I must now return to Miss Alethea
Pontifex, of whom I have said perhaps too little hitherto,
considering how great her influence upon my hero’s
destiny proved to be.
On the death of her father, which
happened when she was about thirty-two years old,
she parted company with her sisters, between whom and
herself there had been little sympathy, and came up
to London. She was determined, so she said,
to make the rest of her life as happy as she could,
and she had clearer ideas about the best way of setting
to work to do this than women, or indeed men, generally
have.
Her fortune consisted, as I have said,
of 5000 pounds, which had come to her by her mother’s
marriage settlements, and 15,000 pounds left her by
her father, over both which sums she had now absolute
control. These brought her in about 900 pounds
a year, and the money being invested in none but the
soundest securities, she had no anxiety about her income.
She meant to be rich, so she formed a scheme of expenditure
which involved an annual outlay of about 500 pounds,
and determined to put the rest by. “If
I do this,” she said laughingly, “I shall
probably just succeed in living comfortably within
my income.” In accordance with this scheme
she took unfurnished apartments in a house in Gower
Street, of which the lower floors were let out as
offices. John Pontifex tried to get her to take
a house to herself, but Alethea told him to mind his
own business so plainly that he had to beat a retreat.
She had never liked him, and from that time dropped
him almost entirely.
Without going much into society she
yet became acquainted with most of the men and women
who had attained a position in the literary, artistic
and scientific worlds, and it was singular how highly
her opinion was valued in spite of her never having
attempted in any way to distinguish herself.
She could have written if she had chosen, but she
enjoyed seeing others write and encouraging them better
than taking a more active part herself. Perhaps
literary people liked her all the better because she
did not write.
I, as she very well knew, had always
been devoted to her, and she might have had a score
of other admirers if she had liked, but she had discouraged
them all, and railed at matrimony as women seldom do
unless they have a comfortable income of their own.
She by no means, however, railed at man as she railed
at matrimony, and though living after a fashion in
which even the most censorious could find nothing to
complain of, as far as she properly could she defended
those of her own sex whom the world condemned most
severely.
In religion she was, I should think,
as nearly a freethinker as anyone could be whose mind
seldom turned upon the subject. She went to church,
but disliked equally those who aired either religion
or irreligion. I remember once hearing her press
a late well-known philosopher to write a novel instead
of pursuing his attacks upon religion. The philosopher
did not much like this, and dilated upon the importance
of showing people the folly of much that they pretended
to believe. She smiled and said demurely, “Have
they not Moses and the prophets? Let them hear
them.” But she would say a wicked thing
quietly on her own account sometimes, and called my
attention once to a note in her prayer-book which gave
account of the walk to Emmaus with the two disciples,
and how Christ had said to them “O fools and
slow of heart to believe ALL that the prophets have
spoken”—the “all” being
printed in small capitals.
Though scarcely on terms with her
brother John, she had kept up closer relations with
Theobald and his family, and had paid a few days’
visit to Battersby once in every two years or so.
Alethea had always tried to like Theobald and join
forces with him as much as she could (for they two
were the hares of the family, the rest being all hounds),
but it was no use. I believe her chief reason
for maintaining relations with her brother was that
she might keep an eye on his children and give them
a lift if they proved nice.
When Miss Pontifex had come down to
Battersby in old times the children had not been beaten,
and their lessons had been made lighter. She
easily saw that they were overworked and unhappy,
but she could hardly guess how all-reaching was the
regime under which they lived. She knew she could
not interfere effectually then, and wisely forbore
to make too many enquiries. Her time, if ever
it was to come, would be when the children were no
longer living under the same roof as their parents.
It ended in her making up her mind to have nothing
to do with either Joey or Charlotte, but to see so
much of Ernest as should enable her to form an opinion
about his disposition and abilities.
