“Wooed and married and
a’.”
“Edith!” said Margaret, gently,
“Edith!”
But as Margaret half suspected,
Edith had fallen asleep. She lay curled up on the sofa in the back
drawing-room in Harley Street looking very lovely in her white
muslin and blue ribbons. If Titania had ever been dressed in white
muslin and blue ribbons, and had fallen asleep on a crimson damask
sofa in a back drawing-room, Edith might have been taken for her.
Margaret was struck afresh by her cousin’s beauty. They had grown
up together from childhood, and all along Edith had been remarked
upon by every one, except Margaret, for her prettiness; but
Margaret had never thought about it until the last few days, when
the prospect of soon losing her companion seemed to give force to
every sweet quality and charm which Edith possessed. They had been
talking about wedding dresses and wedding ceremonies; and Captain
Lennox, and what he had told Edith about her future life at Corfu,
where his regiment was stationed; and the difficulty of keeping a
piano in good tune (a difficulty which Edith seemed to consider as
one of the most formidable that could befall her in her married
life), and what gowns she should want in the visits to Scotland,
which would immediately succeed her marriage; but the whispered
tone had latterly become more drowsy; and Margaret, after a pause
of a few minutes, found, as she fancied, that in spite of the buzz
in the next room, Edith had rolled herself up into a soft ball of
muslin and ribbon, and silken curls, and gone off into a peaceful
little after-dinner nap.
Margaret had been on the point of
telling her cousin of some of the plans and visions which she
entertained as to her future life in the country parsonage, where
her father and mother lived; and where her bright holidays had
always been passed, though for the last ten years her aunt Shaw’s
house had been considered as her home. But in default of a
listener, she had to brood over the change in her life silently as
heretofore. It was a happy brooding, although tinged with regret at
being separated for an indefinite time from her gentle aunt and
dear cousin. As she thought of the delight of filling the important
post of only daughter in Helstone parsonage, pieces of the
conversation out of the next room came upon her ears. Her aunt Shaw
was talking to the five or six ladies who had been dining there,
and whose husbands were still in the dining-room. They were the
familiar acquaintances of the house; neighbours whom Mrs. Shaw
called friends, because she happened to dine with them more
frequently than with any other people, and because if she or Edith
wanted anything from them, or they from her, they did not scruple
to make a call at each other’s houses before luncheon. These ladies
and their husbands were invited in their capacity of friends, to
eat a farewell dinner in honour of Edith’s approaching marriage.
Edith had rather objected to this arrangement, for Captain Lennox
was expected to arrive by a late train this very evening; but,
although she was a spoiled child, she was too careless and idle to
have a very strong will of her own, and gave way when she found
that her mother had absolutely ordered those extra delicacies of
the season which are always supposed to be efficacious against
immoderate grief at farewell dinners. She contented herself by
leaning back in her chair, merely playing with the food on her
plate, and looking grave and absent; while all around her were
enjoying the mots of Mr. Grey, the gentleman who always took the
bottom of the table at Mrs. Shaw’s dinner parties, and asked Edith
to give them some music in the drawing-room. Mr. Grey was
particularly agreeable over this farewell dinner, and the gentlemen
staid downstairs longer than usual. It was very well they did—to
judge from the fragments of conversation which Margaret
overheard.
