a caress of scent—the
soul of the hawthorne flower enfolded them. Robins
were singing on the topmost sprays, and the linnet’s
sweet babbling was heard from the happy nests in its
secret places; while from some unseen steeple the
joyful sound of chiming bells made music between heaven
and earth fit for bands of traveling angels.
They had dined at a wayside inn on
jugged hare, roast beef, and Yorkshire pudding, clotted
cream and haver (oaten) bread, and the careless stillness
of physical well-being and of minds at ease needed
no speech, but the mutual smiling nod of intimate
sympathy. For the sense of joy and beauty which
makes us eloquent is far inferior to that sense which
makes us silent.
This exquisite pause in life was suddenly
ended by an exclamation from the Judge. They
were at the great iron gates of Rawdon Park, and soon
were slowly traversing its woody solitudes. The
soft light, the unspeakable green of the turf, the
voice of ancient days murmuring in the great oak trees,
the deer asleep among the ferns, the stillness of
the summer afternoon filling the air with drowsy peace
this was the atmosphere into which they entered.
Their road through this grand park of three hundred
acres was a wide, straight avenue shaded with beech
trees. The green turf on either hand was starred
with primroses. In the deep undergrowth, ferns
waved and fanned each other, and the scent of hidden
violets saluted as they passed. Drowsily, as
if half asleep, the blackbirds whistled their couplets,
and in the thickest hedges the little brown thrushes
sang softly to their brooding mates. For half
an hour they kept this heavenly path, and then a sudden
turn brought them their first sight of the old home.
It was a stately, irregular building
of red brick, sandaled and veiled in ivy. The
nu-merous windows were all latticed, the chimneys
in picturesque stacks, the sloping roof made of flags
of sandstone. It stood in the center of a large
garden, at the bottom of which ran a babbling little
river—a cheerful tongue of life in the
sweet, silent place. They crossed it by a pretty
bridge, and in a few minutes stood at the great door
of the mansion. It was wide open, and the Squire,
with outstretched hands, rose to meet them. While
yet upon the threshold he kissed both Ethel and Ruth,
and, clasping the Judge’s hand, gazed at him
with such a piercing, kindly look that the eyes of
both men filled with tears.
He led them into the hall, and standing
there he seemed almost a part of it. In his youth
he had been a son of Anak, and his great size had
been matched by his great strength. His stature
was still large, his face broad and massive, and an
abundance of snow-white hair emphasized the dignity
of a countenance which age had made nobler. The
generations of eight hundred years were crystallized
in this benignant old man, looking with such eager
interest into the faces of his strange kindred from
a far-off land.
In the evening they sat together in
the old hall talking of the Rawdons. “There
is great family of us, living and dead,” said
the Squire, “and I count them all my friends.
Bare is the back that has no kin behind it. That
is not our case. Eight hundred years ago there
was a Rawdon in Rawdon, and one has never been wanting
since. Saxon, Danish, Norman, and Stuart kings
have been and gone their way, and we remain; and I
can tell you every Rawdon born since the House of
Hanover came to England. We have had our share
in all England’s strife and glory, for if there
was ever a fight going on anywhere Rawdon was never
far off. Yes, we can string the centuries together
in the battle flags we have won. See there!”
he cried, pointing to two standards interwoven above
the central chimney-piece; “one was taken from
the Paynim in the first Crusade, and the other my
grandson took in Africa. It seems but yesterday,
and Queen Victoria gave him the Cross for it.
Poor lad, he had it on when he died. It went
to the grave with him. I wouldn’t have
it touched. I fancy the Rawdons would know it.
No one dare say they don’t. I think they
meddle a good deal more with this life than we count
on.”
The days that followed were days in
The House Wonderful. It held the treasure-trove
of centuries; all its rooms were full of secrets.
Even the common sitting-room had an antique homeliness
that provoked questions as to the dates of its furniture
and the whereabouts of its wall cupboards and hidden
recesses. Its china had the marks of forgotten
makers, its silver was puzzling with half-obliterated
names and dates, its sideboard of oak was black with
age and full of table accessories, the very names
of which were forgotten. For this house had not
been built in the ordinary sense, it had grown through
centuries; grown out of desire and necessity, just
as a tree grows, and was therefore fit and beautiful.
And it was no wonder that about every room floated
the perfume of ancient things and the peculiar family
aura that had saturated all the inanimate objects
around them.
In a few days, life settled itself
to orderly occupations. The Squire was a late
riser; the Judge and his family breakfasted very early.
Then the two women had a ride in the park, or wandered
in the garden, or sat reading, or sewing, or writing
in some of the sweet, fair rooms. Many visitors
soon appeared, and there were calls to return and
courtesies to accept. Among these visitors the
Tyrrel-Rawdons were the earliest. The representatives
of that family were Nicholas Rawdon and his wife Lydia.
Nicholas Rawdon was a large, stout man, very arrogant,
very complete, very alert for this world, and not
caring much about the other. He was not pleased
at Judge Rawdon’s visit, but thought it best
to be cousinly until his cousin interfered with his
plans—“rights” he called them—“and
then!” and his “Then” implied
a great deal, for Nicholas Rawdon was a man incapable
of conceiving the idea of loving an enemy.
His wife was a pleasant, garrulous
woman, who interested Ethel very much. Her family
was her chief topic of conversation. She had
two daughters, one of whom had married a baronet,
“a man with money and easy to manage”;
and the other, “a rich cotton lord in Manchester.”