He had now been a year and a half
at Roughborough and was nearly fourteen years old,
so that his character had begun to shape. His
aunt had not seen him for some little time and, thinking
that if she was to exploit him she could do so now
perhaps better than at any other time, she resolved
to go down to Roughborough on some pretext which should
be good enough for Theobald, and to take stock of
her nephew under circumstances in which she could
get him for some few hours to herself. Accordingly
in August 1849, when Ernest was just entering on his
fourth half year a cab drove up to Dr Skinner’s
door with Miss Pontifex, who asked and obtained leave
for Ernest to come and dine with her at the Swan Hotel.
She had written to Ernest to say she was coming and
he was of course on the look-out for her. He
had not seen her for so long that he was rather shy
at first, but her good nature soon set him at his
ease. She was so strongly biassed in favour
of anything young that her heart warmed towards him
at once, though his appearance was less prepossessing
than she had hoped. She took him to a cake shop
and gave him whatever he liked as soon as she had
got him off the school premises; and Ernest felt at
once that she contrasted favourably even with his
aunts the Misses Allaby, who were so very sweet and
good. The Misses Allaby were very poor; sixpence
was to them what five shillings was to Alethea.
What chance had they against one who, if she had
a mind, could put by out of her income twice as much
as they, poor women, could spend?
The boy had plenty of prattle in him
when he was not snubbed, and Alethea encouraged him
to chatter about whatever came uppermost. He
was always ready to trust anyone who was kind to him;
it took many years to make him reasonably wary in
this respect—if indeed, as I sometimes doubt,
he ever will be as wary as he ought to be—and
in a short time he had quite dissociated his aunt
from his papa and mamma and the rest, with whom his
instinct told him he should be on his guard.
Little did he know how great, as far as he was concerned,
were the issues that depended upon his behaviour.
If he had known, he would perhaps have played his
part less successfully.
His aunt drew from him more details
of his home and school life than his papa and mamma
would have approved of, but he had no idea that he
was being pumped. She got out of him all about
the happy Sunday evenings, and how he and Joey and
Charlotte quarrelled sometimes, but she took no side
and treated everything as though it were a matter of
course. Like all the boys, he could mimic Dr
Skinner, and when warmed with dinner, and two glasses
of sherry which made him nearly tipsy, he favoured
his aunt with samples of the Doctor’s manner
and spoke of him familiarly as “Sam.”
“Sam,” he said, “is
an awful old humbug.” It was the sherry
that brought out this piece of swagger, for whatever
else he was Dr Skinner was a reality to Master Ernest,
before which, indeed, he sank into his boots in no
time. Alethea smiled and said, “I must
not say anything to that, must I?” Ernest said,
“I suppose not,” and was checked.
By-and-by he vented a number of small second-hand
priggishnesses which he had caught up believing them
to be the correct thing, and made it plain that even
at that early age Ernest believed in Ernest with a
belief which was amusing from its absurdity.
His aunt judged him charitably as she was sure to
do; she knew very well where the priggishness came
from, and seeing that the string of his tongue had
been loosened sufficiently gave him no more sherry.
It was after dinner, however, that
he completed the conquest of his aunt. She then
discovered that, like herself, he was passionately
fond of music, and that, too, of the highest class.
He knew, and hummed or whistled to her all sorts
of pieces out of the works of the great masters, which
a boy of his age could hardly be expected to know,
and it was evident that this was purely instinctive,
inasmuch as music received no kind of encouragement
at Roughborough. There was no boy in the school
as fond of music as he was. He picked up his
knowledge, he said, from the organist of St Michael’s
Church who used to practise sometimes on a week-day
afternoon. Ernest had heard the organ booming
away as he was passing outside the church and had
sneaked inside and up into the organ loft. In
the course of time the organist became accustomed to
him as a familiar visitant, and the pair became friends.
It was this which decided Alethea
that the boy was worth taking pains with. “He
likes the best music,” she thought, “and
he hates Dr Skinner. This is a very fair beginning.”
When she sent him away at night with a sovereign
in his pocket (and he had only hoped to get five shillings)
she felt as though she had had a good deal more than
her money’s worth for her money.