New York is at its very
brightest and best in October. This month of
the year may be safely trusted not to disappoint.
The skies are blue, the air balmy, and there is generally
a delightful absence of wind. The summer exiles
are home again from Jersey boarding houses, and mountain
camps, and seaside hotels, and thankful to the point
of hilarity that this episode of the year is over,
that they can once more dwell under their own roofs
without breaking any of the manifest laws of the great
goddess Custom or Fashion.
Judge Rawdon’s house had an
especially charming “at home” appearance.
During the absence of the family it had been made
beautiful inside and outside, and the white stone,
the plate glass, and falling lace evident to the street,
had an almost conscious look of luxurious propriety.
The Judge frankly admitted his pleasure
in his home surroundings. He said, as they ate
their first meal in the familiar room, that “a
visit to foreign countries was a grand, patriotic
tonic.” He vowed that the “first
sight of the Stars and Stripes at Sandy Hook had given
him the finest emotion he had ever felt in his life,”
and was altogether in his proudest American mood.
Ruth sympathized with him. Ethel listened smiling.
She knew well that the English strain had only temporarily
exhausted itself; it would have its period of revival
at the proper time.
“I am going to see grandmother,”
she said gayly. “I shall stay with her
all day.”
“But I have a letter from her,”
interrupted the Judge, “and she will not return
home until next week.”
“I am sorry. I was anticipating
so eagerly the joy of seeing her. Well, as I
cannot do so, I will go and call on Dora Stanhope.”
“I would not if I were you,
Ethel,” said Ruth. “Let her come
and call on you.”
“I had a little note from her
this morning, welcoming me home, and entreating me
to call.”
The Judge rose as Ethel was speaking,
and no more was said about the visit at that time
but a few hours later Ethel came down from her room
ready for the street and frankly told Ruth she had
made up her mind to call on Dora.
“Then I will only remind you,
Ethel, that Dora is not a fortunate woman to know.
As far as I can see, she is one of those who sow
pain of heart and vexation of spirit about every house
they enter, even their own. But I cannot gather
experience for you, it will have to grow in your own
garden.”
“All right, dear Ruth, and if
I do not like its growth, I will pull it up by the
roots, I assure you.”
Ruth went with her to the door and
watched her walk leisurely down the broad steps to
the street. The light kindled in her eyes and
on her face as she did so. She already felt the
magnetism of the great city, and with a laughing farewell
walked rapidly toward Dora’s house.
Her card brought an instant response,
and she heard Dora’s welcome before the door
was opened. And her first greeting was an enthusiastic
compliment, “How beautiful you have grown, Ethel!”
she cried. “Ah, that is the European finish.
You have gained it, my dear; you really are very much
improved.”
“And you also, Dora?”
The words were really a question,
but Dora accepted them as an assertion, and was satisfied.
“I suppose I am,” she
answered, “though I’m sure I can’t
tell how it should be so, unless worry of all kinds
is good for good looks. I’ve had enough
of that for a lifetime.”
“Now, Dora.”
“Oh, it’s the solid truth—partly
your fault too.”
“I never interfered——”
“Of course you didn’t,
but you ought to have interfered. When you called
on me in London you might have seen that I was not
happy; and I wanted to come to Rawdon Court, and you
would not invite me. I called your behavior then
`very mean,’ and I have not altered my opinion
of it.”
“There were good reasons, Dora,
why I could not ask you.”
“Good reasons are usually selfish
ones, Ethel, and Fred Mostyn told me what they were.
“He likely told you untruths,
Dora, for he knew nothing about my reasons. I
saw very little of him.”
“I know. You treated him
as badly as you treated me, and all for some wild
West creature—a regular cowboy, Fred said,
but then a Rawdon!”
“Mr. Mostyn has misrepresented
Mr. Tyrrel Rawdon—that is all about it.
I shall not explain `how’ or `why.’
Did you enjoy yourself at Stanhope Castle?”
“Enjoy myself! Are you
making fun of me? Ethel, dear, it was the most
awful experience. You never can imagine such
a life, and such women. They were dressed for
a walk at six o’clock; they had breakfast at
half-past seven. They went to the village and
inspected cottages, and gave lessons in housekeeping
or dressmaking or some other drudgery till noon.