“I suffered too much myself; not
that I was not extremely happy with the poor dear General, but
still disparity of age is a drawback; one that I was resolved Edith
should not have to encounter. Of course, without any maternal
partiality, I foresaw that the dear child was likely to marry
early; indeed, I had often said that I was sure she would be
married before she was nineteen. I had quite prophetic feeling when
Captain Lennox”—and here the voice dropped into a whisper, but
Margaret could easily supply the blank. The course of true love in
Edith’s case had run remarkably smooth. Mrs. Shaw had given way to
the presentiment, as she expressed it; and had rather urged on the
marriage, although it was below the expectations which many of
Edith’s acquaintances had formed for her, a young and pretty
heiress. But Mrs. Shaw said that her only child should marry for
love,—and sighed emphatically, as if love had not been her motive
for marrying the General. Mrs. Shaw enjoyed the romance of the
present engagement rather more than her daughter. Not but that
Edith was very thoroughly and properly in love; still she would
certainly have preferred a good house in Belgravia, to all the
picturesqueness of the life which Captain Lennox described at
Corfu. The very parts which made Margaret glow as she listened,
Edith pretended to shiver and shudder at; partly for the pleasure
she had in being coaxed out of her dislike by her fond lover, and
partly because anything of a gipsy or make-shift life was really
distasteful to her. Yet had any one come with a fine house, and a
fine estate, and a fine title to boot, Edith would still have clung
to Captain Lennox while the temptation lasted; when it was over, it
is possible she might have had little qualms of ill-concealed
regret that Captain Lennox could not have united in his person
everything that was desirable. In this she was but her mother’s
child; who, after deliberately marrying General Shaw with no warmer
feeling than respect for his character and establishment, was
constantly, though quietly, bemoaning her hard lot in being united
to one whom she could not love.
“I have spared no expense in her
trousseau,” were the next words Margaret heard. “She has all the
beautiful Indian shawls and scarfs the General gave to me, but
which I shall never wear again.”
“She is a lucky girl,” replied
another voice, which Margaret knew to be that of Mrs. Gibson, a
lady who was taking a double interest in the conversation, from the
fact of one of her daughters having been married within the last
few weeks. “Helen had set her heart upon an Indian shawl, but
really when I found what an extravagant price was asked, I was
obliged to refuse her. She will be quite envious when she hears of
Edith having Indian shawls. What kind are they? Delhi? with the
lovely little borders?”
Margaret heard her aunt’s voice
again, but this time it was as if she had raised herself up from
her half-recumbent position, and were looking into the more dimly
lighted back drawing-room. “Edith! Edith!” cried she; and then she
sank as if wearied by the exertion. Margaret stepped forward.
“Edith is asleep, Aunt Shaw. Is
it anything I can do?”
All the ladies said “poor child!”
on receiving this distressing intelligence about Edith; and the
minute lap-dog in Mrs. Shaw’s arms began to bark, as if excited by
the burst of pity.
“Hush, Tiny! you naughty little
girl! you will waken your mistress. It was only to ask Edith if she
would tell Newton to bring down her shawls; perhaps you would go,
Margaret dear?”
Margaret went up into the old
nursery at the very top of the house, where Newton was busy getting
up some laces which were required for the wedding. While Newton
went (not without a muttered grumbling) to undo the shawls, which
had already been exhibited four or five times that day, Margaret
looked round upon the nursery; the first room in that house with
which she had become familiar nine years ago, when she was brought,
all untamed from the forest, to share the home, the play, and the
lessons of her cousin Edith. She remembered the dark, dim look of
the London nursery, presided over by an austere and ceremonious
nurse, who was terribly particular about clean hands and torn
frocks. She recollected the first tea up there—separate from her
father and aunt, who were dining somewhere down below, an infinite
depth of stairs; for unless she were up in the sky (the child
thought), they must be deep down in the bowels of the earth. At
home—before she came to live in Harley Street—her mother’s
dressing-room had been her nursery; and as they kept early hours in
the country parsonage, Margaret had always had her meals with her
father and mother. Oh! well did the tall stately girl of eighteen
remember the tears shed with such wild passion of grief by the
little girl of nine, as she hid her face under the bed-clothes in
that first night; and how she was bidden not to cry by the nurse,
because it would disturb Miss Edith; and how she had cried as
bitterly, but more quietly, till her newly-seen, grand, pretty aunt
had come softly upstairs with Mr. Hale to show him his little
sleeping daughter. Then the little Margaret had hushed her sobs,
and tried to lie quiet as if asleep, for fear of making her father
unhappy by her grief, which she dared not express before her aunt,
and which she rather thought it was wrong to feel at all after the
long hoping, and planning, and contriving they had gone through at
home, before her wardrobe could be arranged to suit her grander
circumstances, and before papa could leave his parish to come up to
London, even for a few days.
