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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51779 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51779)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Sentimental Garden, by
-Agnes Sweetman Castle and Egerton Castle
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Our Sentimental Garden
-
-Author: Agnes Sweetman Castle
- Egerton Castle
-
-Illustrator: Charles Robinson
-
-Release Date: April 17, 2016 [EBook #51779]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR SENTIMENTAL GARDEN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Clarity, ellinora and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes
-
- Obvious spelling and punctuation errors corrected. On page 296, “raste”
- could be meant to be “haste” or “taste” - it has been left as in the
- original. Inconsistencies in hyphenation in the original have been
- retained.
-
- The original text used ‹ › as parenthesis instead of ( ), this style
- has been retained.
-
- One of the color illustrations is referred to as “THE MOOR” in the List
- of Illustrations and as “THE MOORS” in the original caption. The
- caption has been changed to “THE MOOR” for consistency.
-
- Page headers from right hand pages have been retained as sidenotes and
- placed by relevant text.
-
- There were two chapters named XXXII in the original. The second XXXII
- has been renumbered XXXIII in this text, and subsequent chapters also
- renumbered.
-
- Italics have been represented as underscores surrounding the _italic
- text_.
-
- Small capitals in the original text have been converted to ALL CAPS in
- the text.
-
- Descriptions of illustrations have been added to the text.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration:
-
- OUR
- SENTIMENTAL
- GARDEN
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: THE HEMICYCLE]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: View of Garden is background behind text]
-
- OUR SENTIMENTAL
- GARDEN
-
- BY AGNES AND
- EGERTON
- CASTLE
-
- _Illustrated by
- Charles Robinson_
-
- PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT CO
- LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN
- MCMXIV
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- _Printed in England_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- _To our Kind Neighbours, of Rogate_,
-
- SIR HUGH & LADY WYNDHAM
-
- _who viewed the “Villino” garden,
- even from the beginning, with indulgent
- eyes; and, with friendliest tact,
- persisted in descrying possibilities of
- grace in the wildest tangle, this
- chronicle is affectionately inscribed
- in pleasant remembrance
- of too rare visits._
-
- _September
- 1914_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: flowering plant]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- Villino Loki
-
-
- Over the hills and far away,
- A place of flowers crowns a rise;
- And there our year, from May to May,
- Comes with a breath of Paradise;
- There the small helpless soul that lies
- So sweetly, innocently gay,
- In little furry things at play,
- With perfect trust can meet our eyes;
- Over the hills and far away,
- Over the hills.
-
- Over the hills and far away,
- In every rose a dream we prize,
- While thousand tender memories
- Flutter about the lilac-spray;
- To-day, to-morrow, yesterday—
- Each unto each make glad replies;
- Over the hills and far away,
- Over the hills.
-
- ELINOR SWEETMAN
-
-_Never was trifling chronicle begun so light-heartedly as this chatty,
-idly reminiscent book of ours—and now it is under the great shadow of
-war, of death and suffering, that we see it pass into its final shape!_
-
-_The “little paradise on the hill,” with all its innocent pleasures, its
-everyday joys and cares; with the antics of the “little furry things at
-play,” the sayings and doings of the “famiglia”; the roses, the bulbs
-and seedlings; our alluring garden plans, our small despairs and
-unexpected blisses—our earthly paradise, as we have said, seems like an
-unreal place. We wander through it with spirit ill at ease; oppressed,
-as by a curse, through no fault of ours. The sight of an Autumn
-Catalogue (hitherto so tempting, so full of promised joys) evokes only a
-sigh. The offer, from the familiar Dutchman, of bulbs which “it will
-help Belgium if we buy,” turns the heart sick. We know we must not buy
-bulbs, this year, because we shall have to buy bread—bread for those who
-will surely lack it—and yet, if we do not buy, others in their turn must
-needs go wanting. And here is but the merest drop in the monstrous tide
-of evils wantonly let loose upon humanity by the self-styled Attila!
-There are times when, looking out upon our place of peace, we feel as
-though, surely, we must all be lost in some fantastic nightmare. It is a
-September full of golden sunshine; as this night falls, a benign, placid
-moon rises over the silent moors into a sky the colour of spun-glass.
-The breeze choirs softly through the boughs of scented Larch and Birch.
-All is beauty, harmony—while in those fields yonder, south of the sea,
-the Huns.... Pray God, by the time the Spring begins to stir shyly once
-more in our copses; what time the Crocus pushes forth its little tender
-flame, and the Snowdrop (with us fugitive and reluctant) bends its
-timorous head under our hill-top winds, we may indeed look back upon
-these days as upon some dreadful dream!_
-
-_Meanwhile—even as the Villino itself is now to become a home of
-convalescence for some of our wounded, still unknown, but to be welcomed
-soon; even as the Cottage is to be a refuge for women and babes fled
-from burning Belgian hamlets—the following pages, breathing content and
-all the harmless ways of life, may perchance help to beguile thoughts
-surfeited with tales and pictures of mortal strife. We hope that, as a
-sprig of Lavender, or a Cowslip, by his pillow might for a moment
-relieve the blood-tinted vision of a stricken soldier, so, perhaps, some
-unquiet heart labouring under the strain of long-drawn suspense, will
-find a passing relaxation, a forgotten smile, in the company of Loki and
-his companions._
-
- _Sept. 1914_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: landscape with trees]
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- IN COLOUR
-
- THE HEMICYCLE _Frontispiece_
- THE DUTCH GARDEN _To face page_ 16
- THE BEECH ” ” 142
- SUMMER ” ” 150
- THE MOOR ” ” 208
- AUTUMN ” ” 234
- THE HOLLY TREE ” ” 272
- WINTER ” ” 292
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: small landscape]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- OUR SENTIMENTAL
- GARDEN
-
-
-
-
-I
-
-
-It is easier to begin with our beasts.—First, they are much the most
-important, and secondly, there are only six of them. Our bulbs lie in
-their thousands with just a green nose showing here and there now in
-January and are nameless things: only collectively dear, if
-extraordinarily so.
-
-It will instantly be perceived what kind of gardeners we are, and what
-kind of garden we keep. We have scarcely a single plant of
-“individuality.” We do not spend ten guineas on a jonquil bulb, nor
-fifteen on a peony. To our mind no flower can be common: therefore we
-lavish our resources on quantity. I was going to say: not quality, but
-that is where, in our opinion, the modern kind of garden-maker goes
-wrong. What is in a name? Where flowers are concerned, nothing! But how
-much, what treasures of joy and colour, of shade and exquisite texture,
-of general blessedness in fact, lurk in the beloved crowd of the
-nameless things, that come to us designated only thus: “Best mixed
-Darwin Tulips”; “Blue bedding Hyacinths”; “Single Jonquils, best mixed,”
-and so on! We once descended so far as to order “a hundred mixed
-Delphiniums at 10s.,” and when, last June, we looked down on a certain
-bed in the Reserve Garden from the seat under The Beech Tree ‹which
-commands that enthralling spot› and saw the blue battalion glowing with
-enamel colours draw up against the moor beyond, we felt not at all
-ashamed of ourselves—yea, we felt conceitedly pleased.
-
-[Illustration: woman looking out at garden]
-
- * * * * *
-
-But our beasts are individual indeed; and, as it was said, there are
-only six of them.
-
-[Sidenote: CONCERNING THE PEKINESE]
-
-The first in order of importance is the Pekinese, who, purchased at a
-moment when we were much under the enchantment of the “Ring,” we
-ineptly—yet, from the ethnological standpoint, not altogether
-inappropriately—called Loki: his coat is fiery red, and he is an adept
-at deceit. When we want to impress strangers we hastily explain that he
-is Mo-Loki, son of the great Mo-Choki, the celebrated champion. Loki
-‹who frequently assures us that he was a Lion, in Pekin› was born on the
-roof of the Imperial Palace in High Street, Kensington. His appearance
-and behaviour are such as bear testimony to his princely lineage. We let
-him run a great deal when he was a puppy, with the result that his legs
-are a little longer than is usual with members of the Imperial Dynasty,
-but “Grandpa”—Stop! It is as well to explain from the outset that, since
-the advent of Loki in the family, Grandpa is the name that has devolved,
-automatically, upon the Master of the House: the infant Loki’s mistress
-having assumed, from the very necessity of things, the post and
-responsibility of mother ‹in Pekinese ma-ma›, it must follow as the
-night the day that her father “illico” became Grandpa.—To resume: though
-his legs are a trifle longer than is usual, the Master of the House says
-he is much more beautiful by reason of this distinction. And we all
-agree with him.
-
-[Illustration: dog resting]
-
-Loki will not believe that the Manchu masters have fallen in China ‹of
-course it is not from us that he has heard these distressing rumours›,
-so he still demands as his right the best silk eiderdowns to lie upon,
-satin for his cushions, grilled kidney for his breakfast, freshly poured
-water in his bowl every time he wants to drink; and expects immediate
-attention at lunch and dinner-time, play-time, “bye-bye” time, and all
-the other times when he thinks he would like his chest rubbed. He sits
-up and waves his paws with imperious gesture; or else rolls over on his
-back and puts them together in an attitude of prayer. He had not at
-first much oriental calm about him. Indeed, when he first came to us his
-one desire was to play with every living thing he saw, from a cow to a
-chicken; but the cow misunderstood and ran at him, and the chicken
-misunderstood and ran away. The poor puppy was perplexed and wounded. He
-always believed every new Teddy bear toy to be alive at first, and would
-receive it in a rapture of tail-wagging and nuzzling kisses, until what
-time, it dawning upon him that Teddy was a senseless fraud, he set
-himself to shake and worry it like a little fury. Now he is older and
-wiser. He pretends not to see cows, and condemns chickens; he will growl
-at a strange dog, and bite and shake a new toy the very first day. Thus,
-alas, do years make a cynic of the young idealist!
-
-[Sidenote: LOKI’S OWN ANIMALS]
-
-He only plays with his own animals. These are: Susan, the Butler’s dog,
-and Arabella, the Lavroch setter, a long, lovely, lithe, foolish
-creature, whose surname is Stewart, having come to Villino Loki out of
-far Scotland from a distinguished member of that Royal clan. Arabella,
-who is ten times the size of Loki, turns him over and over, tramples on
-him, nibbles and licks him till he is unspeakable. He will leap at her
-nose, hang on to one of her long flapping ears, race up and down the
-slopes and round and round the green terraces, till they both collapse,
-and their tongues hang out of their laughing mouths, seeming to flicker
-with their panting breath, and become as long as the tongues of dragons
-on old manuscripts.
-
-[Illustration: dogs playing outdoors]
-
-A matter to be noticed is that they never play in their walks with us
-across the moors—apparently that is against dog etiquette—but they will
-lie in wait for each other at the garden gate on the way home, and the
-fun and the pouncing and growling jocosities begin the instant they are
-inside.
-
-Susan doesn’t play with the other animals, though she exercises an
-irresistible fascination upon every dog that comes within a mile of her.
-She has a kind of Jane Eyre charm, we suppose, for it is not at first
-visible to the naked eye. She always does remind us of a small elderly
-German governess, for she is squat, undemonstrative, and eminently—oh,
-eminently!—respectable. She is a fox-terrier. She has, however, one
-terrible weakness. Her only joy is to have stones thrown for her. She is
-not, therefore, an agreeable person to take out for a walk, for she will
-get right under your feet, dig up a stone, point at it, and bark,
-“Throw, throw!” with a shrill persistence that goes through your head.
-And if you are weak-minded enough to yield, then indeed you are undone.
-You will be kept throwing till you wish her in the Dog Star. She will
-scratch up stones till her paws are raw. This we think a great defect,
-but Loki sees no flaw in her.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: CELLARERS YOUNG, CELLARERS OLD]
-
-When Susan’s Butler first came to us, we had suffered acutely from
-butlers young and butlers old, butlers bashful and butlers bold—all of
-whom drank steadily. One nearly murdered his Buttons. Another, engaged
-by correspondence, vouched for by the agency, announcing his years as
-forty-five, arrived huge, decrepit, asthmatic; almost, if not quite,
-qualified for an old-age pension. The eight o’clock dinner he found it
-impossible to serve before nine; and then that ceremony became a perfect
-torture of dazed crawling, enlivened by stertorous breathing, for which
-asthma and chronic alcoholism disputed responsibility. When the Master
-of the House, who is very tender-hearted, intimated that he thought
-that, for the good of the newcomer’s health, they had better part with
-the utmost celerity, the veteran assented resignedly with the husky gasp
-peculiar to him.
-
-[Illustration: man with serving tray]
-
-“You know,” said the Master of the House, mildly, “you are not quite
-what you represented yourself to be. You said you were forty-five!”
-
-“I think,” wheezed the Ancient Cellarer; “I think I said forty-seven,
-sir.”
-
-“Oh, forty-seven!” The Master of the House was a little satiric. “Even
-if you had said forty-seven, you are a great, great deal more than
-that!”
-
-“Sir,” said the delinquent, with a beery twinkle, “no butler can ever be
-more than forty-seven.”
-
-This, we understand, is a maxim of life in the profession.
-
-A third—he was young and beautiful—had a fondness for a brew called
-gin-and-ginger, which had so cheering and immediate effect upon him
-that, having left the drawing-room after tea the very pink and
-perfection of propriety, he would announce dinner in an advanced
-condition of jocular elevation, and when the plates slid out of his
-hands he would survey them with a waggish smile, as one who would say:
-“Bless their little hearts, see how playful they are!” We became anxious
-to secure a servant who would have more than a few streaks of sobriety,
-and when Susan’s owner came, we felt we had secured that pearl. He came
-in a great hurry ‹without Susan› because of the equally hurried
-departure of the beautiful hilarious one. After a week or so, we asked
-him if he would consider us as a permanency. He said he would have to
-consider us a little longer. After another ten days he informed us of
-Susan’s existence, and announced his intention of going to fetch her. We
-breathed again.
-
-[Sidenote: IN THE MATTER OF O’REILLY]
-
-[Illustration: dog looking away]
-
-[Illustration: dog sitting in front of plant]
-
-Juvenal—that is his name—is very fond of animals. A little too fond, we
-thought, when he invited a military friend’s dog to stay, during the
-owner’s absence at manœuvres. This animal, by name O’Reilly, arrived in
-dilapidated, devil-may-care, barrack-yard condition, which was a great
-shock to our Manchu prince. He also had pink bald elbows and knees. His
-hind legs were longer than his front ones, which gave him an
-ourang-outang gait. As became his Milesian name, he fought every one he
-met on his walks. Why he did not fight Loki, we do not know, for Loki
-loathed him and, we believe, suffered acutely in his poor little Chinese
-soul all during his stay. Yet unwelcome as he was, scald, ungainly,
-tiresome, there was something pathetic about the creature. He had a way
-of looking at one, deprecating and pleading at once; and he would
-display such rapture at the smallest token of toleration, that, despite
-our satisfaction at his departure, we had an ache in our hearts too. We
-have a shrewd suspicion that the corporal-major who owned him was a
-rough customer, and that poor O’Reilly’s life was not that happy one
-which every “owned” dog’s ought to be. A dog should not be treated as a
-dog.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As for cats, once they have passed the giddy days of youth, in which
-they are imps, sprites, goblins, pucks, furry, fairy, freakish
-things—anything but mere animals—one cannot help feeling a certain awe
-with regard to them. Despite the many cycles of years that have elapsed
-since their ancestors took habitation with us, they have remained true
-Easterns. From father to son, from mother to daughter they have handed
-down secret stores of occult knowledge which they keep jealously to
-themselves, a sacred inheritance of race. Those eyes that fix you with
-pupil contracted to a slit, and look through and beyond you into
-mysteries undreamt of by you: that lofty detachment, that ineradicable
-independence, that relentless indifference: have we not all felt by
-these signs and tokens how completely the cat puts us outside the sphere
-of his real thoughts and feelings? Priests or priestesses they seem to
-be, of some alien creed, soul satisfying, contemplative, with sudden
-savage rites. Have you ever watched a cat with regard turned inwards,
-meditating? Its body sways, but the spirit bubbles softly as if it were
-seething in content over a mystic fire. It does not want you to join it
-in its rapture, like your dog. It has no desire to admit you into its
-comradeship. It is as self-contained and self-absorbed as the highest
-grade Mahatma.
-
-[Illustration: cat in garden]
-
-[Sidenote: KITTY-WEE THE LOVELY]
-
-Kitty-Wee, the Lovely, is chief of our three cats. She is a Persian lady
-with a wonderful robe of silver grey, faintly blue, and orange eyes
-inherited from that most beautiful, most evil monster, Tittums the
-Bold-and-Bad, her father, who spent his adorable kittenhood and his
-stormy youth under our London roof, until his habit of lying in wait for
-the servants at odd corners and jumping at their elbows, made it
-imperative for us to part with him. He was then adopted by a gentle
-parson’s daughter, in the freedom of whose country dwelling it was hoped
-that he might sow his wild oats and settle down into respectability. But
-alas! the day dawned, when lying on the rector’s cassock in the
-dining-room, he was so incensed at the reverend gentleman’s polite
-request to move, that he chased him round and round the room, ran him
-down in the hall and bit him. The churchman was not an unreasonable
-being and had made many allowances for the frailty of degenerate
-creation; but he drew the line at the violation of his reverend elbows.
-Tittums was once again, with many tears and heart-rendings, passed on.
-This time to a lady who keeps a cattery. We hear that he has become a
-model of every virtue, and that she only wears a fencing mask and boxing
-gloves when she combs him, because on the day when she left them off,
-Tittums, in a fit of absence of mind, bit her through the thumb. Anyone
-who takes a cat paper can hear more of this most distinguished beast,
-under the name of “Saracinesca.”
-
-Kitty-Wee is supposed to have inherited her father’s superlative
-looks—only he was “smoke”—and her mother’s angelic disposition. If
-occasionally a spark of the paternal temper flashes out, the gardener’s
-wife ‹with whom she prefers to dwell› says “Kitty is a bit nervous
-to-day.”
-
-[Sidenote: KITTY-WEE’S MESALLIANCES]
-
-It was after Kitty-Wee’s first _mésalliance_ that she took up her abode
-with the worthy pair in the “little cot,” as Mrs. Adam calls it, at the
-bottom of the garden. Persian princesses, from the time of “A Thousand
-and One Nights” onwards, are proverbially capricious. But what perverse
-freak of youthful fancy induced our delicate silver-pawed highborn
-damsel to fix her young affections upon Mr. Hopkinson was and is, a
-painful mystery.
-
-Mr. Hopkinson, a very hooligan among cats, so degenerate indeed as to
-have lost all his eastern characteristics, and to have assumed a
-positively “Arry-like, bank-’oliday, disreputable, Hampstead-Heath kind
-of vulgarity,” was a lean, mangy creature with a denuded tail. He had a
-black spot over one eye; the other eye was conspicuous by its absence.
-We could hear his raucous voice uplifted in serenade, suggestive of
-accordeons, night after night, and his guttural whisper of “Me
-’Oighness” behind the bushes when we went on our walks. Every effort was
-made to discourage the preposterous suitor. But, alas! Kitty smiled. The
-infatuated Princess escaped the vigilance of her distracted family.
-Perhaps it is best to draw a veil over the consequences of this rash
-alliance. Kitty indeed did her best to obliterate them, refusing to do
-anything but sit heavily on three black and white kittens with ropy
-tails. She only purred again the day the last one died; “Oh! she was
-pleased, Mam,” said the gardener’s wife; “quite took up again, she did.”
-
-[Illustration: animals watching each other]
-
-Kitty-Wee’s next matrimonial venture, though likewise, we grieve to say,
-morganatic, was very much more successful. In fact it is to it that we
-owe—Bunny! The name, the lineage, the very personality of Bunny’s father
-is wrapt in mystery; but judging by the splendour of Bunny’s black fur,
-it is to be conjectured that Kitty-Wee’s choice was of a dark
-complexion, and if not royal, at any rate of noble blood.
-
-Two brave brothers Bunny had, but he is the sole survivor; all the more
-cherished. And really, even if he lacks his mother’s supreme
-distinction, we cannot but feel proud of him. Waggish, gentle, humorous
-creature that he is, he will hang round the neck of Adam, the gardener,
-like a boa, for a whole morning together; or stalk the dogs from tree to
-tree, pounce on them at unexpected moments to deliver a swinging
-friendly slap on Susan’s fat back, or to waltz with Arabella, or to
-inveigle Loki, with odd freakish sidelong gambols, into a mysterious
-game of his own, which, as our little Chinaman has something of the cat
-in him, he seems to understand.
-
-[Illustration: cat in garden]
-
-We are very glad that Adam had Bunny to console him, for Kitty-Wee’s
-offspring has an odd resemblance in size and appearance to Cæsar, the
-late Garden Cat, much beloved, who alas! went the way of all fur ‹with a
-melancholy little assistance from the chemist› shortly before Bunny’s
-appearance in this plane.
-
-“Oh, Miss,” said Mrs. Adam, on the Sunday that followed that Socratic
-tragedy, “last night was the most dreadful night we ever spent! It was
-the first time for thirteen years we hadn’t had a cat in the house! Oh!
-Miss, I thought Daddy would have broken his heart. He just sat with his
-head on his hand, and sighed. Really Miss Marie, I don’t know when we’ve
-felt so bad.”
-
-[Illustration: cat and dog]
-
-It will be seen that Mr. and Mrs. Adam have the right feeling towards
-“little sister cat and little brother dog,” as St. Francis of Assisi
-would have called them. This suits us very well, and oddly enough,
-Villino Loki is a kind of paradise for things of fur and feather. Cat
-and dog live in a strange harmony. To see Loki kiss Bunny, or Bunny
-clasp Arabella round the neck, is as pleasing a sight as you could
-imagine. And if Kitty-Wee occasionally boxes Loki with a kind of
-delicate compactness, it is with her claws in. As for Juvenal, the
-butler, whose pantry is full of singing birds, no sense of etiquette
-will restrain him from public blandishments when Loki is on the scene.
-George, the footman, can be heard addressing him—Loki—in back passages,
-as “My loved one!” And Tom, the old long-haired English cat, rules the
-kitchen.
-
-[Sidenote: THE VICISSITUDES OF TOM]
-
-Tom has reached the patriarchal age of eighteen years, and is cherished
-by the master of the Villino. He has had many vicissitudes. He was stung
-by an adder during our very first summer, years ago, on these moors, and
-lay for a day in a coma with one paw swollen the size of a child’s arm,
-to be saved by doses of brandy and milk. A few years later he was caught
-in a trap. How he got free no one knows, but we found him crawling,
-piteously complaining, with a shattered leg. With the help of the cook,
-who followed the tradition of the establishment and was Tom’s slave, the
-leg was set with strips of firewood, the bone being very successfully
-mended. It so happened that the Master of the House had, about the same
-time, snapped his _tendo-plantaris_ at tennis; and it was a sight to see
-them both when they stumped down the wooden passages—the master
-dot-and-go-one on his crutches, Thomas following in his splints,
-dot-and-go-three.
-
-[Illustration: _Tom_]
-
-The amateur surgery, however, was not completely successful. Though
-Thomas’ bone knit, the poor mangled flesh remained unhealed, and at last
-the cook conveyed her darling in a basket to the most celebrated London
-animal doctor. Thereafter ensued a time of horrible suspense. Telegrams
-went briskly backwards and forwards. Dr. Jewell “doubted if he could
-save the limb.” Tom’s adoring family could not contemplate the tragedy
-therein implied. “Better euthanasia!” we wired. “Will do my best for
-little cat,” the sympathetic Æsculapius of God’s humble creatures
-replied. Hope and devotion triumphed. Tommy returned to us with three
-legs in large fur trousers, the fourth as close as a mouse. The fur
-thereon has never grown to full length again. We fear it will never grow
-now.
-
-Dear old Tom is toothless, and he is getting a little bald on the top of
-his head; but he is a beautiful creature still, and a dandy. His four
-spats are always of an almost startling snowiness; his shirt-front
-ditto. He is not very fond of any of the other animals, and was so
-revolted by Kitty-Wee’s _mésalliance_ that she could not show her face
-in the kitchen without his instantly using as severe language as ever
-John Knox to Queen Mary. “Hussy!” was the mildest of his terms.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: THE DUTCH GARDEN]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: house on hill]
-
-
-
-
-II
-
-
-Where we live, high on the southern moorlands of Surrey, the desolation
-of winter never seems to reach us; unless, indeed, upon certain days of
-streaming rains, or weeping mists that rush rapid and ghost-like up the
-valley, and blot out the world from view. But those days would be dreary
-anywhere and in any season.
-
-Our funny little house, more like an Italian “Villino,” perhaps, than
-anything English, stands high, midway between the rolling shoulders of
-moor and the green-wooded dip of the valley. And the moor has always
-colour in it. There are some sunset days when it seems not so much to
-reflect as to give out rose and purple and carmine. And now in January
-it is a wonderful copper-brown, with the tawny of dying Bracken and the
-yellow of young Gorse. And opposite to us a belt of birchwood is purple
-against solemn green of pine. And the purple and solemn green run right
-down together to the bright verdure of fields and dells; then up again
-to moorland, where the fir trees march up once more against the sky.
-
-There are Larches in these woods, and Oaks, so that the spring tints are
-almost as wonderful as the autumn. When the Furze and Broom are all
-guinea-gold on the moor, the young Bracken begins to creep in green
-patches that are pure joy. Later on the Bell-heather breaks into a deep
-rose which, with the sun on it, holds such a glory of colour that you
-could scarce find its match in an old Cathedral window. And when this
-splendour begins to turn to russet, then comes the tender silvery
-amethyst of the Ling, and spreads a mantle all over those great
-shoulders of wild land that is of the exact hue most beautiful to
-contrast with the full summer woods and the blue of an August sky; a
-combination so matchless for colour-loving eyes that it seems as if
-one’s soul were not big enough to hold the complete impression. And when
-our Delphiniums rear themselves against this background, we feel,
-looking on it all, as if we could sing for the mere rapture of it;
-or—having no voice—roll in the grass like Loki or like Bunny.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: A LITTLE PLACE OF ONE’S OWN]
-
-For a long time we—Loki’s Grandfather and Grandmother—had said to each
-other that we must have a week-end cottage. We were so tired of hiring
-other people’s houses, summer after summer, and of the labour ‹not
-unattended by some pleasurable excitement on Loki’s Grandmother’s part›
-of pulling their furniture about, and hiding away all the family
-portraits and the choicest works of art, to make the alien spaces
-tolerable to one’s own individuality. So tired, too, of the boredom and
-worry of having to restore everything to its pristine ugliness and hang
-up the enlarged photographs and the dreadful oil paintings on the walls
-once more—a tedious task, albeit enlivened on one occasion by the
-thrilling discovery that, having consigned these treasures to an oak
-chest in the hall, most of them had grown fur; and that on another the
-oil painting of your detested landlady, in middle Victorian chignon and
-the hump of the period, has received a scratch on the nose which no
-copious application of linseed oil will disguise. We always detest our
-landlady ... though not as much as we loathe the tenants who may happen
-to hire a house of ours.
-
-[Illustration: street view of house]
-
-At the end of each summer, therefore, we would make elaborate
-calculations to prove what a great economy it would be to have a little
-place of our own. Finally these plans and desires crystallized into
-action. When Loki’s Grandfather returned from a round of inspection to
-the hotel where we were staying in the district we fancied, and told
-Loki’s Grandmother that he had visited a funny little house with a
-terrace upon which he “saw her”—in his own phraseology—she was extremely
-sceptical. And when we drove down the hill to view his discovery, and
-were literally dropped from the side road through a perfunctory gate
-into the steepest little courtyard it is possible to imagine, and she
-beheld green stains on the rough-cast wall of the white small house, her
-scepticism increased to scoffing point. She was blind to the charms of
-the pretty pillared porch. The narrowness of the entrance passage filled
-her with disdain. Though she grudgingly admitted a possibility in the
-drawing-room, it was not until we emerged upon the terrace that her
-preventions vanished.—That rise and fall of moorland in such startling
-proximity, and the way in which the house and its terraces seemed to
-cling to the hillside and be perched in space between the giant curves
-and the dip of the valley beyond, fairly took her breath away. An artist
-friend described the first impression of the view in these words: “It is
-so sudden!” For a long time, even after the queer, fascinating spot had
-become our own, this wonder of “suddenness” always seized us.
-
-It still seems incomprehensible to us that anyone could have desired to
-dispossess himself of so attractive a place—an Italian “Villino” on the
-Surrey Highlands is not to be found every day.
-
-But, after all, it only became a Villino after our ownership. It was
-just a small white house on the hillside before that. Heather and Gorse,
-Bramble and Bracken pressed hard upon the small area of the property
-which was at all cultivated, between densely growing clumps of pine and
-holly.
-
-[Sidenote: THE FIRST TRANSFORMATIONS]
-
-The courtyard is no longer dank: it is widened, levelled, and walled in
-against its high fir-grown strip of bank. It is guarded by bright green
-wooden gates, and three sentinel Cypresses that begin to mark the
-Italian note.
-
-As for the lower reach—the Reserve Garden now—which in former days was a
-dumping-ground for horrors of broken glass, potsherds and tin cans ‹a
-dreary patch of weeds and couch grass withal›, it is unrecognizable.
-Especially this year, when, to the herbaceous border, to the espaliered
-apple-trees, and to the neat little turfed walks, we have added a
-Rose-Garden between screens of rustic woodwork which are to blaze in the
-full luxuriance of the adorable Wichuriana tribe.
-
-Where the jungle waxed thickest, fair paths have been cleared. An avenue
-bordered by a double row of tall slender Pines runs from top to bottom
-of the hill, with a view of our neighbour’s buttercup field on the one
-hand, and of our own Bluebell and May-tree glade on the other. It
-requires a positive effort of imagination to recall that this was a
-literally impenetrable thicket when we first came.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: entrance to house off street]
-
-[Sidenote: A VILLINO ON SURREY HILLS]
-
-Nor is the house less altered. As it was hinted before, a small white
-Surrey house has, by some singular, scarcely intentional process, become
-enchanted into an Italian Villino. Of course, some structural
-alterations were necessary.
-
-[Illustration: house interior with plants]
-
-On entering the red-tiled hall ‹once the pantry!›, at the end of which
-the glass door giving on the terrace frames Verrochio’s little naked
-boy, struggling with his big fish, flanked on each side by Cypresses,
-you might easily fancy yourself at Fiesole or Bello Sguardo, but for the
-unmistakable northern stamp of the moorland beyond. Passing through the
-other glass doors into the inner hall, the first object to meet the eye
-is the big della Robbia over the gracious figure of the Madonna kneeling
-against a blue sky with dear little green clouds upon it. Through the
-open dining-room door you have a vision, all golden orange, of different
-deep shades. The Scotch builder we employed for the construction of the
-two new wings opined that “the scheme was verra’ daring.” Personally,
-every time we go in, it warms the cockles of our hearts. We had the
-golden-hued carpet especially dyed. We chose the tangerine distemper for
-the walls. We had, indeed, considerable difficulty in obtaining the
-higher note for the curtains. Antique chairs, with seats and backs of
-brown leather tooled like old bindings, we brought from Rome; from
-whence also came the yellow marble sideboard table on its gilt-carved
-legs, above which a bronzed cast of Gian di Bologna’s Mercury springs
-out from that orange wall on a flamboyant gilt bracket, with a grace we
-have never seen that adorable conception display anywhere else. We found
-a handsome, but anæmic, oak fitment in this room, filling the whole
-right wall with cupboards, panelled overmantel, and bookshelves. It is
-no longer anæmic, but polished by our industry to a pleasing depth of
-amber gloss.
-
-[Sidenote: THE DORATORE’S ANTIQUES]
-
-[Illustration: house interior with window view]
-
-So Italy walked into the little white Surrey house almost as soon as the
-doors were open to us. But it is in the drawing-room that she has mostly
-established her self. It is so filled with dear Roman things that we can
-think ourselves back again in that haunt of all joy, when we cross its
-threshold. It is full of associations of delightful days, of quaint
-beings. There is the rococo _paravent_, gilt and carved in most delicate
-extravagance, which we bought of the _doratore_ in the Piazza Nicosia.
-That fire-screen—a real Bernini, once the frame of an altar-piece—now
-holds in its strong bold oval a pane of glass where perhaps some wan
-Madonna shewed her seven-pierced heart. The _doratore_ picked up these
-things in old villas and disused churches. His booth was indeed a sight
-to see.—Having recently been on a visit to Rome, Loki’s “great-aunt” was
-naturally charged with many commissions in that quarter. Armed with a
-letter of directions from the Italian scholar of the family, she and a
-Lancashire maid wandered down there one misty afternoon in November, at
-an hour when all the crazy little houses of the ancient Piazza seem to
-fold up and huddle together in the purple Roman dusk.
-
-The _doratore’s_ wares winked through the dimness; and having duly
-knocked their heads against wreaths of dangling frames in his doorway,
-the pilgrims proceeded to steer a perilous path among the heaps of
-gilded _débris_ within.
-
-The _doratore_, made visible only by his paper cap, was seated in a nest
-of angels, tinkering at a fat cherub and whistling gaily. Hearing steps
-he poked his head through the large oval of an empty mirror, and stared
-unconcernedly at the visitors, whose advance was punctuated by
-cataclysms of falling frames, church candlesticks, and other “_oggetti
-religiosi_.”
-
-At the fifth or sixth tumble, he rolled away from his angels with
-unimpaired cheerfulness, and apologized.
-
-“_Scusi, scusi!_” Smilingly he picked up a broken wing and a bit of
-acanthus leaf. “_Scusi!_” again. “Aha! a letter!”
-
-Here the fat laugh merged into a bellow which made the walls ring, and
-brought a dirty little urchin tumbling down a ladder from some loft
-overhead. The urchin diving under a heap of prostrate apostles, produced
-a stick with an iron spike, which he held respectfully under his
-patron’s chin. The doratore stuck a candle on the spike, lit it, and
-with the flame in fearful proximity to his bearded face, proceeded to
-open the letter.
-
-“Aha! from the noble family at Villino Loki!” Here he took off his cap
-with a flourish and did not replace it. “The _signor Inglese_, is he
-well?—_Mi piace._ And the _gentilissima signorina_ who does me the
-honour to write?—_Mi piace, mi piace._ And Mama?—Better?—_Bonissimo!_
-Please the good God to bring her again to Rome. But not this month,”
-waving a warning finger before his nose. “In April. In the _primavera_,
-Rome is as salubrious as she is beautiful. Now what does Mama want?
-Brackets? Angels?—_Ecco._”
-
-He pointed to a pair of fantastic creatures that jutted out like
-gargoyles under the ceiling. “What? Not pretty? _Ma! Scusi!_ they are
-_antichi bellissimi_—they come from a castle in the Abruzzi; there is
-not their match in Rome.” Snapping the candle from the imp, on whose
-locks it was unheededly guttering, he waved it round his own head,
-waking up unexpected companies of saints on the walls and making pools
-of light and darkness among the golden hillocks.
-
-“They are exactly the noble family’s taste,” said the _doratore_,
-replacing his cap with an air of finality. “She said _cinquanta
-lire_—she shall have them for _quaranta_!”
-
-Recognizing that this incident was closed, Loki’s aunt thought she would
-do a deal on her own account, and picking up a little antique frame,
-fell back on the only Italian word she knew:
-
-“_Quanto?_”
-
-The _doratore_ unexpectedly priced the frame at twenty-five lire, and
-cheap at that, and all of a sudden the little shop was filled with
-confusion. The would-be purchaser wished to take away her prize, the
-_doratore_, misunderstanding, vociferated that nothing would be broken
-on the sea-journey; the Lancashire maid struck in with English addresses
-for the other wares; finally, the candle-bearer was sent flying round
-the corner to fetch a friend who, by the grace of God, had the gift of
-tongues.
-
-Breathless, he returned, with a bundle of rags hobbling along on a
-crutch, by his side.
-
-“_Benissimo!_” exclaimed the _doratore_, with a sigh of relief. “This
-gentleman, _signora_, is a friend of all the artists in Rome! He knows
-English, French, German—everything!”
-
-He then performed the ceremonious rites of introduction! “Signor
-Guiseppi Renzo, a person of great worth and learning.—The noble lady
-belonging to the family of my cherished patrons, i Castelli.”
-
-The bundle of rags swept off its battered hat with a flourish,
-disclosing a wall-eye and a three-weeks-old beard, and remarked, in
-Italian, that the weather was beautiful for the time of the year.
-
-“But not so beautiful as in spring,” said the _doratore_ encouragingly.
-Upon which Loki’s aunt bowed too, and smiled and murmured, “Oh! _si_,
-_si_—I mean no.” And then feeling dreadfully uncouth and ill-mannered in
-presence of so much courtesy, picked up her frame again and looked
-helpless. Instantly the interpreter warmed to his office. In fluent if
-curious English, he ascertained her wishes, and then communicated them
-with much gesticulation to the _doratore_, who slapped a fat forehead,
-exclaiming in a contrite manner, “_Va bene, va bene!_” Finally, the imp
-was dispatched on a last errand in search of a little open carriage, and
-having carefully wrapped the frame in a copy of the “_Corriere_”
-produced from his own pocket, the bundle of rags hobbled out into the
-Piazza, where he and the _doratore_ stood bareheaded to wish the ladies
-a safe journey to England, and a speedy return to Rome.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: fancy glass]
-
-[Sidenote: MORE BRIC-A-BRAC]
-
-It is little wonder that the _doratore_ should cherish us. The
-drawing-room of the Villino on the Surrey hill is chiefly furnished out
-of his store. Therefrom come the Venetian chairs, the huge _Goldoni_
-armchair, the two cabinets of rusty gold. The hanging cabinet is full of
-Venetian glass, picked up—of all places—at that roaring cheap emporium,
-Finocchi’s, in the hideous modern corso fitly dedicated to _Vittorio
-Emanuele_. ‹To think these bubbles of ethereal loveliness, these liquid
-curves, these foam-frail phantasies, should have been discovered,
-unshattered, in such a spot!› There from the walls a wistful
-_Giovannino_, with pious, sentimental, guileless head inclined, looks
-down from his golden background, a true bit of early Siennese simplicity
-and faith. He came to us from the talons of a voluble Jew in the _Via
-due Macelli_, from which unclean grasp were likewise rescued those meek
-companions, “St. Bernardino of Siena” and “St. Antoninus,” on the
-opposite wall. St. Bernardino’s face is quite out of drawing, but,
-nevertheless, rarely has any presentment been more impregnated with holy
-benignity. The gentle pair hang just above a statue of Polyhymnia....
-Oh! that “_Manifattura di Signa_,” in the dark purlieus of the Via
-Babuino! It is a blessing that we only discovered it the last week of
-our four months’ stay in Rome, and that our resources were then at a low
-ebb; else, indeed, the exiguous limits of our new country home never
-would have held our purchases. Another “Madonna” between the
-rose-coloured curtains in the narrow window.
-
-Yes, indeed, there are a great many “Madonnas” about the place. There is
-an undeniably papistical atmosphere.—An old gentleman, of developed
-intellectuality, who stumbled in upon us shortly after our
-establishment, could not conceal the horrible impression it made upon
-him. His thoughts would have been easy to read even if the hurry of his
-adieux had not so plainly proclaimed his disgust. Seeing his eyes fixed
-upon the majolica statuette in question, we ‹perhaps with a little
-malice› informed him that it was known as the “_Madonna del Bacio_.” It
-was then he rose, not quite swallowing down his “Faugh!”
-
-[Sidenote: AN OLD-TIME NOTE]
-
-“You had not expected to find such superstition abroad in an enlightened
-age,” we murmured politely. We cling to these old-world symbols—some of
-us by conviction, others for mere love of the beautiful past.—A little
-mistake? The wrong house, say you? How could we have been so stupid as
-not to guess!—Of course, you wanted the bungalow at the other end of the
-village. Yes, Mrs. Ludwigsohn is everything that you can desire to meet.
-Up-to-date cap-a-pie. Socialism, rationalism, suffragism. You can begin
-on the suffrage: she will saw the air with her right hand in a
-convincing platform manner. A delightful, capable woman! She feeds her
-infants scientifically on proteids. And there are Röntgen
-pictures—anatomical, you know—in the hall, that you will find more
-inspiring than della Robbia. Oh, you will get on with her splendidly. We
-know her ... slightly. Indeed, we blush when we think of our one and
-only meeting: it was so inharmonious on our part. She began to argue—and
-instantly had us in a cleft stick: “Soul?” she exclaimed, fiercely
-interrupting an incautious remark. “Soul? there is no such thing. I deny
-it.—Prove,” she cried, “prove I have a soul!”
-
-Poor lady, how could we? No—the Villino is certainly no place for the
-higher critic; for the lady of ’isms. We are not rationalistic in our
-tastes; we love old and simple things; prefer to take much for granted
-in life and enjoy the good peace that is vouchsafed.
-
-[Illustration: decorative oval]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-III
-
-
-[Sidenote: SIX GARDENING VIRTUES]
-
-When we first began to own a garden we could not bring ourselves to wait
-in patience for developments. We expected our beds to bloom as by magic.
-We vehemently ordered pot-plants because no seedlings could be expected
-to “do anything” in June; and the disproportion between our bills and
-the result filled us with dismay. But a garden is at once the most
-delightful and cunning of teachers. How kindly are the virtues it
-inculcates!—Patience, faith, hope, tenderness, gratitude, resignation,
-things in themselves as fragrant and beautiful as the flowers, or like
-the herbs, a little repellent of aspect, but sweet in their bruised
-savour.
-
-[Illustration: garden view - two pages wide]
-
-Now we have even been taught to take pleasure and comfort from the
-vision of the beds in their winter preparation, where with the
-believer’s eye, we anticipate the fulfilment of the spring. In the
-little Dutch Garden under the new wing, the two long beds between the
-clipped Bilberry hedges are full of compact cushions of Forget-me-not.
-Through these the green noses of the china-blue Hyacinths, that are to
-make lakes of colour and scent at the end of March, are beginning to
-push upwards.
-
-The winter has been very mild.—Another garden lesson: too much spoiling
-in infancy is bound to produce forwardness in the young, and the
-inevitable result of withering snubs!
-
-When the Hyacinths have faded, the Forget-me-nots will have spread a
-sheet of tender beauty over the unsightliness. ‹Did we mention that a
-garden teaches charity?› And between this flying scud of blue foam the
-Darwin Tulips will have already reared bold green snake heads which will
-gradually become invaded by tints of mauve, rose, dark purple, until the
-day when their glorious chalices will open, as if cut out of living
-jewels, translucent to the light.
-
-[Sidenote: DUTCH BULBS AND ROSES]
-
-The Dutch Garden is bounded by a clipped yew hedge on two sides, divided
-by a rustic archway where Pink Dorothy rambles in June and onwards.
-Against this hedge there are two long beds lying to the south, filled
-with crimson and red roses: in spring edged with Darwins and Arabis,
-before Mme. Normand Levavasseur spreads her disappointing maroon
-clusters. On the north side the brick wall of the terrace, divided in
-its turn opposite the archway by brick steps, is flanked by Darwin tulip
-beds. The beds under the side of the house to the west have also Darwins
-with a carpet of Forget-me-nots and a fringe of Arabis. The space that
-runs back to the outer wall under the study windows is planted with
-Gloire de Versailles, Pyrus Japonica and the ubiquitous Tulips and
-Forget-me-nots.
-
-There is one thing we have succeeded in impressing on the patient and
-kindly Adam, and that is that we “cannot bear bald spaces.” Our bulbs
-lie as close as they can without injuring each other. Our Wallflowers,
-even now, in January, jostle!
-
-In the bed that runs right along the bricked upper terrace, there lie,
-awaiting the call of the different months ‹please add docility and
-punctuality to the moral list›, behind a deep border of Mrs. Sinkins, a
-double row of Crocuses, a row of Thomas More Tulips, a little hedge of
-white and red “Polyantha” Roses, and groups of “Candidum” Lilies. At
-intervals, on the top of the terrace wall, are large Compton vases which
-will foam with Forget-me-Nots, and thrust clusters of Hyacinths up
-against the Moor by and by. Just now they carry little yellow torches of
-Retinospora Aurea, which Adam said, when he first planted them, looked,
-he thought, “very lonely,” but which, each rising from a field of green
-moss, stand out, we think, with a classic dignity against the sombre
-magnificence of those rolling winter hills.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-IV
-
-
-[Illustration: dog looking at grave]
-
-And did we say that one could ever in any circumstances wish Susan into
-the dogstar? Alas! poor dear little Susan, she reposes in a raw,
-ostentatious grave in the Oak Tree Glade with six bulb spikes at the top
-of the mound. We should like to put a granite stone there with the
-words: “Here lies Susan, a good dog.” All that was possible was done to
-save her, and she was the most pathetic, gentle, patient creature; at
-the very end, seeking blindly with one small paw for her master.
-
-[Sidenote: FORBIDDEN TERRITORY]
-
-Poor Juvenal was so disconsolate that we did not know what to do. We
-hit, however, on the happy thought of purchasing a small white Highland
-Terrier puppy from a litter on sale in the neighbourhood. Bettine ‹thus
-she has been christened with a fine disregard of local colour› arrived,
-a dirty, cringing, abject little wretch; but the atmosphere of Villino
-Loki has wrought so great a change that she is now a perfect imp of
-mischief and general cheekiness. The Master of the House says she is
-like a Paris gamin, and that Gavroche is the only name that befits her.
-The days of cringing are certainly over. Her long ears cocked, her wide
-mouth derisively open, she defies authority, with attitudes and
-expressions that can only be transcribed by such remarks as “Pip, Pip,”
-or the gesture which the French know as _Pied-de-nez_.
-
-[Illustration: dog walking down stairs]
-
-The other dogs at first protested fiercely against this substitute for
-their beloved Susan even Arabella curling a ferocious lip, and striking
-out with her fringed paw. But now they have accepted the new comrade
-with all the generosity of their fine characters. Loki himself makes no
-objection, except when she ventures upon territory which he regards as
-peculiarly his own; such as the grand-maternal bedroom.
-
-The month that has taken away the harmless humble life of Juvenal’s
-fox-terrier, has also brought the news of England’s loss in one of her
-most gallant sons. He was a friend of the household, and Loki, I am
-sure, does not forget—for a long memory is one of the Pekinese
-characteristics—how the South Pole hero played hide-and-seek with him in
-his puppyhood for a whole hour, one summer’s day, like a very child
-himself. The family of Villino Loki have memories, too, of that
-friendship which they valued so highly; and they will always carry the
-vivid picture of the strong brown face, with the blue eyes that were at
-once as guileless as a child’s and full of a far-away vision, as if they
-never ceased to contemplate their high and distant goal. The world is
-crowded with bumptious people who do nothing at all that is useful, if
-they do not do harm. Here was a man who had already accomplished mighty
-achievement and was set on mightier still, and there never was anyone so
-modest, so anxious to push others forward and keep himself in the
-background. He was asked by one of us to write a line in an autograph
-book, and he set down characteristically a tribute to another:
-
- “The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried,
- Grapple them to thy soul with hooks of steel....”
-
-We laughed ‹after that futile fashion that becomes a kind of habit
-nowadays› and said, “We always think that sounds so uncomfortable!”
-
-He raised those blue eyes, half humorously, half deprecatingly. “You
-make me feel ashamed of being incorrigibly romantic.”
-
-It was we who felt ashamed.
-
-“We are sure,” we answered, “you have a good friend somewhere.”
-
-“Yes,” he said, “the best ever a man had.”
-
-We are glad to think that friendship was with him all through and at the
-end. In one of the last letters ever received from the doomed Antarctic
-Expedition the tribute is paid again: “No words of mine,” writes he,
-“can describe what he is.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: bird on branch]
-
-[Sidenote: TOM’S GRAND MANNERS]
-
-The birds have eaten every single bud on our baby almond trees—the first
-year that they have had any flower buds at all. Ungrateful little
-wretches! the Master of the Villino sees personally to the replenishing
-of the numerous bird-baths and drinking-pans; and Juvenal provides them
-with cocoa-nuts filled with lard and baskets full of crumbs—aided by
-Gold-Else, the cook, who loves little creatures in fur and feather as
-much as the rest of the household. Tom, the old cat, is very happy under
-this lady’s kind rule, and, to show his appreciation, accompanies her in
-stately fashion every night up the kitchen stairs to her bedroom door.
-The act of courtesy accomplished, she as solemnly reconducts him
-downstairs again to spread his couch for him—a sheet of brown paper, by
-his request.
-
-The Hyacinths are breaking out of their green hoods, shaking blue bells;
-but our Scillas seem to be going to disappoint us. This sandy soil on
-our Surrey heights is not at all appreciated by bulbs. Snowdrops will
-have nothing to say to us, unless in a prepared bed. Narcissus Poeticus
-disappeared altogether after one year’s blooming. We are trying to
-naturalize Bluebells in a glade which we have cleared—and in which this
-year has been planted an avenue of pink May trees, to end at the bottom
-of the dell in a group of white Azaleas—but we are not at all sure that
-we shall succeed. However, we have our compensations: Azaleas thrive,
-and so do Rhododendrons. We are year by year adding more of the former
-to the wild slopes.
-
-Below the terrace, yclept the “Hemicycle,” a path bordered with Azalea
-Mollis was a perfect glory last May, although it had only been planted
-the preceding autumn. The “Hemicycle” was a little fairy glade of Crocus
-a week ago, the second in February; and we have still hope of the
-Scillas which surround our bereft almond trees. A rough wall rises from
-it to the Upper Terrace, over which Dorothy Rambler will fling its
-lovely blooms in immense trails by and by; and its stones themselves
-hold a never-ending succession of delight in the shape of Arabis,
-Aubretia, Cerastium, Thrift, and the like. Yellow roses climb up to meet
-the Dorothy, and the dear little pink China Rose grows in bushes all
-along the front between the Lavender plants which we are trying to
-acclimatise, but which, year after year, are blighted by the frost
-before they have had time to grow strong.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: garden path]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: two ladies working in garden]
-
-Satisfactory as our wall-garden is, there is a wall-garden at a cottage
-in a neighbouring village which never fails to fill us with envy every
-time we see it. It belongs to two maiden ladies, whom we have christened
-Tweedle-Ann and Tweedle-Liza. They are so extraordinarily like each
-other that even they themselves ‹we have heard› hardly know which is
-which. They have the same rotundity of figure, the same uncertain
-obliquity in one eye, the same cheerful rosy visage, the same sleek
-bands of grey hair.
-
-When the Master of the House was a young man, an Irish servant was heard
-to observe to him, gazing rapturously at him as he walked away from her
-vision, all unconsciously, in his shooting-garb: “And indeed he’s a
-lovely gentleman. Them jars of legs!” ‹As a matter of fact, Loki’s
-Grandfather has very nice legs.› But Tweedle-Ann and Tweedle-Liza, in
-short, sensible grey tweed skirts, bending their portly forms over their
-wall garden, have more than often presented to the passer-by a
-vision....
-
-The Japanese say that reticence is the very soul of art. Our aspirations
-are always towards the artistic, but there is something touching in four
-... exactly similar ... side by side...!
-
-[Sidenote: A TERRIFYING GOOD WISH]
-
-To digress once more: Loki’s Grandfather is no doubt a man of fine
-proportions; though he is not at all plump, he has all the athlete’s
-dread of becoming so. Once when we were stranded at a small wayside
-station in Ireland, without even a bench to sit upon, he began to while
-away the time by testing his weight on the automatic machine. The
-indicating needle travelled considerably further than he expected! He
-was standing, transfixed, staring at the pointing finger, when a very
-old woman with a shawl over her head, holding a very small boy by the
-hand, suddenly broke into loud paeans beside him:
-
-“God bless your honour!—Isn’t it the grand gentleman you are! Glory be
-to God, may you grow larger, and larger, and larger!”
-
-“For heaven’s sake,” cried Loki’s Grandfather, wheeling round in horror,
-“don’t say such a thing!”
-
-“And indeed I do, yer honour.—Look at him now,” she went on, shaking the
-little creature she held by the hand, “you’ll never see a finer
-gentleman. Don’t you wish you had a Dada like that?”
-
-Then she burst out again and continued to wish him increase in Sybilline
-tones. They were both so extraordinarily serious, she in her benisons,
-he in his terror of the curse, that as Loki’s Grandmother sat on her
-trunk she was weak with laughter.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: A LOCAL POET]
-
-The Master of the Villino had a charming little experience last spring.
-Some time before, in the winter, he fell into conversation with an old
-sweep, who was tramping up the hill, the evidence of his life-work thick
-upon him. They discoursed of many things, for the sweep had a wide range
-of interests. They spoke of the moorland place as it was in bygone days;
-and of the learned Professor whose eulogies first put it into fashion;
-of the lectures on Science delivered by this latter; and of the way in
-which the spring first shows itself in the lower copses while it is
-still winter on our heights. The sweep knew a dell where the primroses
-were always a month in advance of any other spot. He had a soul for
-primroses, unlike Wordsworth’s horrible Peter—which reminds me of the
-delicious remark made to Loki’s young mistress by an old pensioner in
-Chelsea Gardens. He led her to the plot he cultivated for himself, with
-all the childish eagerness of the aged, and pointed to a single yellow
-crocus, blown this way and that by the wind, for it was a shrewish day.
-“Look at it, Missie!” he cried. “It’s as playful as a kitten.”
-
-[Illustration: house exterior]
-
-We do not know at what hour in the bleak late February morning the
-little box was left in the porch. It was found there by the earliest
-maid, and brought to the Master of the House with his letters in due
-course; a box that obviously had lately contained carbolic soap. Inside
-in a nest of moss, carefully covered with red bramble leaves, was a
-bunch of primroses tied with red wool, and the following “verses”:
-
- “Beneath the moss and the mast,
- Though the weather has been wet and cold,
- I manage to raise my head
- Down in the Sussex wold.”
-
-Thus it began, speaking in the name of the Primrose, to enter, rapidly
-and boldly into the sweep’s personality:
-
- “To-day I passed by the way,
- So I stayed and picked you a few,
- To show I do not forget
- The chat I had with you.”
-
-Here the muse got a little tired; but it ended up with unimpaired
-cheerfulness:
-
- “I hope you are hale and well
- And now I must say Addue,
- Yours respectfully,
- STAR.”
-
-Over the page there was a charming P.S.:
-
- “Perhaps you have younger fingers
- The flowers to unfold,
- Mine are rather clumsy
- Being big and old.
-
- Pleasant Hours,
- Live long.”
-
-It is the kind of little incident that seems to happen at Villino Loki,
-where animals and human beings are queer and unexpected, and live
-together in simplicity and cheerfulness.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-V
-
-
-Travelling along the pleasant path of life, on the reverse side of the
-hill, the downward course ‹how graphic is the French of it for the later
-and “smaller half” of our allotted span: _sur le retour_›, there is a
-tendency to dwell more upon memories and proportionately less on
-ambitions. The prospect now ahead, placid and mellowed as it may be,
-naturally dwindles to narrower margins. Its interest is more of the
-immediate order; deals mostly with hopes and doings of the coming
-season. And, the circle of recollection widening, things distant in the
-past appeal with proportionate insistency to the mind’s eye.
-
-[Sidenote: “DREAMING BACKWARDS”]
-
-I believe this is the case with all thinking creatures ‹says Loki’s
-Grandpa—who has fallen into a reminiscent mood›. With one whose lazy and
-musing propensities, whose delight in day-dreams has proved his
-paramount weakness, the habit of “dreaming backwards” and hunting for
-old impressions has become as haunting, in these years of the sixth
-decade, as was, in salad days, the “dreaming forward” and the straining
-for a sight of things still below the horizon.
-
-For instance: in a life which has always been one of constant
-book-companionship, the printed passages which most delight me are those
-which, having been first read in another age and re-discovered in this
-one, bring back a pulse of some long forgotten impression. The
-impression may be one that sober and critical memory does not record as
-having been so particularly enthralling at the time—yet it now comes
-back with a subtle fragrance all its own.
-
-The long darkness of winter provides the richest reading hours. And if
-the page-turning is by the side of a wood fire—as happens on this, the
-coldest day of the year—if it is in a deep armchair with the lamp
-throwing its quiet rays over one’s shoulder, why, it is apt to become
-interspersed with long spells of wide-eyed dreaming. The fire burns with
-that special clearness, that kind of conscious eagerness which one
-observes inside the hearth upon a keen frosty night. In the town a
-frosty night is but a cold night. But here, on our country hill-side,
-when winter, albeit officially over, is in reality still with us, a
-frosty night inevitably turns our thoughts to the threatened hopes of
-the garden.
-
-[Illustration: view of garden]
-
-Now, as one who knows practically nought of the gardener’s “Arte and
-Mysterie,” my interest in the matter is of the irresponsible kind. I
-look forward, of course, and keenly, to the satisfying display, first of
-our sappy, turgid fragrant Hyacinth beds in the Dutch Garden ‹somehow,
-the Dutch Garden seems to belong more particularly to my own side of the
-Villino—to be a precinct of my study in fact› than to the proud-pied
-array of the subsequent Tulips, nodding in the breeze over their bed of
-close clustering Forget-me-Nots. This is the annual treat provided in
-the spring—for Grandpa’s especial behoof at Villino Loki—by the
-industrious care of the knowledgeable ladies. Nevertheless, as I say, my
-interest is of the general order; not of details; not of ways and means.
-I expect, in the maturity of every season, delightful achievements, and
-find them; but I take little part in their planning. I am of no use for
-device and not called upon in council. I thankfully enjoy the results;
-and this is perhaps not the worst part the Master of the House could
-play in the year’s transaction.
-
-Only on two occasions have I volunteered a suggestion with regard to
-planting—and both are related to early, very early, reminiscences.
-
-Creepers of all sorts we have in profusion. Ivy, of course, and
-Jessamine and Honeysuckle, and the gorgeous, if short-lived,
-Virginia-Ampilopsis its name, I believe. But there is one thing, I
-pointed out, I must have also, and that is the blue clustering, the
-incomparably fragrant _Glycine_ of my early childhood’s days. Wisteria
-is its proper English name.
-
-Odoriferous bushes, again, we have, of every description. Ribes, Cassia,
-Gummy Cistus, what not?—lurk in ambuscade at the turning of paths to
-waylay you with their gush of essence, not to speak of the Azaleas in
-their banks; but all these perfumes, in their subtleness, belong to the
-middle years. No memories of the complete freshness of time cleave to
-them such as belong to the simple Sweet Briar.
-
-[Illustration: outside entrance to house]
-
-So, now, the two rooted creatures of the Villino, which may be said to
-exist there more specially for the behoof of Loki’s Grandpa, are the
-Briar bushes at the end of the Lily Walk and by the _Schöne Aussicht_,
-and the still tender but promising Wisteria climbers in the re-entering
-and most sheltered corner of his study walls.
-
-[Sidenote: FLOWER LOVES OF CHILDHOOD]
-
-And it is for those young hopeful Wisterias that on this frosty night I
-feel a concern. Last year we had a score or so of purple clusters; we
-look to a goodly increase during the coming _Renouveau_.—‹You perceive
-the old, obsolete French word for Spring comes back of itself!› The
-anticipation of the near future, within the shrinking vista of coming
-pleasures, elicits as usual a return to the widening past. In this case
-the past that is recalled is that of a childhood spent in France.
-
-The book lies forgotten on my knee. The brown Meerschaum grows cold in
-my hand. My eyes, lost in musings among the flame-fringed logs, now peer
-beyond the past half-century—at a time which seems verily as far distant
-and as little related to the present as that year 1636 stamped and still
-faintly discernible on the antique cast-iron backplate of the
-fireplace.... I see a farm-house in a village of that province which in
-ancient days was known as Ile-de-France ‹I hate your modern régime
-_départements_›, by name Mesnil-le-Roy; not far distant from Mantes, the
-natty little town on the upper and green-watered Seine, generally
-adverted to as _Mantes-la-Jolie_.
-
-[Sidenote: GLYCINE!]
-
-Therein, during nearly a whole year, for reasons of delicate health,
-resided a certain very small English boy—French enough in those tender
-years. In this delectable old place, so full of good-smelling things in
-their seasons: hay, and grain, and fruit, and at all times the
-health-restoring cow, the house was in the spring-time covered with
-Glycine. And with the adorable Glycine the small boy, who loved flowers
-as much as milk and fruits and beasts, fell forthwith in love.
-
-How that coquettish Jappy plant came originally to find a footing in so
-rustic a corner as Mesnil-le-Roy is more than I can account for. Your
-French peasant is not, as a rule, addicted to the delights of flower
-raising; and, in those distant days, Wisteria was still something of a
-rarity anywhere. But there it was, already in the sturdiest strength of
-its age, embracing the old walls, forcing its fibrous wood into every
-cranny of the greystone, framing every window, striving up the chimney
-stacks—and filling the air with honey sweetness. It must have taken at
-least two score years to reach such a size.
-
-With the English boy, then barely four, it was a first love. He feasted
-on it with his every sense. From morning till eve he would be sucking
-the base of some blue corolla plucked from its calyx, for the sake of
-that intense sweetness to which the thing owes its Gallic name of
-_Glycine_; he would, whenever he could, run round and rejoice his eyes
-with the delicacies of pale green and purple, drink in the scent, and
-listen hypnotized to the never-ceasing buzz of honey-seekers in the
-sunshine. And, in the morning, his first thought, as he crept out of his
-small truckle-bed, was to go and plunge his hands into the dew that
-glittered upon these Glycine branches nodding in from every side at the
-mansarde window.
-
-Like all first loves it was, as you see, violent. Well do I remember
-how, for months after he was removed back into the Paris house, the
-small boy would ply his mother with the yearning question, infantilely
-incorrect but vernacular: “_Quand que nous retournerons aux Glycines,
-Maman?_” always to receive the non-committal but consoling:
-
-“_Tantôt ... tantôt._”
-
-This “tantôt” is the wonderful “by-and-by” which never comes to be!
-
-And like all first loves this one was utterly forgotten in later
-years—to reappear, however, in the sere and yellow of age. For years a
-many, a purple Wisteria spreading about the eaves of a south-country
-house, was to me only a purple Wisteria. It was a creeper, and it was
-nothing more. It was not a “_Glycine_” until I had a creepered wall of
-my own. Then it surged before imagination’s eye with all the glamour of
-_les premières amours_, to which, in accordance with the old French saw,
-“_on en revient toujours_.”
-
-Now, therefore, at Villino Loki, nothing will serve but a _Glycine_ to
-creep along those walls which are more especially my own; to embrace my
-south windows and nod in at the casement. And the suave-breathed Eastern
-beauty, first brought over to the West and god-fathered by Professor
-Wister, will privily remain Glycine for me; although I may draw the
-indulgent visitor’s attention to her under the better-known name of
-Wisteria Sinensis.—I have, by the way, an ever-ready pretext; for I
-learn from “The Language of Flowers” that the special significance of
-this blossom is “Welcome, fair stranger!” I mean to have a profusion of
-it, for old sake’s sake. Besides, is it not meet that Loki should not be
-deprived, during his villeggiatura, of the company of some Chinese
-living thing?
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-VI
-
-
-[Illustration: view of house from distance]
-
-Strange how sharp and detailed will some of our very early memories
-remain in after life, when even important scenes of our later years are
-so easily forgotten! That old farm of Mesnil-le-Roy is still a clear
-picture, vignetted, so to speak, upon grey pages of oblivion.... I can
-yet see the orchard, strewn with myriad fallen apples—the byres, whereto
-at sundown returned the slow-pacing, dreamy, placid-eyed milch cows; the
-giant walnut-tree, with one of its main branches blasted by
-lightning—blasted on the stormy night, during which “thunder had fallen”
-freely ‹as the little boy heard the labourers say, awe-struck, in the
-morning; but during which he had slept under the brown-tiled roof
-without the slightest disturbance›.... I can see the _Four Banal_, that
-co-operative bread-oven, a relic of mediæval institutions, which was
-still common enough in those days; where you could have such an
-entrancing view of lambent blue flames lined with yellow when the door
-stood open to receive the unbaked loaves; and where the air smelt so
-divinely of hot wheaten crust when they were removed on completion....
-
-[Illustration: little boy with two adults]
-
-It was, by the way, on that alluring spot—the boy used to find his way
-there regularly on the days when _on cuisait_—that he heard a certain
-remark, which to his child ears had no special meaning, but which
-remained on memory’s tablets to assume later an interesting
-significance. The country folk were very kind. The little English boy,
-left for the good of his health at the farm of _père Pelletier_, was
-known to everybody; was accepted and treated as one of the community.
-Rarely did he stroll, as might any roaming puppy dog, into an open door
-of the village without being supplied with a generous sup of milk, or a
-_tartine de raisiné_; or again, in season, with a _pomme cuite_. The
-roasted apple, be it said, browning and lusciously oozing caramel, was a
-standing affair in that old-world village. There was, however, on that
-day, a benighted wayfarer who obviously could not reconcile with these
-rustic surroundings the yellow-haired, barelegged little boy gravely
-gazing at the glowing oven.
-
-“_D’ousqui sort, ce gosse-là?_” ‹for which barbarous lingo I take leave
-to give as an equivalent: Who’s the kid?› asked the man. And the answer
-came: “_Ça?—ca, mais le p’tit godem, donc_.” ‹That—why, that’s the
-little “goddam.”›
-
-[Sidenote: THE LITTLE GODEM]
-
-_Le petit godem!..._ Such was the name under which that young innocent
-was known at Mesnil-le-Roy, and, be it understood, in all cordiality and
-benevolence! Of a certainty not one of those excellent people had the
-remotest idea of the meaning of their “godem:” with them it was only the
-established equivalent for English.
-
-The term is a noun, not an expletive, which has come down through five
-centuries—from the days, in fact, of the English occupation of France.
-Among the written records of those stirring times we come across many a
-passage in which a Duguesclin, a Maid of Orleans, or a Dunois is heard
-to mention hatefully “_les godems_,” or “_les godons d’Angleterre_.”
-Now, all that fertile country of the Vexin, the Ile-de-France and the
-Beauce, of which the fat farm land of my old _père Pelletier_ was so
-fair a sample, was obstinately fought for by the English for the best
-part of a century. Mantes-la-Jolie—now mainly famed for its river
-terraces, its sweet water grapes and its savoury _matelottes_ or eel
-stews—was once a fortified place of note, taken and retaken by French
-and English more than once; but finally captured ‹in 1418› by the noble
-Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, the Achilles of England, as the French
-themselves dubbed him, and firmly held by the “godems” for more than
-thirty years. To have heard that mispleasing word used dispassionately,
-merely as a substantive, is indeed a link with the past.
-
-Strange paths of the musing thought, winding from Wisteria Sinensis to
-the days of our conquering English archer!
-
- * * * * *
-
-I spoke of these childhood memories as of oddly clear pictures emerging
-here and there out of grey mists of oblivion. Another now detaches
-itself in the same way from the clouds of the very distant past.
-
-It belongs to the following summer. A perfume of Glycine still lingers
-about it, no doubt; for there again, upon the stone and through the
-curvetting iron-work balconies of the fair Louis XV house overlooking
-the park of St. Cloud, pale silvery green leafage, with here and there a
-cluster of faint blue, spreads in a well-regulated display—widely
-different, though, from the foaming profusion of the Mesnil. But the
-impression more specially associated with those happy St. Cloud days is
-the incense of the Sweet Briar.
-
-[Sidenote: SWEET EGLANTINE]
-
-[Illustration: outside of window with small balcony]
-
-What has happened—I pause and ask indignantly—to the Sweet-Briar of the
-world? Whither has the celestial, the entrancing scent of the true
-Eglantine vanished? Our twentieth century Briar is still—there is no
-gainsaying it—a delicious being, in its ephemeral exquisiteness of
-flower and its pleasant, if but slightly more lasting, leafy odour. But
-never, in subsequent life, have I captured again the sudden delight
-first brought to my childish nostrils by a puff of breeze that had
-passed over some hidden clump of sweet Eglantine. This first impression
-is connected with certain grassy alleys piercing deep the grand
-old-world park, or rather forest, of St. Cloud, which were my favourite
-playgrounds in the early sixties of the last century. ‹There is
-something distinctly suitable to the status of Grandpa, albeit merely
-“brevet” rank as in my case, in memorising thus about a past century!›
-
-[Illustration: flowers on stem]
-
-I can see the five-year-old arrested short upon the turf, in the midst
-of the hot pursuit of a blue butterfly, by his first whiff in life of
-Rosa Rubiginosa: so might a setter halt and stiffen, having got the wind
-of a grouse.—The source of the fitful stream of fragrance was hidden
-among clumps of forbidding brambles. Besides, there was no following the
-trail: it seemed ubiquitous. Like some Puck in his most tantalising
-mood, it would lead up and down, up and down—luring now to right, now to
-left, now straight ahead, anon seemed to whisk past from behind, until,
-in a kind of “dwam,” the child would give up the baffled purpose and
-pensively trot home by the nurse’s side.
-
-For days the ambrosial fragrance dwelt in his little turned-up nose. It
-haunted the sensitive child-mind much as, later, in budding manhood, the
-remembrance of some enchanting face seen for an instant and then lost to
-sight. He had at last to confide his hopeless passion to his mother. It
-smelt ‹he explained› like the _Pomme Reinette_ of the dessert plates,
-but oh, so much, so much better! The reference to the well-known and
-excellent variety of apple left no doubt about the nature of the plant
-which had exhaled the elusive trails of perfume. “Reinette” became the
-accepted name of the woodland charmer and the hunt for Reinette bushes
-in the more devious paths of the wood a daily occupation.
-
- * * * * *
-
-With these expeditions is associated another first acquaintance that
-made a singularly strong impression.
-
-There was, at the end of one of those heavenly grassed alleys, a group
-of brushwood greenery from which the unmistakable fragrance flowed
-deliciously across the path when the wind blew from a certain
-direction—I should say, now, from the west; for the path led to Garches,
-a place which, some eight years later, during the siege of Paris, became
-notorious as the scene of some very ferocious bayonet fighting.
-Undoubtedly there was a wealth of the desirable “Reinette” amid that
-underwood. But, to the mild surprise of nurse or mother, or whoever it
-might be who escorted the child upon his daily constitutional in the
-wood, nothing could induce him to draw that particular cover. He
-developed an ingenuity ‹or rather should it be called a
-disingenuousness› for pushing investigations or carrying on a game in
-paths that gave this spot a wide berth. Whenever possible, even, he
-found some specious argument for avoiding the Garches-ward alley
-altogether. No one, I believe, ever knew the reason.
-
-[Sidenote: THE BLANCHING, LAUGHING ASPEN]
-
-The fact is that, hard thereby, as if standing sentinel, rose a company
-of tall, slender Aspens—trees that, in a small boy’s estimation, did not
-behave as mere trees should. He had realised this, with a suddenness
-that first made his heart jump, and then rooted him on the spot, one day
-when, having caught up his scent, he was rushing with a whoop to the
-capture of his bush. The Aspens, up to that instant quite placid, palely
-green, grew all at once white with excitement and nodded their heads to
-each other; after which came the noise of their leaves; not the honest
-rustle of green trees, but derisive laughter; sounds, too, weirdly
-human, ringing as though in mockery of the discomfited invader.
-
-Mark you, there is something decidedly uncanny in the deportment of the
-Aspen and its gracile, long-stalked trembling leaves, the white
-undersides of which any puff of wind exposes simultaneously to
-view—turning, on the instant, the whole of the green to foaming silver.
-There was no doubt about the matter then. These paling and odd rustling
-trees completely overawed Master Louis ‹Louis is Loki’s grandpa’s
-baptismal name, now sunk into disuse›, though, in his budding masculine
-pride, he kept the secret of his abhorrence very close within his own
-little bosom.
-
-[Illustration: child in front of trees]
-
-On one occasion, however, when he had had to make up his mind to walk
-past the blanching, murmuring group unless he were prepared ‹which he
-was not› to explain the nature of his objection, he asked, with a fair
-show of indifference, what manner of tree it was which “made that funny
-noise: he-he-he-he.” “One would say,” he added with elaborate airiness,
-“that they make a mock of one!”
-
-When informed that “_Tremble_” was the name thereof, he became sunk in
-fresh unpleasant musings, and was fain to look back, fascinated, over
-his shoulder, each time the chuckling called after him.
-
-The sound of the breeze, as it ruffles through the leaves of “Populus
-tremula,” is like nothing else in the woods. I have always retained my
-interest in the “Tremble” of my young days; and in the course of time it
-became one of delight instead of terror. I would give a good deal to
-have one of my own: one living not far from my bedroom window. It would
-be good to hear it laughing gently outside, when one first woke, and to
-know that it was powdering itself, so to speak, under the rays of the
-rising sun. But there are no Aspens in our part of the world. And, as
-for planting a council of these in the hope of silvery rustle and light
-effects, why, it is perhaps somewhat too late in the day! But I still
-seem to hear and see them with the ears and eyes of that dawning spring
-of life in the St. Cloud days.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-VII
-
-
-Poor little old town of St. Clodoald! In later years I spent an
-afternoon hunting up its distant remembrances. Alas, but it was like
-looking at some worn-out engraving, some faded dun picture once known in
-all its brilliancy.
-
-[Illustration: stone feature in garden]
-
-Obliterated was the dainty white stone Palace; scene of the revelries
-and the bright-coloured elegancies of the Regent; favourite retreat of
-Marie Antoinette; theatre of the “_Dix-huit Brumaire_” drama; early home
-of _l’Aiglon_! The Château de St. Cloud, the summer residence of the
-last Napoleon, had been burned by the Prussians—even as they burned the
-bulk of the town—in 1870.[1]
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- _This was written long before anyone here dreamed of the near
- possibility of another German war._
-
-Many a time, when, not so many years ago, we could read daily the
-shameless slander, the wilful calumnies, of the German press on the
-subject of the “barbarity” of our soldiers during the South African
-wars, has my mind flown back to the picture of charred and jagged ruins
-standing against the rise of the hill which once met my eyes when I
-looked for the quiet, happy prospect I had known.
-
-[Sidenote: THE OLD PARK OF ST. CLOUD]
-
-The town, when I last saw it, and its ancient church had been rebuilt;
-but the Palace was a dismal ruin; and the park seemed scald and
-deserted. Gone also, worst luck of all, the _Lanterne de Diogène_—the
-quaint tower at the river-side opening of the main alley, built in the
-pleasure-loving days of _Louis-le-Bien-Aimé_. ‹It was called a
-_mirador_: I believe a structure of that kind is now known as
-“gazebo”—deplorable word!› From the top of it a magnificent panorama of
-distant Paris could be descried.
-
-The neighbourhood of _la Lanterne_ was the great trysting place of
-nurses and guardsmen, and the playing ground of children. On that day of
-back-dreaming exploration, I had been looking forward, with a kind of
-tenderness, to gazing once more on its bizarre shape. There is a
-well-known _ronde_, dating it would seem from the Middle Ages:
-
- “_La Tour, prends garde—
- La Tour, prends garde—
- De te laisser abattre!_”
-
-which is sung by the Gallic infant, in a game somewhat cognate to our:
-“Here we go round the Mulberry Bush!” It used to be danced under the
-shadow of this tower; and, in a child’s way, I had always instinctively
-associated the unnamed stronghold of the ballad with this peaceful
-erection.
-
-Alas for the dear old _Tour_, it was destined to be laid low, after all,
-in spite of our eager warning! The terrace on which it was built was
-seized as the emplacement of a battery of heavy Krupps, for the
-bombardment of the obstinate capital yonder away. The _Lanterne de
-Diogène_, in its white stone and clear outline against the trees,
-offered too distinct a mark to the answering gunners to be tolerated. It
-had to be levelled. It was never rebuilt. I could find nothing
-appertaining to it but the grass bordered slabs of its foundations....
-
-[Illustration: tower rising from trees]
-
-Lost, too, to me was the particular alley redolent of the memory of both
-_Reinette_ and _Tremble_; no doubt absorbed in some of the metalled
-motor roads that now traverse the park.
-
-The _Grande Cascade_, however, which Lepautre, by order of Louis XIV,
-devised for the glorification of the Duke of Orleans’ future home, was
-still there. Its tiers of white stone steps over which the water, on
-_Grandes Eaux_ days, used to pour down, foaming yet disciplined, in
-symmetric balustered channels, between ranks of allegoric statues
-standing like guards and lacqueys upon a royal stairway—still descend,
-framed by huge umbrageous elms, from the middle height of the hill to
-the wide marble _bassin_ on the river level. How fully the great garden
-designers of the _Roy Soleil_ understood the life-giving virtue of
-moving waters in their grandiose if freezing conception of the formal
-landscape! Here, in the midst of the nature-made beauty of the old
-Park—where there had been forests, more or less wild, ever since Gaulish
-days—these architectural waters have a startling effect; incongruous no
-doubt, but the artificiality of the stone-work has been mellowed by two
-centuries and more of summer suns and winter frosts. And these
-monumental streams are beyond compare more beautiful than their
-prototypes of Versailles and the copies erected in other Continental
-residences in imitation of the _Grand Règne_ manner. This Lepautre was a
-man of fine power, in the style of his age. But he had also the servile
-fawning mind of that age. Soon after the triumph of the St. Cloud Park,
-he could find it in him to die in three days of jaundiced envy because
-some other design of his had been passed over by the King’s eye in
-favour of one by Mansard! Yea, to die of heart-burning, even as that
-greater man, Jean Racine, who, some years later, gave up the ghost in
-despair over a harsh remark passed by his royal master in a fit of
-temper; even as Vatel, the _maître d’hotel_, who fell upon his sword,
-and put an end to a life dishonoured by the failure of the fish at the
-celebrated Chantilly banquet!
-
-Yes, the old cascade, at least, was still there, that once had filled
-the five-year-old’s imagination with a sense of the supreme in earthly
-grandeur. The _Jet Géant_, also; that spouting jet that reaches a height
-of ... but no, why cramp the stupendous into figures? Figures are finite
-things. The shaft of hissing water, in those days of confident
-wondering, reached the limit of the conceivable before it fell down
-again, in its thundering showers, through the iridescent bow, the
-_arc-en-ciel_, that could always be looked for when the sun shone on it
-at the sinking hour. But, alas, for the middle-aged visitor who sought
-for a taste again, however transient, of the noisy joyousness, the
-brilliance, the colour, locked up in memory’s casket!... The _cidevant_
-royal park—now _Propriété Nationale_, and duly stamped, wherever room
-can be found for it, with the priggish and lying motto: _Liberté,
-Egalité, Fraternité_ was dull and drab and neglected: silent and morose.
-The _Grand Monarque’s_ extravagances in stone seemed positively
-shamefaced. The whole place—this artificial park within the ancient
-woods—had the melancholy of things outworn and disowned.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: FIRELIGHT PICTURES]
-
-Yet here, in my armchair by the firelight, up on the side of our dear
-Surrey hill, I can still picture sharply to myself the summer life of
-St. Cloud as it was in the careless precarious days of the Second
-Empire.
-
-[Illustration: children outdoors]
-
-The Empress Eugénie, then a young wife, and one of the most beautiful
-women of Europe, lived at the _Château_. And the Park, though thrown
-open to the people, was kept trim with jealous care. Roads generously
-sanded, lawns watered and mown with systematic care, parterres ever
-bright with flowers, all was marvellously different then from the
-present day shabbiness.
-
-I seem to see again, even with almost a lifetime’s experience
-intervening, the vivid scene impressed on the observant and eager eyes
-of the child. The gay-hued crowds of ladies in all the then elegance of
-scuttle bonnets and crinolines; the bevies of children, of every class,
-but all joyous and noisy; the bands of marching youths, buzzing the
-popular airs of the year on the euphonious _Mirliton_; the siege of
-every “kiosk” where the wafers hot from the mould, or the cool lemonade,
-were dispensed; the swans, stately but voracious, being fed upon the
-great pond; the bright coloured beribboned _nourrices_ squatting with
-the nurslings on the circular benches within sound of the _musique
-militaire_, and the inevitable giant bearded _sapeur_ in flirtatious
-attendance; the quite too beautiful officers with tight waists, waxed
-moustaches and swaying gold epaulets—what not?
-
-Before the great gates, solemnly walking to and fro, or standing
-picturesquely sentinel, there never wanted a party of veteran grenadiers
-in their towering brass-fronted bearskins and white cross-belts to
-produce the desired “Old Guard” effect. Or it might be heavy-moustached
-troopers, _Guides_, with sweeping plumes over the huge _colback_; with
-pelisses of fur and eagle-embroidered sabretaches, copying, on their
-side, the grim appearance of Napoleon’s ‹the real one’s› body guard.
-
-The whole place, indeed, was pervaded with the “immense” uniforms of
-those pretorians: those long service professional soldiers for whose
-showy maintenance the Imperial Government stinted an otherwise dwindling
-national army—disastrous army, destined, despite its gallantry, to be so
-soon decimated, swept away, by the legions of _das Volk in Waffen_
-wielded with the ruthless mastery of German generalship!
-
-[Sidenote: FORGOTTEN BRILLIANCIES]
-
-For such as have only known France since the strictly utilitarian days
-that followed the great _débâcle_; days when the notion that any kind of
-smartness is incompatible with “republican efficiency seems to have
-become an obsession” it is difficult to realize the gilded magnificence
-of the _Garde Impériale_. Still less, perhaps, in these anti-militarist
-times, the idolatry of the people for its _beaux militaires_. Of a
-truth, on a sunny day, they brightened the park walks almost as much as
-the Geraniums in the great stone urns, or the forbidden golden fruit in
-the orange tubs!
-
-The authorities were sedulous, especially in such places as St. Cloud,
-to keep the pleasant side—the pride, the pomp and circumstance—of
-soldiering in evidence. The happy little town was awakened in the
-morning, was apprised of noon and again of sundown, by the incredibly
-joyous “sonneries” of the _Lanciers de l’Impératrice_, whose trumpeters
-specially gathered from far and wide, could sound all tuckets and points
-of war in an admirable harmony of high overtones blended with the noble,
-grave sounds of the ordinary calls.... Entrancing music to the little
-boy, in the glycine-clad house of the _rue du Château_, who would start
-awake, hearken, and then turn round and go to sleep again in great
-content. The drums of the _garde montante_, headed by the olympian
-_tambour-major_, sedulously tossing and twirling his cane, daily rattled
-the window panes as in great pomp it ascended the hill, palace-wards. It
-never failed to draw the same crowd to the same doorsteps. Estaffettes
-clattered hourly along the narrow paved streets, on their way to and
-from Paris; glittering, clinking, full of official importance, and with
-an eagerness no doubt wholly uncalled for by any existing necessity.
-
-All that colour and bustle and pleasant make-believe of strength and
-“tradition,” was typical of all one has since learned to associate with
-that Empire on the high road to ruin. But it had its attractive side for
-those who had not found it out; and, seen through the prism of distance,
-a picturesqueness that modern France, so systematically democratized, is
-scarce like to know again.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-VIII
-
-
-The ways of our musings are as devious, as unexpected, as those of a
-general conversation: there is no presiding spirit to keep us to a
-standing topic! This topic, with us, should be “Our Sentimental Garden.”
-And our tattle should, really, be connected, even if but distantly; with
-plants or scenery; with country life and friends ‹or foes›; with
-emotions or reminiscences plausibly evoked by the flower side of life.
-Happily it is pleasant enough to be brought back to the right theme; as
-I am just now by a thought of the head-line.
-
-[Illustration: two people by tall tree]
-
-[Sidenote: REDISCOVERED DELIGHTS]
-
-To one who has taken somewhat late in the day to a life in the country,
-most of its interests seem to be a rediscovery of early, simple, and
-intimate delights; to be connected with impressions long forgotten.
-
-There is an episode in the biography of Jean-Jacques Rousseau which, if
-I remember aright, bears upon this point. I have not got the
-_Confessions_ by me—it is, no doubt, in that cynical autobiography that
-the anecdote is recorded—nor, indeed, any other work of that exceedingly
-antipathetic writer. ‹This is the usual course: the books I require for
-reference when in the country happen oftener than not to be on my London
-bookshelves; and _mutatis mutandis, vice versa_!› The precise wording
-cannot in consequence be given here. But it is a small matter; the story
-is to this effect:
-
-In his young and singularly impressionable days, Jean-Jacques was taking
-a country walk with one very near to his heart. At a certain spot of the
-garden, or the wood, in which he was tasting the subtle joys of
-_solitude à deux_, the lady suddenly exclaimed:
-
-“See, yonder is a _pervenche_!”
-
-“Indeed,” returned the youth, little intent then, upon the beauties of
-the outer world, and gazed absently upon the tender blue peeping out of
-the tender green. “So, that is a periwinkle?” And he resumed the thread
-of his interrupted discourse.
-
-But, later—much later on, in twilight days of his life—some one happened
-again to say in his hearing:
-
-“See—a Periwinkle!”
-
-And Rousseau, now old Jean-Jacques, amazed the company by an almost
-incredible exhibition of sensibility.
-
-“_Une pervenche!_ Where—where?” he called out, throwing himself down on
-his knees to look for the flower, with eyes bathed in tears.
-
-If this is not quite the exact tale, it matters, as I said above, very
-little. It is the story, in its essence. The age of sensibility ‹praise
-be to our fate!› is no longer with us; but there is something
-permanently true in the picture it sets forth. To the _philosophe_ of
-mature years the mere word _pervenche_ suddenly recalled, in a
-poignantly intimate manner, the first love of his spring-time. _Veteris
-vestigia flammae!_
-
-And we are not to wonder that the echo from a world irremediably lost
-should have affected the morose, self-centred reprobate in an
-uncontrollable manner. I venture to think that, with the least
-sentimental of us, the sudden rediscovery, of some long forgotten
-youthful impression can hardly fail to evoke, however transiently, a
-certain dreamy emotion: half pleasure, half melancholy.
-
-[Illustration: child outside with hoop]
-
-Now, in the case of the Master of the House—and he is thankful to
-realize it—early memories of delight in flowers and such things are
-associated, not with the troublous times of young manhood’s protean
-heart affairs, not with the _Sturm und Drang_ days of the dawning
-moustache, but rather with the quaintly fanciful inner life of boyhood.
-They come back borne upon the colours and odours of such early friends
-as Lilac and Acacia; common Wallflower—_Giroflée_, our Gillyflower; wild
-Violet and Primrose—_gallicé “Coucou”_; Hollyhock or rather
-_Rose-trémière_; Lily-of-the-Valley; _Muguet_.... It is the old French
-name that most readily slips from my pen.
-
-Owing perhaps to a childhood spent almost wholly in France, and to the
-completeness of the break that necessarily ensued when the English born
-but French nurtured boy was at last allowed back to his own and proper
-land, all these memories seem to belong to a world utterly apart—to
-something rather fantastic, unconnected with later life and interests.
-Moreover, being of childhood and of a time when the world seemed
-uniformly kind, they retain an allurement all their own. One pleasant
-recollection of those far-off days does not hook on to others, bitter,
-regretful, or let it be even merely ruffling ... inevitable chain of
-responsible experiences!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Our early memories are like works of art: they have a way of
-perpetuating in beauty things that perhaps were not really beautiful in
-themselves. About them there is an unconscious selection which, having
-been made by a mind still essentially serene, has contrived a subtle
-harmony of all the elements. Upon the pictures of its store, a child’s
-memory lays an emphasis strangely different to that which the critical
-powers of later growth would set. And it is this quaint insistence on
-certain “odd corners of things” which ‹among other reasons› makes them
-so dearly personal and private to the older mind.
-
-In my own case, as I have said, they belong to a world still more remote
-than the childhood of most men of “Grandpa” status—a world which has not
-even the link of language to connect it with the present!
-
-Paradoxically, this is perhaps the reason why I take so much pleasure in
-finding these happy-hued and odorous things now rising, and living under
-their right English names, in a garden of my own. To the other denizens
-of Villino Loki they are part of the excellent general company
-foregathering in our garden: but to me they are in many ways my
-intimates. We seem “to have known things together”; things doubtless of
-no importance, but pleasant to recall in casual intercourse.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-IX
-
-
-[Illustration: flowers on branch]
-
-The Lilac and Acacia, for instance, were the flower-bearers of the
-tree-planted playground of that jocund old school where I received the
-first rudiments of education: the _Institution Delescluze_, then situate
-in a kind of backwater of the faubourg St. Honoré at the angle facing
-the _Palais de l’Elysée_. It has, alas long since been swept away to
-make room for modern mansions. This ancient _Institution_, or
-preparatory school, would seem to have dated from the distant days,
-early Louis XV probably, when the north side of the then lengthening
-noble _faubourg_ must still have been occupied by meadows and orchards.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: branches with leaves]
-
-By the way, it has never occurred to me before to look up that little
-topographical matter authoritatively. I do so now. I have here a copy of
-a wonderful work, the “perspective” map of Paris as it stood in the
-’thirties, of the eighteenth century. It is called the _Plan de Turgot_,
-having been surveyed, and engraved, in lavishly decorative style, by
-order of _Louis-le-Bien-Aimé_, under the care of the celebrated _Prévost
-des Marchands_. The book is quite the most fascinating of its kind I
-know—and I think I have handled as goodly a number of such works as any
-man alive. ‹The nearest approach to it, in point of what one may call
-picturesque perspicuity, is the wonderful bird’s-eye view of Edinburgh
-set down by James Gordon of Rothiemay, and engraved at Amsterdam by F.
-de Wit, about a century earlier.› This plan of Turgot is an elaborate
-affair indeed—an atlas of twenty large sheets, showing practically every
-individual house of any importance. Would we had such a work in
-existence dealing with Georgian London!
-
-Well, to investigate.... Aye, here are the orchards and market gardens,
-beginning at the very back of a narrow line of houses, covering all the
-ground of what nowadays is a close network of stone-fronted streets!
-Here stands the Hôtel d’Evreux, the last, moving westward, of that array
-of lordly mansions: the Hôtels de Montbazon, de Guébrian, de Charost, de
-Duras.... A few of these patrician dwellings, each with their own formal
-gardens stretching southwards to the Champs Elysées, have retained to
-our own times their dignity unimpaired. But where are now scattered most
-of these grand French family names, since the tornado of the great
-Revolution? But, to our map.... Yes, this Hôtel d’Evreux—whilom appanage
-of Madame de Pompadour, now the aforesaid Palais de l’Elysée; residence,
-in due rotation, of the swift-changing presidents of the Republic—is
-here under my finger. And its position unquestionably fixes, some two
-hundred yards westward, that of the now vanished _Institution
-Delescluze_, so interesting to me. And here spread themselves the
-orchards, of which the existence a moment ago was, after all, only a
-matter of surmise!
-
-[Sidenote: PLUM-TREE GUM]
-
-My discovery adds particularity now to the remembrance of that mellow
-place.... A goodly number of antiquated fruit trees were scattered about
-the _cour de récréation_. I can now carve it, in fancy, out of the
-cultivated land shown by the engraver in the most engaging conventional
-manner, at the back of the northern street front—an acre or so. Perhaps
-a little more; likelier still, a little less: recollections of this kind
-have a knack of magnifying affairs. It is bounded by grey walls, tall
-and thick, but distinctly decrepit. The trees were, of course, long past
-bearing, through age and neglect; but they were pleasant company,
-whether snow-laden, or in summer affording their scanty shade. Plum
-trees they were, I should say. At any rate the rough bark of their boles
-distilled a kind of brown gum which was in great demand among us small
-boys for immediate consumption; and sedulously scooped out, as soon as
-discovered, with the help of the stump end of a steel-pen nib.
-
-Interspersed among these remnants of the forgotten orchard were the odd
-groups of Lilacs and Acacias previously mentioned. The latter, the
-Acacias, were tall and above interference. But strict were the standing
-orders touching the bloom of the Lilac, and dire the prospect of
-_pensum_ or _piquet_ to the youthful scholar who should dare to pluck
-the fragrant bunches!
-
-Thus came the Lilac to assume a character at once sacred—or, at least,
-“taboo”—and at the same time perennially tantalizing. It was long before
-the realization dawned that _Lilas_ were not the rare and precious
-blossoms that so uncompromising a prohibition appeared to proclaim. As a
-matter of fact, the _Lilas_, _Blanc ou Rose_, is one of the commonest of
-spring objects in France. Almost might it in its popularity be regarded
-as the national emblem of the _renouveau_, much as with us the pallid,
-delicate Primrose is held to herald the last of wintry days.
-
-The old French name for the latter is _Primerole_, suggestive by its
-etymological connection with “prime,” of the youth of the year. We have
-made of it Prim_rose_, through the usual process of popular phonetic
-adaptation, which ever tends to make a word sound like something already
-familiar. So that the old _Primerole_—meaning simply an early floweret,
-_primula_—has become with us “the early rose”! The French dubbed it
-_Primevère_ a learned equivalent for the _Coucou_ of the rustic tongue,
-to symbolize the advent of vernal days.
-
-The name brings at once to mind the well-known yearning lines:
-
- “_O Primavera, gioventù dell’ anno!_
-
- * * * * *
-
- _O gioventù, primavera della vita!_”
-
-In France, however, the accepted harbinger of _les beaux jours_, is not
-the
-
- “Pale cowslip, fit for maiden’s early bier,”
-
-not the faint Primula but emphatically the Lilac—the Syringa Vulgaris;
-the joyous _fleur des humbles_, as contrasted to the noble Rose.
-
- “_Oh, gai! vive la rose,
- La rose ... et les lilas!_”
-
-runs the refrain of olden days.
-
-During the last century or two it has grown as common, almost, around
-villages as the hawthorn, the _Aubépine_ itself. But it is perhaps best
-appreciated in the towns. While the tender purple bloom lasts, there is
-scarce too modest a working home’s window-sill or mantelpiece for the
-display of a _branche de Lilas_ stuck in the gullet of a water-bottle.
-And your gay-hearted _grisette_ or _midinette_, early afoot in the
-streets, will always spend her first _sou_ of the day on a sprig of the
-sweet-breathing rosy cluster.
-
-[Sidenote: LAYLOCKS—LILAS BLANC]
-
-One may learn, whilst intent upon other matters, many unsuspected things
-about objects even as familiar as the common “Laylock.” ‹A collection of
-old letters of Georgian and very early Victorian days, with which we
-have had much to do at one time, show a preference for this phonetic
-rendering of the name.› Thus it appears that a valuable febrifuge
-“principle” is obtainable from its fruit; that its wood, veined in
-pleasing colours and very fine-grained, is in high request for delicate
-articles of turnery and in particular for inlaying; that a perfumed
-essence is sometimes distilled from it that is almost indistinguishable
-from Rhodes Balsam—and so forth.
-
-Those, however, are not the points of interest which have made it
-imperative to have a plant or two of “Laylocks” in our Sentimental
-Garden. ‹They do fairly well, be it said, in their own specially
-sheltered, suntrap corner of the ground.› No, there is in life an
-ever-growing motive—old sake’s sake. Syringa Persica may mean much to
-the operative gardener, but it can never mean _Lilas blanc_ ... _Lilas
-rose_!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-X
-
-
-As for the Acacias, in that queer old courtyard—distinctly exotic
-creatures, aristocrats in the company of those palpable sons of the
-soil, the caducous orchard trees—I still wonder how they ever came
-there. Their rôle in the life of the small-boy school seems to have
-been that of a butt for cockshies, and thus passively to foster a
-notable precision in the use of those small river pebbles with which
-the playground was covered. A game, deeply favoured by the young
-scholars ‹but not recognized by the authorities› when Acacias were
-“in,” consisted in the bringing down of some selected bunch of
-fragrant, creamy flowers from its lofty station with the minimum
-number of pebbles. The feat was the subject of wager, the stakes
-stated and paid in steel nibs. Nibs—in the tongue of the aborigines,
-_becs-de-plume_—were accepted as currency and legal tender. It would
-be truly interesting to find out how this particular token of exchange
-came to be established among the youthful communities of French
-elementary schools. Be it as it may, the convention was hallowed by
-tradition “whereof the memory of boy ran not to the contrary.”