They walked back to the Castle for lunch. They
attended to their own improvement from half-past one
until four, had lessons in drawing and chemistry,
and, I believe, electricity. They had another
walk, and then indulged themselves with a cup of tea.
They dressed and received visitors, and read science
or theology between whiles. There was always
some noted preacher or scholar at the dinner table.
The conversation was about acids and explosives,
or the planets or bishops, or else on the never, never-ending
subject of elevating the workingman and building schools
for his children. Basil, of course, enjoyed it.
He thought he was giving me a magnificent object
lesson. He was never done praising the ladies
Mary Elinor and Adelaide Stanhope. I’m
sure I wish he had married one or all of them—and
I told him so.”
“You could not be so cruel, Dora.”
“I managed it with the greatest
ease imaginable. He was always trotting at their
side. They spoke of him as `the most pious young
man.’ I have no doubt they were all in
love with him. I hope they were. I used
to pretend to be very much in love when they were
present. I dare say it made them wretched.
Besides, they blushed and thought me improper.
Basil didn’t approve, either, so I hit all round.”
She rose at this memory and shook
out her silk skirts, and walked up and down the room
with an air that was the visible expression of the
mockery and jealousy in her heart. This was an
entirely different Dora to the lachrymose, untidy
wife at the Savoy Hotel in London, and Ethel had a
momentary pang at the thought of the suffering which
was responsible for the change.
“If I had thought, Dora, you
were so uncomfortable, I would have asked Basil and
you to the Court.”
“You saw I was not happy when
I was at the Savoy.”
“I thought you and Basil had
had a kind of lovers’ quarrel, and that it would
blow over in an hour or two; no one likes to meddle
with an affair of that kind. Are you going to
Newport, or is Mrs. Denning in New York?”
“That is another trouble, Ethel.
When I wrote mother I wanted to come to her, she
sent me word she was going to Lenox with a friend.
Then, like you, she said `she had no liberty to invite
me,’ and so on. I never knew mother act
in such a way before. I nearly broke my heart
about it for a few days, then I made up my mind I
wouldn’t care.”
“Mrs. Denning, I am sure, thought
she did the wisest and kindest thing possible.”
“I didn’t want mother
to be wise. I wanted her to understand that I
was fairly worn out with my present life and needed
a change. I’m sure she did understand.
Then why was she so cruel?” and she shrugged
her shoulders impatiently and sat down. “I’m
so tired of life,” she continued. “When
did you hear of Fred Mostyn?”
“I know nothing of his movements.
Is he in America?”
“Somewhere. I asked mother
if he was in Newport, and she never answered the ques-tion.
I suppose he will be in New York for the winter season.
I hope so.”
This topic threatened to be more dangerous
than the other, and Ethel, after many and futile attempts
to bring conversation into safe commonplace channels,
pleaded other engagements and went away. She
was painfully depressed by the interview. All
the elements of tragedy were gathered together under
the roof she had just left, and, as far as she could
see, there was no deliverer wise and strong enough
to prevent a calamity. She did not repeat to
Ruth the conversation which had been so painful to
her. She described Dora’s dress and appearance,
and commented on Fred Mostyn’s description of
Tyrrel Rawdon, and on Mrs. Denning’s refusal
of her daughter’s proposed visit.
Ruth thought the latter circumstance
significant. “I dare say Mostyn was in
Newport at that time,” she answered. “Mrs.
Denning has some very quick perceptions.”
And Ruth’s opinion was probably correct, for
during dinner the Judge remarked in a casual manner
that he had met Mr. Mostyn on the avenue as he was
coming home. “He was well,” he said,
“and made all the usual inquiries as to your
health.” And both Ruth and Ethel understood
that he wished them to know of Mostyn’s presence
in the city, and to be prepared for meeting him; but
did not care to discuss the subject further, at least
at that time. The information brought precisely
the same thought at the same moment to both women,
and as soon as they were alone they uttered it.
“She knew Mostyn was in the
city,” said Ethel in a low voice.
“Certainly.”
“She was expecting him.”
