When Dolly was seventeen, a pink wild
rose just unrolling its petals, a very great event
occurred in her history. She received an invitation
to go and stop with some friends in the country.
The poor child’s life had been
in a sense so uneventful that the bare prospect of
this visit filled her soul beforehand with tremulous
anticipation. To be sure, Dolly Barton had always
lived in the midmost centre of the Movement in London;
she had known authors, artists, socialists, the cream
of our race; she had been brought up in close intercourse
with the men and women who are engaged in revolutionizing
and remodelling humanity. But this very fact
that she had always lived in the Thick of Things made
a change to the Thin of Things only by so much the
more delicious and enchanting. Not that Dolores
had not seen a great deal, too, of the country.
Poor as they were, her mother had taken her to cheap
little seaside nooks for a week or two of each summer;
she had made pilgrimages almost every Sunday in spring
or autumn to Leith Hill or Mapledurham; she had even
strained her scanty resources to the utmost to afford
Dolly an occasional outing in the Ardennes or in Normandy.
But what gave supreme importance to this coming visit
was the special fact that Dolly was now for the first
time in her life to find herself “in society.”
Among the friends she had picked up
at her Marylebone day-school were two west-country
girls, private boarders of the head-mistress’s,
who came from the neighborhood of Combe Neville in
Dorset. Their name was Compson, and their father
was rector of their native village, Upcombe.
Dolly liked them very much, and was proud of their
acquaintance, because they were reckoned about the
most distinguished pupils in the school, their mother
being the niece of a local viscount. Among girls
in middle-class London sets, even so remote a connection
with the title-bearing classes is counted for a distinction.
So when Winnie Compson asked Dolly to go and stop with
her at her father’s rectory during three whole
weeks of the summer holidays, Dolly felt that now
at last by pure force of native worth she was rising
to her natural position in society. It flattered
her that Winnie should select her for such an honor.
The preparations for that visit cost
Dolly some weeks of thought and effort. The
occasion demanded it. She was afraid she had
no frocks good enough for such a grand house as the
Compsons. “Grand” was indeed a favorite
epithet of Dolly’s; she applied it impartially
to everything which had to do, as she conceived, with
the life of the propertied and privileged classes.
It was a word at once of cherished and revered meaning—the
shibboleth of her religion. It implied to her
mind something remote and unapproachable, yet to be
earnestly striven after with all the forces at her
disposal. Even Herminia herself stretched a point
in favor of an occasion which she could plainly see
Dolly regarded as so important; she managed to indulge
her darling in a couple of dainty new afternoon dresses,
which touched for her soul the very utmost verge of
allowable luxury. The materials were oriental;
the cut was the dressmaker’s—not
home-built, as usual. Dolly looked so brave
in them, with her rich chestnut hair and her creamy
complexion,—a touch, Herminia thought, of
her Italian birthplace,— that the mother’s
full heart leapt up to look at her. It almost
made Herminia wish she was rich—and anti-social,
like the rich people—in order that she
might be able to do ample justice to the exquisite
grace of Dolly’s unfolding figure. Tall,
lissome, supple, clear of limb and light of footstep,
she was indeed a girl any mother might have been proud
of.
On the day she left London, Herminia
thought to herself she had never seen her child look
so absolutely lovely. The unwonted union of
blue eyes with that olive-gray skin gave a tinge of
wayward shyness to her girlish beauty. The golden
locks had ripened to nut-brown, but still caught stray
gleams of nestling sunlight. ’Twas with
a foreboding regret that Herminia kissed Dolly on both
peach-bloom cheeks at parting. She almost fancied
her child must be slipping from her motherly grasp
when she went off so blithely to visit these unknown
friends, away down in Dorsetshire. Yet Dolly
had so few amusements of the sort young girls require
that Herminia was overjoyed this opportunity should
have come to her. She reproached herself not
a little in her sensitive heart for even feeling sad
at Dolly’s joyous departure. Yet to Dolly
it was a delight to escape from the atmosphere of
Herminia’s lodgings. Those calm heights
chilled her.
The Compsons’ house was quite
as “grand” in the reality as Dolly had
imagined it. There was a man-servant in a white
tie to wait at table, and the family dressed every
evening for dinner. Yet, much to her surprise,
Dolly found from the first the grandeur did not in
the least incommode her. On the contrary, she
enjoyed it. She felt forthwith she was to the
manner born. This was clearly the life she was
intended by nature to live, and might actually have
been living—she, the granddaughter of so
grand a man as the late Dean of Dunwich—had
it not been for poor Mamma’s ridiculous fancies.
Mamma was so faddy! Before Dolly had spent three
whole days at the rectory, she talked just as the
Compsons did; she picked up by pure instinct the territorial
slang of the county families. One would have
thought, to hear her discourse, she had dressed for
dinner every night of her life, and passed her days
in the society of the beneficed clergy.
But even that did not exhaust the
charm of Upcombe for Dolly. For the first time
in her life, she saw something of men,—real
men, with horses and dogs and guns,—men
who went out partridge shooting in the season and
rode to hounds across country, not the pale abstractions
of cultured humanity who attended the Fabian Society
meetings or wrote things called articles in the London
papers. Her mother’s friends wore soft
felt hats and limp woollen collars; these real men
were richly clad in tweed suits and fine linen.
Dolly was charmed with them all, but especially with
one handsome and manly young fellow named Walter Brydges,
the stepson and ward of a neighboring parson.