Now she had got to love the old
nursery, though it was but a dismantled place; and she looked all
round with a kind of cat-like regret, at the idea of leaving it for
ever in three days.
“Ah Newton!” said she, “I think
we shall all be sorry to leave this dear old room.”
“Indeed, miss, I shan’t for one.
My eyes are not so good as they were, and the light here is so bad
that I can’t see to mend laces except just at the window, where
there’s always a shocking draught—enough to give one one’s death of
cold.”
“Well, I dare say you will have
both good light and plenty of warmth at Naples. You must keep as
much of your darning as you can till then. Thank you, Newton, I can
take them down—you’re busy.”
So Margaret went down laden with
shawls, and snuffing up their spicy Eastern smell. Her aunt asked
her to stand as a sort of lay figure on which to display them, as
Edith was still asleep. No one thought about it; but Margaret’s
tall, finely made figure, in the black silk dress which she was
wearing as mourning for some distant relative of her father’s, set
off the long beautiful folds of the gorgeous shawls that would have
half-smothered Edith. Margaret stood right under the chandelier,
quite silent and passive, while her aunt adjusted the draperies.
Occasionally, as she was turned round, she caught a glimpse of
herself in the mirror over the chimney-piece, and smiled at her own
appearance there—the familiar features in the usual garb of a
princess. She touched the shawls gently as they hung around her,
and took a pleasure in their soft feel and their brilliant colours,
and rather liked to be dressed in such splendour—enjoying it much
as a child would do, with a quiet pleased smile on her lips. Just
then the door opened, and Mr. Henry Lennox was suddenly announced.
Some of the ladies started back, as if half-ashamed of their
feminine interest in dress. Mrs. Shaw held out her hand to the
new-comer; Margaret stood perfectly still, thinking she might be
yet wanted as a sort of block for the shawls; but looking at Mr.
Lennox with a bright, amused face, as if sure of his sympathy in
her sense of the ludicrousness at being thus surprised.
Her aunt was so much absorbed in
asking Mr. Henry Lennox—who had not been able to come to dinner—all
sorts of questions about his brother the bridegroom, his sister the
bridesmaid (coming with the Captain from Scotland for the
occasion), and various other members of the Lennox family, that
Margaret saw she was no more wanted as shawl-bearer, and devoted
herself to the amusement of the other visitors, whom her aunt had
for the moment forgotten. Almost immediately, Edith came in from
the back drawing-room, winking and blinking her eyes at the
stronger light, shaking back her slightly-ruffled curls, and
altogether looking like the Sleeping Beauty just startled from her
dreams. Even in her slumber she had instinctively felt that a
Lennox was worth rousing herself for; and she had a multitude of
questions to ask about dear Janet, the future, unseen
sister-in-law, for whom she professed so much affection, that if
Margaret had not been very proud she might have almost felt jealous
of the mushroom rival. As Margaret sank rather more into the
background on her aunt’s joining the conversation, she saw Henry
Lennox directing his look towards a vacant seat near her; and she
knew perfectly well that as soon as Edith released him from her
questioning, he would take possession of that chair. She had not
been quite sure, from her aunt’s rather confused account of his
engagements, whether he would come that night; it was almost a
surprise to see him; and now she was sure of a pleasant evening. He
liked and disliked pretty nearly the same things that she did.
Margaret’s face was lightened up into an honest, open brightness.
By-and-by he came. She received him with a smile which had not a
tinge of shyness or self-consciousness in it.
“Well, I suppose you are all in
the depth of business—ladies’ business, I mean. Very different to
my business, which is the real true law business. Playing with
shawls is very different work to drawing up settlements.”
“Ah, I knew how you would be
amused to find us all so occupied in admiring finery. But really
Indian shawls are very perfect things of their kind.”
“I have no doubt they are. Their
prices are very perfect, too. Nothing wanting.”
The gentlemen came dropping in
one by one, and the buzz and noise deepened in tone.
“This is your last dinner-party,
is it not? There are no more before Thursday?”