“I am sure of it.”
“Her elaborate and beautiful
dressing was for him.”
“Poor Basil!”
“She asked me to stay and lunch
with her, but very coolly, and when I refused, did
not press the matter as she used to do. Yes,
she was expecting him. I understand now her
nervous manner, her restlessness, her indifference
to my short visit. I wish I could do anything.”
“You cannot, and you must not try.”
“Some one must try.”
“There is her husband.
Have you heard from Tyrrel yet,”
“I have had a couple of telegrams.
He will write from Chicago.”
“Is he going at once to the
Hot Springs?”
“As rapidly as possible.
Colonel Rawdon is now there, and very ill. Tyrrel
will put his father first of all. The trouble
at the mine can be investigated afterwards.”
“You will miss him very much.
You have been so happy together.”
“Of course I shall miss him.
But it will be a good thing for us to be apart awhile.
Love must have some time in which to grow. I
am a little tired of being very happy, and I think
Tyrrel also will find absence a relief. In `Lalla
Rookh’ there is a line about love `falling asleep
in a sameness of splendor.’ It might.
How melancholy is a long spell of hot, sunshiny weather,
and how gratefully we welcome the first shower of
rain.”
“Love has made you a philosopher,
Ethel.”
“Well, it is rather an advantage
than otherwise. I am going to take a walk, Ruth,
into the very heart of Broadway. I have had enough
of the peace of the country. I want the crack,
and crash, and rattle, and grind of wheels, the confused
cries, the snatches of talk and laughter, the tread
of crowds, the sound of bells, and clocks, and chimes.
I long for all the chaotic, unintelligible noise
of the streets. How suggestive it is! Yet
it never explains itself. It only gives one a
full sense of life. Love may need just the same
stimulus. I wish grandmother would come home.
I should not require Broadway as a stimulus.
I am afraid she will be very angry with me, and there
will be a battle royal in Gramercy Park.”
It was nearly a week before Ethel
had this crisis to meet. She went down to it
with a radiant face and charming manner, and her
reception was very cordial. Madam would not throw
down the glove until the proper moment; besides, there
were many very interesting subjects to talk over,
and she wanted “to find things out” that
would never be told unless tempers were propitious.
Added to these reasons was the solid one that she
really adored her granddaughter, and was immensely
cheered by the very sight of the rosy, smiling countenance
lifted to her sitting-room window in passing.
She, indeed, pretended to be there in order to get
a good light for her new shell pattern, but she was
watching for Ethel, and Ethel understood the shell-pattern
fiction very well. She had heard something similar
often.
“My darling grandmother,”
she cried, “I thought you would never come home.”
“It wasn’t my fault, dear.
Miss Hillis and an imbecile young doctor made me believe
I had a cold. I had no cold. I had nothing
at all but what I ought to have. I’ve been
made to take all sorts of things, and do all sorts
of things that I hate to take and hate to do.
For ten days I’ve been kicking my old heels
against bedclothes. Yesterday I took things in
my own hands.”
“Never mind, Granny dear, it
was all a good discipline.”
“Discipline! You impertinent
young lady! Discipline for your grandmother!
Discipline, indeed! That one word may cost you
a thousand dollars, miss.”
“I don’t care if it does,
only you must give the thousand dollars to poor Miss
Hillis.”
“Poor Miss Hillis has had a
most comfortable time with me all summer.”
“I know she has, consequently
she will feel her comfortless room and poverty all
the more after it. Give her the thousand, Granny.
I’m willing.”
“What kind of company have you
been keeping, Ethel Rawdon? Who has taught you
to squander dollars by the thousand? Discipline!
I think you are giving me a little now—a
thousand dollars a lesson, it seems— no
wonder, after the carryings-on at Rawdon Court.”
“Dear grandmother, we had the
loveliest time you can imagine. And there is
not, in all the world, such a noble old gentleman
as Squire Percival Rawdon.”
“I know all about Percival Rawdon—a
proud, careless, extravagant, loose-at-ends man, dancing
and singing and loving as it suited time and season,
taking no thought for the future, and spending with
both hands; hard on women, too, as could be.”