“How you talked with him at tennis to-day!”
Winnie Compson said to her friend, as they sat on the
edge of Dolly’s bed one evening. “He
seemed quite taken with you.”
A pink spot of pleasure glowed on
Dolly’s round cheek to think that a real young
man, in good society, whom she met at so grand a house
as the Compsons’, should seem to be quite taken
with her.
“Who is he, Winnie?” she
asked, trying to look less self-conscious. “He’s
extremely good-looking.”
“Oh, he’s Mr. Hawkshaw’s
stepson, over at Combe Mary,” Winnie answered
with a nod. “Mr. Hawkshaw’s the vicar
there till Mamma’s nephew is ready to take the
living—what they call a warming-pan.
But Walter Brydges is Mrs. Hawkshaw’s son by
her first husband. Old Mr. Brydges was the squire
of Combe Mary, and Walter’s his only child.
He’s very well off. You might do worse,
dear. He’s considered quite a catch down
in this part of the country.”
“How old is he?” Dolly
asked, innocently enough, standing up by the bedside
in her dainty white nightgown. But Winnie caught
at her meaning with the preternatural sharpness of
the girl brought up in immediate contact with the
landed interest. “Oh, he’s of age,”
she answered quickly, with a knowing nod. “He’s
come into the property; he has nobody on earth but
himself to consult about his domestic arrangements.”
Dolly was young; Dolly was pretty;
Dolly’s smile won the world; Dolly was still
at the sweetest and most susceptible of ages.
Walter Brydges was well off; Walter Brydges was handsome;
Walter Brydges had all the glamour of a landed estate,
and an Oxford education. He was a young Greek
god in a Norfolk shooting-jacket. Moreover, he
was a really good and pleasant young fellow.
What wonder, therefore, if before a week was out,
Dolly was very really and seriously in love with him?
And what wonder if Walter Brydges in turn, caught
by that maiden glance, was in love with Dolly?
He had every excuse, for she was lithe, and beautiful,
and a joyous companion; besides being, as the lady’s
maid justly remarked, a perfect lady.
One day, after Dolly had been a fortnight
at Upcombe, the Compsons gave a picnic in the wild
Combe undercliff. ’Tis a broken wall of
chalk, tumbled picturesquely about in huge shattered
masses, and deliciously overgrown with ferns and blackthorn
and golden clusters of close-creeping rock-rose.
Mazy paths thread tangled labyrinths of fallen rock,
or wind round tall clumps of holly-bush and bramble.
They lighted their fire under the lee of one such buttress
of broken cliff, whose summit was festooned with long
sprays of clematis, or “old man’s beard,”
as the common west-country name expressively phrases
it. Thistledown hovered on the basking air.
There they sat and drank their tea, couched on beds
of fern or propped firm against the rock; and when
tea was over, they wandered off, two and two, ostensibly
for nothing, but really for the true business of the
picnic—to afford the young men and maidens
of the group some chance of enjoying, unspied, one
another’s society.
Dolly and Walter Brydges strolled
off by themselves toward the rocky shore. There
Walter showed her where a brook bubbled clear from
the fountain-head; by its brink, blue veronicas grew,
and tall yellow loosestrife, and tasselled purple
heads of great English eupatory. Bending down
to the stream he picked a little bunch of forget-me-nots,
and handed them to her. Dolly pretended unconsciously
to pull the dainty blossoms to pieces, as she sat on
the clay bank hard by and talked with him. “Is
that how you treat my poor flowers?” Walter
asked, looking askance at her.
Dolly glanced down, and drew back
suddenly. “Oh, poor little things!”
she cried, with a quick droop of her long lashes.
“I wasn’t thinking what I did.”
And she darted a shy glance at him. “If
I’d remembered they were forget-me-nots, I don’t
think I could have done it.”
She looked so sweet and pure in her
budding innocence, like a half-blown water-lily, that
the young man, already more than two-thirds in love,
was instantly captivated. “Because they
were forget-me-nots, or because they were mine,
Miss Barton?” he asked softly, all timorousness.
“Perhaps a little of both,”
the girl answered, gazing down, and blushing at each
word a still deeper crimson.
The blush showed sweet on that translucent
skin. Walter turned to her with a sudden impulse.
“And what are you going to do with them now?”
he enquired, holding his breath for joy and half-suppressed
eagerness.
Dolly hesitated a moment with genuine
modesty. Then her liking for the well-knit young
man overcame her. With a frightened smile her
hand stole to her bodice; she fixed them in her bosom.
“Will that do?” she asked timidly.
“Yes, that will do,”
the young man answered, bending forward and seizing
her soft fingers in his own. “That will
do very well. And, Miss Barton—Dolores—I
take it as a sign you don’t wholly dislike me.”
“I like you very much,”
Dolly answered in a low voice, pulling a rock-rose
from a cleft and tearing it nervously to pieces.
“Do you love me, Dolly?” the young
man insisted.
Dolly turned her glance to him tenderly,
then withdrew it in haste. “I think I might,
in time,” she answered very slowly.
“Then you will be mine, mine,
mine?” Walter cried in an ecstasy.
Dolly bent her pretty head in reluctant
assent, with a torrent of inner joy. The sun
flashed in her chestnut hair. The triumph of
that moment was to her inexpressible.
But as for Walter Brydges, he seized
the blushing face boldly in his two brown hands, and
imprinted upon it at once three respectful kisses.
Then he drew back, half-terrified at his own temerity.