-
-[Sidenote: GARLANDS AND ACACIAS]
-
-When, however, the pale yellow, incense-smelling, honey-tasting racemes
-were “out,” the devoted Acacia became the object of other, slightly
-different, balistic attentions. The boys, be it stated, were regularly
-released from the durance of bench and desk every hour for some ten
-minutes ‹a commendable system with seven to ten year-olds› during which
-the courtyard became clamorous as any aviary. During these short
-intervals of recreation, too short to allow of any settled games, a
-favourite occupation was the adorning of the inaccessible branches with
-long streamers of coloured paper, previously manufactured at
-home—_guirlandes_ by name. These _guirlandes_, some twenty or thirty
-feet long, were wound with sedulous care round a suitable stone, leaving
-a small length as trailer; the apparatus was then cast up in a parabola
-over the tree-top. If the indirect fire was successful the trailer
-caught in the leafage, unrolling the remainder and releasing the
-ballasting stone. The most successful shot was, of course, that which
-left the streamer properly entangled on the topmost boughs. Each boy had
-his chosen and declared colour, or mixture of colours; and the trophy
-remained, flaunting his achievement “in its own tincts” as long as wind
-or rain permitted. It afforded the small breast a distinct satisfaction
-when, reaching the school of a morning, the boy could see his pennant
-still flying in the breeze....
-
-Such is the strength of the association of ideas that I never could come
-upon a roadside plantation of Acacias in the hot plains of Hungary—where
-the tree is used as commonly as in France the Poplar, that inevitable
-feature of the great highways—without adorning it in imagination with
-the multi-coloured _guirlandes_ of my first school.
-
- * * * * *
-
-If there was no reasonable accounting for the presence of Acacias at the
-_Institution Delescluze_, the great Poplar, on the other hand, that
-raised its height in the very centre of the _cour_, had a
-well-authenticated history. A relic of Revolution days, it was then in
-its eighth decade, in the strength of its age; having been planted, at
-the same time as hundreds of others, as a Tree of Liberty—Populus,
-emblematic of _sans-culotte_ ascendancy—at the time when the royal
-Bastille, emblem of another form of tyranny, was laid low.
-
-For some cryptic reason, by the way, the democratic Poplar, which had
-subsisted through many changes of régime, and had become undoubtedly too
-ornamental a mark of antiquity to be destroyed, was never honoured by
-the flights of our banderoles. Perhaps it was a result of political
-prejudice, which in France characteristically affects the views even of
-scholars at the hornbook stage of life. Or perhaps it was that the old
-_Peuplier_ was the site of the disciplinary punishment known as
-_piquet_—the playground equivalent of our nursery “corner.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: GLAMOUR OF YORE]
-
-Poplar and gummy Plum-trees, Lilac and Acacias, courtyard and indeed the
-whole _Institution_, had already disappeared when I bethought myself,
-for the first time after so many years of oblivion, to go and gaze upon
-the scene once more. It was quite in middle life. I had lately been
-reading that sad and strangely affecting work, “Peter Ibbetson,” the
-first, and to my mind by far the best, of the three novels written by
-Georges du Maurier in the late autumn of his days. By the thousands who
-for so many years had, week after week, enjoyed the delicate humour and
-pencilling of the great Punch artist, the book was received with a
-favour that paved the way for the greater popular success of “Trilby.”
-But I doubt whether it ever appealed to any denizen of our planet as
-intimately as to the Master of the House.
-
-Those who have read the curiously original novel which, like so many
-first attempts at fiction, is autobiographical—autobiographical as to
-feelings, if not necessarily as to facts—may remember his description of
-the English boy’s early “French days;” and, later on, of the mature
-man’s poignant impressions on revisiting the old playground of his life.
-Now, there were so many points of resemblance between the surroundings
-of Du Maurier’s hero’s childhood and my own; so many allusions to the
-kind of things and the kind of people I had once been familiar with but,
-as time flowed on, had dismissed from mind as removed from real
-existence and new workaday points of view; they were presented,
-moreover, in so sympathetic a manner, that one need hardly wonder at the
-sudden resolve that rose within me, to go and look up the old place
-again.
-
-Such a desire, when it comes, has something of the twist of hunger about
-it—it is _une fringale_, to use a word for which, oddly enough, we have
-no counterpart. But, alas! delight in scenes of the _beau temps jadis_
-is not to be recaptured! It may but be espied in fitful, elusive
-glimpses. The world has moved on and the _genius loci_ has fled. Have
-you ever found out that the return, after many years, to a place oft
-dreamed of until then and with never-failing tenderness, besides leaving
-you blankly unsatisfied, seems to have killed the glamour, to have
-broken the magic spell of memory? The dream is dispelled. It will
-henceforth nevermore haunt your pillow. You have seen the phantom of the
-past with the eyes of nowadays; the new picture has replaced that of the
-dream—for ever.
-
-Well, _la boite Delescluze_—as we irreverent youngsters called that
-respectable institution—unlike those other places, St. Cloud, for
-instance, which were fated to evoke but a melancholy disappointment,
-could not be beheld again with the carnal eye—not the least vestige of
-it. And it is, no doubt, for that reason that so many memories still
-come flitting back, smiling and clear, of that forgotten cradle of
-scholarship.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XI
-
-
-A glowing log rolls down from its allotted place on the hearth, sending
-into the room a jet of wood smoke, blue at the stem, white feathering as
-it spreads out; and the pungent smell immediately revives a fresh set of
-scenes from the past.
-
-[Sidenote: NOSTRIL MEMORIES]
-
-[Illustration: man on path in town]
-
-That nothing brings back old memories so suddenly and so vividly as
-perfume is a commonplace remark. But I wonder whether the extraordinary
-persistency of a first impression, in the case of odours constantly met
-with, has been so generally noticed. Perhaps I am peculiar in this
-sensitiveness. Smells, pleasant, indifferent, or otherwise, which one is
-liable to encounter in the most varied circumstances, should, one would
-think, cease in time to recall any particular period of existence.
-
-For example, the delicious smell of roasting coffee—an aroma not common
-in England—may well bring you back, at a jump, to some foreign,
-unfamiliar experience of your youth—to that early morning walk in the
-little Flemish town of which you have forgotten the name; where, as you
-sauntered down the street, you were greeted at nearly every doorstep by
-this pungent savour. The black cylindrical family roaster, its berries
-rattling musically within, was being carefully revolved over its bed of
-live charcoal by the boy of the house, or perhaps by the housewife
-herself. The delicate, diaphanous sky-blue smoke of the beans, as they
-reached the perfecting point of their charring, struck your eye as
-gratefully as the fragrance it conveyed to your nostrils. No wonder
-that, after a long spell, even a distant whiff of that odour of promise
-should bring back a definite picture. But that essences of such everyday
-character, say, as petrol; or that which accompanies the peeling of an
-orange, should still have the power of bringing me back, instantly, to
-the hours of my early schooling, is in truth a curious matter.
-
-In the case of petrol, perhaps, the connexion is less extraordinary.
-Until the age of the motor was ushered in—and that is barely a score of
-years ago—the smell of “petroleum,” as it was still called, could come
-upon the sense as an odour out of the usual run.
-
-Whenever I come across it now, it never fails to waft me back to the old
-class-room of the _Institution_, the _Etude No. 3_, where I first made
-acquaintance with the possibly wholesome but not otherwise attractive
-redolence of the _lampes à petrole_. That was during the short days of
-the year, when these luminaries were brought in soon after four o’clock,
-and suspended over our young heads—a ceremony coinciding with the last
-hour of _classe_—at the end of which the assembly would be dispersed for
-the day: the bigger boys walking back to their neighbouring homes, the
-smaller being fetched by their _bonnes_, or it might be the footman; or
-yet, in unpropitious weather, by anxious parents in carriage or
-_fiacre_.
-
-[Illustration: back of child sitting on bench]
-
-Quaint place, that _Institution_—when one looks back on it from this far
-end of the road! I think I can breathe its peculiar atmosphere this
-instant—and see the queer, long, low room, with the beams across the
-ceiling; the whitewashed walls, covered with highly coloured elementary
-maps and graphic pictures of the metrical system applied to measures
-lineal and cubical, solid and liquid, and to the national coinage....
-There they are: the six rows of benches and desks, each with its
-half-dozen youngsters, some elaborately drawing a steel nib, in strokes
-alternately swelling and slender, over a copybook of bafflingly soft
-paper, productive of periodical splutters; others reading ‹in earnest or
-in pretence› a chapter of _Epitome_; others, again, committing, with
-dumb mouthing, a fable of La Fontaine to memory for to-morrow’s
-recitation, until such moment as the cracked voice of the courtyard
-clock striking five should proclaim the hour of release. The usher,
-ensconced _in cathedra_, at his high desk; a smaller lamp for his
-especial benefit burning ‹and smelling› by his side; a book before
-him.—In his own walk he must have passed, methinks now, for something of
-a dandy, in the cheap line; for he remains associated more with sedulous
-trimming of nails, with pulling out of curly brown whiskers; with a
-nervous, tricky settling of collar, tie and cuffs ‹obviously false›,
-than with anything else.... He yawns amain. He consults his watch, and
-closes it with a click in the midst of the great silence of the room—the
-silence made more sensible, rather than disturbed, by the recurrent
-splutter of a pen-nib, or the turning of a leaf of _Epitome_.
-
-That _Epitome Historiae Sacrae_ was a primer adapted to first year
-boys—a small buckram-bound book compendized, poetically expurgated, and
-made in truth singularly attractive to the young imagination—more
-attractive even, I fancy, than those Fables of La Fontaine and of
-Florian that, read in the light of “short stories,” were such
-favourites. It was, by the way, called _Epitome Sacrae_ or even _Sacrae_
-pure and simple, in the same manner as the volumes allotted to the two
-subsequent years were known respectively as _Latinae_ and _Graecae_.
-
-I would give a fairly large coin of our present money for a copy now,
-could I come across one in some old bookstall on the quays. But, from
-their very nature, the cheapest books are among the rarest things to
-recover at second hand.
-
-[Sidenote: SCRIPTURE STORIES]
-
-It was within the pale green covers of that queer little tome that I
-tasted for the first time the literary savour of the various _genres_ in
-tale-telling; of pastoral and romance, of idyll and tragedy. One could
-not truly say that any very strong impression of a sacred character was
-conveyed through the collection of Holy Scripture stories. But it is
-doubtful whether anything read in after-life was stamped so clearly on
-the imagination as the poetry of Ruth amid the ears of barley, of
-Rebecca and the pitcher of water, of Rachel; as the romance of Joseph
-and his brethren; as the tragedy of Samson and Delilah; as the war
-pictures of Jericho and Jerusalem. It may have been a jumble of
-disconnected tales—and, for the boys, nothing more than tales—but each
-remains cut out in clean outline and brightest colours that are never
-likely to fade. To this day a field of golden corn, newly reaped, in
-pastoral Dorset, under a hot harvest sun, will raise the bright phantom
-of Boaz and the gentle gleaner. A country lass at the fountain, or even
-merely the rim of some disused and filled-up well, aye even such cryptic
-names as Jakin and Boaz, the pillars, will conjure up again some picture
-first raised from the pages of that _Epitome Sacrae_, read under the
-light of the brown lamp gently swaying in the draught of the school-room
-above our ruffled heads ... and steadily smelling of petrol!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XII
-
-
-Connected with those enthralling first tales, now that I come to think
-of it, is the development of certain simple tastes in food which have
-endured through a life not altogether devoid of gastronomic
-discrimination. Among these may be mentioned a special delight in
-lentils—later on extended to other members of the pulse tribe, but in
-its origin especially concerned with lentils. It is to be noted that the
-_Epitome_ rendering of what in the Authorised Version appears as red
-pottage is _un plat de lentilles_. Now lentils, stewed in some toothsome
-reddish sauce ‹not innocent of the savoury onion› was a standing Friday
-dish in the refectory at Delescluzes ‹together, be it said, with a
-_Saint Jean_ fish-pie—Saint Jean being the equivalent of our own
-mediæval “Poor John,” otherwise salt cod›. The small boy, however, who
-was destined, at the maturity of time, to become the Master of the House
-at the Villino Loki, was allowed a fair mutton chop of his own by
-special compact with M. Delescluze, as a concession to his Protestant
-heresy.
-
-[Illustration: children eating at table]
-
-[Sidenote: THE DELECTABLE LENTIL]
-
-The arrangement had been made when the dietary of the _jours maigres_
-came, quite accidentally, to the knowledge of his anxious parents. Such
-a concession might have bidden fair to scandalize the youthful republic
-at dinner time—if not perhaps on purely dogmatic ground, at least upon a
-question of invidious privilege. But it happened that the intended
-beneficiary of the bi-weekly _côtelette_ had been struck by that
-puzzling tale of Esau’s birthright so readily exchanged for a _plat de
-lentilles_.—Red pottage had become invested with an almost mystical
-quality.
-
-There is often a good deal of auto-suggestion connected with matters of
-food pleasure. At any rate the Friday _plat de lentilles_ ranked among
-the most desirable of eatable things, in his young opinion. The answer
-to the jeer that greeted him from the neighbour on his right, as the
-appetizing grill was laid by the grinning attendant for the first time
-upon the wooden board before him, was a prompt offer of half the flesh
-portion for the whole of his allowance of pulse—and a similar disposal
-of the remainder on the left-hand side. One chop for two plates of the
-savoury mess: the barter, as far as the pleasures of the table were
-concerned, was one of gain, for all parties. It had the further
-advantage of cutting at the root of conversational unpleasantness. The
-exchange of a single fat, heretical chop for two helpings of orthodox
-meagre fare became an established compact—one, it must be said, which
-demanded not only secrecy but adroitness for its fulfilment.
-
-The redistribution of the courses was usually carried out under the
-shelter of an enormous _broc_ ‹a relic of conventual furniture›, the
-French representative of our old English Black Jack; an obese, jug-like,
-wooden contrivance with iron hoops, containing something better than a
-gallon of the anodyne mixture called _abondance_—one part thin red wine
-to four of water. It was a supply which could, without danger to
-sobriety, be drawn upon, as the regulation had it, _à discretion_.
-
-The parties to this lentil transaction, which took place at the end of
-the long table farthest from the eyes of the presiding usher, had to bid
-for turns.... Where are you this day, you the only two whilom reprobate
-amateurs of chops on fast days whose names I can yet recall? You, Victor
-de Mussy, with the notable store of infantile catches and conundrums?
-And you, Guilleaume Moreau, of more plebeian stamp, who used to look up
-words for me in the dictionary—a task I truly loathed—at the rate of
-three words for one _bec-de-plume_? If you are still in the land of the
-living, I would take a fair bet that it never occurs to you now to
-order, of your own accord, a dish of lentils!
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE INCOMPARABLE ORANGE]
-
-Another persistent “nostril memory,” as I have said, is that of the
-orange. It is a curious one. Of a certainty I must have eaten of the
-golden apple many a time before that notable night when I was first
-taken to a theatre. And yet it is invariably that delirious occasion
-which is recalled, for however fleeting a moment, when the bursting of
-the essential oil cells of an orange peel sends forth its fragrance.
-
-[Illustration: child leaning over]
-
-The drama was “_Bas-de-Cuir_”—an adaptation of Fenimore Cooper’s Red
-Indian tale “Leather Stocking.” When I say that the part of “Leather
-Stocking” was taken by Frederic Lemaitre—personified genius of the old
-Romantic Melodrama!—that the playhouse was _Les Folies Dramatiques_—it
-will be patent to anyone familiar with the annals of the Paris stage
-that I refer to a very distant period. I could not have been more than
-eight years old. In those days, apparently, the custom, delectable to
-the boys if less so to their elders, of consuming oranges between the
-acts had not yet fallen into desuetude.
-
-It is very odd. There are as we know a large number of recognized
-methods of eating an orange: from the elaborate and super-epicurean
-Japanese dissection within the skin, which removes every pellicule and
-every pip out of the fruit, preparatory to “spooning” the pure pulp,
-with or without sugar, down to the simple suction known as “Mattie’s
-way.” Whatever be the process, the effect never fails if I stand by: as
-sure as the first puff of fresh orange peel meets me, so is my mind
-instantly brought back to some scene connected with “Leather Stocking”;
-to some sense of the very first dramatic emotion ever known—the silent
-laughter of the trapper; the faint, distant war yell of the Huron; the
-darting of the bark canoe down the rapid; the crack of a gun: the flare
-of the camp fire—what not? It is, of course, but a transient flash now,
-but there it always starts, harking, for a second or so, back half a
-century in the middle of completely unrelated thoughts and in
-surroundings the least likely to evoke the past—in the silence of a sick
-bedside, or amid the hot dustiness of a holiday crowd; or even, at
-dessert time, in the company of some fair neighbour whose young, healthy
-powers of table enjoyment enable her to conclude a regular dinner with a
-whole orange eaten in the appreciative and fragrant manner known as _à
-la Maltaise_.
-
-Scent alone, and that only for a second at a time, possesses this
-fantastic power. The taste of marmalade, for instance, is fraught with
-no special memories. As for the pleasure of sight in connexion with the
-orange, it is now concentrated upon the half-dozen trees—in pots, but
-bravely bearing year by year their little burden of fruit destined to
-grow for purely ornamental and “Italian” effect within doors at the
-Villino.
-
-What a marvel would an orange be considered, had it not become an object
-of our everyday life! We take it as a matter of course; but how much
-poorer would the world suddenly seem if oranges became henceforth
-unobtainable! And the lemon! If lemons cost a guinea apiece, I once
-heard a physician say who had a special experience of its wide-reaching
-healing powers, then would mankind appreciate the treasure it has at
-hand! One-half of its being, and by no means the less important, the
-rind, is deplorably neglected. We deal with it as with a practically
-worthless husk. If we more generally understood the value of its
-ethereal oil, we might save ourselves many a spell of unaccountable
-physical depression. I can personally testify to numerous instances of
-feverish bouts cured solely by a hot decoction of lemon zest.
-
-A similar virtue, by the way, seems to reside in the leaves of the
-Citrus Limonum. In southern countries—especially, I am told, in Spanish
-America—these leaves are obtainable in the dry state, and used as a
-febrifuge and alternative “tea,” or rather tisane, with marked results.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XIII
-
-
-[Sidenote: THE INVALUABLE ONION]
-
-Talking of the proper need of appreciation that might be rendered to
-some of nature’s goodly gifts, if only they were presented to us as
-something rare and novel—what of the humble but invaluable onion? “The
-onion,” as Stevenson says in his masterpiece, Prince Otto ‹and great was
-my satisfaction when I first read the pronouncement›, “which ranks with
-the truffle and the nectarine in the chief place of honour of earth’s
-fruit.”
-
-Truffle and nectarine are doubtless honourable terms of comparison, but
-I make bold to believe that any well-constituted jury of epicures would
-not hesitate to award the humble onion the place paramount among all the
-savours of civilized cookery. There are a certain number of curiously
-constituted people who absolutely refuse to countenance the onion in any
-connexion, however subdued and distant; who profess, whether in æsthetic
-affectation or through some innate queasiness, to look upon it as pure
-abomination. There are also those who assume a similar intolerant
-attitude towards tobacco. But who shall deny that, even as tobacco to
-the meditative and restful moments, the savoury onion has not added
-through the ages an incalculable zest to the hour of physical
-restoration? There could be no cuisine, on any varied scale, without it.
-
-“If the onion did not exist,” said a great _cordon-bleu_, paraphrasing a
-well-known philosophical pronouncement, “it would have to be invented.”
-
-Discreetly introduced, and subdued by happy blendings, it holds the
-finest of _fumets_ for your gastronomist’s palate: and, in all its own
-undisguised vigour, it will invest the coarsest or most tasteless food
-with never-failing allurement for robust appetites, whatever changes be
-rung upon the raw or pickled, the white-boiled, the golden-fried, or the
-brown-stewed.
-
-[Illustration: man at outside table]
-
-It must have been that russet background of onion which justified my
-youthful preconceived notion of the pricelessness of “Red Pottage” as an
-article of food. It no doubt fixed the taste for life. Of course, in all
-matters of earthly enjoyment, the “psychological” moment ‹which, by the
-way, is so often purely physiological› plays an important part. Certain
-tastes reveal themselves only as pleasurable in certain surroundings. A
-draught of coarse, dark wine of la Mancha, sucked out of the goat-skin
-sack, with its obtrusive, pitchy twang, will be a pure delight on the
-side of some dusty, stony Castillian road. And no one who has not had,
-in some wild out-of-the-way mountain village, to break his fast at
-peep-o’-day upon a chunk of grey bread, stone-ground and tasting of the
-wheat-fields, a handful of salt and a couple of Spanish onions, will
-ever know all the excellences of that juicy bulb.
-
-It is reported that, like his furiously assertive relation, garlic, the
-onion has very definite medical virtues. Some claim for it a power to
-cure sleeplessness—dreaded distemper—and also various antiseptic
-properties. This is as may be. The province of the precious plant, the
-duty which it fulfils well and simply, is that of supplying savour to
-things that may be nutritious but lack appetizing virtue. Many are the
-instances that might be adduced in support of this economic plea, but
-none more directly to the point than that of the _soupe à l’oignon_,
-which your thrifty French housewife contrives at shortest notice—the
-traditional “soup meagre,” object of such bitter contempt in our
-beef-gorging Hogarthian days.
-
- * * * * *
-
-This new culinary topic sets me once more back in the streets of old
-Paris, on the occasion when I made personal acquaintance with the
-possibilities of a penny meal—the best appreciated breakfast I have ever
-known.
-
-It was in the very last of my French days. Paris had then recovered from
-the miseries of the German siege and the nightmare of Commune anarchy,
-three years past. Within the next few months a new life was to be opened
-to me in England. The prospect of the great change, albeit fraught with
-some features of gravity, was exhilarating.
-
-The _Lycée_, for all its admirable scheme of studies, had lately been
-abandoned in favour of a quaint old British scholar, very poor, very
-learned, who lived on the heights of Montmartre, in the oddest little
-house—so filled with books that almost everywhere one had to move
-literally edge-ways. The very stairs, for lack of shelves, were piled on
-both sides with volumes, old and modern, tattered or nobly bound, stored
-regardless of subjects, merely in sizes for the sake of room.
-
-Long could I talk about you, O my dear Mr. Gilchrist—you with the keen
-eyes and the vigorous hook nose ‹always half-filled with snuff›; with
-the flowing beard of venerable threescore and ten, who taught me to read
-“the classics” after the English manner, _i.e._ with a regard to
-quantities; who, for the modest and evidently much wanted fee agreed
-upon, gave me daily at least five hours tuition ‹sometimes more› instead
-of the stipulated three! Hours, be it said, that went by lightly enough
-in that queer, snuffy room, where we sat facing each other on two
-straight-backed chairs—eager boy and no less eager old man. For, the
-Latin and Greek tasks over, there always followed excursions, one more
-fascinating than the other, into the deep and still unknown forest of
-English letters. And such was the variety and the happy choice of
-excerpts that, incredible as it may seem, the scholar of fourteen was
-oftener sorry than elated to leave the garrulous and enthusiastic mentor
-on his hill-top and return to the paternal house in the lower planes of
-the Champs Elysées.
-
-[Illustration: child and old man]
-
-An odd way of life for a youth, during those last few months of spring
-and early summer in Paris! It was full of glad aspirations towards the
-future, it is true, but at the same time not without an almost regretful
-enjoyment of the present. The distribution of time was peculiar. There
-was in it a kind of unconscious anticipation of that light-saving Bill
-of Mr. Willet ‹which has so little chance of being embodied in an Act›.
-The queer boy, in his transition stage, had taken a cranky turn on the
-subject of hours. Having made up his mind, on the one hand, that he had
-an enormous amount of new things to read and assimilate before his fresh
-start in England; and, on the other, having heard that one hour of
-morning study was worth ‹on what authority it matters little now› two
-after noon, he had invested in a specially ferocious alarum clock. The
-merciless clamour of this machine drove him out of dreamland daily at a
-quarter to five _ante meridiem_; and, strange as it undoubtedly was, it
-is not on record that he ever failed during that period to obey the
-summons.
-
-[Sidenote: A SEDULOUS SCHOLAR]
-
-There must have been somewhere at the back of so unnatural a submission,
-of such a persistency in a purely self-imposed and unnecessary
-discipline, a sort of romantic smack of mediævalism.... The “sedulous
-_escholier_” ‹so warmly commended by Saint Louis› was found awake and
-already absorbed in his search for lore as returning day began to whiten
-his window.
-
-The net result was a couple of hours of really earnest work before it
-was time to dispatch the morning bowl of _café au lait_ and the _pain de
-gruau_ and hasten to the ascent of Mons Martis, where impatient Mr.
-Gilchrist looked for his scholar’s appearance at eight sharp. It was
-very special reading—English History—a subject with which the _cours
-d’histoire_ at the Lycée could only deal in a sketchy manner; but the
-early-rising _escholier_, greedy of new knowledge, was fortunately
-helped by the appearance in that year of Green’s “Short History of the
-English People,” and fell under the charm of the captivating work.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XIV
-
-
-[Sidenote: PLAYING TRUANT]
-
-I have said that it is not on memory’s record that the whilom schoolboy,
-now in his mediæval student mood, failed to rise at the appointed clock
-crow. Of a truth he rarely had less than his eight hours good sleep,
-glad enough as he was to retire to rest at nine—“curfew time.” But it
-must be admitted that on one occasion or two he succumbed to the
-weakness of compounding with his studious resolutions. The French
-equivalent of playing truant is _faire l’école buissonière_—a taking
-term, redolent of the allurement of hedgerows and free green fields. And
-it is the memory of one of these _écoles buissonières_—or rather, in
-this case, _écoles riveraines_—that, through the usual devious paths,
-brings me back to the forgotten question of _soupe à l’oignon_.
-
-It must have been a very early day in May, for at a quarter before five,
-when the imperative rattle was sprung, sun-rays were just beginning to
-dart between the curtains. The birds in the Champs Elysées kept up their
-concert through the morning silence of the gardens with more persistent
-enthusiasm than usual. And on looking out of window, under such a pure
-sky, the out-of-door world looked quite extraordinarily inviting. It
-would have been folly to decline such an invitation!
-
-The “Short History,” opened at a chapter of the Hundred Years War, was
-left for the nonce undisturbed: the scholar sallied forth to roam under
-the tall trees of the _Cours la Reine_, intent, no doubt, on returning
-after a short stroll. But there is in the early morning hours,
-especially on such a morning, the spell of the “invitation to the road.”
-The river-side, so fresh and green, and the unending line of giant plane
-trees on the quays, as he swung along to meet the sun, still low behind
-the Isle of Notre Dame, drew him on and on. He decided only to return
-for breakfast and Gilchrist. Then he bethought himself there would be
-time to stroll through those populous quarters which, unlike the
-residential districts, were still in many ways the Paris of the Middle
-Ages. That was the Paris which held for him then so potent an
-interest—the Paris within the walls of Charles VI; the town of Armagnacs
-and Burgundians, which had been governed by Bedford for his infant
-English King; the crowded space, in short, between the old Louvres and
-the new Bastille, which had been kept in order by the tramping of
-English men-at-arms. One inquisitive excursion led to another—nearly two
-hours had been spent in delightful ferreting; there was no time to
-return home for breakfast before the Gilchrist-ward ascent. Meanwhile a
-positively wolfish hunger had begun to assert itself. The scholar
-“searched his pouch.” This was quite in mediæval style; and what was
-decidedly in the same style was the discovery of but two poor deniers
-for all asset! His usual pocket-money allowance was then reposing on the
-bed-side table, far away, save for these two pennies luckily forgotten
-in a waistcoat pocket.
-
-This discovery was made, ruefully enough, as he was looking about in the
-vicinity of Saint Eustache for some respectable _restaurateur_ wherein
-to obtain the matutinal coffee. But two deniers—twopence, _vingt
-centimes_—would never purchase breakfast at any table under a roof. What
-the devil...! Well, twopence in this workmen’s district would buy bread
-enough, anyhow, to appease the sharpest-set morning appetite. Saint
-Eustache, as every one knows, is close to the Halles Centrales, the
-great food emporium of Paris—a kind of combined Smithfield,
-Billingsgate, Covent Garden, and Leadenhall Market. The now frantic
-owner of the two pence was darting about the galleries in search of the
-first bread-stall, when he was arrested by a floating savour, truly
-ambrosial. As he stopped and involuntarily, if quite obviously, sniffed,
-a tempting voice rose beside him, engagingly familiar: “_Oui, elle est
-bonne, ce matin. Tu en veux, beau garçon?_” And so saying, a fat smiling
-_dame de la Halle_, with an alert eye to business, plunged a ladle into
-a deep iron _marmite_ and filled a generous-sized white bowl, something
-a trifle under a pint in capacity, with a steaming brown pottage, that
-in the circumstances was positively irresistible: “_Combien, la mère?_”
-asked the truant scholar, falling into the speech suitable to the place,
-and fingering the two modest coins with doubt and anxiety, even as might
-a ravening Villon, a destitute Gringoire.
-
-[Illustration: woman holding steaming bowl]
-
-“_Combien, mon p’tit gros? Mais un sou, toujours!—Et au fromage_,”
-changing her tone to mock deference as one addressing a client of
-importance, “_au fromage, dix centimes_, _mon prince!—Mais, bernique!
-n’y en a plus!_”—she added, laughing complacently and tossing her head
-in the direction of a second cauldron that lay empty on her left.
-
-The more luxurious cheese pottage being “off,” and time of importance
-‹it would, volunteered the culinary Madame Angot, take ten minutes to
-prepare the next potful› the famished wanderer proffered his penny and
-received his grateful bowl together with some eight inches of “long
-bread” in lieu of his half-denier change. And, leaning against a pillar,
-he set himself to the enjoyment of what, as I have remarked before, was
-the best breakfast of his life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: SAVOURY POTTAGE]
-
-Hunger is the finest of all possible sauces—a truism even more than a
-proverb. The snatched crust, the draught of clear water in the palm of
-the hand, at some dire moment of want, is more welcome than the most
-cunning dish, the rarest cup in the easy tenor of life. But the plain
-bread and the clear water, however eagerly seized, must ever savour of
-hardship. Now this halfpenny worth of _soupe à l’oignon_ bore none of
-that character, for all that, as far as nutriment went, it consisted of
-naught but bread and water. It had all the attributes of a civilized
-meal: it was hot, savoury, immediately comforting.
-
-As I disposed of it at leisure—for it was scalding, and had, besides, in
-an Epicurean way, to be husbanded as a relish to my portion of simple
-loaf—I watched the rotund but brisk dame prepare another instalment of
-the superior, or penny, brew against the next influx of customers. The
-first _clientèle_ ‹it appeared in course of friendly if fitful
-conversation› came about six o’clock—journeymen without a _ménagère_ at
-home, on their way to their day’s task; or night-workers in the Halles,
-on their way to morning sleep. The next one would begin soon—clerks,
-workgirls, and small employés who have to be at their post about eight.
-Then the demand for the penny bowl would rise afresh about noon.
-
-To one who was even then tasting the full value of the finished product
-the method of production had the interest of actuality, and was
-otherwise enlightening. And, _pardi!_ it is worth recording, as an
-instance of what could be done with raw material to the value of twelve
-sous—less than sixpence—to provide twenty people with a savoury dishful
-of broth and leave a distinct turnover of profit.
-
-These—as far as I could judge—were about a score of medium-sized onions
-of the more pungent kind ‹twopence, four sous or four cents›; half a
-pound or thereabouts of butter, salt butter it is true, but your
-Parisian insists wherever he can upon _cuisine au beurre_ ‹six sous›; a
-ladle-full of flour ‹say one farthing, half a cent›; something like two
-sous’ worth of stale bread, baker’s shop remnants. Leaving the cost of
-firing out of consideration—and in thrifty ingenious French hands it
-would be small—the return would be like thirty per cent. on the outlay.
-
-As for the technique of the brewing, it was simple but elegant. The
-sliced onions, fried in the butter at the bottom of the iron pot to a
-pleasing sunset colour under the watchful eye of the matron, were at the
-right moment powdered with the allowance of flour and stirred until the
-suitable appetizing brown was achieved—“The flour is just to thicken the
-_bouillon_, you understand, my lad,” the benevolent operator was pleased
-to comment, noticing inquisitiveness.—Then, at the precise moment of
-alchemic projection, the sliced shreds of bread were precipitated in the
-caldron, and gently turned round with a wooden spoon to let them take
-unto themselves all the unction of the butter, all the essence of the
-succulent bulbs. And presently the whole thing was drowned under a
-cataract of scalding hot water ‹some two gallons›. After a bubble or two
-of boiling the combination was completed and the savoury caldron was set
-aside upon a nest of smouldering ashes, ready against the next breakfast
-seeker.
-
- * * * * *
-
-And the _escholier_, having absorbed the last crumb and the last
-spoonful, hastened, greatly refreshed, by every conceivable short cut to
-his heights of Montmartre—_Mons Martyrum_, by the way, some etymologists
-insist on dubbing, in opposition to the _Mons Martis_ theory, in regard
-that it was the site of the martyrdom of St. Denis, the French “Champion
-of Christendom.”
-
-[Sidenote: VIRGIL ON “DOGGIES”]
-
-He was a trifle late—no doubt as a result of short cuts—and Mr.
-Gilchrist proportionately stern, just at first. But the dear
-enthusiastic teacher gradually mellowed under the influence of that
-morning’s reading—the “Georgics,” most enchanting of all Garden Talk
-volumes. The old scholar’s geniality had completely returned by the time
-we reached that “doggy” passage of the Third Book beginning with “_Nec
-tibi cura canum fuerit postrema_.”
-
-I can still see him smiling confidently at me over the line, “Let not
-thy dogs be the last of thy cares....” There was something prophetic
-about it!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Here, two score of years later, as I dream of the past, lies Arabella
-stretched by the fire, now and again heaving her great sighs of comfort.
-Bettina, curled at my feet, looks up adoringly at the master and wags
-her stump of tail whenever she meets his eye. As for Prince Loki, he has
-commandeered the best deep armchair, where he lies flat on his back,
-with front paws folded upon his bosom, and hind legs stretched out in
-abandoned beatific fashion, snoring melodiously.... _Cura canum
-postrema_, indeed!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XV
-
-
-The Hyacinths are all out in the Dutch Garden. But alas, the winds of
-March!—they grew and gathered and became a gale and laid some twenty of
-our silver-blue soldiers prostrate. Their fat juicy stalks snap all too
-easily. In the pots on the terrace wall, half have been swept away.
-However, thanks to our close planting, only the eye of the initiate
-could perceive the gaps. Right under the study windows there are still
-twin lakes of exquisite pale sapphire, breathing fragrance.
-
-[Illustration: outside in garden]
-
-In the bank below the Dutch Garden, the Narcissus, which have been set
-to the tune of two thousand, are swaying long lemon-coloured buds out of
-a field of green spikes. There are, in that tongue of land, two Buddleia
-trees which have grown to unusual height and girth and are a mass of
-orange balls in due season. And there is a band of Iris to which we are
-perpetually adding, but which, mysteriously, never seems to increase.
-There is also a shrubby bit where you will behold a wild rose tree; two
-nondescript flowering evergreens; a darling little Scotch Briar, one
-mass of yellow Pompons, entrancing by their wild scent; those
-disappointing bushes known as Altheas, so eulogized by garden
-chroniclers; and a Rheum.
-
-We planted the Rheum last year. This March it astonishes us by the leaf
-buds it has produced. They are like stormy, sinister, crimson blossoms
-with gaping yellow mouths, and look poisonous and tropical: altogether
-out of place in a Surrey moorland—especially with the innocence of the
-grey Lavender plant that grows beside them. What a thrilling thing a
-garden is and how full of surprises!—do Rheums always do this, we
-wonder?
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: CARPETS OF BLUE]
-
-[Illustration: flower pot]
-
-All the Compton pots along the terrace are filled with blue Hyacinths
-and Forget-me-nots; all the beds about the house are stuffed with Tulips
-and again Forget-me-nots. Now, some people ‹we read in a garden-book the
-other day› eschew this plant, _Myosotis silvestris_, because “it spreads
-so rapidly that it may almost be regarded as a weed.” We are the kind of
-people who like our flowers to spread like weeds; especially when, as in
-the case of this attractive sinner, every bed becomes a delicate cloud
-of blue from which on long stems the Darwins rear their cups of
-wonderful colour.
-
-[Illustration: small flower]
-
-A little later on, we mean to make the same use of Nemophila, which last
-year, in spite of ceaseless rain, kept bravely blue in the patch where
-it had been sown until quite the end of autumn.
-
-Every one tells us that Madonna Lilies will not succeed in our soil. We
-are making another effort with giant bulbs, which, so far, promise
-splendidly.
-
-[Illustration: flower]
-
-Fate, in its unexpected way, has provided us with a double row of red
-Duc van Thol Tulips on each side of the two little rose beds that run
-down the grass slope under the bench yclept “_Schöne Aussicht_.” That
-particular slope, by the way, in the pristine days of jungle, was the
-worst bit of wilderness. Heather, Gorse, Bramble, Bracken and underwood
-made it simply impenetrable. Now, cleared and turfed, it leads the eye
-gently on to the Pine Tree Avenue; to the green of the fields beyond; to
-the valley and the distant hills. In a triangular bed at the top a clump
-of Lilac has been planted and carpeted beneath with “Bachelor’s
-Buttons.” Already it is very gay, although the Lilacs are only in bud.
-We believe these double Daisies go by another title in gardening
-circles, but this is a name associated with youthful memories. They
-ought to flourish the whole year round, since bachelors will always be
-in season. We shall see.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is nothing that gives one a more intimate sense of the joy of
-spring than the renewed song of the birds. It is good to wake at early
-dawn and hear the soft sleepy calls and cries with which they first
-rouse each other, then the exquisite voice of thrush or blackbird,
-singing as it were under its breath the morning hymn which is one of the
-most touching things in Nature.
-
-Just now a small bird was spinning out a monody as delicate and
-continuous and attenuated as a spider’s gossamer—some feathered mother,
-we fancy, cradling her eggs. We never heard any song quite like it
-before. Adam shakes his head and says we are bringing the birds about
-the house with our winter largesses; but one might as well be told that
-if you want to keep your house tidy you should banish the children!
-
-Says Victor Hugo:
-
- “_Préservez moi, Seigneur, préservez ceux que j’aime,
- Frères, parents, amis, et mes ennemis mêmes,
- Dans le mal triomphants,
- De jamais voir, Seigneur, la ruche sans abeilles
- La printemps sans oiseau, l’été sans fleurs vermeilles ...
- La maison sans enfants!_”
-
-Substitute “_jardin_” for “_printemps_” and you have our views. We have
-no children in this house, worse luck ... except the fur ones.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: CONCERNING CALIBAN]
-
-Caliban, the garden man, has again broken his “pledge,” a little quicker
-than usual this time, and we fear we must be firm and keep to our last
-ultimatum—that unless he takes it afresh he will have to go. Caliban
-always reminds us of a prehistoric man. Whenever one meets him he looks
-exactly as if he had just reared himself upright from running on all
-fours, and would drop down again immediately as soon as we are out of
-sight. He has an excellent hard-working wife, and works very well
-himself—until the last pledge has quite worn away. We are sorry for Mrs.
-Caliban, the mother of three prehistoric babies: for we hear that
-Caliban, in the philosophic language of the district, “knocks her about
-a bit,” when he has had what he calls “his glass of beer.”—“You couldn’t
-wish for a nicer husband, when he’s sober,” she vows, poor woman, and is
-pathetically hopeful every time the oath of abstinence is administered!
-It is dreadful how many bad husbands there are in this small district.
-In another family the father is so well known that the mere mention of
-his name is enough to stiffen the employer of labour.
-
- “_Dere Miss, my husband as been very unlucky and strained
- hisself again and ad to give up his work._”
-
-Thus the poor wife starts the usual appeal when the inevitable has
-occurred and there is no more bread in the house. We are quite
-accustomed to these missives, which indeed might be stereotyped with
-space left for the date. Although the brother of a local policeman, this
-black sheep is altogether so hopeless, that, in order to keep his poor
-little progeny from growing sable in their turn, we have placed a lamb
-out here and there in divers charitable folds. Alfie, the last rescued,
-is a more original letter-writer than his mother. This was the document
-that he sent her from that happy Home for Little Boys where we trust he
-will grow up with an unimpeachable fleece.
-
- “_Dere Mother,—I hope this finds you well. I hope James and
- Vilet and Alice are well and nice and good. This is a very nice
- place. I hope you will tell me when you are going to call that I
- may be in. God bless you._
-
- _“Yours trewly_,
-
- “_ALFRED_.”
-
-In yet another family, the head of which was in the habit of spending
-ten or twelve shillings a week regularly on cigarettes and tipple, until
-Nemesis overtook him in the shape of consumption, the pretty,
-hard-working, fiery-haired Irish wife declares without a thought of
-unkindness, that if she could only get him “out of the way for good” she
-could “do all right” for herself and her three small children.
-
-[Sidenote: THE VILLAGE CURSE]
-
-If ever woman has a voice in social reform, though with a few glaring
-exceptions legal interference with the liberty of the subject is
-abhorrent to Loki’s Grandmother, and she has little wish herself for
-suffrage or any other rage, she vows that she will vote and vote and
-vote for any measure that may tend to eliminate the Public House from
-the countryside—curse of the small home that it is! In every one of
-these cases there would be comfort and happiness in the family were it
-not for the perpetual temptation to the breadwinner.
-
-The blacker the sheep, sad to say, the larger as a rule the family of
-doubtfully hued lambs. Mrs. Mutton—the letter-writer—is “not so well
-just now.” She is pathetically anxious that the new babe may be born
-alive, having lost the last one. Loki’s Ma-Ma went to see her the other
-day, and found her with a knowledgeable neighbour who has promised to
-“see her through,” and in a state of profound gloom, not unmixed,
-however, with a faint, pleasurable importance.
-
-“Oh, Miss, we have just heard of such a sad thing in the village. The
-nurse, she’s just been up to tell me—a pore young woman, Miss, gone with
-her first!”
-
-“Oh, dear!”—Loki’s Mother is duly impressed, but anxious to distract
-Mrs. Mutton’s mind—“That is very sad. I hope you’re feeling pretty well
-to-day, Mrs. Mutton?”
-
-“No, Miss, I’m very poorly these days. Mrs. Tosher here says she’s never
-seen any one like me. ‘What can it be,’ she says, ‘that makes you like
-this?’ Don’t you, Mrs. Tosher?”
-
-“Yes, my dear.”
-
-“I fell agin the water-butt this morning,” goes on Mrs. Mutton, in the
-melancholy drone that is habitual to her. “A kind of weakness it was
-come over me. I hit my eye—something awful, Miss, as you can see!”
-
-The signorina had been tactfully averting her gaze from that black orb;
-she now blesses the superior tact which enables her to contemplate it
-calmly.
-
-Mrs. Tosher—a large, jovial, untidy female with a shrunken “blue cotton”
-inadequately fastened by two safety pins across her capacious
-bosom—gives a heavy but non-committal groan. Mr. Mutton’s name is not
-mentioned. The water-butt explanation is accepted without demur.
-
-“Of course, she’s ’ad a shock to-day, Miss, you see,” says the village
-matron, and brings the conversation back to the original topic, which is
-one of great attraction.
-
-“Yes, Miss, it ’aving been just as it might be me, Miss.” Mrs. Mutton
-sighs, and looks in a detached, if one-sided manner, out of the grimy
-window. The visitor perceives there is nothing for it: she must hear the
-details. Wisely she resigns herself.
-
-“What happened?”
-
-“Well, it was all along of two suet dumplings and some chops, Miss,
-which wasn’t as they ought to have been, having been kept in the ’ouse
-too long, you see. Wasn’t that it, Mrs. Tosher, my dear?”
-
-“Yes, my dear, and some ’ard bits of parsnip.”
-
-“But it was mostly the chops, Miss, they’d been kept, you see. The
-doctors, they couldn’t do nothing for her.” Mrs. Mutton sighs and lifts
-the fringe of her shawl to the damaged eye. Tragic as the tale is,
-Loki’s Mother visibly brightens:
-
-“But then the poor thing was poisoned,” she cries cheerfully.
-
-“Yes, Miss, potomaine poison along of her condition, being the same as
-mine, Miss.”
-
-“But, Mrs. Mutton, anyone—”
-
-“No, Miss.” Mrs. Tosher intervenes: she cannot allow this foolish
-attempt at consolation to proceed. “The doctor said it was along of her
-condition.”
-
-“Yes, Miss, it’s the condition as done it—all along of a bit of
-chop—kept like—and ’ard parsnips.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XVI
-
-
-A friend of ours once told us that a doubtful sister-in-law had written
-describing the weather as “boysterious.” The word pleases us. It looks
-so much more graphic, spelt thus, than in the ordinary way. Well, we are
-having a “boysterious” time with shifting winds, this end of March. All
-the poor Pheasant-eye’s leaves are bruised and drooping, and the little
-field of Narcissus under the Buddleia trees is bent and tangled. To-day
-Adam has rolled away six tubs filled with last year’s Hyacinths and put
-them in the border before the rough wall in the front courtyard, against
-which we have last autumn planted Wichuriana Roses in divers shades of
-yellow and tawny, chiefly “Jersey Beauties.” A row of Polyanthuses,
-“Munstead Strain,” are blooming in front. The Hyacinths are blue. The
-effect ought to be pretty in a week or so. When the Hyacinths are over
-we shall go back to the old pink climbing Geraniums for the tubs, and
-they will, please Heaven, flourish from June onwards between our yellow
-roses. We think we will plant pink Geraniums, but we are not quite sure,
-for last year we had red “Jacobys” in those tubs, and very well they
-looked. We should not at all object to them in contrast to the roses.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: HONEYSUCKLE AND BITTER APPLE]
-
-Last night Loki’s Grandmother began to plan a new garden extravagance.
-She finds it very soothing when sleep abandons her pillow. We have not
-half enough Honeysuckle—that’s a fact. She thinks she will order a dozen
-pots. She has also a desire to get a dozen Clematis, chiefly Jackmanni,
-in the mauve and purple sorts, and plant them in their pots—the only
-way, she believes, in which even the commonest sorts will grow in this
-ungrateful soil. Honeysuckle, we know, thrives here. One summer we took
-a house on a hill near this, a little house buried in a wood, and the
-whole place was exquisite with the scent of Honeysuckle. It was grown
-all about the house, and over archways in the garden. Horrid archways
-made of wire they were: but it didn’t matter, the Honeysuckle was the
-thing. We wanted all we could get of it, for there were other odours,
-not at all so nice, that lurked about. The owner of the house, thrifty
-soul ‹at least we suppose it goes with a thrifty soul›, waged war
-against moths with _naphthalene_ and Bitter Apple, which are _anathema
-maranatha_ to us. We have had our nights poisoned in a house in Scotland
-with the reek of Bitter Apple in the blankets. We don’t know what
-people’s noses are made of that they can voluntarily surround themselves
-with such a pestilential atmosphere. The owner of the awful blankets
-also keeps her furs with the same evil-smelling precaution; and we can
-trace her entrance into the most crowded winter tea-party in London if
-she has as much as passed up the stairs.
-
-Besides Bitter Apple inside the honeysuckle-covered house, there was a
-pig outside—not on the premises hired by us, but in the adjoining place,
-where there was a school for little boys. When the wind blew from the
-direction of that school, the garden was odious, Honeysuckle and all.
-The first day we hoped it might be accidental. Then Saturday came, and
-we suppose the odd man did a turn at the sty, for there was peace till
-the next Tuesday, when the wind blew from the south again. Then Loki’s
-Grandmother marched into the room of Loki’s Grandfather ‹there was no
-Loki then, so he wasn’t a grandfather, but that is immaterial› and
-dictated a letter to the schoolmaster. Loki’s Future Grandfather
-protested. It is the kind of thing he hates doing. She drove him into
-the garden to smell. He tried to say he couldn’t smell it. Then she
-changed her tactics and hinted at insalubrity—a case of diphtheria in
-the village, and the danger to Loki’s Future Mother. That had him. He
-went in and sat down like a lamb. She dictated, as has been said. If
-anyone wants to know the kind of letter in which to remonstrate upon a
-neighbouring schoolmaster’s pigsty, he cannot do better than copy this
-model:
-
-[Illustration: pigsty]
-
- “_Dear Sir,—I must apologize for troubling you but I feel sure
- that you are unaware of the offensive condition of the pigsty
- which adjoins our garden—_”
-
-“Offensive?” said Loki’s Grandpa doubtfully.
-
-“Offensive,” said she firmly. “Offensive, you can’t put anything milder.
-It’s disgusting, pestilential, a public nuisance.” “_There is so much
-sickness in the district_—” she dictated on.
-
-“Oh, I don’t think I need put that.” Loki’s Grandfather was getting
-bored.
-
-“You must,” said she; “that will fetch him more than anything. Isn’t he
-a schoolmaster? If it gets about that he’s got an insanitary pig—”
-
-Well, the letter was finished with this artful twist. It had the most
-brilliant and unexpected results. Not only was the schoolmaster
-profoundly grateful for having his attention drawn to the matter—and the
-pigsty really was better ever after—but he expressed his gratitude in
-the most effusive terms. And he and his whole family called, and we went
-to tea in a thunderstorm at the school-house, which apparently had been
-built the day before yesterday, for the plaster was so wet the whole
-place steamed, and Loki’s Grandmother caught the cold of her life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: RUMOURS OF THE PIG-FARM]
-
-It is a very singular thing that in Ireland, the Padrona’s native land,
-supposed, and with reason, to be very inferior in the matter of
-cleanliness, the pig should be so much better cared for. Never have we
-found the sweet airs of that beloved country impregnated with “_bouquet
-de pigsty_” as they are in every farm here. Of course most of the pigs
-in Ireland—nice, clean, intelligent, active creatures—roam cheerfully
-about the roads all day, and share the family domicile by night. But
-even on properties which own a separate habitation for the “gintleman
-that pays the rint” it is swept and garnished for him in a manner seldom
-seen over here.
-
-In the particular region of Dorsetshire where Loki’s Great Aunt dwells
-there is quite a pretty house and grounds nearly always tenantless by
-reason of the pig-farm at the back. The farmer who kept the farm was
-amazed and indignant when one of the passenger tenants remonstrated with
-him and threatened him with the Sanitary Inspector. What if his pigs
-were noticeable? “Pigs ain’t pizen,” he said. I dare say, to him, by
-reason of associations with his bank account, they were sweeter than
-violets.
-
-Personally we should never keep pigs for choice, no matter how
-interested we might be in farming. However we might insist on the
-spotless condition of their dwelling-place, however affectionately we
-might invite them to the frequent bath and rejoice at the clean pink of
-their skins, the horror of the moment of inevitable parting would always
-be before us.
-
-A near relation of ours was the centre of a certain horrid little
-anecdote, likewise connected with pigs, that is nevertheless humorous
-enough. It happened in Dorset, in a picturesque manor-house, the walled
-gardens of which abut on a comely, prosperous farm. One April morning
-the air was rent with the agonizing clamours of protesting pigs; and
-she, whose tender heart suffered with the pain of every animal, was rent
-too with compassion.
-
-“Oh, what,” she cried to her hostess, who was also her daughter, “what
-can Mr. Boyt be doing to the poor, poor pigs? Oh! Polly, I’m afraid he’s
-killing them!”
-
-Polly was not at all sure in her own mind that this was not the case,
-but she was stout in asseverations to the contrary.
-
-“Oh, dear no, darling; nobody ever kills pigs this time of year. They’re
-just cleaning out the sties, that’s all. You know what pigs are,
-darling.”
-
-In spite of a fresh and most dismal explosion, her mendacity rose equal
-to the occasion; and her final statement, that she knew for a fact that
-pigs weren’t half fattened yet, produced the intended effect, and the
-dear visitor was convinced.
-
-[Illustration: woman standing at entrance in wall]
-
-[Sidenote: TIRING WORK]
-
-Later in the day when all was stilled once more, and the lovely April
-afternoon as full of country peace as it should be, the two went out and
-down the lane; the guest in a donkey-chair and her daughter by her side.
-To the latter’s discomfiture on their return they met the portly form of
-Mrs. Boyt, emerging from the walled garden with an empty egg-basket.
-Mrs. Polly was very anxious to skirmish the donkey-chair past with an
-ingratiating and nervous giggle; but neither the donkey nor the lady in
-the chair would fall in with her strategy. The lady in the chair had a
-liking for Mrs. Boyt, and was amused at the thought of a little chat
-with her; and the donkey, like all self-respecting donkeys, was bound in
-honour to stop dead when it was most wanted to advance. Perhaps, too,
-Mrs. Polly’s artfulness had aroused lingering suspicions, for the lady
-in the chair was very firm:
-
-“Good evening, Mrs. Boyt. ‹No, Polly, it’s not cold at all. No, I’m not
-going in yet.› How is Mr. Boyt?”
-
-“Mr. Boyt he be fairly, thanking you kindly, ’m. Of course he be a bit
-tired this evening.”
-
-Mrs. Polly, with a wild eye, intervened.
-
-“I’m afraid it’s tea-time, darling. H’m—H’m—A beautiful evening—Mrs.
-Boyt, my Mother was admiring the little calves—Come on, Bathsheba!”
-
-In vain she clucked, in vain she pulled the reins; Bathsheba merely
-twitched an ear. The clear voice from the bath-chair put all efforts to
-turn the conversation on one side with a decision which swept her into
-silence.
-
-“Tired? Did you say your husband was tired, Mrs. Boyt?”
-
-“Yes’m. Pigs be very tiring.”
-
-“Pigs, Mrs. Boyt?—Oh! what was he doing with the poor pigs this morning?
-He wasn’t—he wasn’t killing them?”
-
-“Oh, ’ess ’m.” And, blind to the horror and disgust on her listener’s
-face, Mrs. Boyt proceeded with unction:
-
-“Beautiful pigs they was, six of them.”
-
-“Oh, but he didn’t do it himself?”
-
-“Oh, ’ess ’m.” Mrs. Boyt was much shocked. “We allus do it ourselves, I
-do hold en, and Boyt he do stick en—very tiring it do be for us both!”
-
-It was only Mrs. Polly who saw the humour of the situation in after
-days. The beloved lady in the bath-chair remained overwhelmed with the
-tragedy. It was not a subject that could be referred to again in her
-presence.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XVII
-
-
-[Illustration: house with smoke coming out of chimney]
-
-How delightful it is to come back to our moors after London! Loki’s
-Grandmother’s heart always sinks when the bricks and mortar begin to
-spring up about the road, and the houses close in around her. Sometimes
-she thinks that what weighs upon it is the sense of all those miles of
-squalor; of all those hives of human misery; of all the sin and
-suffering. Perhaps, however, she is influenced by mere distaste of the
-crowd; displeasure in living one of a herd in a jostle of houses; the
-ignominy of being a number in a row with undesired neighbours on either
-side! Who would prefer to look on pavements, area railings and
-lamp-posts; to listen to the roar and turmoil of a life one has no
-ambition to share—a life vexing the peace of night and day, rather than
-feast the eyes on cool green loveliness, on rolling moorland; the ear on
-vast delicious silence or the choiring of windswept woods? How, in fact,
-can anyone who has the choice live in town, instead of in the fair,
-quiet, spacious country? One cannot feel one’s soul one’s own in London:
-bits of it are perpetually escaping to join the giddy midge dance. The
-individuality evaporates. But then—there are concerts, and Wagner’s
-operas; and one’s own select friends and the interest of the great
-intellectual movements! The splendid activities of life seem to pass one
-by in the country. Well, we suppose, like everything else in existence,
-one must take the see-saw as it comes, and accept the bumps for the sake
-of the soaring. But we are always glad to come back to Villino Loki.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: A SCHEME OF AZURE AND TAWNY]
-
-The discoveries one makes in the garden after ten days’ absence are
-thrilling. The three rows of Thomas More Tulips under the dining-room
-window are colouring to a glorious orange, and the Forget-me-nots
-planted between them are showing little sparks of blue. The tawny
-Wallflowers at the back are not all we could wish; but, even pinched as
-they are, the effect of their many velvet hues is satisfactory. There is
-a single row of double Tulips ‹Prince of Orange› at the edge of the bed,
-between the Forget-me-nots. In a week or so, looking up the terrace,
-there will be five lines of flame running gloriously out of the blue; a
-sight to delight the eye, against the curious bronze purple the moor
-wears just now.
-
-The Scillas, which we thought were going to fail us, have been a
-tremendous success, and still form pools of glowing blue round the
-almond trees. Next year we intend to make a feature of Scillas. They are
-such tiny bulbs that they can scarcely interfere with anything; and we
-shall slip them in among the perennials in every corner, besides putting
-more in the grass terraces. We are also going to run riot with
-“Steeple-Jacks,” especially the light turquoise kind. They last an
-immense time and are of a delicious tint. The long border of Campanelle
-Jonquils that we have planted in what we call the “Bowling Green” are
-drawn up as for a review, stiff and straight like little soldiers in
-bright gold helmets. Next year we shall invest in three or four thousand
-Daffodils for the rough places under the trees, and we mean to star the
-banks with Primroses and Wild Violets.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have made a vast improvement these days by turfing most of the walks,
-and we now look out on a delicious sweep of green. The Lily Border and
-its opposite neighbour, the tongue of land with the Buddleia trees and
-shrubs, look infinitely more attractive thus set into the verdure. Great
-clumps of yellow Polyanthuses and self-sown Forget-me-nots make it gay
-while we are waiting for the Narcissus Poeticus, the Poppies, the Lilies
-and other joys to break upon us. The field of mixed Narcissus under the
-trees is going to be one sheet of blossom in a few days, blown about,
-though they be, poor darlings, by these fierce and cruel winds. The
-papers are full of exclamations over “winter in April”: so far our
-high-pitched garden has stood it well. This is the advantage, we
-suppose, of its natural backwardness.
-
-We are now fired with the desire to turf the Dutch Garden; the path
-under the second terrace, _i.e._ Blue Border, and also the path leading
-from the Bowling Green, so that we shall look down on a succession of
-green levels, each with its wealth of flowers. We want to make the whole
-little place shine like a jewel out of the rough setting of the moor.
-
-[Sidenote: TEMPTATION]
-
-Talk of the zest of gambling! ’Tis impossible that it could more possess
-the soul in defiance of purse and prudence than the garden mania. If
-Loki’s Grandmother had hold of a cheque book ‹which she hasn’t› she is
-afraid the family substance would flow away from month to month into
-bulbs and blossoms, tubers and saxifrages, clumps and climbers; not to
-speak of such prosaic but necessary accompaniments as loam, manures,
-lawn-mixtures and “vaporisers.” She would build at least two new
-greenhouses and double her garden staff. And perhaps after all she
-wouldn’t be half as happy as she is. For she might be led into “named
-novelties,” and garden rivalries, and splendours of artificial rockeries
-where in the centre of vast beds of slag some microscopic curiosity no
-larger than a spider would spread a fairy claw in the shadow of a
-monstrous label. Perhaps she might be bitten with an unwholesome passion
-for Orchids, and spend the portion of her only child, and all the fur
-grandchildren, on the devilish attractions of those plants which are, we
-are convinced, flowers of evil.
-
-Just now her last extravagance has been to order three and six worth of
-White Honesty at ninepence a dozen, to plant in among the new
-Rhododendrons; and she is suffused with satisfaction at the prospect of
-anything so cheap and charming. We recommend the effect, discovered
-quite accidentally.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have really abominable weather. It is very unusual.
-
- “Oh, to be in England,
- Now that April’s there!”
-
-is an aspiration justified as a rule by a tender interlude between the
-tantrums of March and the asperities of May. Last year April came in
-skipping like a kid on the Campagna, even its freakishness full of
-attraction. Is anything more charming than to see the kids playing among
-the flocks, as one drives along those roads of haunting and mysterious
-beauty—under that sky incomparable in its gem-like purity; to see the
-shepherd in his sheepskin seated on a fence with his legs
-cross-bandaged, the shrill pipe to his lips; to hear his wild strain and
-know that it was all just the same a thousand years ago and more? The
-kids, as they leap out of the scattered flocks, are cut against the blue
-as on some classic frieze; the tawny, melancholy plain falls and rises
-and falls again till the hills amethystine, snow-capped, close the field
-of vision in the far distance! The broken line of an aqueduct gleams as
-if golden.
-
- “To be in Italy,
- Now that April’s there!”
-
-Loki’s Grandmother believes she would give up her country and Villino
-Loki, and expatriate herself for ever gladly. But Italy is not
-expatriation, it is the home of the soul. ‹Loki’s Grandpa says he quite
-admits all that—but that for a permanency he prefers his Surrey hills.›
-
-The fires on the Campagna are rose-carmine as the pointed flames pulsate
-upwards. Our fires here are only just the usual yellows. Where is it
-that Italy holds the secret? Is it in the translucence of the
-atmosphere? How the sunlight there lies on a common plaster wall! How
-the stone flushes! Just a little white Villino on a hill-side stands in
-a radiance of its own, and is not white at all but topaz coloured!
-
- * * * * *
-
-To-day, the fifteenth of April, has been as grey and bleaching a day
-here as we never wish to meet again. Even the spears of the Narcissus
-are bruised and drooping.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XVIII
-
-
-Mrs. Mutton, poor soul, has had a dead infant. It is perhaps scarcely to
-be wondered at, as she had another encounter with the water-butt shortly
-before the event; but she is as much “taken-to” as if she had been
-hoping to bring an heir-apparent into a realm of splendour. The doctor,
-to console her, asked her hadn’t she plenty already.
-
-“I did think it unkind of him, Miss! It does seem ’ard! I did so seem to
-long for this one to live!”
-
-We had a confidential conversation with the experienced matron who was
-ministering to her, and we mentioned the water-butt with some severity.
-But Mrs. Tosher would have none of this. Hers is a large mind
-philosophy:
-
-“Ho! well, you see, Miss, it’s just as it takes them. I don’t say as
-Mutton isn’t a bit fond of his glass; but after all, Miss,” she smiled
-indulgently, “you must remember he was a bit upset-like. It isn’t as if
-there ’adn’t been a reason. When ’e ’eard there was going to be another,
-it turned ’im against ’er. Of course, poor feller! That was only to be
-expected like—”
-
-“Good Heavens!”
-
-Mrs. Tosher smiled more broadly than ever at our innocence.
-
-“Some men do take it very ’ard!”
-
-Words failed us. We could not reason upon such a point of view.
-
-At the bottom of the garden the “little cot,” as Mrs. Adam calls it,
-which she and her husband have made so pretty, has been the scene of a
-similar domestic event which makes the contrast still more poignant. A
-little Eve, in fact, has been born into our small garden of Eden. She
-has received a joyful welcome. That most attractive child, black-eyed
-Adam Junior, with the mysterious intuition of childhood had recently
-been bombarding heaven for a little sister. He is now thrilled and
-triumphant at the success of his prayers. We personally are quite
-pleased with the addition to the _famiglia_.
-
-[Illustration: view of house from garden]
-
-We wonder whether it is because of the Italian atmosphere that has so
-unaccountably descended on Villino Loki that we and our establishment
-are really falling into relations not unlike those which so happily
-subsist between master and servant in Italy. The Master is not master,
-but Father-in-chief; the servant are not servants, but members of his
-family—the _famiglia_.
-
-We were afraid our last winter in Rome had spoilt us for English ways.
-We had a delightful famiglia there. Fioravanti di Rienzo, the pearl of
-cooks; Camillo Lanti, the clever, busy, and quite reasonably peculating
-butler; and Aristide ‹surname unknown›, the superb coachman, all begged
-with tears to come back to England with us.
-
-“Take but a postcard,” cried Camillo, “and write upon it ‘Camillo,
-come,’ and instantly I start.”
-
-[Illustration: man in trees]
-
-“Will ever anyone drive the Excellencies as I drive them?” Aristide
-demanded. “I would learn the ways of Londra in a day—two days. To learn
-the ways of Londra, that would be nothing; but to drive another family,
-that I feel I cannot ever again!”
-
-[Sidenote: A FEARFUL DREAM]
-
-It was Fioravanti whom we loved the most, and whom we did really try to
-get over to us later. But it was a case of binding engagements on one
-side and the other. He had given his word, as a man of honour, to remain
-a year with his new family, and we were pledged to some new cook at the
-moment when he was free. So it all came to nothing—which was perhaps
-just as well. He was a choleric little man. Loki’s Mamma dreamt he
-stabbed the kitchen-maid and buried her in the garden, which was not at
-all an unlikely thing to happen, for, like Vatel, his dishes were his
-glory, his honour was bound up in them, and the race of Cinderellas in
-this land would inflame the blood of such an enthusiast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: ROMAN MEMORIES]
-
-This is not to say that all Italian servants are like those three. We
-had some very thrilling experiences in the shape of Roman rascality
-during our first weeks of housekeeping there. After the odd custom we
-had one woman servant to three men; and, as the genus housemaid does not
-exist at all in many parts of the Continent, we had extreme difficulty
-in procuring a _donna di faccenda_. We had a whole large house in the
-Via Gregoriana, and it was imperative we should have something female to
-scrub its bedrooms and bathrooms.—Scrub? It is not a word you could get
-any Roman to understand the meaning of, much less put into application;
-but still we had to get somebody to sweep the dust into the corner or
-under the rug, and pass an occasional wet rag languidly round the rim of
-a bath. Loki’s Ma-Ma, being the Italian scholar of the family, engaged
-the staff. She was enchanted with the appearance of a splendid young
-girl from the Campagna, with cheeks like ripe nectarines, and a
-coroneted black head. Alert and brisk as a mountain kid, she seemed to
-us. Alas! who could have thought it? The creature was a bacchante! She
-ordered in a cask of wine all for herself, and then ran out the second
-evening and never came in till the next morning. Having danced with
-Bacchus all night, she was altogether unfit for any Christian habitation
-in the morning. It may be all very well to sleep off the red fumes on a
-thymy bank in a pagan world; but it’s not at all poetical or attractive
-at close quarters within four walls! A sordid, pitiful, revolting
-business! And the happy mountain kid, who proved after all to be only a
-bad little gutter goat, had to be driven forth when the legs that had
-caracoled so much were able to crawl again.
-
-Aristide had a profile like the head of a philosopher on a Roman coin.
-He was a magnificent driver. We had a pair of powerful, fiery Russian
-horses, and they wanted all his skill. Whenever they took to
-plunging—and when they did so they struck sparks out of the stones and
-filled the street with the thunder of their hoofs—Aristide’s method of
-reassuring “his family” was invariably to gather the reins in one hand
-and blow his nose with great _désinvolture_ with the other. He always
-turned sideways to do this, flourishing an immense pocket-handkerchief,
-as one who would say: “Behold! how calm I am!... Have no fear!”
-
-Only on the occasions when we discarded our carriage for the use of a
-motor was the harmony disturbed between Aristide and ourselves. He would
-droop on his box for days afterwards and take the characteristic Roman
-revenge of declining to shave.
-
-Loki’s Grandmother developed a sudden and violent attack of influenza on
-one of these motor expeditions, and had to be conveyed home in a
-collapsed condition.
-
-“Ah,” said Aristide, “if Mamma had been with me, this would not have
-happened! Autos are nasty feverish things.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-We were very sorry to leave our Roman house, with its delicious
-proximity to the Pincio. It was a very old house, with a round marble
-staircase, deep-grilled windows, and a delightful tiled inner courtyard
-filled with green, where a fountain splashed day and night—a courtyard
-into which the sunshine literally poured. A great many of the objects
-which now give us pleasure at Villino Loki we placed originally in that
-double drawing-room which the owners of the house had left in somewhat
-denuded condition.
-
-[Sidenote: ORANGES AND ALMOND BLOSSOM]
-
-[Illustration: orange tree in pot]
-
-The gardener of the Barberini Palace kept us supplied with hired plants.
-Never have we seen Azaleas or Orange trees grown like those, with such
-exquisite artistic freedom. We had a Tangerine tree that was a complete
-joy. This arrangement worked beautifully for the first month. But
-unfortunately the gardeners, father and son, were professed anarchists
-and, when they were in their cups, their ethical principles overcame
-their business sense. Loki’s Grandmother had one day to stand by
-helplessly while Loki’s Ma-Ma was cursed and vituperated in a foam of
-vulgar Italian for innocently requesting to have a faded Azalea
-replaced. Not being able to speak Italian herself, she could not come to
-the assistance of her more talented daughter.... And both felt
-ignominiously inclined to cry!... Alas! that any spot so beauty-haunted
-should have been desecrated by such coarse and stupid passions! Those
-gardens of the Barberini, with their Lemon groves and Orange groves; the
-lush grass filled with Narcissus and Violets, and, in the Roman way,
-with water dripping from every corner; with the bits of columned wall
-and the statues and the three great stone pines against the blue sky! It
-is all Italy in one small enclosure.
-
-We moved from the Pincian Hill to much less interesting quarters; but,
-with the luck that followed us all through that happy time, quite close
-to the Borghese gardens. There we had a black-and-white tiled
-dining-room and a long drawing-room all hung with pearl grey satin and a
-wonderful Aubusson carpet. And when the room was filled with almond
-blossom there were compensations for the exiguity of our accommodation.
-The lady who was obliging enough to accept us as her tenants ‹for a rent
-that filled our Roman friends with horror at our profligate
-extravagance›, although bearing a noble Austrian name, it was darkly
-whispered, had a commercial origin. Her businesslike spirit certainly
-showed itself in her transactions with us; for neither blankets, nor
-cooking utensils, nor the necessary glass and china were forthcoming, in
-spite of magnificent assurances.
-
-“What will you?” said Fiori, our beloved little chef, shrugging his
-shoulders, “_Sono Polacchi!_” “The Countess,” he informed the young
-housekeeper, “sent in her maid, and I showed her the few poor pans, the
-miserable couple of pots she expected me to do with. ‘Is it not enough?’
-she cried. ‘Enough?’ I answered. ‘Enough perhaps for your lady, for a
-service that is content with an egg on a plate, or one solitary cutlet!
-But my noble family must be nobly served.’”
-
-[Illustration: man with apron]
-
-Excellent Fiori, he used to trot upstairs every night to receive his
-orders, clad in the most spotless white garments and a new white paper
-cap, which he doffed with a superb gesture on entering the room. Upon
-receiving a well-deserved compliment, he would spread out his small fat
-hands and bow profoundly, exclaiming, “My duty, Excellency, only my
-duty!”
-
-In one single instance was his entire content in our establishment
-clouded; that was when, in a moment of abstraction, he forgot to send up
-a dish of young peas—the first in the market—which he had prepared with
-his own superlative skill, and adorned with a pat of fresh butter
-whipped to a cream at the top: “_All’Inglese_,” he called it. We believe
-he spent the evening in tears, and he could not speak of it next day
-without emotion.
-
-“Useless, useless, to try and console me, Excellency,” he exclaimed. “I
-am profoundly humiliated, I shall never get over it!”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XIX
-
-
-[Illustration: _The Blue Border._]
-
-The warm weather has come with a burst in this last week of April. We
-have torn ourselves away from Villino Loki to London pavements. The
-Floribunda trees are covered with red buds. We expect a glory when we
-return. Loki’s Great Aunt has presented his family with twenty-five
-shillings worth of purple Aubretia, with which ‹much to Adam’s
-annoyance› we have decided to carpet the blue border. The Blue Border,
-we think, is under some evil bewitchment. Our late gardener assured us
-that no “human gardener” could find room for another plant. Yet it was
-the only border in the garden that “came up bald,” if one can use such
-an expression. Perhaps we had too much initiative and he too little; a
-combination bound to result in failure sometimes, if it is accompanied
-on one side by plunging ignorance, and on the other by “slowness of
-intellect, Birdie, my dear.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-To come back to one’s garden in April after ten days of strenuous London
-is a wonderful little experience for people who care for the pure joys
-of the young green and the spring flowers.—There is an indescribable
-panorama of woodland beauty on the hills opposite Villino Loki. A great
-marching regiment of pines, straggling upwards, emphasize the tints of
-birch and larch—tints which no pen, hardly any brush, could portray. The
-very sunlight seems caught and sent forth again from the pale yet vivid
-sheen. The White Broom is pearled with bud; in a few days it will burst
-into bloom and toss plumes as of some fantastic, fairy knighthood above
-the yew hedges that enclose the Dutch Garden.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The dogs’ welcome to their lost masters and to Loki ‹who, of course,
-always accompanies his family wherever it goes› is very genuine, and
-rather obstreperous. Bettine runs in and out of the room, up and down
-the furniture, as if in joyful pursuit of imaginary rats. Arabella, fond
-and foolish as ever, tries to crawl into everybody’s lap. Being about
-the size of a young calf, these blandishments are not encouraged. Loki,
-little Fur-man, as we call him, has a different way of expressing his
-feelings. True, he runs about and yelps rapture to the other dogs; but
-he sobs and cries like a child on reunion with any of his own, and half
-swoons with rapture in our arms. Sometimes it seems as if the love in
-his heart were too big for his little flame-coloured body, and must
-burst it in the endeavour to express his joy!
-
-[Sidenote: MISUNDERSTOOD CANDOUR]
-
-Loki is always very bumptious and pleased with himself in London—being
-Only-dog there—but he cannot bear visitors beyond a certain limit.
-Friends who come to tea are very much touched and charmed at the sight
-of the “dear little dog” going from one to the other, sitting up and
-waving his paws with frantically imploring gesture.
-
-[Illustration: dog waving paws at seated visitor]
-
-“Sweet little fellow—what can he want?” they say, and vainly offer
-tit-bits from the tea-table. Loki’s Grandparents of course cannot
-answer, “He begs you to go away”—but such unfortunately is the true
-explanation. He sneezes with rapture when the door is closed on the last
-departing guest: he then is able to lead his Grandmother upstairs for
-the evening romp. His Grandmamma has weak health, which is no doubt the
-reason why he has fixed on her as the only person who understands the
-true inwardness of his games. They are very exhausting to mere humans,
-and he has a great deal of cat perversity in his composition. He spent
-the whole time of a recent dinner-party sitting upon a chair in full
-view of the company, ceaselessly begging with prayerful paws; “Oh do, do
-go away!” As usual he evoked a great deal of undeserved
-sympathy—meanwhile his tactful family held their peace.
-
-Bettine is growing into the hobbledehoy stage. A few weeks ago it was an
-entrancing spectacle to see her playing with a butterfly on the moor. It
-was a yellow butterfly, and we think it must have understood the rules
-of catch-who-catch-can, for it fluttered along just ahead of the white
-puppy’s nose. It was a little vision of youth and spring to snapshot for
-the gallery of mental memories. Loki’s female relations, who are given
-to transcendental discussions, sometimes wonder whether in the next
-world they will be vouchsafed these dear small pleasures which make up
-the best of life down here. Unless we find our animals there, there will
-certainly be something missing. Surely there are flowers in Heaven, and
-birds—why not those faithful creatures in which a soul seems so often
-struggling into birth?
-
-[Sidenote: HEAVEN, AND OUR BEASTS]
-
-“My little god, my little god!” Maeterlinck makes the dog say to his
-master. It is certain that man, in making the dog his companion, has in
-some sort endowed him with spiritual faculties. And it is this piteously
-loving, confiding, blindly adoring, dumb creature that has been selected
-by the “master minds” of the day as the chief victim for the horrors of
-scientific research!
-
-Indeed, that humanity should thus use its God-given dominion over the
-helpless lower order of creation is an idea so hideous that it can only
-have emanated from the Powers of Darkness. All the glib arguments that
-this animal torture benefits suffering man seem to us as much beside the
-mark as they are immoral. Almost every crime can be justified by some
-such theory, from the century-old customs of child exposure in China to
-the modern Suffragette outrages. And already the boundaries on this
-speculative field have been extended so as to include members of the
-community whose defencelessness or unimportance preclude unpleasant
-reprisals. How many unfortunate patients, for instance, are quite
-unnecessarily operated upon in our great hospitals? Within our narrow
-personal experience we have known cases where life has been absolutely
-sacrificed to the “knife mania.”
-
-Loki’s Grandmother, who feels very strongly on this subject, has always
-wanted to write an article giving chapter and verse of the facts. She
-would have headed her instructive pages with the title “Killing no
-Murder;” but she knows no magazine would publish them because of the
-storm it would raise.
-
-During a recent severe illness of hers, one of her nurses, whom she used
-to call her “ministering devil,” was very fond of entertaining her—at
-moments when the patient was too weak for speech—with the hopes which
-many eminent men of science now entertain of being able, some day, to
-get a bill passed permitting vivisection on the condemned criminal!
-
-Why speak of such abominations in these pages dedicated to kind, happy
-days and sweet garden thoughts? Only for this reason—that it is the
-policy of ignoring, of cowardly turning away from unpleasant subjects,
-on the part of the great majority of the world that makes the thing
-possible at all.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: bird flying outside house]
-
-One of the first orders we give a new gardener is that nothing is to be
-slain at Villino Loki except the Green Fly and the Rose-Beetle. The
-birds may devour all our buds, strip up our crocuses, and denude our
-raspberry canes ‹if they get a chance›. The mole may tunnel and burrow
-and raise his convulsive mounds in our most cherished lawn—and that is
-certainly a test of garden endurance—we will have no traps! As for the
-squirrels, we are afraid we have cleared too much in our wilderness to
-tempt them now. But one of the family actually bought little green
-tables in order to spread repasts for them near their favourite haunt.
-
-In certain wild corners of Dorsetshire squirrels become almost familiars
-in such households as are kindly enough to set forth a dainty, now and
-again, for the frolicsome company. One understanding person of our
-acquaintance was given to spreading nuts on a certain window-sill, where
-every day the squirrels used to come and fetch them. One morning she was
-a little later than usual in this attention; on coming into the room,
-she was startled by a knocking on the window, and there on the sill sat
-a thing, all fur and bright eyes, knocking with its fairy paw! We think
-Loki has a good deal of the squirrel in him. There are no end of nice
-little beasts that Loki resembles. Sometimes we declare that he is least
-of all dog.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE WILD PATCH]
-
-[Illustration: flowering plant]
-
-It is a wonder that people do not make more use of Broom in their Wild
-Gardens. We have seen a woodland path where great bushes of alternate
-white and yellow Plantagenista made riot in the sunshine; but it was too
-regular an arrangement to harmonize with scene. A wild garden, however
-cultivated secret, should grow as naturally as possible. It is a rather
-interesting experiment to fling the contents of a packet of wild flower
-seeds about one’s banks and unkept spaces. One forgets all about it;
-and, behold! after the second year, there are all kinds of engaging
-discoveries to be made: patches of grey-blue Campanulas, bold Foxgloves,
-Loose-strife, white Campions, all the more delightful because forgotten
-and unexpected and fitting into their surroundings as no amount of
-planting in can make them do. A giant Mullein has just made itself a
-home under the fir-trees and stands as if it had always been there,
-boldly and defiantly established in its proper place and determined to
-maintain it.
-
-We caress the project of planting tall Ericas and Mediterranean Heaths
-on the borders of a certain rough path; and in between the Heather we
-shall make drifts of Colchicum, so that it may look lovely in all
-seasons. We do not consider that Colchicum is properly placed in the
-garden. Its summer leaf is too coarse, and it is hideous when it dies
-off. Mrs. Earle has made the same remark in one of her delightful books.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: VISCOUNTESS, AND OTHERS]
-
-It will be very interesting to see how the new Roses turn out. A good
-many were ordered on the strength of the catalogue description, from
-three different rose growers. Hybrid Perpetuals do not do with us;
-neither do pure Teas stand our cold, otherwise we should riot in “Lady
-Hillingdon.”
-
-“You never can go wrong with a Viscountess,” said his gardener to a
-friend of ours.
-
-He was a man of lightning wit—as all lovers of “Savoy” operas know.
-
-“That is a very interesting statement of yours,” he said in that brief,
-unsmiling manner that added zest to his quaintness. “I have been given
-to understand the contrary.”
-
-We can go wrong with a Viscountess, unfortunately, and do. As we have
-said, Hybrid Perpetuals do not behave well with us, except, perhaps,
-that model of excellence, Ulrich Brunner.—Morals are a question of
-climate even with roses.
-
-Loki’s Ma-Ma ‹to be discursive—and we are afraid that this chronicle is
-nothing if not discursive› was a great favourite with this genius of
-mirth above mentioned, who made the world ring with honest laughter and
-whose heroic death brought many tears, at least to Villino Loki. He used
-to call her “his little Lemur” because she had a way of clinging to her
-mother, in her first debutante days.
-
-Never was there a man so tender-hearted. On his estate no wild thing was
-to be robbed of its life: not even a rabbit. Loki’s Grandmother used to
-be a little timid in his company, because of this gift of swift humour.
-She never felt able to meet him on his own ground—except once when in a
-windy June he told her that he had begun to take his daily swim in the
-lake, and she shuddered at the thought.
-
-“Cold!” he cried, “not a bit of it! Delightful! You shall take a dip
-with me when next you come to us.”
-
-“No,” she retorted—and it was the only time in all their pleasant
-intercourse that she was ever brave enough to make a pass with him—“No,
-I had rather get into hot water with you.”
-
-Alas, alas! That lake! We felt the menace of it even then. It was there,
-trying to save another, he found his death.
-
-It has often been said that real wit is a thing of the past. Certainly
-the younger generation’s idea of pleasantry is a kind of
-rough-and-tumble fight as compared to the neat, delicate thrust-play of
-an older world. But this friend of ours had a gift quite apart, a
-mixture of humour, wit and satire, something dry, comic, quaint,
-peculiarly his own.
-
-“It reminds me,” said a clever relation of his once in our hearing, “of
-an old wood carving.”
-
-We understood what he meant; the odd angles, the sharp turns, the
-simplicity, the brusque sincerity—and withal how richly genial!
-
-In a single instance one of us beheld him almost meet his match, and
-that in a most unexpected manner. The pretty fairy lady, his wife,
-happened to comment with surprise upon the fact that a woman who had
-been very rude to her should have attempted to greet her upon a recent
-occasion as if nothing had happened.
-
-“She actually held out her hand!” she concluded.
-
-“Well, my dear,” observed her lord, in his serious way, “that is the
-member most usually extended.”
-
-To the surprise of the whole table, a shy lady on his left, who had not
-yet uttered a word, said in a small meek voice: “She might have put out
-her tongue!”
-
-We never met that shy woman again. We should like to. “Please will you
-keep your Pickle out of my preserves,” he wrote to a neighbour whose dog
-was given to roving. The neighbour bore a name well known in grocers’
-lists.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For two days the wind has been blowing over the moors from the east. The
-sound of it through the trees on the hill-side is like the roar of a
-torrent; and now and again it is like the wash of waves upon the beach.
-A very unseasonable wind, but it makes a grave and beautiful music.
-Fortunately the Dutch Garden with its wealth of Tulips is sheltered, or
-there would scarce be left an unbruised petal.
-
-People are very much struck by our beds of Myosotis, surmounted by the
-swaying chalices of the Darwins. The simple plan of the blue carpet for
-these slender May Queens seems to them very wonderful and new.
-
-[Sidenote: OAKS AND BLUE GLADES]
-
-“Oh, look! What’s happened? Is it real? It’s like fairyland!” cried a
-visitor yesterday to a sympathetic sister.—Such kind people to walk
-about the garden with! They have themselves a mysterious Oak wood,
-falling away beneath their lawns, that is now carpeted with Bluebells: a
-place to sit and dream in. Oaks are trees full of romance, we think.
-They tell long stories out of the past, and speak of Shakespeare and the
-glories of England, and their glades are for ever peopled with brave
-figures of history or fiction.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: THE BEECH]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XX
-
-
-Beeches, on the other hand, have a kind of fairy glory about them that
-does not seem to belong to our land. We drove through a beech forest the
-other day; the road went up zigzagging to the top of a steep hill, and
-one looked down upon the Beech glades, all golden green in a fierce
-sunburst between two showers. And they were still dripping with the
-rain. It was wonderful, but not English, distinctively English, like
-that Oak wood. It was a _Märchen-Wald_. Siegfried might have strode
-through it, blowing his horn: youth incarnate, leaping out of Mime’s
-cave to conquer the world. On the inspiration of such a haunt was the
-_Wald-Musick_ conceived.
-
-[Sidenote: MAY AND SEPTEMBER MOODS]
-
-If we had a dwelling for every different mood, a log-house at the top of
-that Beech ravine would suit us very well in a sunny month of May.
-Between the great smooth boles of the trees we would want to peep out at
-the flat wide land, with the rich far woods below, misty in the
-sunshine; and the distant moors as with the bloom of the grape upon
-them. We would not want flowers; nothing but that heavenly green of the
-young leaves against the blue; and the whispering and the swaying of the
-boughs to cradle our souls; and the thrushes and blackbirds to sing the
-dawn in and the twilight out! How holy and innocent and loving would
-one’s mind become after a week in that log hut—a week alone, or with
-one’s best beloved!
-
-[Illustration: landscape with clouds]
-
-After we came out from that Beech wood we took a wrong turning, and
-landed ourselves far out on the downs instead of back to our moors. Now,
-for another mood—say, a warm, still, serene September mood—why not a
-small stone house in a high hollow of those downs, miles removed from
-any other human habitation? Just a stone house dumped in the hollow—pale
-grey, so as not to offend the eye in that stretch of bleached vastness,
-with a group of Thorns at the back and nothing else, not even a path;
-only a long way off, the vision of a white ribbon of road, looping and
-twisting, running to the sea. No flowers but the little wild, stiff,
-aromatic things that push up through the short turf. Overhead, one or
-two quite round, white clouds, sailing along the blue, caught by some
-high current that hardly touches us below—the kind of cloud that you see
-in an old German print. And all about, as far as the gaze can encompass,
-nothing but the dip and rise, the scoop and billow of the downs; and the
-hollows, blue on that wonderful sun-steeped, warm, yet bleached expanse.
-And the shadows of the clouds, running along across it; and perhaps a
-lark’s song, somewhere not too close, beaten back to earth from an
-unseen height of joy; and far, far away, the tinkle of a sheep-bell!
-Would not one’s soul expand with the grand silence and the glorious wide
-spaces? One would not want to hear or behold the sea, only to taste the
-salt of it in every breath. Now does it not seem that up there, sitting
-outside that stone house, you would touch the prehistoric past? Or,
-rather, that the great eternity, the never-dying essences of things,
-would sink into your little passing bit of humanity? Your soul would
-mirror all infinity.—A place to turn Buddhist in!
-
-[Sidenote: A TUSCAN VILLINO]
-
-[Illustration: house on hill]
-
-There was a pink Villino on the unusual side of Rome. You looked in upon
-it through high gates into a tangle of garden, where everything seemed
-to riot. It had an odd, incongruous tower from which you could surely
-have a vast prospect of the plains of the Campagna and the Alban
-mountains beyond. There was an archway in one side of it through which
-one certainly drove into some inner courtyard of delight. That little
-habitation you might covet with a covetousness that gave you a pain in
-your heart. We did.
-
-And outside Florence, too, there was another small house. It had been
-once a farm. A certain great lady had her spring quarters there, liking
-the contrast, we suppose, between that and the old Scotch castle where
-Fate had planted her. We drove to tea with her there ‹early May it was›
-through the hot, wind-swept, noisy Florentine streets. It was just the
-time of year when the Iris was flooding the land with its penetrating
-and yet not sickly sweetness. There never was any scent so perfect. And
-the small pink roses were flinging themselves over the tops of tall
-garden walls, as if the prodigal Italian springtide had been at its full
-and left a foam of bloom behind it. Up, up the mountain road, between
-uncompromising walls and out into the freer country—and there was the
-farmhouse! Its garden has left an odd blurred impression on our minds:
-vaguely—a path bordered by lush grass and gay with Apple trees—there was
-a storm brewing, and all was black overhead; under the weird sky the
-delicate blossoms took a curious vividness like minute paintings.
-
-One had to go across a red-brick kitchen to get to the stairs that led
-to the two long, quaint, cool rooms, in the farther of which the hostess
-sat.
-
-[Sidenote: LANDSCAPE ECSTASY]
-
-She had kept the charm of simplicity there. Plain white walls and rather
-empty spaces, with bits of Italian black oak, and a painting or two; a
-vase of lilac, a dim missal warmth of colour in the Persian carpets that
-lay on the bricks—that was the picture. A very pleasant impression those
-rooms made, with the old great lady in her high-backed chair, clad in
-flowing black satin and with a white lace that framed a face as fresh as
-the apple blossom without. The storm broke as we sat there. She was
-nervous, and so were some of her visitors; therefore she had the wooden
-shutters closed. Perhaps she was not really frightened, for she was as
-sturdy a Scotchwoman as ever we beheld, and her bright blue eye was
-stern in spite of her affability. Perhaps she only compassionated the
-nerves of her guests. Be it as it may, we sat an hour while the thunder
-rolled bars of sound over our heads and the wind whistled and the rain
-hissed and roared down the valley, and the lightning kept a perpetual
-play between the chinks of the shutters. And though Loki’s Grandma
-generally gibbers during a thunderstorm, she never enjoyed an hour more,
-so delightful was her hostess and so fascinating the sense of isolation
-and strangeness, being thus shut away amid the fury of the elements in a
-little Italian farmhouse! And when the tempest was grumbling itself off
-in the distance, the shutters were all thrown back and the doors on the
-square wooden balcony opened. The air rushed in, vivifying, full of the
-scent of the earth and charged with ozone and perfumes. We went out on
-the dripping balcony, and never, oh! never can any of us forget the
-vision! For below the _casa_ the land dropped away, and it was all
-vineyards; and they rose and dipped and rose again, a sight no one has
-ever beheld out of Italy. And beyond were the mountains; and the whole
-wide valley was filled with mist and all of it was stained rose and
-crimson from the sunset.
-
-You may not believe it, you who read it, but it is a fact that the
-valley was carmine up to the balcony, indescribably shot with the fires
-of the West—a steaming cauldron of glory! That is the kind of vision one
-carries gratefully to one’s grave.
-
-For a long time we vowed that our old age would see us, like the Scotch
-Dowager, steeping our being in the joys of Spring in a farmhouse outside
-Florence.—But now we don’t know. Villino Loki has laid hold of us; it is
-our real home, the rest are but dreams.
-
-The Master of the House saw this morning a tiny Golden-crested Wren
-fluttering from stem to stem of the tall Darwin Tulips to pick at the
-Forget-me-nots below; and every time it pecked it twittered with joy, so
-light a thing that it scarcely swayed the slender stalks—a fairy vision.
-
-[Illustration: path through garden to house]
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Hemicycle, where the grass must be allowed to grow lush, because of
-the bulbs, until the leaves “ripen off,” is none the less attractive on
-that account. There are eight little square beds, each containing a
-weeping standard—“Dorothy Perkins” or “Stella”—thickly planted below
-with Forget-me-nots and Bybloemen Tulips. Between the beds there is a
-large red pot also filled with Forget-me-nots and Bybloemen. The Tulips
-have a kind of wild grace, coming out of the long grass; and Myosotis,
-darling little creature, accommodates herself in every surrounding.
-There is a pretty, stemmed fountain, or rather bird-bath; in its centre,
-where, in a basin shaped like a spreading lotus flower, a sturdy _putto_
-astride a dolphin blows soundless blasts. This half-circle of vivid
-beauty, with the young green grass, the swaying Tulips, the blue of the
-Forget-me-nots against the moor is good to look upon.
-
-Beyond the Hemicycle, the Azalea Glade runs down now in lines of
-orange-rose and creamy-salmon, bordered too with Forget-me-nots. Up
-against it the cool silver of a great Service-tree comes just where it
-makes a perfect background; and beyond that again the rivulets of blue
-in the Reserve Garden lie deep below.
-
-[Sidenote: TRANSIENT COLOUR GLORIES]
-
-This is the hour of our garden’s glory. No Delphinium muster, no
-spreading garlands of Roses, can equal the exquisite freshness, the
-fulness of life of this May world. With the Brooms, white and yellow;
-with the pink foam of the Floribunda trees, the incomparable gold and
-green of the Beech and Birch, one wants to put one’s arms round the
-little place and kiss it.
-
-“So much work, so long and great a travail of nature,” said a friend to
-us to-day; “ever since November, preparing for this wonderful revelation
-of bloom ... and all for so short a span! All this beauty scarce reaches
-its climax but it is already on the wane!”
-
-Perhaps it is to give us an idea of the permanence of what “eye hath not
-seen” beyond, that its glories are described in terms of jewels; and yet
-so perversely is one made that it is the very fragility that endears
-here below—a sense of the fleeting moment that gives ecstasy its finest
-edge. No, this limited humanity of ours cannot conceive the infinitude.
-It is only with those perceptions which transcend the senses that one
-gets a gleam, a hint, a possibility of once understanding. The restless
-mind of man for ever demands and creates change, but the soul aspires to
-immutability.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: SUMMER]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXI
-
-
-[Sidenote: END OF SPRING, SUMMER PLANS]
-
-The last day of May. After the usual “contrariness” of life we have
-spent the hot span in London, and returned here to find that ungenial
-nor’west wind blowing in upon us apparently over the same icebergs as a
-month ago. We think with wails of regret of the long, golden, balmy
-garden-days we missed; of the full glory of the Azaleas; of those
-splendours of Rose Tulips which we should have enjoyed, radiant in the
-sunshine, instead of seeing them yawn their lives away in a hot town
-drawing-room. And the Florentina Alba Irises, those delicate, fragrant,
-stately things that look as if they were compounded of cobweb and spun
-crystal and moonlit snow—it takes but a day to show them in their beauty
-and another to wilt them—we have missed their lovely hour too, of
-course. On long, long stems, the Iris Siberica are congregating a little
-grove of buds in the Blue Border; only two curving purple darlings
-having outrun the rest. We shall miss them, for the fates have decreed
-that we are to leave the Earthly Paradise in a day or two once more, and
-that for the flat horizons of Lancashire. Well, the best of the Spring,
-early and late, is over, and we do not grudge these intermediary days so
-much, though we wonder how the bedding out will get on without our
-stimulating presence. We shall not even have a finger in the
-“Cherry-Pie.” Lengthy plans will have to be made. The “Miss Wilmott”
-Verbena must replace, by their delicate rose, the blue of the Myosotis
-carpet as well as the wonders of the many-hued Darwins, in the two
-centre beds of the Dutch Garden. And in the border beds we project a
-fine gathering of Antirrhinums shading from crimson, through Firefly and
-Rose-Dorée, to palest pink.