“Grandmother, I never saw a
more courteous gentleman. He worships women.
He was never tired of talking about you.”
“What had he to say about me?”
“That you were the loveliest
girl in the county, and that he never could forget
the first time he saw you. He said you were like
the vision of an angel.”
“Nonsense! I was just a
pretty girl in a book muslin frock and a white sash,
with a rose at my breast. I believe they use
book muslin for linings now, but it did make the
sheerest, lightest frocks any girl could want.
Yes, I remember that time. I was going to a little
party and crossing a meadow to shorten the walk, and
Squire Percival had been out with his gun, and he
laid it down and ran to help me over the stile.
A handsome young fellow he was then as ever stepped
in shoe leather.”
“And he must have loved you
dearly. He would sit hour after hour telling
Ruth and me how bright you were, and how all the
young beaux around Monk-Rawdon adored you.”
“Nonsense! Nonsense!
I had beaux to be sure. What pretty girl hasn’t?”
“And he said his brother Edward
won you because he was most worthy of your love.”
“Well, now, I chose Edward Rawdon
because he was willing to come to America. I
longed to get away from Monk-Rawdon. I was faint
and weary with the whole stupid place. And the
idea of living a free and equal life, and not caring
what lords and squires and their proud ladies said
or did, pleased me wonderfully. We read about
Niagara and the great prairies and the new bright
cities, and Edward and I resolved to make our home
there. Your grandfather wasn’t a man to
like being `the Squire’s brother.’
He could stand alone.”
“Are you glad you came to America?”
“Never sorry a minute for it.
Ten years in New York is worth fifty years in Monk-Rawdon,
or Rawdon Court either.”
“Squire Percival was very fond
of me. He thought I resembled you, grandmother,
but he never admitted I was as handsome as you were.”
“Well, Ethel dear, you are handsome
enough for the kind of men you’ll pick up in
this generation—most of them bald at thirty,
wearing spectacles at twenty or earlier, and in spite
of the fuss they make about athletics breaking all
to nervous bits about fifty.”
“Grandmother, that is pure slander.
I know some very fine young men, handsome and athletic
both.”
“Beauty is a matter of taste,
and as to their athletics, they can run a mile with
a blacksmith, but when the thermometer rises to eighty-five
degrees it knocks them all to pieces. They sit
fanning themselves like schoolgirls, and call for
juleps and ice-water. I’ve got eyes yet,
my dear. Squire Percival was a different kind
of man; he could follow the hounds all day and dance
all night. The hunt had not a rider like him;
he balked at neither hedge, gate, nor water; a right
gallant, courageous, honorable, affectionate gentleman
as ever Yorkshire bred, and she’s bred lots
of superfine ones. What ever made him get into
such a mess with his estate? Your grandfather
thought him as straight as a string in money matters.”
“You said just now he was careless
and extravagant.”
“Well, I did him wrong, and
I’m sorry for it. How did he manage to
need eighty thousand pounds?”
“It is rather a pitiful story,
grandmother, but he never once blamed those who were
in the wrong. His son for many years had been
the real manager of the estate. He was a speculator;
his grandsons were wild and extravagant. They
began to borrow money ten years ago and had to go
on.”
“Whom did they borrow from?”
“Fred Mostyn’s father.”
“The devil! Excuse me,
Ethel—but the name suits and may stand.”
“The dear old Squire would have
taken the fault on himself if he could have done so.
They that wronged him were his own, and they were
dead. He never spoke of them but with affection.”
“Poor Percival! Your father
told me he was now out of Mostyn’s power; he
said you had saved the estate, but he gave me no
particulars. How did you save it?”
“Bought it!”
“Nonsense!”
“House and lands and outlying
farms and timber—everything.”
Then a rosy color overspread Madam’s
face, her eyes sparkled, she rose to her feet, made
Ethel a sweeping courtesy, and said:
“My respect and congratulations
to Ethel, Lady of Rawdon Manor.”
“Dear grandmother, what else
could I do?”
“You did right.”
“The Squire is Lord of the Manor
as long as he lives. My father says I have done
well to buy it. In the future, if I do not wish
to keep it, Nicholas Rawdon will relieve me at a
great financial advantage.”
