Mrs. Darlington was a woman of refinement
herself, and had been used to the society of refined
persons. She was, naturally enough, shocked at
the coarseness and brutality of Mr. Scragg, and, ere
an hour went by, in despair at the unmannerly rudeness
of the children, the oldest a stout, vulgar-looking
boy, who went racing and rummaging about the house
from the garret to the cellar. For a long time
after her exciting interview with Mr. Scragg, she sat
weeping and trembling in her own room, with Edith
by her side, who sought earnestly to comfort and encourage
her.
“Oh, Edith!” she sobbed,
“to think that we should be humbled to this!”
“Necessity has forced us into
our present unhappy position, mother,” replied
Edith. “Let us meet its difficulties with
as brave hearts as possible.”
“I shall never be able to treat
that dreadful man with even common civility,”
said Mrs. Darlington.
“We have accepted him as our
guest, mother, and it will be our duty to make all
as pleasant and comfortable as possible. We will
have to bear much, I see—much beyond what
I had anticipated.”
Mrs. Darlington sighed deeply as she replied—
“Yes, yes, Edith. Ah, the thought makes
me miserable!”
“No more of that sweet drawing
together in our own dear home circle,” remarked
Edith, sadly.
“Henceforth we are to bear the
constant presence and intrusion of strangers, with
whom we have few or no sentiments in common. We
open our house and take in the ignorant, the selfish,
the vulgar, and feed them for a certain price!
Does not the thought bring a feeling of painful humiliation?
What can pay for all this? Ah me! The anticipation
had in it not a glimpse of what we have found in our
brief experience. Except Mr. and Mrs. Ring, there
isn’t a lady nor gentleman in the house.
That Mason is so rudely familiar that I cannot bear
to come near him. He’s making himself quite
intimate with Henry already, and I don’t like
to see it.”
“Nor do I,” replied Mrs.
Darlington. “Henry’s been out with
him twice to the theatre already.”
“I’m afraid of his influence
over Henry. He’s not the kind of a companion
he ought to choose,” said Edith. “And
then Mr. Barling is with Miriam in the parlour almost
every evening. He asks her to sing, and she says
she doesn’t like to refuse.”
The mother sighed deeply. While
they were conversing, a servant came to their room
to say that Mr. Ring was in the parlour, and wished
to speak with Mrs. Darlington. It was late in
the afternoon of the day on which the Scraggs had
made their appearance.
With a presentiment of trouble, Mrs.
Darlington went down to the parlour.
“Madam,” said Mr. Ring,
as soon as she entered, speaking in a firm voice,
“I find that my wife has been grossly insulted
by a fellow whose family you have taken into your
house. Now they must leave here, or we will,
and that forthwith.”
“I regret extremely,”
replied Mrs. Darlington, “the unpleasant occurrence
to which you allude; but I do not see how it is possible
for me to turn these people out of the house.”
“Very well, ma’am.
Suit yourself about that. You can choose between
us. Both can’t remain.”
“If I were to tell this Mr.
Scragg to seek another boarding-house, he would insult
me,” said Mrs. Darlington.
“Strange that you would take
such a fellow into your house!”
“My rooms were vacant, and I had to fill them.”
“Better to have let them remain
vacant. But this is neither here nor there.
If this fellow remains, we go.”
And go they did on the next day.
Mrs. Darlington was afraid to approach Mr. Scragg
on the subject. Had she done so, she would have
received nothing but abuse.
Two weeks afterward, the room vacated
by Mr. and Mrs. Ring was taken by a tall, fine-looking
man, who wore a pair of handsome whiskers and dressed
elegantly. He gave his name as Burton, and agreed
to pay eight dollars. Mrs. Darlington liked him
very much. There was a certain style about him
that evidenced good breeding and a knowledge of the
world. What his business was he did not say.
He was usually in the house as late as ten o’clock
in the morning, and rarely came in before twelve at
night.