-
-The terrace immediately under the house runs, according to our
-invariable summer programme, to cool colours and sweet scents. Under the
-dining-room and drawing-room windows, besides the transient prospect of
-the White Lilies, there are to bloom ‹until the frost lays waste›
-Heliotrope and Nicotiana, with pale pink Ivy-leaf Geranium to contrast
-with the mauve and purple, and blue Lobelia to rim the outer border of
-White Pinks. Against the terrace wall, between the tall Madonna Lilies,
-which show good promise, and the Polyantha Roses, red and white, with
-the thick edging of “Mrs. Sinkins,” Lobelia and Petunia shall spread.
-The pots will bear their customary summer burthen of rose Ivy-leaf
-Geraniums, with Lobelia too, and the Zonals. We like them to flaunt
-against the moor.
-
-Below, in the Blue Border, the Delphiniums and the Anchusas, the great
-old-established White Rose bushes, the steel blue Thistle, must make
-what show they can over the annuals—Nigella, Gypsophila and
-Nemophila—not forgetting the kind Campanulas, so dear, so faithful, so
-hardy! In fine contrast, on the other side of the grass walk, the
-Dorothy Perkins hedge will spread its vivid masses, and fling out its
-irrepressible garlands over the border of bright blue Nemophila we have
-had the audacity to sow.
-
-[Illustration: trees]
-
-And below, in the Hemicycle, the colours are to grow cool again, with
-Heliotrope between the Lilies, the Lavenders, and the Monthly Roses, and
-Fortune’s Yellow and Rêve d’Or running up the supporting wall.
-
-The beauty of the ancient woods in that Lancashire home from which we
-have just returned lingers in our memory. Outside the park walls, the
-flat fields lie that would have a charm of their own if the encroachment
-of the peculiarly unlovely brick and mortar prosperity of the district
-did not catch the eye on almost every side; but within there is a sense
-of wonderful peace and mystery, in the old, old woods with their
-Rhododendron glades. The astonishing height of the trees seems to keep
-modernity at bay, and tells stories still of the simple, proud,
-God-fearing race which has become so associated with the very spot of
-earth that has borne and nurtured them for many centuries, that, like
-one or two other families in England, their name in absolute legality is
-not complete without the territorial appendage.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE DISAPPEARING SQUIRE]
-
-We hear every day that “the Squire” is a being of the past. We know that
-every effort of present-day legislation is to abolish what was once the
-strength of England; what might still be its strength, if the restless
-and destructive spirit of the age would permit it.
-
-The young owner of those old lands ‹who has just been our host› is one
-who will, we hope, keep up the traditions—so fast dying out, or being
-stamped out—a little longer. He is, as his grandfather was, the centre
-of his own people, the shepherd of his flock. Not quite to the same
-extent, perhaps: we do not suppose, for instance, that he is both maker
-and depository of their wills, or that he is summoned to every tenant’s
-deathbed as was that kindly, sturdy old Lancastrian his grandsire.
-
-“Hurry, Jimmy, hurry!” the afflicted wife and mother would say. “Run oop
-to the Hall and tell Squoire to coom along quick, for feyther’s at his
-last!”
-
-Neither would he undertake to mend the broken leg; or patch up the
-conjugal quarrel. But the young Squire will still hear such a phrase as
-this at election time: “What _we_ wants to know is which way Squoire’s
-voting? Squoire’s man is the man for we!”
-
-He will let his cottages at eighteen pence a week; and the larger the
-family is the smaller will be the rent. And the claims of the tenant
-will be attended to before his own. He seems as much part of them as
-they are part of him. Has anyone ever heard of a labourer on a large
-estate being in destitution? We never have. Our great landowners do more
-to provide for their own dependents and keep down pauperism than any
-frantic legislator or wholesale philanthropist. But the system is to go;
-we have the best authority for it, the authority of those in power. God
-help England and England’s poor peasants, say we, when they have their
-way!
-
-[Illustration: woman in front of landscape]
-
-We can speak with examples under our eyes. Every time a bit of an estate
-is sold, hereabouts, the cottages thereon are purchased by the local
-grocer or butcher: and up goes the rent that had been three and six or
-four shillings a week to seven and six and ten shillings. Here, where we
-live, there are practically no important landowners, and what is the
-result? Not the most miserable cottage to be had under seven and six a
-week, a rent liable to be raised at a moment’s notice. The butcher, the
-baker, these are the “landlords,” and the rent they exact is exactly
-what they know they can extract out of the unfortunate tenant, in the
-present state of cottage scarcity. We ourselves have spent weeks in
-striving to secure a roof for a wretched woman with three little
-children, whose husband had attempted to murder her and after her escape
-had danced upon all her furniture, and burnt the remnants. We had to
-engage a cottage three months in advance, and then the rent was eight
-and six a week! She was a stupid poor goose of a woman, who couldn’t do
-anything for her living except an occasional day’s charing or rough
-washing. Of course we ought to have let her go to the workhouse; but we
-didn’t. We guaranteed the rent instead and took in the eldest boy as an
-unneeded garden assistant. ‹He is rather like a garden slug, so we
-thought he ought to be at home in the borders›! The other day a local
-tradesman raised the rent of a cottage sixpence a week upon the
-hard-working mother of a large family, who occasionally comes in “to
-oblige” at Villino Loki; and when she remonstrated he humorously
-remarked that Mr. Lloyd George was “driving him to it!”
-
-[Sidenote: THE REFRESHING FRUIT]
-
-There is a proverb that “good wine needs no bush.” The Chancellor’s
-efforts to convince his victims of the comfort of the plaster which is
-blistering them are almost pathetic. But surely it is another proof, if
-one were needed, of the weakness of his cause. A local laundry owner has
-been receiving six pounds a week, lecturing, in Devonshire of all
-places, on the blessedness of the Act as experienced by himself and
-staff. One of our district nurses, a delightful sturdy North Country
-woman, was “approached” as to whether she would undertake, for a
-consideration, to use her persuasiveness with her patients and make them
-see how much they were benefited by the stamp tax. She declined with a
-heat that may have astonished the emissary.
-
-It must indeed be a little difficult to make, say, a struggling
-greengrocer understand the debt of gratitude he owes to the law which
-constrains him to pay fourpence a week for the assistant he can so ill
-afford as it is and mulct that discontented youth of threepence! More
-especially when baker and grocer charge him more to cover their own
-losses.
-
-The obvious remedy, says Mr. Lloyd George, is for the greengrocer to
-raise the prices in his town! He does; and somehow it doesn’t work.
-Being in a poor district and all his patrons being poor, they buy less
-from him, and he buys less from them.
-
-“But look at the comfort in sickness!” It is tiresome, it almost seems
-like putting bad will into it, that the greengrocer’s wife should
-develop consumption before the first stone of any sanatorium is ready!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Now, that prosperous, contented class, the labourer on the great estate,
-a man who lives on his lord’s lands, if not rent free, very nearly so,
-with wood and garden produce, potatoes, milk and what not, and steady
-employment all the year round, he is to be benefited—save the mark! A
-“minimum wage,” cheap housing, the fixed hours, the sacred half-holiday,
-it sounds so plausible! The propagandist is volubly at work. “No
-wonder,” as the young Squire we have recently visited once ruefully said
-to us, “my decent, contented, God-fearing villagers were turned in a
-couple of hours into shrieking, blaspheming lunatics by such a gospel,
-preached with forcible arguments in the public-house.”
-
-Of course they will get their demands. Striking, with “peaceful
-picketing,” generally gets its way, even if not backed up by Government
-emissaries and the glorious visions flash-lighted by the Chancellor of
-the Exchequer. But what will be the result? Half the amount of
-employment on the estates of those who can still afford to keep them,
-and no all-the-year-round engagements. When the work is slack the
-over-paid and inimical labourer will naturally be discharged. We say
-inimical, for how can friendly relations be maintained if the old
-solidarity is destroyed? This, of course, is what is aimed at; and the
-quack remedy, the patent pill alluringly held aloft, is—State ownership
-of land! The land is to be managed like the Workhouse, the Prison, and
-the Reformatory, of which, we are all aware, the British State makes
-such a brilliant success. We know how the poor love the Workhouse, and
-how happy they are in it; yet one can scarcely take up a police report
-without finding some desperate pauper sentenced for revolt. Oh, no doubt
-it will be a Merry England when these disinterested and dashing tinkers
-get their way.
-
-[Sidenote: A HAVEN OF REST]
-
-We have known, in parenthesis, a pauper establishment, run by voluntary
-effort, in which a hundred and fifty old men and ninety old women were
-kept happy and contented by a handful of soft-voiced nuns. No need to
-call in the policeman, in Portobello Road; for there old age is
-reverenced at once and pitied, and the double aspect of the most natural
-of all the commandments is put into every-day practice, so unobtrusively
-and simply that no one can guess how heroically.
-
-But the religious question will soon be treated in the same way as the
-land question; so no invidious comparisons need be drawn. Little boys
-and little girls are to be taught that the State is henceforth to take
-the place of God in their infant minds. How comfortable and warm a
-creed! How it will strengthen their character for living, and ease the
-thoughts of the dying. There is no God: but there is a Chancellor of the
-Exchequer and a dashing gentleman at the Home Office. You have not been
-created or redeemed, little boy! We have no prayers to teach you. There
-are no divine commandments which you need obey—naturally, since there is
-no Divine Father. There are no sacraments to sustain and elevate your
-soul—for little boys and girls have no souls! But cheer ye: you were
-evolved by a natural process, and the State is here to cradle and
-instruct you and to make life beautiful for you. Behold, dear children,
-the Book of the Laws. These laws which you are bound to keep—unless, of
-course, you go on strike, become a Suffragette, or organize political
-vote catching. And this is a picture of a Jail for people who are so
-blind as to refuse Insurance blessings; behold that inspired
-countenance. That is the head of the Government! And for Sunday
-amusements there is the Cinema—the Crippen case, dear children; the
-Houndsditch Burglary and the Train Smash.... And when the new theories
-have developed and matured, there will be no such thing as private
-property in anything to constrain the free mind of emancipated man—A
-house of your own, a wife to yourself!—fie!
-
-“Surely, surely,” said a young Liberal M.P., “no sanely thinking person
-would continue to advise religious education in the schools. What is the
-inevitable result—see the case in your own Church” ‹he was speaking to a
-Catholic› “the law commands one thing, and the Church another! Take
-divorce, for instance. Surely, surely—”
-
-“Dear me,” said the Catholic. “We had not looked at it in that light.
-The laws man made are, then, above the laws God made?”
-
-“Surely, surely you would not teach little children to disobey a law of
-the land made for their benefit?”
-
-We ventured to say that the ten commandments had forestalled—
-
-His pitying smile arrested us; so infinitely was he above the ten
-commandments.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXII
-
-
-Yesterday Loki’s family motored energetically some fifty miles and back
-to a garden party near London.
-
-A wonderful house with wonderful lawns and gardens—one feels that the
-hideous tide of brick and mortar must inevitably sweep over and destroy
-it before another generation comes and goes, so that there is a kind of
-pathos in its very beauty.
-
-[Illustration: flower]
-
-Out of the unlovely mean streets along which the tram-line runs its
-abominable way, one turns off into the cool country road. The long
-avenue is bordered by wide fields where, as we passed yesterday, the
-new-mown grass was lying in silver furrows. The country is quite flat;
-but the richness of the green, the incidents of lake and timber, give it
-a placid English fairness of its own.
-
-The Lady of Villino Loki went with a keen eye to garden hints, and her
-first thrill was a Honeysuckle screen in the little garden of the second
-lodge. Such a Honeysuckle screen! It had once, she supposes, been an
-arch, for it rose to a kind of gable peak in the centre, but it was
-filled in either by design or natural luxuriance till it was a complete
-mass of bloom, a solid wall of blossom. Never had she beheld such a
-thing before. She wants Honeysuckle at the Villino, as she said already,
-and she is fired with fresh enthusiasm. Why should she not have a hedge
-of Honeysuckle, not too far from the house itself? It is settled. She
-will buy fifty in November and try.
-
-The weather, which had been misty, thundery and unpromising, cleared
-just upon our arrival at the great “Adam” house. The lawns were in their
-perfection, the shade of the Cedars was cut out on the sun-golden turf,
-the massed flowers were vivid against their cunningly devised
-backgrounds. Naturally Villino Loki, even in its wildest dreams, cannot
-emulate this great and carefully cherished place; but one can find
-practical suggestions here and there. We cannot mass rare and
-golden-hued Maples over a broad band of yellow Calceolarias anywhere on
-our terraced lawns; but it is very instructive to see the management of
-certain herbaceous borders, where three or four large pillars of Rambler
-Roses alternate with mauve and silver-leaved Japanese Maples at the
-back; the foreground being of the usual herbaceous order.
-
-We had no idea that the dwarf bright yellow Evening Primroses would look
-so well grouped together. And Nemesia, “Heavenly Blue,” has become the
-one annual our souls long for: blue flowers are all too rare.
-
-Everything was most kindly labelled. We do not know if it is possible to
-obtain any seedlings this time of year; but certainly, next year, this
-adorable little plant, Nemesia, with its most exquisite turquoise blue
-colourings and its splendid efflorescence, shall enter largely into our
-schemes. In between the Nemesia, bushes of Campanula Persicifolia rose
-with cool restrained tones; the contrast was one to be copied also.
-
-Another not impossible example was a Rose screen, starting with a
-background of close growing Ramblers, some ten or twelve feet high,
-supplemented midway by some of the larger Bush Roses and running down to
-the edge of the turf in front with pegged-down Teas; so that, to the
-very top, it was one mass of varied bloom. We do not see any reason why
-such an effect should not be copied, even in a small garden.
-
-The _standard_ Scarlet Geraniums we must admire from a respectful
-distance. They are as much beyond our humble resources as the _standard_
-Heliotrope we so much admired a year ago in a millionaire’s huge grounds
-not very far from us. These last rose out of a bed of mauve Violas. The
-ambitious soul of the mistress of the Villino hungered to copy it; but
-she knew that hunger would never be assuaged.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: PICKING UP WRINKLES]
-
-We have had a frightful disappointment in the “Miss Wilmott” Verbenas.
-For two summers it has been the same story. Last year they came up “all
-colours,” though purchased from a well-known firm! This year, to make
-quite sure, we ordered seedlings to be specially grown for us from a
-local nursery. The wretch has sent a collection of measly little
-starveling things which cannot be expected to do anything for weeks and
-weeks. Of course they should not have been accepted; but the deed was
-done in our absence. We are much inclined to have the beds cleared, and
-Heliotrope or rose-coloured Ivy-leaf Geraniums put in instead. It is too
-late for anything else. Gardeners are so tiresome! They are as bad as
-cooks, who will accept with perfect equanimity, fish ready to illustrate
-the proverb and game prepared to walk to its own funeral, and then say
-that “they thought it was ‘a bit high’ perhaps, but they weren’t quite
-sure!”
-
-[Illustration: flowers]
-
-We have forced for the house several plants of Canterbury Bells,
-glorious purple and white, which have grown to an extraordinary size and
-fill the Compton pots on the landing in very decorative fashion.
-
-The front landing and stairs are wondrous pretty in the Villino: and the
-colour scheme—Tangerine yellow for the curtains and grey for the
-carpet—somehow suits the little place, with its Roman air. In the round
-bow window there is a large copy of the Samothraki Nike on a white
-stand; and in front of her we place flower-pots all the year
-round—generally Orange trees in the winter, with which we are
-successful.
-
-Alas! we leave the little Paradise to-morrow! However, we are still in
-such an intermediary stage that we mind less than when we lost all the
-glories of the Azaleas. For anyone of an impatient disposition, this
-time of the first setting out of the bedding plants is a trying ordeal.
-We are going this afternoon on a surreptitious round with “plantoids” to
-which Adam objects, but in the virtues of which we are believers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: PITFALLS OF AMBITION]
-
-The longer we labour at garden experiences, the more it is borne in upon
-us that ambitiousness is to be avoided. No amateurs—however splendid
-their visions may be—should attempt “Wild Gardens,” or “Bog Gardens” on
-their own unaided efforts. This does not refer to the flinging of
-wild-flower seeds in woodland glades, but to the digging up of harmless
-and unobtrusive patches of field and bank for the insertion of
-seedlings, which apparently will never be at home in that particular
-aspect and soil. The worst of it is that the energetic workers are so
-ensnared by the mental vision that they very often fail to perceive the
-paltriness of the material result.
-
-“We had to have the meadow mown and to dig it up, just along there,”
-said an energetic gardening neighbour to us the other day, pointing out
-with pride a dreadful stretch of raw and muddy earth that lay
-meaninglessly along the lush field. “And we _think_ the things will do
-now.”
-
-The things—poor little sprigs of white Violas, and other most
-unadaptable garden children—were looking very ill and faint at long
-distances from each other. And in any case, even if they were eventually
-to flourish, the meadow was quite beautiful enough in itself and needed
-no such adornment. But we had not the heart to tell her so. We said,
-“How nice that will be,” but took the lesson to ourselves.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: TANTALISING NOVELTIES]
-
-A visit to the Horticultural Show at Holland House—even the humblest
-gardener can take away lessons from these displays of lavish beauty. We
-wonder whether it would be possible for us to have a pool anywhere upon
-our sandy height. And, if so, why should we not build rough rock-work
-round it on one side; fill it with the cool misty mauve of the Nipeta,
-the cool pale yellow spires of the Dwarf Mulleins, and the faint pinks
-of Spiræa; and against this background, walled about by a bank of the
-mysterious Iris “Morning Mist,” let a little slender lead statue rise
-out of the water? Coolness and mystery! Shall we ever encompass that
-delightful effect?... The flat flagged paths on the other side of the
-water should be bordered by Iris; and they should dip down into the pool
-itself, where just two or three Water Lilies should rock their
-gold-centred cups. Oh, dear! If we had sufficient money how beautiful we
-could make our corner of the earth!
-
-Oh, and the Clematis!—It was a shock to find that we had to pay seven
-and sixpence each to go in, but it was worth it, for we have plunged to
-the extent of a dozen adorable Clematis from the very fountain head—if
-one can so strain the poor English language—of Clematis culture itself.
-
-And the Roses! “Coronation,” a new bright scarlet climbing Wichuriana;
-Tausendschön and Blush Rambler, old favourites, but so beautiful! There
-were two or three pillars of unnamed seedlings, exquisite apple-blossom
-beauties, which we longed to purchase, but which were not yet in the
-market. A firmer, richer apple-blossom best describes the bloom of the
-new discovery.
-
-Quite beyond our pockets, but most attractive, were the standard Ivies,
-golden and variegated, fifteen years old ... at the modest charge of six
-guineas each! Could we ever wait fifteen years to see such developments?
-After all, why not? The grower assured us they were perfectly hardy, and
-more they were cut the better. They would look charming on the terrace.
-Such balls of gold!
-
-Lilies at the top of a rock-garden or at the top of a rough wall have a
-most charming effect.
-
-We have invested in three and sixpence worth of new fertiliser
-guaranteed to “produce an appearance like dark green Utrecht velvet in
-ten days on the roughest lawn.”
-
-“Would you like your lawn to look like that, Madam?” asked the red
-headed youth in charge of squares that didn’t look in the least like
-real grass, but a kind of artificial compound as above mentioned.
-
-“Very much!” said one of us, who was struck by the unnatural hue and
-smoothness of the exhibit.—“Do mind the sun on your head!” she added
-parenthetically to the delicate member of our party, who is always on
-her mind. “Oh, pray Madam, do not trouble to shade me,” said the
-red-haired youth modestly. “I am quite all right, I assure you.”
-
-We had a vision of Loki’s Ma-Ma in her quaint Directoire dress, all
-striped black-and-cream chiffon and dim orange, with her absurd little
-Directoire tulle hat and its one coquettish rose ‹absurd but not
-unbecoming› spending the rest of the afternoon in sudden philanthropic
-frenzy, shading the red-haired youth from the July sunshine, while he
-volubly touted for orders for patent fertilisers! Innately polite, we
-explained. He was not in the least abashed.
-
-“I do feel it very hot,” he remarked simply.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXIII
-
-
-Loki is once more Only-dog in London. He is unspeakably grimy, as none
-of the _famiglia_ except Juvenal are ever able or willing to tub him
-when he most wants it. Juvenal, his special friend, has been away on his
-holiday—poor little Loki could not understand his absence. He was
-perpetually rushing out of the rooms and downstairs to see if he had
-arrived. At last, worn out with suspense, he dashed up to his butler’s
-bedroom and would not be satisfied till he was admitted; when, jumping
-on the bed, he began to tear up the clothes, believing, we suppose, that
-Juvenal shared his propensity for curling under the quilt. Odd little
-dog! He has as many moods as a fine lady, and when really annoyed lies
-in a strained attitude with his hind paws stuck outward like the embryo
-legs of a little crocodile. This is the sign that he wants “a powder”:
-what we call in our playful dog-language, “a pow-pow.”
-
-[Sidenote: FREEMASONRY OF DOG-LOVERS]
-
-What a freemasonry the love of dogs creates! Loki’s Grandfather,
-travelling up from our moors the other day, met a family likewise going
-to London; and these had with them a small Pekinese, who sat very sadly
-with drooping head and tail. The owner of Loki watched him
-sympathetically for some time in silence, then unable to repress his
-feelings, he leant forward and said very solemnly to the Pekinese’s
-lady:
-
-“This little dog wants a pow-wow!”
-
-“Oh! we know,” eagerly cried the lady in charge, “we know he does! He
-should have had it this morning, only we were travelling.”
-
-We were pleased with the anecdote when Loki’s Grandfather told us. No
-introductions, no explanations needed: even our own special doggy
-dialect instantly apprehended! One touch of Peky makes the whole world
-kin.
-
- * * * * *
-
-A divine discontent seems an unavoidable accompaniment of garden
-ambition. The Lady of Villino Loki is always furiously disappointed
-every time she returns home—except in the Spring. She had, this time,
-wonderful visions of her Madonna Lilies, proudly straight against the
-upper terrace wall; of her Blue Border foaming blue; of her new turf
-settling down into greenness. And, behold, the Lilies have got the lily
-disease, drat them! the Blue Border never will be blue, whatever she
-does; the Anchusas have gone back to the wild; and not one drop of water
-has the infant turf received through three weeks of drought since her
-departure—with the results that can be imagined!
-
-[Illustration: man working in garden]
-
-Not one of our precious packets of seed have come up! We once knew a
-pretty American whose daughter married a rather impoverished young
-Englishman of very good connexions. He was, however, scarcely important
-enough himself to attract much attention: and the day before the wedding
-he was nonplussed by his future mother-in-law, hitherto the most silky
-and smiling of beings, taking him by the arm and marching him round the
-displayed wedding presents, pausing at every step to remark: “I do not
-see the present of your uncle, Lord A.! I do not see the present of your
-cousin, Lady B.! I do not see the present of your great aunt, the
-Duchess of C.!”...
-
-We want to take the seedsman in similar fashion round the greenhouse
-shelves:
-
-“Where are the pots of Mignonette?” we will say. “Where the serried
-ranks of Scarlet Verbena? Where are the potted Nicotianas?”...
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXIV
-
-
-The Master of the House—he has admitted it himself somewhere in these
-pages—understands little if anything of gardener’s art: that is, of the
-art of rearing flowers in their proper seasons, in suitable ground and
-so forth. But he complacently believes that he has an aptitude for what,
-on a larger theatre of operations than the few acres of Villino Loki,
-would be called Landscape Gardening! He imagines that, had fate provided
-him with an “estate,” he would have been great at devising vistas,
-grouping trees, laying out pleasing curves of approach, and all that
-sort of thing.
-
-[Illustration: men in garden]
-
-At the Villino this imaginary special competency could only find an
-opening in clearance work. And when we first bought this strip of
-hill-side, clearance was indeed no small matter.
-
-With the exception of the terraces immediately round the House and of
-the kitchen yards about the Cottage, the whole place was a congeries of
-almost impenetrable thickets, interspersed with patches of heather and
-furze. There were but two paths, running down, in purely utilitarian
-lines, from the higher level to that of the cottage _potager_.
-
-‹What has been achieved since then in the matter of path-cutting can be
-made patent by a glance at Mr. Robinson’s perspective map of the Villino
-grounds.›
-
-So thick and strenuous was the growth of underwood—self-sown infant
-Hollies, adolescent Larches and Pines, young Ashes, Oaks and Chestnuts
-in their nonage, all interlocked, entwined in Brambles and Honeysuckle,
-that hardly anywhere could the trunks of the full-grown trees be
-distinguished.
-
-Now it is obvious that the beauty of wooded grounds depends essentially
-upon light effects under the foliage and between the boles; upon distant
-peeps. In no direction ought the view ever to be solidly stopped—unless,
-of course, where it is desired to hide some unpleasing prospect. It may
-therefore be erected into a maxim that, if trees are to be enjoyed,
-underwoods must be sacrificed wholesale.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At first, with that reverence for things which, if they may be laid low
-at one blow or two of the billhook, require many years for their growth,
-one feels inclined to hesitate. One’s heart rebels at the thought of
-cutting off in the flower of its youth the sapling that in the spring is
-of so tender green, the bush of name unknown but engaging enough—if
-there were not “so many of him.” But it soon becomes evident that you
-must harden your heart and ruthlessly slash away the bulk of
-undergrowths, for good and all.
-
-And this has been the province of the _padrone_. And although on many an
-occasion at first the _padrona_ bewailed bitterly, almost tearfully,
-that he was making the place “simply scald,” it is now generally
-admitted that the result has proved a matter for congratulation.
-
-[Illustration: man working in garden]
-
-[Sidenote: THE PROBLEM OF HOLLY]
-
-There have been a few mistakes, no doubt. It was not easy, for instance,
-in the case of Holly, and perhaps also of Rowan, for the beginner to
-distinguish which clump was likely to bear the decorative winter coral
-and which not. Seeing what some of our Hollies in a good season can be
-‹that which closes the prospect at the north end of our Hemicycle, for
-example, what a glory of pure scarlet it displays when all bright
-colours have disappeared from the garden!› we regret not to have spared
-a few more. Nevertheless, it is a wise decision, in grounds overgrown by
-underwood, that _delendum est Ilex Aquifolium_—that Common Holly must
-go.
-
-In the first place, nothing will grow under the shade of its dark
-leathery, spinous leaves, which, even when shed, are more indestructible
-and noxious to grass than pine needles themselves. And, secondly, Holly
-is a very bully and brigand among growing trees. Its vitality and
-pushfulness over-masters everything. Your young Holly will thrust aside
-the sturdiest neighbouring branches; will conquer its “place under the
-sun” to the detriment of the equally fair claims of Oak, or Ash, or
-anything that strives upward.
-
-No—the right place of Holly is in the close-set hedge, for which its
-forbidding, never-failing foliage and its vigorous growth pre-eminently
-fit it. Or, again, in a dignified isolation where it can, without
-truculent self-assertion, develop on all sides its regular, shapely
-growth, look beautiful at all times in its evergreen sheen; and, if of
-the fruit-bearing sex, relieve with its scarlet the browns of autumn and
-the white of a winter landscape.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The first spot to be assailed was the area now called the Blue-bell
-Glade, the interior of which was then _terra incognita_. It had to be
-tackled like a fortress—by regular sap. Nothing was spared but the
-full-grown trees. Terrible was the destruction, and gigantic the
-accumulation of small firewood for future use. But great was the
-landscape result: it gave us our first far-reaching perspective along
-our own ground. We had, of course, fine and wide views over the
-tree-tops from the highest terrace. But now we obtained, in one
-direction at least, a middle-distance prospect of green fields between
-the boles under overhanging branches. And the effect was singularly
-satisfying.
-
-And so the war on undergrowth was carried-on, with system, until the
-present pleasing condition was reached, when in every direction the eye
-is able to find, up hill or down, either some far view of moor or
-valley, or some corner of the grounds themselves, now grass-grown or
-bright with flower-beds.
-
-Grass—that was what Villino Loki most wanted! And the extirpation of the
-greatest enemies to grass—Brushwood, Heather, Gorse, and Bracken—has
-been the hardest achievement of all: one which Grandpa is fond of
-letting every one know is more especially his own.
-
-[Sidenote: THE GREAT CLEARANCE]
-
-The Great Clearance took place in what may be called the pre-Adamite age
-of this little Earthly Paradise. Adam ‹in a kind of fateful way› only
-appeared upon the scene after the rougher work had been dealt with of
-letting in the air and light of heaven wherever it had hitherto failed.
-He arrived, of his own initiative, to offer his services in the matter
-of _gardening_, on the very day when his predecessor—one Grinder, whom
-on benevolence intent we had allowed to assume the duties of “gardener,”
-save the mark!—had had at last to be dismissed.
-
-The late Grinder, whatever his disqualifications for the honourable
-title thrust upon him may have been, was undoubtedly a lusty worker. But
-the Great Clearance was too great a task for one man. It was thus, by
-the way, that Caliban ‹likewise now “the late”› was introduced as
-labouring assistant, and, from the nature of his labours, known as the
-Woodman.
-
-The elimination of underwoods, however, was by no means the most arduous
-task. Let once the good light of day and the free airs penetrate to the
-ground hitherto obscured and choked, and in a given time grass will make
-its appearance. And it will spread healthily if the lower branches of
-all standing trees are lopped, up to a suitable height. But we wanted
-grass not only in the glades, but, if possible, upon every stretch of
-soil not devoted to flowering beds or ornamental bush. And, to that end,
-the Heather and the Gorse had likewise to be banished in perpetuity.
-With miles of Heather and Gorse-clad moors about one, Ericas of any
-kind, and certainly Ulex, however delightful in themselves and in their
-native habitat, are distinctly _de trop_ in the garden.
-
-[Illustration: leafy branches]
-
-Seen in wide masses, and whether in the brown, green, or purple stage,
-Heather, as we know, is an ever beautiful cloak to the earth. But except
-at the height of its flowering richness, when it occurs in scattered
-patches, its effect is apt to be rusty and unkempt. As for the
-Gorse—gorgeous as it undoubtedly be at its full golden time when seen in
-clumps on down or roadside—it has, at close quarters, a ragged, dusty,
-almost leprous appearance which quite unfits it for cultivation. It
-would seem as though all its vital beauty were driven out to the
-flowering tops: its inner and lower portions are always dried up, and
-scabby as from some withering sickness. Such, at least, is always the
-case with the full-grown plant; though, when very young, or when
-springing anew from a shorn stump, it remains for some time pleasingly
-green all over.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE PROBLEM OF GRASS]
-
-To the uninitiated it may appear simple enough to pluck up the Heather;
-but how soon will he be brought face to face with the dismal fact that,
-for grass-growing purposes, this superficial treatment is of no avail
-whatsoever! The peaty soil, product of untold generations of Heather,
-spongy to a depth of many inches, matted with the fibrils of roots, is
-absolutely antagonistic to grass of any description. The roots of the
-Furze, on their side, deep-reaching, far-spreading and tenacious, are
-simply rejuvenated and rejoiced by the lopping of the plant above
-ground. You may think you have done with it: behold! within a very few
-weeks saucy spriglets of brightest green Gorse will merrily make their
-appearance and claim the land again as their own!
-
-[Illustration: men working in field]
-
-Any seed sown on such a bed is merely so much food offered to the fowls
-of the air. The Master of the House had to learn that lesson
-practically, and lost a couple of seasons in so doing. ‹As may plainly
-be seen, he was a thoroughgoing ignoramus in that quarter; and he was
-not likely to be set right by Mr. Grinder!› It was only when Adam
-supervened and pointed out the necessity of trenching the ground,
-ridding it of its centuries-old tangle of fibre, overturning and
-pressing it, that the desired green result could at length be obtained.
-But the overturning demanded the combined work of pickaxe, fork, and
-cutting spade. It produced an incredible amount of underground wood,
-tough, sappy, and seemingly incombustible; and it kept Caliban occupied
-for many a long week.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have now many promising verdant roods, destined in time to be
-improved into lawns, where hitherto Heath and Whin held their sway. But
-the spaces lately freed from underwoods, which we so fondly hoped would
-turn of themselves into grassy glades and dells, provided us with new
-Heraclean labours.
-
-[Sidenote: WAR ON BRACKEN]
-
-Have I named Bracken?—Bracken! an everlasting problem on such a piece of
-land as ours, which less than a century back was undoubtedly part of the
-wild moorland itself. Nothing, it seems, but thorough overturning will
-really and finally rid the soil of the unconscionable Bracken—the
-ubiquitous, the imperishable, the exasperating Pteris Aquilina!
-
- * * * * *
-
-This knowledge has been impressed on us by the experience of successive
-years. Our first inkling of it was when, returning to the Villino after
-a few months’ absence and fondly anticipating to find our precious
-glades ‹which, after the Great Clearance, had been generously sown with
-grass› covered with a tender-green, thickly-piled carpet, we were
-confronted with waving fields of lusty Brake already breast high.
-
-In itself the sight was not displeasing; the young verdure was cool to
-the eye and did not greatly impede the view. But what we wanted was
-Grass. Grass which, in course of time and at their proper seasons,
-Crocus Vernus, Primrose, Blue-bell and Daffodil, Foxglove, and Colchicum
-Autumnale would star and illumine with colour.
-
-Now, where the Brake thrives, it takes unto itself the whole bounty of
-the sun, and stifles all plant-life of lesser height than itself.
-
-We disconsolately took advice from presumably competent persons.
-
-“Oh,” said Everybody, with confidence, “you can get rid of Bracken if
-you cut it twice in the same year.”
-
-“Can you?”—and here the Master of Villino Loki, in a state of inveteracy
-and resentment foreign to his usually placid character, feels he must
-again speak in the first person—“Can you?” ‹this is sarcastic› “I tell
-you, sir, that for the last three years I have cut that infernal
-Bracken, not twice in the twelvemonth, but four times and more—and look
-at it!”
-
-You may imagine me pointing, with an indignation difficult to repress,
-to some corner of the cleared ground that does not happen to have been
-visited _quite_ lately by the spud or the furze-cutter.
-
-“This,” I say with emphasis, “I myself purged of all visible Bracken
-only last month!”
-
-Now, as a matter of fact, the space in question, if not actually covered
-with the pertinacious fronds, is dotted with scores, nay hundreds, of
-forceful shoots; some still cosily curled up in their “crosier” stage,
-others impudently stretching themselves under the sun and persisting, in
-spite of all edicts, in screening its rays from the hard-struggling
-grass. What chance has humble grass against a thing that will sprout
-three inches in one night? And, if you look closer, you perceive a host
-of baby offshoots cheerfully pushing from some deep-burrowing ancient
-subterranean body, its innumerable little bald heads between the sorely
-tried, recently established grass settlements.
-
-Twice cut, forsooth!—Why, to this day, in the very middle of paths made
-three years ago ‹“Three—years-ago—sir!”›, you will discover here, there,
-and there again, a healthy shoot, sappy and erect, balancing its bright
-green plume right in the way, as if in defiance of all extermination.
-
-No—the most that can be claimed as a result of the war which is still
-being waged upon the Brake is that, perhaps, this pertinacious growth is
-beginning to betray some signs of discouragement. The ranks of the
-legions, as they make their periodical reappearance with an obstinacy
-worthy of a better cause, grow a trifle thinner year by year.
-
-“If you only cut them young,” says Adam, consolingly but with cruel
-imagery, “they say the roots will bleed to death.”
-
-This—Corporal Nym would hint—is as may be. As in the case of our
-wonderful forbears, bloodletting in the Spring, if not really conducive
-to better health, seems to interfere little with their thriving.
-Meanwhile, happily, as no scion of Pteris Aquilina ‹if it cannot really
-be prevented from cropping up where it chooses› is now allowed ever to
-reach its baleful maturity, the desired and much-petted grass is
-gradually establishing itself. And, with that eager optimism in
-gardening matters which is a characteristic of the family at Villino
-Loki, we look forward, in a few years, to the prospect of a succession
-of grassy carpets from crest to foot on our hillside.
-
-But this consummation, much desired, can, we are aware, only be secured
-by unremitting labour. Sometimes the Master of the House ‹who, having
-rashly vowed to achieve the task, considers himself bound to see it
-through himself› is assailed by something very like misdoubt as he rests
-awhile upon his spud, blunted by some two hours’ punching at sporadic
-croziers, and computes the remaining roods, nay, the acres, still to be
-dealt with ...
-
- If seven men, with seven spuds
- Should punch for half a year ...
- ...?
-
-Rock of Sisyphus!—Cask of the Danaides!—Hydra of Argolis, with the
-unquenchable heads!—these and others are similes that fatally drift into
-his meditations.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: HAUNTING RHYMES]
-
-When engaged upon work of protracted and futile iteration—such as
-“Bracken-chivvying”—tags of inane rhymes are apt to invade the
-hypnotized brain: of the kind that sometimes rise in accompaniment to
-the steady bumping of railway wheels on certain slow journeys. A
-particularly haunting one—to be conjured off if possible—is the
-“Nightmare” jingle, Mark Twain’s, I believe:
-
- Punch/, conduc/tor, punch/with care,
- A green/trip-slip/for a two/cent fare,
- A pink/trip-slip/for a three/cent fare,
- Punch/, punch/, punch with care ...
-
-and so on relentlessly.
-
-If these are not the exact horrid words, this is the way they come back
-to me, giving a lilt to vindictive spud work.
-
-At another time, the apparent futility of all efforts to come even with
-the task at hand will evoke some such iterative lines as Cyrano’s dying
-vision of eternally resurging enemies:
-
- _Je sais/bien qu’à/la fin/vous me/mettrez/à bas
- N’impor/te, je/me bats/, je me/bats, je/me bats!_
-
-[Illustration: stairs in garden]
-
-This sort of absolutely incongruous haunting is an instance of what
-Hoffmann would have fondly called the _Zusammeverhängniss der Dinge_ or
-“fatally-concatenated-mutual-interdependency” of things! Mythological
-images rising vaguely from the clouds of school memories; the lilt of
-that Walrus and Carpenter verse parodied a thousand times; an American
-jingle never recalled since it was first casually read and dismissed on
-a railway journey; and the magniloquent _panache_ lines of Rostand—all
-dropping in irrelevantly from some distant and forgotten corner of the
-past into this garden, all à propos of spud work and linking itself with
-it!
-
-For instance, to-day ‹one of the three longest in the year, for, in the
-coming morn, about five o’clock, our summer solstice will have taken
-place›, as I spudded away at the fern, thirstily and perspiringly, my
-haunting iteration was alternately of images wide as the poles asunder.
-One was of those puzzling lines, in Boileau’s heroicomic poem _Le
-Lutrin_, anent the barber who
-
- ... _d’une main legère
- Tient un verre de vin qui rit dans la fougère._
-
-[Sidenote: FERN SEED]
-
-The other was of Gadshill boast: “We steal as in a castle, cock-sure: we
-have the receipt of fern-seed”—which irresistibly, by concatenation,
-brought in the image of my dear if disreputable old friend Falstaff and
-how he would have “larded the lean earth” as he spudded along. Now it
-occurs to me that if the receipt of fern-seed as handed down by
-tradition is in any way correct, this is the last day when this fern
-massacre can be of any use, as far as Villino Loki is concerned, to
-prevent its propagation for this year. Is not to-morrow St. John’s Eve;
-and is not that the date upon which the invisible seed—which once
-successfully gathered will confer upon the gatherer the power of
-invisibility—drops upon the soil?
-
-The harvest, it seems, must be made “in the dark of the moon,” at the
-exact turning of midnight, and received in a pewter plate; without
-regard to the beguiling pranks of fairy or goblin, who, naturally
-enough, are jealous of the acquisition by mere mortals of this essential
-attribute of their order. The receipt does not state how the
-pewter-harvested seed, being invisible, is to be bottled up or otherwise
-preserved for use when required.
-
-This, by the way, is a fairly typical instance of the manner in which
-our mediæval superstitions were shrouded in cryptic conditions, the
-failure of any one of which in the smallest particular would plausibly
-explain away the failure of the whole charm.—We can easily understand
-the paucity of invisible mortals at all times.
-
-Well, I for one have no desire for such a charm. The temptation to use
-it would be distracting. And conceive the endless trouble, picture to
-yourself the misconceptions, you would raise into your own mind if you
-possessed the power at any moment of prying, invisible, into the
-innermost life of your best friends, or your enemies ... and of hearing
-what they might happen to say about you!
-
-No. Yet I would some power gave me the gift to gather all the invisible
-seed at Villino Loki: I would burn it once and for all.
-
-[Sidenote: _CROSSES DE FOUGERE, A LA JAPONAISE_]
-
-One cannot help wondering that so little use should be made of all this
-vegetable wealth. There it is, covering square leagues of common land,
-to be harvested by whosoever list. In former days, indeed, it was
-gathered in and burnt for “potashes”—chiefly for glass-making. And
-therein lies the explanation of the wine “laughing in the _fougère_”;
-ash of _fougère_, or Bracken, had in the “grand Roy’s” days become
-synonymous with glass itself. Again, in its dry condition, Brake was
-once extensively used for thatching and for litter; in some parts of the
-country the young plant was given as fodder to cattle and horses. Now,
-however, county councils forbid the building of thatch, our up-to-date
-cattle and horses are too fastidious as to litter and fodder, and we
-import our potashes. Meanwhile, Bracken threatens everywhere to stifle
-the Heather on our moors.
-
-If I remember right, in some parts of France the poorer people make use
-of young Brake as food. And this reminds me that, some years ago, I
-heard the last Japanese Ambassador remark at dinner—à propos of the
-Asparagus that was just going round—that he wondered we should not make
-use in the kitchen of the Bracken he had noticed growing in such
-enormous and neglected quantities in England. In his country, he assured
-us, they eat the young shoots, when still in their folded “crozier”
-stage, precisely as we over here eat Asparagus, and consider them not
-only as delicacies, but as particularly wholesome and nutritious.
-
-The recipe for cooking them is simple. The croziers, cut just short of
-the roots, are to be parboiled in strongly salted water; the first
-water, which extracts some unpleasantly bitter principle, is to be
-quickly poured off; then the shoots, thoroughly drained of this first
-water, are boiled in a large quantity of fresh water, drained again
-carefully and served with oil or butter, very much like our Sprue.
-
-I must some day make the experiment. I wonder if the joy, now, of eating
-tender young Bracken would be like that of the savage devouring his
-declared enemy?
-
-Meanwhile, for the sake of the desired grass, the hecatomb must be
-repeated daily.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXV
-
-
-[Illustration: dog looking outside at rain]
-
-[Sidenote: MORE BLACK SHEEP]
-
-This July, not remarkable for anything but rain and dark skies, has
-produced a perfect outbreak of wickedness in the village. Our black
-sheep have turned into tigers without even the excuse of torrid weather
-to inflame their passions. But, indeed, the public house is always ready
-to supply the stimulant necessary for driving average humanity into
-brutal and insane crime.
-
-Caliban, whom the reader may remember as having once worked in our
-Fortunate Island, and always looking as if he had just risen from
-all-fours, has, in our recent absence, thrown away all pretence at
-humanity once and for all. Though, indeed, why should the poor beasts,
-who generally make excellent fathers and husbands, be compared to the
-type of man that deliberately ruins his home? To batter your wife,
-terrorize your children, to squander your substance for an indulgence
-which ultimately destroys your health, is a mystery of perversity
-reserved for the superior being.
-
-Anyway, Caliban, having drifted from place to place, and lost his last
-chance of employment in this district by killing a whole hot-house full
-of Tomatoes through drunken neglect “on” the local market gardener, as
-we should say in Ireland, finally locked his wife and children out of
-the little cottage, and shut himself in with his drunkenness in company
-with his aged but not less drunken parent. The power of thought having
-returned in the morning, the precious pair put their boosy heads
-together and sold the furniture, possessed themselves of every available
-valuable, even of Mrs. Caliban’s solitary trinket, and decamped together
-from the district!
-
-Mrs. Caliban, with an infant in arms and two little girls at her skirts,
-has now set to work to earn enough for all. She is a valiant woman; and
-no doubt when she has succeeded fairly well, Caliban will return to
-repeat the process. She is very anxious for a separation, but cannot
-accomplish this, as the whereabouts of her lord and master are unknown.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She is less fortunate than the wife of Black Sheep No. 2. Last Saturday
-we were peacefully entertaining a couple of week-end visitors, when poor
-Mrs. Mutton crawled into our garden to “see the young lady.” The
-water-butt myth was cast to the winds. She had a black eye and a
-dislocated thumb, and informed us that Mutton had threatened to “do for
-her,” and that she was going in fear of her life. “When not drunk,” she
-remarked with the apathy of despair, “I think he’s mad!”
-
-Mutton is well known in the district for his playful ways, and no one
-would consent to house his wife but an enterprising barber: on the
-condition, however, that Mutton did not come after her. The poor thing
-shivered and shook, and avowed that she could not return and pass
-another hour in such terrors. When she heard his step, she told us, a
-trembling would seize her.
-
-“You ladies,” she said, rolling her hopeless eyes from one sympathetic
-listener to another, “can have no idea of the kind of life poor women
-like us lead!”
-
-[Sidenote: COUNTY POLICE METHODS]
-
-Little Jimmy Mutton and she had spent the previous night out under fear
-of a gun, which Black Sheep _père_ had taken to bed with him, with
-threats of instant use. The first idea of the owners of Villino Loki was
-that the woman should have protection; and here the drama took a
-Gilbertian form with a dash of nightmare. Her cottage being on the
-borders of another county, no policeman nearer than nine miles off had
-the right to intervene. In vain did “the young lady,” attended by the
-two week-end visitors, start off for the nearest magistrate and lay the
-case before him. Mrs. Mutton must betake herself to that far county
-town, by what means she best might; and if she and her poor lambs were
-“done for” between this and then, it would all be within the strict
-limits of the law as far as the magistrate was concerned. With fruitless
-eloquence were the perils of the situation painted in their blackest
-colours. Mutton, as we have said, was famous, and like Habacuc in
-Voltaire’s estimation, might be _capable de tout_.
-
-Could not the local policeman take possession of the gun?
-
-Impossible. No policeman nearer than Paddockstown could lay a finger on
-it.
-
-Could not at least the village Bobby keep an eye on the house where the
-enterprising barber had taken in the refugees?
-
-The Magistrate smiled at such ignorance of the law. All orders must come
-from Paddockstown.
-
-“That,” remarked one of the week-end visitors as the discomfited party
-shook the Magistrate’s dust off their feet, “that seems a futile old
-gentleman!”
-
-This week-end visitor had an emphatic manner of speech, which afforded
-the only relief in the exasperation of the atmosphere.
-
-However, the affair managed to straighten itself out on, again, true
-Gilbertian lines. Mrs. Mutton duly found a motor-bus to convey her to
-Paddockstown; and there, with all the proper formality, interviewed the
-Magistrate and a lawyer, with the help of whom she was separated from
-her obstreperous Mutton. Little Jimmy gave evidence, Mutton was advised
-by his lawyer not to defend the case. She has now appropriately joined
-forces with Mrs. Caliban and is enjoying a time of peace which we trust
-may not be merely an interlude.
-
-“Oh, Miss!” she cried, describing these unwonted sensations, “I’m that
-overjoiced, I’m afraid it’s hardly right!”
-
-As the husband is hovering about the roads, waylaying all concerned with
-alarming politeness, we are a little anxious. We know that he is still
-_mouton enragé_ at heart; and we do not know if in spite of the mandate
-from Paddockstown the local police would be allowed to interfere were
-gun or table knife to be put into requisition.
-
-The Dorothy Perkins are coming out, showing a most glorious kind of fire
-rose, which hitherto they only displayed in the autumn after a touch of
-frost. Combined with the delicate sprays of the Ceanothus Gloire de
-Versailles, they make in a tall glass vase as pretty a harmony as we
-know.
-
-[Illustration: rose garden]
-
-[Sidenote: THE NEW ROSARY]
-
-The new Rose Garden promises complete success. Caroline Testout is
-coming out, fat and pink and smiling in her usual good-humoured
-profusion. We have a great bed in the shape of a Maltese cross in the
-middle of a stretch of turf in this new Rose Garden, and the other three
-beds are filled respectively with Madame Abel Châtenay; mixed yellow
-roses, among which are Betty, Lady Hillingdon, and Juliet, are specially
-successful; and another deep pink charmer named Madame Jules Groles. She
-has not yet come out. The centre bed is devoted to General MacArthur,
-with a Crimson Rambler pillar.
-
-The Climbing Roses against the arches that bound this rose-lawn north
-and south are growing bravely; and we have lost our hearts to May Queen
-with its mass of bright pink flowers, which, combined with the fainter,
-creamier pinks of Paul Transon, make such a delicious bouquet of bloom,
-all on the same pillar.
-
-The hedge of Penzance Briars, though only a couple of feet above the
-ground as yet, has thrown out long lines of starry blossoms, shading
-from faint primrose to deepest crimson, with intermediate constellations
-of pinks and carmines that out-do both Dorothy Perkins and Zephyrine
-Drouhin.
-
-The new Rose Garden is shut off on the west by a fir-tree avenue, and we
-are trying to coax white and red Wichurianas up the stems, in spite of
-all expert pessimism. Marquise de Sinety is a delicate, warmly tinted,
-pinky cream Rose. Catalogues, no doubt, would call her “salmon”; but it
-is such a horrid word that we prefer to present the picture under
-another aspect.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Do not let anyone subject to the watery caprices of an English climate
-place their trust in Maman Cochet! Her heavy bud becomes hopelessly
-sodden after anything like a shower. One can conceive that this dowager
-would be a handsome enough object in a southern garden, or that she
-would be a good greenhouse rose; but, like many another, she does not
-bear adversity.
-
-Handsome, bland Caroline Testout keeps up her self-contained smile
-unimpaired in fair and foul weather; “fat-faced Puss” that she is, a
-very Gioconda among roses, even to the close folding of her plump
-leaves, which remind one of that overrated charmer’s compact hands. It
-would take a good deal to shake her equanimity; scentless, soulless
-beauty!
-
-The Lyons Rose has burst on us this year in all its splendour, a most
-successful combination of pink and gold. The sunset glow seems to shine
-through the petals.
-
-These efforts at producing new effects are not always successful, some
-having a very patchy appearance, to our mind. As for the Austrian Briar,
-Soleil d’Or, it is more like a blood-orange cut in two than anything
-else, in colour, shape, and pulpy texture. From a distance the bright
-circles look attractive, but we should recommend it to no one who values
-delicacy in their blooms.
-
-A great success are the Weeping Standards Stella. Though it is their
-first year, the branches are covered with lovely tinted blossoms; and
-what is more, these are lasting. Single carmine stars are they, with
-golden centres and a scent of musk.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: FLOWERING TIMES AND PLANS]
-
-The mistress of the Villino, a foolish and impetuous person, has three
-times made the same mistake and omitted to ascertain the blooming season
-of plants which she wished to be in beauty together. So the four Weeping
-Standards Stella, are considerably in advance of the four Dorothys which
-alternate with them; and the standards Soleil d’Or were quite over
-before the Conrad Meyers appeared in the Lily Walk; and the contrast of
-pink and yellow was what had been aimed at!
-
-In the same manner she had intended the Garland Roses to foam up in two
-splendid white pillars at each end of the long length of Dorothy Perkins
-at the opposite side of the Blue Border terrace. Of course the Garland
-is becoming unsightly before the fire-pink of the Dorothy begins to show
-in any profusion.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The garden—except on the upper terrace, which with Heliotrope, Lobelia,
-and the climbing Ceanothus keeps to the faint cool blues, untroubled by
-the efflorescence of the White Pet ‹which, by the way, has completely
-eaten out Perle des Rouges› and the very faint pink of the Ivy-Leaf
-Geraniums—except for the upper terrace, the garden, we say, is growing
-pink. What with the Verbenas and the Red Roses and the cheery coloured
-Ivy-Leaf Geranium called Jersey Beauty, in the Dutch garden, and the
-general ramp of Dorothy everywhere, it is a mass of pink.
-
-Another year we must have more Penstemons. They are charming things, and
-as good as they are beautiful. In a garden nothing is beautiful that is
-not good, which is another facet of its likeness to Paradise.
-
-We caress the idea of a border where perennial Gypsophila, large bushes
-of Monarda, Penstemons and Lavender should group and contrast and
-delight and rest the eye.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a walk in a wonderful garden not far from here—a garden which
-brings a kind of fainting, despairing envy to the soul of Loki’s
-Grandmother—where Lavender and Penstemons make the happiest possible
-effect. The walk itself is a thing of beauty; through woodland on one
-side, the border in question runs quite a long way against a low parapet
-on the other. Below this parapet the ground slopes down, and at the end
-of the walk there is so abrupt a fall that it seems almost to end in
-mid-air with a vast panorama far beneath. And on the side of the flowery
-border a shelving precipice falls away out of which giant stone pines
-hang against the distant horizon. The Lavender has grown to a hedge, and
-the varying soft pinks of the Penstemons run vividly against its
-mistiness.
-
-Would that walk, and that border, and that view, were ours!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXVI
-
-
-We nearly had a garden tragedy yesterday afternoon. The sounds of a
-little dog in great distress broke the peace of the drowsy day. Loki’s
-Ma-Ma dashed out of the house thinking it was Loki—caught in a trap!
-Certainly the little dog—whichever it was—was in desperate straits.
-
-“That’s the voice of my Betty,” cried Juvenal, galloping to the rescue
-in his shirt-sleeves. “My treasure, my little girl! I’m coming!”
-
-It was well indeed that he did hurry, for Betty had fallen into the deep
-water-butt in the Rose Garden; and if she had not had the sense to
-scream for help, and to hold on to the rim of the barrel with all her
-little claws, she would have been a drowned Betty, and nobody the wiser,
-perhaps, for days and days.
-
-We think it would have broken Juvenal’s heart.
-
-Both Arabella and Loki were standing staring stiffly instead of doing
-what was expected of dogs of such intellect: which was running to fetch
-human help.
-
-[Sidenote: PERSIANS AND A WICKED WORLD]
-
-On a former occasion however, when Kitty-Wee had a fit, poor little
-darling, Loki acted up to our opinion of him. We had gone for a walk on
-the moor, and the Persian Princess, still half in her kittenhood, had
-accompanied us, with that touching display of pleasure at being in our
-company which makes the Fur Children so endearing. She had to roll on
-the grass in front of us, sharpen her claws on every tree, and rub her
-pretty head against our skirts in the endeavour to show her feelings. We
-suppose these feelings were too much for her. We had halted in the
-greenhouse when Loki dashed in upon us, whimpering in a frightful state
-of agitation. He drew his Grandmother out of the greenhouse, and rushed
-up to stand over his little fur sister, crying out loud in sympathy and
-distress.
-
-She was a small convulsed heap upon the ground. Fortunately the tap,
-which ran into one of those delectable barrels of odoriferous water so
-precious to the garden, was quite close, and we were able to administer
-first aid with promptitude.
-
-For all who do not know it: cold water to the head gives immediate
-relief to any little creature in such a seizure.
-
- * * * * *
-
-She quite grew out of them. But, alas! our thistledown Princess, our
-dear pretty silver lady! We have delayed to write her sad fate into the
-pages of the chronicle of the happy Fur Family. She was stolen! We often
-lie awake thinking of her. Pampered as she was; so accustomed to be
-thought of, and cherished, and made much of; to have her pearly robe
-brushed and combed to the last point of perfection, her dainty appetite
-catered for; to find a caress and a cuddle whenever she was in the mood
-for it! A lurid mystery ‹accompanied by a great deal of hard swearing›
-envelops her loss. She was lost on a half-hour’s motor-trip which her
-family, struck with momentary idiocy, was allowing her to undertake
-alone. She was, in fact, about to contract another matrimonial alliance
-with a prince of her own race, and was so securely packed in her
-luxurious travelling basket, so unmistakably labelled, so solemnly
-handed over to the care of the conductor of the motor ’bus, that it did
-not seem as if she could come to harm.
-
-But Blue Persians, as well as pink pearls, are over-precious chattels to
-confide to a dishonest world! The conductor of the next ’bus to that by
-which she was expected, handed an empty basket to the envoy from the
-other side; and when this was refused, declared the cat had escaped on
-the way. As the basket was hermetically closed, this lie had not even
-the merit of being plausible. But puzzle succeeded puzzle when the
-waiter from the Golf Club House, a reliable witness, deposed having
-picked up the same basket still securely fastened at every corner—but
-minus the cat—on the first round of the ’bus. “It could have gone to
-Siberia in that basket,” he declared, “it was that strong and solid!”
-
-The local police, a most intelligent and valuable body of men, declared
-that nothing could be done, “as no man could be taken up for telling a
-lie.” And the railway company, after punching a large hole in the
-basket, announced that as the cat was not insured, we might sue them for
-five shillings! We advertised and beat the countryside in vain—Kitty-Wee
-has gone out of our lives. If we only knew that she was happy, the ache
-at our hearts would be less.
-
-We must fill the gap, and are deliberating whether a pair of Blue
-Persians, or an orange couple, would afford us the greater joy. We think
-to decide on the latter would be less callous to the memory of
-Kitty-Wee, and provide perhaps a better match in the little Villino that
-runs so much to orange and yellow.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Never could there be anything more beautiful than the St. John’s Wort
-along the moorland roads. It has been a day of golden heat, the distant
-woods have shimmering purple vapours in their hollows, and the hills are
-misty blue. There had been a fire last year in a great flat stretch of
-pinewood that runs into heather and moor, high above where the road
-begins to fall into the first of the little country towns between us and
-London. The wood had been cleared of the dead trees and we suppose it is
-this which has given encouragement to the great yellow weed. However it
-may be, it is a field of cloth of gold now. Pines rise up at intervals
-in their dark solemnity. Royal purple of the heather runs into the gold.
-It is a meeting of colour that ought to be immortalized.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXVII
-
-
-[Illustration: path down garden]
-
-Time has run away with us, and the garden chronicle has been silent. The
-Ramblers have blazed in the garden, more especially the indefatigable
-“Dorothy,” till one has grown almost tired of such a repetition of vivid
-pink.
-
-The Mistress of the Villino has been planning “toning-down effects” for
-next year and means to run a border of Catmint or Dwarf Lavender against
-the “Dorothy” hedge.
-
-The Lily Walk, which we shall have to call by another name, since, with
-a few exceptions, the Lilies decline to have anything to say to it, is,
-should the scheme contemplated be successful, to show a cool vista of
-greys, lavender blues, and “rose mourante” behind the arch where the
-same irrepressible Perkins flaunts herself in such splendour. The
-Delphiniums, which have done so well there, will have spent their hour
-of glorious life before the arch enters upon its triumph.
-
-What a mausoleum that Lily Walk has proved itself! It has been one of
-our tragedies! Adam is quite dispassionate, and says “it’s the Lily
-disease; and there’s a deal of it about.”
-
-By one of those freakish accidents that will occur in the best regulated
-gardens, a batch of Fairy Lilies was planted _behind_ the ramping
-Alstrumerias. This was discovered too late, when these bold Peruvians
-were succumbing.
-
-[Illustration: landscape by path - two pages wide]
-
-[Sidenote: TONING DOWN EFFECTS]
-
-But besides the amount of sickly, straggling “Candidums,” “Auratums,”
-and “Tigers” that have disgraced the border, there is the unaccountable
-number of bulbs that have been swallowed up in it! The whole thing must
-be dug out this autumn. And the scheme is now to grow Ceanothus “Gloire
-de Versailles” up the wooden trellis at the back between the Roses the
-foliage of which is always blighted, and to have a pillar of Blush
-Rambler at the end, by the side of the Wellingtonia which closes the
-border. Bushes of Ceanothus Azureas, as well as the successful “Gloire
-de Versailles”; a drift of Achillea, shading from the palest pink to
-deep carmine; bushes of Catmint; the new pale pink Spirea, perennial
-Gypsophila; mauve Galiga ‹Salvia, Miss Jekyll recommends›; Sea Lavender
-and a couple of clumps of Eringium will complete the effect. Perhaps
-there shall be Moon Daisies, pale pink and mauve Penstemons, and one or
-two groups of “Cottage Maid” Antirrhinums to fill up the gaps. But what
-we feel is needed is the grey, mauve, silver, and lavender-blue tinting
-against which Dorothy Perkins may be as flaming as she likes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is rare to find Rose Achilleas anywhere. Yet they are as pretty a
-thing as we have ever seen in a border; the blossoms seeming to drift on
-their slender stems, one above the other like little sunset clouds.
-
-What has been for once a complete pleasure is the wide bed under the
-drawing-room window. The Ceanothus—which loves us—has been a treasure of
-delicate bloom; and, against it, the great old bushes of lavender have
-thrust their spikes in profusion. Just the right tone to harmonize. Then
-the Longiflorum Lilies—excellent, sturdy, conscientious darlings!—have
-lifted their satin shining trumpets above the Heliotrope that loves us
-too; and Lobelia, the one vivid line of colour, has rimmed the thick
-cushion of “Mrs. Sinkins’” foliage most artistically. The grey-green
-gives the finishing touch to a really reposeful combination. There are
-also two or three clumps of Nicotiana Affinis, softly mauve, and faded
-purple crimson. To gaze at that corner against the amethyst of the moor
-is a never-ending delight.
-
-[Sidenote: A CHAPTER OF DISASTERS]
-
-But another garden disaster has been the annihilation of all the
-seedlings which we sowed in the open border! It is laughable now, but
-sad too, to turn back the pages and read the vainglorious project of
-running a dazzling ribbon of Nemophila against the Dorothy Perkins
-hedge. ‹It might have been frightful; so perhaps Providence kindly
-intervened!› But that Nigella “Miss Jekyll” should have refused her
-mysterious and pretty presence in the Blue Border is a deep
-disappointment.
-
-We are again gnashing our teeth over the Blue Border. The fact is, we
-suppose, it is too much to expect beauty all the year round, no matter
-how boastfully garden writers inform you of their artifices in that
-direction: how cleverly, for instance, the annual Gypsophila will bury
-the unsightly decay of the Iris leaves, or how you can pull branches of
-“Miss Mellish” down over the Delphiniums.
-
-Why do not our Delphiniums bloom twice? Every garden book and every
-catalogue cheers your heart by promising a handsome second bloom to the
-industrious clipper-off of seed-pods. But never a Delphinium has
-responded to our kind attentions in that direction. Perhaps our soil
-does not give them strength enough for such exertion. But it is idle
-speculating. One must learn what one’s garden will do and what it won’t
-do—and make the best of it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The greatest of all the tragedies that have befallen us lately is
-indubitably the passing away of poor old Tom. We are now catless!
-
-Poor little friend! Where has that quaint, faithful, dutiful identity
-gone to? Juvenal says Heaven would not be Heaven to him if he were not
-to meet his own dogs there—a sentiment which we have, we believe,
-ourselves set down elsewhere. St. Francis the Poverello saw God in all
-His lesser creatures. It is not possible to think that we shall lose
-anything in a completer world.
-
-Tom was the most conscientious of cats. He now lies beside Susan. We are
-going to get two little tombstones made for us by the Watts Settlement
-at Compton. Susan’s epitaph has already been mentioned. Nothing more to
-the point could be imagined:
-
-“Here lies Susan, a good dog.” “Here lies Thomas, for eighteen years our
-faithful cat-comrade.”
-
-So shall it stand recorded over the new grave.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXVIII
-
-
-Mid-August and the lists beginning to come in! Mr. Eden Phillpotts, in
-his delightful garden book, says that no one is a true garden lover who
-is not instantly lost in every nurseryman’s list, who does not
-immediately draw out orders far beyond his means, and spend his time in
-plans and combinations that shall transcend Kew as well as Babylon. What
-garden lovers are we in this respect! It is only when the orders are
-written out and the prices totted up that sober reason obtrudes its
-forbidding countenance—and then the painful process of “knocking off”
-begins. Nevertheless we are becoming adepts in combining lavishness with
-economy. There are delightful firms whose plants are literally to be had
-at a quarter of the price of others, with results quite as happy.
-
-There is the Dutchman who sends us our bulbs. He has grown to be a
-friend, and his English letters are charming, “Dear Mrs.,” he wrote when
-Gladioli, “The Bride,” arrived in a state no Bride should be in, really
-without a wedding garment—“Dear Mrs., She is a flower the most agreeable
-in the garden, but she is very unpleasant to travel.”
-
-His catalogue makes equally fascinating reading. The quaint spelling and
-phraseology are more than attractive. Who, for instance, would not wish
-to invest in Narcissus, thus described:
-
-“Astrardente, white and apricot orange, edged fiery scarlet magnificent
-and nice flowers.”
-
-“Nothing,” says another grower, “can equal, much less excel, early
-single Tulips.”
-
-“Pottebakke White,” cries a third, “is a very large pure white flower,
-and not to surpass better.”
-
-“Of snow-like variety and delicious fragrance a most beloved flower,”
-thus our special Hollander labels Lilium Longiflorum Takesima, in words
-that have a certain charm of poetic simplicity which would not have
-misbecome the artistic Japanese himself.
-
-[Sidenote: DUTCH BULBS]
-
-However tempted by other nationalities, we choose to be Dutch in our
-bulbs. This is the list we have just dispatched to Haarlem:
-
- “600 China blue single Hyacinths.
- 1 dozen Cavaignac pink Hyacinths.
- 1 dozen Fabiola blush Hyacinths.
- 50 Roman Hyacinths.
- 100 Scarlet Duc van Thol Tulips.
- 50 Rose Duc van Thol Tulips.
- 300 Thomas Moore Tulips.
- 1000 Darwin Tulips, best mixed.
- 500 Parrot Tulips, in the finest mixture, bright colours.
- 100 Gladiolus Brenchlyensis.
- 100 Gladiolus Hollandia.
- 1000 mixed striped Crocus.
- 1000 Scilla Siberica praecox.
- 1000 blue Grape Hyacinths.
- 1000 Snowdrops Elweseii.
- 1000 Poeticus recurvus Narcissus.
- 100 Hyacinthus Candicans.
- 1000 Single Trumpet Daffodils mixed.
- 500 Double Daffodils mixed.”
-
-Of these some of the scarlet and rose “Duc van Thol” Tulips, and all the
-“Cavaignac” and “Fabiola” Hyacinths are for forcing; and, of course, the
-Roman Hyacinths also. The other bulbs are destined for the open ground.
-
-Gladiolus Hollandia is described as the “Pink Brenchlyensis,” and is
-much recommended. We have never grown her yet, but her scarlet cousin is
-a great success in our garden. We find our Gladioli do so much better
-when planted in the spring, that we are asking the firm not to send them
-to us for another seven months. But they are included in the autumn list
-so that he may reserve us good sound tubers.
-
-It is evidently against garden decorum to mention the name of a
-horticulturist, for some garden writers make a point of assuring the
-reader that they will never be guilty of such an indiscretion; but we
-see no harm at all in paying, by the way of this discursive pen, a
-tribute to the perfect satisfaction hitherto afforded us by our chosen
-bulb grower, Mr. Thoolen, of Haarlem. His Tulips, Hyacinths, and
-Narcissi have stood the test for three years. Of course, in our soil we
-cannot expect more than one good season out of anything except Crocus,
-Scilla, and Narcissi.
-
-Daffodils, which up till now have been unaccountably absent from our
-garden plans, are to be heavily indulged in this year. Besides what
-appears in the above list we are venturing on another thousand from a
-certain Mr. Telkamp, likewise in the land of windmills.
-
-[Sidenote: MORE DUTCH BULBS]
-
-The following is the order which we have just dispatched to him:
-
- “1000 Daffodils for naturalization.
- 100 Retroflexa Tulips, soft yellow.
- 100 Bouton d’Or Tulips, deep golden yellow.
- 100 Caledonia Tulips, orange, dark stems.
- 100 Golden Eagle Tulips, fine yellow.
- 200 Count of Leicester, yellow orange tinted.”
-
-He advertises a thousand Daffodils for ten shillings—two and a half
-dollars! Miraculous, if true! It is worth the plunge.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We have decided to take a slice off the kitchen garden to be kept
-entirely for bulbs and tubers for cutting. There a hundred “Madonna”
-Lilies, three dozen Auratum, a hundred Tigrinum, and a few hundreds of
-other kinds shall be given all the chances that completely fresh soil
-and good exposure can afford. Five hundred Parrot Tulips, three hundred
-“Thomas Moore,” and a hundred “Bizarres” are to make a field of glory
-for the harvest. The hundred Gladiolus Brenchlyensis and the hundred
-Hollandia will rear their scarlet and pink spears; and Iris shall stand
-in ranks.
-
-The Mistress of the Villino has still an hour of bliss before her in
-picking out Iris for her list. The “Florentina” shall certainly be
-largely of the company, and preference is to be given generally to the
-misty blue and purple kinds. Then the speculation in cheap bulbs
-provides a thousand mixed May flowering Tulips.... Adam’s face will be a
-study when he finds how much of his cherished potato and cabbage land
-will be required. But what a span of beauty it will make; and what
-sheaves of delight for ourselves and our friends!
-
-[Sidenote: FOND DREAMS, AND MISDOUBTS]
-
-Every year the extravagant woman above mentioned, who has got the vice
-of garden-gambling into her very system, extends her ambitions. But how
-much is there not still to be accomplished before she is satisfied, if
-ever a garden-lover is satisfied!
-
-For a long time she has dreamt of a shady pool—somewhere. And, after
-beholding the adorable vision before described in Messrs. Wallace’s
-exhibit at Holland House this summer, she had been quite sure that it
-would be difficult to exist another year without a nook with Irises
-about it and a sunk basin, and a little statue mysteriously contrived in
-the green. Coming across an advertisement in _Country Life_, where an
-artistic firm of garden-decorators offers just what she wants, a small
-round stone pond with a Faun sitting cross-legged on the brim of it, it
-becomes quite clear to her that there are cravings which must be
-satisfied. She is willing to give up the vision of a new Azalea dell
-‹for this year only, of course› and of a paved walk with Cypresses on
-each side, ending in a _rondpoint_ hedged about with more Cypresses,
-with a stone bench in the middle, for the more immediately alluring
-claim. But, O, ye gods and little fishes, how insatiable are still the
-needs of the Villino on the hill!
-
-There is the orchard for the slope above the sunk tennis court; to be a
-glory some Spring with Apple and Pear blossom, while Daffodils, Narcissi
-and Scilla riot underneath. And there is the round Autumn Garden to be
-dug out and levelled in the wood, where Sunflowers, Michaelmas Daisies,
-“Fire King” Antirrhinums, Nasturtiums and flaunting orange and saffron
-Dahlias are to make a rim of splendour against a cropped green hedge.
-The centre of this blazing circle is to be flagged and consecrated to
-“Herbs.” That will be something to live for; to see accomplished some
-golden autumn of the future!
-
-So much has already been done in what was, most of it, a mere sodden
-tangle, impenetrable not only to human beings but even to the light of
-heaven, that it gives one heart for what may be achieved in the future.
-Yet never does the Grandmother of Loki feel the uncertainty of life more
-keenly than when she is in the midst of her garden dreams. Every winter
-indeed, when the bulbs are planted, she wonders, with a pang, if she
-will see them come up in the Spring; how much more does she now ask
-herself whether the hidden Autumn Garden, or the Italian walk, or the
-Bowery Orchard, or even the Sunk Fountain, are ever destined to rejoice
-her.
-
-Well, after all, she gets an extraordinary amount of pleasure out of the
-mere mental picture, and who can say if the very uncertainty of all
-things here below does not add to their zest?
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: THE MOOR]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXIX
-
-
-[Sidenote: DAWN OVER THE MOOR]
-
-This morning, waking at dawn, the Padrona was impelled to roll out of
-bed, and look out of both her windows. The one over her balcony gives
-down the valley and the one opposite her bed affords her vision of the
-moor rolling away beyond the Dutch Garden and the terrace corner. If she
-had been but a woman of moderate vigour, she would not have gone to bed
-again till the whole pageant of mysterious glory had fulfilled itself
-before her eyes. For what a sight it was! First of all, the whole
-garden, woodland and heather hills were steeped in a translucence for
-which there is no name. It is a virgin hour, and its purity no words can
-describe. The Ling, in full bloom, was silver and amethyst on the rise,
-misty purple and blue in the hollows. Behind the shouldering hills a
-rift of sky was a radiant lemon-yellow, a kind of honey sea of light.
-And above that, again, little drifts of cloud had caught a wonderful
-orange-rose glow like the wings of cherubim about the Throne. Down the
-valley there were silver mists against the most tender, clear horizon;
-and all along the Lily Walk the clumps of Tiger Lilies seemed to be like
-little Fra Angelico angels, holding their breath in adoration!
-
-[Illustration: landscape - two pages wide]
-
-Everything lies, after all, in the point of view. The dawn was decidedly
-too pink for safety, and the clumps of Lilies that looked so pious and
-recollected have got “the disease” badly in their stalks. Yet realism
-can never blight that exquisite hour of breaking day in her thoughts!
-
-The only time we degenerates ever really see the dawn is coming home
-from some London ball; or again, travelling. The dawn in London often
-gives an impression of extraordinary blue in atmosphere and heaven, we
-suppose because it is seen contrasted with artificial illuminations. But
-that sapphire blue, when it permeates park and streets, when the sky
-seems to hold unplumbed depths beyond depths of the same wonderful
-colour, is a thing to dwell in the memory likewise, though travellers
-have the better part. Dawn in the Alps! A night not to be depicted! Such
-vastness of tinted heights; such black chasms where the pines hang;
-spume of waterfalls all golden crimson, and deep rivers, green and
-terrible and beautiful with a glint on them as they rush!
-
-One of us ‹the fourth in the lucky clover leaf at Villino Loki; one who
-is poet and musician besides many other things, and sometimes poet and
-musician together› has defined the indefinable. It is not the dawn of
-the day she hymns, but the dawn of the young Spring.
-
-Though the poem is printed in a recently published volume, it seems to
-fit naturally into this page.
-
- _THE ST. GOTHARD_
-
- _April and I—
- Each with each greeting amid tumbled ice,
- Travel these wastes of frozen purity.
- Here the wild air above the precipice
- E’en tasteth sweet, and hath a delicate scent
- As of faint flowers unseen—the flower of snows
- Massed peak on peak in slumber yet unspent,
- But dreaming of the Rose._
-
- _Here the great hills wear silence as a seal—
- April and I,
- Listening can hear the loosened snowflake steal
- Down from the burdened bough that slips awry;
- Here the long cry of water-nymphs at play
- Freezes upon the iced lips of fountains,
- And their sweet limbs’ arrested holiday
- In crystal carved engarlandeth the mountains._
-
- _Through such vast fields of sleep how dare we roam,
- April and I,
- And from its eyrie bid the torrent foam,
- And virgin meads grow starrier than the sky
- With scattered cowslip and with drifted bell?
- Or where austerely looms an Alpine giant
- Set a young almond rosily defiant
- To be our sentinel?_
-
- _Whence are we victors, chanting as we go,
- April and I.
- “Be free, ye tumbling streams, awake O snow—
- Ye silver blooms increase and multiply?”
- What is our spell?—The singing heart we bring,
- And lo! that song that is the core of earth
- Leaps in reply, and children of the Spring
- Into the light come forth._
-
-[Sidenote: THE DAWN OF YOUNG SPRING]
-
-Then there was a dawn over the Campagna, seen from the train that was
-speeding us towards Rome. A ball of red fire hung over the horizon. The
-sea lay silver and grey; and misty silver the Campagna.... “God made
-himself an awful rose of dawn,” as Tennyson sings. He did that morning:
-awful, yet full of a glorious comfort. The sea just caught the great
-reflection on its bosom.
-
-A little later, when we came to the first ruins that precede the
-aqueducts, there were the white cattle, stepping about among the broken
-pillars, with their huge spreading horns all gilded. These had not
-changed since the days when the sun gleamed on the grandeurs of classic
-Rome. Only then yonder building—temple, or tomb, or villa—fronted the
-morning with a forgotten stateliness, a lost grace.
-
-Is anything comparable to the scene that meets the traveller on his
-entry into Rome? Alas! St. John Lateran no longer stands like some
-titanic splendid ship about to slip her moorings and sail away into the
-wild, lonely sea of the Campagna. New walls have sprung up without the
-noble ancient walls; sordid disjointed lengths of streets, mean houses
-with blistered, leprous plaster; and evil-looking little wine-shops.
-Nevertheless, nothing can spoil the moment when the Lateran Church first
-gathers shape against the sky. All those statues with tossing gesture
-against the faint blue of the new day, heroic figures with outstretched
-arms seeming to gather pilgrims into the city; and in the midst of them
-the Saviour uplifting the Cross of Salvation! To the believer what a
-welcome! And it is Rome herself at a glance, too; for if the Church
-stands here beckoning between earth and sky, she is jostled below and
-round about by the still speaking wonders of old Pagan Rome.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXX
-
-
-One of the advantages of being “little people in a little place” is the
-pleasure small things can give one. The Duke of Devonshire has seventy
-men in his garden. Is it possible to imagine taking an interest in
-anything conducted on so enormous a scale? It is not gardening, it is
-horticultural government! There can be no individual knowledge of any
-“beloved flower,” as our Dutch friend has it. Outside a millionaire’s
-greenhouse we once beheld regiment after regiment of Begonia pots. It
-made one’s brain reel. How insupportable anything so repeated would
-become!
-
-Even in small gardens there is too much of a tendency nowadays to overdo
-garden effects. The flagged-path effect can certainly be overdone. We
-were tempted to visit a farmhouse the other day, adorably placed on a
-high Sussex down just where a stretch of table-land dominates an immense
-panorama of undulating country, and a vast half-circle of horizon. With
-a few more trees no situation could have been more beautiful.
-
-“It was a party of the name of Mosensohn” who had taken the old
-farmhouse, we are told, and they were transmogrifying it according to
-the most modern principles of how the plutocrat’s farmhouse should look.
-
-In some ways it was very well done. The fine old lines of wall and roof
-were carefully preserved; the high brick wall with its arched doorway
-and door with the grille in it, were quite in keeping, and gave one a
-sense of comfortable seclusion as one stepped in off the high road.
-
-But the square court, once the farmyard, divided by two different
-levels, was completely flagged. Only a few beds against the wall, and a
-strip of turf on the lower level under the house, afforded any relief to
-the eye. There was a sunk garden beyond which was turfed, and the sense
-of rest it instantly afforded made one realize what the incoming family
-will suffer on a scorching August day from the glare and refractions of
-the flags in a space so hemmed in. In the right spirit of garden mania,
-we were not above taking what hints we could. And some were very good.
-All the beds on that first level were planted with cool-looking blue and
-purple flowers—a happy thought where there was so much hot stone. And
-the old cow stables had been very cleverly converted into a most
-Italian-looking brick pergola which ran the length of the sunk Rose
-Garden, and ended in a round summer-house with a window. From there, as
-well as from the Rose Garden, the wide view over the Downs met the gaze.
-Vividly coloured herbaceous borders ran along the side nearest to the
-sudden slope of the hill. There is something very pleasing to the senses
-when the glance passes from such an ordered kaleidoscope of colour to
-the misty vastness of a far-reaching view.
-
-In the middle of the Rose Garden was a sunk fountain in a long narrow
-basin.
-
-A batch of pinewood, dark and shady, would have saved the situation; one
-sought everywhere for the comfort of real shadows.
-
-We went into the house, which was in the act of being papered and
-painted for the millionaires. Delightful in theory as such old buildings
-are, we were seized with doubt from the moment of crossing the threshold
-whether any sense of quaint antiquity would compensate one for beams on
-top of one’s head, for bedrooms the size of a bath-towel, and a general
-feeling of having one foot on the hearth and another in the passage. We
-thought the newcomers had shown more taste outside, and came to the
-conclusion that some one else’s taste ruled in the garden, but that they
-had allowed their own ideas free scope indoors. These ideas were
-monotonous. The parlour that gave on the little orchard had a paper all
-over green parrots; the best bedroom upstairs had a paper all over blue
-parrots; and the second best bedroom was adorned with terra-cotta
-parrots. The only chance for a conglomeration of rooms so hopelessly low
-and contracted, would have been a plain distemper of no tint deeper than
-cream, or at the outside butter colour. Then the old beams would have
-had a chance, and one might have felt able to draw one’s breath.
-
-‹Fancy waking in the morning to the dance of all the little parrots on
-top of one’s eyelids!›
-
-Then, out of a small space, the shapes of trees and flower-beds beyond
-come upon the vision with no sense of effect if the space within is
-tormented. Neither can anyone have any proper appreciation of the joy of
-a bunch of flowers, or a vase of spreading boughs, who has not set them
-against plain walls where their shadows have play.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: CONVERTING A COTTAGE]
-
-Another little house near here—set down in the valley this, on the edge
-of a hamlet, overlooking a wide pond—has been to our thinking more
-successfully dealt with. Three very old cottages have been knocked into
-one, and the whole little rambling up-and-down dwelling-place thus
-produced has been boldly distempered white within from roof to kitchen.
-The round black oak beams are delightful in these little white rooms,
-and the pretty, blue-eyed, still youthful spinster who owns them has
-been content with a short pair of clear white muslin curtains in every
-window; not, be it understood, the London bedroom kind that cuts across
-the pane ‹an abomination difficult to avoid in towns›, but proper
-curtains hanging over the recess. Nothing more suitable could be
-devised, and it took a “real lady,” in the sense of Hans Andersen’s
-“Real Princess,” to be content with such fresh simplicity. But
-attractive as her furnishing is, and full of genuinely beautiful things,
-there our tastes slightly diverged.
-
-[Sidenote: COTTAGE FURNITURE]
-
-[Illustration: landscape]
-
-The largest sitting-room has a set of black lacquer furniture inlaid
-with vivid mother-of-pearl; it is deliciously gay in this gay cottage
-parlour, and certainly no one who possessed these early Victorian
-treasures could bear to put them on one side. We think if we had been
-the lucky owner, however, we would have eschewed coupling them with
-velvet—or, indeed, brought velvet at all under those weather beaten
-tiles. The mistress of the Villino had a vision—a daring vision—of
-printed linen with scarlet cherries and impossible birds pecking at
-them; something with a true Jacobean angularity in it, to link the
-centuries together, and an uncompromising vividness of tint. That for
-cushions and sofa-covers. On the floor then, no bright carpet would be
-admitted. We should have enamelled that floor white, and cast a few rugs
-down on it, with no more colours in them than faint lemons and greys or
-creams.
-
-To complete this discursion on cottages, some of us visited the other
-day a tiny house, where all the downstairs rooms, except the kitchen,
-had been thrown together, making a charming, long, low living-room with
-one great black beam across the ceiling. On the walls was a perfect
-cottage paper, with isolated pink rose-buds well-distanced from each
-other: a pink rosebud chintz and black carpet dotted with faint stiff
-roses, made quaint and unusual but very satisfying arrangement. The
-windows looked out on a pine wood across a hedge of rampant pink Dorothy
-Roses. Gazing out on the dim, dark green grey aisles of the fir trees
-one would want the gay note within; and the little Rose-strewn paper was
-perfection.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yesterday the Grandfather of Loki dragged the Grandmother in her
-bath-chair out into the heart of the moors. It’s a sporting bath-chair
-this. It has been over as much rough ground as a horse artillery
-gun-carriage, and nothing in the matter of obstacles stops it unless it
-is barbed wire; it was chosen as light in make as possible, and now it
-has a rakish, weather-beaten appearance, like an old mountain mule.
-
-The rare strangers we meet on our wild career regard us with varied
-sentiments. Some are obviously filled with compassion over the joggling
-the occupant of the bath-chair must be enduring. “What can that fool of
-a man be about to expose that wretchedly delicate woman to such
-suffering?” their expression says to us as they pass. Others, on the
-other hand, are horror-stricken at the spectacle of the wifely brutality
-that condemns this weakly, good-natured man to the task of lugging her
-about. There is a good deal of uphill work, of course, about us, and he
-goes a good pace. “You ought to get a donkey, Madam,” is their
-conclusion.
-
-On two or three occasions good Samaritans have rushed to assist him,
-with glances of scathing rebuke at this new embodiment of woman’s
-tyranny.
-
-But they are some of our best days, in spite of outside disapproval.
-And, to go back to yesterday, we started off with all the dogs in a
-state of “high cockalorum”—Arabella in her most obsequious mood ‹having
-been scolded the day before for running away›; Loki, the Chinaman,
-trotting on in determined and splendid isolation as usual, it being
-quite against Chinese etiquette to speak to any fur-brother _outside_
-the garden gates; Betty, and her father Laddie, secretly determined to
-go hunting, no matter what execrations should be hurled after them.
-Laddie comes from a neighbouring house, and insists on adopting us as
-his family. It is very hard to be brutal and say that we won’t be
-adopted when a pair of the most beautiful cairngorm eyes in all the
-world are looking up at us out of the dear long, wise, pathetic dog
-face. In fact, we are not brutal; and Laddie comes and goes as he likes.
-Only he is occasionally carried back to his cook ‹who, it seems, duly
-loves him› by Juvenal the tender-hearted.
-
-It is very difficult to reach the moors, with this discursiveness! But,
-in a sunshine as blazing as that which ever fell from any Italian sky,
-we did get into the hollow of the heather hills, and there spend an
-afternoon of perfect dreaminess and pleasure.
-
-[Sidenote: BATH CHAIR AND HEATHER]
-
-Loki’s Grandfather took off his coat and marched up the slippery paths,
-the bath-chair bumping merrily after him. It is one of his male
-prerogatives to scorn the idea of sunstroke, and Loki’s Grandmother is
-filled with apprehensions half the time. But when she saw him stretched
-on a rug over the heather, smoking his pipe, and the four dogs cast
-themselves down in attitudes expressive of their different natures, the
-mental horizon became cloudless. The material skies—if such an adjective
-can be used in such connexion—the unplumbed dome of mystery above us,
-were by no means cloudless, and that was part of their wonderful beauty.
-Huge lazy white clouds, so luminous as to be dazzling, sailed over the
-rim of the moor and cast shadows of indescribable mauve and purple into
-the hollows. A day of such intense light it was that every tree in the
-thick of the woods flung its patch of shadow, purple-dark against the
-vivid green. And, oh, the colour of the Ling, mixed with Hill Heather,
-set with islands of Bracken—Bracken in its proper place—silver under the
-sun rays, against the blue! And the scent of the Heath and the Whin!
-
-One doesn’t know if it is exactly one’s soul that the beauty touches,
-the appeal is so strongly to the senses. But the soul is of it; for no
-mere physical joy can give such a serenity, such an airiness as of wings
-to the spirit. Mr. A. C. Benson says, in some early book of his, that
-one of the great proofs to him of the existence of God is the feeling
-which comes at the sight of a very beautiful prospect. We want to give
-ourselves to it—he says—to be absorbed into it; and that is a movement
-of the soul, for everything earthly is possessive.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Arabella, who is a very affectionate dog, flung herself down beside her
-master, taking up a large share of the rug, and pensively chewed gorse
-half the time, the other half being absorbed in extracting its prickles
-from her chest. Laddie, of course, slipped off to the chase. The two
-little dogs, russet brother and little white sister, whiled away a
-period of inaction: Betty, by circling round the bath-chair, jumping in
-to assure its occupant that she loved her very much and out again to
-show that she was a dog of tact; and Loki, panting in his great fur coat
-‹in which condition he grins like a Chinese dragon with his roseleaf
-tongue bent back in the oddest little loop between his white teeth› by
-seeking cool spots wherein to repose—preferably under the very wheel of
-the chair, to his Grandmother’s distraction.
-
-An afternoon to remember, when nothing happened but the greatest
-happenings of all: God’s good gifts of sun and wild moor and balmy air!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXI
-
-
-[Illustration: flower]
-
-The really artistic member of the _famiglia_ is Juvenal. He settles all
-the flowers; and for that alone—for the pleasure he gets from it and the
-pleasure he gives—he is worth his weight in gold. The little gold and
-mother-of-pearl tinted Italian drawing-room is always a bower.
-Yesterday, on the silver table which stands beneath a silver and gold
-Ikon, he set a vase of white and yellow Roses. It was a touch of genius!
-We are quite sick of reading how beautiful Primroses look in Benares
-brass bowls. Personally, we dislike brass bowls for flowers. Glass!
-Glass! There is nothing as good as glass, especially when you have the
-luck to possess, as we did, a case of old Dutch moulded bottles. They
-were made in all kinds of delicious angles—three-cornered, square,
-hexagonal—with Tulips stamped in the glass: in such as these a couple of
-long-stemmed Roses or Irises, and especially Tulips and Daffodils, are
-at their very best.
-
-We have said “they were.” Alas for those Dutch bottles, and for our
-folly, improvident wretches as we are, in setting them about for our own
-pleasure, instead of shutting them up in a cabinet! Of what were once
-eleven perfect irreplaceable treasures ‹the twelfth had a large chip off
-its neck from the beginning›, there are only five left! Tittums, the
-splendid savage “smoke Persian,” swept the biggest and best off a
-chimney-piece with taps of a deliberately evil paw.... And the rest have
-gone the way of vases!
-
-“Very sorry, Miss” ‹it’s generally to the Signorina they come: she takes
-the edge off the Padrona’s fury›. “I don’t know how it happened, I’m
-sure. It came to pieces——”
-
-‹Oh, let us stay our pen! Every owner of precious bric-à-brac knows the
-awful sound of those words, and the futility of resentment.›
-
-The Master of the Villino had a teapot. Of yellow Cantagalli pottery it
-was, with quaint adornments like caterpillars all over it; it had a
-snake handle and a long curving spout. He loved it. He never wanted to
-have his tea out of any other vessel. One morning a stranger sat in its
-place. He rang the bell severely. One of the nomad footmen, who appear,
-and camp, and go away, answered it.
-
-“My teapot.”
-
-‹Yes, it was broken.›
-
-“It came to pieces in your hand, I suppose?” said the master
-sarcastically.
-
-The injured expression of the misjudged became painted on John’s face:
-
-“No, sir,” he said with much dignity, “it shut itself in the door!”
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: MORE PEKINESE WAYS]
-
-[Illustration: dog lying down]
-
-Loki has had a bath, out of due season, because his own artist has come
-down from London to limn his imperial splendours for his own book. We
-tried to make him understand that it is only smug _nouveaux riches_ who
-imagine they can patronize art; that, on the contrary, it is Art which
-condescends to us. He put on his most Chinese face and became a
-crocodile on the spot. On such occasions his Grandpa calls him a
-“Crocowog.” ‹This page is only for the pet dog-lover: superior people,
-please pass on!› He is very nice to kiss after his bath, a process
-attended on his side by subterranean growls of protest and an alarming
-curling of the lip. But—dear little gentle creature as he is at heart—it
-is not in him to bite even the most persistent tormentor.
-
-When his Grandfather amuses himself by what he calls “Squeezing the
-growls out” every morning, Loki tries vainly to keep up a show of
-displeasure, but always ends on his back with a windmill waving of
-pretty prayerful paws.
-
-[Illustration: dog facing away]
-
-Loki has his own very marked ideas on the subject of jokes; at least he
-has one—in fact, an only joke! It took his Grandfather some time to
-apprehend it; but constant repetition of the incident ‹after the
-consecrated fashion of the British farce› is beginning to make him see
-the point of it. The joke is this: at the top, or the bottom, of the
-garden, as the case may be, coming in from, or going out for, a walk,
-Loki stands stock still, generally unperceived till you are midway. No
-coaxing, whistling, or screaming will budge him. He will stand there a
-quarter of an hour, it may be. And the point of the joke is that you
-must get behind him and stamp your feet, and say “Naughty Dog!” Then
-Loki careers up or down in paroxysms of merriment. This may not appeal
-to some people’s special bump of hilarity; and as it is useless to try
-to explain a jest, we will leave those to enjoy the spinach story.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXII
-
-
-England is so seldom visited by hot weather such as we now have, that,
-especially in our little place with its foreign stamp within and
-without, one keeps thinking of other lands. There was the one hot summer
-we went visiting in country houses in Italy—two country houses, to be
-precise, and both of them were “_castelli_.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: A CASTELLO IN PIEDMONT]
-
-The first ‹which we preferred vastly› was on a high plateau in the
-middle of the Piedmontese plain, not far from Turin. From that
-entrancing spot the view lay over wide undulating stretches of maize
-fields and vineyards; and the eye could not turn North, West, East or
-South without resting on a distant panorama of Alps or Apennines.
-
-That was a hot summer with a vengeance! We were met in the dusk of the
-evening—the soft warm dusk of such days in Italy, when the caress of the
-air is like the touch of velvet—by a gay little equipage drawn by three
-mountain horses abreast, each with a collar of bells and a red hussar
-plume erect on its forehead. It was the most merry vehicle we have ever
-driven in. How those horses went! How they tossed their heads and how
-their bells jangled!
-
-A beautiful old French style castello it was, by no means spoilt in our
-eyes by having been left with rough brick. Now we hear that its
-ambitious owners have faced it with stone and are themselves charmed
-with the result. No doubt its original picturesqueness had its
-disadvantages, for innumerable birds built under the eaves amid those
-rough bricks. At the approach of any vehicle the air was full of flying
-wings. The flutter and the sound of them! We thought the place all
-delightful and characteristic; wonderfully more attractive than the
-pompous banality of the now renewed mansion, photographs of which we
-have since had mendaciously to admire.
-
-Inside it was cool and charming; full of old French furniture and
-irreplaceable family relics. Some of these have recently been sold, to
-defray, no doubt, part of the cost of the new exterior.
-
-The sedan chair of _Madame la Maréchale_ in pre-Revolution days remains
-in my memory as a regret; it was a wonder of old Vernis-Martin. We hope
-they have kept the great flags that used to hang in the hall. The
-reigning châtelaine did not really care for any of these old things. Her
-heart was set on the joys of a Roman _appartement_, and its concomitant
-social gaieties.
-
-[Sidenote: GRANDCHILDREN]
-
-There was a spacious white hall with impossible paintings of a boar hunt
-on its walls, opening upon an endless series of reception rooms. And
-through these lofty chambers three little children were running about in
-little white linen tunics, and nothing on underneath, because of the
-heat of the weather. Their hair was cut in mediæval fashion, straight
-across the forehead and straight again across the shoulders. There was
-also a most adorable baby of eleven months carried about by a soft-eyed
-_Balia_. Out of the mountains she had come, this creature, to cherish
-another’s child! And a series of misfortunes had fallen upon her little
-home since her departure: the death of her own nursling followed by the
-death of the cow! “_Cara moglie_,” her husband wrote on each occasion,
-“do not grieve. It is the will of God!”
-
-There were no doubt other very simple reasons for these catastrophes:
-the pitiable poverty of the family which had made it necessary for the
-poor woman to sell her mother-rights, and possibly the tainted milk of
-the sick cow which had poisoned the little mountaineer. But call it
-fate, or the intolerable economic system of modern Italy, it came round
-in the end to the same thing. “Do not grieve, _cara moglie_. It is the
-will of God!”
-
-She had done her best to help her own, and this was her comfort in her
-sorrow. It was not such a bad comfort; and the most advanced thinker
-cannot prove after all that it was not the will of God.
-
-It was difficult, too, for the foster-mother to weep long when Baby
-Maddalena danced on the stone of the terrace with little bare brown
-feet. She had the bluest eyes and the brownest face that ever we beheld,
-and laughed and gurgled as she danced, with very high action, upheld by
-the ends of her sash by the adoring _Balia_, whose own face and neck
-above her string of gold beads were the colour of a ripe apricot.