“Why didn’t you let Nicholas
Rawdon buy it now?”
“He would have wanted prompt
possession. The Squire would have had to leave
his home. It would have broken his heart.”
“I dare say. He has a soft,
loving heart. That isn’t always a blessing.
It can give one a deal of suffering. And I hear
you have all been making idols of these Tyrrel-Rawdons.
Fred tells me they are as vulgar a lot as can be.”
“Fred lies! Excuse me,
grandmother—but the word suits and may
stand. Mr. Nicholas is pompous, and walks as
slowly as if he had to carry the weight of his great
fortune; but his manners are all right, and his wife
and son are delightful. She is handsome, well
dressed, and so good-hearted that her pretty county
idioms are really charming. John Thomas is a
man by himself—not handsome, but running
over with good temper, and exceedingly clever and
wide-awake. Many times I was forced to tell myself,
John Thomas would make an ideal Squire of Rawdon.”
“Why don’t you marry him.”
“He never asked me.”
“What was the matter with the men?”
“He was already engaged to a
very lovely young lady.”
“I am glad she is a lady.”
“She is also very clever.
She has been to college and taken high honors, a thing
I have not done.”
“You might have done and overdone
that caper; you were too sensible to try it.
Well, I’m glad that part of the family is looking
up. They had the right stuff in them, and it
is a good thing for families to dwell together in
unity. We have King David’s word for that.
My observation leads me to think it is far better
for families to dwell apart, in unity. They seldom
get along comfortably together.”
Then Ethel related many pleasant,
piquant scenes between the two families at Monk-Rawdon,
and especially that one in which the room of the first
Tyrrel had been opened and his likeness restored to
its place in the family gallery. It touched the
old lady to tears, and she murmured, “Poor lad!
Poor lad! I wonder if he knows! I wonder
if he knows!”
The crucial point of Ethel’s
revelations had not yet been revealed, but Madam was
now in a gentle mood, and Ethel took the opportunity
to introduce her to Tyrrel Rawdon. She was expecting
and waiting for this topic, but stubbornly refused
to give Ethel any help toward bringing it forward.
At last, the girl felt a little anger at her pretended
indifference, and said, “I suppose Fred Mostyn
told you about Mr. Tyrrel Rawdon, of California?”
“Tyrrel Rawdon, of California!
Pray, who may he be?”
“The son of Colonel Rawdon,
of the United States Army.”
“Oh, to be sure! Well, what of him?”
“I am going to marry him.”
“I shall see about that.”
“We were coming here together
to see you, but before we left the steamer he got
a telegram urging him to go at once to his father,
who is very ill.”
“I have not asked him to come
and see me. Perhaps he will wait till I do so.”
“If you are not going to love
Tyrrel, you need not love me. I won’t have
you for a grandmother any longer.”
“I did without you sixty years.
I shall not live another twelve months, and I think
I can manage to do without you for a granddaughter
any longer.”
“You cannot do without me.
You would break your heart, and I should break mine.”
Whereupon Ethel began to cry with a passion that quite
gratified the old lady. She watched her a few
moments, and then said gently:
“There now, that will do.
When he comes to New York bring him to see me.
And don’t name the man in the meantime.
I won’t talk about him till I’ve seen
him. It isn’t fair either way. Fred
didn’t like him.”
“Fred likes no one but Dora Stanhope.”
“Eh! What! Is that
nonsense going on yet?”
Then Ethel described her last two
interviews with Dora. She did this with scrupulous
fidelity, making no suggestions that might prejudice
the case. For she really wanted her grandmother’s
decision in order to frame her own conduct by it.
Madam was not, however, in a hurry to give it.
“What do you think?” she asked Ethel.
“I have known Dora for many
years; she has always told me everything.”
“But nothing about Fred?”
“Nothing.”
“Nothing to tell, perhaps?”
“Perhaps.”
“Where does her excellent husband
come in?”
“She says he is very kind to
her in his way.”
“And his way is to drag her
over the world to see the cathedrals thereof, and
to vary that pleasure with inspecting schools and
reformatories and listening to great preachers.