Soon after Mr. Burton became a member
of Mrs. Darlington’s household, he began to
show particular attentions to Miriam, who was in her
nineteenth year, and was, as we have said, a gentle,
timid, shrinking girl. Though she did not encourage,
she would not reject the attentions of the polite
and elegant stranger, who had so much that was agreeable
to say that she insensibly acquired a kind of prepossession
in his favour.
As now constituted, the family of
Mrs. Darlington was not so pleasant and harmonious
as could have been desired. Mr. Scragg had already
succeeded in making himself so disagreeable to the
other boarders, that they were scarcely civil to him;
and Mrs. Grimes, who was quite gracious with Mrs.
Scragg at first, no longer spoke to her. They
had fallen out about some trifle, quarrelled, and then
cut each other’s acquaintance. When the
breakfast, dinner, or tea bell rang, and the boarders
assembled at the table, there was generally, at first,
an embarrassing silence. Scragg looked like a
bull-dog waiting for an occasion to bark; Mrs. Scragg
sat with her lips closely compressed and her head
partly turned away, so as to keep her eyes out of
the line of vision with Mrs. Grimes’s face; while
Mrs. Grimes gave an occasional glance of contempt towards
the lady with whom she had had a “tiff.”
Barling and Mason, observing all this, and enjoying
it, were generally the first to break the reigning
silence; and this was usually done by addressing some
remark to Scragg, for no other reason, it seemed, than
to hear his growling reply. Usually, they succeeded
in drawing him into an argument, when they would goad
him until he became angry; a species of irritation
in which they never suffered themselves to indulge.
As for Mr. Grimes, he was a man of few words.
When spoken to, he would reply; but he never made
conversation. The only man who really behaved
like a gentleman was Mr. Burton; and the contrast seen
in him naturally prepossessed the family in his favour.
The first three months’ experience
in taking boarders was enough to make the heart of
Mrs. Darlington sick. All domestic comfort was
gone. From early morning until late at night,
she toiled harder than any servant in the house; and,
with all, had a mind pressed down with care and anxiety.
Three times during this period she had been obliged
to change her cook, yet, for all, scarcely a day passed
that she did not set badly cooked food before her
guests. Sometimes certain of the boarders complained,
and it generally happened that rudeness accompanied
the complaint. The sense of pain that attended
this was always most acute, for it was accompanied
by deep humiliation and a feeling of helplessness.
Moreover, during these first three months, Mr. and
Mrs. Grimes had left the house without paying their
board for five weeks, thus throwing her into a loss
of forty dollars.
At the beginning of this experiment,
after completing the furniture of her house, Mrs.
Darlington had about three hundred dollars. When
the quarter’s bill for rent was paid, she had
only a hundred and fifty dollars left. Thus,
instead of making any thing by boarders, so far, she
had sunk a hundred and fifty dollars. This fact
disheartened her dreadfully. Then, the effect
upon almost every member of her family had been bad.
Harry was no longer the thoughtful affectionate, innocent-minded
young man of former days. Mason and Barling had
introduced him into gay company, and, fascinated with
a new and more exciting kind of life, he was fast
forming associations and acquiring habits of a dangerous
character. It was rare that he spent an evening
at home; and, instead of being of any assistance to
his mother, was constantly making demands on her for
money. The pain all this occasioned Mrs. Darlington
was of the most distressing character. Since
the children of Mr. and Mrs. Scragg came into the
house, Edward and Ellen, who had heretofore been under
the constant care and instruction of their mother,
left almost entirely to themselves, associated constantly
with these children, and learned from them to be rude,
vulgar, and, in some things, even vicious. And
Miriam had become apparently so much interested in
Mr. Burton, who was constantly attentive to her, that
both Mrs. Darlington and Edith became anxious on her
account. Burton was entire stranger to them all,
and there were many things about him that appeared
strange, if not wrong.
So much for the experiment of taking
boarders, after the lapse of a single quarter of a
year.