-
-It would be difficult to have devised a fortnight of greater interest,
-amusement, and quaintness than that of this Piedmontese visit. It was a
-thoroughly foreign household. The handsome white-bearded athletic father
-of the Chatelaine, tied to his chair by an attack of gout, had his
-apartments downstairs. And on an upper floor the mother of the Marchese
-had her own complete establishment, including a wonderful library, all
-tawny gold. There was a baroque Chapel; and one of our most vivid
-recollections was our pulling the children down by their sashes as they
-swung themselves over the tops of the benches, doubled up like golden
-fleeces till their curly heads and their little shoes touched.
-
-One thing never to be omitted was to watch Monte Rosa at sunset. The
-night before our departure there was a thunderstorm far, far away in
-those Alps where Monte Rosa rises in beauty. At every flash, peak beyond
-peak shone out in distances hitherto wrapped away even from the
-imagination.
-
-“Why does the sky do like that?” asked the second boy, vigorously
-blinking his great eyes. With straight black hair and an odd, serious
-little countenance, square-jawed and long upper-lipped like a Medici out
-of Benozzo Gozzoli’s frescoes, he was the most mediæval-looking of all
-the children. We loved that four-year-old.... He has grown up, we hear,
-“impossible” and a burden to his family. We cannot help feeling it must
-be the family’s fault. The elder boy, much handsomer though he was, did
-not then promise so well. A terribly nervous child; the cry “_Ho
-paura_,” was always on his lips. It hurt his grandfather’s pride that
-any son of his race should show such degenerate timidity.
-
-One typical scene we were witness of. The little fellow, in great awe of
-the peremptory, loud-voiced old sportsman, approached him to say
-good-night; and, hanging his head after the manner of the frightened
-child, stammered the requisite “_Bonsoir, Bonpapa_,” almost inaudibly.
-
-Instantly wrath broke out over him. ‹Bonpapa’s temper had not improved
-with the gout.› “That was not the manner in which to say good-night.”—“A
-man was to look up: to speak straight.” “What does one say?” he ended,
-shouting.
-
-“_Pardon!_” cried the poor, terrified imp, with a wail.
-
-This child, over whom were so many head-shakings, doubts and laments,
-has grown up so brave and fine a boy that it would have rejoiced the
-heart of the old Vicomte to see him now. His was a stormy heart that
-wanted much of life, and therefore, of course, knew much bitterness. It
-is stilled now, alas! this many a year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: A CASTELLO IN LOMBARDY]
-
-From this comparatively modern mansion in the Piedmont we went to an
-old, old castle in the plains of Lombardy. The chronicles have it that
-Barbarossa besieged it. It was approached through a considerable
-village—one of great antiquity, and still retaining the lines of the
-Roman _castrum_, with all its streets parallel or at right-angles. At
-the top of the main of these the great machicolated entrance of the
-Castello, with its faded frescoes across the arch, was very impressive
-in mediæval strength. The church shouldered one corner of the immense
-pile of outer wall; and each side of the moat, between the towers,
-inside and out, peasant houses had crept.
-
-The Castello itself, of extreme antiquity, as has been said, formed two
-sides of a square, round, and flagged courtyard. The garden ran sheer up
-the hill, within the tower-flanked walls of the outer bailey. There were
-vineyards inside; and outside, where the ground fell away, the whole
-land was likewise covered with vines. They ran up and down long ridges,
-like petrified waves, as far as the eye could see. And in the far, far
-distance, almost lost in the horizon, were the Alps.
-
-What a view that was from the loopholes of those half-ruined
-towers—especially at sunset, when there gathered a rosy mist over that
-curious, wild-tossing expanse!
-
-Could we go back now to that unique spot, what a vast amount of æsthetic
-pleasure should we not draw from it? But it must be admitted that we
-were gross-minded enough at the time to allow material discomfort to
-overcome all other impressions.
-
-[Illustration: castle tower]
-
-To lodge in a genuine old Lombard Castle, with stone floors and stairs
-hewn in the immense thickness of the stone; to look out upon one side
-into the moat, and to see the peasant houses clinging to the massive
-foundations far below like barnacles to a rock; to look out on the other
-side upon the odd rise of sunburnt garden up to the vineyard and the
-towers; to imagine oneself back into the very heart of the Middle Ages
-may be very inspiring, in theory. But mediæval sensibilities were
-undoubtedly more blunted than ours. The smell of that moat running with
-the refuse of the crowded Italian village!... For additional pungency,
-all the water in the place came from sulphur springs! The reek of it was
-in one’s nostrils all day from merely washing in it.
-
-The household was composed of peasant women out of the village. The wife
-of the barber, the mother of the shoemaker, and others, clattered about
-the stone passages in their _mules_—a style of foot-gear which leaves
-the foot free from the instep. It was perhaps as well that the heels
-were high, for their idea of housemaiding ‹a method which appertains in
-most Italian households to this day› was first to walk about with a pail
-and to slop water out of it over the flags of the floor; then to sweep
-the resulting wet mess into a puddle where the stone was worn most
-hollow or under the carpet!
-
-Some attempts at a housemaid’s sink had been excavated in the stone at
-the head of the stairs outside our set of rooms; but there was generally
-a small cataract of soapy water dripping down the steps, for the simple
-practice of the _donna_ that attended on our apartment was to stand on
-the landing outside our doors and to shy the contents of her bucket
-upwards.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The delightful friend with whom we stayed, though not born of the
-country, had fallen quite resignedly into its ways. And, indeed, the
-castle was chiefly ruled by the _Princesse Mère_, a châtelaine of the
-old school, who used to arise in the grey dawn and pull the iron chain
-of the great bell that hung outside her windows, to call the vassals to
-their daily work.
-
-“Come, come!” she was frequently heard addressing some dependent or
-other whose movements were more indolent than she approved of. “Are you
-here for your comfort or for mine?”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The table was served, copiously, with singular Italian dishes. There was
-a favourite soup with stewed quails in it: the whole animal, bones and
-beak and all! It is an unspeakable dish to have set before you on a hot
-day. Patties filled with cocks’ combs might follow. Even the _Risotto_
-was intermingled with such strange mincings of liver and cutlet
-trimmings that one hesitated before venturing. The _Fritura_, needless
-to say, was in full force. A lucky dip, that! You may come across
-yesterday’s cauliflower, a bit of forgotten sweetbread, a slice of
-sausage, a frizzled artichoke, and half the quail you couldn’t eat the
-night before—all in one spoonful!
-
-Besides the fierce matutinal summons of the domestic bell, one’s sleep
-was constantly disturbed by a jangle of chimes from the church: a
-perfect frenzy of joy-bells it was, so prolonged and insistent that
-sleep was beaten out of one’s brain as with hammers.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE ANGELS’ MASS]
-
-“What,” we asked our younger hostess, the third day of this infliction,
-“what are these carillons, morning after morning?”
-
-“Oh, that?—That is for the Angels’ Mass,” she answered us indifferently.
-
-“The Angels’ Mass?”
-
-“Yes. A child dead in the village.”
-
-“But every morning?”
-
-“There have been several deaths lately. It is the fever from the rice
-fields.”
-
-Pleasant hearing for a woman with an only little daughter just
-recovering from a rather serious illness! Every smell that greeted her
-nostrils afterwards—and they were of a diversified and poignant
-description—seemed laden with the germs of death. But the young
-_Principessa_ had absorbed a good deal of the indolent indifference of
-her adopted country towards hygiene.
-
-“You, with your English notions!” was all the comfort her visitor got,
-offered in tones of good-humour not unmixed with contempt. Or else:
-“What you smell, my dear, is only carbolic; and that is very healthy.”
-
-A few dabs of disinfectant had indeed been distributed about the moat,
-on much the same principle, and with the same effect, as the red pepper
-which is served with wild duck, just to heighten the flavour of the
-dish.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: ENTOMOLOGICAL MYSTERIES]
-
-Perhaps the most lasting impression of that Lombardy sojourn was the
-morning discovery in a glass of drinking-water which had been placed
-beside the bed the previous night, of the most extraordinary creature
-any of us had ever seen. It was like a very large shrimp, perfectly
-transparent, with such gigantic antennæ and legs that they protruded
-over the top of the tumbler!
-
-No one else in the castle had ever beheld anything like it either, it
-appeared; except one old woman, who described it vaguely as “_una bestia
-del acqua_.” But as it most certainly had not been in the tumbler when
-the water was put into it, its origin remains for ever a mystery.
-
-A few nights later the little girl of the party of travellers found one
-of these zoological mysteries in a quite empty tumbler! We might have
-thought it a practical joke played on the _forestieri_, only that no one
-could have come into the room without the knowledge of its occupants.
-
-This, and the sudden departure of the “chef” who had been responsible
-for the little quails in the soup, did upset the equanimity of the
-pretty hostess.
-
-“To think,” she cried, “that I should invite my best friend here, to
-starve or poison her!... And that unknown beasts should get into her
-drinking-water! I—I have been here every summer for eleven years and I
-have never seen a beast like that!”
-
-She thought we had dreamt the first monster. The second was carried in
-to her, with its horrible transparent legs bristling over the tumbler.
-She surveyed it hopelessly.
-
-“_Il ne manquait plus que cela!_”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Yet one looks back on it all with a kind of tenderness. It was all so
-picturesque! What a dwelling might have been made of that antique castle
-by anyone who had the money and the art to spend it!
-
-But, alas!... In the great stone bedchambers where we lodged there were
-blinds with Swiss scenes depicted in the most vivid colours: a mountain
-maiden and a Mont Blanc, and a torrent upon each.... Incongruity could
-go no farther—except perhaps in the billiard-room, which had been done
-up by the _Principe_ and was always shown off with great pomp. It was a
-splendid vaulted apartment, dating from the Barbarossa period; there
-were four deep niches hewn out of the stone: well, in two of these were
-placed large Chinese Mandarins, with heads that nodded if anyone could
-reach high enough to set them going; and, in the other two were plaster
-statues of the worst garden description: Flora with a basket, Ceres with
-a lumpy sheaf!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: AUTUMN]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: landscape with man and pets]
-
-
-
-
-XXXIII
-
-
-[Sidenote: SOME GARDEN GHOSTS]
-
-There is no ghost in the garden of the Villino. Neither the meek spirit
-of Susan nor Tom’s saturnine spectre haunts the peaceful glade where
-they lie. ‹Juvenal has planted a “Tree of Heaven” at the head of his
-ever-mourned darling and covered the grave with Forget-me-nots!›
-
- * * * * *
-
-My youth ‹these reminiscences are contributed by Loki’s grandmother› was
-spent in a large country place in Ireland, and to us children—we were
-six then—certain walks, certain dells in the woods, were assuredly
-haunted.
-
-The property had long ago belonged to one Lady Tidd, who so adored it
-that she had herself buried on a hill overlooking it, her coffin upright
-in its tall square tomb. It was Lady Tidd who was popularly supposed to
-haunt the fair wooded lands that had come to us. This Dysart Hill, on
-the top of which the ruined chapel and the deserted graveyard lay, was a
-favourite walk of our childish days. When our short legs had mastered
-the difficulties of the slope—and a very stony slope it was, covered
-towards the summit with a fine mountain grass, than which no footing is
-more slippery—we never failed to wander round to that singular monument,
-through the massive granite door of which she who stood in the upright
-coffin was supposed to be gazing down upon the distant prospect of our
-own home. It was never without an awful sense of horror and mystery that
-I pictured those dead eyes, endowed with miraculous vision, piercing
-through wood and stone to stare out upon what she still loved. Some
-apprehension of the horror and tragedy of bodily death and of the dread
-power of the spirit seized hold of my small soul as I contemplated that
-grave of human folly and of poor human aspiration. There it was,
-perhaps, that an overpowering dislike of graveyards began in me.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Lady Tidd was seen by a gardener of ours, between two Yew trees, in a
-dark corner outside the garden wall.
-
-“She riz up out of the ground at me,” he told my mother. And he added,
-as a convincing detail, that his hat stood up on his equally rising
-hair. “Sure, wasn’t me hat lifted an inch off me head, ma’m?”
-
-My mother, strong-souled creature as she was, laughed with a fine
-scepticism. Another kind of spirit had done the mischief, she declared.
-But we who heard could not so easily dismiss the agonizingly fascinating
-tale. We knew that spot outside the garden wall, in the shadow of the
-black Yew trees; and the fear and the darkness that always fell upon us
-when we passed it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Another dreaded place was a certain Primrose dell, beautifully starred
-with blossoms, beautifully green, beautifully shaded; the very place for
-happy children, it would seem, and for long hours of flower-picking
-gipsy teas and endless games. It was quite lost in the woods that banded
-the property, away from intrusions of nurse or governess—and yet, how
-haunted! Never shall I forget—I feel it now as I write—the profound
-misery that would seize upon me at the very entrance to the laughing
-glade.
-
-I am not sure, however, that there was not a tangible reason for this
-depression, connected with the disappearance of a fondly-loved
-four-footed playfellow. A darling dog he was: one of the jocose,
-high-spirited kind; his open mouth and hanging tongue seemed to show him
-a partaker in human mirth, with a waggish humour all his own. ‹No pun is
-intended!› He had a rough tangled coat, black and white, a flag of a
-tail, flopping ears. He was the swiftest, gayest, most romping creature
-that has ever shared the play of children. We adored him. His name was
-Carlo. I don’t know of what breed he was, if of any.... Alas! he hunted
-the sheep! He disappeared! No one knew what had become of him. We
-children never ascertained anything, but there was a rumour—a dark,
-untraceable, yet most convincing rumour—that somebody had seen the
-small, rough corpse hanging from a tree-trunk, not far from the Primrose
-dell. Was it not that, perhaps, which haunted the dell for me?
-
-[Sidenote: THE LOATHELY HERD]
-
-We suspected the herd. A large, fat, round-faced, smiling man, this;
-with an unctuous, creeping voice that seemed to gurgle up like a slow
-oil-bubble from inner recesses of obesity. A man who at intervals would
-remark, seeing us grouped about our mother, “You’ve a lovely lot of
-ladies, ma’m, God bless them!”—as if we were little pigs or calves.
-
-He had a sinister reputation with us already on account of his
-periodical dealings with sheep, which we, tender-hearted and
-impressionable children, scarcely as much as hinted to each other; and
-certainly never really associated with the roast mutton that appeared
-twice a week.
-
-No, we did not like Green, the herd; and I, the smallest of the “lovely
-lot,” would cling to my mother’s skirts when his little twinkling eye
-turned in my direction.
-
- * * * * *
-
-For a long time he was associated in my mind with the horror of a
-conversation which passed between him and my mother. How well I remember
-that day! We were walking through one of the upper fields towards a
-village called Hop Hall, which also belonged to the estate. It was a
-lovely meadow with a curious little wood in the middle of it, ringed
-like a moat by a streamlet in which the cattle drank. This wood was full
-of wild Crab-apples; the blossom of it hung over the water and was
-mirrored therein. The field caught the sweep of wind that blew from the
-top of the hill with the breath of the Pine-trees. It was a carpet of
-Cowslips in the right season.
-
-Well, as we walked, my mother and four little girls and one little boy,
-the herd stumping along with a stick—he had a lame leg—his ragged dog
-behind him, there came the following interchange of remarks, which set a
-seal of terror on my young mind. My mother mentioned her intention of
-visiting Hop Hall, and then inquired how a certain old woman might be
-who dwelt there. She had been long bedridden.
-
-“Troth, and she’s the same as ever!”
-
-“My goodness,” exclaimed my mother, “why, she must be nearly a hundred!”
-
-“She must be that, me lady.—Begorra, she’ll have to be shot!”
-
-My mother laughed, and so did the herd. The anguish of the small
-listener passes description; and there ensued a veritable haunting. The
-herd she could understand, she knew him to be a criminal of the deepest
-dye. But her mother!...
-
-It was months before a benevolent governess discovered the hidden sore,
-and explained and consoled. It was only a joke! It left a rankling
-tenderness. I could see no humour in it.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It is no wonder that Irish children should be fanciful, surrounded as
-they are, or were in my day, with the quaint, superstitious beliefs of
-servants and peasantry. Our chief nursery comfort and most beloved
-companion was the old housekeeper, who had begun her life in the service
-of our mother’s grandmother. That takes one back! Whenever we had a free
-moment we trotted into her sitting-room for pleasant conversation and,
-maybe, a biscuit, a bit of chocolate or candy. She had the key of the
-stores.
-
-“I declare if I was made of sugar, you’d have me eaten!” she would say;
-a cannibalistic possibility I made it a point of earnestly disclaiming.
-
-[Sidenote: THE THREE KINGS AND THE STAR]
-
-The linen room was where she sat, in a quaint, painted, high-backed
-armchair by the window. She gazed straight out across a yard to a
-shrubbery dominated by three large Fir trees over which the evening star
-would peep, a tremulous yellow. She called those Fir trees her Three
-Kings, and never failed to lift her hands in wonder and gratitude over
-the beauty of the star. Poetry goes deep into the hearts of the Irish.
-
- * * * * *
-
-I can see that room now. The whole of one side was filled with
-cupboards—presses, we called them—where, behind buff wire gratings and
-beautifully fluted bright pink calico, the linen was stored. A few
-nursery groceries, biscuit and dessert oddments were kept in a cupboard
-just at the entrance; and there was always a faint fragrance of raisins
-and spice in the atmosphere. I can see the dear occupant of the room
-too; the picture of beautiful old age, with banded silver hair beneath
-the snow-white cap which was tied with muslin strings under her chin. I
-can see her apple-blossom cheeks and her blue eyes, clear and innocent
-as a child’s, yet so wise! She had a white starched kerchief folded
-across her black bodice, and her black skirt was gathered with a great
-many pleats round the comfortable rotundity of her figure. We used to
-find her sitting by the casement in the twilight, gazing out. If the
-mood took me, I would sit on her knee and stare out too. Every few
-minutes or so she would sigh, not with sadness, but gently, as the woods
-sigh, with scarcely perceptible movement on a still night. But though I
-knew it to be no sigh of distress, it nevertheless troubled me. I would
-ask anxiously:
-
-“Why do you sigh, Mobie?”
-
-Her answer was always the same:
-
-“Old age, Alanna!”
-
-Her name was Mrs. O’Brien, which was interpreted Mobie by our baby lips.
-
-In same fashion the first nurse, whom I only vaguely remember, erect,
-small, severe, and kind, had degenerated from Mrs. Hughes into Shuzzie;
-and the queer, tiny head housemaid, baptized Bridget, was Dadgie. A
-unique personage this, minute as she was active, with bobbing bunches of
-grey curls on each side of her grey net cap with purple ribbons which
-were tied under her chin. Upon the rare occasions when some damage
-occurred to the china or glass under her hands, she would trot into my
-mother with the announcement:
-
-“Oh, ma’am, I’ve made a ‘_foo pas_!’”
-
-No one knew where she had picked up this inappropriate bit of French.
-
-Dear, quaint, pathetic, busy little creature, buzzing about the house
-with a flapping duster! I have a vision of her too, as I write: her huge
-poke bonnet overshadowing the small, important face; her bobbing curls
-as she fluttered in to confession in the oratory on those monthly
-occasions when the old parish priest—another figure out of long past
-times, he too, with his white head, his black stockings and buckle
-shoes, his full-skirted coat—came out from the little country town to
-“hear” the household.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE FAIRIES]
-
-My mother used to call the three old women servants her three duchesses.
-Alas! two of these dignitaries passed away very early in my
-recollection. Fortunately, Mobie, the best beloved, was left to us till
-later years. It is to her that my thoughts most readily return.
-
-[Illustration: profile of old woman]
-
-She was a store-house of anecdotes and legends. Never would she speak,
-nor allow anyone to speak before her, of the fairies otherwise than as
-“the good people”; and then it was with bated breath. It was established
-as a fact among us that in her girlhood she had had communication with
-them. Certainly, we believed, she had seen them one evening dancing in a
-ring; but never could she be got to tell us in detail anything about
-these experiences. The very mystery of her silence confirmed our theory.
-
-What a delightful volume one could have made out of the tales that fell
-from her lips upon our small listening ears by the nursery fire; or in
-the linen room with its uncurtained window and its vision of the Three
-Kings and the Star.
-
-From many memories one floats back to me. It made a great impression:
-
-“... And when Tim Brenahan was on his way home that evening, wasn’t it
-round by the wall he went, and didn’t he see two great cats sitting on
-the top of it with their tails hanging over? And didn’t one cat say to
-the other, as plain as can be, and didn’t he hear it, just as you do be
-hearing me:
-
-“Says one, ‘And what’s the news this evening?’ And says the other, ‘No
-news at all,’ says he. ‘Only that the widdie Moloney’s old tabby’s gone
-at last,’ says he, ‘and it’s the great funeral will be to-night,’ says
-he.
-
-“And when Tim Brenahan came home to his wife, says she to him, ‘And
-what’s the news this evening, Tim, asthore?’
-
-[Illustration: two cats sitting on a wall]
-
-“And says he to her, ‘Faith, no news at all,’ says he, ‘save as I was
-coming home by the long wall beyont, there was two great fellers of cats
-sitting on the top of it. And says one to the other, “The widdie
-Moloney’s tabb’s goney at last,” says he, “and it’s the grand burying on
-her there’ll be to-night.”’
-
-“And no sooner were the words out of his mouth when his own tom-cat ups
-with him and shakes himself where he was sittin’ starin’ at the turf,
-and says he ‘Then it’s time for me to be off,’ says he, ‘or I’ll be late
-for the funeral.’ And out of the door with him, with his tail all of a
-bristle....”
-
-I was rather awed by that story, which, to my infant mind, bore the
-stamp of unmistakable veracity; but nothing that proceeded from the
-linen room ever really distressed me. Its ruling spirit was too benign
-and too perfectly in harmony with us.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: AN OLD IRISH NURSE]
-
-The terror of those days to me was the fragile-looking, soft-voiced,
-mincing widow who became our nurse after the death of the fine old
-martinet by whom we had been ruled before. It was not surprising that
-our mother should have imagined she was passing us over to a much
-gentler authority; but as a matter of fact—indolent, ignorant,
-peevish—the new nursery autocrat was given to enforcing her orders by
-threats of a ghastly and impossible description.
-
-“I’ll cut your tongue out,” was a favourite menace, which, if defied,
-would be supplemented by—“Wait, now, till I run and get my scissors.”
-
-Stronger of body, more enlightened in mind, my co-nurseryites treated
-these remarks with the scorn they deserved. But I cannot describe the
-agony with which they pressed upon me. It is peculiar to all children
-that these terrors are never communicated to others. Not even to my
-brothers and sisters would I breathe one word of my apprehensions. But
-the misery took shape in horrible dreams and sleepless nights. And when
-matters became too intolerable, I would creep out of my little bed, and
-patter across the bare boards into the adjoining room where the
-housekeeper slept. On no single occasion did she show the smallest
-severity or even annoyance at being disturbed.
-
-[Illustration: little girl]
-
-“Mobie,” I would pipe, “I’m afraid!... May I get into your bed?”
-
-“Come in, Alanna,” was the invariable response.
-
-Oh! the comfort of snuggling against her!
-
-Whether she promptly fell asleep again, or whether she watched and
-talked loving nonsense one felt equally safe, equally blessedly happy.
-If she slept, it was lightly enough, like all old people; and each time
-she turned or moved in the bed, the small bed-fellow would hear her
-murmur:
-
-“The Lord have mercy on me!”
-
-It was not a deliberate prayer, scarcely even a conscious thought, but
-the natural movement of the soul.
-
-Little wonder that, being what she was, she who had lain down every
-night, as it were, in the very arms of Providence, should pass to her
-last sleep as simply and fearlessly.
-
-“Are you frightened, mother?” cried her daughter, bending over her at
-the very end. She opened her eyes and smiled.
-
-“Frightened? How could I be frightened? Am I not going to my best
-friend?”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXIV
-
-
-Looking back now, it seems to me that the whole of my childhood was
-pursued by one phantom or another. The smell of the woods through the
-open nursery window on a hot summer’s night turned me sick with an
-unspeakable apprehension. Believers in reincarnation would attribute
-this peculiarity to some sylvan tragedy in a previous existence. No
-doubt there must have been a physical explanation. I have come to the
-conclusion that most things in life are capable of a double
-interpretation; which is the same thing as saying that there are two
-aspects to every question!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Is it usual for children, I wonder, to see such marvellous colours,
-shapes, and appearances in the dark as both I and a sister did, between
-the ages of five and eight? Kaleidoscopic colours running one into the
-other, and an odd, very frequently recurrent vision of a cushion covered
-with gold pieces which poured down on the bed.
-
-My husband, as a small child, would behold complete scenes in the corner
-of his nursery, and would pull his nurse on one side impatiently when
-she impeded his view. And let me here note a curious incident connected
-with his juvenile imaginings. All his life, as far back as he could
-remember, he had a recurrent dream of terror—at fairly rare intervals—of
-an immense wave rising up before him like a mountain and curling over at
-the top, about to overwhelm the land. He told me of this dream after we
-were married, adding that though it was so distinct that he could draw
-it, he knew it for a purely fantastic nightmare; knew that no such tall
-and steep wave as he beheld in his sleep could exist in nature. A few
-years ago—we were at Brighton, I remember—he brought up to me from the
-hotel room an illustrated paper, and, laying it on the table before me,
-said: “Look—there is my dream!”
-
-I looked. It was an illustration that held the whole page. I saw a huge
-wall of water, rising sheer black, with a toppling crest of white—an
-awful, threatening vision! I read underneath: “Photograph of the recent
-tidal wave in Japan.”
-
-Who can explain the mystery? He had had that dream first as a baby boy
-in Paris, some forty-five years before. No such sight, no such picture
-had ever come across his waking consciousness.
-
-A tidal wave in Japan ... so far has my discursive mind led me from
-garden ghosts!
-
- * * * * *
-
-We know a haunted garden belonging to an old Manor House in Dorsetshire
-which was our abode one summer, five or six years ago. The house had
-once been Catherine Parr’s. It was full of ghosts too, but I am none too
-sure that they were mellow sixteenth-century spectres; rather I believe
-were they the objectionable offspring of a table-rapping spiritualistic
-owner.
-
-[Sidenote: THE FORGOTTEN NUN]
-
-The garden ghost was, to our thinking, neither Tudor nor modern, but
-that of a sad little eighteenth-century nun. For, passing through many
-hands, the place had for a time been a convent. A gentle community,
-turned out by the French Revolution, had been offered a refuge in this
-far corner of England by the then papist possessor of “The Court.” The
-place had its previous story of faith and persecution: its parish
-church, which had long clung to the old dispensation, and its priest
-martyr still lying in the little churchyard. All this is forgotten now.
-We knew nothing of it, nor of the nuns; but oddly enough, when we came
-into the house, one of us said to the other: “I am sure there was a
-chapel here.”
-
-[Illustration: nun]
-
-Well, when the nuns packed up their goods and returned to France, they
-took away with them too ‹so tradition says› the coffins of some sisters
-who had been buried in the garden. Surely they had forgotten one! What
-else could account for the dreadful melancholy which fell upon us at a
-particular turn of the walk that ran round that sunny, bowery enclosure?
-There was nothing whatsoever suggestive about the spot. The high, warm
-wall with the spreading fruit trees rose on one side; an Apple tree and
-a clump of Hazels held the other—yet so sure as one came to this place
-the heart was gripped, the spirit seized. We each of us felt it;
-visitors felt it. That dear, departed cat, Tom, of venerable memory—he
-was a great ghost-seer—he felt it—nay, he saw it! His tail would
-bristle, his fur stare, he would stand and then flee as if pursued for
-his life.
-
-The poor little nun, lying in a foreign land, away from the rest of her
-sisters, forgotten!—Ghosts have walked for much less. In fact, it is
-curious to note that the restlessness of most authenticated ghosts seems
-due to an objection to their place of burial. And on this score—if the
-anecdote takes me away from gardens, it brings me back to them in the
-end—I have in my mind another tale. It is a true story, as the children
-say, connected with a house which we have often visited in Ireland: an
-old monastery, full of that curious depression in its stateliness which
-so many confiscated church properties retain. It was haunted in many
-ways.
-
-Personally, beyond unpleasant sensations in traversing some particular
-corridor and landing, we never met any ghost in the Abbey. But then we
-were not placed in _the_ ghost-room.
-
-[Sidenote: A STRONG MIND CONVINCED]
-
-An old friend of our hostess, an elderly lady, was not so kindly
-treated. She was a spinster of robust constitution and strong mind; a
-type of the particular generation which comes between the nervous
-gentility of the Early Victorian sisterhood and the present day
-“suffrage” community. No doubt the mistress of the Abbey believed her
-ghost-proof. But she was mistaken. After the first night in the Lavender
-Bedroom, the visitor’s appearance at breakfast pointed so conclusively
-to the fatigue of sleeplessness that, with some misgiving, her friend
-drew her on one side to question her in private:
-
-“Were you disturbed, Lucy?”
-
-“I was, Mary.” The maiden lady was not a person of many words.
-
-“Did you—did you ... see any thing, Lucy?” exclaimed the hostess. The
-family had but lately come into possession; and the idea of haunters and
-haunted annoyed rather than frightened her.
-
-“I did,” said the friend firmly.
-
-Some persuasion was necessary before she would relate her experience. At
-last it was extracted from her in some such shape as this:
-
- * * * * *
-
-“I couldn’t sleep. Towards two in the morning I heard a noise. I thought
-it was rats. I sat up in bed to feel for the matches: couldn’t find
-them. There came a light, on the opposite wall. I stared. I saw a monk
-in it. He began to move. He didn’t look alive: he looked like a magic
-lantern. He went out of the room through the closed door. I got up,
-opened the door, looked out into the passage. Yes, Mary, the light was
-there, and the figure in it, too. It moved along the wall. I followed
-it. It disappeared before the cross doors. I went back to bed. No, I’m
-not frightened, but I haven’t slept. I’d like another room, please. No,
-I wasn’t asleep—it wasn’t a dream. I can’t explain it. Nor you either, I
-suppose.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-The hostess pondered. It was true she couldn’t explain. She had heard of
-that apparition before—perhaps had seen it. It was certainly very
-annoying. She promised her friend to give instant orders for the
-preparation of another room; and then made a request that the matter
-should not be mentioned to her daughter—an impressionable, imaginative
-girl of eighteen.
-
-The maiden lady snorted. It wasn’t likely.
-
-Rosamund, the daughter, had of course known all about it long ago;
-while, after the fashion of her kind, keeping her counsel demurely
-before her elders, she had discussed freely the thrilling appanage of
-her new home with all the companions of her own age who came to stay at
-the Abbey.
-
-It was she who was destined to lay the ghost. One rainy afternoon later
-in the same summer, the young members of the house-party found
-themselves stranded together in the great hall, and Rosamund cheerfully
-suggested table-turning and spirit-rapping to while away the time till
-tea. It is a never-failing amusement.
-
-Having produced a satisfactory condition of lurching, and elicited
-several quite distinct raps from the round mahogany table, she cried
-out:
-
-“Let us call up the ghost.”
-
-Responsive knocks came, loud and marked. A system of communication was
-promptly established. Two raps for yes, one for no. Then the questioning
-began.
-
-With much laughter and some agreeable tremors, it was ascertained that
-the monk-ghost belonged to the community which had dwelt so long at the
-Abbey; that he was dissatisfied with his present place of burial, which
-was outside the old monks’ burying-ground, now a part of the actual
-garden.
-
-It is always safe, as I have said, to question a ghost on this point.
-Now, however, some difficulty ensued when, through the limited medium,
-the rapping spirit endeavoured to specify the spot of its present abode,
-and the field was too wide for exactness—until a young sailor cousin
-intervened. He had been playing, in mere idleness and utter scepticism,
-the rather gruesome game. But at this point he roused himself,
-interested to put the matter to the proof. He fetched pencil and paper,
-and drew up a scheme of latitude and longitude with reference to the
-garden walls; and finally determined the position where the discontented
-ghost announced that his bones were actually reposing.
-
-With professional neatness he made a plan of the shrubbery, marked the
-grave thereon, and the whole party resolved to sally forth with spades
-“to see if the old ghost spoke the truth.” The sailor cousin was
-particularly jocose in unbelief.
-
-[Sidenote: LAID AT LAST]
-
-Yet truly, the next day, in the very place designated, they came upon
-bones—to be exact, upon a skeleton complete save for the skull. The
-sailor was the first to rush back to the Abbey and collect a circle for
-a fresh séance. And once more the phantom monk rapped out latitude and
-longitude in connexion with his skull; once more he was found to be a
-ghost of the most complete veracity. And the end of this true story is
-that the skeleton, complete with its cranium, was laid duly and
-reverently in the old consecrated ground in the garden. And the monk
-appeared no more in the Lavender Room.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXV
-
-
-I promised to return to gardens, and here I am. What a garden that was!
-Not a bit uncomfortable in spite of its company of departed friars. The
-monk’s old Yew Walk was there; such a one as has not its match in the
-kingdom, I believe. There too were fields of “Malmaison” Carnations.
-Never have I beheld such lavishness before or since. The scent of the
-things! It was our hostess’s rather extravagant fancy. I don’t know that
-I exactly envy it. It was almost too much, but yet it was a wonder!
-
- * * * * *
-
-I think it was a dream of very childish days that started my haunting
-dread of graveyards; that, and the peculiar desolation of the little
-burial-place through which we passed every Sunday morning to go to the
-Chapel near our country home. It was what is called in Ireland a
-“station,” that is a Chapel of Ease, which was only attended on Sundays
-and shut up on week-days. Deprived of the flicker of the Sanctuary lamp,
-the place seemed, except for that brief Sunday service, as deserted
-within as it was forlorn without.
-
-[Sidenote: GREEN GRAVES]
-
-I dreamt that all those poor neglected green graves—there was hardly one
-with even a black painted cross to mark it—had become endued with
-ghastly life and started in pursuit of me down the familiar country
-road. In a frightful, stealthy silence they wallowed and leaped, gaining
-on me as I ran, in my dream, in a panic that I can hardly even now bear
-to think back on.
-
-For years afterwards I never walked away from that little churchyard,
-even in the large and cheerful company of my sisters, clutching the
-solid hand of governess or nurse, without the nightmare terror coming on
-me again. Not a word did I breathe of it, of course; but I would look
-back over my shoulder, at every turn of the road, horribly expecting to
-see those uncanny green hounds on the trace of my miserable little
-heels.
-
-[Illustration: children walking]
-
-It was only in my walks I feared, however. When driving backwards and
-forwards to Mass I felt I could defy the graves. We always drove to the
-Sunday Mass. How vivid are the impressions of those early days! As I
-write I have before me the whole scene. Just before the cracked bell
-ceased ringing, we would file up the little front aisle and enter the
-pew reserved for us; my mother very solemn, with what we called her
-church face; our two governesses and we children. In summer each of the
-four little girls wore a new starched, very full-skirted print frock;
-and the one little boy of the party a white duck suit equally stiff from
-the wash. Our wooden pew ran on the right side of the Sanctuary rails
-and was shut off by a little door from the rest of the chapel. It had
-long bright red rep cushions, and the wood-work was painted a peculiarly
-pale yellow, handsomely and wormily grained! Just opposite to us, the
-better class farmers’ families were installed; and every new fashion
-that appeared in our bench was promptly copied by the bouncing Miss
-Condrens and Miss Mahons opposite.
-
-There was, I recollect, one personage who inspired me with great
-admiration. She was a Mrs. Condren and her Christian name was Eliza. The
-daughter of what is called a “warm farmer,” she had been forbidden all
-thoughts of matrimony by him, who held the holy estate in as much
-disfavour as did Mrs. Browning’s father.
-
-Well on in years, and presumably bored by her maiden state, she had at
-length eloped with an elderly admirer; and though she had “done very
-well for herself” and her spouse was quite as “warm” as her papa, the
-latter maintained towards them both an undying resentment. No wonder
-Mrs. Condren moved in a halo of romance in our eyes. Added to this she
-was always very handsomely attired in a shining purple silk, which
-filled the chapel with its rustle. She also sported a yellow bonnet with
-bunches of wax grapes and—last touch of elegance—dependent from its
-brim, a lace veil embroidered also with grapes, a cluster of which
-completely covered one eye and part of her cheek.
-
-Quite another type was old Judy in her little brown shawl and lilac
-sun-bonnet, who knelt ostentatiously just in front of the altar rails,
-apart from the rest of the congregation; and who punctuated the service
-and sermon with loud clacks of her tongue, groans from and thumps upon
-her attenuated chest. My mother was once highly amused by Judy’s
-pantomime during a particular discourse.
-
-[Sidenote: BLESSED ARE THE POOR]
-
-“Blessed are the poor,” announced the young curate with his rolling
-Irish emphasis.
-
-Here was a statement quite to Judy’s taste. Loud were her groans of
-approval. She turned up her eyes with great piety, and the gusto with
-which she beat her breast indicated that she took the benediction
-entirely to herself. “But don’t think, me brethren,” went on the
-ecclesiastic warningly, “that this means that because you’re poor in
-purse you’re pleasing to God. It’s the poor in spirit that I do be
-meaning. There’s many a poor body with a proud heart.”
-
-Now poor old Judy must have been conscious of the possession of this
-spiritual drawback; for even as she had taken the text as a direct
-compliment, so she now took the corollary to it as a personal insult.
-She drew herself up with a jerk and threw a glance of furious reproach
-at the speaker. No more groans should His Riverence have out of her!
-No—nor tongue clacking, nor chest thumpings either!
-
-For the rest of his sermon she remained rigid, fixing her gaze upon him
-with an unwavering glare of disapproval.
-
- * * * * *
-
-As the priest had to come from a considerable distance, he was generally
-late; and as the congregation itself straggled in from over the hills,
-sometimes much before the hour, it was the pious custom at Rathenisha
-for the two model damsels of the congregation each to read aloud out of
-a different book of sermons for the edification of the assembly in the
-delay before Mass. They had fine loud voices and read simultaneously;
-the effect can be better imagined than described. One ear would be
-struck by genteel accents proclaiming, “Admoire the obedience of Joseph,
-me brethren. Did he repoine, did he hesitate?”—the while the other ear
-was assailed by a rich brogue announcing, “The sentence is already past.
-Thou must doi. How many have gone to bed at noight in apparent good
-health—”
-
-It was some such threat as this, intermittently caught from the side of
-the deepest brogue, which would terrify my small mind. The whole
-churchyard, with its horror of green graves, would seem to close about
-me. And how much worse it was should there chance to be a new, raw mound
-without!
-
- * * * * *
-
-One of the Mahon girls did indeed illustrate the gloomy treatise in a
-manner appalling to my secret state of apprehension. She died quite
-suddenly while dancing at some rural festivity. Rumour had it it was
-tight-lacing which had produced the tragedy.
-
-“Wasn’t she black all down one side, the crathur?”
-
-“Ah, maybe—but she was always a yaller girl,” opined a wise matron.
-
-Dimly I can recall that she had the pallor that goes with swarthy hair
-and eyes. A handsome creature, but not of the type admired by her class.
-The poor girl’s sudden end formed a stirring illustration for the second
-curate’s sermon the Sunday after the funeral.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: A PERSUASIVE TONGUE]
-
-“What did I say, me brethren, last time I stood preaching here at you?
-Didn’t I say who could tell who would be missing before the year was
-out? And look now at the wan that has been taken—a foin, sthrapping
-young girl, one of the foinest, I might say, in this parish.... Not an
-ail on her a few days ago, and where is she now?”
-
-He jerked his thumb terribly through the little glass window at the
-side. The congregation enjoyed it enormously. There was a sucking of
-breaths, a clacking of tongues and subdued groans of approbation; and a
-good deal of rocking backwards and forwards on the part of Judy, who as
-usual squatted on her heels at the edge of the altar rails. But, poor
-little wretch that I was, how I quaked!
-
-The second curate was an excellent young man, of the sturdy type
-familiar to many Irish districts in those days. The people called him
-“rale wicked,” and loved him proportionately—“wicked,” in their
-terminology, having a very different significance from the word used in
-its English sense. “Wicked” to them refers but to the flame of the fire
-of zeal; and they like to feel it scorch them.
-
-When from the altar steps he threatened by name certain recalcitrant
-black sheep of his congregation who were neglecting their Easter duty,
-to be “afther them with a horsewhip if they didn’t present themselves
-‘at the box’ so soon as he had his breakfast swallowed,” there was a
-thrill of admiration through the chapel. That was being “wicked” after a
-fashion they all appreciated. And when, after his breakfast had been
-gulped down, he duly appeared with a horsewhip, the results were
-immediate and excellent. His morning meal, in parenthesis, got ready for
-him by a neighbouring farmer’s wife and served to him in the little damp
-sacristy, invariably consisted of three boiled eggs, besides the usual
-pot of poisonous strong tea. Three eggs is the number consecrated to the
-cleric in Ireland.
-
-At a certain Connemara hotel a curious visitor, hearing the orders
-shouted out: “Bacon and eggs for a lady,” “Bacon and eggs for a
-gentleman,” “Bacon and eggs for a priest,” ventured to inquire the
-differentiation. The answer was prompt and simple.
-
-“Wan egg for a lady; two for a gentleman; and three for a priest!”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXVI
-
-
-[Sidenote: NECROPOLIS]
-
-I have solemnly sworn my family that when I die I am not to be buried in
-a “Necropolis.” Horrible thought, a “city” of the dead! To hate the herd
-when living, and to be forcibly associated with it till the Day of
-Judgment, if not evicted to make room for fresh tenants!
-
-In the very early months of my marriage we were obliged to take up our
-abode in a large northern town, for Loki’s future grandfather had to
-study certain aspects of newspaper management. Never was anything more
-difficult to find than a roof for our heads in that place of teeming
-activities. Worn out with a long and fruitless search we were at last
-landed in a higher quarter of the town at the house of a dentist! The
-dentist was going away for a holiday, and was ready to put at our
-disposal, for a consideration, the whole of the clean, fresh, quite
-unobjectionable little abode, reserving only one room—his chamber of
-horrors!
-
-I interviewed an elderly thin-faced lady, with, as became a dentist’s
-mother, a very handsome smile. She brought me to the window. We looked
-down on waving tree-tops and a wide space of green in the gathering dusk
-of the September evening.
-
-“You see,” she said, “we have a most pleasant view.”
-
-I gazed. That stretch of green silence and restfulness, after all those
-sordid roaring streets, decided me.
-
-“We will take the house!” I cried, in a hurry lest we should miss such a
-chance.
-
-“I always think,” said the dentist’s mother, smiling still more broadly,
-“that it is a great advantage to be opposite the Necropolis.”
-
-Poor innocent as I was, and country bred, I had no idea of the meaning
-of the word.
-
-I was soon to discover. Funerals are of more than daily occurrence in a
-mighty city. Oh! the processions that I stared down upon from the
-drawing-room window, through the fog and the rain—gloom generally
-enveloped that centre of manufactures! I was left long hours alone; no
-one but an impertinent French maid with whom I could exchange my ideas.
-The proceedings in the Necropolis had a hypnotic attraction for me. I
-began to feel quite certain that it was gaping for my poor little bones,
-and that they must inevitably rest there. Finally, I extracted a solemn
-oath that, whatever happened, this should not be the case—a promise
-momentarily soothing, but far from lifting the weight of depression that
-pressed upon me.
-
-To add a touch of revolting comedy to my experiences, the owner of the
-house returned abruptly from his holiday and took possession of the
-locked-up room for an afternoon, for the purpose of extracting all the
-teeth of a special friend. I fled from the house in terror, when Elise
-‹who hated me› informed me with much gusto of the impending excitement.
-Needless to say, however, she regaled me with every groan on my return,
-and all the details she had been able to pick up from the
-parlourmaid—left by the dentist, _en parenthèse_—who had counted the
-teeth.
-
-The nightmare shrinking from death and its dreadful appanages is one
-that is mercifully passing from me. But I envy those who can take the
-great tragic facts of existence, not only with simplicity, but with a
-kind of enjoyable interest.
-
-A Hungarian friend of ours derived much solace in the loss of an adored
-mother by the choosing of a coffin—“Louis XV, with little Watteau bows
-of ormolu.” She smiled with real joy, through her tears as she described
-the casket to us, adding:
-
-“And I have chosen just such another for myself for ven I die!”
-
-She stared in amazement when I remarked that I should not care what my
-coffin was like.
-
-“Vat?” she exclaimed, “not like to be buried in a Vatteau coffin? But it
-is so pretty!”
-
-Alas! she lies in her pretty coffin, and our world is much the poorer.
-But we are sure that during the long months of her last illness, when
-she shut herself away from every one in the solitude of her great
-Hungarian property, to face death alone, the thought of those Watteau
-bows was a distinct satisfaction.
-
-Never was there a creature so instinct with life as she! It was little
-wonder she could not imagine herself as past caring for the small
-pleasures for which she had always had so keen a taste. She never lost
-the heart of a child. Though when last we saw her she must have been, as
-years go, almost an old woman, there was no touch of age about her: only
-a snowier white of her hair made her more like an adorable little
-Marquise than ever. Her pretty picturesque ways were unchanged, her
-eager sympathy, the delicious freshness of her mind, the lightness, the
-charm, the simplicity.
-
-She had a soft oval face; rich southern tints; the bluest eyes between
-black lashes that it is possible to imagine; her small nose like a
-falcon’s beak—which gave a character of decision, an untamed, spirited
-look to the whole countenance. The word savage could not apply to
-anything so exquisitely dainty in manner and appearance; and yet one
-felt the long line of savage ancestry at the back of her, a wildness no
-other European nation would show in such a flower of its race. And, to
-finish the description, no one had ever so pretty a mouth with the smile
-of a child and a thousand fascinating expressions.
-
-Life had dealt very hardly with her, as is sometimes the case with such
-buoyant souls. She lost all she loved, and was left in the end with half
-a province in land, and no creature nearer than the son of a second
-cousin to whom to bequeath the vast inheritance.
-
-[Sidenote: JOHNNIE’S SOUL]
-
-Wedded to an English officer in the Austrian service, while still in her
-teens, one might have thought she would have had a better chance of
-domestic bliss than if her choice had fallen upon one of her own
-countrymen; since, above all in those middle Victorian days, the English
-home and the English virtues are so proverbial. But he was all that a
-husband ought not to be. And her only child died in babyhood. For thirty
-years she devoted herself in an alien land to what she conceived to be
-her duty. A fervent believer in the higher destinies of man and the
-necessity of repentance, she would say, “I will not give up Johnnie’s
-soul.”
-
-The dashing Chevau-leger became an old curmudgeon of the crankiest
-description. To a less courageous spirit life would really have been
-intolerable beside him. Nevertheless the small London house near the
-Park, every window of which was bright with flower-boxes, was as gay
-within as it was without, and friends flocked to those Sunday
-tea-parties—the only entertainments she was permitted to give.
-
-Well, she had the reward she craved. Johnnie “made his soul,” in Irish
-parlance, quite sufficiently long before softening of the brain became
-too marked to preclude intelligent action. And after three years more
-she was able to send that telegram to her intimates: “Released!” It was
-the cry of one who had been enslaved and in prison for all her youth and
-all her bright womanhood.
-
-But, characteristically, “Johnnie’s” funeral was a matter of great
-importance. He had been very fond of driving four-in-hand, and so there
-were four horses to the hearse that conveyed all that was left of the
-Tyrant to Kensal Green. It was as splendid as lavish instructions could
-make it; and the little widow would pop her head out of the window at
-every turning to watch the noble appearance of the hearse with its
-nodding plumes and murmur contentedly:
-
-“Poor Johnnie, he vas so fond of driving behind four horses: I vas
-determined he should have it for de last time!”
-
-We were not a little startled to receive a postcard a few weeks later,
-containing the cryptic phrase:
-
-“Just re-buried Johnnie!”
-
-Johnnie had always been a trial of a unique description. Was it possible
-that he had put the laws of nature at defiance and returned to torment
-his long-suffering spouse? But the explanation was simple. She thought
-it so simple herself as to admit of its expression, as we have said, on
-a postcard.
-
-When she had left him among all those ranks of dead, the thought came to
-her that he was dissatisfied with his resting-place and would prefer to
-be laid with his ancestors. And so Johnnie was promptly dug up from
-where he had been deposited with so much pomp, removed across half
-England, and “reburied.”
-
-If it was true that, like so many ghosts, he was particular about his
-tomb, I can quite understand his displeasure in this instance. As I have
-said, I share it.
-
-He lies now just outside the park where he played as a child, under the
-lee of the little church where he said his first innocent prayers, and
-his dust will mingle with the dust of his grandsires.
-
-Such a quiet, peaceful spot! Immense cornfields skirt it on the one hand
-and on the other the great woods.
-
-May I lie in some such hallowed, uncrowded acre!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXVII
-
-
-Irish born as I am, there is something in the breath of Ireland that
-makes my heart rise. The sound of the soft Irish voices is music to my
-ear. I forgive the slipshod ways because of the general delightfulness.
-Distressful country as it is—more than ever, now, alas! the
-battle-ground of factions—from the moment of our landing joyfully on its
-shores, to the sad hour of parting, our too rare visits to Ireland have
-been punctuated by kindly and innocent laughter. Impossible, beloved
-people! They break the heart of the politician and of the reformer; but
-how enchanting they are to just a foolish person such as I am, who likes
-to go and live among them and enjoy them without political bias; who can
-laugh at and with them, and love them as they are!
-
-Our last journey to Ireland began in mirth, and ended in the agonies of
-a bad passage which accentuated all our regrets. The traject thither had
-been accomplished with no such drawbacks.
-
-The Master of the Villino is remarkably indifferent to anything the sea
-can do; but I like to have a comfortable cabin to myself, and a large
-port-hole for the sea-wind to blow through. I cannot say I’m fond of
-feeling like the German lover:
-
- _Himmel-hoch jauchzend, zu Tode betrübt_
-
-between wave and hollow. But it is the woes of other people that really
-undo me. On this particular passage—a bright fresh day it was, with
-what’s called, I suppose, “a choppy sea”—I was quite ready to defy the
-elements, when suddenly there arose, from the next-door cabin,
-sounds.... No—even in recollection these things are not to be dwelt
-upon!
-
-“My dear,” said I to my companion, “let us talk and drown the outcries
-of this shameless and abandoned woman.”
-
-Fortunately I had a companion with whom conversation is always as easy
-as it is interesting. We began to enjoy our own pleasant humour very
-much, and did not allow a moment’s silence to fall between us, lest—
-
-We were travelling by North Wall; and when the placidity of the Liffey
-odoriferously enfolded us, we emerged cheerfully on deck to join some
-friends, for the sake of whose agreeable company we had chosen this
-particular route.
-
-The dear little lady who was about to be our hostess we found charitably
-administering dry biscuits to a very dilapidated-looking, green-faced
-young woman with the unmistakable appearance of—but again, no!
-
-“Poor Mrs. Saunders has been feeling so faint,” said our friend, with
-the cheerful sympathy of the good sailor.
-
-We were introduced to the languid one.
-
-“Poor thing,” we said, “you do look bad! Have you been ill?”
-
-One is very crude in one’s questions on board ship.
-
-“Oh, no; not ill!” She flung the suggestion from her with an acid
-titter. Then rolling a jaundiced eye upon us:
-
-“Were you ill?”
-
-“Oh, no,” we said; “we quite enjoyed the passage.”
-
-The sufferer turned her glance from our brutality to the sympathetic
-neighbour.
-
-“If I could have slept,” she said plaintively. Then she looked back
-darkly at us. “There were some horrible people in the cabin next me, who
-would talk, and talk, and talk.”
-
-“Well,” we exclaimed, and it was indeed in all innocence, “you were at
-least better off than we were. For there was a creature in the cabin
-next to us—the most disgusting—the most unbridled—”
-
-It was not till we saw the dreadful rage in her eyes that we realized!
-It is a horrible little anecdote, but it started us laughing even before
-we set foot on the quays.
-
-[Sidenote: IRISH VIGNETTES]
-
-The next incident partakes of the tragi-comedy in which every Irish
-problem is set. All Ireland stands like one of those figures of mimes on
-an old drop-curtain; a laughing face behind a tragic mask—or indeed the
-reverse. We laughed while our hearts grew sad at the sight of a stalwart
-devil-may-care individual in a frieze coat who strolled up to a group of
-jarvies while we sat in the cab waiting for our luggage to be loaded.
-The whole business was conducted with a fine artful carelessness. Now
-one, now another of the standing group of cab-drivers would lurch up
-against him of the frieze coat or clasp him jovially by the hand, and
-there would ensue a passage of coppers from one grimy palm to another.
-Then out of a deep side-pocket of the frieze coat a black bottle would
-be drawn, with all the _désinvolture_ of the conjuring trick. No doubt
-some four yards away on either side stood a policeman; the illicit
-traffic was conducted, so to speak, under his nose. But, splendid fellow
-as he is, is he not, too, an Irishman? He knows when to sniff in another
-direction.
-
-‹And here we may parenthetically remember a charming and typical
-spectacle which once met our eyes in the County Wicklow: a local police
-station, a large placard commanding that all dogs shall be muzzled, and
-five or six curs of different low degrees snapping untrammelled in the
-sunshine at the feet of two smiling members of the constabulary.
-
-Some brutish Saxon member of our party stops to point out the
-discrepancy.
-
-“Unmuzzled, is it?” says the elder policeman genially. “And, begorra, so
-it is, ma’am. But, sure, isn’t that Tim Connolly’s little dog? Sure,
-what ’ud we be muzzling him for? Thim orders is only for stray dogs!”›
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: DRIVEN IN STYLE]
-
-We drove away across the cobbled Dublin streets at a hand gallop.
-Whether the poor animal that drew us had to be kept at this unnatural
-speed lest it should collapse altogether, or whether our “jarvey” had
-had more than one pull at the black bottle I know not; certainly we went
-in peril of our lives. Shaving off corners, striking the edge of the
-curb, oscillating violently from side to side, the antique vehicle
-threatened at every leap and bound to break into fragments like a
-pantomime joke. The Dublin cab is a thing apart. From the musty straw
-upon which your feet rest, to the dilapidated blue velveteen cushion
-upon which you leap, to its wooden walls and rattling windows, you would
-not find its like upon any other point of the globe. It searches you to
-your least bone socket; and the noise of its career deafens your wails
-on the principle of the “painless extractor” at the fair, who blows a
-trumpet for every wrench.
-
-It was useless for us to thrust our heads out of the window, like “Bunny
-come to town”; the frightful clatter of an arrest, a grunt, and a start
-at fresh speed were the only result. We trembled in every limb and so
-did the poor horse, as we were at last flung out in front of our hotel
-with a jerk that nearly broke the bottom of the cab in two.
-
-We tendered what we knew to be considerably more than the fare. The
-driver surveyed it and looked at us, then rolled a disgusted glance back
-to the coins, and dropped them into his pocket.
-
-“Is that all? And me afther dhriving you in such style!”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXVIII
-
-
-Humours pursued us during our brief sojourn in the hotel. We are very
-fond of that hotel. It is associated with the repeated charm of its
-hospitable reception on each of our visits. We were glad to see we were
-given the same set of rooms as on a previous occasion; and when we found
-the same broken lock on the door, we felt indeed that we were among old
-friends.
-
-When our tea was brought—we were lying down to rest—we had however to
-ring and protest.
-
-“Look at this spoon!” we exclaimed dramatically.
-
-The soft-voiced maid looked at it quizzically.
-
-“What is it?” Then she smiled. “It’s apt to have been in the honey, by
-the look of it,” she observed dispassionately.
-
-“Please take it away,” we said, “and bring another.”
-
-She thought us strange and dull of wit. There was a clean napkin on
-every plate. But—no doubt with a mental “Ah, God help us. Travellers is
-queer folk!”—she departed, we feel sure, no farther than the passage,
-there to wipe the honey off on the inside of her apron.
-
-[Sidenote: A GARDEN IN MEATH]
-
-The next day saw us landed at a small wayside station in the rich flat
-land of Meath, where we were met by a charming old-fashioned “turn out,”
-a handsome waggonette and a sturdy pair of carriage horses. At least we
-thought the waggonette old-fashioned and delightful, in these motor
-times; but it seems it was on the contrary new and wonderful.
-
-The coachman surveyed us tentatively two or three times while our divers
-small goods were being collected, magisterially directing the footman
-with the butt end of his whip. Presently he broke into speech:
-
-“Will you be noticing the carriage, sir?” he remarked, addressing the
-head of the party. “Her Ladyship’s just bought it. I chose it for her
-meself, so I did. It’s a grand contrivance. You can have it the way it
-is now, and it’s real comfortable, isn’t it, sir? But sure, you can turn
-it into an omnibus. And you’d never believe now, how many it would hold.
-I drove six ladies to a ball in it the other night, and not one of them
-crushed on me—And fine large ladies they were,” he observed admiringly.
-
-“We do wish he would not tell every one that,” observed one of the
-“large ladies” a little later. “Every time he’s gone to the station in
-the new waggonette this summer he’s told that story.”
-
-But she was quite good-humoured and amused. Indeed, her largeness was of
-the beautiful order. It was no wonder the coachman was proud of
-conveying it uncrushed.
-
-The gardens where these hostesses dwelt were pleasantly green and
-flowery. There was the usual high-walled garden. Villino Loki, with its
-absurd terraces, can never dream of attaining to such an enclosure of
-antique charm. For if we walled in the Kitchen and Reserve Garden at the
-foot of our hill we should wall out the moor from below, and obstruct
-our sweeping vision from above. But my heart yearns to an old walled
-garden. A place quite apart, with its mingled odours of herb and flower
-and ripening fruit; with its perpetual murmur of bees, its tangled
-walks, its old bushes of Rosemary and Lavender, its mossy Apple-trees,
-its crisp Parsley beds, its tumble-down greenhouses.
-
-[Illustration: garden view - two pages wide]
-
-[Sidenote: CURBED AMBITIONS]
-
-This particular walled garden was a very good specimen of its kind. It
-was here that our ignorance first made acquaintance with the invaluable
-Cosmia; that treasure of the herbaceous border that keeps on blooming in
-the face of adversity from June till November. There was also a huge bed
-of Salvias, one sheet of gentian blue. ‹Why cannot we grow Salvias like
-that?› It ran at the foot of an overgrown, very old rose plot, the trees
-of which had developed into fairy-tale luxuriance. And opposite, across
-the gravelled path, which from old associations we prefer to any other
-species of walk, was a field of Snap-dragon against the high wall where
-the leaves of the plum branches were reddening as they clung. Duly
-mossed was this old wall, and richly lichened; overtopped by the great
-trees without. These swayed to the mild Irish wind, with long, pleasant,
-choiring sounds, the rooks cawing as they circled in them. It was small
-wonder that I should have felt content and at peace as I stood there—if
-only my heart had not swelled with envy over those Salvias! But one
-can’t be the owner of an Italian Villino on a Surrey Highland and
-encompass the antique peace of a centuries-old Irish home. One must be
-reasonable—as a French governess of our youth used to say to us when she
-began her most lengthy harangues. “_Voyons—de deux choses l’une ..._”
-
-The park was typically Irish, and possessed some wonderful trees.
-Amongst others a chestnut, four or five immense branches of which,
-sweeping to the ground, had taken root again and started fresh trees,
-forming a singular tropical-looking grove. How children would have
-delighted in such a leafy palace, roofed in and pillared of its own
-stateliness!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Memories of laughter pursue us at every stage of those weeks. There was
-the visit to a neighbouring castle; a genuine old castle this, but
-irretrievably “restored” in that bygone period of history when Pugin
-reigned supreme.
-
-[Sidenote: AN IRISH CHATELAINE]
-
-It was Sunday, and we found the Châtelaine—a little lady renowned for
-her vivacity and charm—out in the field with her children and her lord,
-energetically teaching hockey to the young men and women of the village.
-Her little boy was running up and down after her, wringing his hands and
-ejaculating, “Mamma, ye’ll be kilt! Mamma, ye’ll be kilt!” to perfectly
-regardless ears.
-
-In a whirl of energy we were rushed into tea; and, while drawing off her
-loose gloves and flinging them at random into a corner, our hostess’s
-tongue, which was as nimble as her little feet, never ceased wagging:
-
-“I hope you don’t mind the smell! Oh, it’s a terrible smell. But it’s
-only the dogs, ye know. We’ve been washing them. They’re sick, poor
-things. Not infectious, ye needn’t be a bit afraid. Only mange, or
-something. It’s the sulphur in the soap, ye know. Come in, come in!—Oh,
-I do hope we have got something fit to eat! Katie, Katie! ‹Katie’s me
-eldest daughter› Katie, what have we got? Ah, it’s horrid!—Ah, I don’t
-know what’s the matter with them.—Yes, it’s a fine big room. We were
-dancing here last week. You wouldn’t think it to look at it now, would
-you? ’Pon my word! I was thinking to meself that night, ‘It’s a queer
-world we live in, with all those saints looking down at us with their
-bare legs, and we with our bare backs!’ Oh, yes, they’re very grand old
-paintings, I dare say! But there is a deal of bare legs about them.—Will
-you have any more? Ah, no, ye can’t eat it!—I don’t wonder, I can’t
-meself.—Will you come into the garden? I’d like to be showing you the
-garden. Where’s me gloves?—Where’s me yellow gloves? Katie, did ye see
-me yellow gloves? Ah, never mind! This way.—I’ve been making a new
-herbaceous border. Ah, ’pon me word, if they’ve not gone and locked the
-garden door! Sunday’s the mischief! Never mind, I’ll ring the bell.
-Green! Green, Johnny Green, are ye there? Is Mrs. Green there? Is Patsy
-there? Where’s young Condren? Ah, they’re all out! But I’ll not be
-beaten.—Maybe I’ll get it open. Will ye push, now? I’ll turn the handle.
-Give a good shove. It’s an old lock. Ah, devil a bit of it! Will ye give
-me your stick.—No, thank ye. I’d rather hit it meself.”
-
-Even to her it was impossible to continue talking, while she was, as she
-herself would have expressed it, “laying on to the garden door.”
-Scarlet, panting, dishevelled, but still completely fascinating, she
-desisted at last and handed back the stick with a smile and gasp, and a
-resigned: “Ah, I clean forgot, I see how it is now. They’re all off to
-the funeral of the priest’s brother’s sister.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: THE HOLLY TREE]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XXXIX
-
-
-From the rich plains of Meath to the barren lands of Galway, it is a far
-cry and an unforgettable journey. The country grows more and more
-desolate, and grand in desolation, as one approaches the Atlantic. There
-was an orange sunset that evening, over an illimitable stretch of bog, a
-vision of savage, haunting beauty that went with us into the darkness of
-the fast closing day like a strain of wild music.
-
-Ireland has always been as a living creature to her children. She has
-taken, in their fanciful minds, a distinct personality. To get such a
-glimpse of her as that, is to understand the passionate ardour of fealty
-which she has had the power to inspire; to understand how she has come
-to be “Kathleen na Hoolihan,” and “My dark Rosaleen,” to those poet
-hearts. We were speeding now to that very corner of land from which her
-younger lovers have chiefly sprung.
-
-It was pitch dark when we alighted at a town which had once been large
-and prosperous and was now forlornly sunk in decay; mute witness, like
-so many others, to that act of tyranny—blunder and crime—the effects of
-which England can never wipe away.
-
-Our kind friends had ordered “a carriage from the hotel” to meet us. We
-had a long cross-country drive before us. Looking doubtfully by the
-light of the station lamp at the two emaciated animals that were to draw
-us, we wondered, in our tired brains, if two bad horses are not worse
-than one. It had begun to drizzle rain, a fine soft rain that is like a
-caress in the air.
-
-[Sidenote: A TYPICAL JARVEY]
-
-If anything could beat the Dublin cab, it was that Galway carriage. We
-set off lurching and rattling; and soon, the wind catching us from over
-the fields, the rain began to strike in across the open windows. To have
-a window up seemed the simple remedy; but things simple elsewhere are
-not so in the West of Ireland. One window was as impossible to lift out
-of its socket as the oyster out of its closed shells, for it was
-strapless. We fell upon the other strap and instantly the window shot
-outwards at right angles, with the evident intention of casting itself
-on the road, had we not held it despairingly by its shabby appendage. If
-you have ever tried to hold a window in that position by its strap you
-will know how agonizing is the process. The driver was hailed.
-
-“Look here! Your window’s loose!—You’d better stop and put it back.”
-
-The slogging trot of the horses slackened, and over his shoulder the man
-of Galway demanded:
-
-“Is it the windy on the left, or the wan to the right of ye?”
-
-“The left, the left! Oh, do be quick!”
-
-“The left, is it? Sure, isn’t that the wan with the sthrap?” He jerked
-his reins and clucked at his horses. What more could we want? Wasn’t
-that the one with the “sthrap?”
-
-With great difficulty, with imminent risk to the life of the window and
-our own safety, we got the recalcitrant pane back into its socket, and
-discovered that by dint of judicious manipulation, and a tight hold of
-the “sthrap,” it was possible to shelter the most neuralgic of the
-party.
-
-A ten Irish miles’ drive along the stoniest of roads, through complete
-darkness—for there was only a partial glimmer from one carriage-lamp
-half the way, which then became extinct altogether—it is something of an
-enterprise! But it was worth it to find such a welcome at the end!
-
-[Sidenote: A GALWAY DEMESNE]
-
-A “Gothic” mansion, dating from the early part of last century,
-Kilcoultra is outwardly a very grand pile and stands nobly in the midst
-of a rolling park, reclaimed from the wild stony land of Galway. And
-inside, the first impression is like stepping in to the glories of a
-missal page. The whole house is homogeneous and entirely successful in
-its mediæval colouring. On the walls are gorgeous enamel blues, peacock
-greens or yet carmine crimsons appropriately set with fleurs-de-lis,
-maltese cross or some other conventional device in gold; ceiling and
-cornices are richly illuminated to correspond. To find this glow of
-colour in the midst of the melancholy greys and greens of the western
-landscape, under the low drifting cloud-ridden skies, has a great charm;
-it has a poetic Maeterlinckian atmosphere.
-
-There is something too of the delicate sadness of an old romance in the
-lives of these kindly ladies who rule so wisely over the lands left to
-them by their brother—the last of his name. He was a man round whom
-justly centred unusual hopes and ambitions. Now he, who had so great a
-heart and so splendid a mind, lies in the ruined chapel in the park,
-alone. The chapel is roofless. It is a nobly solitary and fit
-resting-place for one who was nobly apart from the petty aims of his
-contemporaries; who lived and died true to his ideals; whose work still
-prospers in the freed lands of his people. He gave up much for Ireland,
-and Ireland gave him nothing at all in return ... except that wonderful
-sleeping-place with the changing sky overhead.
-
-They say there is no such word in the Irish language as gratitude, and
-yet—
-
-My Kilcoultra hostess drove me round the property on the day after my
-arrival, and drew the pony to the standstill on a height that finely
-dominated the park and house. When I had duly admired the view she
-pointed with her whip to a little white cottage that stood a few yards
-away and began a kindly tale of the old woman who had long lived there
-and had but recently passed away.
-
-“When I’d come round to see her, I used to find her, times out of
-number, leaning over the wall, gazing down at Kilcoultra. Always she’d
-be leaning over the wall, staring down at the house. And one day I said
-to her, ‘Mary, what in the world makes you stand there like that?’ And
-she answered me, ‘I’m looking down on the roof that shelters me lovely
-master!’”
-
-“My lovely master!” A fragrant thing to have become to the poor that
-live on your soil! When we reach a sphere where things are judged by
-different standards and higher measures than we can now conceive, how
-far will not such a title outweigh any paltry worldly honour!
-
-Yet if the memory of its lost master dominates and haunts all Kilcoultra
-house and lands, there is nothing to sadden one in the thoughts it
-inspires; and our stay there is altogether full of charm and pleasure.
-
-Not only are the ladies a fund of anecdote, racy of the soil; not only
-do they live delightfully in touch with their peasantry, with eye and
-ear ever ready to catch the humour and the pathos about them; but they
-are cultured, far-travelled beings. Not much in the outer world escapes
-their knowledge and shrewd apprehension.
-
-Home topics, however, are what appeals to their visitors most.
-
-[Sidenote: IRISH WITS]
-
-“Carrie,” the younger sister will say to the elder, “I heard Whalen the
-guard, and Tim Rooney the porter, at Athenmore Station, talking
-together. And Tim is thinking of making up to a young lady, you know,
-and I suppose he’s always talking about it, for Whalen was saying to him
-just as I came up: ‘’Pon me word, I wish you were married, and had your
-family rared on me!’ They had a great jollification at our station the
-other night,” she goes on, turning to us. “And they brewed the punch in
-the station bell! Whalen’s a very humorous man,” she proceeds. “They
-used to stop the express from Galway at Athenmore when required; but
-there were complaints of the delay and orders came from Dublin it wasn’t
-to be done on any account. But it’s a recent regulation and everybody
-doesn’t know about it. And the other day there was terrible work, for
-there was Father Blake and the Doctor both counting on it for an urgent
-sick call—dying, they said the poor man was.
-
-“‘You’ll have to stop the train for this once, Whalen,’ says Father
-Blake.
-
-“‘I’ll maybe save him yet,’ says the doctor.
-
-“‘I couldn’t, yer riverence,’ says Whalen; ‘it’s as much as me place is
-worth. Don’t you be askin’ me, doctor. It ’ud be me ruin. The company’s
-very strict.’
-
-“‘Think of his poor soul,’ says the priest.
-
-“‘I’ll hold ye responsible for his life,’ says the doctor.
-
-“‘Wirra, I can’t,’ says poor Whalen, and calls up Tim. ‘Tell his
-riverence, Tim,’ says he, ‘tell his riverence and the doctor that I
-can’t be disobeying orders.... And begorra, she’s due this minute! Up
-into the signal-box with you. And down with that signal, so the express
-can get by,’ says he. And as Tim starts off at a great pace, Whalen
-shouts after him, ‘And I’m sure I hope ye’ll get it to work, Tim, for
-it’s terrible stiff it is, that same signal, and it at danger!’
-
-“Well, whether he had winked at Tim, or what, but Tim worked and worked.
-
-“‘I can’t get it to move,’ he says. ‘Will you come up yourself, Mr.
-Whalen, sir, and have a try?’
-
-“And, oh,” says Miss Margaret, in fits of laughter, “the way the two of
-them went on in that signal-box, and the way Whalen pumped and pulled,
-and at last he cries, ‘There’s no help for it, it’s stuck! And sure the
-company can’t blame me, if the machinery’s out of order,’ says he.
-‘Well, there’s wan good thing, your riverence, the thrain ’ull have to
-stop now, anyhow.’”
-
-We laugh a good deal during those pleasant meals at Kilcoultra. Not one
-dull moment does the house hold for us, and we don’t want any better
-company than that of the two dear ladies.
-
-“We’ve got,” Miss Caroline, the elder, explains to me carefully, “a very
-careful coachman, a very steady man, so you needn’t be the least nervous
-driving out with us. He was selected, indeed, because he could be
-trusted. It wouldn’t do for us unprotected women, you know,” she says in
-all seriousness, “to be risking our necks with a tipsy coachman.”
-
-Two days we are driven by this paragon. The third day there sits a
-stranger on the box.
-
-“I hope,” says Miss Carrie apologetically, “that you don’t mind his
-being out of livery.”
-
-“The fact is, Regan had an accident last night,” explains Miss Margaret.
-“He fell into the old gravel pit going back home and cut his head open,
-and——”
-
-“It was my fault entirely,” interrupts Miss Caroline in distressed
-accents. “I had to send him in to Galway town, and to tell him to wait
-and bring back Captain Blake. And that meant loitering an hour.”
-
-“Dear, dear!” Miss Margaret clacks her tongue. “That was very
-unfortunate! He—such a steady man! But an hour in Galway town...!”
-
-“It’s only what might have been expected,” Miss Caroline concludes. “I
-blame myself entirely.—I generally,” she adds, turning to me, “avoid
-leaving him any time in the town, you know.”
-
-[Sidenote: A STEADY MAN]
-
-And the best of it is that Regan remains in their minds “the steady
-man.” How impossible it is for the stranger to understand Ireland and
-Ireland’s ways! How much humour must you have—and what unlimited
-patience! There is nothing, of course, that so conduces to patience as a
-pleasant sense of humour.
-
-The ladies are the Providence of the district. There is a room at the
-back of the great gallery filled nearly to the ceiling with rolls of
-homespun made by the peasant women in the villages. Whenever a cottage
-mother is in want of money she runs up to Miss Margaret or Miss
-Caroline, bringing or promising the product of her loom. A good deal of
-money is advanced; a good deal paid in this manner, chiefly out of the
-ladies’ generous pockets.
-
-“Of course, poor things, you must know the way to take them,” says Miss
-Caroline in her Irish way. “One of them will come up and declare they’ll
-all be ‘lost entirely, ruined out and out’ for the want of five pounds.
-‘Are you sure you couldn’t do with thirty shillings, now?’ I say to
-them. ‘Oh, Miss Caroline’—it will be then—‘as thrue as I’m a living
-woman, I couldn’t do with less than two pound ten!’ ... I get at the
-truth that way,” she adds.
-
-It is Miss Margaret who undertakes the sale of goods which have already
-cost Kilcoultra so dear, and no one can say that she shows a commercial
-spirit.
-
-“Let me see now,” she will say, fingering the stuff—and splendid stuff
-it is—with tentative finger and thumb. “I think we paid
-three-and-tenpence a yard for this, or maybe it was four shillings,
-but”—with a delighted smile—“I’ll let you have it for one-and-six, if
-you’re sure—really sure—you want it.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XL
-
-
-[Sidenote: THE COLOUR OF THE WEST]
-
-The country all about Kilcoultra is typically wild and melancholy. The
-fields stretch, barren and yellowing, strewn with giant stones. Except
-where sombre belts of woodland mark the great estates, there is scarcely
-a tree to break the monotony; a monotony intensified by the low,
-unending lines of rough grey walls that border every road. But there is
-a kind of poetry even in this desolation, and a satisfaction to all who
-love the freedom of unbounded horizons. Then the mountains of Clare
-stretch their incomparable plum and grape colours against the sky. The
-colour of Ireland is a thing scarcely realized over here, where,
-somehow, hues seem washed out. “In England everything has got grey in
-it,” an artist friend of ours discontentedly avers.
-
-[Illustration: landscape with tree - two pages wide]
-
-We are taken across the county to a castle standing by a lake, which is
-a place of wonder. It is a castle no older, in its mediæval sturdiness,
-than the Gothic mansion we are staying in, but quite as convincingly
-built. Loughcool is a realm of beauty. At the end of the long approach
-the road rises very steeply through a stern grove of pines. All at once,
-as you approach the summit of this dark woodland, the ground breaks away
-abruptly on the right, and, between the pines, far, far below, lies the
-lake smiling, and on its banks what is called “the hidden garden”—a
-stretch of fairy beauty. Words are poor things to describe the vision
-which breaks so unexpectedly upon the eye. Everything that gardening art
-can do has been accomplished at Loughcool. You have terraces and a glory
-of roses overhanging the water even this late September; and there are
-“Auratum” Lilies rising in splendid groups on each side of a grass walk
-that runs grandly into the woods between stately trees. The lady of
-Loughcool is fighting a hard fight to make Azaleas and Rhododendrons
-grow in the limy soil; but it is a question whether the struggle is
-worth while.
-
-“We have given it up,” says the sensible châtelaine of Kilcoultra.
-
-We smiled privately. Villino Loki has at least some points of
-superiority.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We made another expedition, over the border into County Clare. A white
-plastered pillared house this, dating from the terrible neo-Italian
-period of the end of the last century. There dwells an eccentric
-gentleman, one of the chief instigators of the Young Ireland movement;
-but he was unfortunately away. We visited the house, and were
-entertained by his housekeeper. This lady’s name was Mrs. Quinlan, and
-she was an old friend of our hostesses. We think we enjoyed that
-afternoon as well as any of our excursions; and certainly we laughed as
-much as ever.
-
-Mrs. Quinlan came creaking down in a flowing black silk, which brought
-me instantly back to the Sundays of my childhood and the genteel
-appearance of my mother’s maid. We sat in the early Victorian
-drawing-room and had tea and Albert biscuits, listening with unremitting
-amusement to the conversation between Miss Caroline and Mrs. Quinlan. Be
-it mentioned that the owner of Curriestown has long been a widower and
-that the question of his remarriage has never ceased to agitate the
-bosoms of his neighbours since the event, so many years ago, which
-qualified him once again for the matrimonial market.
-
-Mrs. Quinlan stood, her perfectly unwashed hands crossed on the last
-button of her black silk bodice; her faded face all over lines,
-querulous, good-humoured, quizzical, under the untidy wisps of her
-yellow-grey hair; and, while we ate and drank, she flowed continuously
-on, stimulated by a question here and there, or an appropriate comment.
-
-[Sidenote: SPEAKING THE IRISH]
-
-“And indeed, Miss Caroline, it’s very busy I am. For sure, didn’t the
-master wire there’d be twelve of them here the day after to-morrow? It’s
-getting all the rooms ready I am, and the Professor here and all. Not
-that he’s much trouble, the crathur. Them’s his shoes, in the hall
-beyant. I’m sorry he’s out, then, for it’s the queer-looking body he is.
-He’s wearing the kilt, ye know, Miss Carrie. And not a word out of him
-but Irish! Musha, I don’t know what he’d be saying!—It’s a deal of store
-they do be setting on speaking the Irish now, Miss.”
-
-Here Mrs. Quinlan, seized with a paroxysm of silent laughter, claps one
-of the grimy hands over her mouth and doubles herself in two.
-
-“The master’s wild about it, God help him!” she proceeds presently. “But
-sure, I do be tellin’ him, I’m too old to be thinkin’ about that kind of
-thing at my time of life. Troth, and it’s queer times we do be having!
-Isn’t the master bringing back a black lady on us!”
-
-“A black lady?” ejaculated Miss Carrie, startled out of her placidity.
-“Good gracious, Mrs. Quinlan!”
-
-“Indeed, and it’s true. A rale black lady I hear she is, and it’s in
-Paris he met her.”
-
-“In Paris!”
-
-It seemed a strange place from which to bring a black lady. We were all
-full of the liveliest interest.
-
-“I suppose,” says Miss Caroline, “you mean a very dark lady, Mrs.
-Quinlan—a brunette?”
-
-“I do not, then—rale black she is, I’m told. Out of the Indies, or
-Africa, or some of them places.”
-
-“Dear me!” Our hostess is much puzzled. “Is he thinking of marrying her,
-Mrs. Quinlan?”
-
-“I wouldn’t put it past him. I wouldn’t put anything past him, Miss
-Carrie!”
-
-A black lady! Was this to be the end of twenty-five years’ expectation?
-
-“Well, now, and is he bringing her with him to-morrow night?”
-
-“Och, maybe he is! He’s coming by the midnight train, Miss Carrie, and
-the Lord knows what time in the world they’ll be up here.”
-
-“Oh, he must mean to marry her!” says Miss Carrie, and Mrs. Quinlan
-laughs again exhaustedly with an undercurrent of plaintiveness, and
-remarks once more that she wouldn’t put it past him.
-
-We go through the house in Mrs. Quinlan’s wake. There is something that
-looks like a kitchen rubber laid over one corner of the mahogany table
-in the great red-papered dining-room; and on it a crusty loaf flanks a
-dim glass and a cracked plate. Mrs. Quinlan casts a phrase of
-explanation as she trails us around.
-
-“He do be looking for his bit of dinner early.” We presume “he” to be
-the “crathur that gives no trouble.”
-
-We pass through a bewildering series of bedrooms. The damp has been
-coming in very copiously at Curriestown. Mrs. Quinlan points out the
-worst places in each apartment as we go along:
-
-“Look athere, now! Just cast your eye on that, Miss Carrie, and sure
-it’s nothing to what’s behind the bed. If ye could see the way it is at
-the back of that press, Miss Carrie, you’d be hard set to believe it.
-Och, the house is in a tirrible state! Me heart’s broke pulling the
-furniture about, thrying to get them bad bits covered.”
-
-Some one suggests that perhaps the owner will have it painted for the
-black lady. But Honoria Quinlan is still of opinion that you couldn’t
-tell what he’d be at.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the way back we burst a tyre, not far from one of those hamlets which
-are typical of the western coast. Set in surroundings of the wildest
-beauty, it is practically deserted. The four walls of the ruined chapel
-gaping to the sky, and the long row of empty broken-down cottages
-testify still to the ruthless policy that laid the country waste in far
-Cromwellian times. Perhaps there are no more than fifteen smoking
-hearths left, beaten by passionate seas, guarded by the tremendous black
-cliffs. Life here, it would seem, must be hard won indeed from stony
-fields and treacherous waters.
-
-Very soon, while the chauffeur worked at the wheel, a small knot of
-onlookers gathers about us; children with a tangled thatch of bleached
-hair, and eyes that look half-fiercely, half-appealingly out from under
-it. Black eyes they seem at first sight, set as they are with raven
-lashes. It is only on examination that you find them to be richly
-violet. There is an old man fantastically attired in a blanket laced
-with twine down to his knees. Such a creature of savage primitiveness he
-seems that one of the party is moved to ask him humorously if he has
-ever driven in a motor-car. He surveys us with his mild blue eyes that
-are as innocent as the child’s beside him, and shakes his shaggy white
-head.
-
-“Bedad, I have,” he then says unexpectedly. “And sure it never touched
-the ground at all but an odd time between here and Connemara.”
-
-[Sidenote: CLARE ROADS]
-
-Yet motor-cars must be very rare apparitions along these Clare roads;
-for at their approach the people fling themselves sideways into the
-ditches and against the walls, when they cannot escape through a gap
-into the fields. Even the dogs will flee. One poor Collie flattened
-himself on a bank in a paroxysm of terror that we cannot forget. When I
-remember how along the English roads my heart is for ever in my mouth
-over the callous indifference of the British cur, I realize that canine
-folk are very much like human beings when all is said and done.
-
-The Irish of the west have curious habits and customs which seem to link
-them with their forgotten eastern ancestral race. The women will draw
-their garments over their heads at the approach of a stranger, so
-closely that you may not get even a glimpse of their faces. Their
-husband is still “the master” to them, and they walk two steps behind
-him when they go abroad. But it is the old Catholic spirit that leads
-them to expect the greeting “God save all here!” when you enter their
-cottage, and “God bless the work!” when you pass them in the field.
-
-[Sidenote: AN IRISH STRIKE]
-
-We hurry away, much against our will, from these attractive scenes
-because of the breaking out of the railway strike. The newspapers are
-all very alarming, and we are threatened with being flung for an
-indefinite period upon the hospitality of our most hospitable friends.
-We do not fear for a minute that that would fail us, but we are due in
-England at appointed dates, and so we bustle off, “against the heart” as
-the French say.
-
-But when you make acquaintance with a strike from an Irish point of
-view, it seems one huge joke. Never did we make a journey to the sound
-of so much laughter as that day. Every station was crowded with
-soldiers, and all the inhabitants mustered on the platforms to exchange
-sallies with them. An eager, curious, good-humoured gathering greets and
-speeds the train which is supposed to be kept running at imminent risk
-of riot and peril.
-
-A very splendid looking police-inspector came into our carriage and had
-an animated conversation on the prospects with an elderly gentleman whom
-he addressed as “Judge.” Both seemed inspired with glee.
-
-When we arrived in Dublin there was indeed a slight drawback in finding
-no porters available for our many boxes. But the stalwart man of the
-party made “no bones,” as they would say, about shouldering them
-himself, and this was accomplished amid the unstinted enthusiasm of the
-“jarvies.” He was aided ‹save the mark› by the only faithful porter, as
-old as Pantaloon, who quivered and quavered behind him. A further
-occasion for cheers.
-
-“Ah, will ye look at the gintleman! To think of the likes of him now,
-being put to carry the thrunks! Isn’t it ashamed of themselves they
-ought to be! Well done, Larry, it is a grand old boy ye are! Let me get
-a hould of the box, yer honour. Oh, begorra, isn’t it the stringth of
-ten ye do be having....”
-
-“And how do ye like Dublin now, Mr. Smith?” we heard a pretty Irish girl
-saying to a stalwart young British soldier on the platform.
-
-He was grinning down at her in stolid admiration. She herself had
-dove-like eyes and a dove-like cooing voice.
-
-We think he liked Dublin very much indeed.
-
-It was the laughing face behind the mask of tragedy.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XLI
-
-
-[Sidenote: THE FALL OF THE LEAF]
-
-Once more has the Equinox come and dropped into the past. Autumn—the
-Fall, as our older and more poetic term had it to balance the image of
-Spring, and as America still prefers to call it—is about us.
-
-[Illustration: bird in nest]
-
-We disagree radically with Chateaubriand’s estimate of the “russet and
-silver days.”
-
-“A moral character” ‹thus does the Father of _Romantisme_ meditate, in
-his usual melancholy mood, upon the season of shortening days and
-long-drawing nights› “is attached to autumnal scenes.... The leaves
-falling like our years, the flowers withdrawing like our hours, the
-colours of the clouds fading like our illusions, the light waning like
-our intelligence, the sun growing colder like our affections, the rivers
-becoming frozen like our lives—everything about Autumn bears secret
-relations to our destinies....”
-
-Yes, we disagree with every one of these similes. Rather should Autumn
-be considered as the happy season of the task accomplished. The wine is
-pressed and stored, the fruit is garnered.... In the garden it is the
-time of eager preparation against new delights, another year; of
-solicitude for the treasures of beauty which are to brighten another
-Spring, another Summer. The seed of the dying Annuals has been saved;
-the more tender of the Perennials are timely withdrawn into shelter,
-while the hardier are cosily tucked in their own bed for the coming long
-winter sleep. It is the time of the tidying down and of the confident
-“good night—till next year!”
-
-“Colder, like our affections,” indeed! What will not love of rhetoric
-perpetrate?—and Christmastide drawing on apace!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The Master of the House has an old-fashioned weakness—what may be called
-a “Dickensy” weakness—for things Christmassy. And his family have all
-childlike tastes and are quite ready to minister to his picturesque
-fancy.
-
-We have a Christmas tree—a Spruce sapling, selected yearly for
-sacrifice in the territory called the Wilderness. It must be said that
-the wide library, with the capacious hearth and the beamed ceiling,
-lends a suitable scenery to this homelike ‹but, we fear, obsolescent›
-entertainment. The tree is lit up on the first night for ourselves; on
-the second for the household; and a third time for the children. For
-the true pleasures of Yule would be incomplete without a
-“foregathering-and-rejoicing-together” ‹as only a tough German
-compound word could express it› of all grades of age and station. The
-children, in this case, are those of the Catechism class and of our
-_employés_—which pompous term must be understood to refer to the
-gardener, the chauffeur, the under-gardener, and the “occasional
-help.” This last has five of them—so it mounts up satisfactorily.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THINGS CHRISTMASSY]
-
-[Illustration: bird bath hanging from tree]
-
-The beloved “furry ones” are not forgotten. Loki, who is always in a
-state of violent excitement on Christmas Tree nights, has a toy animal
-to make acquaintance with, tease, and finally worry. Some one ‹it must
-have been Juvenal› suggested tying up nice clean bones in red ribbons;
-but out of regard for Grandma’s carpet, the succulent thought has never
-been “materialized.”
-
-The Master of the House, and Juvenal, are also full of solicitude for
-the feathery things in Winter. The bird-baths are carefully thawed—it
-seems, by the way, to be in the coldest days of the year that they
-appear to prefer to bathe; sand baths are generally found sufficient in
-the Summer, one wonders why. In cold weather generally, cocoanuts filled
-with fat are disposed in various parts of the garden, around which tits
-and finches of every shade dispute noisily all day. But on Christmas day
-the terraces, the balustrades and steps round the house are further
-disfigured with such an abundance of crumbs and other tempting morsels,
-that, even with the help of all the black birds from neighbouring
-copses, they cannot come even with the whole of the feast.
-
- * * * * *
-
-We give each other enchanting presents. The lovely little carved-wood
-Joan of Arc, on a bracket in Grandpa’s library; the Madonna of Cluny
-“prayer-stick” in one corner of the chimney-piece; the Medici copy of
-Filippino Lippi’s wonderful angel in the National Gallery, in the grey
-and yellow bedroom; the cut-glass goblets painted with purple plums and
-red cherries and blue grapes in the drawing-room—all these were this
-year’s Christmas gifts, cunningly chosen, we think, and a constant
-delight to our eyes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Loki’s Grandma, after the fashion of a lady in a recent celebrated
-lawsuit, likes to choose her own presents. But she is not so indelicate
-as to demand money and buy it herself—No, she drops an absent hint, as
-Christmastide draws near. If this is not satisfactory, she abandons
-diplomacy for an engaging frankness.... But she is always overwhelmed
-with surprise and delight when “the very thing she wanted” duly appears
-about the Tree. The Master of the Villino, on his side, has had all the
-pleasure of purchasing; and, being of a guileless nature, is often quite
-persuaded that the choice was his own.
-
-In fact we all become like children again at Christmas; and this, after
-all, cannot be displeasing to the Christ Child. It is a time of hectic
-preparation, of pleasurable brain-racking over the suitability of gifts;
-of endless tying up of parcels for foreign and home dispatch. We
-decorate the Villino with round compact Holly-wreaths, which Adam makes
-with rare raste and adroitness. Never was such a year as the last for
-Hollies; and some of the trees were still scarlet with them in the late
-Spring.
-
-[Sidenote: HUES OF WINTER]
-
-As for Juvenal, he shows a recrudescence of genius in the devising of
-table decoration with unthought-of evergreens; with rich-toned leaves in
-the sear and the brown and purpling hues of Winter, brightened with an
-astonishing variety of haws, hips, and berries.
-
-In the little Chapel a crib is built up in a stone manger brought from
-Rome. Therein lies the Italian _Bambino_, purchased two generations ago
-by a dear one who has now gone from us. It is the quaintest little wax
-figure imaginable, with its painted red curls and one wax foot uplifted
-in the act of kicking.—The story goes that the original much venerated
-image in a certain Roman church, the object of yearly pilgrimages, was
-purloined, or for some reason moved to another Church, to the woe and
-indignation of the faithful of the district. But on the first Christmas
-night after this translation, a loud knocking was heard at the door of
-the original Church, and the small figure was discovered, kicking with
-all its might for re-admittance. Captured and carried in with devotion
-and joy, it was re-established with much pomp in its old quarters, but
-ever after remained with a little kicking leg in the air!
-
-Our Crib, surrounded with Roman Hyacinths and White Narcissus and
-Primulas, is fragrant and poetic; but we do not attempt to show anything
-more than the one image. Want of space prevents it. Our ambition,
-however, finds larger scope in the village Chapel. There Juvenal has
-built a very noble stable, thatched with heather; and all the figures of
-those first scenes of the Greatest Story in the World will take their
-place this year.
-
-Last year the tragedy happened that the St. Joseph and Our Lady; the Ox
-and the Ass; the Kings and Shepherds, which had been ordered in secret
-to surprise every one, remained on the high seas detained by December
-gales, until too late.—But our coming Noel will be the richer for the
-enforced postponement of the Holy Picture.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At the last Yuletide the Mistress of Villino was unable, after a long
-year’s illness, to join the family party at Midnight Mass in the village
-below the hill. ‹Midnight Mass, be it noted in parenthesis, has an
-extraordinary charm for the household and indeed for the neighbourhood.
-And, when all is said and done, it certainly is as picturesque and
-touching a ceremony as ever men of goodwill are happy to join in. It
-seems to bring one in direct touch with the simplicity of the shepherds
-of those far-off hills.› But as the excluded _padrona_ was lying quietly
-in bed waiting for the sounds of departure, she was touched and charmed
-to hear the strains of a carol rising softly from the terrace beneath
-her windows:
-
- _See amid the winter’s snow,
- Born for us on earth below,
- See, the tender Lamb appears,
- Promised from eternal years!_
-
- _Hail, thou ever blessed morn!
- Hail, Redemption’s happy dawn!
- Sing, through all Jerusalem,
- Christ is born in Bethlehem!_
-
- _Lo, within a manger lies
- He Who built the starry skies;
- He, Who throned in heights sublime
- Sits amid the Cherubim!_
-
-All the household had gathered there to give her this pleasure and make
-her feel that she was not altogether shut out from the Christmas
-privileges! Wrapped in their thick cloaks, with Juvenal swinging a
-lantern, they stood in a long row and chanted to her. It was one of
-those small sweetnesses in life that leave a lasting memory.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There is a picture in a garden paper of Japanese single Asters growing
-wild in grass: the seeds had been mixed by mistake, but the result,
-according to the illustration, was singularly attractive. When we saw it
-we said that the experiment should be made at Villino Loki!—Many indeed
-are the experiments, many the improvements to be made within our small
-acres.
-
-But what a difference lies between conception and execution. Of late
-‹for an instance› we had revolved round the agreeable thought of a Pool
-and a wet place generally, for Iris Kæmpheri, Spiræa and other
-moisture-loving darlings. We had indeed intended something altogether
-choice in the shape of a large sunken basin with a piping faun on the
-edge of it. Oh, something quite delightful.... But an inconvenient
-attack of “conscience”—in other words the heavy memory of garden bills,
-already incurred over the Autumn lists, rose up and barred the way. We
-felt something like Scrooge when the ghost with the bony finger
-‹horrible vision of our youth› pointed to the tomb. Only, on our tablet
-what was written was the ghastly total of our bulbous liabilities! Like
-Scrooge, we covered our faces with our hands. No wonder the faun took
-fright and leaped into next year.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Sidenote: THE TURN OF THE YEAR]
-
-Well, now, another year has come; and it is passing, taking us upon yet
-another round of garden pleasures, of old hopes and ambitions
-renewed—with many new delights and new disappointments, as of old; with
-also fresh openings on the bright horizon. New interests too. Of these,
-some of the smaller are not the least engrossing. To Villino Loki this
-year, for example, has come a new Pekinese. It is a Princess, very
-small, very sleek; chestnut-hued, with a face like a pansy. She has got
-a little jutting under-jaw, an extremely flat nose; and, in moments of
-excitement, her eyes display an amazing amount of white rim. But they
-are becoming very beautiful eyes for all that. They were the brightest
-of “boot-buttons” when she came first.
-
-[Illustration: dog]
-
-Loki was, naturally, very angry. He did his best to kill her; which was
-ungrateful, as she was really procured, at great cost and difficulty, to
-be his Imperial Bride! She, on her side, liked him awfully, and told him
-so. On her first motor drive down here from London, as she waggled and
-smirked at him from an opposite lap, he sat on his Ma-Ma’s knee and
-pulled a series of grimaces in return, the like of which you can only
-find painted on Chinese screens or cast in Chinese bronze.
-
-[Sidenote: THE NEW PEKY]
-
-The ways of the new Peky are an endless source of amusement and joy. We
-tried to call her Mimosa; but, as usual with the youngest of the family,
-she remains “Baby.”
-
-She has a coat the colour of a ripe chestnut, which will, we think,
-almost rival Loki’s in luxuriance. Her eyes have the same proportion to
-her face as those of a Dicky Doyle fairy. She has the oddest tastes,
-loving among many other unexpected things the flavour of tobacco. If she
-can get hold of a pipe or a cigarette she will sit and suck it, sniffing
-with enchantment, till one would swear she was smoking.