Upon my word, I feel sorry for the child! And
I know all about such excellent people as the Stanhopes.
I used to go to what they call `a pleasant evening’
with them. We sat around a big room lit with
wax candles, and held improving conversation, or some
one sang one or two of Mrs. Hemans’ songs, like
`Passing Away’ or `He Never Smiled Again.’
Perhaps there was a comic recitation, at which no
one laughed, and finally we had wine and hot water—they
called it `port negus’—and tongue
sandwiches and caraway cakes. My dear Ethel,
I yawn now when I think of those dreary evenings.
What must Dora have felt, right out of the maelstrom
of New York’s operas and theaters and dancing
parties?”
“Still, Dora ought to try to
feel some interest in the church affairs. She
says she does not care a hairpin for them, and Basil
feels so hurt.”
“I dare say he does, poor fellow!
He thinks St. Jude’s Kindergarten and sewing
circles and missionary societies are the only joys
in the world. Right enough for Basil, but how
about Dora?”
“They are his profession; she
ought to feel an interest in them.”
“Come now, look at the question
sensibly. Did Dora’s father bring his `deals’
and stock-jobbery home, and expect Dora and her mother
to feel an interest in them? Do doctors tell
their wives about their patients, and expect them
to pay sympathizing visits? Does your father
expect Ruth and yourself to listen to his cases and
arguments, and visit his poor clients or make underclothing
for them? Do men, in general, consider it a
wife’s place to interfere in their profession
or business?”
“Clergymen are different.”
“Not at all. Preaching
and philanthropy is their business. They get
so much a year for doing it. I don’t believe
St. Jude’s pays Mrs. Stanhope a red cent.
There now, and if she isn’t paid, she’s
right not to work. Amen to that!”
“Before she was married Dora
said she felt a great interest in church work.”
“I dare say she did. Marriage
makes a deal of difference in a woman’s likes
and dislikes. Church work was courting-time before
marriage; after marriage she had other opportunities.”
“I think you might speak to
Fred Mostyn——”
“I might, but it wouldn’t
be worth while. Be true to your friend as long
as you can. In Yorkshire we stand by our friends,
right or wrong, and we aren’t too particular
as to their being right. My father enjoyed justifying
a man that everyone else was down on; and I’ve
stood by many a woman nobody had a good word for.
I was never sorry for doing it, either. I’ll
be going into a strange country soon, and I should
not wonder if some of them that have gone there first
will be ready to stand by me. We don’t
know what friends we’ll be glad of there.”
The dinner bell broke up this conversation,
and Ethel during it told Madam about the cook and
cooking at the Court and at Nicholas Rawdon’s,
where John Thomas had installed a French chef.
Other domestic arrangements were discussed, and when
the Judge called for his daughter at four o’clock,
Madam vowed “she had spent one of the happiest
days of her life.”
“Ruth tells me,” said
the Judge, “that Dora Stanhope called for Ethel
soon after she left home this morning. Ruth seems
troubled at the continuance of this friendship.
Have you spoken to your grandmother, Ethel, about
Dora?”
“She has told me all there is
to tell, I dare say,” answered Madam.
“Well, mother, what do you think?”
“I see no harm in it yet awhile.
It is not fair, Edward, to condemn upon likelihoods.
We are no saints, sinful men and women, all of us,
and as much inclined to forbidden fruit as any good
Christians can be. Ethel can do as she feels
about it; she’s got a mind of her own, and I
hope to goodness she’ll not let Ruth Bayard
bit and bridle it.”
Going home the Judge evidently pondered
this question, for he said after a lengthy silence,
“Grandmother’s ethics do not always fit
the social ethics of this day, Ethel. She criticises
people with her heart, not her intellect. You
must be prudent. There is a remarkable thing
called Respectability to be reckoned with remember
that.”
And Ethel answered, “No one
need worry about Dora. Some women may show the
edges of their character soiled and ragged, but Dora
will be sure to have hers reputably finished with
a hem of the widest propriety.” And after
a short silence the Judge added, almost in soliloquy,
“And, moreover, Ethel,
“`There’s a divinity that
shapes our ends,
Rough-hew them how we will.’”