“No. I think after this evening
we shall feel at rest, which I am sure I have not done for many
weeks; at least, that kind of rest when the hands have nothing more
to do, and all the arrangements are complete for an event which
must occupy one’s head and heart. I shall be glad to have time to
think, and I am sure Edith will.”
“I am not so sure about her, but
I can fancy that you will. Whenever I have seen you lately, you
have been carried away by a whirlwind of some other person’s
making.”
“Yes,” said Margaret, rather
sadly, remembering the never-ending commotion about trifles that
had been going on for more than a month past: “I wonder if a
marriage must always be preceded by what you call a whirlwind, or
whether in some cases there might not rather be a calm and peaceful
time just before it.”
“Cinderella’s godmother ordering
the trousseau, the wedding-breakfast, writing the notes of
invitation, for instance,” said Mr. Lennox, laughing.
“But are all these quite
necessary troubles?” asked Margaret, looking up straight at him for
an answer. A sense of indescribable weariness of all the
arrangements for a pretty effect, in which Edith had been busied as
supreme authority for the last six weeks, oppressed her just now;
and she really wanted some one to help her to a few pleasant, quiet
ideas connected with a marriage.
“Oh, of course,” he replied with
a change to gravity in his tone. “There are forms and ceremonies to
be gone through, not so much to satisfy oneself, as to stop the
world’s mouth, without which stoppage there would be very little
satisfaction in life. But how would you have a wedding
arranged?”
“Oh, I have never thought much
about it; only I should like it to be a very fine summer morning;
and I should like to walk to church through the shade of trees; and
not to have so many bridesmaids, and to have no wedding-breakfast.
I dare say I am resolving against the very things that have given
me the most trouble just now.”
“No, I don’t think you are. The
idea of stately simplicity accords well with your character.”
Margaret did not quite like this
speech; she winced away from it more, from remembering former
occasions on which he had tried to lead her into a discussion (in
which he took the complimentary part) about her own character and
ways of going on. She cut his speech rather short by saying:
“It is natural for me to think of
Helstone church, and the walk to it, rather than of driving up to a
London church in the middle of a paved street.”
“Tell me about Helstone. You have
never described it to me. I should like to have some idea of the
place you will be living in, when ninety-six Harley Street will be
looking dingy and dirty, and dull, and shut up. Is Helstone a
village, or a town, in the first place?”
“Oh, only a hamlet; I don’t think
I could call it a village at all. There is the church and a few
houses near it on the green—cottages, rather—with roses growing all
over them.”
“And flowering all the year
round, especially at Christmas—make your picture complete,” said
he.
“No,” replied Margaret, somewhat
annoyed, “I am not making a picture. I am trying to describe
Helstone as it really is. You should not have said that.”
“I am penitent,” he answered.
“Only it really sounded like a village in a tale rather than in
real life.”
“And so it is,” replied Margaret,
eagerly. “All the other places in England that I have seen seem so
hard and prosaic-looking, after the New Forest. Helstone is like a
village in a poem—in one of Tennyson’s poems. But I won’t try and
describe it any more. You would only laugh at me if I told you what
I think of it—what it really is.”
“Indeed, I would not. But I see
you are going to be very resolved. Well, then, tell me that which I
should like still better to know: what the parsonage is
like.”
“Oh, I can’t describe my home. It
is home, and I can’t put its charm into words.”
“I submit. You are rather severe
to-night, Margaret.”
“How?” said she, turning her
large soft eyes round full upon him. “I did not know I was.”
“Why, because I made an unlucky
remark, you will neither tell me what Helstone is like, nor will
you say anything about your home, though I have told you how much I
want to hear about both, the latter especially.”
“But indeed I cannot tell you
about my own home. I don’t quite think it is a thing to be talked
about, unless you knew it.”
“Well, then”—pausing for a
moment—“tell me what you do there. Here you read, or have lessons,
or otherwise improve your mind, till the middle of the day; take a
walk before lunch, go a drive with your aunt after, and have some
kind of engagement in the evening. There, now fill up your day at
Helstone. Shall you ride, drive, or walk?”