-
-All the dogs, of course, have their coffee after lunch and dinner in
-orthodox fashion, so there is nothing astounding in her having taken to
-it with gusto from the very first—but, for her, the stronger the better!
-
-Like most Pekies, she begs and “prays” without ever having had to be
-taught the art. She has furthermore a talent quite her own—that of
-elaborately waltzing in front of you when she wants anything very
-particularly.
-
-One of the dearest peculiarities of the breed is, as we have said, the
-rapture of their welcome on the return of any member of the family. The
-Master of the House is sensitive to this attention, and is quite hurt if
-he misses Loki’s clamorous greeting. The other day “the Baby” was sent
-into the Hall to meet him on his home-coming. No sooner did he appear
-than she solemnly began her dance and preceded him as he advanced,
-conscientiously executing her finest _pas de fascination_. This consists
-of leaping into the air, turning round upon herself, and coming down on
-to her front paws. Little Eastern as she is, she knew no better way of
-expressing her feelings towards “the Master.”
-
-From what far ancestress, bred in the secret sinister splendours of a
-Manchu Palace, did she inherit this accomplishment?
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: WINTER]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
-XLII
-
-
-It is the dream of the owners of Villino Loki to build on another wing;
-but, so far, funds do not run to this. The Villino is sadly short of
-guest chambers; that is because one room has been for ever allotted to
-the little Oratory.
-
-This little Chapel is a haven of peace. One’s thoughts turn to it when
-one has the misfortune to be away from home. Over the altar there hangs
-a large, wonderfully beautiful crucifix. The figure, white majolica, was
-bought in a villainous den of a curiosity shop on the Tiber. We remember
-how it shone out of the darkness at us, and we felt it _had_ to be ours!
-It is now affixed to a large gilt carved wood cross made for us by the
-_doratore_ in _Piazza Nicosia_.... Excellent ruffian! The cross has one
-arm much longer than the other, though no one would know it who did not
-measure; and it has the inimitable stamp of the artistic hand bound by
-no slavish measure or hideous time-saving mechanism.
-
-The Chapel is chiefly white and gold. Two large Donatello angels, warm
-ivory-coloured, from the _Manifattura di Signa_, carry the red Sanctuary
-lamps. One is certainly the real Donatello—the other, we fear, a poor
-foundling. But they both look very well.
-
-There is a great window over the moor.
-
-The few small statues are, we think, attractive; chiefly decorated with
-bronzy golds and deep colours. There is St. Louis, King of France,
-specially carved by a Bavarian artist; a slender noble figure with a
-face of grave asceticism, holding up the Crown of Thorns. And there is a
-sternly warlike St. Michael, all golden, resting on his sword. And a St.
-Anthony ‹a real discovery this› lifting a pale countenance that seems on
-fire with ardour towards the Divine Infant who stands on his book—St.
-Anthony is “in glory”; his habit golden over the brown. St. George, a
-fine splash of colour, charges the dragon over the fireplace. It is a
-most satisfying dragon with red jaws open and a green claw tearing at
-the lance that has conquered him. St. George’s iron-grey horse, with
-flowing crimson trappings, starts aside and rolls a distraught eye—as
-well he might. It is all in plaster and in rather deep relief. Two tall
-golden wood-carved Roman church candlesticks flank it on either side,
-fitted with electric light.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: garden view]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-We have placed square Compton pots with Italian wreaths, filled with
-palms and flowering plants, one on each side of the altar step.
-
-At night, when there is no light in the Oratory, except that of the
-Sanctuary lamps, the shadows of the palms look like angels’ wings,
-crossing and re-crossing....
-
- * * * * *
-
-But, just as to a Garden there is no end—no end to its wants or to our
-desires for it; to its phases, its transmutation surprises; to our joys
-and disappointments in it—so there is no end to a Garden and Country
-House gossip. We might go on for ever—like Tennyson’s Brook! And
-meanwhile the year is passing on, in its stately pomp.
-
-[Sidenote: SUMMER ONCE MORE ... AND AFTER]
-
-Full Summer is once more upon the Garden. The Delphiniums are rampant.
-We are in the centre of a heat wave, and our dry hill-side pants in the
-sun. At the fall of eve our souls rejoice in the sound of the refreshing
-showers when the watering begins; for one thirsts sympathetically with
-the cherished borders....
-
-The moor is deepening to purple. The trees wear the deep green that
-precedes the turn. Life is rushing by with us so quickly that it seems
-but the “blink of an eye,” as the Germans say, since we were peering for
-the first bulb shoot.... In a little while the Ramblers and Wichurianas
-will be one blaze of glory; and in a little while again the Autumn winds
-will be shouting up the valley and the Bracken turning gold over the
-rolling hills; and again in a little while again it will be the Winter
-and the snow and we shall be watching for the Spring.
-
-And it will be all even as before and yet all quite different. And so
-year by year.... And one day our garden will bloom for other eyes than
-ours.
-
-_Nunc tibi—mox aliis_, the Book-Lover’s motto has it. How true also of
-the beloved Garden!... Another “eye-blink.”
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: path down garden]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Sentimental Garden, by
-Agnes Sweetman Castle and Egerton Castle
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Sentimental Garden, by
-Agnes Sweetman Castle and Egerton Castle
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Our Sentimental Garden
-
-Author: Agnes Sweetman Castle
- Egerton Castle
-
-Illustrator: Charles Robinson
-
-Release Date: April 17, 2016 [EBook #51779]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUR SENTIMENTAL GARDEN ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Clarity, ellinora and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Notes</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
- <ul class='ul_1'>
- <li>Obvious spelling and punctuation errors corrected. On page 296, “raste” could be
- meant to be “haste” or “taste” - it has been left as in the original. Inconsistencies in
- hyphenation in the original have been retained.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>The original text used ‹ › as parenthesis instead of ( ), this style has
- been retained.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>One of the color illustrations is referred to as “THE MOOR” in the List of
- Illustrations and as “THE MOORS” in the original caption. The caption has been changed to
- “THE MOOR” for consistency.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>Page headers from right hand pages have been retained as sidenotes and
- placed by relevant text.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>There were two chapters named XXXII in the original. The second XXXII has
- been renumbered XXXIII in this text, and subsequent chapters also renumbered.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>The alignment of some images was changed to fit the flow of text given the
- inclusion of sidenotes.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>Color illustrations and corresponding captions have been moved to fall at
- chapter breaks and may be clicked on to view larger versions.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>Illustrations that ran across two pages have been rejoined on one page, with
- a small vertical white space in between the two halves where they did not exactly line up.
- </li>
- <li class='c001'>The cover has been created by the transcriber from the title page and has
- been placed in the public domain.
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image001.jpg' alt='Woman and dog in garden' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>OUR<br />SENTIMENTAL<br />GARDEN</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div id='fp' class='figcenter id002'>
-<a href='images/image004_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image004.jpg' alt='THE HEMICYCLE' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE HEMICYCLE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/image006.jpg' alt='title page' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'>OUR SENTIMENTAL <br /> GARDEN</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>BY AGNES AND</div>
- <div>EGERTON</div>
- <div>CASTLE</div>
- <div class='c002'><i>Illustrated by</i></div>
- <div><i>Charles Robinson</i></div>
- <div class='c002'>PHILADELPHIA: J. B. LIPPINCOTT CO</div>
- <div>LONDON: WILLIAM HEINEMANN</div>
- <div>MCMXIV</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><span class='small'><i>Printed in England</i></span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c000'>
- <div><i>To our Kind Neighbours, of Rogate</i>,</div>
- <div class='c002'><span class='large'>SIR HUGH &amp; LADY WYNDHAM</span></div>
- <div class='c002'><i>who viewed the “Villino” garden,</i></div>
- <div><i>even from the beginning, with indulgent</i></div>
- <div><i>eyes; and, with friendliest tact,</i></div>
- <div><i>persisted in descrying possibilities of</i></div>
- <div><i>grace in the wildest tangle, this</i></div>
- <div><i>chronicle is affectionately inscribed</i></div>
- <div><i>in pleasant remembrance</i></div>
- <div><i>of too rare visits.</i></div>
- <div class='c002'><i>September</i></div>
- <div><i>1914</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/image010.jpg' alt='flowering plant' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c004'>Villino Loki</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b c005'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Over the hills and far away,</div>
- <div class='line'>A place of flowers crowns a rise;</div>
- <div class='line'>And there our year, from May to May,</div>
- <div class='line'>Comes with a breath of Paradise;</div>
- <div class='line'>There the small helpless soul that lies</div>
- <div class='line'>So sweetly, innocently gay,</div>
- <div class='line'>In little furry things at play,</div>
- <div class='line'>With perfect trust can meet our eyes;</div>
- <div class='line'>Over the hills and far away,</div>
- <div class='line'>Over the hills.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Over the hills and far away,</div>
- <div class='line'>In every rose a dream we prize,</div>
- <div class='line'>While thousand tender memories</div>
- <div class='line'>Flutter about the lilac-spray;</div>
- <div class='line'>To-day, to-morrow, yesterday—</div>
- <div class='line'>Each unto each make glad replies;</div>
- <div class='line'>Over the hills and far away,</div>
- <div class='line'>Over the hills.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c006'><span class='sc'>Elinor Sweetman</span></div>
-<p class='drop-capa0_0_6 c007'><i>Never was trifling chronicle begun so light-heartedly
-as this chatty, idly reminiscent book of
-ours—and now it is under the great shadow of
-war, of death and suffering, that we see it pass into its
-final shape!</i></p>
-
-<p class='c008'><i>The “little paradise on the hill,” with all its innocent
-pleasures, its everyday joys and cares; with the antics of
-the “little furry things at play,” the sayings and doings
-of the “famiglia”; the roses, the bulbs and seedlings;
-our alluring garden plans, our small despairs and unexpected
-blisses—our earthly paradise, as we have said,
-seems like an unreal place. We wander through it with
-spirit ill at ease; oppressed, as by a curse, through no
-fault of ours. The sight of an Autumn Catalogue
-(hitherto so tempting, so full of promised joys) evokes only
-a sigh. The offer, from the familiar Dutchman, of bulbs
-which “it will help Belgium if we buy,” turns the
-heart sick. We know we must not buy bulbs, this year,
-because we shall have to buy bread—bread for those who
-will surely lack it—and yet, if we do not buy, others in
-their turn must needs go wanting. And here is but
-the merest drop in the monstrous tide of evils wantonly
-let loose upon humanity by the self-styled Attila! There
-are times when, looking out upon our place of peace,
-we feel as though, surely, we must all be lost in some
-fantastic nightmare. It is a September full of golden
-sunshine; as this night falls, a benign, placid moon rises
-over the silent moors into a sky the colour of spun-glass.
-The breeze choirs softly through the boughs of scented
-Larch and Birch. All is beauty, harmony—while
-in those fields yonder, south of the sea, the Huns....
-Pray God, by the time the Spring begins to stir shyly
-once more in our copses; what time the Crocus pushes
-forth its little tender flame, and the Snowdrop (with us
-fugitive and reluctant) bends its timorous head under our
-hill-top winds, we may indeed look back upon these days
-as upon some dreadful dream!</i></p>
-
-<p class='c008'><i>Meanwhile—even as the Villino itself is now to become
-a home of convalescence for some of our wounded, still
-unknown, but to be welcomed soon; even as the Cottage
-is to be a refuge for women and babes fled from burning
-Belgian hamlets—the following pages, breathing content
-and all the harmless ways of life, may perchance help
-to beguile thoughts surfeited with tales and pictures of
-mortal strife. We hope that, as a sprig of Lavender,
-or a Cowslip, by his pillow might for a moment
-relieve the blood-tinted vision of a stricken soldier, so,
-perhaps, some unquiet heart labouring under the strain
-of long-drawn suspense, will find a passing relaxation,
-a forgotten smile, in the company of Loki and his
-companions.</i></p>
-
-<p class='c009'><i>Sept. 1914</i></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image014.jpg' alt='landscape with trees' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c010'>
- <div>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</div>
- <div>IN COLOUR</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#fp'>THE HEMICYCLE</a></td>
- <td class='c012' colspan='2'><i><span class='xsmall'>Frontispiece</span></i></td>
- <td class='c013'>&nbsp;</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#dg'>THE DUTCH GARDEN</a></td>
- <td class='c012' colspan='2'><i><span class='xsmall'>To face page</span></i></td>
- <td class='c013'>16</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#tb'>THE BEECH</a></td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c013'>142</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#sum'>SUMMER</a></td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c013'>150</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#tm'>THE MOOR</a></td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c013'>208</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#aut'>AUTUMN</a></td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c013'>234</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#ht'>THE HOLLY TREE</a></td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c013'>272</td>
- </tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#win'>WINTER</a></td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c014'>”</td>
- <td class='c013'>292</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/image015.jpg' alt='small landscape' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c010'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>OUR SENTIMENTAL</div>
- <div class='line'>GARDEN</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>I</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c016'>
- <img class='drop-capi' src='images/image016.jpg' width='125' height='122' alt='' />
-</div><p class='drop-capi_25'>
-It is easier to begin with our beasts.—First,
-they are much the most important,
-and secondly, there are
-only six of them. Our bulbs lie
-in their thousands with just a
-green nose showing here and there
-now in January and are nameless
-things: only collectively dear, if
-extraordinarily so.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It will instantly be perceived what kind of gardeners we are,
-and what kind of garden we keep. We have scarcely a
-single plant of “individuality.” We do not spend ten
-guineas on a jonquil bulb, nor fifteen on a peony. To our
-mind no flower can be common: therefore we lavish our
-resources on quantity. I was going to say: not quality,
-but that is where, in our opinion, the modern kind of garden-maker
-goes wrong. What is in a name? Where flowers
-are concerned, nothing! But how much, what treasures of
-joy and colour, of shade and exquisite texture, of general
-blessedness in fact, lurk in the beloved crowd of the nameless
-things, that come to us designated only thus: “Best
-mixed Darwin Tulips”; “Blue bedding Hyacinths”;
-“Single Jonquils, best mixed,” and so on! We once descended
-so far as to order “a hundred mixed Delphiniums
-at 10s.,” and when, last June, we looked down on a certain
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_1'>1</span>bed in the Reserve Garden from the seat under The Beech
-Tree ‹which commands that enthralling spot› and saw the
-blue battalion
-glowing with
-enamel colours
-draw up
-against the
-moor beyond,
-we felt
-not at
-all ashamed of
-ourselves—yea,
-we felt conceitedly
-pleased.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image017.jpg' alt='woman looking out at garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>But our beasts
-are individual indeed;
-and, as it was
-said, there are only six of
-them.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CONCERNING THE PEKINESE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The first in order of importance
-is the Pekinese, who,
-purchased at a moment when
-we were much under the enchantment
-of the “Ring,” we ineptly—yet, from the
-ethnological standpoint, not altogether inappropriately—called
-Loki: his coat is fiery red, and he is an adept at
-deceit. When we want to impress strangers we hastily
-explain that he is Mo-Loki, son of the great Mo-Choki, the
-celebrated champion. Loki ‹who frequently assures us
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_2'>2</span>that he was a Lion, in Pekin› was born on the roof of
-the Imperial Palace in High Street, Kensington. His
-appearance and behaviour are such as bear testimony to
-his princely lineage. We let him run a great deal when
-he was a puppy, with the result that his legs are a little
-longer than is usual with members of the Imperial Dynasty,
-but “Grandpa”—Stop! It is as well to explain from the
-outset that, since the advent of Loki in the family, Grandpa
-is the name that has devolved, automatically, upon the
-Master of the House: the infant Loki’s mistress having
-assumed, from the very necessity of things, the post and
-responsibility of mother ‹in Pekinese ma-ma›, it must follow
-as the night the day that her father “illico” became
-Grandpa.—To resume: though his legs are a trifle longer
-than is usual, the Master of the House says he is much
-more beautiful by reason of this distinction. And we all
-agree with him.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id005'>
-<img src='images/image019.jpg' alt='dog resting' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki will not believe that the Manchu masters have fallen
-in China ‹of course it is not from us that he has heard
-these distressing rumours›, so he still demands as his right
-the best silk eiderdowns to lie upon, satin for his cushions,
-grilled kidney for his breakfast, freshly poured water in his
-bowl every time he wants to drink; and expects immediate
-attention at lunch and dinner-time, play-time, “bye-bye” time,
-and all the other times when he thinks he would like his
-chest rubbed. He sits up and waves his paws with imperious
-gesture; or else rolls over on his back and puts
-them together in an attitude of prayer. He had not at
-first much oriental calm about him. Indeed, when he first
-came to us his one desire was to play with every living
-thing he saw, from a cow to a chicken; but the cow
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_3'>3</span>misunderstood and ran at him, and the chicken misunderstood
-and ran away. The poor puppy was perplexed and
-wounded. He always
-believed every new
-Teddy bear toy to
-be alive at first, and
-would receive it in a
-rapture of tail-wagging
-and nuzzling kisses,
-until what time, it
-dawning upon him
-that Teddy was a
-senseless fraud, he
-set himself to shake
-and worry it like
-a little fury. Now
-he is older and
-wiser. He pretends
-not to see cows, and
-condemns chickens; he
-will growl at a strange dog,
-and bite and shake a new toy
-the very first day. Thus, alas,
-do years make a cynic of the
-young idealist!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>LOKI’S OWN ANIMALS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>He only plays with his own animals.
-These are: Susan, the Butler’s dog, and
-Arabella, the Lavroch setter, a long,
-lovely, lithe, foolish creature, whose surname is Stewart,
-having come to Villino Loki out of far Scotland from a
-distinguished member of that Royal clan.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_4'>4</span>Arabella, who is ten times the size of Loki, turns him
-over and over, tramples on him,
-nibbles and licks him till he is unspeakable.
-He will leap at her
-nose, hang on to one
-of her long flapping
-ears, race up and
-down the slopes and
-round and round the
-green terraces, till they
-both collapse, and their
-tongues hang out of
-their laughing mouths,
-seeming to flicker with
-their panting breath,
-and become as long
-as the tongues of
-dragons on old manuscripts.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image020.jpg' alt='dogs playing outdoors' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>A matter to be noticed is
-that they never play in their
-walks with us across the
-moors—apparently that is
-against dog etiquette—but
-they will lie in wait for each
-other at the garden gate on
-the way home, and the fun
-and the pouncing and growling jocosities begin the instant
-they are inside.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Susan doesn’t play with the other animals, though she
-exercises an irresistible fascination upon every dog that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_5'>5</span>comes within a mile of her. She has a kind of Jane Eyre
-charm, we suppose, for it is not at first visible to the
-naked eye. She always does remind us of a small elderly
-German governess, for she is squat, undemonstrative,
-and eminently—oh, eminently!—respectable. She is a fox-terrier.
-She has, however, one terrible weakness. Her
-only joy is to have stones thrown for her. She is not,
-therefore, an agreeable person to take out for a walk,
-for she will get right under your feet, dig up a stone,
-point at it, and bark, “Throw, throw!” with a shrill
-persistence that goes through your head. And if you
-are weak-minded enough to yield, then indeed you are
-undone. You will be kept throwing till you wish her in
-the Dog Star. She will scratch up stones till her paws
-are raw. This we think a great defect, but Loki sees no
-flaw in her.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CELLARERS YOUNG, CELLARERS OLD</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>When Susan’s Butler first came to us, we had suffered
-acutely from butlers young and butlers old, butlers bashful
-and butlers bold—all of whom drank steadily. One nearly
-murdered his Buttons. Another, engaged by correspondence,
-vouched for by the agency, announcing his years as
-forty-five, arrived huge, decrepit, asthmatic; almost, if not
-quite, qualified for an old-age pension. The eight o’clock
-dinner he found it impossible to serve before nine; and then
-that ceremony became a perfect torture of dazed crawling,
-enlivened by stertorous breathing, for which asthma and
-chronic alcoholism disputed responsibility. When the
-Master of the House, who is very tender-hearted, intimated
-that he thought that, for the good of the newcomer’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_6'>6</span>health, they had better part with the utmost
-celerity, the veteran assented resignedly with the husky
-gasp peculiar to him.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image022.jpg' alt='man with serving tray' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You know,” said the Master of the
-House, mildly, “you are not quite what
-you represented yourself to be. You
-said you were forty-five!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I think,” wheezed the Ancient
-Cellarer; “I think I said forty-seven,
-sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, forty-seven!” The Master
-of the House was a little
-satiric. “Even if you had
-said forty-seven, you are a
-great, great deal more than that!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Sir,” said the delinquent, with a beery
-twinkle, “no butler can ever be more
-than forty-seven.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This, we understand, is a maxim of life
-in the profession.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A third—he was young and beautiful—had
-a fondness for a brew called gin-and-ginger,
-which had so cheering and immediate effect
-upon him that, having left the drawing-room
-after tea the very pink and perfection
-of propriety, he would announce dinner
-in an advanced condition of jocular elevation, and when
-the plates slid out of his hands he would survey them
-with a waggish smile, as one who would say: “Bless
-their little hearts, see how playful they are!”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_7'>7</span>We became anxious to secure a servant who would
-have more than a few streaks of sobriety, and when
-Susan’s owner came, we felt we had secured that pearl.
-He came in a great hurry ‹without Susan› because of
-the equally hurried departure of the beautiful hilarious one.
-After a week or so, we asked him if he would consider us
-as a permanency. He said he would have to consider us
-a little longer. After another ten days he informed us of
-Susan’s existence, and announced his intention of going
-to fetch her. We breathed again.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>IN THE MATTER OF O’REILLY</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image023.jpg' alt='dog looking away' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figleft id007'>
-<img src='images/image024.jpg' alt='dog sitting in front of plant' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Juvenal—that is his name—is very fond of animals. A little
-too fond, we thought, when he invited a military friend’s
-dog to stay, during the owner’s absence at manœuvres.
-This animal, by name O’Reilly, arrived in dilapidated,
-devil-may-care, barrack-yard condition, which was a great
-shock to our Manchu
-prince. He also had pink
-bald elbows and knees.
-His hind legs were longer
-than his front ones, which
-gave him an ourang-outang
-gait. As became
-his Milesian name, he
-fought every one he met
-on his walks. Why he
-did not fight Loki, we
-do not know, for Loki
-loathed him and, we believe,
-suffered acutely in
-his poor little Chinese
-soul all during his stay.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_8'>8</span>Yet unwelcome as he was, scald, ungainly, tiresome, there
-was something pathetic about the creature. He had a
-way of looking at one, deprecating and pleading
-at once; and he would display such rapture at
-the smallest token of toleration, that, despite
-our satisfaction at his departure, we had an
-ache in our hearts too. We have a shrewd
-suspicion that the corporal-major who
-owned him was a rough customer, and that
-poor O’Reilly’s life was not that happy one
-which every “owned” dog’s ought to be.
-A dog should not be treated as a dog.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>As for cats, once they have passed the giddy days of
-youth, in which they are imps, sprites, goblins, pucks,
-furry, fairy, freakish things—anything but mere animals—one
-cannot help feeling a certain awe with regard to them.
-Despite the many cycles of years that have elapsed since
-their ancestors took habitation with us, they have remained
-true Easterns. From father to son, from mother to
-daughter they have handed down secret stores of occult
-knowledge which they keep jealously to themselves, a sacred
-inheritance of race. Those eyes that fix you with pupil
-contracted to a slit, and look through and beyond you into
-mysteries undreamt of by you: that lofty detachment, that
-ineradicable independence, that relentless indifference: have
-we not all felt by these signs and tokens how completely
-the cat puts us outside the sphere of his real thoughts and
-feelings? Priests or priestesses they seem to be, of some
-alien creed, soul satisfying, contemplative, with sudden
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_9'>9</span>savage rites. Have you ever watched a cat with regard
-turned inwards, meditating? Its body sways, but the
-spirit bubbles softly as if it were seething in content over a
-mystic fire. It does not want you to join it in its rapture,
-like your dog. It has no desire to admit you into its
-comradeship. It is as self-contained and self-absorbed
-as the highest grade Mahatma.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image025.jpg' alt='cat in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>KITTY-WEE THE LOVELY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Kitty-Wee, the Lovely, is chief of our three cats.
-She is a Persian lady with a wonderful robe of
-silver grey, faintly blue, and orange eyes inherited from
-that most beautiful, most evil monster, Tittums the Bold-and-Bad,
-her father, who spent his adorable kittenhood
-and his stormy youth under our London roof, until his
-habit of lying in wait for the servants at odd corners and
-jumping at their elbows, made it imperative for us to part
-with him. He was then adopted by a gentle parson’s
-daughter, in the freedom of whose country dwelling it
-was hoped that he might sow his wild oats and settle
-down into respectability. But alas! the day dawned,
-when lying on the rector’s cassock in the dining-room,
-he was so incensed at the reverend gentleman’s polite
-request to move, that he chased him round and round
-the room, ran him down in the hall and bit him. The
-churchman was not an unreasonable being and had made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_10'>10</span>many allowances for the frailty of degenerate creation;
-but he drew the line at the violation of his reverend elbows.
-Tittums was once again, with many tears and heart-rendings,
-passed on. This time to a lady who keeps a
-cattery. We hear that he has become a model of every
-virtue, and that she only wears a fencing mask and boxing
-gloves when she combs him, because on the day when she
-left them off, Tittums, in a fit of absence of mind, bit her
-through the thumb. Anyone who takes a cat paper can
-hear more of this most distinguished beast, under the name
-of “Saracinesca.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Kitty-Wee is supposed to have inherited her father’s superlative
-looks—only he was “smoke”—and her mother’s
-angelic disposition. If occasionally a spark of the paternal
-temper flashes out, the gardener’s wife ‹with whom she
-prefers to dwell› says “Kitty is a bit nervous to-day.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>KITTY-WEE’S MESALLIANCES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was after Kitty-Wee’s first <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mésalliance</span></i> that she took up
-her abode with the worthy pair in the “little cot,” as
-Mrs. Adam calls it, at the bottom of the garden. Persian
-princesses, from the time of “A Thousand and One
-Nights” onwards, are proverbially capricious. But what
-perverse freak of youthful fancy induced our delicate silver-pawed
-highborn damsel to fix her young affections upon
-Mr. Hopkinson was and is, a painful mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mr. Hopkinson, a very hooligan among cats, so degenerate
-indeed as to have lost all his eastern characteristics, and to
-have assumed a positively “Arry-like, bank-’oliday, disreputable,
-Hampstead-Heath kind of vulgarity,” was a
-lean, mangy creature with a denuded tail. He had a black
-spot over one eye; the other eye was conspicuous by
-its absence. We could hear his raucous voice uplifted
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_11'>11</span>in serenade, suggestive of accordeons, night after night, and
-his guttural whisper of “Me ’Oighness” behind the bushes
-when we went on our
-walks. Every effort was
-made to discourage
-the preposterous suitor.
-But, alas! Kitty smiled.
-The infatuated Princess
-escaped the vigilance of
-her distracted family.
-Perhaps it is best to
-draw a veil over the
-consequences of this rash alliance. Kitty
-indeed did her best to obliterate them,
-refusing to do anything but sit heavily
-on three black and white kittens with
-ropy tails. She only purred again the
-day the last one died; “Oh! she was
-pleased, Mam,” said the gardener’s wife;
-“quite took up again, she did.”</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id006'>
-<img src='images/image027.jpg' alt='animals watching each other' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Kitty-Wee’s next matrimonial venture,
-though likewise, we grieve to say, morganatic,
-was very much more successful.
-In fact it is to it that we owe—Bunny!
-The name, the lineage, the very personality
-of Bunny’s father is wrapt in mystery;
-but judging by the splendour of Bunny’s
-black fur, it is to be conjectured that Kitty-Wee’s
-choice was of a dark complexion,
-and if not royal, at any rate of noble blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Two brave brothers Bunny had, but he is the sole survivor;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_12'>12</span>all the more cherished. And really, even if he lacks his
-mother’s supreme distinction, we cannot but feel proud of
-him. Waggish, gentle, humorous creature that he is, he
-will hang round the neck of
-Adam, the gardener, like a boa,
-for a whole morning together;
-or stalk the dogs from tree to
-tree, pounce on them at unexpected
-moments to deliver a
-swinging friendly slap on
-Susan’s fat back, or to waltz
-with Arabella, or to inveigle
-Loki, with odd freakish sidelong
-gambols, into a mysterious
-game of his own, which, as
-our little Chinaman has something
-of the cat in him, he
-seems to understand.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id008'>
-<img src='images/image028.jpg' alt='cat in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are very glad that Adam
-had Bunny to console him, for
-Kitty-Wee’s offspring has an
-odd resemblance in size and appearance to Cæsar, the
-late Garden Cat, much beloved, who alas! went the
-way of all fur ‹with a melancholy little assistance from
-the chemist› shortly before Bunny’s appearance in this
-plane.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, Miss,” said Mrs. Adam, on the Sunday that
-followed that Socratic tragedy, “last night was the most
-dreadful night we ever spent! It was the first time for
-thirteen years we hadn’t had a cat in the house! Oh!
-Miss, I thought Daddy would have broken his heart. He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_13'>13</span>just sat with his head on his hand, and sighed. Really
-Miss Marie, I don’t know when we’ve felt so bad.”</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image029.jpg' alt='cat and dog' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It will be seen that Mr. and Mrs. Adam have the right
-feeling towards “little sister cat and little brother dog,” as
-<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Francis of Assisi would have called them. This suits
-us very well, and oddly enough, Villino Loki is a kind of
-paradise for things of fur and feather. Cat and dog live in
-a strange harmony. To see Loki kiss Bunny, or Bunny clasp
-Arabella round the neck, is as pleasing a sight as you could
-imagine. And if Kitty-Wee occasionally boxes Loki with
-a kind of delicate compactness, it is with her claws in. As
-for Juvenal, the butler, whose pantry is full of singing birds,
-no sense of etiquette will restrain him from public blandishments
-when Loki is on the scene. George, the footman,
-can be heard addressing him—Loki—in back passages, as
-“My loved one!” And Tom, the old long-haired English
-cat, rules the kitchen.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE VICISSITUDES OF TOM</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Tom has reached the patriarchal age of eighteen years, and
-is cherished by the master of the Villino. He has had many
-vicissitudes. He was stung by an adder during our very
-first summer, years ago, on these moors, and lay for a day
-in a coma with one paw swollen the size of a child’s arm,
-to be saved by doses of brandy and milk. A few years
-later he was caught in a trap. How he got free no one
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_14'>14</span>knows, but we found him crawling, piteously complaining,
-with a shattered leg. With the help of the cook, who
-followed the tradition of the establishment and
-was Tom’s slave, the leg was set with strips
-of firewood, the bone
-being very successfully
-mended. It so
-happened that the
-Master of the House
-had, about the same
-time, snapped his <i>tendo-plantaris</i> at tennis;
-and it was a sight to see them both when
-they stumped down the wooden passages—the master dot-and-go-one
-on his crutches, Thomas following in his splints,
-dot-and-go-three.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image030.jpg' alt='cat lying down (Tom)' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><i>Tom</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The amateur surgery, however, was not completely successful.
-Though Thomas’ bone knit, the poor mangled
-flesh remained unhealed, and at last the cook conveyed
-her darling in a basket to the most celebrated London
-animal doctor. Thereafter ensued a time of horrible
-suspense. Telegrams went briskly backwards and forwards.
-Dr. Jewell “doubted if he could save the limb.”
-Tom’s adoring family could not contemplate the tragedy
-therein implied. “Better euthanasia!” we wired. “Will
-do my best for little cat,” the sympathetic Æsculapius of
-God’s humble creatures replied. Hope and devotion
-triumphed. Tommy returned to us with three legs in
-large fur trousers, the fourth as close as a mouse. The
-fur thereon has never grown to full length again. We fear
-it will never grow now.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dear old Tom is toothless, and he is getting a little bald
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_15'>15</span>on the top of his head; but he is a beautiful creature still,
-and a dandy. His four spats are always of an almost
-startling snowiness; his shirt-front ditto. He is not very
-fond of any of the other animals, and was so revolted by
-Kitty-Wee’s <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mésalliance</span></i> that she could not show her face
-in the kitchen without his instantly using as severe language
-as ever John Knox to Queen Mary. “Hussy!” was the
-mildest of his terms.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='dg' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_16'>16</span>
-<a href='images/image033_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image033.jpg' alt='THE DUTCH GARDEN' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE DUTCH GARDEN</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image035.jpg' alt='house on hill' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>II</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Where we live, high on the southern moorlands of Surrey,
-the desolation of winter never seems to reach us; unless,
-indeed, upon certain days of streaming rains, or weeping
-mists that rush rapid and ghost-like up the valley, and
-blot out the world from view. But those days would
-be dreary anywhere and in any season.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Our funny little house, more like an Italian “Villino,” perhaps,
-than anything English, stands high, midway between
-the rolling shoulders of moor and the green-wooded dip
-of the valley. And the moor has always colour in it.
-There are some sunset days when it seems not so much to
-reflect as to give out rose and purple and carmine. And
-now in January it is a wonderful copper-brown, with the
-tawny of dying Bracken and the yellow of young Gorse.
-And opposite to us a belt of birchwood is purple against
-solemn green of pine. And the purple and solemn green
-run right down together to the bright verdure of fields and
-dells; then up again to moorland, where the fir trees march
-up once more against the sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There are Larches in these woods, and Oaks, so that the
-spring tints are almost as wonderful as the autumn. When
-the Furze and Broom are all guinea-gold on the moor, the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_17'>17</span>young Bracken begins to creep in green patches that are
-pure joy. Later on the Bell-heather breaks into a deep
-rose which, with the sun on it, holds such a glory of colour
-that you could scarce find its match in an old Cathedral
-window. And when this splendour begins to turn to
-russet, then comes the tender silvery amethyst of the Ling,
-and spreads a mantle all over those great shoulders of
-wild land that is of the exact hue most beautiful to contrast
-with the full summer woods and the blue of an August
-sky; a combination so matchless for colour-loving eyes
-that it seems as if one’s soul were not big enough to hold
-the complete impression. And when our Delphiniums rear
-themselves against this background, we feel, looking on it
-all, as if we could sing for the mere rapture of it; or—having
-no voice—roll in the grass like Loki or like Bunny.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A LITTLE PLACE OF ONE’S OWN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>For a long time we—Loki’s Grandfather and Grandmother—had
-said to each other that we must have a week-end
-cottage. We were so tired of hiring other people’s houses,
-summer after summer, and of the labour ‹not unattended
-by some pleasurable excitement on Loki’s Grandmother’s
-part› of pulling their furniture about, and hiding away all
-the family portraits and the choicest works of art, to make
-the alien spaces tolerable to one’s own individuality. So
-tired, too, of the boredom and worry of having to restore
-everything to its pristine ugliness and hang up the enlarged
-photographs and the dreadful oil paintings on the walls
-once more—a tedious task, albeit enlivened on one occasion
-by the thrilling discovery that, having consigned these
-treasures to an oak chest in the hall, most of them had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_18'>18</span>grown fur; and that on another the oil painting of your
-detested landlady, in middle Victorian chignon and the hump
-of the period, has received a scratch on the nose which no
-copious application of linseed oil will disguise. We
-always detest our landlady ... though not as much as
-we loathe the tenants who may happen to hire a house
-of ours.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image037.jpg' alt='street view of house' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the end of each summer, therefore, we would make
-elaborate calculations to prove what a great economy it
-would be to
-have a little
-place of our
-own. Finally
-these plans and desires
-crystallized into
-action. When Loki’s
-Grandfather returned
-from a round of inspection
-to the hotel
-where we were staying in the district
-we fancied, and told Loki’s
-Grandmother that he had visited a funny little house
-with a terrace upon which he “saw her”—in his own
-phraseology—she was extremely sceptical. And when
-we drove down the hill to view his discovery, and were
-literally dropped from the side road through a perfunctory
-gate into the steepest little courtyard it is
-possible to imagine, and she beheld green stains on the
-rough-cast wall of the white small house, her scepticism
-increased to scoffing point. She was blind to the charms
-of the pretty pillared porch. The narrowness of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_19'>19</span>entrance passage filled her with disdain. Though she
-grudgingly admitted a possibility in the drawing-room, it
-was not until we emerged upon the terrace that her preventions
-vanished.—That rise and fall of moorland in such
-startling proximity, and the way in which the house and its
-terraces seemed to cling to the hillside and be perched in
-space between the giant curves and the dip of the valley
-beyond, fairly took her breath away. An artist friend described
-the first impression of the view in these words: “It is
-so sudden!” For a long time, even after the queer, fascinating
-spot had become our own, this wonder of “suddenness”
-always seized us.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It still seems incomprehensible to us that anyone could
-have desired to dispossess himself of so attractive a place—an
-Italian “Villino” on the Surrey Highlands is not to
-be found every day.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But, after all, it only became a Villino after our ownership.
-It was just a small white house on the hillside before that.
-Heather and Gorse, Bramble and Bracken pressed hard upon
-the small area of the property which was at all cultivated,
-between densely growing clumps of pine and holly.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE FIRST TRANSFORMATIONS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The courtyard is no longer dank: it is widened, levelled,
-and walled in against its high fir-grown strip of bank. It
-is guarded by bright green wooden gates, and three sentinel
-Cypresses that begin to mark the Italian note.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As for the lower reach—the Reserve Garden now—which
-in former days was a dumping-ground for horrors of broken
-glass, potsherds and tin cans ‹a dreary patch of weeds
-and couch grass withal›, it is unrecognizable. Especially
-this year, when, to the herbaceous border, to the espaliered
-apple-trees, and to the neat little turfed walks, we have
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_20'>20</span>added a Rose-Garden between screens of rustic woodwork
-which are to blaze in the full luxuriance of the adorable
-Wichuriana tribe.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Where the jungle waxed thickest, fair paths have been
-cleared. An avenue bordered by a double row of tall
-slender Pines runs from top to bottom of the hill, with a
-view of our neighbour’s buttercup field on the one hand,
-and of our own Bluebell and May-tree glade on the other.
-It requires a positive effort of imagination to recall that
-this was a literally
-impenetrable thicket
-when we first came.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image039.jpg' alt='entrance to house off street' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A VILLINO ON SURREY HILLS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Nor is the house less
-altered. As it was
-hinted before, a
-small white Surrey
-house has, by
-some singular,
-scarcely intentional
-process, become enchanted into an Italian
-Villino. Of course, some structural alterations were
-necessary.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id005'>
-<img src='images/image040.jpg' alt='house interior with plants' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>On entering the red-tiled hall ‹once the pantry!›, at the
-end of which the glass door giving on the terrace frames
-Verrochio’s little naked boy, struggling with his big fish,
-flanked on each side by Cypresses, you might easily fancy
-yourself at Fiesole or Bello Sguardo, but for the unmistakable
-northern stamp of the moorland beyond. Passing
-through the other glass doors into the inner hall, the first
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_21'>21</span>object to meet the eye is the big della Robbia over the
-gracious figure of the Madonna kneeling against a blue
-sky with dear little green clouds upon it. Through
-the open dining-room door you have a vision, all
-golden orange, of different deep shades. The Scotch
-builder we employed for the
-construction of the two new
-wings opined that “the
-scheme was verra’ daring.”
-Personally, every time we
-go in, it warms the cockles
-of our hearts. We had
-the golden-hued carpet especially
-dyed. We chose the
-tangerine distemper for the
-walls. We had, indeed,
-considerable difficulty in
-obtaining the higher note
-for the curtains. Antique
-chairs, with seats and backs
-of brown leather tooled
-like old bindings, we brought
-from Rome; from whence
-also came the yellow marble sideboard table
-on its gilt-carved legs, above which a bronzed
-cast of Gian di Bologna’s Mercury springs
-out from that orange wall on a flamboyant
-gilt bracket, with a grace we have never
-seen that adorable conception display anywhere
-else. We found a handsome, but anæmic, oak
-fitment in this room, filling the whole right wall with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_22'>22</span>cupboards, panelled overmantel, and bookshelves. It is no
-longer anæmic, but polished by our industry to a
-pleasing depth of amber gloss.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE DORATORE’S ANTIQUES</div>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image041.jpg' alt='house interior with window view' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>So Italy walked into the little white Surrey
-house almost as soon as the
-doors were open to us. But
-it is in the drawing-room that
-she has mostly established her
-self. It is so filled with dear
-Roman things that we can think
-ourselves back again in that
-haunt of all joy, when we cross
-its threshold. It is full of associations
-of delightful days, of
-quaint beings. There is the
-rococo <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">paravent</span></i>, gilt and carved
-in most delicate extravagance,
-which we bought of the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>
-in the Piazza Nicosia. That
-fire-screen—a real Bernini, once
-the frame of an altar-piece—now
-holds in its strong bold oval a
-pane of glass where perhaps some
-wan Madonna shewed her seven-pierced heart.
-The <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i> picked up these things in old
-villas and disused churches. His booth
-was indeed a sight to see.—Having recently
-been on a visit to Rome, Loki’s “great-aunt” was
-naturally charged with many commissions in that quarter.
-Armed with a letter of directions from the Italian scholar
-of the family, she and a Lancashire maid wandered down
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_23'>23</span>there one misty afternoon in November, at an hour when
-all the crazy little houses of the ancient Piazza seem to
-fold up and huddle together in the purple Roman dusk.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore’s</span></i> wares winked through the dimness; and
-having duly knocked their heads against wreaths of
-dangling frames in his doorway, the pilgrims proceeded to
-steer a perilous path among the heaps of gilded <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débris</span></i>
-within.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>, made visible only by his paper cap, was
-seated in a nest of angels, tinkering at a fat cherub and
-whistling gaily. Hearing steps he poked his head through
-the large oval of an empty mirror, and stared unconcernedly
-at the visitors, whose advance was punctuated
-by cataclysms of falling frames, church candlesticks, and
-other “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">oggetti religiosi</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the fifth or sixth tumble, he rolled away from his
-angels with unimpaired cheerfulness, and apologized.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Scusi, scusi!</span></i>” Smilingly he picked up a broken wing
-and a bit of acanthus leaf. “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Scusi!</span></i>” again. “Aha! a
-letter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Here the fat laugh merged into a bellow which made the
-walls ring, and brought a dirty little urchin tumbling down
-a ladder from some loft overhead. The urchin diving
-under a heap of prostrate apostles, produced a stick with
-an iron spike, which he held respectfully under his patron’s
-chin. The doratore stuck a candle on the spike, lit it,
-and with the flame in fearful proximity to his bearded face,
-proceeded to open the letter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Aha! from the noble family at Villino Loki!” Here he
-took off his cap with a flourish and did not replace it.
-“The <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">signor Inglese</span></i>, is he well?—<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Mi piace.</span></i> And the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_24'>24</span><i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">gentilissima signorina</span></i> who does me the honour to write?—<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Mi
-piace, mi piace.</span></i> And Mama?—Better?—<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Bonissimo!</span></i>
-Please the good God to bring her again to Rome. But
-not this month,” waving a warning finger before his nose.
-“In April. In the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">primavera</span></i>, Rome is as salubrious as
-she is beautiful. Now what does Mama want? Brackets?
-Angels?—<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Ecco.</span></i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He pointed to a pair of fantastic creatures that jutted out
-like gargoyles under the ceiling. “What? Not pretty?
-<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Ma! Scusi!</span></i> they are <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">antichi bellissimi</span></i>—they come from
-a castle in the Abruzzi; there is not their match in Rome.”
-Snapping the candle from the imp, on whose locks it was
-unheededly guttering, he waved it round his own head,
-waking up unexpected companies of saints on the walls
-and making pools of light and darkness among the golden
-hillocks.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“They are exactly the noble family’s taste,” said the
-<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>, replacing his cap with an air of finality. “She
-said <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">cinquanta lire</span></i>—she shall have them for <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">quaranta</span></i>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Recognizing that this incident was closed, Loki’s aunt
-thought she would do a deal on her own account, and
-picking up a little antique frame, fell back on the only
-Italian word she knew:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Quanto?</span></i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i> unexpectedly priced the frame at twenty-five
-<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">lire</span>, and cheap at that, and all of a sudden the little
-shop was filled with confusion. The would-be purchaser
-wished to take away her prize, the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>, misunderstanding,
-vociferated that nothing would be broken on the
-sea-journey; the Lancashire maid struck in with English
-addresses for the other wares; finally, the candle-bearer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_25'>25</span>was sent flying round the corner to fetch a friend who, by
-the grace of God, had the gift of tongues.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Breathless, he returned, with a bundle of rags hobbling
-along on a crutch, by his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Benissimo!</span></i>” exclaimed the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>, with a sigh of relief.
-“This gentleman, <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">signora</span></i>, is a friend of all the artists in
-Rome! He knows English, French, German—everything!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He then performed the ceremonious rites of introduction!
-“<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Signor Guiseppi Renzo</span>, a person of great worth and
-learning.—The noble lady belonging to the family of my
-cherished patrons, <span lang="it" xml:lang="it">i Castelli</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The bundle of rags swept off its battered hat with a flourish,
-disclosing a wall-eye and a three-weeks-old beard, and
-remarked, in Italian, that the weather was beautiful for the
-time of the year.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“But not so beautiful as in spring,” said the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>
-encouragingly. Upon which Loki’s aunt bowed too, and
-smiled and murmured, “Oh! <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">si</span></i>, <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">si</span></i>—I mean no.” And
-then feeling dreadfully uncouth and ill-mannered in presence
-of so much courtesy, picked up her frame again and looked
-helpless. Instantly the interpreter warmed to his office.
-In fluent if curious English, he ascertained her wishes, and
-then communicated them with much gesticulation to the
-<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i>, who slapped a fat forehead, exclaiming in a
-contrite manner, “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Va bene, va bene!</span></i>” Finally, the imp
-was dispatched on a last errand in search of a little open
-carriage, and having carefully wrapped the frame in a
-copy of the “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Corriere</span></i>” produced from his own pocket,
-the bundle of rags hobbled out into the Piazza, where
-he and the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i> stood bareheaded to wish the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_26'>26</span>ladies a safe journey to England, and a speedy return
-to Rome.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image045.jpg' alt='fancy glass' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>MORE BRIC-A-BRAC</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is little wonder that the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i> should cherish us.
-The drawing-room of the Villino on the Surrey hill is chiefly
-furnished out of his store. Therefrom come the Venetian
-chairs, the huge <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Goldoni</span></i> armchair, the two cabinets of
-rusty gold. The hanging cabinet is full of Venetian glass,
-picked up—of all places—at that roaring
-cheap emporium, Finocchi’s, in the hideous
-modern corso fitly dedicated to <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Vittorio
-Emanuele</span></i>. ‹To think these bubbles of ethereal
-loveliness, these liquid curves, these foam-frail
-phantasies, should have been discovered, unshattered,
-in such a spot!› There from the
-walls a wistful <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Giovannino</span></i>, with pious,
-sentimental, guileless head inclined, looks
-down from his golden background, a true
-bit of early Siennese simplicity and faith. He
-came to us from the talons of a voluble Jew in the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Via due
-Macelli</span></i>, from which unclean grasp were likewise rescued
-those meek companions, “<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Bernardino of Siena” and
-“<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Antoninus,” on the opposite wall. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Bernardino’s
-face is quite out of drawing, but, nevertheless, rarely
-has any presentment been more impregnated with holy
-benignity. The gentle pair hang just above a statue
-of Polyhymnia.... Oh! that “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Manifattura di Signa</span></i>,” in
-the dark purlieus of the Via Babuino! It is a blessing that
-we only discovered it the last week of our four months’
-stay in Rome, and that our resources were then at a low
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_27'>27</span>ebb; else, indeed, the exiguous limits of our new country
-home never would have held our purchases. Another
-“Madonna” between the rose-coloured curtains in the
-narrow window.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yes, indeed, there are a great many “Madonnas” about
-the place. There is an undeniably papistical atmosphere.—An
-old gentleman, of developed intellectuality, who stumbled
-in upon us shortly after our establishment, could not conceal
-the horrible impression it made upon him. His thoughts
-would have been easy to read even if the hurry of his
-adieux had not so plainly proclaimed his disgust. Seeing
-his eyes fixed upon the majolica statuette in question, we
-‹perhaps with a little malice› informed him that it was
-known as the “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Madonna del Bacio</span></i>.” It was then he rose,
-not quite swallowing down his “Faugh!”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>AN OLD-TIME NOTE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You had not expected to find such superstition abroad in
-an enlightened age,” we murmured politely. We cling to
-these old-world symbols—some of us by conviction, others
-for mere love of the beautiful past.—A little mistake? The
-wrong house, say you? How could we have been so
-stupid as not to guess!—Of course, you wanted the
-bungalow at the other end of the village. Yes, Mrs.
-Ludwigsohn is everything that you can desire to meet.
-Up-to-date cap-a-pie. Socialism, rationalism, suffragism.
-You can begin on the suffrage: she will saw the air with
-her right hand in a convincing platform manner. A delightful,
-capable woman! She feeds her infants scientifically
-on proteids. And there are Röntgen pictures—anatomical,
-you know—in the hall, that you will find more
-inspiring than della Robbia. Oh, you will get on with
-her splendidly. We know her ... slightly. Indeed, we
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_28'>28</span>blush when we think of our one and only meeting: it was
-so inharmonious on our part. She began to argue—and
-instantly had us in a cleft stick: “Soul?” she exclaimed,
-fiercely interrupting an incautious remark. “Soul? there is
-no such thing. I deny it.—Prove,” she cried, “prove I have
-a soul!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Poor lady, how could we? No—the Villino is certainly
-no place for the higher critic; for the lady of ’isms. We
-are not rationalistic in our tastes; we love old and simple
-things; prefer to take much for granted in life and enjoy
-the good peace that is vouchsafed.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id009'>
-<img src='images/image047.jpg' alt='decorative oval' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_29'>29</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>III</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>SIX GARDENING VIRTUES</div>
-<p class='c008'>When we first began to own a garden we could not
-bring ourselves to wait in patience for developments. We
-expected our beds to bloom as by magic. We vehemently
-ordered pot-plants because no seedlings could be expected
-to “do anything” in June;
-and the disproportion between
-our bills and the result filled
-us with dismay. But a garden
-is at once the most delightful
-and cunning of teachers. How
-kindly are the virtues it inculcates!—Patience,
-faith, hope, tenderness, gratitude, resignation,
-things in themselves as fragrant and beautiful as
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_30'>30</span>the flowers, or like the herbs, a little repellent of aspect,
-but sweet in their bruised savour.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image048_049.jpg' alt='garden view - two pages wide' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now we have even been taught to take pleasure and
-comfort from the vision of the beds in their winter preparation,
-where with the believer’s eye, we anticipate the
-fulfilment of the spring. In the little Dutch Garden under
-the new wing,
-the two long
-beds between
-the clipped Bilberry
-hedges
-are full of compact
-cushions
-of Forget-me-not.
-Through
-these the
-green noses
-of the china-blue
-Hyacinths,
-that
-are to make lakes of colour and scent at the end of March,
-are beginning to push upwards.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The winter has been very mild.—Another garden lesson:
-too much spoiling in infancy is bound to produce forwardness
-in the young, and the inevitable result of withering
-snubs!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the Hyacinths have faded, the Forget-me-nots will
-have spread a sheet of tender beauty over the unsightliness.
-‹Did we mention that a garden teaches charity?› And
-between this flying scud of blue foam the Darwin Tulips
-will have already reared bold green snake heads which will
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_31'>31</span>gradually become invaded by tints of mauve, rose, dark
-purple, until the day when their glorious chalices will
-open, as if cut out of living jewels, translucent to the
-light.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>DUTCH BULBS AND ROSES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Dutch Garden is bounded by a clipped yew hedge on
-two sides, divided by a rustic archway where Pink Dorothy
-rambles in June and onwards. Against this hedge there
-are two long beds lying to the south, filled with crimson
-and red roses: in spring edged with Darwins and Arabis,
-before Mme. Normand Levavasseur spreads her disappointing
-maroon clusters. On the north side the brick
-wall of the terrace, divided in its turn opposite the archway
-by brick steps, is flanked by Darwin tulip beds. The
-beds under the side of the house to the west have also
-Darwins with a carpet of Forget-me-nots and a fringe
-of Arabis. The space that runs back to the outer
-wall under the study windows is planted with Gloire de
-Versailles, Pyrus Japonica and the ubiquitous Tulips and
-Forget-me-nots.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is one thing we have succeeded in impressing on the
-patient and kindly Adam, and that is that we “cannot bear
-bald spaces.” Our bulbs lie as close as they can without
-injuring each other. Our Wallflowers, even now, in
-January, jostle!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the bed that runs right along the bricked upper terrace,
-there lie, awaiting the call of the different months ‹please
-add docility and punctuality to the moral list›, behind a
-deep border of Mrs. Sinkins, a double row of Crocuses, a
-row of Thomas More Tulips, a little hedge of white and
-red “Polyantha” Roses, and groups of “Candidum” Lilies.
-At intervals, on the top of the terrace wall, are large
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_32'>32</span>Compton vases which will foam with Forget-me-Nots,
-and thrust clusters of Hyacinths up against the Moor by
-and by. Just now they carry little yellow torches of
-Retinospora Aurea, which Adam said, when he first planted
-them, looked, he thought, “very lonely,” but which, each
-rising from a field of green moss, stand out, we think, with
-a classic dignity against the sombre magnificence of those
-rolling winter hills.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_33'>33</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>IV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id008'>
-<img src='images/image052.jpg' alt='dog looking at grave' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>And did we say that one could ever in any circumstances
-wish Susan into the dogstar? Alas! poor dear
-little Susan, she reposes
-in a raw, ostentatious
-grave in the Oak Tree
-Glade with six bulb
-spikes at the top of the mound.
-We should like to put a granite
-stone there with the words: “Here
-lies Susan, a good dog.” All
-that was possible was done to
-save her, and she was the most
-pathetic, gentle, patient creature;
-at the very end, seeking blindly with
-one small paw for her master.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FORBIDDEN TERRITORY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Poor Juvenal was so disconsolate
-that we did not know what to do.
-We hit, however, on the happy
-thought of purchasing a small white
-Highland Terrier puppy from a litter
-on sale in the neighbourhood. Bettine
-‹thus she has been christened
-with a fine disregard of local colour›
-arrived, a dirty, cringing, abject
-little wretch; but the atmosphere
-of Villino Loki has wrought so
-great a change that she is now a perfect imp of mischief and
-general cheekiness. The Master of the House says she
-is like a Paris gamin, and that Gavroche is the only name
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_34'>34</span>that befits her. The days of cringing are certainly over.
-Her long ears cocked, her wide mouth derisively open, she
-defies authority, with attitudes and expressions that can
-only be transcribed by such remarks
-as “Pip, Pip,” or the
-gesture which the French know
-as <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pied-de-nez</span></i>.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id010'>
-<img src='images/image053.jpg' alt='dog walking down stairs' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The other dogs at first protested
-fiercely against this substitute
-for their beloved Susan
-even Arabella curling a
-ferocious lip, and striking
-out with her
-fringed paw. But
-now they have
-accepted the new
-comrade with all
-the generosity of
-their fine characters.
-Loki himself
-makes no objection,
-except when
-she ventures upon
-territory which he
-regards as peculiarly
-his own;
-such as the grand-maternal
-bedroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The month that has taken away the harmless humble life of
-Juvenal’s fox-terrier, has also brought the news of England’s
-loss in one of her most gallant sons. He was a friend of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_35'>35</span>the household, and Loki, I am sure, does not forget—for a
-long memory is one of the Pekinese characteristics—how
-the South Pole hero played hide-and-seek with him in his
-puppyhood for a whole hour, one summer’s day, like a
-very child himself. The family of Villino Loki have
-memories, too, of that friendship which they valued so
-highly; and they will always carry the vivid picture of the
-strong brown face, with the blue eyes that were at once as
-guileless as a child’s and full of a far-away vision, as if
-they never ceased to contemplate their high and distant goal.
-The world is crowded with bumptious people who do
-nothing at all that is useful, if they do not do harm. Here
-was a man who had already accomplished mighty achievement
-and was set on mightier still, and there never was
-anyone so modest, so anxious to push others forward and
-keep himself in the background. He was asked by one of
-us to write a line in an autograph book, and he set down
-characteristically a tribute to another:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“The friends thou hast, and their adoption tried,</div>
- <div class='line'>Grapple them to thy soul with hooks of steel....”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We laughed ‹after that futile fashion that becomes a kind
-of habit nowadays› and said, “We always think that
-sounds so uncomfortable!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He raised those blue eyes, half humorously, half deprecatingly.
-“You make me feel ashamed of being incorrigibly
-romantic.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was we who felt ashamed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“We are sure,” we answered, “you have a good friend
-somewhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_36'>36</span>“Yes,” he said, “the best ever a man had.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are glad to think that friendship was with him all
-through and at the end. In one of the last letters ever
-received from the doomed Antarctic Expedition the tribute
-is paid again: “No words of mine,” writes he, “can
-describe what he is.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image055.jpg' alt='bird on branch' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>TOM’S GRAND MANNERS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The birds have eaten every single bud on our baby almond
-trees—the first year that they have had any flower buds at
-all. Ungrateful little wretches! the Master of
-the Villino sees personally to the replenishing
-of the numerous bird-baths and drinking-pans;
-and Juvenal provides them with
-cocoa-nuts filled with lard and baskets full
-of crumbs—aided by Gold-Else, the cook,
-who loves little creatures in fur and
-feather as much as the rest of the
-household. Tom, the old cat, is very
-happy under this lady’s kind rule,
-and, to show his appreciation,
-accompanies her in stately fashion
-every night up the kitchen stairs
-to her bedroom door. The act
-of courtesy accomplished, she as
-solemnly reconducts him downstairs
-again to spread his couch for him—a sheet of brown
-paper, by his request.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Hyacinths are breaking out of their green hoods,
-shaking blue bells; but our Scillas seem to be going to disappoint
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_37'>37</span>us. This sandy soil on our Surrey heights is not
-at all appreciated by bulbs. Snowdrops will have nothing
-to say to us, unless in a prepared bed. Narcissus Poeticus
-disappeared altogether after one year’s blooming. We are
-trying to naturalize Bluebells in a glade which we have
-cleared—and in which this year has been planted an avenue
-of pink May trees, to end at the bottom of the dell in a
-group of white Azaleas—but we are not at all sure that we
-shall succeed. However, we have our compensations:
-Azaleas thrive, and so do Rhododendrons. We are
-year by year adding more of the former to the wild
-slopes.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Below the terrace, yclept the “Hemicycle,” a path bordered
-with Azalea Mollis was a perfect glory last May,
-although it had only been planted the preceding autumn.
-The “Hemicycle” was a little fairy glade of Crocus a week
-ago, the second in February; and we have still hope of
-the Scillas which surround our bereft almond trees. A
-rough wall rises from it to the Upper Terrace, over which
-Dorothy Rambler will fling its lovely blooms in immense
-trails by and by; and its stones themselves hold a never-ending
-succession of delight in the shape of Arabis, Aubretia,
-Cerastium, Thrift, and the like. Yellow roses
-climb up to meet the Dorothy, and the dear little pink China
-Rose grows in bushes all along the front between the
-Lavender plants which we are trying to acclimatise, but
-which, year after year, are blighted by the frost before
-they have had time to grow strong.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_38'>38</span>
-<img src='images/image057.jpg' alt='garden path' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id012'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_39'>39</span>
-<img src='images/image058.jpg' alt='two ladies working in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Satisfactory as our wall-garden is, there is a wall-garden
-at a cottage in a neighbouring village which never fails to
-fill us with envy every time we see it. It belongs to two
-maiden ladies, whom we have christened Tweedle-Ann and
-Tweedle-Liza. They are so extraordinarily
-like each other that even
-they themselves ‹we have heard›
-hardly know which is which. They
-have the same rotundity of figure,
-the same uncertain obliquity in one
-eye, the same cheerful rosy visage,
-the same sleek bands of grey hair.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When the Master of the House was a
-young man, an Irish servant was heard
-to observe to him, gazing rapturously
-at him as he walked away from her
-vision, all unconsciously, in his shooting-garb:
-“And indeed he’s a lovely
-gentleman. Them jars of legs!” ‹As
-a matter of fact, Loki’s Grandfather
-has very nice legs.› But Tweedle-Ann
-and Tweedle-Liza, in short, sensible
-grey tweed skirts, bending their portly
-forms over their wall garden, have more
-than often presented to the passer-by a
-vision....</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Japanese say that reticence is the
-very soul of art. Our aspirations are
-always towards the artistic, but there is
-something touching in four ... exactly
-similar ... side by side...!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A TERRIFYING GOOD WISH</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>To digress once more: Loki’s Grandfather
-is no doubt a man of fine proportions; though he is
-not at all plump, he has all the athlete’s dread of becoming
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_40'>40</span>so. Once when we were stranded at a small wayside
-station in Ireland, without even a bench to sit upon, he
-began to while away the time by testing his weight on the
-automatic machine. The indicating needle travelled considerably
-further than he expected! He was standing, transfixed,
-staring at the pointing finger, when a very old woman
-with a shawl over her head, holding a very small boy by
-the hand, suddenly broke into loud paeans beside him:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“God bless your honour!—Isn’t it the grand gentleman
-you are! Glory be to God, may you grow larger, and
-larger, and larger!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“For heaven’s sake,” cried Loki’s Grandfather, wheeling
-round in horror, “don’t say such a thing!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And indeed I do, yer honour.—Look at him now,” she
-went on, shaking the little creature she held by the hand,
-“you’ll never see a finer gentleman. Don’t you wish you
-had a Dada like that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Then she burst out again and continued to wish him
-increase in Sybilline tones. They were both so extraordinarily
-serious, she in her benisons, he in his terror of
-the curse, that as Loki’s Grandmother sat on her trunk
-she was weak with laughter.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A LOCAL POET</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Master of the Villino had a charming little experience
-last spring. Some time before, in the winter, he fell into
-conversation with an old sweep, who was tramping up the
-hill, the evidence of his life-work thick upon him. They
-discoursed of many things, for the sweep had a wide range
-of interests. They spoke of the moorland place as it was
-in bygone days; and of the learned Professor whose
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_41'>41</span>eulogies first put it into fashion; of the lectures on Science
-delivered by this latter; and of the way in which the
-spring first shows itself in the lower copses while it is still
-winter on our heights. The sweep knew a dell where the
-primroses were always a month in advance of any other
-spot. He had a soul for primroses, unlike Wordsworth’s
-horrible Peter—which reminds me of the delicious remark
-made to Loki’s young mistress by an old pensioner in
-Chelsea Gardens. He led her to the plot he cultivated for
-himself, with all the childish eagerness of the aged, and
-pointed to a single yellow crocus, blown this
-way and that by the wind, for it was a shrewish
-day. “Look at it, Missie!” he cried. “It’s
-as playful as a kitten.”</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id006'>
-<img src='images/image060.jpg' alt='house exterior' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We do not know at what hour in the bleak late
-February morning the little box was left in the
-porch. It was found there by the
-earliest maid, and brought to the Master
-of the House with his letters in due
-course; a box that obviously
-had lately contained
-carbolic soap. Inside in a
-nest of moss, carefully
-covered with red bramble
-leaves, was a bunch of primroses
-tied with red wool,
-and the following “verses”:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Beneath the moss and the mast,</div>
- <div class='line'>Though the weather has been wet and cold,</div>
- <div class='line'>I manage to raise my head</div>
- <div class='line'>Down in the Sussex wold.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_42'>42</span>Thus it began, speaking in the name of the Primrose, to
-enter, rapidly and boldly into the sweep’s personality:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To-day I passed by the way,</div>
- <div class='line'>So I stayed and picked you a few,</div>
- <div class='line'>To show I do not forget</div>
- <div class='line'>The chat I had with you.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Here the muse got a little tired; but it ended up with
-unimpaired cheerfulness:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“I hope you are hale and well</div>
- <div class='line'>And now I must say Addue,</div>
- <div class='line in12'>Yours respectfully,</div>
- <div class='line in26'>STAR.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Over the page there was a charming P.S.:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'>“Perhaps you have younger fingers</div>
- <div class='line in4'>The flowers to unfold,</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Mine are rather clumsy</div>
- <div class='line in4'>Being big and old.</div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Pleasant Hours,</div>
- <div class='line'>Live long.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is the kind of little incident that seems to happen at
-Villino Loki, where animals and human beings are queer
-and unexpected, and live together in simplicity and cheerfulness.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_43'>43</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>V</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Travelling along the pleasant path of life, on the
-reverse side of the hill, the downward course ‹how graphic
-is the French of it for the later and “smaller half” of our
-allotted span: <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sur le retour</span></i>›, there is a tendency to dwell
-more upon memories and proportionately less on ambitions.
-The prospect now ahead, placid and mellowed as it may
-be, naturally dwindles to narrower margins. Its interest
-is more of the immediate order; deals mostly with hopes
-and doings of the coming season. And, the circle of
-recollection widening, things distant in the past appeal
-with proportionate insistency to the mind’s eye.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>“DREAMING BACKWARDS”</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I believe this is the case with all thinking creatures ‹says
-Loki’s Grandpa—who has fallen into a reminiscent mood›.
-With one whose lazy and musing propensities, whose
-delight in day-dreams has proved his paramount weakness,
-the habit of “dreaming backwards” and hunting for old
-impressions has become as haunting, in these years of the
-sixth decade, as was, in salad days, the “dreaming
-forward” and the straining for a sight of things still below
-the horizon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For instance: in a life which has always been one of
-constant book-companionship, the printed passages which
-most delight me are those which, having been first read in
-another age and re-discovered in this one, bring back a
-pulse of some long forgotten impression. The impression
-may be one that sober and critical memory does not record
-as having been so particularly enthralling at the time—yet
-it now comes back with a subtle fragrance all its own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The long darkness of winter provides the richest reading
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_44'>44</span>hours. And if the page-turning is by the side
-of a wood fire—as happens on this, the coldest
-day of the year—if it is in a deep armchair
-with the lamp throwing its quiet rays over
-one’s shoulder, why, it is apt to become interspersed
-with long spells of wide-eyed dreaming.
-The fire burns with that special clearness,
-that kind of conscious eagerness
-which one observes inside the
-hearth upon a
-keen frosty night.
-In the town a
-frosty night is but
-a cold night. But
-here, on our country
-hill-side, when
-winter, albeit officially
-over, is in
-reality still with
-us, a frosty night
-inevitably turns
-our thoughts to
-the threatened hopes of the garden.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id013'>
-<img src='images/image063.jpg' alt='view of garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now, as one who knows practically
-nought of the gardener’s “Arte and
-Mysterie,” my interest in the matter is of the
-irresponsible kind. I look forward, of course, and
-keenly, to the satisfying display, first of our sappy,
-turgid fragrant Hyacinth beds in the Dutch Garden ‹somehow,
-the Dutch Garden seems to belong more particularly
-to my own side of the Villino—to be a precinct
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_45'>45</span>of my study in fact› than to the proud-pied array of
-the subsequent Tulips, nodding in the breeze over their
-bed of close clustering Forget-me-Nots. This is the annual
-treat provided in the spring—for Grandpa’s especial
-behoof at Villino Loki—by the industrious care of the
-knowledgeable ladies. Nevertheless, as I say, my interest
-is of the general order; not of details; not of ways and
-means. I expect, in the maturity of every season,
-delightful achievements, and find them; but I take little
-part in their planning. I am of no use for device and not
-called upon in council. I thankfully enjoy the results;
-and this is perhaps not the worst part the Master of the
-House could play in the year’s transaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Only on two occasions have I volunteered a suggestion
-with regard to planting—and both are related to early, very
-early, reminiscences.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Creepers of all sorts we have in profusion. Ivy, of
-course, and Jessamine and Honeysuckle, and the gorgeous,
-if short-lived, Virginia-Ampilopsis its name, I believe. But
-there is one thing, I pointed out, I must have also, and
-that is the blue clustering, the incomparably fragrant
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Glycine</span></i> of my early childhood’s days. Wisteria is its proper
-English name.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Odoriferous bushes, again, we have, of every description.
-Ribes, Cassia, Gummy Cistus, what not?—lurk in ambuscade
-at the turning of paths to waylay you with their gush
-of essence, not to speak of the Azaleas in their banks; but
-all these perfumes, in their subtleness, belong to the middle
-years. No memories of the complete freshness of time
-cleave to them such as belong to the simple Sweet
-Briar.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_46'>46</span>
-<img src='images/image065.jpg' alt='outside entrance to house' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>So, now, the two rooted creatures of the Villino, which
-may be said to exist there more
-specially for the behoof of Loki’s
-Grandpa, are the Briar
-bushes at the end of the
-Lily Walk and by the
-<i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Schöne Aussicht</span></i>, and the
-still tender but promising
-Wisteria climbers in the
-re-entering and most sheltered
-corner of his study
-walls.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FLOWER LOVES OF CHILDHOOD</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>And it is for those young
-hopeful Wisterias that on
-this frosty night I feel a
-concern. Last year we had
-a score or so of purple
-clusters; we look to a
-goodly increase during the
-coming <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Renouveau</span></i>.—‹You
-perceive the old, obsolete
-French word for Spring
-comes back of itself!› The
-anticipation of the near
-future, within the shrinking
-vista of coming pleasures, elicits
-as usual a return to the widening
-past. In this case the past that is
-recalled is that of a childhood spent in
-France.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_47'>47</span>The book lies forgotten on my knee. The brown
-Meerschaum grows cold in my hand. My eyes, lost in
-musings among the flame-fringed logs, now peer beyond
-the past half-century—at a time which seems verily as far
-distant and as little related to the present as that year 1636
-stamped and still faintly discernible on the antique cast-iron
-backplate of the fireplace.... I see a farm-house in a
-village of that province which in ancient days was known
-as Ile-de-France ‹I hate your modern régime <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">départements</span></i>›,
-by name Mesnil-le-Roy; not far distant from Mantes, the
-natty little town on the upper and green-watered Seine,
-generally adverted to as <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mantes-la-Jolie</span></i>.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>GLYCINE!</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Therein, during nearly a whole year, for reasons of delicate
-health, resided a certain very small English boy—French
-enough in those tender years. In this delectable old place,
-so full of good-smelling things in their seasons: hay, and
-grain, and fruit, and at all times the health-restoring cow,
-the house was in the spring-time covered with Glycine.
-And with the adorable Glycine the small boy, who loved
-flowers as much as milk and fruits and beasts, fell forthwith
-in love.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>How that coquettish Jappy plant came originally to
-find a footing in so rustic a corner as Mesnil-le-Roy is
-more than I can account for. Your French peasant is
-not, as a rule, addicted to the delights of flower raising;
-and, in those distant days, Wisteria was still something
-of a rarity anywhere. But there it was, already in
-the sturdiest strength of its age, embracing the old
-walls, forcing its fibrous wood into every cranny of the
-greystone, framing every window, striving up the chimney
-stacks—and filling the air with honey sweetness. It must
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_48'>48</span>have taken at least two score years to reach such a
-size.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With the English boy, then barely four, it was a first love.
-He feasted on it with his every sense. From morning till
-eve he would be sucking the base of some blue corolla
-plucked from its calyx, for the sake of that intense sweetness
-to which the thing owes its Gallic name of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Glycine</span></i>;
-he would, whenever he could, run round and rejoice his
-eyes with the delicacies of pale green and purple, drink in
-the scent, and listen hypnotized to the never-ceasing buzz
-of honey-seekers in the sunshine. And, in the morning,
-his first thought, as he crept out of his small truckle-bed,
-was to go and plunge his hands into the dew that glittered
-upon these Glycine branches nodding in from every side
-at the mansarde window.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Like all first loves it was, as you see, violent. Well do I
-remember how, for months after he was removed back into
-the Paris house, the small boy would ply his mother with
-the yearning question, infantilely incorrect but vernacular:
-“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Quand que nous retournerons aux Glycines, Maman?</span></i>”
-always to receive the non-committal but consoling:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tantôt ... tantôt.</span></i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This “<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tantôt</span>” is the wonderful “by-and-by” which never
-comes to be!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And like all first loves this one was utterly forgotten in
-later years—to reappear, however, in the sere and yellow of
-age. For years a many, a purple Wisteria spreading about
-the eaves of a south-country house, was to me only a
-purple Wisteria. It was a creeper, and it was nothing
-more. It was not a “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Glycine</span></i>” until I had a creepered wall
-of my own. Then it surged before imagination’s eye with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_49'>49</span>all the glamour of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les premières amours</span></i>, to which, in
-accordance with the old French saw, “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">on en revient
-toujours</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now, therefore, at Villino Loki, nothing will serve but a
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Glycine</span></i> to creep along those walls which are more especially
-my own; to embrace my south windows and nod in
-at the casement. And the suave-breathed Eastern beauty,
-first brought over to the West and god-fathered by Professor
-Wister, will privily remain Glycine for me; although
-I may draw the indulgent visitor’s attention to her under
-the better-known name of Wisteria Sinensis.—I have, by the
-way, an ever-ready pretext; for I learn from “The Language
-of Flowers” that the special significance of this
-blossom is “Welcome, fair stranger!” I mean to have a
-profusion of it, for old sake’s sake. Besides, is it not meet
-that Loki should not be deprived, during his villeggiatura, of
-the company of some Chinese living thing?</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_50'>50</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>VI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image069.jpg' alt='view of house from distance' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Strange how sharp and detailed will some of our
-very early memories remain in after life, when even important
-scenes of our later years are so easily forgotten! That
-old farm of Mesnil-le-Roy is still a clear picture, vignetted,
-so to speak, upon grey pages of oblivion.... I can yet see
-the orchard, strewn with myriad fallen apples—the byres,
-whereto at sundown returned the slow-pacing, dreamy,
-placid-eyed milch cows; the giant walnut-tree, with one of
-its main branches blasted by lightning—blasted on the stormy
-night, during which “thunder had fallen” freely ‹as the little
-boy heard the labourers say, awe-struck, in the morning;
-but during which he had slept under the brown-tiled roof
-without the slightest disturbance›.... I can see the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Four
-Banal</span></i>, that co-operative bread-oven, a relic of mediæval
-institutions, which was still common enough in those days;
-where you could have such an entrancing view of lambent
-blue flames lined with yellow when the door stood open to
-receive the unbaked loaves; and where the air smelt so
-divinely of hot wheaten crust when they were removed on
-completion....</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image070.jpg' alt='little boy with two adults' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was, by the way, on that alluring
-spot—the boy used to find
-his way there regularly on the
-days when <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">on cuisait</span></i>—that
-he heard a certain remark,
-which to his child ears had
-no special meaning, but
-which remained on memory’s
-tablets to assume later an
-interesting significance. The
-country folk were very kind. The little English boy, left for
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_51'>51</span>the good of his health at the farm of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">père Pelletier</span></i>, was
-known to everybody; was accepted and treated as one
-of the community. Rarely did he stroll, as might any
-roaming puppy dog, into an open door of the village
-without being supplied with a generous sup of milk, or a
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tartine de raisiné</span></i>; or again, in season, with a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pomme
-cuite</span></i>. The roasted apple, be it said, browning and
-lusciously oozing caramel, was a standing affair in that
-old-world village. There
-was, however, on that
-day, a benighted wayfarer
-who obviously could not
-reconcile with these rustic
-surroundings the
-yellow-haired, barelegged
-little boy gravely gazing
-at the glowing oven.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">D’ousqui sort, ce gosse-là?</span></i>”
-‹for which barbarous
-lingo I take
-leave to give as an
-equivalent: Who’s the
-kid?› asked the man.
-And the answer came:
-“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Ça?—ca, mais le p’tit
-godem, donc</span></i>.” ‹That—why,
-that’s the little “goddam.”›</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE LITTLE GODEM</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le petit godem!...</span></i> Such was the
-name under which that young
-innocent was known at Mesnil-le-Roy,
-and, be it understood,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_52'>52</span>in all cordiality and benevolence! Of a certainty not
-one of those excellent people had the remotest idea of
-the meaning of their “godem:” with them it was only the
-established equivalent for English.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The term is a noun, not an expletive, which has come
-down through five centuries—from the days, in fact, of the
-English occupation of France. Among the written records
-of those stirring times we come across many a passage in
-which a Duguesclin, a Maid of Orleans, or a Dunois is
-heard to mention hatefully “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les godems</span></i>,” or “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les godons
-d’Angleterre</span></i>.” Now, all that fertile country of the Vexin,
-the Ile-de-France and the Beauce, of which the fat farm
-land of my old <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">père Pelletier</span></i> was so fair a sample, was
-obstinately fought for by the English for the best part of a
-century. Mantes-la-Jolie—now mainly famed for its river
-terraces, its sweet water grapes and its savoury <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">matelottes</span></i>
-or eel stews—was once a fortified place of note, taken and
-retaken by French and English more than once; but
-finally captured ‹in 1418› by the noble Talbot, Earl of
-Shrewsbury, the Achilles of England, as the French
-themselves dubbed him, and firmly held by the “godems”
-for more than thirty years. To have heard that mispleasing
-word used dispassionately, merely as a
-substantive, is indeed a link with the past.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Strange paths of the musing thought, winding from
-Wisteria Sinensis to the days of our conquering English
-archer!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>I spoke of these childhood memories as of oddly clear
-pictures emerging here and there out of grey mists of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_53'>53</span>oblivion. Another now detaches itself in the same way
-from the clouds of the very distant past.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It belongs to the following summer. A perfume of
-Glycine still lingers about it, no doubt; for there again,
-upon the stone and through the curvetting iron-work
-balconies of the fair Louis XV house overlooking the park
-of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud, pale silvery green
-leafage, with here and there a
-cluster of faint blue, spreads in a
-well-regulated display—widely
-different, though, from the foaming
-profusion of the Mesnil. But
-the impression more specially
-associated with those happy <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
-Cloud days is the incense of
-the Sweet Briar.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>SWEET EGLANTINE</div>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image072.jpg' alt='outside of window with small balcony' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>What has happened—I pause and
-ask indignantly—to the Sweet-Briar
-of the world? Whither
-has the celestial, the entrancing
-scent of the true Eglantine
-vanished? Our twentieth century
-Briar is still—there is no
-gainsaying it—a delicious being,
-in its ephemeral exquisiteness of
-flower and its pleasant, if but
-slightly more lasting, leafy odour.
-But never, in subsequent life,
-have I captured again the sudden delight first brought to
-my childish nostrils by a puff of breeze that had passed over
-some hidden clump of sweet Eglantine. This first impression
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_54'>54</span>is connected with certain grassy alleys piercing deep the grand
-old-world park, or rather forest, of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud, which were my
-favourite playgrounds in the early sixties of the last century.
-‹There is something distinctly suitable to the status of
-Grandpa, albeit merely “brevet” rank as in my case, in
-memorising thus about a past century!›</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id014'>
-<img src='images/image073.jpg' alt='flowers on stem' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I can see the five-year-old arrested short upon the turf, in
-the midst of the hot pursuit of a blue butterfly, by his first
-whiff in life of Rosa Rubiginosa: so might a setter halt and
-stiffen, having got the wind of a grouse.—The source of the
-fitful stream of fragrance was hidden among
-clumps of forbidding brambles. Besides,
-there was no following the trail: it seemed
-ubiquitous. Like some Puck in his most
-tantalising mood, it would lead up and down,
-up and down—luring now to right, now to left,
-now straight ahead, anon seemed to whisk
-past from behind, until, in a kind of “dwam,”
-the child would give up the baffled purpose and
-pensively trot home by the nurse’s side.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For days the ambrosial fragrance dwelt in
-his little turned-up nose. It haunted the
-sensitive child-mind much as, later, in budding
-manhood, the remembrance of some enchanting
-face seen for an instant and then lost
-to sight. He had at last to confide his
-hopeless passion to his mother. It smelt
-‹he explained› like the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pomme Reinette</span></i> of
-the dessert plates, but oh, so much, so much
-better! The reference to the well-known and
-excellent variety of apple left no doubt about
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_55'>55</span>the nature of the plant which had exhaled the elusive trails
-of perfume. “Reinette” became the accepted name of the
-woodland charmer and the hunt for Reinette bushes in
-the more devious paths of the wood a daily occupation.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>With these expeditions is associated another first acquaintance
-that made a singularly strong impression.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There was, at the end of one of those heavenly grassed
-alleys, a group of brushwood greenery from which the
-unmistakable fragrance flowed deliciously across the path
-when the wind blew from a certain direction—I should say,
-now, from the west; for the path led to Garches, a place
-which, some eight years later, during the siege of Paris,
-became notorious as the scene of some very ferocious
-bayonet fighting. Undoubtedly there was a wealth of
-the desirable “Reinette” amid that underwood. But, to
-the mild surprise of nurse or mother, or whoever it might
-be who escorted the child upon his daily constitutional in
-the wood, nothing could induce him to draw that particular
-cover. He developed an ingenuity ‹or rather should it be
-called a disingenuousness› for pushing investigations or
-carrying on a game in paths that gave this spot a wide
-berth. Whenever possible, even, he found some specious
-argument for avoiding the Garches-ward alley altogether.
-No one, I believe, ever knew the reason.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE BLANCHING, LAUGHING ASPEN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fact is that, hard thereby, as if standing sentinel,
-rose a company of tall, slender Aspens—trees that, in a
-small boy’s estimation, did not behave as mere trees
-should. He had realised this, with a suddenness that
-first made his heart jump, and then rooted him on the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_56'>56</span>spot, one day when, having caught up his scent, he was
-rushing with a whoop to the capture of his bush. The
-Aspens, up to that instant quite placid, palely green,
-grew all at once white with excitement and nodded their
-heads to each other; after which came the noise of their
-leaves; not the honest rustle of green
-trees, but derisive laughter; sounds, too,
-weirdly human, ringing as though in
-mockery of the discomfited invader.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mark you, there is something decidedly
-uncanny in the deportment of the Aspen
-and its gracile, long-stalked trembling
-leaves, the white undersides of which
-any puff of wind exposes simultaneously
-to view—turning, on the instant,
-the whole of the green to foaming
-silver. There was no doubt about
-the matter then. These paling and
-odd rustling trees completely
-overawed Master Louis ‹Louis
-is Loki’s grandpa’s baptismal
-name, now sunk into disuse›,
-though, in his budding masculine
-pride, he kept the secret of his
-abhorrence very close within his
-own little bosom.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image075.jpg' alt='child in front of trees' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>On one occasion, however, when he had had to make
-up his mind to walk past the blanching, murmuring group
-unless he were prepared ‹which he was not› to explain
-the nature of his objection, he asked, with a fair show
-of indifference, what manner of tree it was which “made
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_57'>57</span>that funny noise: he-he-he-he.” “One would say,” he
-added with elaborate airiness, “that they make a mock
-of one!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When informed that “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tremble</span></i>” was the name thereof,
-he became sunk in fresh unpleasant musings, and was
-fain to look back, fascinated, over his shoulder, each
-time the chuckling called after him.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The sound of the breeze, as it ruffles through the leaves
-of “Populus tremula,” is like nothing else in the woods.
-I have always retained my interest in the “Tremble” of
-my young days; and in the course of time it became
-one of delight instead of terror. I would give a good
-deal to have one of my own: one living not far from
-my bedroom window. It would be good to hear it
-laughing gently outside, when one first woke, and to know
-that it was powdering itself, so to speak, under the
-rays of the rising sun. But there are no Aspens in our
-part of the world. And, as for planting a council of
-these in the hope of silvery rustle and light effects,
-why, it is perhaps somewhat too late in the day! But
-I still seem to hear and see them with the ears and
-eyes of that dawning spring of life in the <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud days.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_58'>58</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>VII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Poor little old town of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Clodoald! In later years
-I spent an afternoon hunting up its distant remembrances.
-Alas, but it was like looking at some worn-out engraving,
-some faded dun picture once known in all its
-brilliancy.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id010'>
-<img src='images/image077.jpg' alt='stone feature in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Obliterated was the dainty white stone Palace;
-scene of the revelries and the bright-coloured
-elegancies of the Regent; favourite
-retreat of Marie Antoinette; theatre
-of the “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dix-huit Brumaire</span></i>” drama;
-early home of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">l’Aiglon</span></i>! The Château
-de <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud, the summer residence
-of the last Napoleon,
-had been
-burned
-by the
-Prussians—even as they
-burned the bulk of the
-town—in 1870.<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c018'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Many a time, when, not
-so many years ago, we could read
-daily the shameless slander, the wilful calumnies,
-of the German press on the subject of the
-“barbarity” of our soldiers during the South
-African wars, has my mind flown back to the picture of
-charred and jagged ruins standing against the rise of the hill
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_59'>59</span>which once met my eyes when I looked for the quiet, happy
-prospect I had known.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE OLD PARK OF <abbr title='Saint'>ST.</abbr> CLOUD</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The town, when I last saw it, and its ancient church had
-been rebuilt; but the Palace was a dismal ruin; and the park
-seemed scald and deserted. Gone also, worst luck of all,
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lanterne de Diogène</span></i>—the quaint tower at the river-side
-opening of the main alley, built in the pleasure-loving days
-of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Louis-le-Bien-Aimé</span></i>. ‹It was called a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mirador</span></i>: I believe
-a structure of that kind is now known as “gazebo”—deplorable
-word!› From the top of it a magnificent
-panorama of distant Paris could be descried.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The neighbourhood of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">la Lanterne</span></i> was the great trysting
-place of nurses and guardsmen, and the playing ground of
-children. On that day of back-dreaming exploration, I had
-been looking forward, with a kind of tenderness, to gazing
-once more on its bizarre shape. There is a well-known
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ronde</span></i>, dating it would seem from the Middle Ages:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Tour, prends garde—</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La Tour, prends garde—</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">De te laisser abattre!</span></i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>which is sung by the Gallic infant, in a game somewhat
-cognate to our: “Here we go round the Mulberry
-Bush!” It used to be danced under the shadow of this
-tower; and, in a child’s way, I had always instinctively
-associated the unnamed stronghold of the ballad with this
-peaceful erection.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Alas for the dear old <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tour</span></i>, it was destined to be laid low,
-after all, in spite of our eager warning! The terrace on
-which it was built was seized as the emplacement of a
-battery of heavy Krupps, for the bombardment of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_60'>60</span>obstinate capital yonder away. The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lanterne de Diogène</span></i>,
-in its white stone and clear outline against the trees,
-offered too distinct a mark to the answering gunners to be
-tolerated. It had to be levelled. It was never
-rebuilt. I could find nothing appertaining to it
-but the grass bordered slabs of its foundations....</p>
-
-<div class='figright id012'>
-<img src='images/image079.jpg' alt='tower rising from trees' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Lost, too, to me was the particular alley redolent
-of the memory of both <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Reinette</span></i> and
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tremble</span></i>; no doubt absorbed in some of the
-metalled motor roads that now traverse the
-park.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Grande Cascade</span></i>, however, which Lepautre,
-by order of Louis XIV, devised for the
-glorification of the Duke of Orleans’ future
-home, was still there. Its tiers of white stone
-steps over which the water, on <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Grandes Eaux</span></i>
-days, used to pour down, foaming yet disciplined,
-in symmetric balustered channels,
-between ranks of allegoric statues standing
-like guards and lacqueys upon a royal stairway—still descend,
-framed by huge umbrageous elms, from the middle
-height of the hill to the wide marble <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bassin</span></i> on the river level.
-How fully the great garden designers of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Roy Soleil</span></i>
-understood the life-giving virtue of moving waters in their
-grandiose if freezing conception of the formal landscape!
-Here, in the midst of the nature-made beauty of the old
-Park—where there had been forests, more or less wild, ever
-since Gaulish days—these architectural waters have a
-startling effect; incongruous no doubt, but the artificiality
-of the stone-work has been mellowed by two centuries
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_61'>61</span>and more of summer suns and winter frosts. And these
-monumental streams are beyond compare more beautiful
-than their prototypes of Versailles and the copies erected
-in other Continental residences in imitation of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Grand
-Règne</span></i> manner. This Lepautre was a man of fine power,
-in the style of his age. But he had also the servile fawning
-mind of that age. Soon after the triumph of the <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud
-Park, he could find it in him to die in three days of
-jaundiced envy because some other design of his had
-been passed over by the King’s eye in favour of one
-by Mansard! Yea, to die of heart-burning, even as that
-greater man, Jean Racine, who, some years later, gave up
-the ghost in despair over a harsh remark passed by his
-royal master in a fit of temper; even as Vatel, the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">maître d’hotel</span></i>, who fell upon his sword, and put an
-end to a life dishonoured by the failure of the fish at the
-celebrated Chantilly banquet!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yes, the old cascade, at least, was still there, that once
-had filled the five-year-old’s imagination with a sense of
-the supreme in earthly grandeur. The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Jet Géant</span></i>, also;
-that spouting jet that reaches a height of ... but no,
-why cramp the stupendous into figures? Figures are
-finite things. The shaft of hissing water, in those days
-of confident wondering, reached the limit of the conceivable
-before it fell down again, in its thundering
-showers, through the iridescent bow, the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">arc-en-ciel</span></i>,
-that could always be looked for when the sun shone
-on it at the sinking hour. But, alas, for the middle-aged
-visitor who sought for a taste again, however
-transient, of the noisy joyousness, the brilliance, the
-colour, locked up in memory’s casket!... The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cidevant</span></i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_62'>62</span>royal park—now <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Propriété Nationale</span></i>, and duly stamped,
-wherever room can be found for it, with the priggish and
-lying motto: <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Liberté, Egalité, Fraternité</span></i> was dull and drab
-and neglected: silent and morose. The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Grand Monarque’s</span></i>
-extravagances in stone seemed positively shamefaced. The
-whole place—this artificial park within the ancient woods—had
-the melancholy of things outworn and disowned.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FIRELIGHT PICTURES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet here, in my armchair by the firelight, up on the side
-of our dear Surrey hill, I can still picture
-sharply to myself the summer life of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud
-as it was in the careless precarious days
-of the Second Empire.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image081.jpg' alt='children outdoors' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Empress Eugénie, then a young wife,
-and one of the most beautiful women of
-Europe, lived at the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Château</span></i>. And the
-Park, though thrown open to the people, was
-kept trim with jealous care.
-Roads generously sanded,
-lawns watered and mown
-with systematic care, parterres
-ever bright with
-flowers, all was marvellously
-different then from
-the present day shabbiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I seem to see again, even with
-almost a lifetime’s experience intervening,
-the vivid scene impressed on
-the observant and eager eyes of the child.
-The gay-hued crowds of ladies in all the then elegance of
-scuttle bonnets and crinolines; the bevies of children, of every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_63'>63</span>class, but all joyous and noisy; the bands of marching
-youths, buzzing the popular airs of the year on the
-euphonious <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Mirliton</span></i>; the siege of every “kiosk” where
-the wafers hot from the mould, or the cool lemonade,
-were dispensed; the swans, stately but voracious, being
-fed upon the great pond; the bright coloured beribboned
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">nourrices</span></i> squatting with the nurslings on the circular benches
-within sound of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">musique militaire</span></i>, and the inevitable giant
-bearded <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sapeur</span></i> in flirtatious attendance; the quite too
-beautiful officers with tight waists, waxed moustaches and
-swaying gold epaulets—what not?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Before the great gates, solemnly walking to and fro, or
-standing picturesquely sentinel, there never wanted a party
-of veteran grenadiers in their towering brass-fronted bearskins
-and white cross-belts to produce the desired “Old
-Guard” effect. Or it might be heavy-moustached
-troopers, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Guides</span></i>, with sweeping plumes over the huge
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">colback</span></i>; with pelisses of fur and eagle-embroidered
-sabretaches, copying, on their side, the grim appearance of
-Napoleon’s ‹the real one’s› body guard.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The whole place, indeed, was pervaded with the “immense”
-uniforms of those pretorians: those long service professional
-soldiers for whose showy maintenance the Imperial
-Government stinted an otherwise dwindling national army—disastrous
-army, destined, despite its gallantry, to be
-so soon decimated, swept away, by the legions of <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">das
-Volk in Waffen</span></i> wielded with the ruthless mastery of
-German generalship!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FORGOTTEN BRILLIANCIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>For such as have only known France since the strictly
-utilitarian days that followed the great <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">débâcle</span></i>; days
-when the notion that any kind of smartness is incompatible
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_64'>64</span>with “republican efficiency seems to have become an
-obsession” it is difficult to realize the gilded magnificence
-of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Garde Impériale</span></i>. Still less, perhaps, in these anti-militarist
-times, the idolatry of the people for its <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beaux
-militaires</span></i>. Of a truth, on a sunny day, they brightened
-the park walks almost as much as the Geraniums in the
-great stone urns, or the forbidden golden fruit in the orange
-tubs!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The authorities were sedulous, especially in such places as
-<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud, to keep the pleasant side—the pride, the pomp
-and circumstance—of soldiering in evidence. The happy
-little town was awakened in the morning, was apprised of
-noon and again of sundown, by the incredibly joyous “sonneries”
-of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lanciers de l’Impératrice</span></i>, whose trumpeters
-specially gathered from far and wide, could sound all
-tuckets and points of war in an admirable harmony of high
-overtones blended with the noble, grave sounds of the
-ordinary calls.... Entrancing music to the little boy, in the
-glycine-clad house of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rue du Château</span></i>, who would start
-awake, hearken, and then turn round and go to sleep
-again in great content. The drums of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">garde montante</span></i>,
-headed by the olympian <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">tambour-major</span></i>, sedulously tossing
-and twirling his cane, daily rattled the window panes as in
-great pomp it ascended the hill, palace-wards. It never
-failed to draw the same crowd to the same doorsteps.