“They haven’t done badly,”
she said confidentially, “and it’s a great
thing to get girls off your hands early. Adelaide
and Martha were well educated and suitable, but, “she
added with a glow of pride, “you should see
my John Thomas. He’s manager of the mill,
and he loves the mill, and he knows every pound of
warp or weft that comes in or goes out of the mill;
and what his father would do without him, I’m
sure I don’t know. And he is a member of
Parliament, too—Radical ticket. Won
over Mostyn. Wiped Mostyn out pretty well.
That was a thing to do, wasn’t it?”
“I suppose Mr. Mostyn was the
Conservative candidate?”
“You may be sure of that.
But my John Thomas doesn’t blame him for it—the
gentry have to be Conservatives. John Thomas
said little against his politics; he just set the
crowd laughing at his ways—his dandified
ways. And he tried to wear one eyeglass, and
let it fall, and fall, and then told the men `he
couldn’t manage half a pair of spectacles; but
he could manage their interests and fight for their
rights,’ and such like talk. And he walked
like Mostyn, and he talked like Mostyn, and spread
out his legs, and twirled his walking stick like Mostyn,
and asked them `if they would wish him to go to Parliament
in that kind of a shape, as he’d try and do it
if they wanted a tailor-made man’; and they
laughed him down, and then he spoke reasonable to
them. John Thomas knows what Yorkshire weavers
want, and he just prom-ised them everything they
had set their hearts on; and so they sent him to Parliament,
and Mostyn went to America, where, perhaps, they’ll
teach him that a man’s life is worth a bit more
than a bird or a rabbit. Mostyn is all for preserving
game, and his father was a mean creature. When
one thinks of his father, one has to excuse the young
man a little bit.”
“I saw a good deal of Mr. Mostyn
in New York,” said Ethel. “He used
to speak highly of his father.”
“I’ll warrant he did;
and he ought to keep at it, for he’s the only
one in this world that will use his tongue for that
end. Old Samuel Mostyn never learned to live
godly or even manly, but after his death he ceased
to do evil, and that, I’ve no doubt, often feels
like a blessing to them that had to live anyway near
to him. But my John Thomas!”
“Oh,” cried Ethel, laughing,
“you must not tell me so much about John Thomas;
he might not like it.”
“John Thomas can look all he
does and all he says straight in the face. You
may talk of him all day, and find nothing to say
that a good girl like you might not listen to.
I should have brought him with us, but he’s
away now taking a bit of a holiday. I’m
sure he needs it.”
“Where is he taking his holiday?”
“Why, he went with a cousin
to show him the sights of London; but somehow they
got through London sights very quick, and thought
they might as well put Paris in. I wish they
hadn’t. I don’t trust foreigners and
foreign ways, and they don’t have the same kind
of money as ours; but Nicholas says I needn’t
worry; he is sure that our John Thomas, if change
is to make, will make it to suit himself.”
“How soon will he be home?”
“I might say to-day or any other
early day. He’s been idling for a month
now, and his father says `the very looms are calling
out for him.’ I’ll bring him to see
you just as soon as he comes home, looms or no looms,
and he’ll be fain to come. No one appreciates
a pretty girl more than John Thomas does.”
So the days passed sweetly and swiftly
onward, and there was no trouble in them. Such
business as was to be done went on behind the closed
doors of the Squire’s office, and with no one
present but himself, Judge Rawdon, and the attorneys
attached to the Rawdon and Mostyn estates. And
as there were no entanglements and no possible reason
for disputing, a settlement was quickly arrived at.
Then, as Mostyn’s return was uncertain, an attorney’s
messenger, properly accredited, was sent to America
to procure his signatures. Allowing for unforeseen
delays, the perfected papers of release might certainly
be on hand by the fifteenth of July, and it was proposed
on the first of August to give a dinner and dance
in return for the numerous courtesies the American
Rawdons had received.
As this date approached Ruth and Ethel
began to think of a visit to London. They wanted
new gowns and many other pretty things, and why not
go to London for them? The journey was but a
few hours, and two or three days’ shopping in
Regent Street and Piccadilly would be delightful.
“We will make out a list of all we need this
afternoon,” said Ruth, “and we might as
well go to-morrow morning as later,” and at
this moment a servant entered with the mail.
Ethel lifted her letter with an exclamation.
“It is from Dora,” she said, and her voice
had a tone of annoyance in it. “Dora is
in London, at the Savoy. She wants to see me
very much.”
“I am so sorry. We have been so happy.”
“I don’t think she will interfere much,
Ruth.”
“My dears,” said Judge
Rawdon, “I have a letter from Fred Mostyn.
He is coming home. He will be in London in a
day or two.”
“Why is he coming, father?”
“He says he has a proposal to
make about the Manor. I wish he were not coming.
No one wants his proposal.” Then the breakfast-table,
which had been so gay, became silent and depressed,
and presently the Judge went away without exhibiting
further interest in the London journey.
“I do wish Dora would let us
alone,” said Ruth. “She always brings
disappointment or worry of some kind. And I wonder
what is the meaning of this unexpected London visit.
I thought she was in Holland.”
“She said in her last letter
that London would be impossible before August.”
“Is it an appointment—or
a coincidence?”
And Ethel, lifting her shoulders sarcastically,
as if in hostile surrender to the inevitable, answered:
“It is a fatality!”