“Walk, decidedly. We have no
horse, not even for papa. He walks to the very extremity of his
parish. The walks are so beautiful, it would be a shame to
drive—almost a shame to ride.”
“Shall you garden much? That, I
believe, is a proper employment for young ladies in the
country.”
“I don’t know. I am afraid I
shan’t like such hard work.”
“Archery parties—picnics—race
balls—hunt balls?”
“Oh no!” said she, laughing.
“Papa’s living is very small; and even if we were near such things,
I doubt if I should go to them.”
“I see, you won’t tell me
anything. You will only tell me that you are not going to do this
and that. Before the vacation ends, I think I shall pay you a call,
and see what you really do employ yourself in.”
“I hope you will. Then you will
see for yourself how beautiful Helstone is. Now I must go. Edith is
sitting down to play, and I just know enough of music to turn over
the leaves for her; and, besides, Aunt Shaw won’t like us to
talk.”
Edith played brilliantly. In the
middle of the piece the door half-opened, and Edith saw Captain
Lennox hesitating whether to come in. She threw down her music, and
rushed out of the room, leaving Margaret standing confused and
blushing to explain to the astonished guests what vision had shown
itself to cause Edith’s sudden flight. Captain Lennox had come
earlier than was expected; or was it really so late? They looked at
their watches, were duly shocked, and took their leave.
Then Edith came back, glowing
with pleasure, half-shyly, half-proudly leading in her tall
handsome Captain. His brother shook hands with him, and Mrs. Shaw
welcomed him in her gentle kindly way, which had always something
plaintive in it, arising from the long habit of considering herself
a victim to an uncongenial marriage. Now that, the General being
gone, she had every good of life, with as few drawbacks as
possible, she had been rather perplexed to find an anxiety, if not
a sorrow. She had, however, of late settled upon her own health as
a source of apprehension; she had a nervous little cough whenever
she thought about it; and some complaisant doctor ordered her just
what she desired—a winter in Italy. Mrs. Shaw had as strong wishes
as most people, but she never liked to do anything from the open
and acknowledged motive of her own good will and pleasure; she
preferred being compelled to gratify herself by some other person’s
command or desire. She really did persuade herself that she was
submitting to some hard external necessity; and thus she was able
to moan and complain in her soft manner, all the time she was in
reality doing just what she liked.
It was in this way she began to
speak of her own journey to Captain Lennox, who assented, as in
duty bound, to all his future mother-in-law said, while his eyes
sought Edith, who was busying herself in re-arranging the
tea-table, and ordering up all sorts of good things in spite of his
assurances that he had dined within the last two hours.
Mr. Henry Lennox stood leaning
against the chimney-piece, amused with the family scene. He was
close by his handsome brother; he was the plain one in a singularly
good-looking family; but his face was intelligent, keen, and
mobile; and now and then Margaret wondered what it was that he
could be thinking about, while he kept silence, but was evidently
observing, with an interest that was slightly sarcastic, all that
Edith and she were doing. The sarcastic feeling was called out by
Mrs. Shaw’s conversation with his brother; it was separate from the
interest which was excited by what he saw. He thought it a pretty
sight to see the two cousins so busy in their little arrangements
about the table. Edith chose to do most herself. She was in a
humour to enjoy showing her lover how well she could behave as a
soldier’s wife. She found out that the water in the urn was cold,
and ordered up the great kitchen tea-kettle; the only consequence
of which was that when she met it at the door, and tried to carry
it in, it was too heavy for her, and she came in pouting, with a
black mark on her muslin gown, and a little round white hand
indented by the handle, which she took to show to Captain Lennox,
just like a hurt child, and, of course, the remedy was the same in
both cases. Margaret’s quickly-adjusted spirit-lamp was the most
efficacious contrivance, though not so like the gypsy-encampment
which Edith, in some of her moods, chose to consider the nearest
resemblance to a barrack-life.
After this evening all was bustle
till the wedding was over.