-Estaffettes clattered hourly along the narrow paved streets,
-on their way to and from Paris; glittering, clinking, full
-of official importance, and with an eagerness no doubt
-wholly uncalled for by any existing necessity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>All that colour and bustle and pleasant make-believe of
-strength and “tradition,” was typical of all one has since
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_65'>65</span>learned to associate with that Empire on the high road to
-ruin. But it had its attractive side for those who had not
-found it out; and, seen through the prism of distance, a
-picturesqueness that modern France, so systematically
-democratized, is scarce like to know again.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_66'>66</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>VIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The ways of our musings are as devious, as unexpected,
-as those of a general conversation: there is no presiding
-spirit to keep us to a standing topic! This
-topic, with us, should be “Our Sentimental
-Garden.” And our tattle should, really,
-be connected, even if but distantly; with
-plants or scenery; with country life and
-friends ‹or foes›; with emotions or reminiscences
-plausibly evoked by the flower
-side of life. Happily it is pleasant enough
-to be brought back to the right
-theme; as I am just now by a
-thought of the head-line.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image085.jpg' alt='two people by tall tree' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>REDISCOVERED DELIGHTS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>To one who has taken somewhat
-late in the day to a life in the country,
-most of its interests seem to be a rediscovery
-of early, simple, and intimate
-delights; to be connected with
-impressions long forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is an episode in the biography
-of Jean-Jacques Rousseau which,
-if I remember aright, bears upon this
-point. I have not got the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Confessions</span></i>
-by me—it is, no doubt, in that cynical
-autobiography that the anecdote
-is recorded—nor, indeed, any other
-work of that exceedingly antipathetic
-writer. ‹This is the usual course: the books
-I require for reference when in the country happen oftener
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_67'>67</span>than not to be on my London bookshelves; and <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">mutatis
-mutandis, vice versa</span></i>!› The precise wording cannot in
-consequence be given here. But it is a small matter; the
-story is to this effect:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In his young and singularly impressionable days, Jean-Jacques
-was taking a country walk with one very near to
-his heart. At a certain spot of the garden, or the wood,
-in which he was tasting the subtle joys of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">solitude à
-deux</span></i>, the lady suddenly exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“See, yonder is a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pervenche</span></i>!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Indeed,” returned the youth, little intent then, upon the
-beauties of the outer world, and gazed absently upon the
-tender blue peeping out of the tender green. “So, that is
-a periwinkle?” And he resumed the thread of his interrupted
-discourse.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But, later—much later on, in twilight days of his life—some
-one happened again to say in his hearing:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“See—a Periwinkle!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And Rousseau, now old Jean-Jacques, amazed the company
-by an almost incredible exhibition of sensibility.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Une pervenche!</span></i> Where—where?” he called out,
-throwing himself down on his knees to look for the flower,
-with eyes bathed in tears.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If this is not quite the exact tale, it matters, as I said above,
-very little. It is the story, in its essence. The age of
-sensibility ‹praise be to our fate!› is no longer with us;
-but there is something permanently true in the picture it
-sets forth. To the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">philosophe</span></i> of mature years the mere
-word <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pervenche</span></i> suddenly recalled, in a poignantly intimate
-manner, the first love of his spring-time. <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Veteris vestigia
-flammae!</span></i></p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_68'>68</span>And we are not to wonder that the echo from a world irremediably
-lost should have affected the morose, self-centred
-reprobate in an uncontrollable manner. I venture to think
-that, with the least sentimental of us, the sudden
-rediscovery, of some long forgotten youthful impression
-can hardly fail to evoke, however transiently, a certain
-dreamy emotion: half pleasure, half melancholy.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id012'>
-<img src='images/image087.jpg' alt='child outside with hoop' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now, in the case of the Master of the House—and he
-is thankful to realize it—early memories of delight in
-flowers and such things are associated, not with the
-troublous times of young manhood’s protean heart affairs,
-not with the <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Sturm und Drang</span></i> days of the dawning
-moustache, but rather with the quaintly fanciful inner life
-of boyhood. They come back borne upon the colours
-and odours of such early friends as Lilac and Acacia;
-common Wallflower—<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Giroflée</span></i>, our Gillyflower;
-wild Violet and Primrose—<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">gallicé “Coucou”</span></i>;
-Hollyhock or rather <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Rose-trémière</span></i>; Lily-of-the-Valley;
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Muguet</span></i>.... It is the old French
-name that most readily slips from my pen.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Owing perhaps to a childhood spent almost
-wholly in France, and to the completeness of the
-break that necessarily ensued when the English
-born but French nurtured boy was at last allowed
-back to his own and proper land, all these memories
-seem to belong to a world utterly apart—to something
-rather fantastic, unconnected with later life
-and interests. Moreover, being of childhood and
-of a time when the world seemed uniformly kind,
-they retain an allurement all their own. One
-pleasant recollection of those far-off days does not
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_69'>69</span>hook on to others, bitter, regretful, or let it be even merely
-ruffling ... inevitable chain of responsible experiences!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Our early memories are like works of art: they have
-a way of perpetuating in beauty things that perhaps were
-not really beautiful in themselves. About them there is
-an unconscious selection which, having been made by
-a mind still essentially serene, has contrived a subtle
-harmony of all the elements. Upon the pictures of its
-store, a child’s memory lays an emphasis strangely
-different to that which the critical powers of later growth
-would set. And it is this quaint insistence on certain
-“odd corners of things” which ‹among other reasons› makes
-them so dearly personal and private to the older mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In my own case, as I have said, they belong to a world
-still more remote than the childhood of most men of
-“Grandpa” status—a world which has not even the link
-of language to connect it with the present!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Paradoxically, this is perhaps the reason why I take so
-much pleasure in finding these happy-hued and odorous
-things now rising, and living under their right English
-names, in a garden of my own. To the other denizens of
-Villino Loki they are part of the excellent general company
-foregathering in our garden: but to me they are in many
-ways my intimates. We seem “to have known things
-together”; things doubtless of no importance, but pleasant
-to recall in casual intercourse.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_70'>70</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>IX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figleft id012'>
-<img src='images/image089.jpg' alt='flowers on branch' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The Lilac and Acacia, for instance, were the
-flower-bearers of the tree-planted playground
-of that jocund old school where I received the
-first rudiments of education: the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution
-Delescluze</span></i>, then situate in a kind of backwater
-of the faubourg <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Honoré</span> at the angle facing
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Palais de l’Elysée</span></i>. It has, alas long since
-been swept away to make room for modern
-mansions. This ancient <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution</span></i>, or preparatory
-school, would seem to have dated from the distant
-days, early Louis XV probably, when the north
-side of the then lengthening noble <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">faubourg</span></i> must
-still have been occupied by meadows and orchards.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='figright id012'>
-<img src='images/image089a.jpg' alt='branches with leaves' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>By the way, it has never occurred to me before to
-look up that little topographical matter authoritatively.
-I do so now. I have here a copy of a wonderful
-work, the “perspective” map of Paris as it stood
-in the ’thirties, of the eighteenth century. It is called
-the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Plan de Turgot</span></i>, having been surveyed, and
-engraved, in lavishly decorative style,
-by order of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Louis-le-Bien-Aimé</span></i>, under
-the care of the celebrated <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Prévost
-des Marchands</span></i>. The book is quite
-the most fascinating of its kind I know—and I
-think I have handled as goodly a number of
-such works as any man alive. ‹The nearest
-approach to it, in point of what one may
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_71'>71</span>call picturesque perspicuity, is the wonderful bird’s-eye
-view of Edinburgh set down by James Gordon of Rothiemay,
-and engraved at Amsterdam by F. de Wit, about
-a century earlier.› This plan of Turgot is an elaborate
-affair indeed—an atlas of twenty large sheets, showing
-practically every individual house of any importance.
-Would we had such a work in existence dealing with
-Georgian London!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, to investigate.... Aye, here are the orchards and
-market gardens, beginning at the very back of a narrow
-line of houses, covering all the ground of what nowadays
-is a close network of stone-fronted streets! Here stands
-the Hôtel d’Evreux, the last, moving westward, of that
-array of lordly mansions: the Hôtels de Montbazon, de
-Guébrian, de Charost, de Duras.... A few of these
-patrician dwellings, each with their own formal gardens
-stretching southwards to the Champs Elysées, have retained
-to our own times their dignity unimpaired. But
-where are now scattered most of these grand French
-family names, since the tornado of the great Revolution?
-But, to our map.... Yes, this Hôtel d’Evreux—whilom
-appanage of Madame de Pompadour, now the aforesaid
-Palais de l’Elysée; residence, in due rotation, of the swift-changing
-presidents of the Republic—is here under my finger.
-And its position unquestionably fixes, some two hundred
-yards westward, that of the now vanished <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution
-Delescluze</span></i>, so interesting to me. And here spread themselves
-the orchards, of which the existence a moment ago
-was, after all, only a matter of surmise!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>PLUM-TREE GUM</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>My discovery adds particularity now to the remembrance
-of that mellow place.... A goodly number of antiquated
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_72'>72</span>fruit trees were scattered about the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cour de récréation</span></i>. I
-can now carve it, in fancy, out of the cultivated land shown
-by the engraver in the most engaging conventional manner,
-at the back of the northern street front—an acre or so.
-Perhaps a little more; likelier still, a little less: recollections
-of this kind have a knack of magnifying affairs. It
-is bounded by grey walls, tall and thick, but distinctly
-decrepit. The trees were, of course, long past bearing,
-through age and neglect; but they were pleasant company,
-whether snow-laden, or in summer affording their scanty
-shade. Plum trees they were, I should say. At any rate
-the rough bark of their boles distilled a kind of brown gum
-which was in great demand among us small boys for immediate
-consumption; and sedulously scooped out, as soon
-as discovered, with the help of the stump end of a steel-pen
-nib.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Interspersed among these remnants of the forgotten orchard
-were the odd groups of Lilacs and Acacias previously
-mentioned. The latter, the Acacias, were tall and above
-interference. But strict were the standing orders touching
-the bloom of the Lilac, and dire the prospect of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pensum</span></i>
-or <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">piquet</span></i> to the youthful scholar who should dare to pluck
-the fragrant bunches!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Thus came the Lilac to assume a character at once sacred—or,
-at least, “taboo”—and at the same time perennially
-tantalizing. It was long before the realization dawned that
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lilas</span></i> were not the rare and precious blossoms that so
-uncompromising a prohibition appeared to proclaim. As
-a matter of fact, the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lilas</span></i>, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Blanc ou Rose</span></i>, is one of the
-commonest of spring objects in France. Almost might it
-in its popularity be regarded as the national emblem of the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_73'>73</span><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">renouveau</span></i>, much as with us the pallid, delicate Primrose
-is held to herald the last of wintry days.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The old French name for the latter is <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Primerole</span></i>, suggestive
-by its etymological connection with “prime,” of the
-youth of the year. We have made of it Prim<i>rose</i>, through
-the usual process of popular phonetic adaptation, which
-ever tends to make a word sound like something already
-familiar. So that the old <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Primerole</span></i>—meaning simply an
-early floweret, <i>primula</i>—has become with us “the early
-rose”! The French dubbed it <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Primevère</span></i> a learned
-equivalent for the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Coucou</span></i> of the rustic tongue, to
-symbolize the advent of vernal days.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The name brings at once to mind the well-known yearning
-lines:</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">O Primavera, gioventù dell’ anno!</span></i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">O gioventù, primavera della vita!</span></i>”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In France, however, the accepted harbinger of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">les beaux
-jours</span></i>, is not the</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>“Pale cowslip, fit for maiden’s early bier,”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>not the faint Primula but emphatically the Lilac—the Syringa
-Vulgaris; the joyous <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fleur des humbles</span></i>, as contrasted to
-the noble Rose.</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Oh, gai! vive la rose,</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La rose ... et les lilas!</span></i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>runs the refrain of olden days.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During the last century or two it has grown as common,
-almost, around villages as the hawthorn, the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Aubépine</span></i>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_74'>74</span>itself. But it is perhaps best appreciated in the towns.
-While the tender purple bloom lasts, there is scarce too
-modest a working home’s window-sill or mantelpiece for
-the display of a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">branche de Lilas</span></i> stuck in the gullet of a
-water-bottle. And your gay-hearted <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">grisette</span></i> or <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">midinette</span></i>,
-early afoot in the streets, will always spend her first <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sou</span></i>
-of the day on a sprig of the sweet-breathing rosy cluster.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>LAYLOCKS—LILAS BLANC</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>One may learn, whilst intent upon other matters, many
-unsuspected things about objects even as familiar as
-the common “Laylock.” ‹A collection of old letters of
-Georgian and very early Victorian days, with which we
-have had much to do at one time, show a preference for
-this phonetic rendering of the name.› Thus it appears
-that a valuable febrifuge “principle” is obtainable from its
-fruit; that its wood, veined in pleasing colours and very
-fine-grained, is in high request for delicate articles of
-turnery and in particular for inlaying; that a perfumed
-essence is sometimes distilled from it that is almost indistinguishable
-from Rhodes Balsam—and so forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Those, however, are not the points of interest which have
-made it imperative to have a plant or two of “Laylocks”
-in our Sentimental Garden. ‹They do fairly well, be it
-said, in their own specially sheltered, suntrap corner of
-the ground.› No, there is in life an ever-growing motive—old
-sake’s sake. Syringa Persica may mean much to the
-operative gardener, but it can never mean <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lilas blanc</span></i> ...
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lilas rose</span></i>!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_75'>75</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>X</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>As for the Acacias, in that queer old courtyard—distinctly
-exotic creatures, aristocrats in the company of those palpable
-sons of the soil, the caducous orchard trees—I still
-wonder how they ever came there. Their rôle in the life
-of the small-boy school seems to have been that of a
-butt for cockshies, and thus passively to foster a notable
-precision in the use of those small river pebbles with which
-the playground was covered. A game, deeply favoured
-by the young scholars ‹but not recognized by the authorities›
-when Acacias were “in,” consisted in the bringing
-down of some selected bunch of fragrant, creamy flowers
-from its lofty station with the minimum number of pebbles.
-The feat was the subject of wager, the stakes stated and
-paid in steel nibs. Nibs—in the tongue of the aborigines,
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">becs-de-plume</span></i>—were accepted as currency and legal tender.
-It would be truly interesting to find out how this particular
-token of exchange came to be established among
-the youthful communities of French elementary schools.
-Be it as it may, the convention was hallowed by tradition
-“whereof the memory of boy ran not to the contrary.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>GARLANDS AND ACACIAS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>When, however, the pale yellow, incense-smelling, honey-tasting
-racemes were “out,” the devoted Acacia became
-the object of other, slightly different, balistic attentions.
-The boys, be it stated, were regularly released from the
-durance of bench and desk every hour for some ten
-minutes ‹a commendable system with seven to ten year-olds›
-during which the courtyard became clamorous as
-any aviary. During these short intervals of recreation,
-too short to allow of any settled games, a favourite
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_76'>76</span>occupation was the adorning of the inaccessible branches
-with long streamers of coloured paper, previously manufactured
-at home—<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">guirlandes</span></i> by name. These <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">guirlandes</span></i>,
-some twenty or thirty feet long, were wound with sedulous
-care round a suitable stone, leaving a small length as
-trailer; the apparatus was then cast up in a parabola over
-the tree-top. If the indirect fire was successful the trailer
-caught in the leafage, unrolling the remainder and releasing
-the ballasting stone. The most successful shot was, of
-course, that which left the streamer properly entangled on
-the topmost boughs. Each boy had his chosen and
-declared colour, or mixture of colours; and the trophy
-remained, flaunting his achievement “in its own tincts”
-as long as wind or rain permitted. It afforded the small
-breast a distinct satisfaction when, reaching the school of
-a morning, the boy could see his pennant still flying in the
-breeze....</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Such is the strength of the association of ideas that I never
-could come upon a roadside plantation of Acacias in the
-hot plains of Hungary—where the tree is used as commonly
-as in France the Poplar, that inevitable feature of the great
-highways—without adorning it in imagination with the
-multi-coloured <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">guirlandes</span></i> of my first school.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>If there was no reasonable accounting for the presence of
-Acacias at the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution Delescluze</span></i>, the great Poplar,
-on the other hand, that raised its height in the very centre
-of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cour</span></i>, had a well-authenticated history. A relic
-of Revolution days, it was then in its eighth decade, in the
-strength of its age; having been planted, at the same time
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_77'>77</span>as hundreds of others, as a Tree of Liberty—Populus,
-emblematic of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">sans-culotte</span></i> ascendancy—at the time when
-the royal Bastille, emblem of another form of tyranny, was
-laid low.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For some cryptic reason, by the way, the democratic
-Poplar, which had subsisted through many changes of
-régime, and had become undoubtedly too ornamental a
-mark of antiquity to be destroyed, was never honoured by
-the flights of our banderoles. Perhaps it was a result of
-political prejudice, which in France characteristically
-affects the views even of scholars at the hornbook stage of
-life. Or perhaps it was that the old <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Peuplier</span></i> was the
-site of the disciplinary punishment known as <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">piquet</span></i>—the
-playground equivalent of our nursery “corner.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>GLAMOUR OF YORE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Poplar and gummy Plum-trees, Lilac and Acacias, courtyard
-and indeed the whole <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution</span></i>, had already disappeared
-when I bethought myself, for the first time after
-so many years of oblivion, to go and gaze upon the scene
-once more. It was quite in middle life. I had lately been
-reading that sad and strangely affecting work, “Peter
-Ibbetson,” the first, and to my mind by far the best, of the
-three novels written by Georges du Maurier in the late
-autumn of his days. By the thousands who for so many
-years had, week after week, enjoyed the delicate humour
-and pencilling of the great Punch artist, the book was
-received with a favour that paved the way for the greater
-popular success of “Trilby.” But I doubt whether it ever
-appealed to any denizen of our planet as intimately as to
-the Master of the House.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_78'>78</span>Those who have read the curiously original novel which,
-like so many first attempts at fiction, is autobiographical—autobiographical
-as to feelings, if not necessarily as to
-facts—may remember his description of the English boy’s
-early “French days;” and, later on, of the mature man’s
-poignant impressions on revisiting the old playground of
-his life. Now, there were so many points of resemblance
-between the surroundings of Du Maurier’s hero’s childhood
-and my own; so many allusions to the kind of
-things and the kind of people I had once been familiar
-with but, as time flowed on, had dismissed from mind as
-removed from real existence and new workaday points of
-view; they were presented, moreover, in so sympathetic a
-manner, that one need hardly wonder at the sudden resolve
-that rose within me, to go and look up the old place again.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Such a desire, when it comes, has something of the twist
-of hunger about it—it is <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">une fringale</span></i>, to use a word for
-which, oddly enough, we have no counterpart. But, alas!
-delight in scenes of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">beau temps jadis</span></i> is not to be
-recaptured! It may but be espied in fitful, elusive glimpses.
-The world has moved on and the <i>genius loci</i> has fled.
-Have you ever found out that the return, after many
-years, to a place oft dreamed of until then and with never-failing
-tenderness, besides leaving you blankly unsatisfied,
-seems to have killed the glamour, to have broken the magic
-spell of memory? The dream is dispelled. It will henceforth
-nevermore haunt your pillow. You have seen the
-phantom of the past with the eyes of nowadays; the
-new picture has replaced that of the dream—for ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">la boite Delescluze</span></i>—as we irreverent youngsters
-called that respectable institution—unlike those other
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_79'>79</span>places, <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Cloud, for instance, which were fated to evoke
-but a melancholy disappointment, could not be beheld
-again with the carnal eye—not the least vestige of it.
-And it is, no doubt, for that reason that so many memories
-still come flitting back, smiling and clear, of that forgotten
-cradle of scholarship.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_80'>80</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>A glowing log rolls down from its
-allotted place on the hearth, sending into
-the room a jet of wood smoke, blue at
-the stem, white feathering as it spreads
-out; and the pungent smell immediately
-revives a fresh set of scenes from the
-past.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>NOSTRIL MEMORIES</div>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image099.jpg' alt='man on path in town' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>That nothing brings back old memories
-so suddenly and so vividly as perfume
-is a commonplace remark. But I wonder
-whether the extraordinary persistency of
-a first impression, in the case of odours
-constantly met with, has been so generally
-noticed. Perhaps I am peculiar in this
-sensitiveness. Smells, pleasant, indifferent,
-or otherwise, which one is liable to encounter
-in the most varied circumstances,
-should, one would think, cease in time to
-recall any particular period of existence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For example, the delicious smell of roasting
-coffee—an aroma not common in
-England—may well bring you back, at
-a jump, to some foreign, unfamiliar experience
-of your youth—to that early
-morning walk in the little Flemish town
-of which you have forgotten the name;
-where, as you sauntered down the street,
-you were greeted at nearly every doorstep
-by this pungent savour. The black cylindrical
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_81'>81</span>family roaster, its berries rattling musically within,
-was being carefully revolved over its bed of live charcoal
-by the boy of the house, or perhaps by the housewife herself.
-The delicate, diaphanous sky-blue smoke of the
-beans, as they reached the perfecting point of their charring,
-struck your eye as gratefully as the fragrance it conveyed
-to your nostrils. No wonder that, after a long
-spell, even a distant whiff of that odour of promise should
-bring back a definite picture. But that essences of such
-everyday character, say, as petrol; or that which accompanies
-the peeling of an orange, should still have the power
-of bringing me back, instantly, to the hours of my early
-schooling, is in truth a curious matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the case of petrol, perhaps, the connexion is less
-extraordinary. Until the age of the motor was ushered in—and
-that is barely a score of years ago—the smell of
-“petroleum,” as it was still called, could come upon the
-sense as an odour out of the usual run.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Whenever I come across it now, it never fails to waft me
-back to the old class-room of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution</span></i>, the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Etude
-No. 3</span></i>, where I first made acquaintance with the possibly
-wholesome but not otherwise attractive redolence of the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">lampes à petrole</span></i>. That was during the short days of
-the year, when these luminaries were brought in soon after
-four o’clock, and suspended over our young heads—a
-ceremony coinciding with the last hour of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">classe</span></i>—at the
-end of which the assembly would be dispersed for the day:
-the bigger boys walking back to their neighbouring homes,
-the smaller being fetched by their <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bonnes</span></i>, or it might be
-the footman; or yet, in unpropitious weather, by anxious
-parents in carriage or <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fiacre</span></i>.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id011'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_82'>82</span>
-<img src='images/image101.jpg' alt='back of child sitting on bench' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Quaint place, that <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Institution</span></i>—when
-one looks back on it from this far
-end of the road! I think I can breathe
-its peculiar atmosphere this instant—and
-see the queer, long, low room,
-with the beams across the ceiling;
-the whitewashed walls, covered with
-highly coloured elementary maps and
-graphic pictures of the metrical
-system applied to measures lineal
-and cubical, solid and liquid, and to
-the national coinage.... There they
-are: the six rows of benches and
-desks, each with its half-dozen
-youngsters, some elaborately drawing
-a steel nib, in strokes alternately
-swelling and slender, over a copybook of bafflingly soft
-paper, productive of periodical splutters; others reading
-‹in earnest or in pretence› a chapter of <cite>Epitome</cite>; others,
-again, committing, with dumb mouthing, a fable of La
-Fontaine to memory for to-morrow’s recitation, until such
-moment as the cracked voice of the courtyard clock
-striking five should proclaim the hour of release. The
-usher, ensconced <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">in cathedra</span></i>, at his high desk; a smaller
-lamp for his especial benefit burning ‹and smelling› by his
-side; a book before him.—In his own walk he must have
-passed, methinks now, for something of a dandy, in the
-cheap line; for he remains associated more with sedulous
-trimming of nails, with pulling out of curly brown
-whiskers; with a nervous, tricky settling of collar, tie and
-cuffs ‹obviously false›, than with anything else.... He
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_83'>83</span>yawns amain. He consults his watch, and closes it with
-a click in the midst of the great silence of the room—the
-silence made more sensible, rather than disturbed, by the
-recurrent splutter of a pen-nib, or the turning of a leaf of
-<cite>Epitome</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>That <cite>Epitome Historiae Sacrae</cite> was a primer adapted
-to first year boys—a small buckram-bound book compendized,
-poetically expurgated, and made in truth singularly
-attractive to the young imagination—more attractive even,
-I fancy, than those Fables of La Fontaine and of Florian
-that, read in the light of “short stories,” were such
-favourites. It was, by the way, called <cite>Epitome Sacrae</cite>
-or even <cite>Sacrae</cite> pure and simple, in the same manner as the
-volumes allotted to the two subsequent years were known
-respectively as <cite>Latinae</cite> and <cite>Graecae</cite>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I would give a fairly large coin of our present money for a
-copy now, could I come across one in some old bookstall on
-the quays. But, from their very nature, the cheapest
-books are among the rarest things to recover at second
-hand.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>SCRIPTURE STORIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was within the pale green covers of that queer little
-tome that I tasted for the first time the literary savour of
-the various <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">genres</span></i> in tale-telling; of pastoral and romance,
-of idyll and tragedy. One could not truly say that any
-very strong impression of a sacred character was conveyed
-through the collection of Holy Scripture stories. But it is
-doubtful whether anything read in after-life was stamped
-so clearly on the imagination as the poetry of Ruth amid
-the ears of barley, of Rebecca and the pitcher of water, of
-Rachel; as the romance of Joseph and his brethren; as the
-tragedy of Samson and Delilah; as the war pictures of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_84'>84</span>Jericho and Jerusalem. It may have been a jumble of
-disconnected tales—and, for the boys, nothing more than
-tales—but each remains cut out in clean outline and
-brightest colours that are never likely to fade. To this
-day a field of golden corn, newly reaped, in pastoral
-Dorset, under a hot harvest sun, will raise the bright
-phantom of Boaz and the gentle gleaner. A country lass
-at the fountain, or even merely the rim of some disused
-and filled-up well, aye even such cryptic names as Jakin
-and Boaz, the pillars, will conjure up again some picture
-first raised from the pages of that <cite>Epitome Sacrae</cite>, read
-under the light of the brown lamp gently swaying in the
-draught of the school-room above our ruffled heads ...
-and steadily smelling of petrol!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_85'>85</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Connected with those enthralling first tales, now
-that I come to think of it, is the development of certain
-simple tastes in food which have endured through a life not
-altogether devoid of gastronomic discrimination. Among
-these may be mentioned a special delight in lentils—later
-on extended to other members of the pulse tribe, but in its
-origin especially concerned with lentils. It is to be noted
-that the <cite>Epitome</cite> rendering of what in the Authorised
-Version appears as red pottage is <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">un plat de lentilles</span></i>.
-Now lentils, stewed in some toothsome reddish sauce ‹not
-innocent of the savoury onion› was a standing Friday
-dish in the refectory at Delescluzes ‹together, be it said,
-with a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Saint Jean</span></i> fish-pie—<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Saint Jean</span> being the equivalent
-of our own mediæval “Poor John,” otherwise salt
-cod›. The small boy, however, who was destined, at the
-maturity of time, to become the Master of the House at
-the Villino Loki, was allowed a fair mutton chop of his
-own by special compact with M. Delescluze, as a concession
-to his Protestant heresy.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image104.jpg' alt='children eating at table' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE DELECTABLE LENTIL</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The arrangement had been made
-when the dietary of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">jours
-maigres</span></i> came, quite accidentally,
-to the knowledge of his anxious
-parents. Such a concession might
-have bidden fair to scandalize the
-youthful republic at dinner time—if
-not perhaps on purely dogmatic
-ground, at least upon a question of invidious
-privilege. But it happened that the intended beneficiary of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_86'>86</span>the bi-weekly <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">côtelette</span></i> had been struck by that puzzling
-tale of Esau’s birthright so readily exchanged for a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">plat
-de lentilles</span></i>.—Red pottage had become invested with an
-almost mystical quality.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is often a good deal of auto-suggestion connected
-with matters of food pleasure. At any rate the Friday
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">plat de lentilles</span></i> ranked among the most desirable of eatable
-things, in his young opinion. The answer to the jeer that
-greeted him from the neighbour on his right, as the
-appetizing grill was laid by the grinning attendant for the
-first time upon the wooden board before him, was a prompt
-offer of half the flesh portion for the whole of his allowance
-of pulse—and a similar disposal of the remainder on
-the left-hand side. One chop for two plates of the savoury
-mess: the barter, as far as the pleasures of the table were
-concerned, was one of gain, for all parties. It had the
-further advantage of cutting at the root of conversational
-unpleasantness. The exchange of a single fat, heretical
-chop for two helpings of orthodox meagre fare became
-an established compact—one, it must be said, which
-demanded not only secrecy but adroitness for its
-fulfilment.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The redistribution of the courses was usually carried out
-under the shelter of an enormous <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">broc</span></i> ‹a relic of conventual
-furniture›, the French representative of our old
-English Black Jack; an obese, jug-like, wooden contrivance
-with iron hoops, containing something better than a
-gallon of the anodyne mixture called <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">abondance</span></i>—one part
-thin red wine to four of water. It was a supply which
-could, without danger to sobriety, be drawn upon, as the
-regulation had it, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à discretion</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_87'>87</span>The parties to this lentil transaction, which took place at
-the end of the long table farthest from the eyes of the
-presiding usher, had to bid for turns.... Where are you
-this day, you the only two whilom reprobate amateurs of
-chops on fast days whose names I can yet recall? You,
-Victor de Mussy, with the notable store of infantile
-catches and conundrums? And you, Guilleaume Moreau,
-of more plebeian stamp, who used to look up words for
-me in the dictionary—a task I truly loathed—at the rate of
-three words for one <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bec-de-plume</span></i>? If you are still in the
-land of the living, I would take a fair bet that it never
-occurs to you now to order, of your own accord, a dish
-of lentils!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE INCOMPARABLE ORANGE</div>
-<p class='c008'>Another persistent “nostril memory,” as I have said, is
-that of the orange. It is a curious one. Of a certainty I
-must have eaten of the golden apple many a time before
-that notable night when I was first taken to a theatre.
-And yet it is invariably that delirious occasion which is
-recalled, for however fleeting a moment,
-when the bursting of the essential oil cells
-of an orange peel sends forth its fragrance.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id011'>
-<img src='images/image106.jpg' alt='child leaning over' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The drama was “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bas-de-Cuir</span></i>”—an
-adaptation of Fenimore Cooper’s Red
-Indian tale “Leather Stocking.” When
-I say that the part of “Leather Stocking”
-was taken by Frederic Lemaitre—personified
-genius of the old Romantic
-Melodrama!—that the playhouse was
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Les Folies Dramatiques</span></i>—it will be patent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_88'>88</span>to anyone familiar with the annals of the Paris stage that
-I refer to a very distant period. I could not have
-been more than eight years old. In those days, apparently,
-the custom, delectable to the boys if less so to
-their elders, of consuming oranges between the acts had
-not yet fallen into desuetude.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is very odd. There are as we know a large number of
-recognized methods of eating an orange: from the
-elaborate and super-epicurean Japanese dissection within
-the skin, which removes every pellicule and every pip out
-of the fruit, preparatory to “spooning” the pure pulp,
-with or without sugar, down to the simple suction known
-as “Mattie’s way.” Whatever be the process, the effect
-never fails if I stand by: as sure as the first puff of fresh
-orange peel meets me, so is my mind instantly brought
-back to some scene connected with “Leather Stocking”; to
-some sense of the very first dramatic emotion ever known—the
-silent laughter of the trapper; the faint, distant war
-yell of the Huron; the darting of the bark canoe down the
-rapid; the crack of a gun: the flare of the camp fire—what
-not? It is, of course, but a transient flash now, but there
-it always starts, harking, for a second or so, back half a
-century in the middle of completely unrelated thoughts and
-in surroundings the least likely to evoke the past—in the
-silence of a sick bedside, or amid the hot dustiness of a
-holiday crowd; or even, at dessert time, in the company
-of some fair neighbour whose young, healthy powers of
-table enjoyment enable her to conclude a regular dinner
-with a whole orange eaten in the appreciative and fragrant
-manner known as <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">à la Maltaise</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Scent alone, and that only for a second at a time, possesses
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_89'>89</span>this fantastic power. The taste of marmalade, for instance,
-is fraught with no special memories. As for the pleasure of
-sight in connexion with the orange, it is now concentrated
-upon the half-dozen trees—in pots, but bravely bearing
-year by year their little burden of fruit destined to grow
-for purely ornamental and “Italian” effect within doors at
-the Villino.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What a marvel would an orange be considered, had it not
-become an object of our everyday life! We take it as a
-matter of course; but how much poorer would the world
-suddenly seem if oranges became henceforth unobtainable!
-And the lemon! If lemons cost a guinea apiece, I once
-heard a physician say who had a special experience of its
-wide-reaching healing powers, then would mankind appreciate
-the treasure it has at hand! One-half of its being,
-and by no means the less important, the rind, is deplorably
-neglected. We deal with it as with a practically worthless
-husk. If we more generally understood the value of its
-ethereal oil, we might save ourselves many a spell of
-unaccountable physical depression. I can personally testify
-to numerous instances of feverish bouts cured solely by a
-hot decoction of lemon zest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A similar virtue, by the way, seems to reside in the leaves
-of the Citrus Limonum. In southern countries—especially,
-I am told, in Spanish America—these leaves are obtainable
-in the dry state, and used as a febrifuge and alternative
-“tea,” or rather tisane, with marked results.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_90'>90</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>THE INVALUABLE ONION</div>
-<p class='c008'>Talking of the proper need of appreciation that might be
-rendered to some of nature’s goodly gifts, if only they were
-presented to us as something rare and novel—what of the
-humble but invaluable onion? “The onion,” as Stevenson
-says in his masterpiece, Prince Otto ‹and great was my
-satisfaction when I first read the pronouncement›, “which
-ranks with the truffle and the nectarine in the chief place
-of honour of earth’s fruit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Truffle and nectarine are doubtless honourable terms of
-comparison, but I make bold to believe that any well-constituted
-jury of epicures would not hesitate to award
-the humble onion the place paramount among all the
-savours of civilized cookery. There are a certain number
-of curiously constituted people who absolutely refuse to
-countenance the onion in any connexion, however subdued
-and distant; who profess, whether in æsthetic affectation
-or through some innate queasiness, to look upon it as
-pure abomination. There are also those who assume a
-similar intolerant attitude towards tobacco. But who shall
-deny that, even as tobacco to the meditative and restful
-moments, the savoury onion has not added through the
-ages an incalculable zest to the hour of physical restoration?
-There could be no cuisine, on any varied scale,
-without it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“If the onion did not exist,” said a great <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cordon-bleu</span></i>,
-paraphrasing a well-known philosophical pronouncement,
-“it would have to be invented.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Discreetly introduced, and subdued by happy blendings, it
-holds the finest of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fumets</span></i> for your gastronomist’s palate:
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_91'>91</span>and, in all its own undisguised vigour, it will invest the
-coarsest or most tasteless food with never-failing allurement
-for robust appetites, whatever changes be rung upon
-the raw or pickled, the white-boiled, the golden-fried, or the
-brown-stewed.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image110.jpg' alt='man at outside table' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It must have been that russet background of onion which
-justified my youthful preconceived notion of the pricelessness
-of “Red Pottage” as an article of food. It no doubt
-fixed the taste for life. Of course, in all matters of
-earthly enjoyment, the “psychological” moment ‹which,
-by the way, is so often purely physiological›
-plays an important part. Certain
-tastes reveal themselves only as pleasurable
-in certain surroundings. A draught
-of coarse, dark wine of la Mancha, sucked
-out of the goat-skin sack, with its obtrusive,
-pitchy twang, will be a pure
-delight on the side of some dusty, stony
-Castillian road. And no one who has
-not had, in some wild out-of-the-way
-mountain village, to break his fast at
-peep-o’-day upon a chunk of grey bread,
-stone-ground and tasting of the wheat-fields,
-a handful of salt and a couple of
-Spanish onions, will ever know all the
-excellences of that juicy bulb.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is reported that, like his furiously
-assertive relation, garlic, the onion has
-very definite medical virtues. Some claim
-for it a power to cure sleeplessness—dreaded
-distemper—and also various antiseptic
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_92'>92</span>properties. This is as may be. The province of the
-precious plant, the duty which it fulfils well and simply, is
-that of supplying savour to things that may be nutritious
-but lack appetizing virtue. Many are the instances that
-might be adduced in support of this economic plea, but
-none more directly to the point than that of the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soupe à
-l’oignon</span></i>, which your thrifty French housewife contrives
-at shortest notice—the traditional “soup meagre,” object
-of such bitter contempt in our beef-gorging Hogarthian
-days.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>This new culinary topic sets me once more back in the
-streets of old Paris, on the occasion when I made personal
-acquaintance with the possibilities of a penny meal—the
-best appreciated breakfast I have ever known.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was in the very last of my French days. Paris had
-then recovered from the miseries of the German siege and
-the nightmare of Commune anarchy, three years past.
-Within the next few months a new life was to be opened
-to me in England. The prospect of the great change, albeit
-fraught with some features of gravity, was exhilarating.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lycée</span></i>, for all its admirable scheme of studies, had
-lately been abandoned in favour of a quaint old British
-scholar, very poor, very learned, who lived on the heights
-of Montmartre, in the oddest little house—so filled with
-books that almost everywhere one had to move literally
-edge-ways. The very stairs, for lack of shelves, were
-piled on both sides with volumes, old and modern,
-tattered or nobly bound, stored regardless of subjects,
-merely in sizes for the sake of room.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_93'>93</span>Long could I talk about you, O my dear Mr. Gilchrist—you
-with the keen eyes and the vigorous hook nose
-‹always half-filled with snuff›; with the flowing
-beard of venerable threescore and ten, who
-taught me to read “the classics” after
-the English manner, <i>i.e.</i>
-with a regard to quantities;
-who, for the
-modest and
-evidently
-much wanted
-fee agreed
-upon, gave me daily at least five hours
-tuition ‹sometimes more› instead of
-the stipulated three! Hours, be it said, that went by lightly
-enough in that queer, snuffy room, where we sat facing each
-other on two straight-backed chairs—eager boy and no less
-eager old man. For, the Latin and Greek tasks over, there
-always followed excursions, one more fascinating than the
-other, into the deep and still unknown forest of English
-letters. And such was the variety and the happy choice of
-excerpts that, incredible as it may seem, the scholar of
-fourteen was oftener sorry than elated to leave the garrulous
-and enthusiastic mentor on his hill-top and return to the paternal
-house in the lower planes of the Champs Elysées.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image112.jpg' alt='child and old man' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>An odd way of life for a youth, during those last few months
-of spring and early summer in Paris! It was full of glad
-aspirations towards the future, it is true, but at the same
-time not without an almost regretful enjoyment of the
-present. The distribution of time was peculiar. There
-was in it a kind of unconscious anticipation of that light-saving
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_94'>94</span>Bill of Mr. Willet ‹which has so little chance
-of being embodied in an Act›. The queer boy, in his
-transition stage, had taken a cranky turn on the subject
-of hours. Having made up his mind, on the one hand, that
-he had an enormous amount of new things to read and
-assimilate before his fresh start in England; and, on the
-other, having heard that one hour of morning study was
-worth ‹on what authority it matters little now› two after
-noon, he had invested in a specially ferocious alarum clock.
-The merciless clamour of this machine drove him out of
-dreamland daily at a quarter to five <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">ante meridiem</span></i>; and,
-strange as it undoubtedly was, it is not on record that
-he ever failed during that period to obey the summons.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A SEDULOUS SCHOLAR</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>There must have been somewhere at the back of so
-unnatural a submission, of such a persistency in a purely
-self-imposed and unnecessary discipline, a sort of romantic
-smack of mediævalism.... The “sedulous <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">escholier</span></i>” ‹so
-warmly commended by Saint Louis› was found awake
-and already absorbed in his search for lore as returning
-day began to whiten his window.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The net result was a couple of hours of really earnest
-work before it was time to dispatch the morning bowl
-of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">café au lait</span></i> and the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pain de gruau</span></i> and hasten to the
-ascent of Mons Martis, where impatient Mr. Gilchrist
-looked for his scholar’s appearance at eight sharp. It
-was very special reading—English History—a subject with
-which the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cours d’histoire</span></i> at the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Lycée</span> could only deal in a
-sketchy manner; but the early-rising <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">escholier</span></i>, greedy of
-new knowledge, was fortunately helped by the appearance
-in that year of Green’s “Short History of the English
-People,” and fell under the charm of the captivating work.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_95'>95</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>PLAYING TRUANT</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have said that it is not on memory’s record that the
-whilom schoolboy, now in his mediæval student mood,
-failed to rise at the appointed clock crow. Of a truth he
-rarely had less than his eight hours good sleep, glad
-enough as he was to retire to rest at nine—“curfew time.”
-But it must be admitted that on one occasion or two he
-succumbed to the weakness of compounding with his
-studious resolutions. The French equivalent of playing
-truant is <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">faire l’école buissonière</span></i>—a taking term, redolent
-of the allurement of hedgerows and free green fields. And
-it is the memory of one of these <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">écoles buissonières</span></i>—or
-rather, in this case, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">écoles riveraines</span></i>—that, through the
-usual devious paths, brings me back to the forgotten
-question of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soupe à l’oignon</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It must have been a very early day in May, for at a
-quarter before five, when the imperative rattle was sprung,
-sun-rays were just beginning to dart between the curtains.
-The birds in the Champs Elysées kept up their concert
-through the morning silence of the gardens with more
-persistent enthusiasm than usual. And on looking out
-of window, under such a pure sky, the out-of-door world
-looked quite extraordinarily inviting. It would have been
-folly to decline such an invitation!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The “Short History,” opened at a chapter of the Hundred
-Years War, was left for the nonce undisturbed: the
-scholar sallied forth to roam under the tall trees of the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Cours la Reine</span></i>, intent, no doubt, on returning after a short
-stroll. But there is in the early morning hours, especially
-on such a morning, the spell of the “invitation to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_96'>96</span>road.” The river-side, so fresh and green, and the unending
-line of giant plane trees on the quays, as he swung along
-to meet the sun, still low behind the Isle of Notre Dame,
-drew him on and on. He decided only to return for
-breakfast and Gilchrist. Then he bethought himself there
-would be time to stroll through those populous quarters
-which, unlike the residential districts, were still in many
-ways the Paris of the Middle Ages. That was the Paris
-which held for him then so potent an interest—the Paris
-within the walls of Charles VI; the town of Armagnacs
-and Burgundians, which had been governed by Bedford for
-his infant English King; the crowded space, in short,
-between the old Louvres and the new Bastille, which had
-been kept in order by the tramping of English men-at-arms.
-One inquisitive excursion led to another—nearly two
-hours had been spent in delightful ferreting; there was no
-time to return home for breakfast before the Gilchrist-ward
-ascent. Meanwhile a positively wolfish hunger had
-begun to assert itself. The scholar “searched his pouch.”
-This was quite in mediæval style; and what was decidedly
-in the same style was the discovery of but two poor
-deniers for all asset! His usual pocket-money allowance
-was then reposing on the bed-side table, far away, save
-for these two pennies luckily forgotten in a waistcoat
-pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This discovery was made, ruefully enough, as he was
-looking about in the vicinity of Saint Eustache for some
-respectable <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">restaurateur</span></i> wherein to obtain the matutinal
-coffee. But two deniers—twopence, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">vingt centimes</span></i>—would
-never purchase breakfast at any table under a roof.
-What the devil...! Well, twopence in this workmen’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_97'>97</span>district would buy bread enough, anyhow, to appease the
-sharpest-set morning appetite. Saint Eustache, as every
-one knows, is close to the Halles Centrales, the great food
-emporium of Paris—a kind of combined Smithfield, Billingsgate,
-Covent Garden, and Leadenhall Market. The now
-frantic owner of the two pence was darting about the
-galleries in search of the first bread-stall, when he was
-arrested by a floating
-savour, truly
-ambrosial. As he
-stopped and involuntarily,
-if quite
-obviously, sniffed, a
-tempting voice rose
-beside him, engagingly
-familiar: “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Oui,
-elle est bonne, ce
-matin. Tu en veux,
-beau garçon?</span></i>” And
-so saying, a fat smiling <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">dame de la Halle</span></i>, with an alert
-eye to business, plunged a ladle into a deep iron <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">marmite</span></i>
-and filled a generous-sized white bowl, something a trifle
-under a pint in capacity, with a steaming brown pottage,
-that in the circumstances was positively irresistible:
-“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Combien, la mère?</span></i>” asked the truant scholar, falling into the
-speech suitable to the place, and fingering the two modest
-coins with doubt and anxiety, even as might a ravening
-Villon, a destitute Gringoire.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image116.jpg' alt='woman holding steaming bowl' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Combien, mon p’tit gros? Mais un sou, toujours!—Et au
-fromage</span></i>,” changing her tone to mock deference as one
-addressing a client of importance, “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">au fromage, dix centimes</span></i>,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_98'>98</span><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mon prince!—Mais, bernique! n’y en a plus!</span></i>”—she added,
-laughing complacently and tossing her head in the direction
-of a second cauldron that lay empty on her left.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The more luxurious cheese pottage being “off,” and time
-of importance ‹it would, volunteered the culinary Madame
-Angot, take ten minutes to prepare the next potful› the
-famished wanderer proffered his penny and received his
-grateful bowl together with some eight inches of “long
-bread” in lieu of his half-denier change. And, leaning
-against a pillar, he set himself to the enjoyment of what,
-as I have remarked before, was the best breakfast of his
-life.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>SAVOURY POTTAGE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Hunger is the finest of all possible sauces—a truism even
-more than a proverb. The snatched crust, the draught
-of clear water in the palm of the hand, at some dire moment
-of want, is more welcome than the most cunning dish, the
-rarest cup in the easy tenor of life. But the plain bread
-and the clear water, however eagerly seized, must ever
-savour of hardship. Now this halfpenny worth of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">soupe à
-l’oignon</span></i> bore none of that character, for all that, as far as
-nutriment went, it consisted of naught but bread and
-water. It had all the attributes of a civilized meal: it was
-hot, savoury, immediately comforting.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As I disposed of it at leisure—for it was scalding, and
-had, besides, in an Epicurean way, to be husbanded
-as a relish to my portion of simple loaf—I watched the
-rotund but brisk dame prepare another instalment of the
-superior, or penny, brew against the next influx of customers.
-The first <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">clientèle</span></i> ‹it appeared in course of friendly
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_99'>99</span>if fitful conversation› came about six o’clock—journeymen
-without a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">ménagère</span></i> at home, on their way to their day’s
-task; or night-workers in the Halles, on their way to
-morning sleep. The next one would begin soon—clerks,
-workgirls, and small employés who have to be at their
-post about eight. Then the demand for the penny bowl
-would rise afresh about noon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To one who was even then tasting the full value of the
-finished product the method of production had the interest
-of actuality, and was otherwise enlightening. And, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pardi!</span></i>
-it is worth recording, as an instance of what could be
-done with raw material to the value of twelve sous—less
-than sixpence—to provide twenty people with a
-savoury dishful of broth and leave a distinct turnover of
-profit.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These—as far as I could judge—were about a score of
-medium-sized onions of the more pungent kind ‹twopence,
-four sous or four cents›; half a pound or thereabouts of
-butter, salt butter it is true, but your Parisian insists
-wherever he can upon <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">cuisine au beurre</span></i> ‹six sous›; a ladle-full
-of flour ‹say one farthing, half a cent›; something like two
-sous’ worth of stale bread, baker’s shop remnants. Leaving
-the cost of firing out of consideration—and in thrifty
-ingenious French hands it would be small—the return
-would be like thirty per cent. on the outlay.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As for the technique of the brewing, it was simple but
-elegant. The sliced onions, fried in the butter at the
-bottom of the iron pot to a pleasing sunset colour under
-the watchful eye of the matron, were at the right moment
-powdered with the allowance of flour and stirred until
-the suitable appetizing brown was achieved—“The flour is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_100'>100</span>just to thicken the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bouillon</span></i>, you understand, my lad,” the
-benevolent operator was pleased to comment, noticing
-inquisitiveness.—Then, at the precise moment of alchemic
-projection, the sliced shreds of bread were precipitated in
-the caldron, and gently turned round with a wooden spoon
-to let them take unto themselves all the unction of the
-butter, all the essence of the succulent bulbs. And presently
-the whole thing was drowned under a cataract of
-scalding hot water ‹some two gallons›. After a bubble
-or two of boiling the combination was completed and the
-savoury caldron was set aside upon a nest of smouldering
-ashes, ready against the next breakfast seeker.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>And the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">escholier</span></i>, having absorbed the last crumb and
-the last spoonful, hastened, greatly refreshed, by every
-conceivable short cut to his heights of Montmartre—<i>Mons
-Martyrum</i>, by the way, some etymologists insist on
-dubbing, in opposition to the <i>Mons Martis</i> theory, in
-regard that it was the site of the martyrdom of <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Denis,
-the French “Champion of Christendom.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>VIRGIL ON “DOGGIES”</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>He was a trifle late—no doubt as a result of short cuts—and
-Mr. Gilchrist proportionately stern, just at first. But
-the dear enthusiastic teacher gradually mellowed under
-the influence of that morning’s reading—the “Georgics,”
-most enchanting of all Garden Talk volumes. The old
-scholar’s geniality had completely returned by the time we
-reached that “doggy” passage of the Third Book beginning
-with “<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nec tibi cura canum fuerit postrema</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I can still see him smiling confidently at me over the line,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_101'>101</span>“Let not thy dogs be the last of thy cares....” There
-was something prophetic about it!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Here, two score of years later, as I dream of the past,
-lies Arabella stretched by the fire, now and again heaving
-her great sighs of comfort. Bettina, curled at my feet,
-looks up adoringly at the master and wags her stump of
-tail whenever she meets his eye. As for Prince Loki, he
-has commandeered the best deep armchair, where he lies
-flat on his back, with front paws folded upon his bosom,
-and hind legs stretched out in abandoned beatific fashion,
-snoring melodiously.... <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Cura canum postrema</span></i>, indeed!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_102'>102</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The Hyacinths are all out in the Dutch Garden. But
-alas, the winds of March!—they grew and gathered and
-became a gale and laid
-some twenty of our
-silver-blue soldiers prostrate.
-Their fat juicy
-stalks snap all too
-easily. In the pots on
-the terrace wall, half
-have been swept away.
-However, thanks to
-our close planting, only
-the eye of the initiate
-could perceive the gaps.
-Right under the study
-windows there are still
-twin lakes of exquisite
-pale sapphire, breathing
-fragrance.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id010'>
-<img src='images/image121.jpg' alt='outside in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the bank below the
-Dutch Garden, the
-Narcissus, which have
-been set to the tune of two
-thousand, are swaying long
-lemon-coloured buds out of a field
-of green spikes. There are, in that tongue of land, two
-Buddleia trees which have grown to unusual height and girth
-and are a mass of orange balls in due season. And there is
-a band of Iris to which we are perpetually adding, but which,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_103'>103</span>mysteriously, never seems to increase. There is also a
-shrubby bit where you will behold a wild rose tree; two
-nondescript flowering evergreens; a darling little Scotch
-Briar, one mass of yellow Pompons, entrancing by their
-wild scent; those disappointing bushes known as Altheas,
-so eulogized by garden chroniclers; and a Rheum.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We planted the Rheum last year. This March it
-astonishes us by the leaf buds it has produced. They
-are like stormy, sinister, crimson blossoms with gaping
-yellow mouths, and look poisonous and tropical: altogether
-out of place in a Surrey moorland—especially with
-the innocence of the grey Lavender plant that grows
-beside them. What a thrilling thing a garden is and
-how full of surprises!—do Rheums always do this, we
-wonder?</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CARPETS OF BLUE</div>
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image122.jpg' alt='flower pot' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>All the Compton pots along the terrace are filled with
-blue Hyacinths and Forget-me-nots; all the beds about
-the house are stuffed with Tulips and
-again Forget-me-nots. Now, some people
-‹we read in a garden-book the other day›
-eschew this plant, <i>Myosotis silvestris</i>,
-because “it spreads so rapidly that it
-may almost be regarded as a weed.” We
-are the kind of people who like our
-flowers to spread like weeds; especially
-when, as in the case of this attractive sinner, every
-bed becomes a delicate cloud of blue from which on long
-stems the Darwins rear their cups of wonderful colour.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id015'>
-<img src='images/image122a.jpg' alt='small flower' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>A little later on, we mean to make the same use of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_104'>104</span>Nemophila, which last year, in spite of ceaseless rain, kept
-bravely blue in the patch where it had been sown until
-quite the end of autumn.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Every one tells us that Madonna Lilies will not succeed in
-our soil. We are making another effort with giant bulbs,
-which, so far, promise splendidly.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id015'>
-<img src='images/image123.jpg' alt='flower' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Fate, in its unexpected way, has provided us with a
-double row of red Duc van Thol Tulips on each side of
-the two little rose beds that run down the grass
-slope under the bench yclept “<i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Schöne Aussicht</span></i>.”
-That particular slope, by the way, in the pristine
-days of jungle, was the worst bit of wilderness.
-Heather, Gorse, Bramble, Bracken and underwood
-made it simply impenetrable. Now, cleared and
-turfed, it leads the eye gently on to the Pine Tree
-Avenue; to the green of the fields beyond; to the
-valley and the distant hills. In a triangular bed
-at the top a clump of Lilac has been planted and
-carpeted beneath with “Bachelor’s Buttons.”
-Already it is very gay, although the Lilacs are
-only in bud. We believe these double Daisies go
-by another title in gardening circles, but this is
-a name associated with youthful memories. They ought
-to flourish the whole year round, since bachelors will
-always be in season. We shall see.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>There is nothing that gives one a more intimate sense of
-the joy of spring than the renewed song of the birds. It is
-good to wake at early dawn and hear the soft sleepy
-calls and cries with which they first rouse each other, then
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_105'>105</span>the exquisite voice of thrush or blackbird, singing as it
-were under its breath the morning hymn which is one of
-the most touching things in Nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Just now a small bird was spinning out a monody as
-delicate and continuous and attenuated as a spider’s
-gossamer—some feathered mother, we fancy, cradling her
-eggs. We never heard any song quite like it before.
-Adam shakes his head and says we are bringing the birds
-about the house with our winter largesses; but one might
-as well be told that if you want to keep your house tidy
-you should banish the children!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Says Victor Hugo:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Préservez moi, Seigneur, préservez ceux que j’aime,</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Frères, parents, amis, et mes ennemis mêmes,</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Dans le mal triomphants,</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">De jamais voir, Seigneur, la ruche sans abeilles</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La printemps sans oiseau, l’été sans fleurs vermeilles ...</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">La maison sans enfants!</span></i>”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Substitute “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">jardin</span></i>” for “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">printemps</span></i>” and you have our
-views. We have no children in this house, worse luck ...
-except the fur ones.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CONCERNING CALIBAN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Caliban, the garden man, has again broken his “pledge,” a
-little quicker than usual this time, and we fear we must be
-firm and keep to our last ultimatum—that unless he takes it
-afresh he will have to go. Caliban always reminds us of
-a prehistoric man. Whenever one meets him he looks
-exactly as if he had just reared himself upright from
-running on all fours, and would drop down again immediately
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_106'>106</span>as soon as we are out of sight. He has an excellent
-hard-working wife, and works very well himself—until the last
-pledge has quite worn away. We are sorry for Mrs. Caliban,
-the mother of three prehistoric babies: for we hear that
-Caliban, in the philosophic language of the district, “knocks
-her about a bit,” when he has had what he calls “his glass
-of beer.”—“You couldn’t wish for a nicer husband, when
-he’s sober,” she vows, poor woman, and is pathetically
-hopeful every time the oath of abstinence is administered!
-It is dreadful how many bad husbands there are in this
-small district. In another family the father is so well
-known that the mere mention of his name is enough to
-stiffen the employer of labour.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>Dere Miss, my husband as been very unlucky and strained
-hisself again and ad to give up his work.</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Thus the poor wife starts the usual appeal when the
-inevitable has occurred and there is no more bread in the
-house. We are quite accustomed to these missives, which
-indeed might be stereotyped with space left for the date.
-Although the brother of a local policeman, this black
-sheep is altogether so hopeless, that, in order to keep his
-poor little progeny from growing sable in their turn, we
-have placed a lamb out here and there in divers charitable
-folds. Alfie, the last rescued, is a more original letter-writer
-than his mother. This was the document that he
-sent her from that happy Home for Little Boys where we
-trust he will grow up with an unimpeachable fleece.</p>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>Dere Mother,—I hope this finds you well. I hope James
-and Vilet and Alice are well and nice and good. This is a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_107'>107</span>very nice place. I hope you will tell me when you are going
-to call that I may be in. God bless you.</i></p>
-<div class='c020'><i>“Yours trewly</i>,</div>
-<div class='c021'>“<i>ALFRED</i>.”</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>In yet another family, the head of which was in the habit
-of spending ten or twelve shillings a week regularly on
-cigarettes and tipple, until Nemesis overtook him in the
-shape of consumption, the pretty, hard-working, fiery-haired
-Irish wife declares without a thought of unkindness,
-that if she could only get him “out of the way for good”
-she could “do all right” for herself and her three small
-children.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE VILLAGE CURSE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>If ever woman has a voice in social reform, though
-with a few glaring exceptions legal interference with the
-liberty of the subject is abhorrent to Loki’s Grandmother,
-and she has little wish herself for suffrage or any other
-rage, she vows that she will vote and vote and vote for
-any measure that may tend to eliminate the Public House
-from the countryside—curse of the small home that it is!
-In every one of these cases there would be comfort and
-happiness in the family were it not for the perpetual
-temptation to the breadwinner.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The blacker the sheep, sad to say, the larger as a rule the
-family of doubtfully hued lambs. Mrs. Mutton—the letter-writer—is
-“not so well just now.” She is pathetically
-anxious that the new babe may be born alive, having lost
-the last one. Loki’s Ma-Ma went to see her the other
-day, and found her with a knowledgeable neighbour who
-has promised to “see her through,” and in a state of profound
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_108'>108</span>gloom, not unmixed, however, with a faint, pleasurable
-importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, Miss, we have just heard of such a sad thing in the
-village. The nurse, she’s just been up to tell me—a pore
-young woman, Miss, gone with her first!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, dear!”—Loki’s Mother is duly impressed, but
-anxious to distract Mrs. Mutton’s mind—“That is very
-sad. I hope you’re feeling pretty well to-day, Mrs.
-Mutton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“No, Miss, I’m very poorly these days. Mrs. Tosher
-here says she’s never seen any one like me. ‘What
-can it be,’ she says, ‘that makes you like this?’ Don’t
-you, Mrs. Tosher?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes, my dear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I fell agin the water-butt this morning,” goes on Mrs.
-Mutton, in the melancholy drone that is habitual to her.
-“A kind of weakness it was come over me. I hit my
-eye—something awful, Miss, as you can see!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The signorina had been tactfully averting her gaze from
-that black orb; she now blesses the superior tact which
-enables her to contemplate it calmly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mrs. Tosher—a large, jovial, untidy female with a shrunken
-“blue cotton” inadequately fastened by two safety pins
-across her capacious bosom—gives a heavy but non-committal
-groan. Mr. Mutton’s name is not mentioned.
-The water-butt explanation is accepted without demur.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Of course, she’s ’ad a shock to-day, Miss, you see,”
-says the village matron, and brings the conversation back
-to the original topic, which is one of great attraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes, Miss, it ’aving been just as it might be me, Miss.”
-Mrs. Mutton sighs, and looks in a detached, if one-sided
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_109'>109</span>manner, out of the grimy window. The visitor perceives
-there is nothing for it: she must hear the details. Wisely
-she resigns herself.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“What happened?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Well, it was all along of two suet dumplings and some
-chops, Miss, which wasn’t as they ought to have been,
-having been kept in the ’ouse too long, you see. Wasn’t
-that it, Mrs. Tosher, my dear?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes, my dear, and some ’ard bits of parsnip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“But it was mostly the chops, Miss, they’d been kept,
-you see. The doctors, they couldn’t do nothing for her.”
-Mrs. Mutton sighs and lifts the fringe of her shawl to the
-damaged eye. Tragic as the tale is, Loki’s Mother visibly
-brightens:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“But then the poor thing was poisoned,” she cries cheerfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes, Miss, potomaine poison along of her condition,
-being the same as mine, Miss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“But, Mrs. Mutton, anyone—”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“No, Miss.” Mrs. Tosher intervenes: she cannot allow
-this foolish attempt at consolation to proceed. “The
-doctor said it was along of her condition.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes, Miss, it’s the condition as done it—all along of a
-bit of chop—kept like—and ’ard parsnips.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_110'>110</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>A friend of ours once told us that a doubtful sister-in-law
-had written describing the weather as “boysterious.”
-The word pleases us. It looks so much more graphic,
-spelt thus, than in the ordinary way. Well, we are having
-a “boysterious” time with shifting winds, this end of
-March. All the poor Pheasant-eye’s leaves are bruised
-and drooping, and the little field of Narcissus under the
-Buddleia trees is bent and tangled. To-day Adam has
-rolled away six tubs filled with last year’s Hyacinths and
-put them in the border before the rough wall in the front
-courtyard, against which we have last autumn planted
-Wichuriana Roses in divers shades of yellow and tawny,
-chiefly “Jersey Beauties.” A row of Polyanthuses,
-“Munstead Strain,” are blooming in front. The
-Hyacinths are blue. The effect ought to be pretty in
-a week or so. When the Hyacinths are over we shall
-go back to the old pink climbing Geraniums for the tubs,
-and they will, please Heaven, flourish from June onwards
-between our yellow roses. We think we will plant pink
-Geraniums, but we are not quite sure, for last year we
-had red “Jacobys” in those tubs, and very well they
-looked. We should not at all object to them in contrast
-to the roses.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>HONEYSUCKLE AND BITTER APPLE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Last night Loki’s Grandmother began to plan a new
-garden extravagance. She finds it very soothing when sleep
-abandons her pillow. We have not half enough Honeysuckle—that’s
-a fact. She thinks she will order a dozen pots.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_111'>111</span>She has also a desire to get a dozen Clematis, chiefly
-Jackmanni, in the mauve and purple sorts, and plant them
-in their pots—the only way, she believes, in which even
-the commonest sorts will grow in this ungrateful soil.
-Honeysuckle, we know, thrives here. One summer we
-took a house on a hill near this, a little house buried in a
-wood, and the whole place was exquisite with the scent
-of Honeysuckle. It was grown all about the house, and
-over archways in the garden. Horrid archways made of
-wire they were: but it didn’t matter, the Honeysuckle was
-the thing. We wanted all we could get of it, for there
-were other odours, not at all so nice, that lurked about.
-The owner of the house, thrifty soul ‹at least we suppose
-it goes with a thrifty soul›, waged war against moths
-with <i>naphthalene</i> and Bitter Apple, which are <i>anathema
-maranatha</i> to us. We have had our nights poisoned in a
-house in Scotland with the reek of Bitter Apple in the
-blankets. We don’t know what people’s noses are made
-of that they can voluntarily surround themselves with
-such a pestilential atmosphere. The owner of the awful
-blankets also keeps her furs with the same evil-smelling
-precaution; and we can trace her entrance into the most
-crowded winter tea-party in London if she has as much as
-passed up the stairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Besides Bitter Apple inside the honeysuckle-covered house,
-there was a pig outside—not on the premises hired by us,
-but in the adjoining place, where there was a school for
-little boys. When the wind blew from the direction of
-that school, the garden was odious, Honeysuckle and all.
-The first day we hoped it might be accidental. Then
-Saturday came, and we suppose the odd man did a turn
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_112'>112</span>at the sty, for there was peace till the next Tuesday,
-when the wind blew from the south again. Then Loki’s
-Grandmother marched into the room of Loki’s
-Grandfather ‹there was no Loki then, so he wasn’t
-a grandfather, but that is immaterial› and dictated
-a letter to the schoolmaster. Loki’s
-Future Grandfather protested. It is the
-kind of thing he hates doing. She drove
-him into the garden to smell. He tried
-to say he couldn’t smell it. Then
-she changed her tactics and hinted
-at insalubrity—a case of diphtheria
-in the village, and the danger to
-Loki’s Future Mother. That had
-him. He went in and sat down like
-a lamb. She dictated, as has been
-said. If anyone wants to know
-the kind of letter in which to remonstrate
-upon a neighbouring
-schoolmaster’s pigsty, he cannot
-do better than copy this model:</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image131.jpg' alt='pigsty' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c019'>“<i>Dear Sir,—I must apologize for
-troubling you but I feel sure that
-you are unaware of the offensive
-condition of the pigsty which
-adjoins our garden—</i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Offensive?” said Loki’s Grandpa doubtfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Offensive,” said she firmly. “Offensive, you can’t put anything
-milder. It’s disgusting, pestilential, a public nuisance.”
-“<i>There is so much sickness in the district</i>—” she dictated on.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_113'>113</span>“Oh, I don’t think I need put that.” Loki’s Grandfather
-was getting bored.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You must,” said she; “that will fetch him more than
-anything. Isn’t he a schoolmaster? If it gets about that
-he’s got an insanitary pig—”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, the letter was finished with this artful twist. It had
-the most brilliant and unexpected results. Not only was
-the schoolmaster profoundly grateful for having his attention
-drawn to the matter—and the pigsty really was better
-ever after—but he expressed his gratitude in the most
-effusive terms. And he and his whole family called, and
-we went to tea in a thunderstorm at the school-house,
-which apparently had been built the day before yesterday,
-for the plaster was so wet the whole place steamed, and
-Loki’s Grandmother caught the cold of her life.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>RUMOURS OF THE PIG-FARM</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is a very singular thing that in Ireland, the Padrona’s
-native land, supposed, and with reason, to be very inferior
-in the matter of cleanliness, the pig should be so much
-better cared for. Never have we found the sweet airs of
-that beloved country impregnated with “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">bouquet de pigsty</span></i>”
-as they are in every farm here. Of course most of the
-pigs in Ireland—nice, clean, intelligent, active creatures—roam
-cheerfully about the roads all day, and share the
-family domicile by night. But even on properties which
-own a separate habitation for the “gintleman that pays
-the rint” it is swept and garnished for him in a manner
-seldom seen over here.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the particular region of Dorsetshire where Loki’s Great
-Aunt dwells there is quite a pretty house and grounds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_114'>114</span>nearly always tenantless by reason of the pig-farm at the
-back. The farmer who kept the farm was amazed and
-indignant when one of the passenger tenants remonstrated
-with him and threatened him with the Sanitary Inspector.
-What if his pigs were noticeable? “Pigs ain’t pizen,” he
-said. I dare say, to him, by reason of associations with
-his bank account, they were sweeter than violets.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Personally we should never keep pigs for choice, no matter
-how interested we might be in farming. However we
-might insist on the spotless condition of their dwelling-place,
-however affectionately we might invite them to the
-frequent bath and rejoice at the clean pink of their skins,
-the horror of the moment of inevitable parting would
-always be before us.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A near relation of ours was the centre of a certain horrid
-little anecdote, likewise connected with pigs, that is nevertheless
-humorous enough. It happened in Dorset, in a
-picturesque manor-house, the walled gardens of which abut
-on a comely, prosperous farm. One April morning the
-air was rent with the agonizing clamours of protesting
-pigs; and she, whose tender heart suffered with the pain
-of every animal, was rent too with compassion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, what,” she cried to her hostess, who was also her
-daughter, “what can Mr. Boyt be doing to the poor, poor
-pigs? Oh! Polly, I’m afraid he’s killing them!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Polly was not at all sure in her own mind that this was
-not the case, but she was stout in asseverations to the
-contrary.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, dear no, darling; nobody ever kills pigs this time
-of year. They’re just cleaning out the sties, that’s all.
-You know what pigs are, darling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_115'>115</span>In spite of a fresh and most dismal explosion, her mendacity
-rose equal to the occasion; and her final statement, that
-she knew for a fact that pigs weren’t half fattened yet,
-produced the intended effect, and the dear visitor was
-convinced.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image134.jpg' alt='woman standing at entrance in wall' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>TIRING WORK</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Later in the day when all was stilled once more, and the
-lovely April afternoon as full of country peace as it should
-be, the two went out and down the lane; the guest in a
-donkey-chair and her daughter by her side. To the latter’s
-discomfiture on their return they met the portly form of
-Mrs. Boyt, emerging from the walled
-garden with an empty egg-basket.
-Mrs. Polly was very anxious to
-skirmish the donkey-chair past
-with an ingratiating and nervous
-giggle; but neither the donkey
-nor the lady in the chair would
-fall in with her strategy. The
-lady in the chair had a liking
-for Mrs. Boyt, and was amused
-at the thought of a little chat
-with her; and the donkey, like
-all self-respecting donkeys, was
-bound in honour to stop dead
-when it was most wanted to
-advance. Perhaps, too, Mrs.
-Polly’s artfulness had aroused
-lingering suspicions, for the
-lady in the chair was very
-firm:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Good evening, Mrs. Boyt.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_116'>116</span>‹No, Polly, it’s not cold at all. No, I’m not going in yet.›
-How is Mr. Boyt?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Mr. Boyt he be fairly, thanking you kindly, ’m. Of
-course he be a bit tired this evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mrs. Polly, with a wild eye, intervened.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I’m afraid it’s tea-time, darling. H’m—H’m—A beautiful
-evening—Mrs. Boyt, my Mother was admiring the little
-calves—Come on, Bathsheba!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In vain she clucked, in vain she pulled the reins; Bathsheba
-merely twitched an ear. The clear voice from the
-bath-chair put all efforts to turn the conversation on one
-side with a decision which swept her into silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Tired? Did you say your husband was tired, Mrs.
-Boyt?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes’m. Pigs be very tiring.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Pigs, Mrs. Boyt?—Oh! what was he doing with the
-poor pigs this morning? He wasn’t—he wasn’t killing
-them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, ’ess ’m.” And, blind to the horror and disgust on
-her listener’s face, Mrs. Boyt proceeded with unction:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Beautiful pigs they was, six of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, but he didn’t do it himself?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, ’ess ’m.” Mrs. Boyt was much shocked. “We
-allus do it ourselves, I do hold en, and Boyt he do stick
-en—very tiring it do be for us both!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was only Mrs. Polly who saw the humour of the situation
-in after days. The beloved lady in the bath-chair remained
-overwhelmed with the tragedy. It was not a subject that
-could be referred to again in her presence.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_117'>117</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image136.jpg' alt='house with smoke coming out of chimney' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>How delightful it is to come back to our moors after
-London! Loki’s Grandmother’s heart always sinks when
-the bricks and mortar begin to spring up about the
-road, and the houses close in around her. Sometimes
-she thinks that what weighs upon it is the
-sense of all those miles of squalor; of all those
-hives of human misery; of all the sin and
-suffering. Perhaps, however, she is influenced
-by mere distaste of the crowd; displeasure in
-living one of a herd in a jostle of houses; the
-ignominy of being a number in a row with
-undesired neighbours on either side! Who
-would prefer to look on pavements, area
-railings and lamp-posts; to listen to the roar
-and turmoil of a life one has no ambition
-to share—a life vexing the peace of night
-and day, rather than feast the eyes on cool
-green loveliness, on rolling moorland; the
-ear on vast delicious silence or the choiring of
-windswept woods? How, in fact, can anyone who has the
-choice live in town, instead of in the fair, quiet, spacious
-country? One cannot feel one’s soul one’s own in
-London: bits of it are perpetually escaping to join the
-giddy midge dance. The individuality evaporates. But
-then—there are concerts, and Wagner’s operas; and one’s
-own select friends and the interest of the great intellectual
-movements! The splendid activities of life seem to pass
-one by in the country. Well, we suppose, like everything
-else in existence, one must take the see-saw as it comes,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_118'>118</span>and accept the bumps for the sake of the soaring. But
-we are always glad to come back to Villino Loki.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A SCHEME OF AZURE AND TAWNY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The discoveries one makes in the garden after ten days’
-absence are thrilling. The three rows of Thomas More
-Tulips under the dining-room window are colouring to a
-glorious orange, and the Forget-me-nots planted between
-them are showing little sparks of blue. The tawny Wallflowers
-at the back are not all we could wish; but, even
-pinched as they are, the effect of their many velvet hues is
-satisfactory. There is a single row of double Tulips
-‹Prince of Orange› at the edge of the bed, between the
-Forget-me-nots. In a week or so, looking up the terrace,
-there will be five lines of flame running gloriously out of
-the blue; a sight to delight the eye, against the curious
-bronze purple the moor wears just now.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Scillas, which we thought were going to fail us, have
-been a tremendous success, and still form pools of glowing
-blue round the almond trees. Next year we intend to
-make a feature of Scillas. They are such tiny bulbs that
-they can scarcely interfere with anything; and we shall
-slip them in among the perennials in every corner, besides
-putting more in the grass terraces. We are also going to
-run riot with “Steeple-Jacks,” especially the light turquoise
-kind. They last an immense time and are of a delicious
-tint. The long border of Campanelle Jonquils that we
-have planted in what we call the “Bowling Green” are
-drawn up as for a review, stiff and straight like little
-soldiers in bright gold helmets. Next year we shall invest
-in three or four thousand Daffodils for the rough places
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_119'>119</span>under the trees, and we mean to star the banks with
-Primroses and Wild Violets.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We have made a vast improvement these days by turfing
-most of the walks, and we now look out on a delicious
-sweep of green. The Lily Border and its opposite neighbour,
-the tongue of land with the Buddleia trees and
-shrubs, look infinitely more attractive thus set into the
-verdure. Great clumps of yellow Polyanthuses and self-sown
-Forget-me-nots make it gay while we are waiting
-for the Narcissus Poeticus, the Poppies, the Lilies and
-other joys to break upon us. The field of mixed Narcissus
-under the trees is going to be one sheet of blossom
-in a few days, blown about, though they be, poor darlings,
-by these fierce and cruel winds. The papers are full of
-exclamations over “winter in April”: so far our high-pitched
-garden has stood it well. This is the advantage,
-we suppose, of its natural backwardness.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are now fired with the desire to turf the Dutch
-Garden; the path under the second terrace, <i>i.e.</i> Blue
-Border, and also the path leading from the Bowling Green,
-so that we shall look down on a succession of green levels,
-each with its wealth of flowers. We want to make the
-whole little place shine like a jewel out of the rough setting
-of the moor.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>TEMPTATION</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Talk of the zest of gambling! ’Tis impossible that it could
-more possess the soul in defiance of purse and prudence
-than the garden mania. If Loki’s Grandmother had hold
-of a cheque book ‹which she hasn’t› she is afraid the family
-substance would flow away from month to month into
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_120'>120</span>bulbs and blossoms, tubers and saxifrages, clumps and
-climbers; not to speak of such prosaic but necessary
-accompaniments as loam, manures, lawn-mixtures and
-“vaporisers.” She would build at least two new greenhouses
-and double her garden staff. And perhaps after
-all she wouldn’t be half as happy as she is. For she
-might be led into “named novelties,” and garden rivalries,
-and splendours of artificial rockeries where in the centre
-of vast beds of slag some microscopic curiosity no larger
-than a spider would spread a fairy claw in the shadow of
-a monstrous label. Perhaps she might be bitten with an
-unwholesome passion for Orchids, and spend the portion
-of her only child, and all the fur grandchildren, on the
-devilish attractions of those plants which are, we are convinced,
-flowers of evil.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Just now her last extravagance has been to order three
-and six worth of White Honesty at ninepence a dozen,
-to plant in among the new Rhododendrons; and she is
-suffused with satisfaction at the prospect of anything so
-cheap and charming. We recommend the effect, discovered
-quite accidentally.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We have really abominable weather. It is very unusual.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“Oh, to be in England,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now that April’s there!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>is an aspiration justified as a rule by a tender interlude
-between the tantrums of March and the asperities of
-May. Last year April came in skipping like a kid on the
-Campagna, even its freakishness full of attraction. Is
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_121'>121</span>anything more charming than to see the kids playing
-among the flocks, as one drives along those roads of
-haunting and mysterious beauty—under that sky incomparable
-in its gem-like purity; to see the shepherd in his sheepskin
-seated on a fence with his legs cross-bandaged, the shrill
-pipe to his lips; to hear his wild strain and know that it
-was all just the same a thousand years ago and more? The
-kids, as they leap out of the scattered flocks, are cut against
-the blue as on some classic frieze; the tawny, melancholy
-plain falls and rises and falls again till the hills amethystine,
-snow-capped, close the field of vision in the far distance!
-The broken line of an aqueduct gleams as if golden.</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“To be in Italy,</div>
- <div class='line'>Now that April’s there!”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki’s Grandmother believes she would give up her
-country and Villino Loki, and expatriate herself for ever
-gladly. But Italy is not expatriation, it is the home of the
-soul. ‹Loki’s Grandpa says he quite admits all that—but
-that for a permanency he prefers his Surrey hills.›</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The fires on the Campagna are rose-carmine as the
-pointed flames pulsate upwards. Our fires here are only
-just the usual yellows. Where is it that Italy holds the
-secret? Is it in the translucence of the atmosphere? How
-the sunlight there lies on a common plaster wall! How
-the stone flushes! Just a little white Villino on a hill-side
-stands in a radiance of its own, and is not white at all
-but topaz coloured!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>To-day, the fifteenth of April, has been as grey and bleaching
-a day here as we never wish to meet again. Even
-the spears of the Narcissus are bruised and drooping.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_122'>122</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Mrs. Mutton, poor soul, has had a dead infant. It
-is perhaps scarcely to be wondered at, as she had another
-encounter with the water-butt shortly before the event;
-but she is as much “taken-to” as if she had been hoping
-to bring an heir-apparent into a realm of splendour. The
-doctor, to console her, asked her hadn’t she plenty
-already.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I did think it unkind of him, Miss! It does seem ’ard!
-I did so seem to long for this one to live!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We had a confidential conversation with the experienced
-matron who was ministering to her, and we mentioned
-the water-butt with some severity. But Mrs. Tosher
-would have none of this. Hers is a large mind philosophy:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Ho! well, you see, Miss, it’s just as it takes them.
-I don’t say as Mutton isn’t a bit fond of his glass; but
-after all, Miss,” she smiled indulgently, “you must remember
-he was a bit upset-like. It isn’t as if there ’adn’t
-been a reason. When ’e ’eard there was going to be
-another, it turned ’im against ’er. Of course, poor feller!
-That was only to be expected like—”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Good Heavens!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mrs. Tosher smiled more broadly than ever at our
-innocence.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Some men do take it very ’ard!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Words failed us. We could not reason upon such a
-point of view.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the bottom of the garden the “little cot,” as Mrs.
-Adam calls it, which she and her husband have made so
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_123'>123</span>pretty, has been the scene of a similar domestic event
-which makes the contrast still more poignant. A little
-Eve, in fact, has been born into
-our small garden of Eden. She
-has received a joyful welcome.
-That most attractive child, black-eyed
-Adam Junior, with the
-mysterious intuition of childhood
-had recently been bombarding
-heaven for a little
-sister. He is now thrilled and
-triumphant at the success of
-his prayers. We personally
-are quite pleased with the
-addition to the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">famiglia</span></i>.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id006'>
-<img src='images/image142.jpg' alt='view of house from garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We wonder whether it is
-because of the Italian atmosphere
-that has so unaccountably
-descended on Villino
-Loki that we and our establishment
-are really falling into
-relations not unlike those which so
-happily subsist between master and
-servant in Italy. The Master is not master, but Father-in-chief;
-the servant are not servants, but members of his
-family—the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">famiglia</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We were afraid our last winter in Rome had spoilt us
-for English ways. We had a delightful famiglia there.
-Fioravanti di Rienzo, the pearl of cooks; Camillo Lanti,
-the clever, busy, and quite reasonably peculating butler;
-and Aristide ‹surname unknown›, the superb coachman,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_124'>124</span>all begged with tears to come back to England with
-us.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Take but a postcard,” cried Camillo, “and write upon
-it ‘Camillo, come,’ and instantly I start.”</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image143.jpg' alt='man in trees' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Will ever anyone drive the Excellencies as I drive
-them?” Aristide demanded. “I would learn the ways of
-Londra in a day—two days. To learn the ways of Londra,
-that would be nothing; but to drive another family,
-that I feel I cannot ever again!”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A FEARFUL DREAM</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was Fioravanti whom we loved the
-most, and whom we did really try to
-get over to us later. But it was a
-case of binding engagements on one
-side and the other. He had given his
-word, as a man of honour, to remain
-a year with his new family,
-and we were pledged to some new
-cook at the moment when he was
-free. So it all came to nothing—which
-was perhaps just as well.
-He was a choleric little man.
-Loki’s Mamma dreamt he stabbed
-the kitchen-maid and buried her in
-the garden, which was not at all an
-unlikely thing to happen, for, like Vatel,
-his dishes were his glory, his honour was
-bound up in them, and the race of
-Cinderellas in this land would inflame
-the blood of such an enthusiast.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>ROMAN MEMORIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>This is not to say that all Italian servants are like those
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_125'>125</span>three. We had some very thrilling experiences in the shape
-of Roman rascality during our first weeks of housekeeping
-there. After the odd custom we had one woman servant
-to three men; and, as the genus housemaid does not exist
-at all in many parts of the Continent, we had extreme
-difficulty in procuring a <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">donna di faccenda</span></i>. We had a
-whole large house in the Via Gregoriana, and it was
-imperative we should have something female to scrub its
-bedrooms and bathrooms.—Scrub? It is not a word you
-could get any Roman to understand the meaning of, much
-less put into application; but still we had to get somebody
-to sweep the dust into the corner or under the rug,
-and pass an occasional wet rag languidly round the rim of
-a bath. Loki’s Ma-Ma, being the Italian scholar of the
-family, engaged the staff. She was enchanted with the
-appearance of a splendid young girl from the Campagna,
-with cheeks like ripe nectarines, and a coroneted black
-head. Alert and brisk as a mountain kid, she seemed to
-us. Alas! who could have thought it? The creature was
-a bacchante! She ordered in a cask of wine all for herself,
-and then ran out the second evening and never came in
-till the next morning. Having danced with Bacchus all
-night, she was altogether unfit for any Christian habitation
-in the morning. It may be all very well to sleep off the
-red fumes on a thymy bank in a pagan world; but it’s
-not at all poetical or attractive at close quarters within
-four walls! A sordid, pitiful, revolting business! And
-the happy mountain kid, who proved after all to be only
-a bad little gutter goat, had to be driven forth when
-the legs that had caracoled so much were able to crawl
-again.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_126'>126</span>Aristide had a profile like the head of a philosopher on a
-Roman coin. He was a magnificent driver. We had a
-pair of powerful, fiery Russian horses, and they wanted
-all his skill. Whenever they took to plunging—and when
-they did so they struck sparks out of the stones and filled
-the street with the thunder of their hoofs—Aristide’s
-method of reassuring “his family” was invariably to
-gather the reins in one hand and blow his nose with great
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">désinvolture</span></i> with the other. He always turned sideways
-to do this, flourishing an immense pocket-handkerchief, as
-one who would say: “Behold! how calm I am!...
-Have no fear!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Only on the occasions when we discarded our carriage
-for the use of a motor was the harmony disturbed between
-Aristide and ourselves. He would droop on his box for
-days afterwards and take the characteristic Roman revenge
-of declining to shave.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki’s Grandmother developed a sudden and violent attack
-of influenza on one of these motor expeditions, and had to
-be conveyed home in a collapsed condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Ah,” said Aristide, “if Mamma had been with me, this
-would not have happened! Autos are nasty feverish
-things.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We were very sorry to leave our Roman house, with its
-delicious proximity to the Pincio. It was a very old
-house, with a round marble staircase, deep-grilled windows,
-and a delightful tiled inner courtyard filled with
-green, where a fountain splashed day and night—a courtyard
-into which the sunshine literally poured. A great
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_127'>127</span>many of the objects which now give us pleasure at Villino
-Loki we placed originally in that double drawing-room
-which the owners of the house had left in somewhat
-denuded condition.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>ORANGES AND ALMOND BLOSSOM</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image146.jpg' alt='orange tree in pot' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The gardener of the Barberini Palace kept us supplied
-with hired plants. Never have we seen Azaleas or
-Orange trees grown like those,
-with such exquisite artistic freedom.
-We had a Tangerine
-tree that was a complete joy.
-This arrangement worked beautifully
-for the first month. But unfortunately
-the gardeners, father
-and son, were professed anarchists
-and, when they were in
-their cups, their ethical principles
-overcame their business sense.
-Loki’s Grandmother had one
-day to stand by helplessly while
-Loki’s Ma-Ma was cursed and
-vituperated in a foam of vulgar
-Italian for innocently requesting
-to have a faded Azalea replaced.
-Not being able to speak Italian
-herself, she could not come to the assistance of her more
-talented daughter.... And both felt ignominiously inclined
-to cry!... Alas! that any spot so beauty-haunted
-should have been desecrated by such coarse and stupid
-passions! Those gardens of the Barberini, with their
-Lemon groves and Orange groves; the lush grass filled
-with Narcissus and Violets, and, in the Roman way, with
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_128'>128</span>water dripping from every corner; with the bits of columned
-wall and the statues and the three great stone pines against
-the blue sky! It is all Italy in one small enclosure.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We moved from the Pincian Hill to much less interesting
-quarters; but, with the luck that followed us all through
-that happy time, quite close to the Borghese gardens.
-There we had a black-and-white tiled dining-room and a
-long drawing-room all hung with pearl grey satin and a
-wonderful Aubusson carpet. And when the room was
-filled with almond blossom there were compensations for
-the exiguity of our accommodation. The lady who was
-obliging enough to accept us as her tenants ‹for a rent
-that filled our Roman friends with horror at our profligate
-extravagance›, although bearing a noble Austrian name, it
-was darkly whispered, had a commercial origin. Her
-businesslike spirit certainly showed itself in her transactions
-with us; for neither blankets, nor cooking utensils,
-nor the necessary glass and china were forthcoming, in
-spite of magnificent assurances.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“What will you?” said Fiori, our beloved little chef, shrugging
-his shoulders, “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Sono Polacchi!</span></i>” “The Countess,”
-he informed the young housekeeper, “sent in her maid,
-and I showed her the few poor pans, the miserable couple
-of pots she expected me to do with. ‘Is it not enough?’
-she cried. ‘Enough?’ I answered. ‘Enough perhaps for
-your lady, for a service that is content with an egg on a
-plate, or one solitary cutlet! But my noble family must
-be nobly served.’”</p>
-
-<div class='figright id014'>
-<img src='images/image148.jpg' alt='man with apron' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Excellent Fiori, he used to trot upstairs every night to
-receive his orders, clad in the most spotless white garments
-and a new white paper cap, which he doffed with a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_129'>129</span>superb gesture on entering the room. Upon receiving
-a well-deserved compliment, he would spread out his small
-fat hands and bow profoundly, exclaiming, “My duty,
-Excellency, only my duty!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In one single instance was his entire content in our establishment
-clouded; that was when, in a moment of abstraction,
-he forgot to send up a dish of young peas—the
-first in the market—which he had prepared with his
-own superlative skill, and adorned with a pat of fresh
-butter whipped to a cream at the top: “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">All’Inglese</span></i>,”
-he called it. We believe he spent the evening in tears,
-and he could not speak of it next day without
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Useless, useless, to try and console me, Excellency,”
-he exclaimed. “I am profoundly humiliated,
-I shall never get over it!”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_130'>130</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image149.jpg' alt='path through garden' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p><i>The Blue Border.</i></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The warm weather has come with a burst in this last
-week of April. We have torn ourselves away from Villino
-Loki to London pavements. The Floribunda trees are
-covered with red buds. We expect a glory when we return.
-Loki’s Great Aunt has presented his family with twenty-five
-shillings worth of
-purple Aubretia, with
-which ‹much to Adam’s
-annoyance› we have decided
-to carpet the blue
-border. The Blue Border,
-we think, is under some evil
-bewitchment. Our late gardener
-assured us that no
-“human gardener” could
-find room for another plant.
-Yet it was the only border
-in the garden that “came up
-bald,” if one can use such
-an expression. Perhaps we
-had too much initiative and
-he too little; a combination
-bound to result in failure sometimes, if
-it is accompanied on one side by plunging
-ignorance, and on the other by “slowness
-of intellect, Birdie, my dear.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>To come back to one’s garden in April after ten days of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_131'>131</span>strenuous London is a wonderful little experience for
-people who care for the pure joys of the young green and
-the spring flowers.—There is an indescribable panorama of
-woodland beauty on the hills opposite Villino Loki. A
-great marching regiment of pines, straggling upwards,
-emphasize the tints of birch and larch—tints which no pen,
-hardly any brush, could portray. The very sunlight
-seems caught and sent forth again from the pale yet vivid
-sheen. The White Broom is pearled with bud; in a few
-days it will burst into bloom and toss plumes as of some
-fantastic, fairy knighthood above the yew hedges that
-enclose the Dutch Garden.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The dogs’ welcome to their lost masters and to Loki
-‹who, of course, always accompanies his family wherever
-it goes› is very genuine, and rather obstreperous.
-Bettine runs in and out of the room, up and down the
-furniture, as if in joyful pursuit of imaginary rats.
-Arabella, fond and foolish as ever, tries to crawl into
-everybody’s lap. Being about the size of a young calf,
-these blandishments are not encouraged. Loki, little
-Fur-man, as we call him, has a different way of expressing
-his feelings. True, he runs about and yelps rapture to the
-other dogs; but he sobs and cries like a child on reunion
-with any of his own, and half swoons with rapture in our
-arms. Sometimes it seems as if the love in his heart were
-too big for his little flame-coloured body, and must burst
-it in the endeavour to express his joy!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>MISUNDERSTOOD CANDOUR</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki is always very bumptious and pleased with himself
-in London—being Only-dog there—but he cannot bear
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_132'>132</span>visitors beyond a certain limit. Friends who come to tea
-are very much touched and charmed at the sight of the
-“dear little dog” going from one to the other, sitting
-up and waving his paws with frantically imploring
-gesture.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image151.jpg' alt='dog waving paws at seated visitor' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Sweet little fellow—what can he want?” they say, and
-vainly offer tit-bits from the tea-table. Loki’s Grandparents
-of course cannot answer, “He begs you to go
-away”—but such unfortunately is the true explanation.
-He sneezes with rapture when the
-door is closed on the last departing
-guest: he then is able to lead
-his Grandmother upstairs for the
-evening romp. His Grandmamma
-has weak health, which is no doubt
-the reason why he has fixed
-on her as the only person
-who understands the true
-inwardness of his games.
-They are very exhausting
-to mere humans, and he
-has a great
-deal of cat
-perversity in
-his composition.
-He spent
-the whole time
-of a recent
-dinner-party
-sitting upon a chair in full view of the company, ceaselessly
-begging with prayerful paws; “Oh do, do go away!”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_133'>133</span>As usual he evoked a great deal of undeserved sympathy—meanwhile
-his tactful family held their peace.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Bettine is growing into the hobbledehoy stage. A few
-weeks ago it was an entrancing spectacle to see her
-playing with a butterfly on the moor. It was a yellow
-butterfly, and we think it must have understood the rules
-of catch-who-catch-can, for it fluttered along just ahead
-of the white puppy’s nose. It was a little vision of youth
-and spring to snapshot for the gallery of mental memories.
-Loki’s female relations, who are given to transcendental
-discussions, sometimes wonder whether in the next world
-they will be vouchsafed these dear small pleasures which
-make up the best of life down here. Unless we find our
-animals there, there will certainly be something missing.
-Surely there are flowers in Heaven, and birds—why not
-those faithful creatures in which a soul seems so often
-struggling into birth?</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>HEAVEN, AND OUR BEASTS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“My little god, my little god!” Maeterlinck makes the
-dog say to his master. It is certain that man, in making
-the dog his companion, has in some sort endowed him
-with spiritual faculties. And it is this piteously loving,
-confiding, blindly adoring, dumb creature that has been
-selected by the “master minds” of the day as the chief
-victim for the horrors of scientific research!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Indeed, that humanity should thus use its God-given
-dominion over the helpless lower order of creation is an
-idea so hideous that it can only have emanated from the
-Powers of Darkness. All the glib arguments that this
-animal torture benefits suffering man seem to us as much
-beside the mark as they are immoral. Almost every crime
-can be justified by some such theory, from the century-old
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_134'>134</span>customs of child exposure in China to the modern
-Suffragette outrages. And already the boundaries on
-this speculative field have been extended so as to include
-members of the community whose defencelessness or
-unimportance preclude unpleasant reprisals. How many
-unfortunate patients, for instance, are quite unnecessarily
-operated upon in our great hospitals? Within our
-narrow personal experience we have known cases where
-life has been absolutely sacrificed to the “knife mania.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki’s Grandmother, who feels very strongly on this
-subject, has always wanted to write an article giving
-chapter and verse of the facts. She would have headed
-her instructive pages with the title “Killing no Murder;”
-but she knows no magazine would publish them because
-of the storm it would raise.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>During a recent severe illness of hers, one of her nurses,
-whom she used to call her “ministering devil,” was very
-fond of entertaining her—at moments when the patient was
-too weak for speech—with the hopes which many eminent
-men of science now entertain of being able, some day, to
-get a bill passed permitting vivisection on the condemned
-criminal!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Why speak of such abominations in these pages dedicated
-to kind, happy days and sweet garden thoughts? Only
-for this reason—that it is the policy of ignoring, of
-cowardly turning away from unpleasant subjects, on the
-part of the great majority of the world that makes the
-thing possible at all.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='figleft id006'>
-<img src='images/image154.jpg' alt='bird flying outside house' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the first orders we give a new gardener is that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_135'>135</span>nothing is to be slain at Villino Loki except the Green
-Fly and the Rose-Beetle. The birds may devour all our
-buds, strip up our crocuses, and denude our
-raspberry canes ‹if they get a chance›. The
-mole may tunnel and burrow and raise his convulsive
-mounds in our most
-cherished lawn—and that is
-certainly a test of garden
-endurance—we will have no
-traps! As for the squirrels,
-we are afraid we have
-cleared too much in our
-wilderness to tempt them
-now. But one of the family
-actually bought little green
-tables in order to spread
-repasts for them near their
-favourite haunt.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In certain wild corners of
-Dorsetshire squirrels become
-almost familiars in
-such households as are
-kindly enough to set forth a dainty, now
-and again, for the frolicsome company.
-One understanding person of our acquaintance was given
-to spreading nuts on a certain window-sill, where every
-day the squirrels used to come and fetch them. One
-morning she was a little later than usual in this attention;
-on coming into the room, she was startled by a knocking
-on the window, and there on the sill sat a thing, all fur and
-bright eyes, knocking with its fairy paw! We think Loki
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_136'>136</span>has a good deal of the squirrel in him. There are no
-end of nice little beasts that Loki resembles. Sometimes
-we declare that he is least of all dog.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE WILD PATCH</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image155.jpg' alt='flowering plant' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is a wonder that people do not make more use of Broom
-in their Wild Gardens. We have seen a woodland path
-where great bushes of alternate white and yellow Plantagenista
-made riot in the sunshine; but it was too
-regular an arrangement to harmonize with
-scene. A wild garden, however cultivated
-secret, should grow as naturally as possible.
-It is a rather interesting experiment
-to fling the contents of a packet of wild
-flower seeds about one’s banks and
-unkept spaces. One forgets all about
-it; and, behold! after the second
-year, there are all kinds of engaging
-discoveries to be made: patches of
-grey-blue Campanulas, bold Foxgloves,
-Loose-strife, white Campions,
-all the more delightful because
-forgotten and unexpected
-and fitting into their surroundings
-as no amount of planting
-in can make them do. A giant
-Mullein has just made itself a
-home under the fir-trees and
-stands as if it had always been
-there, boldly and defiantly established in its
-proper place and determined to maintain it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We caress the project of planting tall Ericas and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_137'>137</span>Mediterranean Heaths on the borders of a certain rough
-path; and in between the Heather we shall make drifts of
-Colchicum, so that it may look lovely in all seasons. We
-do not consider that Colchicum is properly placed in the
-garden. Its summer leaf is too coarse, and it is hideous
-when it dies off. Mrs. Earle has made the same remark
-in one of her delightful books.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>VISCOUNTESS, AND OTHERS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It will be very interesting to see how the new Roses turn
-out. A good many were ordered on the strength of the
-catalogue description, from three different rose growers.
-Hybrid Perpetuals do not do with us; neither do pure
-Teas stand our cold, otherwise we should riot in “Lady
-Hillingdon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You never can go wrong with a Viscountess,” said his
-gardener to a friend of ours.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He was a man of lightning wit—as all lovers of “Savoy”
-operas know.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“That is a very interesting statement of yours,” he said
-in that brief, unsmiling manner that added zest to his
-quaintness. “I have been given to understand the contrary.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We can go wrong with a Viscountess, unfortunately, and
-do. As we have said, Hybrid Perpetuals do not behave
-well with us, except, perhaps, that model of excellence,
-Ulrich Brunner.—Morals are a question of climate even
-with roses.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki’s Ma-Ma ‹to be discursive—and we are afraid that this
-chronicle is nothing if not discursive› was a great favourite
-with this genius of mirth above mentioned, who made the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_138'>138</span>world ring with honest laughter and whose heroic death
-brought many tears, at least to Villino Loki. He used
-to call her “his little Lemur” because she had a way
-of clinging to her mother, in her first debutante days.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Never was there a man so tender-hearted. On his
-estate no wild thing was to be robbed of its life: not even
-a rabbit. Loki’s Grandmother used to be a little timid in
-his company, because of this gift of swift humour. She
-never felt able to meet him on his own ground—except
-once when in a windy June he told her that he had begun
-to take his daily swim in the lake, and she shuddered at
-the thought.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Cold!” he cried, “not a bit of it! Delightful! You
-shall take a dip with me when next you come to us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“No,” she retorted—and it was the only time in all their
-pleasant intercourse that she was ever brave enough to
-make a pass with him—“No, I had rather get into hot
-water with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Alas, alas! That lake! We felt the menace of it even then.
-It was there, trying to save another, he found his death.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It has often been said that real wit is a thing of the past.
-Certainly the younger generation’s idea of pleasantry is a
-kind of rough-and-tumble fight as compared to the neat,
-delicate thrust-play of an older world. But this friend of
-ours had a gift quite apart, a mixture of humour, wit and
-satire, something dry, comic, quaint, peculiarly his own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“It reminds me,” said a clever relation of his once in our
-hearing, “of an old wood carving.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We understood what he meant; the odd angles, the sharp
-turns, the simplicity, the brusque sincerity—and withal
-how richly genial!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_139'>139</span>In a single instance one of us beheld him almost meet his
-match, and that in a most unexpected manner. The
-pretty fairy lady, his wife, happened to comment with
-surprise upon the fact that a woman who had been very
-rude to her should have attempted to greet her upon a
-recent occasion as if nothing had happened.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“She actually held out her hand!” she concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Well, my dear,” observed her lord, in his serious way,
-“that is the member most usually extended.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To the surprise of the whole table, a shy lady on his left,
-who had not yet uttered a word, said in a small meek voice:
-“She might have put out her tongue!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We never met that shy woman again. We should like to.
-“Please will you keep your Pickle out of my preserves,”
-he wrote to a neighbour whose dog was given to roving.
-The neighbour bore a name well known in grocers’ lists.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>For two days the wind has been blowing over the moors
-from the east. The sound of it through the trees on the
-hill-side is like the roar of a torrent; and now and again it
-is like the wash of waves upon the beach. A very
-unseasonable wind, but it makes a grave and beautiful
-music. Fortunately the Dutch Garden with its wealth
-of Tulips is sheltered, or there would scarce be left an
-unbruised petal.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>People are very much struck by our beds of Myosotis,
-surmounted by the swaying chalices of the Darwins. The
-simple plan of the blue carpet for these slender May
-Queens seems to them very wonderful and new.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>OAKS AND BLUE GLADES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, look! What’s happened? Is it real? It’s like
-fairyland!” cried a visitor yesterday to a sympathetic sister.—Such
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_140'>140</span>kind people to walk about the garden with! They
-have themselves a mysterious Oak wood, falling away
-beneath their lawns, that is now carpeted with Bluebells:
-a place to sit and dream in. Oaks are trees full of romance,
-we think. They tell long stories out of the past, and speak
-of Shakespeare and the glories of England, and their glades
-are for ever peopled with brave figures of history or
-fiction.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='tb' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_141'>141</span>
-<a href='images/image162_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image162.jpg' alt='THE BEECH' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE BEECH</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>XX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Beeches, on the other hand, have a kind of fairy glory
-about them that does not seem to belong to our land. We
-drove through a beech forest the other day; the road went up
-zigzagging to the top of a steep hill, and one looked down
-upon the Beech glades, all golden green in a fierce sunburst
-between two showers. And they were still dripping
-with the rain. It was wonderful, but not English, distinctively
-English, like that Oak wood. It was a <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Märchen-Wald</span></i>.
-Siegfried might have strode through it, blowing his
-horn: youth incarnate, leaping out of Mime’s cave to
-conquer the world. On the inspiration of such a haunt
-was the <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Wald-Musick</span></i> conceived.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>MAY AND SEPTEMBER MOODS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>If we had a dwelling for every different mood, a log-house
-at the top of that Beech ravine would suit us very well in
-a sunny month of May. Between the great smooth boles
-of the trees we would want to peep out at the flat wide
-land, with the rich far woods below, misty in the sunshine;
-and the distant moors as with the bloom of the
-grape upon them. We would not want flowers; nothing
-but that heavenly green of the young leaves against the
-blue; and the whispering and the swaying of the boughs
-to cradle our souls; and the thrushes and blackbirds to
-sing the dawn in and the twilight out! How holy and
-innocent and loving would one’s mind become after a
-week in that log hut—a week alone, or with one’s best
-beloved!</p>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image164.jpg' alt='landscape with clouds' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>After we came out from that Beech wood we took a
-wrong turning, and landed ourselves far out on the downs
-instead of back to our moors. Now, for another mood—say,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_142'>142</span>a warm, still, serene September mood—why not a
-small stone house in a high hollow of those downs, miles
-removed from any other human habitation? Just a stone
-house dumped in the hollow—pale grey, so as not to
-offend the eye in that stretch of bleached
-vastness, with a group of Thorns at the back
-and nothing else, not even a path; only a
-long way off, the vision of a white ribbon
-of road, looping and twisting, running to
-the sea. No flowers but the little wild, stiff,
-aromatic things that push up through the
-short turf. Overhead, one or two quite
-round, white clouds, sailing along the
-blue, caught by some high current that
-hardly touches us below—the kind of
-cloud that you see in an old German
-print. And all about, as far as the
-gaze can encompass, nothing but the
-dip and rise, the scoop and billow of
-the downs; and the hollows, blue on
-that wonderful sun-steeped, warm,
-yet bleached expanse. And the
-shadows of the clouds, running
-along across it; and perhaps a
-lark’s song, somewhere not too
-close, beaten back to earth from
-an unseen height of joy; and
-far, far away, the tinkle of a sheep-bell! Would not
-one’s soul expand with the grand silence and the glorious
-wide spaces? One would not want to hear or behold
-the sea, only to taste the salt of it in every breath. Now
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_143'>143</span>does it not seem that up there, sitting outside that stone
-house, you would touch the prehistoric past? Or, rather,
-that the great eternity, the never-dying essences of things,
-would sink into your little passing bit of humanity? Your
-soul would mirror all infinity.—A place to turn
-Buddhist in!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A TUSCAN VILLINO</div>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image165.jpg' alt='house on hill' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>There was a pink Villino on the unusual side
-of Rome. You looked in upon it through high
-gates into a tangle of garden,
-where everything seemed to
-riot. It had an odd, incongruous
-tower from which you
-could surely have a vast prospect
-of the plains of the
-Campagna and the Alban
-mountains beyond. There was
-an archway in one side of it
-through which one certainly
-drove into some inner courtyard
-of delight. That little
-habitation you might covet
-with a covetousness that gave
-you a pain in your heart. We did.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And outside Florence, too, there was
-another small house. It had been once
-a farm. A certain great lady had her
-spring quarters there, liking the contrast,
-we suppose, between that and
-the old Scotch castle where Fate had planted
-her. We drove to tea with her there ‹early
-May it was› through the hot, wind-swept,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_144'>144</span>noisy Florentine streets. It was just the time of year
-when the Iris was flooding the land with its penetrating
-and yet not sickly sweetness. There never was any scent
-so perfect. And the small pink roses were flinging themselves
-over the tops of tall garden walls, as if the prodigal
-Italian springtide had been at its full and left a foam of
-bloom behind it. Up, up the mountain road, between
-uncompromising walls and out into the freer country—and
-there was the farmhouse! Its garden has left an odd
-blurred impression on our minds: vaguely—a path bordered
-by lush grass and gay with Apple trees—there was a storm
-brewing, and all was black overhead; under the weird sky
-the delicate blossoms took a curious vividness like minute
-paintings.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One had to go across a red-brick kitchen to get to the
-stairs that led to the two long, quaint, cool rooms, in
-the farther of which the hostess sat.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>LANDSCAPE ECSTASY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>She had kept the charm of simplicity there. Plain white
-walls and rather empty spaces, with bits of Italian black
-oak, and a painting or two; a vase of lilac, a dim missal
-warmth of colour in the Persian carpets that lay on the
-bricks—that was the picture. A very pleasant impression
-those rooms made, with the old great lady in her high-backed
-chair, clad in flowing black satin and with a white lace
-that framed a face as fresh as the apple blossom without.
-The storm broke as we sat there. She was nervous, and
-so were some of her visitors; therefore she had the
-wooden shutters closed. Perhaps she was not really
-frightened, for she was as sturdy a Scotchwoman as ever
-we beheld, and her bright blue eye was stern in spite of her
-affability. Perhaps she only compassionated the nerves of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_145'>145</span>her guests. Be it as it may, we sat an hour while the
-thunder rolled bars of sound over our heads and the wind
-whistled and the rain hissed and roared down the valley,
-and the lightning kept a perpetual play between the chinks
-of the shutters. And though Loki’s Grandma generally
-gibbers during a thunderstorm, she never enjoyed an hour
-more, so delightful was her hostess and so fascinating the
-sense of isolation and strangeness, being thus shut away
-amid the fury of the elements in a little Italian farmhouse!
-And when the tempest was grumbling itself off in the
-distance, the shutters were all thrown back and the doors
-on the square wooden balcony opened. The air rushed
-in, vivifying, full of the scent of the earth and charged with
-ozone and perfumes. We went out on the dripping
-balcony, and never, oh! never can any of us forget the
-vision! For below the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">casa</span></i> the land dropped away, and
-it was all vineyards; and they rose and dipped and rose
-again, a sight no one has ever beheld out of Italy. And
-beyond were the mountains; and the whole wide valley
-was filled with mist and all of it was stained rose and
-crimson from the sunset.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>You may not believe it, you who read it, but it is a fact
-that the valley was carmine up to the balcony, indescribably
-shot with the fires of the West—a steaming cauldron
-of glory! That is the kind of vision one carries gratefully
-to one’s grave.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For a long time we vowed that our old age would see us,
-like the Scotch Dowager, steeping our being in the joys of
-Spring in a farmhouse outside Florence.—But now we
-don’t know. Villino Loki has laid hold of us; it is our
-real home, the rest are but dreams.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_146'>146</span>The Master of the House saw this morning a tiny
-Golden-crested Wren fluttering from stem to stem of the
-tall Darwin Tulips to pick
-at the Forget-me-nots
-below; and every time it
-pecked it twittered with
-joy, so light a thing that
-it scarcely swayed the
-slender stalks—a fairy
-vision.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image168.jpg' alt='path through garden to house' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The Hemicycle, where the
-grass must be allowed to
-grow lush, because of the
-bulbs, until the leaves
-“ripen off,” is none the
-less attractive on that
-account. There are eight
-little square beds, each
-containing a weeping standard—“Dorothy
-Perkins”
-or “Stella”—thickly
-planted below with Forget-me-nots
-and Bybloemen
-Tulips. Between the beds
-there is a large red pot also
-filled with Forget-me-nots
-and Bybloemen. The Tulips
-have a kind of wild grace, coming out of the long grass;
-and Myosotis, darling little creature, accommodates herself
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_147'>147</span>in every surrounding. There is a pretty, stemmed fountain,
-or rather bird-bath; in its centre, where, in a basin shaped
-like a spreading lotus flower, a sturdy <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">putto</span></i> astride a dolphin
-blows soundless blasts. This half-circle of vivid beauty,
-with the young green grass, the swaying Tulips, the blue of
-the Forget-me-nots against the moor is good to look
-upon.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Beyond the Hemicycle, the Azalea Glade runs down now
-in lines of orange-rose and creamy-salmon, bordered too
-with Forget-me-nots. Up against it the cool silver of a
-great Service-tree comes just where it makes a perfect
-background; and beyond that again the rivulets of blue in
-the Reserve Garden lie deep below.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>TRANSIENT COLOUR GLORIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>This is the hour of our garden’s glory. No Delphinium
-muster, no spreading garlands of Roses, can equal the
-exquisite freshness, the fulness of life of this May world.
-With the Brooms, white and yellow; with the pink foam
-of the Floribunda trees, the incomparable gold and green
-of the Beech and Birch, one wants to put one’s arms round
-the little place and kiss it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“So much work, so long and great a travail of nature,”
-said a friend to us to-day; “ever since November, preparing
-for this wonderful revelation of bloom ... and all for so
-short a span! All this beauty scarce reaches its climax
-but it is already on the wane!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Perhaps it is to give us an idea of the permanence of what
-“eye hath not seen” beyond, that its glories are described
-in terms of jewels; and yet so perversely is one made that
-it is the very fragility that endears here below—a sense
-of the fleeting moment that gives ecstasy its finest edge.
-No, this limited humanity of ours cannot conceive the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_148'>148</span>infinitude. It is only with those perceptions which transcend
-the senses that one gets a gleam, a hint, a possibility
-of once understanding. The restless mind of man for ever
-demands and creates change, but the soul aspires to
-immutability.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='sum' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_149'>149</span>
-<a href='images/image173_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image173.jpg' alt='SUMMER' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>SUMMER</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>END OF SPRING, SUMMER PLANS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The last day of May. After the usual “contrariness”
-of life we have spent the hot span in London, and returned
-here to find that ungenial nor’west wind blowing in upon
-us apparently over the same icebergs as a month ago.
-We think with wails of regret of the long, golden, balmy
-garden-days we missed; of the full glory of the Azaleas;
-of those splendours of Rose Tulips which we should have
-enjoyed, radiant in the sunshine, instead of seeing them
-yawn their lives away in a hot town drawing-room. And
-the Florentina Alba Irises, those delicate, fragrant, stately
-things that look as if they were compounded of cobweb
-and spun crystal and moonlit snow—it takes but a day to
-show them in their beauty and another to wilt them—we
-have missed their lovely hour too, of course. On long,
-long stems, the Iris Siberica are congregating a little grove
-of buds in the Blue Border; only two curving purple
-darlings having outrun the rest. We shall miss them, for
-the fates have decreed that we are to leave the Earthly
-Paradise in a day or two once more, and that for the flat
-horizons of Lancashire. Well, the best of the Spring, early
-and late, is over, and we do not grudge these intermediary
-days so much, though we wonder how the bedding out will
-get on without our stimulating presence. We shall not
-even have a finger in the “Cherry-Pie.” Lengthy plans
-will have to be made. The “Miss Wilmott” Verbena
-must replace, by their delicate rose, the blue of the Myosotis
-carpet as well as the wonders of the many-hued Darwins,
-in the two centre beds of the Dutch Garden. And in the
-border beds we project a fine gathering of Antirrhinums
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_150'>150</span>shading from crimson, through Firefly and Rose-Dorée, to
-palest pink.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The terrace immediately under the house runs, according
-to our invariable summer programme, to cool colours and
-sweet scents. Under the dining-room and drawing-room
-windows, besides the transient prospect of the White
-Lilies, there are to bloom ‹until the frost lays waste›
-Heliotrope and Nicotiana, with pale pink Ivy-leaf
-Geranium to contrast with the mauve and purple, and
-blue Lobelia to rim the outer border of White Pinks.
-Against the terrace wall, between the tall Madonna Lilies,
-which show good promise, and the Polyantha Roses, red
-and white, with the thick edging of “Mrs. Sinkins,” Lobelia
-and Petunia shall spread. The pots will bear their customary
-summer burthen of rose Ivy-leaf Geraniums, with
-Lobelia too, and the Zonals. We like them to flaunt
-against the moor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Below, in the Blue Border, the Delphiniums and the
-Anchusas, the great old-established White Rose bushes,
-the steel blue Thistle, must make what show they can
-over the annuals—Nigella, Gypsophila and Nemophila—not
-forgetting the kind Campanulas, so dear, so faithful,
-so hardy! In fine contrast, on the other side of the grass
-walk, the Dorothy Perkins hedge will spread its vivid
-masses, and fling out its irrepressible garlands over the
-border of bright blue Nemophila we have had the
-audacity to sow.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image176.jpg' alt='trees' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>And below, in the Hemicycle, the colours are to grow
-cool again, with Heliotrope between the Lilies, the
-Lavenders, and the Monthly Roses, and Fortune’s Yellow
-and Rêve d’Or running up the supporting wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_151'>151</span>The beauty of the ancient woods in that Lancashire
-home from which we have just returned lingers in our
-memory. Outside the park walls, the flat fields lie that
-would have a charm of their own if the encroachment of
-the peculiarly unlovely brick and mortar prosperity of the
-district did not catch the eye on almost every side; but
-within there is a sense of wonderful peace and mystery,
-in the old, old woods with their Rhododendron glades.
-The astonishing height of the trees
-seems to keep modernity at bay, and
-tells stories still of the simple, proud,
-God-fearing race which has become
-so associated with the very
-spot of earth that has borne
-and nurtured them for
-many centuries, that, like
-one or two other families
-in England, their name in
-absolute legality is not
-complete without the territorial
-appendage.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE DISAPPEARING SQUIRE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We hear every day that “the
-Squire” is a being of the past.
-We know that every effort of
-present-day legislation is to
-abolish what was once the strength
-of England; what might still be its
-strength, if the restless and destructive
-spirit of the age would permit it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_152'>152</span>The young owner of those old lands ‹who has just been
-our host› is one who will, we hope, keep up the traditions—so
-fast dying out, or being stamped out—a little longer. He
-is, as his grandfather was, the centre of his own people,
-the shepherd of his flock. Not quite to the same extent,
-perhaps: we do not suppose, for instance, that he is both
-maker and depository of their wills, or that he is summoned
-to every tenant’s deathbed as was that kindly,
-sturdy old Lancastrian his grandsire.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Hurry, Jimmy, hurry!” the afflicted wife and mother
-would say. “Run oop to the Hall and tell Squoire to
-coom along quick, for feyther’s at his last!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Neither would he undertake to mend the broken leg; or
-patch up the conjugal quarrel. But the young Squire will
-still hear such a phrase as this at election time: “What <em>we</em>
-wants to know is which way Squoire’s voting? Squoire’s
-man is the man for we!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He will let his cottages at eighteen pence a week; and the
-larger the family is the smaller will be the rent. And the
-claims of the tenant will be attended to before his own.
-He seems as much part of them as they are part of him.
-Has anyone ever heard of a labourer on a large estate
-being in destitution? We never have. Our great landowners
-do more to provide for their own dependents and
-keep down pauperism than any frantic legislator or wholesale
-philanthropist. But the system is to go; we have
-the best authority for it, the authority of those in power.
-God help England and England’s poor peasants, say we,
-when they have their way!</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image178.jpg' alt='woman in front of landscape' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We can speak with examples under our eyes. Every time
-a bit of an estate is sold, hereabouts, the cottages thereon
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_153'>153</span>are purchased by the local grocer or butcher: and up goes
-the rent that had been three and six or four shillings a week
-to seven and six and ten shillings. Here, where we live, there
-are practically no important landowners, and what is the
-result? Not the most miserable cottage to be had under
-seven and six a week, a rent liable to be raised at a
-moment’s notice. The butcher, the baker, these are the
-“landlords,” and the rent they exact is exactly what they
-know they can extract out of the unfortunate tenant, in
-the present state of cottage scarcity. We ourselves have
-spent weeks in striving to secure a roof for a wretched
-woman with three little children, whose husband had
-attempted to murder her and after her escape had danced
-upon all her furniture, and burnt the remnants. We had
-to engage a cottage three months in advance, and then
-the rent was eight and six a week! She was a stupid
-poor goose of a woman, who couldn’t do anything for
-her living except an occasional day’s charing or rough
-washing. Of course we ought to have let her go to the
-workhouse; but we didn’t. We guaranteed the rent instead
-and took in the eldest boy as an unneeded garden
-assistant. ‹He is rather like a
-garden slug, so we thought he
-ought to be at home
-in the borders›! The
-other day a local
-tradesman raised the
-rent of a cottage
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_154'>154</span>sixpence a week upon the hard-working mother of a large
-family, who occasionally comes in “to oblige” at Villino
-Loki; and when she remonstrated he humorously remarked
-that Mr. Lloyd George was “driving him to it!”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE REFRESHING FRUIT</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a proverb that “good wine needs no bush.” The
-Chancellor’s efforts to convince his victims of the comfort
-of the plaster which is blistering them are almost pathetic.
-But surely it is another proof, if one were needed, of the
-weakness of his cause. A local laundry owner has been
-receiving six pounds a week, lecturing, in Devonshire of
-all places, on the blessedness of the Act as experienced by
-himself and staff. One of our district nurses, a delightful
-sturdy North Country woman, was “approached” as to
-whether she would undertake, for a consideration, to use
-her persuasiveness with her patients and make them see
-how much they were benefited by the stamp tax. She
-declined with a heat that may have astonished the emissary.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It must indeed be a little difficult to make, say, a struggling
-greengrocer understand the debt of gratitude he owes to
-the law which constrains him to pay fourpence a week for
-the assistant he can so ill afford as it is and mulct that discontented
-youth of threepence! More especially when baker
-and grocer charge him more to cover their own losses.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The obvious remedy, says Mr. Lloyd George, is for the
-greengrocer to raise the prices in his town! He does; and
-somehow it doesn’t work. Being in a poor district and all
-his patrons being poor, they buy less from him, and he
-buys less from them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“But look at the comfort in sickness!” It is tiresome, it
-almost seems like putting bad will into it, that the greengrocer’s
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_155'>155</span>wife should develop consumption before the first
-stone of any sanatorium is ready!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Now, that prosperous, contented class, the labourer on
-the great estate, a man who lives on his lord’s lands, if
-not rent free, very nearly so, with wood and garden
-produce, potatoes, milk and what not, and steady employment
-all the year round, he is to be benefited—save the
-mark! A “minimum wage,” cheap housing, the fixed
-hours, the sacred half-holiday, it sounds so plausible!
-The propagandist is volubly at work. “No wonder,”
-as the young Squire we have recently visited once ruefully
-said to us, “my decent, contented, God-fearing
-villagers were turned in a couple of hours into shrieking,
-blaspheming lunatics by such a gospel, preached with
-forcible arguments in the public-house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of course they will get their demands. Striking, with
-“peaceful picketing,” generally gets its way, even if not
-backed up by Government emissaries and the glorious
-visions flash-lighted by the Chancellor of the Exchequer.
-But what will be the result? Half the amount of employment
-on the estates of those who can still afford to
-keep them, and no all-the-year-round engagements. When
-the work is slack the over-paid and inimical labourer will
-naturally be discharged. We say inimical, for how can
-friendly relations be maintained if the old solidarity is
-destroyed? This, of course, is what is aimed at; and
-the quack remedy, the patent pill alluringly held aloft, is—State
-ownership of land! The land is to be managed like
-the Workhouse, the Prison, and the Reformatory, of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_156'>156</span>which, we are all aware, the British State makes such a
-brilliant success. We know how the poor love the
-Workhouse, and how happy they are in it; yet one can
-scarcely take up a police report without finding some
-desperate pauper sentenced for revolt. Oh, no doubt it
-will be a Merry England when these disinterested and
-dashing tinkers get their way.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A HAVEN OF REST</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have known, in parenthesis, a pauper establishment,
-run by voluntary effort, in which a hundred and fifty old
-men and ninety old women were kept happy and contented
-by a handful of soft-voiced nuns. No need to call
-in the policeman, in Portobello Road; for there old age is
-reverenced at once and pitied, and the double aspect of
-the most natural of all the commandments is put into
-every-day practice, so unobtrusively and simply that no
-one can guess how heroically.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But the religious question will soon be treated in the same
-way as the land question; so no invidious comparisons need
-be drawn. Little boys and little girls are to be taught that
-the State is henceforth to take the place of God in their infant
-minds. How comfortable and warm a creed! How it
-will strengthen their character for living, and ease the
-thoughts of the dying. There is no God: but there is a
-Chancellor of the Exchequer and a dashing gentleman at
-the Home Office. You have not been created or redeemed,
-little boy! We have no prayers to teach you.
-There are no divine commandments which you need obey—naturally,
-since there is no Divine Father. There are
-no sacraments to sustain and elevate your soul—for little
-boys and girls have no souls! But cheer ye: you were
-evolved by a natural process, and the State is here to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_157'>157</span>cradle and instruct you and to make life beautiful for you.
-Behold, dear children, the Book of the Laws. These laws
-which you are bound to keep—unless, of course, you go
-on strike, become a Suffragette, or organize political
-vote catching. And this is a picture of a Jail for people who
-are so blind as to refuse Insurance blessings; behold that
-inspired countenance. That is the head of the Government!
-And for Sunday amusements there is the Cinema—the
-Crippen case, dear children; the Houndsditch Burglary
-and the Train Smash.... And when the new theories
-have developed and matured, there will be no such thing
-as private property in anything to constrain the free mind
-of emancipated man—A house of your own, a wife to
-yourself!—fie!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Surely, surely,” said a young Liberal M.P., “no sanely
-thinking person would continue to advise religious education
-in the schools. What is the inevitable result—see the
-case in your own Church” ‹he was speaking to a Catholic›
-“the law commands one thing, and the Church another!
-Take divorce, for instance. Surely, surely—”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Dear me,” said the Catholic. “We had not looked at it
-in that light. The laws man made are, then, above the
-laws God made?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Surely, surely you would not teach little children to
-disobey a law of the land made for their benefit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We ventured to say that the ten commandments had
-forestalled—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>His pitying smile arrested us; so infinitely was he above
-the ten commandments.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_158'>158</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Yesterday Loki’s family motored energetically some
-fifty miles and back to a garden party near London.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A wonderful house with wonderful lawns and gardens—one
-feels that the hideous tide of brick and mortar must
-inevitably sweep over and destroy it before another
-generation comes and goes, so that there is a kind of
-pathos in its very beauty.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image183.jpg' alt='flower' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Out of the unlovely mean streets along which the tram-line
-runs its abominable way, one turns off into the cool
-country road. The long avenue is bordered by wide fields
-where, as we passed yesterday, the new-mown grass was
-lying in silver furrows. The country is quite flat; but the
-richness of the green, the incidents of lake and timber,
-give it a placid English fairness of its own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Lady of Villino Loki went with a keen
-eye to garden hints, and her first thrill was a
-Honeysuckle screen in the little garden of the
-second lodge. Such a Honeysuckle screen!
-It had once, she supposes, been an arch, for
-it rose to a kind of gable peak in the centre,
-but it was filled in either by design or natural
-luxuriance till it was a complete mass of bloom,
-a solid wall of blossom. Never had she beheld
-such a thing before. She wants Honeysuckle
-at the Villino, as she said already, and she is
-fired with fresh enthusiasm. Why should she
-not have a hedge of Honeysuckle, not too far
-from the house itself? It is settled. She will buy
-fifty in November and try.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_159'>159</span>The weather, which had been misty, thundery and unpromising,
-cleared just upon our arrival at the great
-“Adam” house. The lawns were in their perfection, the
-shade of the Cedars was cut out on the sun-golden turf, the
-massed flowers were vivid against their cunningly devised
-backgrounds. Naturally Villino Loki, even in its wildest
-dreams, cannot emulate this great and carefully cherished
-place; but one can find practical suggestions here and
-there. We cannot mass rare and golden-hued Maples
-over a broad band of yellow Calceolarias anywhere on
-our terraced lawns; but it is very instructive to see the
-management of certain herbaceous borders, where three or
-four large pillars of Rambler Roses alternate with mauve
-and silver-leaved Japanese Maples at the back; the foreground
-being of the usual herbaceous order.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We had no idea that the dwarf bright yellow Evening
-Primroses would look so well grouped together. And
-Nemesia, “Heavenly Blue,” has become the one annual
-our souls long for: blue flowers are all too rare.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Everything was most kindly labelled. We do not know
-if it is possible to obtain any seedlings this time of year;
-but certainly, next year, this adorable little plant, Nemesia,
-with its most exquisite turquoise blue colourings and its
-splendid efflorescence, shall enter largely into our schemes.
-In between the Nemesia, bushes of Campanula Persicifolia
-rose with cool restrained tones; the contrast was one to
-be copied also.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another not impossible example was a Rose screen,
-starting with a background of close growing Ramblers,
-some ten or twelve feet high, supplemented midway by
-some of the larger Bush Roses and running down to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_160'>160</span>edge of the turf in front with pegged-down Teas; so that,
-to the very top, it was one mass of varied bloom. We do
-not see any reason why such an effect should not be
-copied, even in a small garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The <em>standard</em> Scarlet Geraniums we must admire from a
-respectful distance. They are as much beyond our
-humble resources as the <em>standard</em> Heliotrope we so much
-admired a year ago in a millionaire’s huge grounds not
-very far from us. These last rose out of a bed of mauve
-Violas. The ambitious soul of the mistress of the Villino
-hungered to copy it; but she knew that hunger would
-never be assuaged.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>PICKING UP WRINKLES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have had a frightful disappointment in the “Miss
-Wilmott” Verbenas. For two summers it has been the
-same story. Last year they came up “all colours,”
-though purchased from a well-known firm! This year, to
-make quite sure, we ordered seedlings to be specially
-grown for us from a local nursery. The wretch has sent
-a collection of measly little starveling things which cannot
-be expected to do anything for weeks and weeks. Of
-course they should not have been accepted; but the deed
-was done in our absence. We are much inclined to have
-the beds cleared, and Heliotrope or rose-coloured Ivy-leaf
-Geraniums put in instead. It is too late for anything else.
-Gardeners are so tiresome! They are as bad as cooks,
-who will accept with perfect equanimity, fish ready to
-illustrate the proverb and game prepared to walk to its
-own funeral, and then say that “they thought it was ‘a
-bit high’ perhaps, but they weren’t quite sure!”</p>
-
-<div class='figright id015'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_161'>161</span>
-<img src='images/image186.jpg' alt='flowers' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have forced for the house several plants of
-Canterbury Bells, glorious purple and white, which
-have grown to an extraordinary size and fill the
-Compton pots on the landing in very decorative
-fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The front landing and stairs are wondrous pretty
-in the Villino: and the colour scheme—Tangerine
-yellow for the curtains and grey for the carpet—somehow
-suits the little place, with its Roman air.
-In the round bow window there is a large copy
-of the Samothraki Nike on a white stand; and in
-front of her we place flower-pots all the year round—generally
-Orange trees in the winter, with which
-we are successful.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Alas! we leave the little Paradise to-morrow!
-However, we are still in such an intermediary
-stage that we mind less than when we lost all
-the glories of the Azaleas. For anyone of an
-impatient disposition, this time of the first setting
-out of the bedding plants is a trying ordeal. We
-are going this afternoon on a surreptitious round
-with “plantoids” to which Adam objects, but in
-the virtues of which we are believers.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>PITFALLS OF AMBITION</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The longer we labour at garden experiences, the more it is
-borne in upon us that ambitiousness is to be avoided.
-No amateurs—however splendid their visions may be—should
-attempt “Wild Gardens,” or “Bog Gardens” on
-their own unaided efforts. This does not refer to the
-flinging of wild-flower seeds in woodland glades, but to the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_162'>162</span>digging up of harmless and unobtrusive patches of field
-and bank for the insertion of seedlings, which apparently
-will never be at home in that particular aspect and soil.
-The worst of it is that the energetic workers are so
-ensnared by the mental vision that they very often fail to
-perceive the paltriness of the material result.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“We had to have the meadow mown and to dig it up,
-just along there,” said an energetic gardening neighbour
-to us the other day, pointing out with pride a dreadful
-stretch of raw and muddy earth that lay meaninglessly
-along the lush field. “And we <em>think</em> the things will do
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The things—poor little sprigs of white Violas, and other
-most unadaptable garden children—were looking very ill
-and faint at long distances from each other. And in any
-case, even if they were eventually to flourish, the meadow
-was quite beautiful enough in itself and needed no such adornment.
-But we had not the heart to tell her so. We said,
-“How nice that will be,” but took the lesson to ourselves.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>TANTALISING NOVELTIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>A visit to the Horticultural Show at Holland House—even
-the humblest gardener can take away lessons from
-these displays of lavish beauty. We wonder whether it
-would be possible for us to have a pool anywhere upon
-our sandy height. And, if so, why should we not build
-rough rock-work round it on one side; fill it with the cool
-misty mauve of the Nipeta, the cool pale yellow spires of
-the Dwarf Mulleins, and the faint pinks of Spiræa; and
-against this background, walled about by a bank of the
-mysterious Iris “Morning Mist,” let a little slender lead
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_163'>163</span>statue rise out of the water? Coolness and mystery!
-Shall we ever encompass that delightful effect?... The
-flat flagged paths on the other side of the water should be
-bordered by Iris; and they should dip down into the pool
-itself, where just two or three Water Lilies should rock
-their gold-centred cups. Oh, dear! If we had sufficient
-money how beautiful we could make our corner of the
-earth!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Oh, and the Clematis!—It was a shock to find that we
-had to pay seven and sixpence each to go in, but it was
-worth it, for we have plunged to the extent of a dozen
-adorable Clematis from the very fountain head—if one can
-so strain the poor English language—of Clematis culture
-itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And the Roses! “Coronation,” a new bright scarlet
-climbing Wichuriana; Tausendschön and Blush Rambler,
-old favourites, but so beautiful! There were two or three
-pillars of unnamed seedlings, exquisite apple-blossom
-beauties, which we longed to purchase, but which were
-not yet in the market. A firmer, richer apple-blossom best
-describes the bloom of the new discovery.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Quite beyond our pockets, but most attractive, were the
-standard Ivies, golden and variegated, fifteen years old
-... at the modest charge of six guineas each! Could
-we ever wait fifteen years to see such developments?
-After all, why not? The grower assured us they were
-perfectly hardy, and more they were cut the better. They
-would look charming on the terrace. Such balls of
-gold!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Lilies at the top of a rock-garden or at the top of a rough
-wall have a most charming effect.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_164'>164</span>We have invested in three and sixpence worth of new
-fertiliser guaranteed to “produce an appearance like dark
-green Utrecht velvet in ten days on the roughest lawn.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Would you like your lawn to look like that, Madam?”
-asked the red headed youth in charge of squares that didn’t
-look in the least like real grass, but a kind of artificial
-compound as above mentioned.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Very much!” said one of us, who was struck by the
-unnatural hue and smoothness of the exhibit.—“Do mind
-the sun on your head!” she added parenthetically to the
-delicate member of our party, who is always on her mind.
-“Oh, pray Madam, do not trouble to shade me,” said
-the red-haired youth modestly. “I am quite all right, I
-assure you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We had a vision of Loki’s Ma-Ma in her quaint Directoire
-dress, all striped black-and-cream chiffon and dim orange,
-with her absurd little Directoire tulle hat and its one
-coquettish rose ‹absurd but not unbecoming› spending the
-rest of the afternoon in sudden philanthropic frenzy,
-shading the red-haired youth from the July sunshine, while
-he volubly touted for orders for patent fertilisers! Innately
-polite, we explained. He was not in the least
-abashed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I do feel it very hot,” he remarked simply.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_165'>165</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Loki is once more Only-dog in London. He is unspeakably
-grimy, as none of the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">famiglia</span></i> except Juvenal
-are ever able or willing to tub him when he most
-wants it. Juvenal, his special friend, has been away on
-his holiday—poor little Loki could not understand his
-absence. He was perpetually rushing out of the rooms
-and downstairs to see if he had arrived. At last, worn
-out with suspense, he dashed up to his butler’s bedroom
-and would not be satisfied till he was admitted; when, jumping
-on the bed, he began to tear up the clothes, believing,
-we suppose, that Juvenal shared his propensity for curling
-under the quilt. Odd little dog! He has as many moods
-as a fine lady, and when really annoyed lies in a strained
-attitude with his hind paws stuck outward like the embryo
-legs of a little crocodile. This is the sign that he wants
-“a powder”: what we call in our playful dog-language,
-“a pow-pow.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FREEMASONRY OF DOG-LOVERS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>What a freemasonry the love of dogs creates! Loki’s
-Grandfather, travelling up from our moors the other day,
-met a family likewise going to London; and these had
-with them a small Pekinese, who sat very sadly with
-drooping head and tail. The owner of Loki watched him
-sympathetically for some time in silence, then unable to
-repress his feelings, he leant forward and said very solemnly
-to the Pekinese’s lady:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“This little dog wants a pow-wow!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh! we know,” eagerly cried the lady in charge, “we
-know he does! He should have had it this morning, only
-we were travelling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_166'>166</span>We were pleased with the anecdote when Loki’s Grandfather
-told us. No introductions, no explanations needed:
-even our own special doggy dialect instantly apprehended!
-One touch of Peky makes the whole world kin.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>A divine discontent seems an unavoidable accompaniment
-of garden ambition. The Lady of Villino Loki is always
-furiously disappointed every time she returns home—except
-in the Spring. She had, this time, wonderful
-visions of her Madonna Lilies, proudly
-straight against the upper terrace
-wall; of her Blue Border
-foaming blue; of her new
-turf settling down into
-greenness. And, behold,
-the Lilies have got the
-lily disease, drat them!
-the Blue Border never
-will be blue, whatever
-she does; the Anchusas
-have gone back to the
-wild; and not one drop
-of water has the infant
-turf received through
-three weeks of drought
-since her departure—with
-the results that can be
-imagined!</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image191.jpg' alt='man working in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Not one of our precious packets of seed
-have come up! We once knew a pretty
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_167'>167</span>American whose daughter married a rather impoverished
-young Englishman of very good connexions. He was,
-however, scarcely important enough himself to attract
-much attention: and the day before the wedding he was
-nonplussed by his future mother-in-law, hitherto the most
-silky and smiling of beings, taking him by the arm and
-marching him round the displayed wedding presents, pausing
-at every step to remark: “I do not see the present of your
-uncle, Lord A.! I do not see the present of your cousin,
-Lady B.! I do not see the present of your great aunt, the
-Duchess of C.!”...</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We want to take the seedsman in similar fashion round
-the greenhouse shelves:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Where are the pots of Mignonette?” we will say.
-“Where the serried ranks of Scarlet Verbena? Where are
-the potted Nicotianas?”...</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_168'>168</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The Master of the House—he has
-admitted it himself somewhere in these
-pages—understands little
-if anything of gardener’s
-art: that is, of the art of
-rearing flowers in their
-proper seasons, in suitable
-ground and so forth. But
-he complacently believes
-that he has an aptitude for
-what, on a larger theatre
-of operations than the few
-acres of Villino Loki,
-would be called Landscape
-Gardening! He
-imagines that, had fate
-provided him with an
-“estate,” he would
-have been great at devising
-vistas, grouping
-trees, laying out pleasing curves of approach, and all that
-sort of thing.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id005'>
-<img src='images/image193.jpg' alt='men in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>At the Villino this imaginary special competency could
-only find an opening in clearance work. And when we
-first bought this strip of hill-side, clearance was indeed no
-small matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With the exception of the terraces immediately round
-the House and of the kitchen yards about the Cottage,
-the whole place was a congeries of almost impenetrable
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_169'>169</span>thickets, interspersed with patches of heather and furze.
-There were but two paths, running down, in purely utilitarian
-lines, from the higher level to that of the cottage <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">potager</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>‹What has been achieved since then in the matter of path-cutting
-can be made patent by a glance at Mr. Robinson’s
-perspective map of the Villino grounds.›</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>So thick and strenuous was the growth of underwood—self-sown
-infant Hollies, adolescent Larches and Pines,
-young Ashes, Oaks and Chestnuts in their nonage, all
-interlocked, entwined in Brambles and Honeysuckle, that
-hardly anywhere could the trunks of the full-grown trees
-be distinguished.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now it is obvious that the beauty of wooded grounds
-depends essentially upon light effects under the foliage and
-between the boles; upon distant peeps. In no direction
-ought the view ever to be solidly stopped—unless, of course,
-where it is desired to hide some unpleasing prospect. It
-may therefore be erected into a maxim that, if trees are
-to be enjoyed, underwoods must be sacrificed wholesale.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>At first, with that reverence for things which, if they may
-be laid low at one blow or two of the billhook, require
-many years for their growth, one feels inclined to hesitate.
-One’s heart rebels at the thought of cutting off in the
-flower of its youth the sapling that in the spring is of so
-tender green, the bush of name unknown but engaging
-enough—if there were not “so many of him.” But it soon
-becomes evident that you must harden your heart and
-ruthlessly slash away the bulk of undergrowths, for good
-and all.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_170'>170</span>And this has been the province of the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">padrone</span></i>. And
-although on many an occasion at first the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">padrona</span></i> bewailed
-bitterly, almost tearfully, that he
-was making the place “simply
-scald,” it is now generally admitted
-that the result has proved a matter
-for congratulation.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image195.jpg' alt='man working in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE PROBLEM OF HOLLY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>There have been a few mistakes,
-no doubt. It was not easy, for instance,
-in the case of Holly, and
-perhaps also of Rowan, for the beginner
-to distinguish which clump
-was likely to bear the decorative
-winter coral and which not. Seeing
-what some of our Hollies in a good
-season can be ‹that which closes
-the prospect at the north end
-of our Hemicycle, for example,
-what a glory of pure scarlet it
-displays when all bright colours have
-disappeared from the garden!› we
-regret not to have spared a few more.
-Nevertheless, it is a wise decision, in
-grounds overgrown by underwood, that <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">delendum est Ilex
-Aquifolium</span></i>—that Common Holly must go.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the first place, nothing will grow under the shade of its
-dark leathery, spinous leaves, which, even when shed, are
-more indestructible and noxious to grass than pine needles
-themselves. And, secondly, Holly is a very bully and brigand
-among growing trees. Its vitality and pushfulness over-masters
-everything. Your young Holly will thrust aside
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_171'>171</span>the sturdiest neighbouring branches; will conquer its “place
-under the sun” to the detriment of the equally fair claims
-of Oak, or Ash, or anything that strives upward.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No—the right place of Holly is in the close-set hedge, for
-which its forbidding, never-failing foliage and its vigorous
-growth pre-eminently fit it. Or, again, in a dignified
-isolation where it can, without truculent self-assertion,
-develop on all sides its regular, shapely growth, look
-beautiful at all times in its evergreen sheen; and, if of the
-fruit-bearing sex, relieve with its scarlet the browns of
-autumn and the white of a winter landscape.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The first spot to be assailed was the area now called the
-Blue-bell Glade, the interior of which was then <i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">terra incognita</span></i>.
-It had to be tackled like a fortress—by regular sap.
-Nothing was spared but the full-grown trees. Terrible was
-the destruction, and gigantic the accumulation of small
-firewood for future use. But great was the landscape
-result: it gave us our first far-reaching perspective along
-our own ground. We had, of course, fine and wide views
-over the tree-tops from the highest terrace. But now we
-obtained, in one direction at least, a middle-distance prospect
-of green fields between the boles under overhanging
-branches. And the effect was singularly satisfying.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And so the war on undergrowth was carried-on,
-with system, until the present pleasing condition was
-reached, when in every direction the eye is able to find, up
-hill or down, either some far view of moor or valley, or
-some corner of the grounds themselves, now grass-grown
-or bright with flower-beds.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_172'>172</span>Grass—that was what Villino Loki most wanted! And
-the extirpation of the greatest enemies to grass—Brushwood,
-Heather, Gorse, and Bracken—has been the hardest
-achievement of all: one which Grandpa is fond of letting
-every one know is more especially his own.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE GREAT CLEARANCE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Great Clearance took place in what may be called
-the pre-Adamite age of this little Earthly Paradise. Adam
-‹in a kind of fateful way› only appeared upon the scene
-after the rougher work had been dealt with of letting in
-the air and light of heaven wherever it had hitherto failed.
-He arrived, of his own initiative, to offer his services in
-the matter of <em>gardening</em>, on the very day when his predecessor—one
-Grinder, whom on benevolence intent we
-had allowed to assume the duties of “gardener,” save the
-mark!—had had at last to be dismissed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The late Grinder, whatever his disqualifications for the
-honourable title thrust upon him may have been, was
-undoubtedly a lusty worker. But the Great Clearance
-was too great a task for one man. It was thus, by the
-way, that Caliban ‹likewise now “the late”› was introduced
-as labouring assistant, and, from the nature of his
-labours, known as the Woodman.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The elimination of underwoods, however, was by no
-means the most arduous task. Let once the good light
-of day and the free airs penetrate to the ground hitherto
-obscured and choked, and in a given time grass will make
-its appearance. And it will spread healthily if the lower
-branches of all standing trees are lopped, up to a suitable
-height. But we wanted grass not only in the glades, but,
-if possible, upon every stretch of soil not devoted to
-flowering beds or ornamental bush. And, to that end,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_173'>173</span>the Heather and the Gorse had likewise to be banished in
-perpetuity. With miles of Heather and Gorse-clad moors
-about one, Ericas of any kind, and certainly Ulex, however
-delightful in themselves and in their native habitat,
-are distinctly <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">de trop</span></i> in the garden.</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id007'>
-<img src='images/image198.jpg' alt='leafy branches' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Seen in wide masses, and whether in the brown, green, or
-purple stage, Heather, as we know, is an ever
-beautiful cloak to the earth. But except at the
-height of its flowering richness, when it occurs
-in scattered patches, its effect is apt to be
-rusty and unkempt. As for the Gorse—gorgeous
-as it undoubtedly be at its full
-golden time when seen in clumps on down
-or roadside—it has, at close quarters, a
-ragged, dusty, almost leprous appearance
-which quite unfits it for cultivation.
-It would seem as though all its
-vital beauty were driven out to the flowering
-tops: its inner and lower portions are always
-dried up, and scabby as from some withering sickness.
-Such, at least, is always the case with the
-full-grown plant; though, when very young, or when
-springing anew from a shorn stump, it remains for some
-time pleasingly green all over.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE PROBLEM OF GRASS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>To the uninitiated it may appear simple enough to pluck
-up the Heather; but how soon will he be brought face to
-face with the dismal fact that, for grass-growing purposes,
-this superficial treatment is of no avail whatsoever! The
-peaty soil, product of untold generations of Heather,
-spongy to a depth of many inches, matted with the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_174'>174</span>fibrils of roots, is absolutely antagonistic to grass of
-any description. The roots of the Furze, on their side,
-deep-reaching, far-spreading and tenacious, are simply
-rejuvenated and rejoiced by the lopping of the plant above
-ground. You may think you have done with it: behold!
-within a very few weeks saucy spriglets of brightest green
-Gorse will merrily make their appearance and claim the
-land again as their own!</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image199.jpg' alt='men working in field' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Any seed sown on such a bed is merely so much food
-offered to the fowls of the air. The Master of the House
-had to learn that lesson practically, and lost a couple of
-seasons in so doing. ‹As may plainly be seen, he was a
-thoroughgoing ignoramus in that quarter; and he was not
-likely to be set right by Mr. Grinder!› It was only when
-Adam supervened and pointed out the necessity of
-trenching the ground, ridding it of its centuries-old tangle
-of fibre, overturning and pressing it, that the desired green
-result could at length be obtained. But the overturning
-demanded the combined work of pickaxe, fork, and cutting
-spade. It produced an incredible amount of underground
-wood, tough, sappy, and seemingly incombustible; and it
-kept Caliban occupied for many a long week.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We have now many promising verdant roods, destined in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_175'>175</span>time to be improved into lawns, where hitherto Heath
-and Whin held their sway. But the spaces lately freed
-from underwoods, which we so fondly hoped would turn
-of themselves into grassy glades and dells, provided us
-with new Heraclean labours.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>WAR ON BRACKEN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Have I named Bracken?—Bracken! an everlasting problem
-on such a piece of land as ours, which less than a
-century back was undoubtedly part of the wild moorland
-itself. Nothing, it seems, but thorough overturning will
-really and finally rid the soil of the unconscionable Bracken—the
-ubiquitous, the imperishable, the exasperating Pteris
-Aquilina!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>This knowledge has been impressed on us by the experience
-of successive years. Our first inkling of it was
-when, returning to the Villino after a few months’ absence
-and fondly anticipating to find our precious glades ‹which,
-after the Great Clearance, had been generously sown
-with grass› covered with a tender-green, thickly-piled
-carpet, we were confronted with waving fields of lusty
-Brake already breast high.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In itself the sight was not displeasing; the young verdure
-was cool to the eye and did not greatly impede the view. But
-what we wanted was Grass. Grass which, in course of
-time and at their proper seasons, Crocus Vernus, Primrose,
-Blue-bell and Daffodil, Foxglove, and Colchicum Autumnale
-would star and illumine with colour.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now, where the Brake thrives, it takes unto itself the
-whole bounty of the sun, and stifles all plant-life of lesser
-height than itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_176'>176</span>We disconsolately took advice from presumably competent
-persons.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh,” said Everybody, with confidence, “you can
-get rid of Bracken if you cut it twice in the same
-year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Can you?”—and here the Master of Villino Loki, in a
-state of inveteracy and resentment foreign to his usually
-placid character, feels he must again speak in the first
-person—“Can you?” ‹this is sarcastic› “I tell you, sir,
-that for the last three years I have cut that infernal
-Bracken, not twice in the twelvemonth, but four times
-and more—and look at it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>You may imagine me pointing, with an indignation difficult
-to repress, to some corner of the cleared ground that does
-not happen to have been visited <em>quite</em> lately by the spud or
-the furze-cutter.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“This,” I say with emphasis, “I myself purged of all
-visible Bracken only last month!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now, as a matter of fact, the space in question, if not
-actually covered with the pertinacious fronds, is dotted
-with scores, nay hundreds, of forceful shoots; some still
-cosily curled up in their “crosier” stage, others impudently
-stretching themselves under the sun and persisting,
-in spite of all edicts, in screening its rays from the hard-struggling
-grass. What chance has humble grass against
-a thing that will sprout three inches in one night? And,
-if you look closer, you perceive a host of baby offshoots
-cheerfully pushing from some deep-burrowing ancient
-subterranean body, its innumerable little bald heads
-between the sorely tried, recently established grass settlements.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_177'>177</span>Twice cut, forsooth!—Why, to this day, in the very
-middle of paths made three years ago ‹“Three—years-ago—sir!”›,
-you will discover here, there, and there again,
-a healthy shoot, sappy and erect, balancing its bright
-green plume right in the way, as if in defiance of all
-extermination.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No—the most that can be claimed as a result of the war
-which is still being waged upon the Brake is that, perhaps,
-this pertinacious growth is beginning to betray some signs
-of discouragement. The ranks of the legions, as they
-make their periodical reappearance with an obstinacy
-worthy of a better cause, grow a trifle thinner year by
-year.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“If you only cut them young,” says Adam, consolingly
-but with cruel imagery, “they say the roots will bleed to
-death.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This—Corporal Nym would hint—is as may be. As in
-the case of our wonderful forbears, bloodletting in the
-Spring, if not really conducive to better health, seems
-to interfere little with their thriving. Meanwhile, happily,
-as no scion of Pteris Aquilina ‹if it cannot really be prevented
-from cropping up where it chooses› is now allowed
-ever to reach its baleful maturity, the desired and much-petted
-grass is gradually establishing itself. And, with
-that eager optimism in gardening matters which is a
-characteristic of the family at Villino Loki, we look
-forward, in a few years, to the prospect of a succession
-of grassy carpets from crest to foot on our hillside.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But this consummation, much desired, can, we are aware,
-only be secured by unremitting labour. Sometimes the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_178'>178</span>Master of the House ‹who, having rashly vowed to
-achieve the task, considers himself bound to see it
-through himself› is assailed by something very like misdoubt
-as he rests awhile upon his spud, blunted by
-some two hours’ punching at sporadic croziers, and computes
-the remaining roods, nay, the acres, still to be
-dealt with ...</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>If seven men, with seven spuds</div>
- <div class='line'>Should punch for half a year ...</div>
- <div class='line'>...?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Rock of Sisyphus!—Cask of the Danaides!—Hydra of
-Argolis, with the unquenchable heads!—these and others
-are similes that fatally drift into his meditations.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>HAUNTING RHYMES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>When engaged upon work of protracted and futile iteration—such
-as “Bracken-chivvying”—tags of inane rhymes
-are apt to invade the hypnotized brain: of the kind that
-sometimes rise in accompaniment to the steady bumping of
-railway wheels on certain slow journeys. A particularly
-haunting one—to be conjured off if possible—is the
-“Nightmare” jingle, Mark Twain’s, I believe:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>Punch/, conduc/tor, punch/with care,</div>
- <div class='line'>A green/trip-slip/for a two/cent fare,</div>
- <div class='line'>A pink/trip-slip/for a three/cent fare,</div>
- <div class='line'>Punch/, punch/, punch with care ...</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>and so on relentlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If these are not the exact horrid words, this is the way
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_179'>179</span>they come back to me, giving a lilt to vindictive spud
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At another time, the apparent futility of all efforts to come
-even with the task at hand will evoke some such iterative lines
-as Cyrano’s dying vision of eternally resurging enemies:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Je sais/bien qu’à/la fin/vous me/mettrez/à bas</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">N’impor/te, je/me bats/, je me/bats, je/me bats!</span></i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figleft id016'>
-<img src='images/image204.jpg' alt='stairs in garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>This sort of absolutely
-incongruous haunting is
-an instance of what
-Hoffmann would have
-fondly called the <i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Zusammeverhängniss
-der Dinge</span></i>
-or “fatally-concatenated-mutual-interdependency”
-of things! Mythological
-images rising vaguely from the
-clouds of school memories; the
-lilt of that Walrus and Carpenter verse
-parodied a thousand times; an American
-jingle never recalled since it was first
-casually read and dismissed on a railway journey; and
-the magniloquent <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">panache</span></i> lines of Rostand—all dropping
-in irrelevantly from some distant and forgotten corner of
-the past into this garden, all à propos of spud work and
-linking itself with it!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For instance, to-day ‹one of the three longest in the year,
-for, in the coming morn, about five o’clock, our summer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_180'>180</span>solstice will have taken place›, as I spudded away at the
-fern, thirstily and perspiringly, my haunting iteration was
-alternately of images wide as the poles asunder. One
-was of those puzzling lines, in Boileau’s heroicomic
-poem <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Le Lutrin</span></i>, anent the barber who</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in20'>... <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">d’une main legère</span></i></div>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Tient un verre de vin qui rit dans la fougère.</span></i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FERN SEED</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The other was of Gadshill boast: “We steal as in a castle,
-cock-sure: we have the receipt of fern-seed”—which
-irresistibly, by concatenation, brought in the image of
-my dear if disreputable old friend Falstaff and how he
-would have “larded the lean earth” as he spudded along.
-Now it occurs to me that if the receipt of fern-seed as
-handed down by tradition is in any way correct, this is the
-last day when this fern massacre can be of any use, as
-far as Villino Loki is concerned, to prevent its propagation
-for this year. Is not to-morrow <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> John’s Eve;
-and is not that the date upon which the invisible seed—which
-once successfully gathered will confer upon the
-gatherer the power of invisibility—drops upon the soil?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The harvest, it seems, must be made “in the dark of the
-moon,” at the exact turning of midnight, and received in a
-pewter plate; without regard to the beguiling pranks of
-fairy or goblin, who, naturally enough, are jealous of the
-acquisition by mere mortals of this essential attribute of
-their order. The receipt does not state how the pewter-harvested
-seed, being invisible, is to be bottled up or otherwise
-preserved for use when required.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This, by the way, is a fairly typical instance of the manner
-in which our mediæval superstitions were shrouded in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_181'>181</span>cryptic conditions, the failure of any one of which in the
-smallest particular would plausibly explain away the
-failure of the whole charm.—We can easily understand
-the paucity of invisible mortals at all times.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, I for one have no desire for such a charm. The
-temptation to use it would be distracting. And conceive
-the endless trouble, picture to yourself the misconceptions,
-you would raise into your own mind if you possessed the
-power at any moment of prying, invisible, into the innermost
-life of your best friends, or your enemies ... and of hearing
-what they might happen to say about you!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No. Yet I would some power gave me the gift to gather
-all the invisible seed at Villino Loki: I would burn it
-once and for all.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'><i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">CROSSES DE FOUGERE, A LA JAPONAISE</span></i></div>
-
-<p class='c008'>One cannot help wondering that so little use should be
-made of all this vegetable wealth. There it is, covering
-square leagues of common land, to be harvested by whosoever
-list. In former days, indeed, it was gathered in and
-burnt for “potashes”—chiefly for glass-making. And
-therein lies the explanation of the wine “laughing in the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fougère</span></i>”; ash of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">fougère</span></i>, or Bracken, had in the “grand
-Roy’s” days become synonymous with glass itself. Again,
-in its dry condition, Brake was once extensively used for
-thatching and for litter; in some parts of the country the
-young plant was given as fodder to cattle and horses.
-Now, however, county councils forbid the building of
-thatch, our up-to-date cattle and horses are too fastidious
-as to litter and fodder, and we import our potashes.
-Meanwhile, Bracken threatens everywhere to stifle the
-Heather on our moors.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If I remember right, in some parts of France the poorer
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_182'>182</span>people make use of young Brake as food. And this
-reminds me that, some years ago, I heard the last Japanese
-Ambassador remark at dinner—à propos of the Asparagus
-that was just going round—that he wondered we should
-not make use in the kitchen of the Bracken he had noticed
-growing in such enormous and neglected quantities in
-England. In his country, he assured us, they eat the
-young shoots, when still in their folded “crozier” stage,
-precisely as we over here eat Asparagus, and consider
-them not only as delicacies, but as particularly wholesome
-and nutritious.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The recipe for cooking them is simple. The croziers, cut
-just short of the roots, are to be parboiled in strongly salted
-water; the first water, which extracts some unpleasantly
-bitter principle, is to be quickly poured off; then the
-shoots, thoroughly drained of this first water, are boiled
-in a large quantity of fresh water, drained again carefully
-and served with oil or butter, very much like our Sprue.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I must some day make the experiment. I wonder if the
-joy, now, of eating tender young Bracken would be like
-that of the savage devouring his declared enemy?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Meanwhile, for the sake of the desired grass, the hecatomb
-must be repeated daily.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_183'>183</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image208.jpg' alt='dog looking outside at rain' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>MORE BLACK SHEEP</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>This July, not remarkable for
-anything but rain and dark skies,
-has produced a perfect outbreak
-of wickedness in the village. Our
-black sheep have turned into
-tigers without even the excuse
-of torrid weather to inflame
-their passions. But, indeed, the
-public house is always ready
-to supply the stimulant necessary
-for driving average humanity
-into brutal and insane
-crime.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Caliban, whom the reader
-may remember as having once
-worked in our Fortunate
-Island, and always looking
-as if he had just risen from all-fours,
-has, in our recent absence, thrown
-away all pretence at humanity once
-and for all. Though, indeed, why
-should the poor beasts, who generally make excellent
-fathers and husbands, be compared to the
-type of man that deliberately ruins his home? To batter
-your wife, terrorize your children, to squander your
-substance for an indulgence which ultimately destroys
-your health, is a mystery of perversity reserved for the
-superior being.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Anyway, Caliban, having drifted from place to place, and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_184'>184</span>lost his last chance of employment in this district by killing
-a whole hot-house full of Tomatoes through drunken neglect
-“on” the local market gardener, as we should say in
-Ireland, finally locked his wife and children out of the little
-cottage, and shut himself in with his drunkenness in company
-with his aged but not less drunken parent. The
-power of thought having returned in the morning, the
-precious pair put their boosy heads together and sold the
-furniture, possessed themselves of every available valuable,
-even of Mrs. Caliban’s solitary trinket, and decamped
-together from the district!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mrs. Caliban, with an infant in arms and two little girls
-at her skirts, has now set to work to earn enough for
-all. She is a valiant woman; and no doubt when she has
-succeeded fairly well, Caliban will return to repeat the
-process. She is very anxious for a separation, but cannot
-accomplish this, as the whereabouts of her lord and master
-are unknown.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>She is less fortunate than the wife of Black Sheep <abbr title='Number'>No.</abbr> 2.
-Last Saturday we were peacefully entertaining a couple
-of week-end visitors, when poor Mrs. Mutton crawled into
-our garden to “see the young lady.” The water-butt
-myth was cast to the winds. She had a black eye and a
-dislocated thumb, and informed us that Mutton had
-threatened to “do for her,” and that she was going in fear
-of her life. “When not drunk,” she remarked with the
-apathy of despair, “I think he’s mad!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mutton is well known in the district for his playful ways,
-and no one would consent to house his wife but an enterprising
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_185'>185</span>barber: on the condition, however, that Mutton
-did not come after her. The poor thing shivered and
-shook, and avowed that she could not return and pass
-another hour in such terrors. When she heard his step,
-she told us, a trembling would seize her.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You ladies,” she said, rolling her hopeless eyes from one
-sympathetic listener to another, “can have no idea of the
-kind of life poor women like us lead!”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>COUNTY POLICE METHODS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Little Jimmy Mutton and she had spent the previous night
-out under fear of a gun, which Black Sheep <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">père</span></i> had taken
-to bed with him, with threats of instant use. The first idea
-of the owners of Villino Loki was that the woman should
-have protection; and here the drama took a Gilbertian
-form with a dash of nightmare. Her cottage being on the
-borders of another county, no policeman nearer than nine
-miles off had the right to intervene. In vain did “the
-young lady,” attended by the two week-end visitors, start
-off for the nearest magistrate and lay the case before him.
-Mrs. Mutton must betake herself to that far county town,
-by what means she best might; and if she and her poor
-lambs were “done for” between this and then, it would
-all be within the strict limits of the law as far as the
-magistrate was concerned. With fruitless eloquence were
-the perils of the situation painted in their blackest
-colours. Mutton, as we have said, was famous, and
-like Habacuc in Voltaire’s estimation, might be <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">capable
-de tout</span></i>.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Could not the local policeman take possession of the
-gun?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Impossible. No policeman nearer than Paddockstown
-could lay a finger on it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_186'>186</span>Could not at least the village Bobby keep an eye on the
-house where the enterprising barber had taken in the
-refugees?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Magistrate smiled at such ignorance of the law. All
-orders must come from Paddockstown.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“That,” remarked one of the week-end visitors as the discomfited
-party shook the Magistrate’s dust off their feet,
-“that seems a futile old gentleman!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This week-end visitor had an emphatic manner of speech,
-which afforded the only relief in the exasperation of the
-atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>However, the affair managed to straighten itself out on,
-again, true Gilbertian lines. Mrs. Mutton duly found a
-motor-bus to convey her to Paddockstown; and there, with
-all the proper formality, interviewed the Magistrate and a
-lawyer, with the help of whom she was separated from
-her obstreperous Mutton. Little Jimmy gave evidence,
-Mutton was advised by his lawyer not to defend the case.
-She has now appropriately joined forces with Mrs. Caliban
-and is enjoying a time of peace which we trust may not
-be merely an interlude.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, Miss!” she cried, describing these unwonted
-sensations, “I’m that overjoiced, I’m afraid it’s hardly
-right!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>As the husband is hovering about the roads, waylaying
-all concerned with alarming politeness, we are a little
-anxious. We know that he is still <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">mouton enragé</span></i> at
-heart; and we do not know if in spite of the mandate
-from Paddockstown the local police would be allowed
-to interfere were gun or table knife to be put into
-requisition.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_187'>187</span>The Dorothy Perkins are coming out, showing a most
-glorious kind of fire rose, which hitherto they only displayed
-in the autumn after a touch of frost. Combined
-with the delicate sprays of the
-Ceanothus Gloire de Versailles,
-they make in a tall glass vase
-as pretty a harmony as we
-know.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image212.jpg' alt='rose garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE NEW ROSARY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The new Rose Garden promises
-complete success. Caroline
-Testout is coming out, fat
-and pink and smiling in her
-usual good-humoured profusion.
-We have a great bed
-in the shape of a Maltese cross
-in the middle of a stretch of
-turf in this new Rose Garden,
-and the other three beds are
-filled respectively with Madame
-Abel Châtenay; mixed yellow
-roses, among which are Betty,
-Lady Hillingdon, and Juliet,
-are specially successful; and
-another deep pink charmer
-named Madame Jules Groles. She has not yet come out.
-The centre bed is devoted to General MacArthur, with a
-Crimson Rambler pillar.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Climbing Roses against the arches that bound this
-rose-lawn north and south are growing bravely; and we
-have lost our hearts to May Queen with its mass of
-bright pink flowers, which, combined with the fainter,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_188'>188</span>creamier pinks of Paul Transon, make such a delicious
-bouquet of bloom, all on the same pillar.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The hedge of Penzance Briars, though only a couple of
-feet above the ground as yet, has thrown out long lines
-of starry blossoms, shading from faint primrose to deepest
-crimson, with intermediate constellations of pinks and
-carmines that out-do both Dorothy Perkins and
-Zephyrine Drouhin.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The new Rose Garden is shut off on the west by a
-fir-tree avenue, and we are trying to coax white and red
-Wichurianas up the stems, in spite of all expert pessimism.
-Marquise de Sinety is a delicate, warmly tinted, pinky
-cream Rose. Catalogues, no doubt, would call her
-“salmon”; but it is such a horrid word that we prefer
-to present the picture under another aspect.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Do not let anyone subject to the watery caprices of an
-English climate place their trust in Maman Cochet! Her
-heavy bud becomes hopelessly sodden after anything like
-a shower. One can conceive that this dowager would be
-a handsome enough object in a southern garden, or that
-she would be a good greenhouse rose; but, like many
-another, she does not bear adversity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Handsome, bland Caroline Testout keeps up her self-contained
-smile unimpaired in fair and foul weather;
-“fat-faced Puss” that she is, a very Gioconda among
-roses, even to the close folding of her plump leaves, which
-remind one of that overrated charmer’s compact hands.
-It would take a good deal to shake her equanimity;
-scentless, soulless beauty!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_189'>189</span>The Lyons Rose has burst on us this year in all its
-splendour, a most successful combination of pink and
-gold. The sunset glow seems to shine through the
-petals.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>These efforts at producing new effects are not always
-successful, some having a very patchy appearance, to our
-mind. As for the Austrian Briar, Soleil d’Or, it is
-more like a blood-orange cut in two than anything else, in
-colour, shape, and pulpy texture. From a distance the
-bright circles look attractive, but we should recommend
-it to no one who values delicacy in their blooms.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A great success are the Weeping Standards Stella.
-Though it is their first year, the branches are covered
-with lovely tinted blossoms; and what is more, these are
-lasting. Single carmine stars are they, with golden centres
-and a scent of musk.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FLOWERING TIMES AND PLANS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The mistress of the Villino, a foolish and impetuous
-person, has three times made the same mistake and
-omitted to ascertain the blooming season of plants which
-she wished to be in beauty together. So the four Weeping
-Standards Stella, are considerably in advance of the
-four Dorothys which alternate with them; and the
-standards Soleil d’Or were quite over before the
-Conrad Meyers appeared in the Lily Walk; and
-the contrast of pink and yellow was what had been
-aimed at!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the same manner she had intended the Garland Roses
-to foam up in two splendid white pillars at each end of
-the long length of Dorothy Perkins at the opposite side of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_190'>190</span>the Blue Border terrace. Of course the Garland is becoming
-unsightly before the fire-pink of the Dorothy begins
-to show in any profusion.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The garden—except on the upper terrace, which with Heliotrope,
-Lobelia, and the climbing Ceanothus keeps to the
-faint cool blues, untroubled by the efflorescence of the
-White Pet ‹which, by the way, has completely eaten
-out Perle des Rouges› and the very faint pink of the
-Ivy-Leaf Geraniums—except for the upper terrace, the
-garden, we say, is growing pink. What with the Verbenas
-and the Red Roses and the cheery coloured Ivy-Leaf
-Geranium called Jersey Beauty, in the Dutch garden,
-and the general ramp of Dorothy everywhere, it is a
-mass of pink.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another year we must have more Penstemons. They
-are charming things, and as good as they are beautiful.
-In a garden nothing is beautiful that is not good, which is
-another facet of its likeness to Paradise.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We caress the idea of a border where perennial Gypsophila,
-large bushes of Monarda, Penstemons and Lavender should
-group and contrast and delight and rest the eye.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a walk in a wonderful garden not far from here—a
-garden which brings a kind of fainting, despairing envy
-to the soul of Loki’s Grandmother—where Lavender and
-Penstemons make the happiest possible effect. The walk
-itself is a thing of beauty; through woodland on one side,
-the border in question runs quite a long way against a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_191'>191</span>low parapet on the other. Below this parapet the ground
-slopes down, and at the end of the walk there is so abrupt
-a fall that it seems almost to end in mid-air with a vast
-panorama far beneath. And on the side of the flowery
-border a shelving precipice falls away out of which giant
-stone pines hang against the distant horizon. The Lavender
-has grown to a hedge, and the varying soft pinks of
-the Penstemons run vividly against its mistiness.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Would that walk, and that border, and that view, were
-ours!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_192'>192</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>We nearly had a garden tragedy yesterday afternoon.
-The sounds of a little dog in great distress broke the peace
-of the drowsy day. Loki’s Ma-Ma dashed out of the
-house thinking it was Loki—caught in a trap! Certainly
-the little dog—whichever it was—was in desperate straits.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“That’s the voice of my Betty,” cried Juvenal, galloping
-to the rescue in his shirt-sleeves. “My treasure, my little
-girl! I’m coming!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was well indeed that he did hurry, for Betty had fallen
-into the deep water-butt in the Rose Garden; and if she had
-not had the sense to scream for help, and to hold on to the
-rim of the barrel with all her little claws, she would have
-been a drowned Betty, and nobody the wiser, perhaps, for
-days and days.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We think it would have broken Juvenal’s heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Both Arabella and Loki were standing staring stiffly instead
-of doing what was expected of dogs of such intellect:
-which was running to fetch human help.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>PERSIANS AND A WICKED WORLD</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>On a former occasion however, when Kitty-Wee had a fit,
-poor little darling, Loki acted up to our opinion of him. We
-had gone for a walk on the moor, and the Persian Princess,
-still half in her kittenhood, had accompanied us, with that
-touching display of pleasure at being in our company which
-makes the Fur Children so endearing. She had to roll on
-the grass in front of us, sharpen her claws on every tree,
-and rub her pretty head against our skirts in the endeavour
-to show her feelings. We suppose these feelings were too
-much for her. We had halted in the greenhouse when
-Loki dashed in upon us, whimpering in a frightful state of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_193'>193</span>agitation. He drew his Grandmother out of the greenhouse,
-and rushed up to stand over his little fur sister,
-crying out loud in sympathy and distress.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She was a small convulsed heap upon the ground. Fortunately
-the tap, which ran into one of those delectable
-barrels of odoriferous water so precious to the garden, was
-quite close, and we were able to administer first aid with
-promptitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For all who do not know it: cold water to the head gives
-immediate relief to any little creature in such a seizure.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>She quite grew out of them. But, alas! our thistledown
-Princess, our dear pretty silver lady! We have delayed
-to write her sad fate into the pages of the chronicle of the
-happy Fur Family. She was stolen! We often lie awake
-thinking of her. Pampered as she was; so accustomed
-to be thought of, and cherished, and made much of; to
-have her pearly robe brushed and combed to the last point
-of perfection, her dainty appetite catered for; to find a
-caress and a cuddle whenever she was in the mood for it!
-A lurid mystery ‹accompanied by a great deal of hard
-swearing› envelops her loss. She was lost on a half-hour’s
-motor-trip which her family, struck with momentary idiocy,
-was allowing her to undertake alone. She was, in fact,
-about to contract another matrimonial alliance with a
-prince of her own race, and was so securely packed in her
-luxurious travelling basket, so unmistakably labelled, so
-solemnly handed over to the care of the conductor of the
-motor ’bus, that it did not seem as if she could come to
-harm.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_194'>194</span>But Blue Persians, as well as pink pearls, are over-precious
-chattels to confide to a dishonest world! The conductor
-of the next ’bus to that by which she was expected, handed
-an empty basket to the envoy from the other side; and
-when this was refused, declared the cat had escaped on
-the way. As the basket was hermetically closed, this lie
-had not even the merit of being plausible. But puzzle
-succeeded puzzle when the waiter from the Golf Club
-House, a reliable witness, deposed having picked up the
-same basket still securely fastened at every corner—but
-minus the cat—on the first round of the ’bus. “It could
-have gone to Siberia in that basket,” he declared, “it was
-that strong and solid!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The local police, a most intelligent and valuable body of
-men, declared that nothing could be done, “as no man
-could be taken up for telling a lie.” And the railway
-company, after punching a large hole in the basket,
-announced that as the cat was not insured, we might sue
-them for five shillings! We advertised and beat the
-countryside in vain—Kitty-Wee has gone out of our lives.
-If we only knew that she was happy, the ache at our
-hearts would be less.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We must fill the gap, and are deliberating whether a pair
-of Blue Persians, or an orange couple, would afford us
-the greater joy. We think to decide on the latter would
-be less callous to the memory of Kitty-Wee, and provide
-perhaps a better match in the little Villino that runs so
-much to orange and yellow.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Never could there be anything more beautiful than the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_195'>195</span><abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> John’s Wort along the moorland roads. It has been a
-day of golden heat, the distant woods have shimmering
-purple vapours in their hollows, and the hills are misty
-blue. There had been a fire last year in a great flat
-stretch of pinewood that runs into heather and moor, high
-above where the road begins to fall into the first of the
-little country towns between us and London. The wood
-had been cleared of the dead trees and we suppose it is
-this which has given encouragement to the great yellow
-weed. However it may be, it is a field of cloth of gold
-now. Pines rise up at intervals in their dark solemnity.
-Royal purple of the heather runs into the gold. It is a
-meeting of colour that ought to be immortalized.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_196'>196</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figleft id005'>
-<img src='images/image221.jpg' alt='path down garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Time has run
-away with us, and
-the garden chronicle
-has been silent. The
-Ramblers have
-blazed in the garden,
-more especially the
-indefatigable “Dorothy,”
-till one has
-grown almost tired
-of such a repetition
-of vivid pink.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Mistress of the
-Villino has been
-planning “toning-down
-effects” for
-next year and means
-to run a border of
-Catmint or Dwarf
-Lavender against the
-“Dorothy” hedge.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Lily Walk, which we shall have to call by
-another name, since, with a few exceptions, the Lilies
-decline to have anything to say to it, is, should the
-scheme contemplated be successful, to show a cool
-vista of greys, lavender blues, and “rose mourante”
-behind the arch where the same irrepressible Perkins
-flaunts herself in such splendour. The Delphiniums,
-which have done so well there, will have spent their
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_197'>197</span>hour of glorious life before the arch enters upon its
-triumph.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What a mausoleum that Lily Walk has proved itself! It
-has been one of our tragedies! Adam is quite dispassionate,
-and says “it’s the Lily disease; and there’s a deal of it
-about.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>By one of those freakish accidents that will occur in the
-best regulated gardens, a batch of Fairy Lilies was planted
-<em>behind</em> the ramping Alstrumerias. This was discovered too
-late, when these bold Peruvians were succumbing.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image222_223.jpg' alt='landscape by path - two pages wide' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>TONING DOWN EFFECTS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>But besides the amount of sickly, straggling “Candidums,”
-“Auratums,” and “Tigers” that have disgraced the
-border, there is the unaccountable number of bulbs that
-have been swallowed up in it! The whole thing must
-be dug out this autumn. And the scheme is now to
-grow Ceanothus “Gloire de Versailles” up the wooden
-trellis at the back between the Roses the foliage of which
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_198'>198</span>is always blighted, and to have a pillar of Blush Rambler
-at the end, by the side of the Wellingtonia which closes
-the border. Bushes of Ceanothus Azureas, as well as the
-successful “Gloire de Versailles”; a drift of Achillea,
-shading from the palest pink to deep carmine; bushes of
-Catmint; the new pale pink Spirea, perennial Gypsophila;
-mauve Galiga ‹Salvia, Miss Jekyll recommends›; Sea
-Lavender and a couple of clumps of Eringium will complete
-the effect. Perhaps there shall be Moon Daisies,
-pale pink and mauve Penstemons, and one or two groups
-of “Cottage Maid” Antirrhinums to fill up the gaps.
-But what we feel is needed is the grey, mauve, silver, and
-lavender-blue tinting against which Dorothy Perkins may
-be as flaming as she likes.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>It is rare to find Rose Achilleas anywhere. Yet they are
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_199'>199</span>as pretty a thing as we have ever seen in a border; the
-blossoms seeming to drift on their slender stems, one above
-the other like little sunset clouds.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What has been for once a complete pleasure is the wide
-bed under the drawing-room window. The Ceanothus—which
-loves us—has been a treasure of delicate bloom;
-and, against it, the great old bushes of lavender have thrust
-their spikes in profusion. Just the right tone to harmonize.
-Then the Longiflorum Lilies—excellent, sturdy, conscientious
-darlings!—have lifted their satin shining trumpets
-above the Heliotrope that loves us too; and Lobelia, the
-one vivid line of colour, has rimmed the thick cushion of
-“Mrs. Sinkins’” foliage most artistically. The grey-green
-gives the finishing touch to a really reposeful combination.
-There are also two or three clumps of Nicotiana Affinis,
-softly mauve, and faded purple crimson. To gaze at that
-corner against the amethyst of the moor is a never-ending
-delight.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A CHAPTER OF DISASTERS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>But another garden disaster has been the annihilation of all
-the seedlings which we sowed in the open border! It is
-laughable now, but sad too, to turn back the pages and
-read the vainglorious project of running a dazzling ribbon
-of Nemophila against the Dorothy Perkins hedge. ‹It might
-have been frightful; so perhaps Providence kindly intervened!›
-But that Nigella “Miss Jekyll” should have
-refused her mysterious and pretty presence in the Blue
-Border is a deep disappointment.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are again gnashing our teeth over the Blue Border.
-The fact is, we suppose, it is too much to expect beauty
-all the year round, no matter how boastfully garden writers
-inform you of their artifices in that direction: how cleverly,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_200'>200</span>for instance, the annual Gypsophila will bury the unsightly
-decay of the Iris leaves, or how you can pull branches of
-“Miss Mellish” down over the Delphiniums.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Why do not our Delphiniums bloom twice? Every garden
-book and every catalogue cheers your heart by promising
-a handsome second bloom to the industrious clipper-off of
-seed-pods. But never a Delphinium has responded to our
-kind attentions in that direction. Perhaps our soil does
-not give them strength enough for such exertion. But it is
-idle speculating. One must learn what one’s garden will
-do and what it won’t do—and make the best of it.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The greatest of all the tragedies that have befallen us
-lately is indubitably the passing away of poor old Tom.
-We are now catless!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Poor little friend! Where has that quaint, faithful, dutiful
-identity gone to? Juvenal says Heaven would not be
-Heaven to him if he were not to meet his own dogs there—a
-sentiment which we have, we believe, ourselves set
-down elsewhere. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Francis the Poverello saw God in
-all His lesser creatures. It is not possible to think that
-we shall lose anything in a completer world.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Tom was the most conscientious of cats. He now lies
-beside Susan. We are going to get two little tombstones
-made for us by the Watts Settlement at Compton. Susan’s
-epitaph has already been mentioned. Nothing more to
-the point could be imagined:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Here lies Susan, a good dog.” “Here lies Thomas, for
-eighteen years our faithful cat-comrade.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>So shall it stand recorded over the new grave.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_201'>201</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Mid-August and the lists beginning to come in! Mr.
-Eden Phillpotts, in his delightful garden book, says that no
-one is a true garden lover who is not instantly lost in
-every nurseryman’s list, who does not immediately draw
-out orders far beyond his means, and spend his time in
-plans and combinations that shall transcend Kew as well
-as Babylon. What garden lovers are we in this respect!
-It is only when the orders are written out and the prices
-totted up that sober reason obtrudes its forbidding
-countenance—and then the painful process of “knocking
-off” begins. Nevertheless we are becoming adepts in
-combining lavishness with economy. There are delightful
-firms whose plants are literally to be had at a quarter
-of the price of others, with results quite as happy.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is the Dutchman who sends us our bulbs. He has
-grown to be a friend, and his English letters are charming,
-“Dear Mrs.,” he wrote when Gladioli, “The Bride,”
-arrived in a state no Bride should be in, really without a
-wedding garment—“Dear Mrs., She is a flower the most
-agreeable in the garden, but she is very unpleasant to
-travel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>His catalogue makes equally fascinating reading. The
-quaint spelling and phraseology are more than attractive.
-Who, for instance, would not wish to invest in Narcissus,
-thus described:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Astrardente, white and apricot orange, edged fiery scarlet
-magnificent and nice flowers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Nothing,” says another grower, “can equal, much less
-excel, early single Tulips.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_202'>202</span>“Pottebakke White,” cries a third, “is a very large pure
-white flower, and not to surpass better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Of snow-like variety and delicious fragrance a most
-beloved flower,” thus our special Hollander labels Lilium
-Longiflorum Takesima, in words that have a certain
-charm of poetic simplicity which would not have misbecome
-the artistic Japanese himself.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>DUTCH BULBS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>However tempted by other nationalities, we choose to be
-Dutch in our bulbs. This is the list we have just
-dispatched to Haarlem:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“600 China blue single Hyacinths.</div>
- <div class='line'>1 dozen Cavaignac pink Hyacinths.</div>
- <div class='line'>1 dozen Fabiola blush Hyacinths.</div>
- <div class='line'>50 Roman Hyacinths.</div>
- <div class='line'>100 Scarlet Duc van Thol Tulips.</div>
- <div class='line'>50 Rose Duc van Thol Tulips.</div>
- <div class='line'>300 Thomas Moore Tulips.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 Darwin Tulips, best mixed.</div>
- <div class='line'>500 Parrot Tulips, in the finest mixture, bright colours.</div>
- <div class='line'>100 Gladiolus Brenchlyensis.</div>
- <div class='line'>100 Gladiolus Hollandia.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 mixed striped Crocus.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 Scilla Siberica praecox.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 blue Grape Hyacinths.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 Snowdrops Elweseii.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 Poeticus recurvus Narcissus.</div>
- <div class='line'>100 Hyacinthus Candicans.</div>
- <div class='line'>1000 Single Trumpet Daffodils mixed.</div>
- <div class='line'>500 Double Daffodils mixed.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Of these some of the scarlet and rose “Duc van Thol”
-Tulips, and all the “Cavaignac” and “Fabiola” Hyacinths
-are for forcing; and, of course, the Roman Hyacinths
-also. The other bulbs are destined for the open ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_203'>203</span>Gladiolus Hollandia is described as the “Pink Brenchlyensis,”
-and is much recommended. We have never
-grown her yet, but her scarlet cousin is a great success
-in our garden. We find our Gladioli do so much better
-when planted in the spring, that we are asking the firm not
-to send them to us for another seven months. But they
-are included in the autumn list so that he may reserve us
-good sound tubers.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is evidently against garden decorum to mention the name
-of a horticulturist, for some garden writers make a point
-of assuring the reader that they will never be guilty of such
-an indiscretion; but we see no harm at all in paying, by
-the way of this discursive pen, a tribute to the perfect
-satisfaction hitherto afforded us by our chosen bulb grower,
-Mr. Thoolen, of Haarlem. His Tulips, Hyacinths, and
-Narcissi have stood the test for three years. Of course,
-in our soil we cannot expect more than one good season
-out of anything except Crocus, Scilla, and Narcissi.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Daffodils, which up till now have been unaccountably
-absent from our garden plans, are to be heavily indulged
-in this year. Besides what appears in the above list we
-are venturing on another thousand from a certain Mr.
-Telkamp, likewise in the land of windmills.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>MORE DUTCH BULBS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The following is the order which we have just dispatched
-to him:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-b'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'>“1000 Daffodils for naturalization.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>100 Retroflexa Tulips, soft yellow.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>100 Bouton d’Or Tulips, deep golden yellow.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>100 Caledonia Tulips, orange, dark stems.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>100 Golden Eagle Tulips, fine yellow.</div>
- <div class='line in1'>200 Count of Leicester, yellow orange tinted.”</div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_204'>204</span>He advertises a thousand Daffodils for ten shillings—two
-and a half dollars! Miraculous, if true! It is worth the
-plunge.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We have decided to take a slice off the kitchen garden to
-be kept entirely for bulbs and tubers for cutting. There a
-hundred “Madonna” Lilies, three dozen Auratum, a
-hundred Tigrinum, and a few hundreds of other kinds
-shall be given all the chances that completely fresh soil
-and good exposure can afford. Five hundred Parrot
-Tulips, three hundred “Thomas Moore,” and a hundred
-“Bizarres” are to make a field of glory for the harvest.
-The hundred Gladiolus Brenchlyensis and the hundred
-Hollandia will rear their scarlet and pink spears; and Iris
-shall stand in ranks.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Mistress of the Villino has still an hour of bliss
-before her in picking out Iris for her list. The “Florentina”
-shall certainly be largely of the company, and preference
-is to be given generally to the misty blue and purple kinds.
-Then the speculation in cheap bulbs provides a thousand
-mixed May flowering Tulips.... Adam’s face will be a
-study when he finds how much of his cherished potato
-and cabbage land will be required. But what a span of
-beauty it will make; and what sheaves of delight for ourselves
-and our friends!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>FOND DREAMS, AND MISDOUBTS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Every year the extravagant woman above mentioned,
-who has got the vice of garden-gambling into her very
-system, extends her ambitions. But how much is there not
-still to be accomplished before she is satisfied, if ever a
-garden-lover is satisfied!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_205'>205</span>For a long time she has dreamt of a shady pool—somewhere.
-And, after beholding the adorable vision before
-described in Messrs. Wallace’s exhibit at Holland House
-this summer, she had been quite sure that it would be
-difficult to exist another year without a nook with Irises
-about it and a sunk basin, and a little statue mysteriously
-contrived in the green. Coming across an advertisement
-in <cite>Country Life</cite>, where an artistic firm of garden-decorators
-offers just what she wants, a small round stone pond with
-a Faun sitting cross-legged on the brim of it, it becomes
-quite clear to her that there are cravings which must be
-satisfied. She is willing to give up the vision of a new
-Azalea dell ‹for this year only, of course› and of a paved
-walk with Cypresses on each side, ending in a <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">rondpoint</span></i>
-hedged about with more Cypresses, with a stone bench in
-the middle, for the more immediately alluring claim. But,
-O, ye gods and little fishes, how insatiable are still the
-needs of the Villino on the hill!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is the orchard for the slope above the sunk tennis
-court; to be a glory some Spring with Apple and Pear
-blossom, while Daffodils, Narcissi and Scilla riot underneath.
-And there is the round Autumn Garden to be
-dug out and levelled in the wood, where Sunflowers,
-Michaelmas Daisies, “Fire King” Antirrhinums, Nasturtiums
-and flaunting orange and saffron Dahlias are to
-make a rim of splendour against a cropped green hedge.
-The centre of this blazing circle is to be flagged and
-consecrated to “Herbs.” That will be something to
-live for; to see accomplished some golden autumn of
-the future!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_206'>206</span>So much has already been done in what was, most of it,
-a mere sodden tangle, impenetrable not only to human
-beings but even to the light of heaven, that it gives one
-heart for what may be achieved in the future. Yet never
-does the Grandmother of Loki feel the uncertainty of life
-more keenly than when she is in the midst of her garden
-dreams. Every winter indeed, when the bulbs are planted,
-she wonders, with a pang, if she will see them come up in
-the Spring; how much more does she now ask herself
-whether the hidden Autumn Garden, or the Italian walk,
-or the Bowery Orchard, or even the Sunk Fountain, are
-ever destined to rejoice her.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, after all, she gets an extraordinary amount of
-pleasure out of the mere mental picture, and who can say
-if the very uncertainty of all things here below does not
-add to their zest?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='tm' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_207'>207</span>
-<a href='images/image234_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image234.jpg' alt='THE MOOR' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE MOOR</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>DAWN OVER THE MOOR</div>
-<p class='c008'>This morning, waking at dawn, the Padrona was impelled
-to roll out of bed, and look out of both her windows.
-The one over her balcony gives down the valley and the
-one opposite her bed affords her vision
-of the moor rolling away beyond the
-Dutch Garden
-and the terrace
-corner.
-If she had
-been but a woman of moderate
-vigour, she would not have gone to
-bed again till the whole pageant of mysterious glory had
-fulfilled itself before her eyes. For what a sight it was!
-First of all, the whole garden, woodland and heather
-hills were steeped in a translucence for which there is no
-name. It is a virgin hour, and its purity no words can
-describe. The Ling, in full bloom, was silver and amethyst
-on the rise, misty purple and blue in the hollows. Behind
-the shouldering hills a rift of sky was a radiant lemon-yellow,
-a kind of honey sea of light. And above that,
-again, little drifts of cloud had caught a wonderful orange-rose
-glow like the wings of cherubim about the Throne.
-Down the valley there were silver mists against the most
-tender, clear horizon; and all along the Lily Walk the
-clumps of Tiger Lilies seemed to be like little Fra Angelico
-angels, holding their breath in adoration!</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image232_236.jpg' alt='landscape - two pages wide' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Everything lies, after all, in the point of view. The dawn
-was decidedly too pink for safety, and the clumps of Lilies
-that looked so pious and recollected have got “the disease”
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_208'>208</span>badly in their stalks. Yet realism can never blight that
-exquisite hour of breaking day in her thoughts!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The only time we degenerates ever really see the dawn is
-coming home from some London ball; or again, travelling.
-The dawn in London often gives an impression of extraordinary
-blue in atmosphere and heaven, we suppose
-because it is seen contrasted with artificial illuminations.
-But that sapphire blue, when it permeates park and streets,
-when the sky seems to hold unplumbed depths beyond
-depths of the same wonderful colour, is a thing to dwell in
-the memory likewise, though travellers have the better part.
-Dawn in the Alps! A night not to be depicted! Such
-vastness of tinted heights; such black chasms where the
-pines hang; spume of waterfalls all golden crimson, and
-deep rivers, green and terrible and beautiful with a glint
-on them as they rush!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of us ‹the fourth in the lucky clover leaf at Villino
-Loki; one who is poet and musician besides many other
-things, and sometimes poet and musician together› has
-defined the indefinable. It is not the dawn of the day she
-hymns, but the dawn of the young Spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_209'>209</span>Though the poem is printed in a recently published volume,
-it seems to fit naturally into this page.</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><i>THE <abbr title='Saint'>ST.</abbr> GOTHARD</i></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line in4'><i>April and I—</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Each with each greeting amid tumbled ice,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Travel these wastes of frozen purity.</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Here the wild air above the precipice</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>E’en tasteth sweet, and hath a delicate scent</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>As of faint flowers unseen—the flower of snows</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Massed peak on peak in slumber yet unspent,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>But dreaming of the Rose.</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Here the great hills wear silence as a seal—</i></div>
- <div class='line in4'><i>April and I,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Listening can hear the loosened snowflake steal</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Down from the burdened bough that slips awry;</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Here the long cry of water-nymphs at play</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Freezes upon the iced lips of fountains,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And their sweet limbs’ arrested holiday</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>In crystal carved engarlandeth the mountains.</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Through such vast fields of sleep how dare we roam,</i></div>
- <div class='line in4'><i>April and I,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And from its eyrie bid the torrent foam,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And virgin meads grow starrier than the sky</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>With scattered cowslip and with drifted bell?</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Or where austerely looms an Alpine giant</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Set a young almond rosily defiant</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>To be our sentinel?</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_210'>210</span><i>Whence are we victors, chanting as we go,</i></div>
- <div class='line in4'><i>April and I.</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>“Be free, ye tumbling streams, awake O snow—</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Ye silver blooms increase and multiply?”</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>What is our spell?—The singing heart we bring,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>And lo! that song that is the core of earth</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Leaps in reply, and children of the Spring</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Into the light come forth.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE DAWN OF YOUNG SPRING</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Then there was a dawn over the Campagna, seen from
-the train that was speeding us towards Rome. A ball of
-red fire hung over the horizon. The sea lay silver and
-grey; and misty silver the Campagna.... “God made
-himself an awful rose of dawn,” as Tennyson sings. He
-did that morning: awful, yet full of a glorious comfort.
-The sea just caught the great reflection on its bosom.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A little later, when we came to the first ruins that precede
-the aqueducts, there were the white cattle, stepping about
-among the broken pillars, with their huge spreading horns
-all gilded. These had not changed since the days when
-the sun gleamed on the grandeurs of classic Rome. Only
-then yonder building—temple, or tomb, or villa—fronted
-the morning with a forgotten stateliness, a lost grace.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Is anything comparable to the scene that meets the traveller
-on his entry into Rome? Alas! <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> John Lateran no
-longer stands like some titanic splendid ship about to slip
-her moorings and sail away into the wild, lonely sea of the
-Campagna. New walls have sprung up without the noble
-ancient walls; sordid disjointed lengths of streets, mean
-houses with blistered, leprous plaster; and evil-looking
-little wine-shops. Nevertheless, nothing can spoil the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_211'>211</span>moment when the Lateran Church first gathers shape
-against the sky. All those statues with tossing gesture
-against the faint blue of the new day, heroic figures with
-outstretched arms seeming to gather pilgrims into the city;
-and in the midst of them the Saviour uplifting the Cross of
-Salvation! To the believer what a welcome! And it is
-Rome herself at a glance, too; for if the Church stands
-here beckoning between earth and sky, she is jostled below
-and round about by the still speaking wonders of old Pagan
-Rome.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_212'>212</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>One of the advantages of being “little people in a little
-place” is the pleasure small things can give one. The
-Duke of Devonshire has seventy men in his garden. Is it
-possible to imagine taking an interest in anything conducted
-on so enormous a scale? It is not gardening, it is horticultural
-government! There can be no individual knowledge
-of any “beloved flower,” as our Dutch friend has it.
-Outside a millionaire’s greenhouse we once beheld regiment
-after regiment of Begonia pots. It made one’s brain reel.
-How insupportable anything so repeated would become!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Even in small gardens there is too much of a tendency
-nowadays to overdo garden effects. The flagged-path
-effect can certainly be overdone. We were tempted to
-visit a farmhouse the other day, adorably placed on a high
-Sussex down just where a stretch of table-land dominates
-an immense panorama of undulating country, and a vast
-half-circle of horizon. With a few more trees no situation
-could have been more beautiful.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“It was a party of the name of Mosensohn” who had
-taken the old farmhouse, we are told, and they were transmogrifying
-it according to the most modern principles of
-how the plutocrat’s farmhouse should look.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In some ways it was very well done. The fine old lines
-of wall and roof were carefully preserved; the high brick
-wall with its arched doorway and door with the grille in
-it, were quite in keeping, and gave one a sense of comfortable
-seclusion as one stepped in off the high road.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But the square court, once the farmyard, divided by two
-different levels, was completely flagged. Only a few beds
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_213'>213</span>against the wall, and a strip of turf on the lower level under
-the house, afforded any relief to the eye. There was a
-sunk garden beyond which was turfed, and the sense of
-rest it instantly afforded made one realize what the incoming
-family will suffer on a scorching August day from the
-glare and refractions of the flags in a space so hemmed in.
-In the right spirit of garden mania, we were not above
-taking what hints we could. And some were very good.
-All the beds on that first level were planted with cool-looking
-blue and purple flowers—a happy thought where
-there was so much hot stone. And the old cow stables
-had been very cleverly converted into a most Italian-looking
-brick pergola which ran the length of the sunk Rose
-Garden, and ended in a round summer-house with a window.
-From there, as well as from the Rose Garden, the
-wide view over the Downs met the gaze. Vividly coloured
-herbaceous borders ran along the side nearest to the sudden
-slope of the hill. There is something very pleasing to
-the senses when the glance passes from such an ordered
-kaleidoscope of colour to the misty vastness of a far-reaching
-view.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the middle of the Rose Garden was a sunk fountain in
-a long narrow basin.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A batch of pinewood, dark and shady, would have saved
-the situation; one sought everywhere for the comfort of
-real shadows.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We went into the house, which was in the act of being
-papered and painted for the millionaires. Delightful in
-theory as such old buildings are, we were seized with doubt
-from the moment of crossing the threshold whether any
-sense of quaint antiquity would compensate one for beams
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_214'>214</span>on top of one’s head, for bedrooms the size of a bath-towel,
-and a general feeling of having one foot on the
-hearth and another in the passage. We thought the newcomers
-had shown more taste outside, and came to the
-conclusion that some one else’s taste ruled in the garden,
-but that they had allowed their own ideas free scope
-indoors. These ideas were monotonous. The parlour
-that gave on the little orchard had a paper all over green
-parrots; the best bedroom upstairs had a paper all over
-blue parrots; and the second best bedroom was adorned
-with terra-cotta parrots. The only chance for a conglomeration
-of rooms so hopelessly low and contracted,
-would have been a plain distemper of no tint deeper than
-cream, or at the outside butter colour. Then the old
-beams would have had a chance, and one might have felt
-able to draw one’s breath.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>‹Fancy waking in the morning to the dance of all the little
-parrots on top of one’s eyelids!›</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Then, out of a small space, the shapes of trees and
-flower-beds beyond come upon the vision with no sense of
-effect if the space within is tormented. Neither can anyone
-have any proper appreciation of the joy of a bunch
-of flowers, or a vase of spreading boughs, who has not
-set them against plain walls where their shadows have
-play.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CONVERTING A COTTAGE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Another little house near here—set down in the valley
-this, on the edge of a hamlet, overlooking a wide pond—has
-been to our thinking more successfully dealt with. Three
-very old cottages have been knocked into one, and the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_215'>215</span>whole little rambling up-and-down dwelling-place thus produced
-has been boldly distempered white within from
-roof to kitchen. The round black oak beams are delightful
-in these little white rooms, and the pretty, blue-eyed, still
-youthful spinster who owns them has been content with a
-short pair of clear white muslin curtains in every window;
-not, be it understood, the London bedroom kind that cuts
-across the pane ‹an abomination difficult to avoid in
-towns›, but proper curtains hanging over the recess.
-Nothing more suitable could be devised, and it took a
-“real lady,” in the sense of Hans Andersen’s “Real
-Princess,” to be content with such fresh simplicity. But
-attractive as her furnishing is, and full of genuinely beautiful
-things, there our tastes slightly diverged.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>COTTAGE FURNITURE</div>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image244.jpg' alt='landscape' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The largest sitting-room has a set of black lacquer furniture
-inlaid with vivid mother-of-pearl; it is deliciously
-gay in this gay cottage parlour, and certainly no one who
-possessed these early Victorian treasures could bear to
-put them on one side. We think if we had been the lucky
-owner, however, we would have eschewed coupling them
-with velvet—or, indeed, brought velvet at all under those
-weather beaten tiles. The mistress of the Villino had a
-vision—a daring vision—of printed linen with scarlet cherries
-and impossible birds pecking at them; something with a
-true Jacobean angularity in it, to link the centuries together,
-and an uncompromising vividness of tint. That for
-cushions and sofa-covers. On the floor then, no bright
-carpet would be admitted. We should have enamelled
-that floor white, and cast a few rugs down on it, with no
-more colours in them than faint lemons and greys or
-creams.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_216'>216</span>To complete this discursion on cottages, some of us
-visited the other day a tiny house, where all the downstairs
-rooms, except the kitchen, had
-been thrown together, making a
-charming, long, low living-room with
-one great black beam across the
-ceiling. On the walls was a perfect
-cottage paper, with isolated pink
-rose-buds well-distanced from each
-other: a pink rosebud chintz and
-black carpet dotted with faint stiff
-roses, made quaint and unusual but
-very satisfying arrangement. The
-windows looked out on a pine wood
-across a hedge of rampant pink
-Dorothy Roses. Gazing out on
-the dim, dark green grey aisles of
-the fir trees one would want the
-gay note within; and the little Rose-strewn
-paper was perfection.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Yesterday the Grandfather of Loki
-dragged the Grandmother in her
-bath-chair out into the heart of the
-moors. It’s a sporting bath-chair
-this. It has been over as much rough ground as a horse
-artillery gun-carriage, and nothing in the matter of obstacles
-stops it unless it is barbed wire; it was chosen as light in
-make as possible, and now it has a rakish, weather-beaten
-appearance, like an old mountain mule.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_217'>217</span>The rare strangers we meet on our wild career regard us
-with varied sentiments. Some are obviously filled with
-compassion over the joggling the occupant of the bath-chair
-must be enduring. “What can that fool of a man
-be about to expose that wretchedly delicate woman to
-such suffering?” their expression says to us as they pass.
-Others, on the other hand, are horror-stricken at the spectacle
-of the wifely brutality that condemns this weakly,
-good-natured man to the task of lugging her about. There
-is a good deal of uphill work, of course, about us, and he
-goes a good pace. “You ought to get a donkey,
-Madam,” is their conclusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>On two or three occasions good Samaritans have rushed
-to assist him, with glances of scathing rebuke at this new
-embodiment of woman’s tyranny.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But they are some of our best days, in spite of outside
-disapproval. And, to go back to yesterday, we started
-off with all the dogs in a state of “high cockalorum”—Arabella
-in her most obsequious mood ‹having been
-scolded the day before for running away›; Loki, the
-Chinaman, trotting on in determined and splendid isolation
-as usual, it being quite against Chinese etiquette to speak
-to any fur-brother <em>outside</em> the garden gates; Betty, and her
-father Laddie, secretly determined to go hunting, no matter
-what execrations should be hurled after them. Laddie
-comes from a neighbouring house, and insists on adopting
-us as his family. It is very hard to be brutal and say that
-we won’t be adopted when a pair of the most beautiful
-cairngorm eyes in all the world are looking up at us out of
-the dear long, wise, pathetic dog face. In fact, we are not
-brutal; and Laddie comes and goes as he likes. Only he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_218'>218</span>is occasionally carried back to his cook ‹who, it seems,
-duly loves him› by Juvenal the tender-hearted.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is very difficult to reach the moors, with this discursiveness!
-But, in a sunshine as blazing as that which ever
-fell from any Italian sky, we did get into the hollow of the
-heather hills, and there spend an afternoon of perfect
-dreaminess and pleasure.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>BATH CHAIR AND HEATHER</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki’s Grandfather took off his coat and marched up the
-slippery paths, the bath-chair bumping merrily after him.
-It is one of his male prerogatives to scorn the idea of
-sunstroke, and Loki’s Grandmother is filled with apprehensions
-half the time. But when she saw him stretched
-on a rug over the heather, smoking his pipe, and the four
-dogs cast themselves down in attitudes expressive of their
-different natures, the mental horizon became cloudless.
-The material skies—if such an adjective can be used in
-such connexion—the unplumbed dome of mystery above
-us, were by no means cloudless, and that was part of their
-wonderful beauty. Huge lazy white clouds, so luminous
-as to be dazzling, sailed over the rim of the moor and cast
-shadows of indescribable mauve and purple into the hollows.
-A day of such intense light it was that every tree in the
-thick of the woods flung its patch of shadow, purple-dark
-against the vivid green. And, oh, the colour of the Ling,
-mixed with Hill Heather, set with islands of Bracken—Bracken
-in its proper place—silver under the sun rays,
-against the blue! And the scent of the Heath and the
-Whin!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One doesn’t know if it is exactly one’s soul that the
-beauty touches, the appeal is so strongly to the senses.
-But the soul is of it; for no mere physical joy can give
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_219'>219</span>such a serenity, such an airiness as of wings to the spirit.
-Mr. A. C. Benson says, in some early book of his, that
-one of the great proofs to him of the existence of God is
-the feeling which comes at the sight of a very beautiful
-prospect. We want to give ourselves to it—he says—to
-be absorbed into it; and that is a movement of the soul,
-for everything earthly is possessive.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Arabella, who is a very affectionate dog, flung herself
-down beside her master, taking up a large share of the rug,
-and pensively chewed gorse half the time, the other half
-being absorbed in extracting its prickles from her chest.
-Laddie, of course, slipped off to the chase. The two little
-dogs, russet brother and little white sister, whiled away a
-period of inaction: Betty, by circling round the bath-chair,
-jumping in to assure its occupant that she loved her very
-much and out again to show that she was a dog of tact;
-and Loki, panting in his great fur coat ‹in which condition
-he grins like a Chinese dragon with his roseleaf tongue
-bent back in the oddest little loop between his white teeth›
-by seeking cool spots wherein to repose—preferably under
-the very wheel of the chair, to his Grandmother’s distraction.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>An afternoon to remember, when nothing happened but
-the greatest happenings of all: God’s good gifts of sun
-and wild moor and balmy air!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_220'>220</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figright id015'>
-<img src='images/image248.jpg' alt='flower' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>The really artistic member of the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">famiglia</span></i> is Juvenal.
-He settles all the flowers; and for that alone—for the
-pleasure he gets from it and the pleasure he gives—he
-is worth his weight in gold. The little gold and
-mother-of-pearl tinted Italian drawing-room is always
-a bower. Yesterday, on the silver table which stands
-beneath a silver and gold Ikon, he set a vase of white
-and yellow Roses. It was a touch of genius! We
-are quite sick of reading how beautiful Primroses
-look in Benares brass bowls. Personally, we dislike
-brass bowls for flowers. Glass! Glass! There is
-nothing as good as glass, especially when you have
-the luck to possess, as we did, a case of old Dutch
-moulded bottles. They were made in all kinds of delicious
-angles—three-cornered, square, hexagonal—with Tulips
-stamped in the glass: in such as these a couple of long-stemmed
-Roses or Irises, and especially Tulips and Daffodils,
-are at their very best.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have said “they were.” Alas for those Dutch bottles,
-and for our folly, improvident wretches as we are, in
-setting them about for our own pleasure, instead of shutting
-them up in a cabinet! Of what were once eleven
-perfect irreplaceable treasures ‹the twelfth had a large chip
-off its neck from the beginning›, there are only five left!
-Tittums, the splendid savage “smoke Persian,” swept the
-biggest and best off a chimney-piece with taps of a
-deliberately evil paw.... And the rest have gone the way
-of vases!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Very sorry, Miss” ‹it’s generally to the Signorina they
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>come: she takes the edge off the Padrona’s fury›. “I
-don’t know how it happened, I’m sure. It came to
-pieces——”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>‹Oh, let us stay our pen! Every owner of precious bric-à-brac
-knows the awful sound of those words, and the
-futility of resentment.›</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Master of the Villino had a teapot. Of yellow Cantagalli
-pottery it was, with quaint adornments like caterpillars
-all over it; it had a snake handle and a long curving
-spout. He loved it. He never wanted to have his tea out
-of any other vessel. One morning a stranger sat in its
-place. He rang the bell severely. One of the nomad
-footmen, who appear, and camp, and go away, answered it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“My teapot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>‹Yes, it was broken.›</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“It came to pieces in your hand, I suppose?” said the
-master sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The injured expression of the misjudged became painted on
-John’s face:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“No, sir,” he said with much dignity, “it shut itself in
-the door!”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>MORE PEKINESE WAYS</div>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image249.jpg' alt='dog lying down' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki has had a bath, out of due season, because his own
-artist has come down from London to
-limn his imperial splendours for his
-own book. We tried to make him
-understand that it is only smug
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">nouveaux riches</span></i> who imagine they can patronize art; that,
-on the contrary, it is Art which condescends to us. He
-put on his most Chinese face and became a crocodile on
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>the spot. On such occasions his Grandpa calls him a
-“Crocowog.” ‹This page is only for the pet dog-lover:
-superior people, please pass on!› He is very nice to kiss
-after his bath, a process attended on his side by subterranean
-growls of protest and an alarming curling of the lip. But—dear
-little gentle creature as he is at heart—it is not in him
-to bite even the most persistent tormentor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When his Grandfather amuses himself by what he calls
-“Squeezing the growls out” every morning, Loki tries vainly
-to keep up a show of displeasure, but always ends on his
-back with a windmill waving of pretty prayerful paws.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image250.jpg' alt='dog facing away' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki has his own very marked ideas on the subject of
-jokes; at least he has one—in fact, an only
-joke! It took his Grandfather some time to
-apprehend it; but constant repetition of the
-incident ‹after the consecrated fashion of the
-British farce› is beginning to make him see
-the point of it. The joke is this: at the top,
-or the bottom, of the garden, as the case may
-be, coming in from, or going out for, a walk,
-Loki stands stock still, generally unperceived
-till you are midway. No coaxing, whistling,
-or screaming will budge him. He will stand
-there a quarter of an hour, it may be. And
-the point of the joke is that you must get
-behind him and stamp your feet, and say “Naughty
-Dog!” Then Loki careers up or down in paroxysms
-of merriment. This may not appeal to some
-people’s special bump of hilarity; and as it is useless to try to
-explain a jest, we will leave those to enjoy the spinach story.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>England is so seldom visited by hot weather such as we
-now have, that, especially in our little place with its foreign
-stamp within and without, one keeps thinking of other lands.
-There was the one hot summer we went visiting in country
-houses in Italy—two country houses, to be precise, and
-both of them were “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">castelli</span></i>.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A CASTELLO IN PIEDMONT</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The first ‹which we preferred vastly› was on a high plateau
-in the middle of the Piedmontese plain, not far from Turin.
-From that entrancing spot the view lay over wide undulating
-stretches of maize fields and vineyards; and the eye
-could not turn North, West, East or South without
-resting on a distant panorama of Alps or Apennines.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>That was a hot summer with a vengeance! We were met
-in the dusk of the evening—the soft warm dusk of such
-days in Italy, when the caress of the air is like the touch of
-velvet—by a gay little equipage drawn by three mountain
-horses abreast, each with a collar of bells and a red hussar
-plume erect on its forehead. It was the most merry vehicle
-we have ever driven in. How those horses went! How
-they tossed their heads and how their bells jangled!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A beautiful old French style castello it was, by no means
-spoilt in our eyes by having been left with rough brick.
-Now we hear that its ambitious owners have faced it with
-stone and are themselves charmed with the result. No
-doubt its original picturesqueness had its disadvantages,
-for innumerable birds built under the eaves amid those
-rough bricks. At the approach of any vehicle the air was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>full of flying wings. The flutter and the sound of them!
-We thought the place all delightful and characteristic;
-wonderfully more attractive than the pompous banality of
-the now renewed mansion, photographs of which we have
-since had mendaciously to admire.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Inside it was cool and charming; full of old French furniture
-and irreplaceable family relics. Some of these have
-recently been sold, to defray, no doubt, part of the cost of
-the new exterior.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The sedan chair of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Madame la Maréchale</span></i> in pre-Revolution
-days remains in my memory as a regret; it was a wonder
-of old Vernis-Martin. We hope they have kept the great
-flags that used to hang in the hall. The reigning châtelaine
-did not really care for any of these old things. Her heart
-was set on the joys of a Roman <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">appartement</span></i>, and its concomitant
-social gaieties.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>GRANDCHILDREN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>There was a spacious white hall with impossible paintings
-of a boar hunt on its walls, opening upon an endless series
-of reception rooms. And through these lofty chambers
-three little children were running about in little white linen
-tunics, and nothing on underneath, because of the heat of
-the weather. Their hair was cut in mediæval fashion,
-straight across the forehead and straight again across
-the shoulders. There was also a most adorable baby of
-eleven months carried about by a soft-eyed <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Balia</span></i>. Out
-of the mountains she had come, this creature, to cherish
-another’s child! And a series of misfortunes had fallen
-upon her little home since her departure: the death of her
-own nursling followed by the death of the cow! “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Cara
-moglie</span></i>,” her husband wrote on each occasion, “do not
-grieve. It is the will of God!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>There were no doubt other very simple reasons for these
-catastrophes: the pitiable poverty of the family which had
-made it necessary for the poor woman to sell her mother-rights,
-and possibly the tainted milk of the sick cow which
-had poisoned the little mountaineer. But call it fate, or the
-intolerable economic system of modern Italy, it came round
-in the end to the same thing. “Do not grieve, <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">cara moglie</span></i>.
-It is the will of God!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She had done her best to help her own, and this was her
-comfort in her sorrow. It was not such a bad comfort;
-and the most advanced thinker cannot prove after all that
-it was not the will of God.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was difficult, too, for the foster-mother to weep long
-when Baby Maddalena danced on the stone of the terrace
-with little bare brown feet. She had the bluest eyes and
-the brownest face that ever we beheld, and laughed and
-gurgled as she danced, with very high action, upheld by
-the ends of her sash by the adoring <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Balia</span></i>, whose own face
-and neck above her string of gold beads were the colour of
-a ripe apricot.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It would be difficult to have devised a fortnight of greater
-interest, amusement, and quaintness than that of this
-Piedmontese visit. It was a thoroughly foreign household.
-The handsome white-bearded athletic father of the
-Chatelaine, tied to his chair by an attack of gout, had his
-apartments downstairs. And on an upper floor the
-mother of the Marchese had her own complete establishment,
-including a wonderful library, all tawny gold. There
-was a baroque Chapel; and one of our most vivid recollections
-was our pulling the children down by their sashes
-as they swung themselves over the tops of the benches,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>doubled up like golden fleeces till their curly heads and
-their little shoes touched.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One thing never to be omitted was to watch Monte Rosa
-at sunset. The night before our departure there was a
-thunderstorm far, far away in those Alps where Monte
-Rosa rises in beauty. At every flash, peak beyond peak
-shone out in distances hitherto wrapped away even from
-the imagination.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Why does the sky do like that?” asked the second
-boy, vigorously blinking his great eyes. With straight
-black hair and an odd, serious little countenance, square-jawed
-and long upper-lipped like a Medici out of Benozzo
-Gozzoli’s frescoes, he was the most mediæval-looking of
-all the children. We loved that four-year-old.... He has
-grown up, we hear, “impossible” and a burden to his
-family. We cannot help feeling it must be the family’s fault.
-The elder boy, much handsomer though he was, did not
-then promise so well. A terribly nervous child; the cry
-“<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Ho paura</span></i>,” was always on his lips. It hurt his grandfather’s
-pride that any son of his race should show such
-degenerate timidity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One typical scene we were witness of. The little fellow,
-in great awe of the peremptory, loud-voiced old sportsman,
-approached him to say good-night; and, hanging his head
-after the manner of the frightened child, stammered the
-requisite “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Bonsoir, Bonpapa</span></i>,” almost inaudibly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Instantly wrath broke out over him. ‹Bonpapa’s temper
-had not improved with the gout.› “That was not the
-manner in which to say good-night.”—“A man was to
-look up: to speak straight.” “What does one say?” he
-ended, shouting.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Pardon!</span></i>” cried the poor, terrified imp, with a wail.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This child, over whom were so many head-shakings,
-doubts and laments, has grown up so brave and fine a boy
-that it would have rejoiced the heart of the old Vicomte to
-see him now. His was a stormy heart that wanted much
-of life, and therefore, of course, knew much bitterness. It
-is stilled now, alas! this many a year.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A CASTELLO IN LOMBARDY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>From this comparatively modern mansion in the Piedmont
-we went to an old, old castle in the plains of Lombardy.
-The chronicles have it that Barbarossa besieged it. It
-was approached through a considerable village—one of
-great antiquity, and still retaining the lines of the Roman
-<i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">castrum</span></i>, with all its streets parallel or at right-angles. At
-the top of the main of these the great machicolated entrance
-of the Castello, with its faded frescoes across the arch,
-was very impressive in mediæval strength. The church
-shouldered one corner of the immense pile of outer wall;
-and each side of the moat, between the towers, inside and
-out, peasant houses had crept.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Castello itself, of extreme antiquity, as has been said,
-formed two sides of a square, round, and flagged courtyard.
-The garden ran sheer up the hill, within the tower-flanked
-walls of the outer bailey. There were vineyards
-inside; and outside, where the ground fell away, the whole
-land was likewise covered with vines. They ran up and
-down long ridges, like petrified waves, as far as the eye
-could see. And in the far, far distance, almost lost in the
-horizon, were the Alps.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What a view that was from the loopholes of those half-ruined
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>towers—especially at sunset, when there gathered a
-rosy mist over that curious, wild-tossing expanse!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Could we go back now to that unique spot, what a vast
-amount of æsthetic pleasure should we not draw from it?
-But it must be admitted that we were gross-minded enough
-at the time to allow material discomfort to overcome all
-other impressions.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image256.jpg' alt='castle tower' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>To lodge in a genuine old Lombard Castle, with stone
-floors and stairs hewn in the immense thickness
-of the stone; to look out upon one side
-into the moat, and to see the peasant
-houses clinging to the massive foundations
-far below like barnacles to a rock; to
-look out on the other side upon the odd
-rise of sunburnt garden up to the vineyard
-and the towers; to imagine oneself
-back into the very heart of the
-Middle Ages may be very inspiring,
-in theory. But mediæval sensibilities
-were undoubtedly more blunted than ours.
-The smell of that moat running with the
-refuse of the crowded Italian village!...
-For additional pungency, all the water in
-the place came from sulphur springs! The
-reek of it was in one’s nostrils all day from
-merely washing in it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The household was composed of peasant
-women out of the village. The wife of the
-barber, the mother of the shoemaker, and others,
-clattered about the stone passages in their <i>mules</i>—a
-style of foot-gear which leaves the foot free from the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>instep. It was perhaps as well that the heels were high,
-for their idea of housemaiding ‹a method which appertains
-in most Italian households to this day› was first to walk
-about with a pail and to slop water out of it over the flags
-of the floor; then to sweep the resulting wet mess into
-a puddle where the stone was worn most hollow or under
-the carpet!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Some attempts at a housemaid’s sink had been excavated
-in the stone at the head of the stairs outside our set of
-rooms; but there was generally a small cataract of soapy
-water dripping down the steps, for the simple practice of
-the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">donna</span></i> that attended on our apartment was to stand on
-the landing outside our doors and to shy the contents of
-her bucket upwards.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The delightful friend with whom we stayed, though not
-born of the country, had fallen quite resignedly into its
-ways. And, indeed, the castle was chiefly ruled by the
-<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Princesse Mère</span></i>, a châtelaine of the old school, who used to
-arise in the grey dawn and pull the iron chain of the great
-bell that hung outside her windows, to call the vassals to
-their daily work.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Come, come!” she was frequently heard addressing
-some dependent or other whose movements were more
-indolent than she approved of. “Are you here for your
-comfort or for mine?”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The table was served, copiously, with singular Italian
-dishes. There was a favourite soup with stewed quails in
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>it: the whole animal, bones and beak and all! It is an
-unspeakable dish to have set before you on a hot day.
-Patties filled with cocks’ combs might follow. Even the
-<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Risotto</span></i> was intermingled with such strange mincings of
-liver and cutlet trimmings that one hesitated before venturing.
-The <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Fritura</span></i>, needless to say, was in full force.
-A lucky dip, that! You may come across yesterday’s
-cauliflower, a bit of forgotten sweetbread, a slice of
-sausage, a frizzled artichoke, and half the quail you
-couldn’t eat the night before—all in one spoonful!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Besides the fierce matutinal summons of the domestic bell,
-one’s sleep was constantly disturbed by a jangle of chimes
-from the church: a perfect frenzy of joy-bells it was, so
-prolonged and insistent that sleep was beaten out of one’s
-brain as with hammers.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE ANGELS’ MASS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“What,” we asked our younger hostess, the third day
-of this infliction, “what are these carillons, morning after
-morning?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, that?—That is for the Angels’ Mass,” she answered
-us indifferently.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“The Angels’ Mass?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Yes. A child dead in the village.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“But every morning?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“There have been several deaths lately. It is the fever
-from the rice fields.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Pleasant hearing for a woman with an only little daughter
-just recovering from a rather serious illness! Every
-smell that greeted her nostrils afterwards—and they
-were of a diversified and poignant description—seemed
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>laden with the germs of death. But the young <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Principessa</span></i>
-had absorbed a good deal of the indolent indifference of
-her adopted country towards hygiene.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You, with your English notions!” was all the comfort
-her visitor got, offered in tones of good-humour not unmixed
-with contempt. Or else: “What you smell, my
-dear, is only carbolic; and that is very healthy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A few dabs of disinfectant had indeed been distributed
-about the moat, on much the same principle, and with the
-same effect, as the red pepper which is served with wild
-duck, just to heighten the flavour of the dish.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>ENTOMOLOGICAL MYSTERIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Perhaps the most lasting impression of that Lombardy
-sojourn was the morning discovery in a glass of drinking-water
-which had been placed beside the bed the previous
-night, of the most extraordinary creature any of us had
-ever seen. It was like a very large shrimp, perfectly transparent,
-with such gigantic antennæ and legs that they
-protruded over the top of the tumbler!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No one else in the castle had ever beheld anything like it
-either, it appeared; except one old woman, who described
-it vaguely as “<i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">una bestia del acqua</span></i>.” But as it most
-certainly had not been in the tumbler when the water was
-put into it, its origin remains for ever a mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A few nights later the little girl of the party of travellers
-found one of these zoological mysteries in a quite empty
-tumbler! We might have thought it a practical joke played
-on the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">forestieri</span></i>, only that no one could have come into
-the room without the knowledge of its occupants.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This, and the sudden departure of the “chef” who had
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>been responsible for the little quails in the soup, did upset
-the equanimity of the pretty hostess.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“To think,” she cried, “that I should invite my best
-friend here, to starve or poison her!... And that
-unknown beasts should get into her drinking-water!
-I—I have been here every summer for eleven years and I
-have never seen a beast like that!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She thought we had dreamt the first monster. The second
-was carried in to her, with its horrible transparent legs
-bristling over the tumbler. She surveyed it hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Il ne manquait plus que cela!</span></i>”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet one looks back on it all with a kind of tenderness. It
-was all so picturesque! What a dwelling might have been
-made of that antique castle by anyone who had the money
-and the art to spend it!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But, alas!... In the great stone bedchambers where we
-lodged there were blinds with Swiss scenes depicted in the
-most vivid colours: a mountain maiden and a Mont Blanc,
-and a torrent upon each.... Incongruity could go no
-farther—except perhaps in the billiard-room, which had
-been done up by the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Principe</span></i> and was always shown off
-with great pomp. It was a splendid vaulted apartment,
-dating from the Barbarossa period; there were four deep
-niches hewn out of the stone: well, in two of these were
-placed large Chinese Mandarins, with heads that nodded
-if anyone could reach high enough to set them going; and,
-in the other two were plaster statues of the worst garden
-description: Flora with a basket, Ceres with a lumpy
-sheaf!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='aut' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>
-<a href='images/image263_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image263.jpg' alt='AUTUMN' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>AUTUMN</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image261.jpg' alt='landscape with man and pets' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>SOME GARDEN GHOSTS</div>
-<p class='c008'>There is no ghost in the garden of the Villino. Neither
-the meek spirit of Susan nor Tom’s saturnine spectre
-haunts the peaceful glade where they lie. ‹Juvenal has
-planted a “Tree of Heaven” at the head of his ever-mourned
-darling and covered the grave with Forget-me-nots!›</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>My youth ‹these reminiscences are contributed by Loki’s
-grandmother› was spent in a large country place in Ireland,
-and to us children—we were six then—certain walks, certain
-dells in the woods, were assuredly haunted.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The property had long ago belonged to one Lady Tidd, who
-so adored it that she had herself buried on a hill overlooking
-it, her coffin upright in its tall square tomb. It was Lady
-Tidd who was popularly supposed to haunt the fair wooded
-lands that had come to us. This Dysart Hill, on the top
-of which the ruined chapel and the deserted graveyard lay,
-was a favourite walk of our childish days. When our
-short legs had mastered the difficulties of the slope—and a
-very stony slope it was, covered towards the summit with
-a fine mountain grass, than which no footing is more
-slippery—we never failed to wander round to that singular
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>monument, through the massive granite door of which she
-who stood in the upright coffin was supposed to be gazing
-down upon the distant prospect of our own home. It was
-never without an awful sense of horror and mystery that
-I pictured those dead eyes, endowed with miraculous
-vision, piercing through wood and stone to stare out upon
-what she still loved. Some apprehension of the horror and
-tragedy of bodily death and of the dread power of the spirit
-seized hold of my small soul as I contemplated that grave
-of human folly and of poor human aspiration. There it
-was, perhaps, that an overpowering dislike of graveyards
-began in me.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Lady Tidd was seen by a gardener of ours, between two
-Yew trees, in a dark corner outside the garden wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“She riz up out of the ground at me,” he told my mother.
-And he added, as a convincing detail, that his hat stood
-up on his equally rising hair. “Sure, wasn’t me hat lifted
-an inch off me head, ma’m?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>My mother, strong-souled creature as she was, laughed
-with a fine scepticism. Another kind of spirit had done
-the mischief, she declared. But we who heard could not
-so easily dismiss the agonizingly fascinating tale. We
-knew that spot outside the garden wall, in the shadow of
-the black Yew trees; and the fear and the darkness that
-always fell upon us when we passed it.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Another dreaded place was a certain Primrose dell, beautifully
-starred with blossoms, beautifully green, beautifully
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>shaded; the very place for happy children, it would seem,
-and for long hours of flower-picking gipsy teas and endless
-games. It was quite lost in the woods that banded
-the property, away from intrusions of nurse or
-governess—and yet, how haunted! Never shall I forget—I
-feel it now as I write—the profound misery that
-would seize upon me at the very entrance to the laughing
-glade.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I am not sure, however, that there was not a tangible
-reason for this depression, connected with the disappearance
-of a fondly-loved four-footed playfellow. A darling dog
-he was: one of the jocose, high-spirited kind; his open
-mouth and hanging tongue seemed to show him a partaker
-in human mirth, with a waggish humour all his own. ‹No
-pun is intended!› He had a rough tangled coat, black and
-white, a flag of a tail, flopping ears. He was the swiftest,
-gayest, most romping creature that has ever shared the
-play of children. We adored him. His name was Carlo.
-I don’t know of what breed he was, if of any.... Alas!
-he hunted the sheep! He disappeared! No one knew
-what had become of him. We children never ascertained
-anything, but there was a rumour—a dark, untraceable, yet
-most convincing rumour—that somebody had seen the
-small, rough corpse hanging from a tree-trunk, not far from
-the Primrose dell. Was it not that, perhaps, which haunted
-the dell for me?</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE LOATHELY HERD</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We suspected the herd. A large, fat, round-faced, smiling
-man, this; with an unctuous, creeping voice that seemed to
-gurgle up like a slow oil-bubble from inner recesses of
-obesity. A man who at intervals would remark, seeing
-us grouped about our mother, “You’ve a lovely lot of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>ladies, ma’m, God bless them!”—as if we were little pigs
-or calves.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He had a sinister reputation with us already on
-account of his periodical dealings with sheep, which we,
-tender-hearted and impressionable children, scarcely as
-much as hinted to each other; and certainly never really
-associated with the roast mutton that appeared twice a
-week.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No, we did not like Green, the herd; and I, the smallest of
-the “lovely lot,” would cling to my mother’s skirts when
-his little twinkling eye turned in my direction.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>For a long time he was associated in my mind with the
-horror of a conversation which passed between him and
-my mother. How well I remember that day! We were
-walking through one of the upper fields towards a village
-called Hop Hall, which also belonged to the estate. It was
-a lovely meadow with a curious little wood in the middle
-of it, ringed like a moat by a streamlet in which the cattle
-drank. This wood was full of wild Crab-apples; the
-blossom of it hung over the water and was mirrored
-therein. The field caught the sweep of wind that blew
-from the top of the hill with the breath of the Pine-trees. It
-was a carpet of Cowslips in the right season.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, as we walked, my mother and four little girls and
-one little boy, the herd stumping along with a stick—he had
-a lame leg—his ragged dog behind him, there came the
-following interchange of remarks, which set a seal of
-terror on my young mind. My mother mentioned her
-intention of visiting Hop Hall, and then inquired how a
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>certain old woman might be who dwelt there. She had
-been long bedridden.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Troth, and she’s the same as ever!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“My goodness,” exclaimed my mother, “why, she must be
-nearly a hundred!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“She must be that, me lady.—Begorra, she’ll have to be
-shot!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>My mother laughed, and so did the herd. The anguish of
-the small listener passes description; and there ensued a
-veritable haunting. The herd she could understand, she
-knew him to be a criminal of the deepest dye. But her
-mother!...</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was months before a benevolent governess discovered
-the hidden sore, and explained and consoled. It was only
-a joke! It left a rankling tenderness. I could see no
-humour in it.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>It is no wonder that Irish children should be fanciful, surrounded
-as they are, or were in my day, with the quaint,
-superstitious beliefs of servants and peasantry. Our chief
-nursery comfort and most beloved companion was the old
-housekeeper, who had begun her life in the service of our
-mother’s grandmother. That takes one back! Whenever
-we had a free moment we trotted into her sitting-room for
-pleasant conversation and, maybe, a biscuit, a bit of
-chocolate or candy. She had the key of the stores.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I declare if I was made of sugar, you’d have me eaten!”
-she would say; a cannibalistic possibility I made it a point
-of earnestly disclaiming.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE THREE KINGS AND THE STAR</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The linen room was where she sat, in a quaint, painted,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>high-backed armchair by the window. She gazed straight
-out across a yard to a shrubbery dominated by three large
-Fir trees over which the evening star would peep, a
-tremulous yellow. She called those Fir trees her Three
-Kings, and never failed to lift her hands in wonder and
-gratitude over the beauty of the star. Poetry goes deep
-into the hearts of the Irish.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>I can see that room now. The whole of one side was filled
-with cupboards—presses, we called them—where, behind
-buff wire gratings and beautifully fluted bright pink calico,
-the linen was stored. A few nursery groceries, biscuit and
-dessert oddments were kept in a cupboard just at the
-entrance; and there was always a faint fragrance of raisins
-and spice in the atmosphere. I can see the dear occupant
-of the room too; the picture of beautiful old age, with
-banded silver hair beneath the snow-white cap which was
-tied with muslin strings under her chin. I can see her
-apple-blossom cheeks and her blue eyes, clear and innocent
-as a child’s, yet so wise! She had a white starched kerchief
-folded across her black bodice, and her black skirt was
-gathered with a great many pleats round the comfortable
-rotundity of her figure. We used to find her sitting by the
-casement in the twilight, gazing out. If the mood took me,
-I would sit on her knee and stare out too. Every few
-minutes or so she would sigh, not with sadness, but gently,
-as the woods sigh, with scarcely perceptible movement on
-a still night. But though I knew it to be no sigh of distress,
-it nevertheless troubled me. I would ask anxiously:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Why do you sigh, Mobie?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>Her answer was always the same:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Old age, Alanna!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Her name was Mrs. O’Brien, which was interpreted Mobie
-by our baby lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In same fashion the first nurse, whom I only vaguely
-remember, erect, small, severe, and kind, had degenerated
-from Mrs. Hughes into Shuzzie; and the queer, tiny head
-housemaid, baptized Bridget, was Dadgie. A unique
-personage this, minute as she was active, with bobbing
-bunches of grey curls on each side of her grey net cap
-with purple ribbons which were tied under her chin. Upon
-the rare occasions when some damage occurred to the
-china or glass under her hands, she would trot into my
-mother with the announcement:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, ma’am, I’ve made a ‘<em>foo pas</em>!’”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>No one knew where she had picked up this inappropriate
-bit of French.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dear, quaint, pathetic, busy little creature, buzzing about
-the house with a flapping duster! I have a vision of her
-too, as I write: her huge poke bonnet overshadowing the
-small, important face; her bobbing curls as she fluttered
-in to confession in the oratory on those monthly occasions
-when the old parish priest—another figure out of long past
-times, he too, with his white head, his black stockings and
-buckle shoes, his full-skirted coat—came out from the little
-country town to “hear” the household.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE FAIRIES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>My mother used to call the three old women servants her
-three duchesses. Alas! two of these dignitaries passed
-away very early in my recollection. Fortunately, Mobie,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>the best beloved, was left to us till later years. It is
-to her that my thoughts most readily return.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image271.jpg' alt='profile of old woman' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>She was a store-house of anecdotes and legends. Never
-would she speak, nor allow anyone to speak
-before her, of the fairies otherwise than as
-“the good people”; and then it was with
-bated breath. It was established as a fact
-among us that in her girlhood she had had
-communication with them. Certainly, we believed,
-she had seen them one evening dancing
-in a ring; but never could she be got to tell
-us in detail anything about these experiences.
-The very mystery of her silence confirmed our
-theory.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>What a delightful volume one could have made
-out of the tales that fell from her lips upon our
-small listening ears by the nursery fire; or in the
-linen room with its uncurtained window and its vision of
-the Three Kings and the Star.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From many memories one floats back to me. It made a
-great impression:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“... And when Tim Brenahan was on his way home
-that evening, wasn’t it round by the wall he went, and
-didn’t he see two great cats sitting on the top of it with
-their tails hanging over? And didn’t one cat say to the
-other, as plain as can be, and didn’t he hear it, just as you
-do be hearing me:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Says one, ‘And what’s the news this evening?’ And
-says the other, ‘No news at all,’ says he. ‘Only that
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>the widdie Moloney’s old tabby’s gone at last,’ says he,
-‘and it’s the great funeral will be to-night,’ says he.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And when Tim Brenahan came home to his wife, says
-she to him, ‘And what’s the news this evening, Tim,
-asthore?’</p>
-
-<div class='figleft id011'>
-<img src='images/image272.jpg' alt='two cats sitting on a wall' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And says he to her, ‘Faith, no news at all,’ says he,
-‘save as I was coming home by the long wall beyont, there
-was two great fellers of cats sitting on the
-top of it. And says one to the other,
-“The widdie Moloney’s tabb’s goney
-at last,” says he, “and it’s the grand
-burying on her there’ll be to-night.”’</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And no sooner were the words
-out of his mouth when his own
-tom-cat ups with him and shakes
-himself where he was sittin’ starin’
-at the turf, and says he ‘Then it’s
-time for me to be off,’ says he, ‘or
-I’ll be late for the funeral.’ And out
-of the door with him, with his tail all
-of a bristle....”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I was rather awed by that story, which, to my infant
-mind, bore the stamp of unmistakable veracity; but
-nothing that proceeded from the linen room ever really
-distressed me. Its ruling spirit was too benign and too
-perfectly in harmony with us.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>AN OLD IRISH NURSE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The terror of those days to me was the fragile-looking, soft-voiced,
-mincing widow who became our nurse after the death
-of the fine old martinet by whom we had been ruled before.
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_242'>242</span>It was not surprising that our mother should have imagined
-she was passing us over to a much gentler authority; but
-as a matter of fact—indolent, ignorant, peevish—the new
-nursery autocrat was given to enforcing her orders by
-threats of a ghastly and impossible description.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I’ll cut your tongue out,” was a favourite menace, which,
-if defied, would be supplemented by—“Wait, now, till I
-run and get my scissors.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Stronger of body, more enlightened in mind, my co-nurseryites
-treated these remarks with the scorn they
-deserved. But I cannot describe the agony with which
-they pressed upon me. It is peculiar to all children that
-these terrors are never communicated to others. Not even
-to my brothers and sisters would I breathe one word of
-my apprehensions. But the misery took shape in horrible
-dreams and sleepless nights. And when matters became
-too intolerable, I would creep out of my little bed, and
-patter across the bare boards into the adjoining room
-where the housekeeper slept. On no single occasion did
-she show the smallest severity or even annoyance
-at being disturbed.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image273.jpg' alt='little girl' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Mobie,” I would pipe, “I’m afraid!... May
-I get into your bed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Come in, Alanna,” was the invariable response.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Oh! the comfort of snuggling against her!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Whether she promptly fell asleep again, or whether
-she watched and talked loving nonsense one felt
-equally safe, equally blessedly happy. If she slept,
-it was lightly enough, like all old people; and each
-time she turned or moved in the bed, the small bed-fellow
-would hear her murmur:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_243'>243</span>“The Lord have mercy on me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was not a deliberate prayer, scarcely even a conscious
-thought, but the natural movement of the soul.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Little wonder that, being what she was, she who had lain
-down every night, as it were, in the very arms of Providence,
-should pass to her last sleep as simply and
-fearlessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Are you frightened, mother?” cried her daughter, bending
-over her at the very end. She opened her eyes and
-smiled.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Frightened? How could I be frightened? Am I not
-going to my best friend?”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_244'>244</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXIV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Looking back now, it seems to me that the whole
-of my childhood was pursued by one phantom or another.
-The smell of the woods through the open nursery window
-on a hot summer’s night turned me sick with an unspeakable
-apprehension. Believers in reincarnation would
-attribute this peculiarity to some sylvan tragedy in a
-previous existence. No doubt there must have been a
-physical explanation. I have come to the conclusion that
-most things in life are capable of a double interpretation;
-which is the same thing as saying that there are two
-aspects to every question!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Is it usual for children, I wonder, to see such marvellous
-colours, shapes, and appearances in the dark as both I and
-a sister did, between the ages of five and eight? Kaleidoscopic
-colours running one into the other, and an odd,
-very frequently recurrent vision of a cushion covered with
-gold pieces which poured down on the bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>My husband, as a small child, would behold complete
-scenes in the corner of his nursery, and would pull his
-nurse on one side impatiently when she impeded his view.
-And let me here note a curious incident connected with
-his juvenile imaginings. All his life, as far back as he
-could remember, he had a recurrent dream of terror—at
-fairly rare intervals—of an immense wave rising up before
-him like a mountain and curling over at the top, about
-to overwhelm the land. He told me of this dream after we
-were married, adding that though it was so distinct that he
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_245'>245</span>could draw it, he knew it for a purely fantastic nightmare;
-knew that no such tall and steep wave as he beheld in his
-sleep could exist in nature. A few years ago—we were
-at Brighton, I remember—he brought up to me from the
-hotel room an illustrated paper, and, laying it on the table
-before me, said: “Look—there is my dream!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I looked. It was an illustration that held the whole page.
-I saw a huge wall of water, rising sheer black, with a
-toppling crest of white—an awful, threatening vision! I
-read underneath: “Photograph of the recent tidal wave in
-Japan.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Who can explain the mystery? He had had that dream
-first as a baby boy in Paris, some forty-five years before.
-No such sight, no such picture had ever come across his
-waking consciousness.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A tidal wave in Japan ... so far has my discursive mind
-led me from garden ghosts!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We know a haunted garden belonging to an old Manor
-House in Dorsetshire which was our abode one summer,
-five or six years ago. The house had once been Catherine
-Parr’s. It was full of ghosts too, but I am none too sure
-that they were mellow sixteenth-century spectres; rather
-I believe were they the objectionable offspring of a table-rapping
-spiritualistic owner.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE FORGOTTEN NUN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The garden ghost was, to our thinking, neither Tudor nor
-modern, but that of a sad little eighteenth-century nun.
-For, passing through many hands, the place had for a time
-been a convent. A gentle community, turned out by the
-French Revolution, had been offered a refuge in this far
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_246'>246</span>corner of England by the then papist possessor of “The
-Court.” The place had its previous story of faith and
-persecution: its parish church, which had long clung to the
-old dispensation, and its priest martyr still lying in the
-little churchyard. All this is forgotten now. We knew
-nothing of it, nor of the nuns; but oddly enough, when
-we came into the house, one of us said to the other:
-“I am sure there was a chapel here.”</p>
-
-<div class='figright id007'>
-<img src='images/image277.jpg' alt='nun' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, when the nuns packed up their goods and
-returned to France, they took away with them
-too ‹so tradition says› the coffins of some
-sisters who had been buried in the garden. Surely
-they had forgotten one! What else could account
-for the dreadful melancholy which fell
-upon us at a particular turn of the walk that
-ran round that sunny, bowery enclosure? There
-was nothing whatsoever suggestive about the
-spot. The high, warm wall with the spreading
-fruit trees rose on one side; an Apple tree and a
-clump of Hazels held the other—yet so sure as
-one came to this place the heart was gripped, the
-spirit seized. We each of us felt it; visitors felt
-it. That dear, departed cat, Tom, of venerable
-memory—he was a great ghost-seer—he felt it—nay,
-he saw it! His tail would bristle, his fur
-stare, he would stand and then flee as if pursued
-for his life.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The poor little nun, lying in a foreign land, away from
-the rest of her sisters, forgotten!—Ghosts have walked
-for much less. In fact, it is curious to note that the
-restlessness of most authenticated ghosts seems due to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_247'>247</span>an objection to their place of burial. And on this score—if
-the anecdote takes me away from gardens, it brings me
-back to them in the end—I have in my mind another tale. It
-is a true story, as the children say, connected with a house
-which we have often visited in Ireland: an old monastery,
-full of that curious depression in its stateliness which
-so many confiscated church properties retain. It was
-haunted in many ways.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Personally, beyond unpleasant sensations in traversing
-some particular corridor and landing, we never met any
-ghost in the Abbey. But then we were not placed in <em>the</em>
-ghost-room.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A STRONG MIND CONVINCED</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>An old friend of our hostess, an elderly lady, was not so
-kindly treated. She was a spinster of robust constitution
-and strong mind; a type of the particular generation
-which comes between the nervous gentility of the Early
-Victorian sisterhood and the present day “suffrage”
-community. No doubt the mistress of the Abbey
-believed her ghost-proof. But she was mistaken. After
-the first night in the Lavender Bedroom, the visitor’s appearance
-at breakfast pointed so conclusively to the fatigue of
-sleeplessness that, with some misgiving, her friend drew
-her on one side to question her in private:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Were you disturbed, Lucy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I was, Mary.” The maiden lady was not a person
-of many words.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Did you—did you ... see any thing, Lucy?” exclaimed
-the hostess. The family had but lately come into possession;
-and the idea of haunters and haunted annoyed
-rather than frightened her.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I did,” said the friend firmly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_248'>248</span>Some persuasion was necessary before she would relate
-her experience. At last it was extracted from her in some
-such shape as this:</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>“I couldn’t sleep. Towards two in the morning I heard a
-noise. I thought it was rats. I sat up in bed to feel for the
-matches: couldn’t find them. There came a light, on the
-opposite wall. I stared. I saw a monk in it. He began to
-move. He didn’t look alive: he looked like a magic lantern.
-He went out of the room through the closed door. I got up,
-opened the door, looked out into the passage. Yes, Mary,
-the light was there, and the figure in it, too. It moved along
-the wall. I followed it. It disappeared before the cross
-doors. I went back to bed. No, I’m not frightened, but
-I haven’t slept. I’d like another room, please. No, I
-wasn’t asleep—it wasn’t a dream. I can’t explain it. Nor
-you either, I suppose.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The hostess pondered. It was true she couldn’t explain.
-She had heard of that apparition before—perhaps had seen
-it. It was certainly very annoying. She promised her
-friend to give instant orders for the preparation of another
-room; and then made a request that the matter should
-not be mentioned to her daughter—an impressionable,
-imaginative girl of eighteen.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The maiden lady snorted. It wasn’t likely.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Rosamund, the daughter, had of course known all about it
-long ago; while, after the fashion of her kind, keeping her
-counsel demurely before her elders, she had discussed freely
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_249'>249</span>the thrilling appanage of her new home with all the companions
-of her own age who came to stay at the Abbey.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was she who was destined to lay the ghost. One rainy
-afternoon later in the same summer, the young members of
-the house-party found themselves stranded together in the
-great hall, and Rosamund cheerfully suggested table-turning
-and spirit-rapping to while away the time till tea. It is a
-never-failing amusement.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Having produced a satisfactory condition of lurching, and
-elicited several quite distinct raps from the round
-mahogany table, she cried out:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Let us call up the ghost.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Responsive knocks came, loud and marked. A system of
-communication was promptly established. Two raps for
-yes, one for no. Then the questioning began.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With much laughter and some agreeable tremors, it was
-ascertained that the monk-ghost belonged to the community
-which had dwelt so long at the Abbey; that he was dissatisfied
-with his present place of burial, which was outside
-the old monks’ burying-ground, now a part of the actual
-garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is always safe, as I have said, to question a ghost on
-this point. Now, however, some difficulty ensued when,
-through the limited medium, the rapping spirit endeavoured
-to specify the spot of its present abode, and the field was
-too wide for exactness—until a young sailor cousin intervened.
-He had been playing, in mere idleness and utter
-scepticism, the rather gruesome game. But at this point
-he roused himself, interested to put the matter to the proof.
-He fetched pencil and paper, and drew up a scheme of
-latitude and longitude with reference to the garden walls;
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_250'>250</span>and finally determined the position where the discontented
-ghost announced that his bones were actually reposing.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With professional neatness he made a plan of the shrubbery,
-marked the grave thereon, and the whole party resolved to
-sally forth with spades “to see if the old ghost spoke the
-truth.” The sailor cousin was particularly jocose in
-unbelief.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>LAID AT LAST</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet truly, the next day, in the very place designated, they
-came upon bones—to be exact, upon a skeleton complete
-save for the skull. The sailor was the first to rush back
-to the Abbey and collect a circle for a fresh séance. And
-once more the phantom monk rapped out latitude and
-longitude in connexion with his skull; once more he was
-found to be a ghost of the most complete veracity. And
-the end of this true story is that the skeleton, complete
-with its cranium, was laid duly and reverently in the old
-consecrated ground in the garden. And the monk appeared
-no more in the Lavender Room.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_251'>251</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXV</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>I promised to return to gardens, and here I am.
-What a garden that was! Not a bit uncomfortable in
-spite of its company of departed friars. The monk’s old
-Yew Walk was there; such a one as has not its match
-in the kingdom, I believe. There too were fields of
-“Malmaison” Carnations. Never have I beheld such
-lavishness before or since. The scent of the things! It
-was our hostess’s rather extravagant fancy. I don’t
-know that I exactly envy it. It was almost too much,
-but yet it was a wonder!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>I think it was a dream of very childish days that started
-my haunting dread of graveyards; that, and the peculiar
-desolation of the little burial-place through which we
-passed every Sunday morning to go to the Chapel near
-our country home. It was what is called in Ireland a
-“station,” that is a Chapel of Ease, which was only
-attended on Sundays and shut up on week-days. Deprived
-of the flicker of the Sanctuary lamp, the place seemed,
-except for that brief Sunday service, as deserted within as
-it was forlorn without.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>GREEN GRAVES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I dreamt that all those poor neglected green graves—there
-was hardly one with even a black painted cross to mark
-it—had become endued with ghastly life and started in
-pursuit of me down the familiar country road. In a frightful,
-stealthy silence they wallowed and leaped, gaining
-on me as I ran, in my dream, in a panic that I can hardly
-even now bear to think back on.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_252'>252</span>For years afterwards I never walked away from that little
-churchyard, even in the large and cheerful company of my
-sisters, clutching the solid hand of governess or nurse,
-without the nightmare terror coming on me again. Not
-a word did I breathe of it, of course; but I would
-look back over my shoulder, at every turn of the
-road, horribly expecting to see those uncanny
-green hounds on the trace of my miserable
-little heels.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id011'>
-<img src='images/image283.jpg' alt='children walking' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was only in my walks I feared, however.
-When driving backwards and forwards to
-Mass I felt I could defy the graves. We
-always drove to the Sunday Mass. How
-vivid are the impressions of those early
-days! As I write I have before me the
-whole scene. Just before the cracked
-bell ceased ringing, we would file up
-the little front aisle and enter the pew
-reserved for us; my mother very solemn,
-with what we called her church face;
-our two governesses and we children.
-In summer each of the four little girls
-wore a new starched, very full-skirted print
-frock; and the one little boy of the party a
-white duck suit equally stiff from the wash.
-Our wooden pew ran on the right side of the
-Sanctuary rails and was shut off by a little door from the
-rest of the chapel. It had long bright red rep cushions, and
-the wood-work was painted a peculiarly pale yellow, handsomely
-and wormily grained! Just opposite to us, the
-better class farmers’ families were installed; and every
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_253'>253</span>new fashion that appeared in our bench was promptly
-copied by the bouncing Miss Condrens and Miss Mahons
-opposite.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There was, I recollect, one personage who inspired me
-with great admiration. She was a Mrs. Condren and her
-Christian name was Eliza. The daughter of what is
-called a “warm farmer,” she had been forbidden all thoughts
-of matrimony by him, who held the holy estate in as
-much disfavour as did Mrs. Browning’s father.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well on in years, and presumably bored by her maiden
-state, she had at length eloped with an elderly admirer;
-and though she had “done very well for herself” and her
-spouse was quite as “warm” as her papa, the latter maintained
-towards them both an undying resentment. No
-wonder Mrs. Condren moved in a halo of romance in our
-eyes. Added to this she was always very handsomely
-attired in a shining purple silk, which filled the chapel with
-its rustle. She also sported a yellow bonnet with bunches
-of wax grapes and—last touch of elegance—dependent
-from its brim, a lace veil embroidered also with grapes, a
-cluster of which completely covered one eye and part of
-her cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Quite another type was old Judy in her little brown shawl
-and lilac sun-bonnet, who knelt ostentatiously just in front
-of the altar rails, apart from the rest of the congregation;
-and who punctuated the service and sermon with loud
-clacks of her tongue, groans from and thumps upon her
-attenuated chest. My mother was once highly amused by
-Judy’s pantomime during a particular discourse.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>BLESSED ARE THE POOR</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Blessed are the poor,” announced the young curate with
-his rolling Irish emphasis.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_254'>254</span>Here was a statement quite to Judy’s taste. Loud were
-her groans of approval. She turned up her eyes with
-great piety, and the gusto with which she beat her breast
-indicated that she took the benediction entirely to herself.
-“But don’t think, me brethren,” went on the ecclesiastic
-warningly, “that this means that because you’re poor in
-purse you’re pleasing to God. It’s the poor in spirit that
-I do be meaning. There’s many a poor body with a proud
-heart.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Now poor old Judy must have been conscious of the
-possession of this spiritual drawback; for even as she had
-taken the text as a direct compliment, so she now took the
-corollary to it as a personal insult. She drew herself up
-with a jerk and threw a glance of furious reproach at the
-speaker. No more groans should His Riverence have out
-of her! No—nor tongue clacking, nor chest thumpings
-either!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>For the rest of his sermon she remained rigid, fixing her
-gaze upon him with an unwavering glare of disapproval.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>As the priest had to come from a considerable distance, he
-was generally late; and as the congregation itself straggled
-in from over the hills, sometimes much before the hour, it
-was the pious custom at Rathenisha for the two model
-damsels of the congregation each to read aloud out of
-a different book of sermons for the edification of the
-assembly in the delay before Mass. They had fine loud
-voices and read simultaneously; the effect can be better
-imagined than described. One ear would be struck by
-genteel accents proclaiming, “Admoire the obedience of
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_255'>255</span>Joseph, me brethren. Did he repoine, did he hesitate?”—the
-while the other ear was assailed by a rich brogue
-announcing, “The sentence is already past. Thou must
-doi. How many have gone to bed at noight in apparent
-good health—”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was some such threat as this, intermittently caught from
-the side of the deepest brogue, which would terrify my
-small mind. The whole churchyard, with its horror of
-green graves, would seem to close about me. And how
-much worse it was should there chance to be a new, raw
-mound without!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the Mahon girls did indeed illustrate the gloomy
-treatise in a manner appalling to my secret state of
-apprehension. She died quite suddenly while dancing at
-some rural festivity. Rumour had it it was tight-lacing
-which had produced the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Wasn’t she black all down one side, the crathur?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Ah, maybe—but she was always a yaller girl,” opined a
-wise matron.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Dimly I can recall that she had the pallor that goes with
-swarthy hair and eyes. A handsome creature, but not of
-the type admired by her class. The poor girl’s sudden end
-formed a stirring illustration for the second curate’s sermon
-the Sunday after the funeral.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A PERSUASIVE TONGUE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“What did I say, me brethren, last time I stood preaching
-here at you? Didn’t I say who could tell who would be
-missing before the year was out? And look now at the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_256'>256</span>wan that has been taken—a foin, sthrapping young girl, one
-of the foinest, I might say, in this parish.... Not an ail
-on her a few days ago, and where is she now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He jerked his thumb terribly through the little glass window
-at the side. The congregation enjoyed it enormously.
-There was a sucking of breaths, a clacking of tongues and
-subdued groans of approbation; and a good deal of rocking
-backwards and forwards on the part of Judy, who as
-usual squatted on her heels at the edge of the altar rails.
-But, poor little wretch that I was, how I quaked!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The second curate was an excellent young man, of the
-sturdy type familiar to many Irish districts in those days.
-The people called him “rale wicked,” and loved him proportionately—“wicked,”
-in their terminology, having a
-very different significance from the word used in its English
-sense. “Wicked” to them refers but to the flame of the
-fire of zeal; and they like to feel it scorch them.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When from the altar steps he threatened by name certain
-recalcitrant black sheep of his congregation who were
-neglecting their Easter duty, to be “afther them with a
-horsewhip if they didn’t present themselves ‘at the box’ so
-soon as he had his breakfast swallowed,” there was a
-thrill of admiration through the chapel. That was being
-“wicked” after a fashion they all appreciated. And when,
-after his breakfast had been gulped down, he duly appeared
-with a horsewhip, the results were immediate and excellent.
-His morning meal, in parenthesis, got ready for him by a
-neighbouring farmer’s wife and served to him in the little
-damp sacristy, invariably consisted of three boiled eggs,
-besides the usual pot of poisonous strong tea. Three
-eggs is the number consecrated to the cleric in Ireland.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_257'>257</span>At a certain Connemara hotel a curious visitor, hearing
-the orders shouted out: “Bacon and eggs for a lady,”
-“Bacon and eggs for a gentleman,” “Bacon and eggs for
-a priest,” ventured to inquire the differentiation. The
-answer was prompt and simple.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Wan egg for a lady; two for a gentleman; and three for
-a priest!”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_258'>258</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXVI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>NECROPOLIS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>I have solemnly sworn my family that when I die I am
-not to be buried in a “Necropolis.” Horrible thought, a
-“city” of the dead! To hate the herd when living, and to
-be forcibly associated with it till the Day of Judgment, if
-not evicted to make room for fresh tenants!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the very early months of my marriage we were obliged
-to take up our abode in a large northern town, for Loki’s
-future grandfather had to study certain aspects of newspaper
-management. Never was anything more difficult to
-find than a roof for our heads in that place of teeming
-activities. Worn out with a long and fruitless search we
-were at last landed in a higher quarter of the town at the
-house of a dentist! The dentist was going away for a holiday,
-and was ready to put at our disposal, for a consideration,
-the whole of the clean, fresh, quite unobjectionable little
-abode, reserving only one room—his chamber of horrors!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I interviewed an elderly thin-faced lady, with, as became a
-dentist’s mother, a very handsome smile. She brought me
-to the window. We looked down on waving tree-tops
-and a wide space of green in the gathering dusk of the
-September evening.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“You see,” she said, “we have a most pleasant view.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I gazed. That stretch of green silence and restfulness,
-after all those sordid roaring streets, decided me.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“We will take the house!” I cried, in a hurry lest we
-should miss such a chance.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I always think,” said the dentist’s mother, smiling still
-more broadly, “that it is a great advantage to be opposite
-the Necropolis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_259'>259</span>Poor innocent as I was, and country bred, I had no idea
-of the meaning of the word.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>I was soon to discover. Funerals are of more than daily
-occurrence in a mighty city. Oh! the processions that I
-stared down upon from the drawing-room window, through
-the fog and the rain—gloom generally enveloped that centre
-of manufactures! I was left long hours alone; no one
-but an impertinent French maid with whom I could
-exchange my ideas. The proceedings in the Necropolis
-had a hypnotic attraction for me. I began to feel quite
-certain that it was gaping for my poor little bones, and
-that they must inevitably rest there. Finally, I extracted
-a solemn oath that, whatever happened, this should not be
-the case—a promise momentarily soothing, but far from
-lifting the weight of depression that pressed upon me.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>To add a touch of revolting comedy to my experiences,
-the owner of the house returned abruptly from his holiday
-and took possession of the locked-up room for an
-afternoon, for the purpose of extracting all the teeth of a
-special friend. I fled from the house in terror, when Elise
-‹who hated me› informed me with much gusto of the impending
-excitement. Needless to say, however, she regaled
-me with every groan on my return, and all the
-details she had been able to pick up from the parlourmaid—left
-by the dentist, <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">en parenthèse</span></i>—who had counted the
-teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The nightmare shrinking from death and its dreadful appanages
-is one that is mercifully passing from me. But I
-envy those who can take the great tragic facts of existence,
-not only with simplicity, but with a kind of enjoyable
-interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_260'>260</span>A Hungarian friend of ours derived much solace in the loss
-of an adored mother by the choosing of a coffin—“Louis
-XV, with little Watteau bows of ormolu.” She smiled
-with real joy, through her tears as she described the casket
-to us, adding:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And I have chosen just such another for myself for ven
-I die!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She stared in amazement when I remarked that I should not
-care what my coffin was like.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Vat?” she exclaimed, “not like to be buried in a Vatteau
-coffin? But it is so pretty!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Alas! she lies in her pretty coffin, and our world is much
-the poorer. But we are sure that during the long months
-of her last illness, when she shut herself away from every
-one in the solitude of her great Hungarian property, to face
-death alone, the thought of those Watteau bows was a
-distinct satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Never was there a creature so instinct with life as she!
-It was little wonder she could not imagine herself as past
-caring for the small pleasures for which she had always
-had so keen a taste. She never lost the heart of a child.
-Though when last we saw her she must have been, as
-years go, almost an old woman, there was no touch of
-age about her: only a snowier white of her hair made her
-more like an adorable little Marquise than ever. Her
-pretty picturesque ways were unchanged, her eager sympathy,
-the delicious freshness of her mind, the lightness,
-the charm, the simplicity.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She had a soft oval face; rich southern tints; the bluest
-eyes between black lashes that it is possible to imagine;
-her small nose like a falcon’s beak—which gave a character
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_261'>261</span>of decision, an untamed, spirited look to the whole countenance.
-The word savage could not apply to anything
-so exquisitely dainty in manner and appearance; and yet
-one felt the long line of savage ancestry at the back of her,
-a wildness no other European nation would show in such
-a flower of its race. And, to finish the description, no one
-had ever so pretty a mouth with the smile of a child and a
-thousand fascinating expressions.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Life had dealt very hardly with her, as is sometimes the
-case with such buoyant souls. She lost all she loved, and
-was left in the end with half a province in land, and
-no creature nearer than the son of a second cousin to
-whom to bequeath the vast inheritance.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>JOHNNIE’S SOUL</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Wedded to an English officer in the Austrian service, while
-still in her teens, one might have thought she would have
-had a better chance of domestic bliss than if her choice had
-fallen upon one of her own countrymen; since, above all
-in those middle Victorian days, the English home and the
-English virtues are so proverbial. But he was all that a
-husband ought not to be. And her only child died in
-babyhood. For thirty years she devoted herself in an
-alien land to what she conceived to be her duty. A
-fervent believer in the higher destinies of man and the
-necessity of repentance, she would say, “I will not give
-up Johnnie’s soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The dashing Chevau-leger became an old curmudgeon of
-the crankiest description. To a less courageous spirit life
-would really have been intolerable beside him. Nevertheless
-the small London house near the Park, every window
-of which was bright with flower-boxes, was as gay within
-as it was without, and friends flocked to those Sunday
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_262'>262</span>tea-parties—the only entertainments she was permitted to
-give.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, she had the reward she craved. Johnnie “made his
-soul,” in Irish parlance, quite sufficiently long before
-softening of the brain became too marked to preclude
-intelligent action. And after three years more she was
-able to send that telegram to her intimates: “Released!”
-It was the cry of one who had been enslaved and in prison
-for all her youth and all her bright womanhood.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But, characteristically, “Johnnie’s” funeral was a matter
-of great importance. He had been very fond of driving four-in-hand,
-and so there were four horses to the hearse that
-conveyed all that was left of the Tyrant to Kensal Green.
-It was as splendid as lavish instructions could make it;
-and the little widow would pop her head out of the window
-at every turning to watch the noble appearance of the
-hearse with its nodding plumes and murmur contentedly:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Poor Johnnie, he vas so fond of driving behind four
-horses: I vas determined he should have it for de last
-time!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We were not a little startled to receive a postcard a few
-weeks later, containing the cryptic phrase:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Just re-buried Johnnie!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Johnnie had always been a trial of a unique description.
-Was it possible that he had put the laws of nature at
-defiance and returned to torment his long-suffering spouse?
-But the explanation was simple. She thought it so simple
-herself as to admit of its expression, as we have said, on a
-postcard.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When she had left him among all those ranks of dead, the
-thought came to her that he was dissatisfied with his
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_263'>263</span>resting-place and would prefer to be laid with his ancestors.
-And so Johnnie was promptly dug up from
-where he had been deposited with so much pomp, removed
-across half England, and “reburied.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>If it was true that, like so many ghosts, he was particular
-about his tomb, I can quite understand his displeasure in
-this instance. As I have said, I share it.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He lies now just outside the park where he played as a
-child, under the lee of the little church where he said his
-first innocent prayers, and his dust will mingle with the
-dust of his grandsires.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Such a quiet, peaceful spot! Immense cornfields skirt it
-on the one hand and on the other the great woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>May I lie in some such hallowed, uncrowded acre!</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_264'>264</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXVII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Irish born as I am, there is something in the breath
-of Ireland that makes my heart rise. The sound of the
-soft Irish voices is music to my ear. I forgive the slipshod
-ways because of the general delightfulness. Distressful
-country as it is—more than ever, now, alas! the battle-ground
-of factions—from the moment of our landing
-joyfully on its shores, to the sad hour of parting, our
-too rare visits to Ireland have been punctuated by kindly
-and innocent laughter. Impossible, beloved people! They
-break the heart of the politician and of the reformer; but
-how enchanting they are to just a foolish person such as I
-am, who likes to go and live among them and enjoy them
-without political bias; who can laugh at and with them,
-and love them as they are!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Our last journey to Ireland began in mirth, and ended in
-the agonies of a bad passage which accentuated all our
-regrets. The traject thither had been accomplished with
-no such drawbacks.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Master of the Villino is remarkably indifferent to
-anything the sea can do; but I like to have a comfortable
-cabin to myself, and a large port-hole for the sea-wind to
-blow through. I cannot say I’m fond of feeling like the
-German lover:</p>
-<div class='lg-container-b c002'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i><span lang="de" xml:lang="de">Himmel-hoch jauchzend, zu Tode betrübt</span></i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>between wave and hollow. But it is the woes of other
-people that really undo me. On this particular passage—a
-bright fresh day it was, with what’s called, I suppose,
-“a choppy sea”—I was quite ready to defy the elements,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_265'>265</span>when suddenly there arose, from the next-door cabin,
-sounds.... No—even in recollection these things are not
-to be dwelt upon!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“My dear,” said I to my companion, “let us talk and
-drown the outcries of this shameless and abandoned
-woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Fortunately I had a companion with whom conversation
-is always as easy as it is interesting. We began to enjoy
-our own pleasant humour very much, and did not allow a
-moment’s silence to fall between us, lest—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We were travelling by North Wall; and when the placidity
-of the Liffey odoriferously enfolded us, we emerged cheerfully
-on deck to join some friends, for the sake of whose
-agreeable company we had chosen this particular route.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The dear little lady who was about to be our hostess we
-found charitably administering dry biscuits to a very
-dilapidated-looking, green-faced young woman with the
-unmistakable appearance of—but again, no!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Poor Mrs. Saunders has been feeling so faint,” said our
-friend, with the cheerful sympathy of the good sailor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We were introduced to the languid one.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Poor thing,” we said, “you do look bad! Have you
-been ill?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One is very crude in one’s questions on board ship.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, no; not ill!” She flung the suggestion from her
-with an acid titter. Then rolling a jaundiced eye upon us:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Were you ill?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, no,” we said; “we quite enjoyed the passage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The sufferer turned her glance from our brutality to the
-sympathetic neighbour.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“If I could have slept,” she said plaintively. Then she
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_266'>266</span>looked back darkly at us. “There were some horrible
-people in the cabin next me, who would talk, and talk, and
-talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Well,” we exclaimed, and it was indeed in all innocence,
-“you were at least better off than we were. For there
-was a creature in the cabin next to us—the most disgusting—the
-most unbridled—”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was not till we saw the dreadful rage in her eyes
-that we realized! It is a horrible little anecdote, but it
-started us laughing even before we set foot on the
-quays.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>IRISH VIGNETTES</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The next incident partakes of the tragi-comedy in which
-every Irish problem is set. All Ireland stands like one of
-those figures of mimes on an old drop-curtain; a laughing
-face behind a tragic mask—or indeed the reverse. We
-laughed while our hearts grew sad at the sight of a
-stalwart devil-may-care individual in a frieze coat who
-strolled up to a group of jarvies while we sat in the cab
-waiting for our luggage to be loaded. The whole business
-was conducted with a fine artful carelessness. Now one,
-now another of the standing group of cab-drivers would
-lurch up against him of the frieze coat or clasp him jovially
-by the hand, and there would ensue a passage of coppers
-from one grimy palm to another. Then out of a deep
-side-pocket of the frieze coat a black bottle would be
-drawn, with all the <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">désinvolture</span></i> of the conjuring trick. No
-doubt some four yards away on either side stood a
-policeman; the illicit traffic was conducted, so to speak,
-under his nose. But, splendid fellow as he is, is he not,
-too, an Irishman? He knows when to sniff in another
-direction.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_267'>267</span>‹And here we may parenthetically remember a charming
-and typical spectacle which once met our eyes in the
-County Wicklow: a local police station, a large placard
-commanding that all dogs shall be muzzled, and five or six
-curs of different low degrees snapping untrammelled in the
-sunshine at the feet of two smiling members of the constabulary.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Some brutish Saxon member of our party stops to point
-out the discrepancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Unmuzzled, is it?” says the elder policeman genially.
-“And, begorra, so it is, ma’am. But, sure, isn’t that Tim
-Connolly’s little dog? Sure, what ’ud we be muzzling
-him for? Thim orders is only for stray dogs!”›</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>DRIVEN IN STYLE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We drove away across the cobbled Dublin streets at a
-hand gallop. Whether the poor animal that drew us had
-to be kept at this unnatural speed lest it should collapse
-altogether, or whether our “jarvey” had had more than
-one pull at the black bottle I know not; certainly we went
-in peril of our lives. Shaving off corners, striking the edge
-of the curb, oscillating violently from side to side, the
-antique vehicle threatened at every leap and bound to
-break into fragments like a pantomime joke. The Dublin
-cab is a thing apart. From the musty straw upon which
-your feet rest, to the dilapidated blue velveteen cushion
-upon which you leap, to its wooden walls and rattling
-windows, you would not find its like upon any other point
-of the globe. It searches you to your least bone socket;
-and the noise of its career deafens your wails on the
-principle of the “painless extractor” at the fair, who blows
-a trumpet for every wrench.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_268'>268</span>It was useless for us to thrust our heads out of the window,
-like “Bunny come to town”; the frightful clatter of an
-arrest, a grunt, and a start at fresh speed were the only
-result. We trembled in every limb and so did the poor
-horse, as we were at last flung out in front of our hotel
-with a jerk that nearly broke the bottom of the cab
-in two.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We tendered what we knew to be considerably more than
-the fare. The driver surveyed it and looked at us, then
-rolled a disgusted glance back to the coins, and dropped
-them into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Is that all? And me afther dhriving you in such
-style!”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_269'>269</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXVIII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Humours pursued us during our brief sojourn in the
-hotel. We are very fond of that hotel. It is associated
-with the repeated charm of its hospitable reception on each
-of our visits. We were glad to see we were given the same
-set of rooms as on a previous occasion; and when we
-found the same broken lock on the door, we felt indeed
-that we were among old friends.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When our tea was brought—we were lying down to rest—we
-had however to ring and protest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Look at this spoon!” we exclaimed dramatically.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The soft-voiced maid looked at it quizzically.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“What is it?” Then she smiled. “It’s apt to have
-been in the honey, by the look of it,” she observed
-dispassionately.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Please take it away,” we said, “and bring another.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She thought us strange and dull of wit. There was a clean
-napkin on every plate. But—no doubt with a mental
-“Ah, God help us. Travellers is queer folk!”—she
-departed, we feel sure, no farther than the passage, there
-to wipe the honey off on the inside of her apron.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A GARDEN IN MEATH</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The next day saw us landed at a small wayside station in
-the rich flat land of Meath, where we were met by a charming
-old-fashioned “turn out,” a handsome waggonette and
-a sturdy pair of carriage horses. At least we thought the
-waggonette old-fashioned and delightful, in these motor
-times; but it seems it was on the contrary new and
-wonderful.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The coachman surveyed us tentatively two or three times
-while our divers small goods were being collected, magisterially
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_270'>270</span>directing the footman with the butt end of his whip.
-Presently he broke into speech:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Will you be noticing the carriage, sir?” he remarked,
-addressing the head of the party. “Her Ladyship’s just
-bought it. I chose it for her meself, so I did. It’s a grand
-contrivance. You can have it the way it is now, and it’s
-real comfortable, isn’t it, sir? But sure, you can turn
-it into an omnibus. And you’d never believe now,
-how many it would hold. I drove six ladies to a ball
-in it the other night, and not one of them crushed on
-me—And fine large ladies they were,” he observed
-admiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“We do wish he would not tell every one that,” observed
-one of the “large ladies” a little later. “Every time he’s
-gone to the station in the new waggonette this summer
-he’s told that story.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But she was quite good-humoured and amused. Indeed,
-her largeness was of the beautiful order. It was no
-wonder the coachman was proud of conveying it uncrushed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The gardens where these hostesses dwelt were pleasantly
-green and flowery. There was the usual high-walled
-garden. Villino Loki, with its absurd terraces, can never
-dream of attaining to such an enclosure of antique charm.
-For if we walled in the Kitchen and Reserve Garden at
-the foot of our hill we should wall out the moor from
-below, and obstruct our sweeping vision from above. But
-my heart yearns to an old walled garden. A place quite
-apart, with its mingled odours of herb and flower and
-ripening fruit; with its perpetual murmur of bees, its
-tangled walks, its old bushes of Rosemary and Lavender,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_271'>271</span>its mossy Apple-trees, its crisp Parsley beds, its tumble-down
-greenhouses.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image302_306.jpg' alt='garden view - two pages wide' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CURBED AMBITIONS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>This particular walled garden was a very good specimen
-of its kind. It was here that our ignorance first made
-acquaintance with the invaluable Cosmia; that treasure
-of the herbaceous border
-that keeps on
-blooming in the
-face of adversity
-from June
-till November.
-There
-was also a
-huge bed of
-Salvias, one
-sheet of gentian
-blue.
-‹Why cannot we grow Salvias like that?› It ran at the
-foot of an overgrown, very old rose plot, the trees of
-which had developed into fairy-tale luxuriance. And
-opposite, across the gravelled path, which from old associations
-we prefer to any other species of walk, was a
-field of Snap-dragon against the high wall where the leaves
-of the plum branches were reddening as they clung. Duly
-mossed was this old wall, and richly lichened; overtopped
-by the great trees without. These swayed to the mild Irish
-wind, with long, pleasant, choiring sounds, the rooks
-cawing as they circled in them. It was small wonder that
-I should have felt content and at peace as I stood there—if
-only my heart had not swelled with envy over those
-Salvias! But one can’t be the owner of an Italian Villino
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_272'>272</span>on a Surrey Highland and encompass the antique peace of
-a centuries-old Irish home. One must be reasonable—as a
-French governess of our youth used to say to us when
-she began her most lengthy harangues. “<i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Voyons—de deux
-choses l’une ...</span></i>”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The park was typically Irish, and
-possessed
-some wonderful
-trees.
-Amongst
-others a
-chestnut,
-four or five
-immense
-branches of
-which, sweeping
-to the ground,
-had taken root again
-and started fresh trees, forming
-a singular tropical-looking grove. How children would
-have delighted in such a leafy palace, roofed in and pillared
-of its own stateliness!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Memories of laughter pursue us at every stage of those
-weeks. There was the visit to a neighbouring castle; a
-genuine old castle this, but irretrievably “restored” in that
-bygone period of history when Pugin reigned supreme.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>AN IRISH CHATELAINE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was Sunday, and we found the Châtelaine—a little lady
-renowned for her vivacity and charm—out in the field with
-her children and her lord, energetically teaching hockey to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_273'>273</span>the young men and women of the village. Her little boy
-was running up and down after her, wringing his hands and
-ejaculating, “Mamma, ye’ll be kilt! Mamma, ye’ll be
-kilt!” to perfectly regardless ears.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In a whirl of energy we were rushed into tea; and, while
-drawing off her loose gloves and flinging them at random
-into a corner, our hostess’s tongue, which was as nimble
-as her little feet, never ceased wagging:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I hope you don’t mind the smell! Oh, it’s a terrible
-smell. But it’s only the dogs, ye know. We’ve been
-washing them. They’re sick, poor things. Not infectious,
-ye needn’t be a bit afraid. Only mange, or something.
-It’s the sulphur in the soap, ye know. Come in, come
-in!—Oh, I do hope we have got something fit to eat!
-Katie, Katie! ‹Katie’s me eldest daughter› Katie, what
-have we got? Ah, it’s horrid!—Ah, I don’t know what’s
-the matter with them.—Yes, it’s a fine big room. We
-were dancing here last week. You wouldn’t think it to
-look at it now, would you? ’Pon my word! I was
-thinking to meself that night, ‘It’s a queer world we live
-in, with all those saints looking down at us with their bare
-legs, and we with our bare backs!’ Oh, yes, they’re
-very grand old paintings, I dare say! But there is a deal
-of bare legs about them.—Will you have any more?
-Ah, no, ye can’t eat it!—I don’t wonder, I can’t meself.—Will
-you come into the garden? I’d like to be showing
-you the garden. Where’s me gloves?—Where’s me yellow
-gloves? Katie, did ye see me yellow gloves? Ah, never
-mind! This way.—I’ve been making a new herbaceous
-border. Ah, ’pon me word, if they’ve not gone and
-locked the garden door! Sunday’s the mischief! Never
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_274'>274</span>mind, I’ll ring the bell. Green! Green, Johnny Green,
-are ye there? Is Mrs. Green there? Is Patsy there?
-Where’s young Condren? Ah, they’re all out! But I’ll
-not be beaten.—Maybe I’ll get it open. Will ye push,
-now? I’ll turn the handle. Give a good shove. It’s
-an old lock. Ah, devil a bit of it! Will ye give me your
-stick.—No, thank ye. I’d rather hit it meself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Even to her it was impossible to continue talking, while
-she was, as she herself would have expressed it, “laying
-on to the garden door.” Scarlet, panting, dishevelled, but
-still completely fascinating, she desisted at last and handed
-back the stick with a smile and gasp, and a resigned:
-“Ah, I clean forgot, I see how it is now. They’re all off
-to the funeral of the priest’s brother’s sister.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='ht' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_275'>275</span>
-<a href='images/image304_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image304.jpg' alt='THE HOLLY TREE' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>THE HOLLY TREE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>XXXIX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>From the rich plains of Meath to the barren lands of
-Galway, it is a far cry and an unforgettable journey. The
-country grows more and more desolate, and grand in
-desolation, as one approaches the Atlantic. There was
-an orange sunset that evening, over an illimitable stretch
-of bog, a vision of savage, haunting beauty that went with
-us into the darkness of the fast closing day like a strain of
-wild music.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Ireland has always been as a living creature to her children.
-She has taken, in their fanciful minds, a distinct personality.
-To get such a glimpse of her as that, is to understand the
-passionate ardour of fealty which she has had the power
-to inspire; to understand how she has come to be
-“Kathleen na Hoolihan,” and “My dark Rosaleen,” to
-those poet hearts. We were speeding now to that very
-corner of land from which her younger lovers have chiefly
-sprung.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was pitch dark when we alighted at a town which had
-once been large and prosperous and was now forlornly
-sunk in decay; mute witness, like so many others, to that
-act of tyranny—blunder and crime—the effects of which
-England can never wipe away.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Our kind friends had ordered “a carriage from the hotel”
-to meet us. We had a long cross-country drive before us.
-Looking doubtfully by the light of the station lamp at the
-two emaciated animals that were to draw us, we wondered,
-in our tired brains, if two bad horses are not worse than
-one. It had begun to drizzle rain, a fine soft rain that is
-like a caress in the air.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A TYPICAL JARVEY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_276'>276</span>If anything could beat the Dublin cab, it was that Galway
-carriage. We set off lurching and rattling; and soon, the
-wind catching us from over the fields, the rain began to
-strike in across the open windows. To have a window
-up seemed the simple remedy; but things simple elsewhere
-are not so in the West of Ireland. One window was as
-impossible to lift out of its socket as the oyster out of its
-closed shells, for it was strapless. We fell upon the other
-strap and instantly the window shot outwards at right
-angles, with the evident intention of casting itself on the
-road, had we not held it despairingly by its shabby appendage.
-If you have ever tried to hold a window in that
-position by its strap you will know how agonizing is the
-process. The driver was hailed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Look here! Your window’s loose!—You’d better stop
-and put it back.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The slogging trot of the horses slackened, and over his
-shoulder the man of Galway demanded:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Is it the windy on the left, or the wan to the right of
-ye?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“The left, the left! Oh, do be quick!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“The left, is it? Sure, isn’t that the wan with the sthrap?”
-He jerked his reins and clucked at his horses. What
-more could we want? Wasn’t that the one with the
-“sthrap?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>With great difficulty, with imminent risk to the life of the
-window and our own safety, we got the recalcitrant pane
-back into its socket, and discovered that by dint of
-judicious manipulation, and a tight hold of the “sthrap,”
-it was possible to shelter the most neuralgic of the party.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A ten Irish miles’ drive along the stoniest of roads, through
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_277'>277</span>complete darkness—for there was only a partial glimmer
-from one carriage-lamp half the way, which then became
-extinct altogether—it is something of an enterprise! But
-it was worth it to find such a welcome at the end!</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A GALWAY DEMESNE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>A “Gothic” mansion, dating from the early part of last
-century, Kilcoultra is outwardly a very grand pile and
-stands nobly in the midst of a rolling park, reclaimed from
-the wild stony land of Galway. And inside, the first impression
-is like stepping in to the glories of a missal page. The
-whole house is homogeneous and entirely successful in its
-mediæval colouring. On the walls are gorgeous enamel
-blues, peacock greens or yet carmine crimsons appropriately
-set with fleurs-de-lis, maltese cross or some other
-conventional device in gold; ceiling and cornices are richly
-illuminated to correspond. To find this glow of colour in
-the midst of the melancholy greys and greens of the western
-landscape, under the low drifting cloud-ridden skies, has a
-great charm; it has a poetic Maeterlinckian atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is something too of the delicate sadness of an old
-romance in the lives of these kindly ladies who rule so
-wisely over the lands left to them by their brother—the last
-of his name. He was a man round whom justly centred
-unusual hopes and ambitions. Now he, who had so great
-a heart and so splendid a mind, lies in the ruined chapel in
-the park, alone. The chapel is roofless. It is a nobly
-solitary and fit resting-place for one who was nobly apart
-from the petty aims of his contemporaries; who lived and
-died true to his ideals; whose work still prospers in the
-freed lands of his people. He gave up much for Ireland,
-and Ireland gave him nothing at all in return ... except that
-wonderful sleeping-place with the changing sky overhead.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_278'>278</span>They say there is no such word in the Irish language as
-gratitude, and yet—</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>My Kilcoultra hostess drove me round the property on
-the day after my arrival, and drew the pony to the standstill
-on a height that finely dominated the park and house.
-When I had duly admired the view she pointed with her
-whip to a little white cottage that stood a few yards away
-and began a kindly tale of the old woman who had long
-lived there and had but recently passed away.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“When I’d come round to see her, I used to find her, times
-out of number, leaning over the wall, gazing down at Kilcoultra.
-Always she’d be leaning over the wall, staring
-down at the house. And one day I said to her, ‘Mary,
-what in the world makes you stand there like that?’
-And she answered me, ‘I’m looking down on the roof
-that shelters me lovely master!’”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“My lovely master!” A fragrant thing to have become
-to the poor that live on your soil! When we reach a
-sphere where things are judged by different standards and
-higher measures than we can now conceive, how far will
-not such a title outweigh any paltry worldly honour!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet if the memory of its lost master dominates and haunts
-all Kilcoultra house and lands, there is nothing to sadden
-one in the thoughts it inspires; and our stay there is altogether
-full of charm and pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Not only are the ladies a fund of anecdote, racy of the
-soil; not only do they live delightfully in touch with their
-peasantry, with eye and ear ever ready to catch the humour
-and the pathos about them; but they are cultured, far-travelled
-beings. Not much in the outer world escapes
-their knowledge and shrewd apprehension.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_279'>279</span>Home topics, however, are what appeals to their visitors
-most.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>IRISH WITS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Carrie,” the younger sister will say to the elder, “I heard
-Whalen the guard, and Tim Rooney the porter, at Athenmore
-Station, talking together. And Tim is thinking of
-making up to a young lady, you know, and I suppose he’s
-always talking about it, for Whalen was saying to him
-just as I came up: ‘’Pon me word, I wish you were married,
-and had your family rared on me!’ They had a
-great jollification at our station the other night,” she goes
-on, turning to us. “And they brewed the punch in the
-station bell! Whalen’s a very humorous man,” she
-proceeds. “They used to stop the express from Galway
-at Athenmore when required; but there were complaints of
-the delay and orders came from Dublin it wasn’t to be
-done on any account. But it’s a recent regulation and
-everybody doesn’t know about it. And the other day
-there was terrible work, for there was Father Blake and
-the Doctor both counting on it for an urgent sick call—dying,
-they said the poor man was.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘You’ll have to stop the train for this once, Whalen,’
-says Father Blake.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘I’ll maybe save him yet,’ says the doctor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘I couldn’t, yer riverence,’ says Whalen; ‘it’s as
-much as me place is worth. Don’t you be askin’
-me, doctor. It ’ud be me ruin. The company’s very
-strict.’</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘Think of his poor soul,’ says the priest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘I’ll hold ye responsible for his life,’ says the doctor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘Wirra, I can’t,’ says poor Whalen, and calls up Tim.
-‘Tell his riverence, Tim,’ says he, ‘tell his riverence and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_280'>280</span>the doctor that I can’t be disobeying orders.... And
-begorra, she’s due this minute! Up into the signal-box
-with you. And down with that signal, so the express can
-get by,’ says he. And as Tim starts off at a great pace,
-Whalen shouts after him, ‘And I’m sure I hope ye’ll get
-it to work, Tim, for it’s terrible stiff it is, that same signal,
-and it at danger!’</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Well, whether he had winked at Tim, or what, but Tim
-worked and worked.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“‘I can’t get it to move,’ he says. ‘Will you come up
-yourself, Mr. Whalen, sir, and have a try?’</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And, oh,” says Miss Margaret, in fits of laughter, “the
-way the two of them went on in that signal-box, and the
-way Whalen pumped and pulled, and at last he cries,
-‘There’s no help for it, it’s stuck! And sure the company
-can’t blame me, if the machinery’s out of order,’
-says he. ‘Well, there’s wan good thing, your riverence,
-the thrain ’ull have to stop now, anyhow.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We laugh a good deal during those pleasant meals at
-Kilcoultra. Not one dull moment does the house hold
-for us, and we don’t want any better company than that
-of the two dear ladies.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“We’ve got,” Miss Caroline, the elder, explains to me
-carefully, “a very careful coachman, a very steady man,
-so you needn’t be the least nervous driving out with us.
-He was selected, indeed, because he could be trusted. It
-wouldn’t do for us unprotected women, you know,” she
-says in all seriousness, “to be risking our necks with a
-tipsy coachman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Two days we are driven by this paragon. The third day
-there sits a stranger on the box.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_281'>281</span>“I hope,” says Miss Carrie apologetically, “that you
-don’t mind his being out of livery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“The fact is, Regan had an accident last night,” explains
-Miss Margaret. “He fell into the old gravel pit going
-back home and cut his head open, and——”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“It was my fault entirely,” interrupts Miss Caroline in
-distressed accents. “I had to send him in to Galway
-town, and to tell him to wait and bring back Captain
-Blake. And that meant loitering an hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Dear, dear!” Miss Margaret clacks her tongue. “That
-was very unfortunate! He—such a steady man! But an
-hour in Galway town...!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“It’s only what might have been expected,” Miss Caroline
-concludes. “I blame myself entirely.—I generally,” she
-adds, turning to me, “avoid leaving him any time in the
-town, you know.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>A STEADY MAN</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>And the best of it is that Regan remains in their minds
-“the steady man.” How impossible it is for the stranger
-to understand Ireland and Ireland’s ways! How much
-humour must you have—and what unlimited patience!
-There is nothing, of course, that so conduces to patience
-as a pleasant sense of humour.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The ladies are the Providence of the district. There is a
-room at the back of the great gallery filled nearly to the
-ceiling with rolls of homespun made by the peasant women
-in the villages. Whenever a cottage mother is in want of
-money she runs up to Miss Margaret or Miss Caroline,
-bringing or promising the product of her loom. A good
-deal of money is advanced; a good deal paid in this
-manner, chiefly out of the ladies’ generous pockets.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Of course, poor things, you must know the way to
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_282'>282</span>take them,” says Miss Caroline in her Irish way. “One
-of them will come up and declare they’ll all be ‘lost
-entirely, ruined out and out’ for the want of five pounds.
-‘Are you sure you couldn’t do with thirty shillings,
-now?’ I say to them. ‘Oh, Miss Caroline’—it will be
-then—‘as thrue as I’m a living woman, I couldn’t do with
-less than two pound ten!’ ... I get at the truth that
-way,” she adds.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It is Miss Margaret who undertakes the sale of goods
-which have already cost Kilcoultra so dear, and no one
-can say that she shows a commercial spirit.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Let me see now,” she will say, fingering the stuff—and
-splendid stuff it is—with tentative finger and thumb. “I
-think we paid three-and-tenpence a yard for this, or maybe
-it was four shillings, but”—with a delighted smile—“I’ll let
-you have it for one-and-six, if you’re sure—really sure—you
-want it.”</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_283'>283</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XL</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>THE COLOUR OF THE WEST</div>
-<p class='c008'>The country all about Kilcoultra is typically wild and
-melancholy. The fields stretch, barren and yellowing,
-strewn with giant stones. Except where sombre belts of
-woodland mark the great estates, there is scarcely a tree
-to break the monotony; a monotony intensified by the
-low, unending lines of rough grey walls that border every
-road. But there
-is a kind of
-poetry even
-in this desolation,
-and a
-satisfaction to all
-who love the freedom
-of unbounded
-horizons. Then the
-mountains of Clare stretch their incomparable plum and
-grape colours against the sky. The colour of Ireland is a
-thing scarcely realized over here, where, somehow, hues
-seem washed out. “In England everything has got grey
-in it,” an artist friend of ours discontentedly avers.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/image317_318.jpg' alt='landscape with tree - two pages wide' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We are taken across the county to a castle standing by a
-lake, which is a place of wonder. It is a castle no older,
-in its mediæval sturdiness, than the Gothic mansion we
-are staying in, but quite as convincingly built. Loughcool
-is a realm of beauty. At the end of the long approach
-the road rises very steeply through a stern grove of pines.
-All at once, as you approach the summit of this dark
-woodland, the ground breaks away abruptly on the right,
-and, between the pines, far, far below, lies the lake smiling,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_284'>284</span>and on its banks what is called “the hidden garden”—a
-stretch of fairy beauty. Words are poor things to describe
-the vision which breaks so unexpectedly upon the
-eye. Everything that gardening art can do has been
-accomplished
-at Loughcool.
-You have terraces
-and a
-glory of roses
-overhanging the
-water even this late September;
-and there are “Auratum”
-Lilies rising in splendid groups on each
-side of a grass walk that runs grandly into the
-woods between stately trees. The lady of Loughcool
-is fighting a hard fight to make Azaleas and Rhododendrons
-grow in the limy soil; but it is a question whether
-the struggle is worth while.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“We have given it up,” says the sensible châtelaine of
-Kilcoultra.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We smiled privately. Villino Loki has at least some
-points of superiority.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We made another expedition, over the border into County
-Clare. A white plastered pillared house this, dating from
-the terrible neo-Italian period of the end of the last century.
-There dwells an eccentric gentleman, one of the chief
-instigators of the Young Ireland movement; but he was
-unfortunately away. We visited the house, and were
-entertained by his housekeeper. This lady’s name was
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_285'>285</span>Mrs. Quinlan, and she was an old friend of our hostesses.
-We think we enjoyed that afternoon as well as any of our
-excursions; and certainly we laughed as much as ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mrs. Quinlan came creaking down in a flowing black silk,
-which brought me instantly back to the Sundays of my
-childhood and the genteel appearance of my mother’s maid.
-We sat in the early Victorian drawing-room and had tea
-and Albert biscuits, listening with unremitting amusement
-to the conversation between Miss Caroline and Mrs.
-Quinlan. Be it mentioned that the owner of Curriestown
-has long been a widower and that the question of his remarriage
-has never ceased to agitate the bosoms of his
-neighbours since the event, so many years ago, which
-qualified him once again for the matrimonial market.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Mrs. Quinlan stood, her perfectly unwashed hands crossed
-on the last button of her black silk bodice; her faded face
-all over lines, querulous, good-humoured, quizzical, under
-the untidy wisps of her yellow-grey hair; and, while we
-ate and drank, she flowed continuously on, stimulated by
-a question here and there, or an appropriate comment.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>SPEAKING THE IRISH</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And indeed, Miss Caroline, it’s very busy I am. For
-sure, didn’t the master wire there’d be twelve of them here
-the day after to-morrow? It’s getting all the rooms ready
-I am, and the Professor here and all. Not that he’s much
-trouble, the crathur. Them’s his shoes, in the hall beyant.
-I’m sorry he’s out, then, for it’s the queer-looking body he
-is. He’s wearing the kilt, ye know, Miss Carrie. And
-not a word out of him but Irish! Musha, I don’t know
-what he’d be saying!—It’s a deal of store they do be setting
-on speaking the Irish now, Miss.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Here Mrs. Quinlan, seized with a paroxysm of silent laughter,
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_286'>286</span>claps one of the grimy hands over her mouth and
-doubles herself in two.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“The master’s wild about it, God help him!” she proceeds
-presently. “But sure, I do be tellin’ him, I’m too old to be
-thinkin’ about that kind of thing at my time of life. Troth,
-and it’s queer times we do be having! Isn’t the master
-bringing back a black lady on us!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“A black lady?” ejaculated Miss Carrie, startled out of
-her placidity. “Good gracious, Mrs. Quinlan!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Indeed, and it’s true. A rale black lady I hear she is, and
-it’s in Paris he met her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“In Paris!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It seemed a strange place from which to bring a black lady.
-We were all full of the liveliest interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I suppose,” says Miss Caroline, “you mean a very dark
-lady, Mrs. Quinlan—a brunette?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I do not, then—rale black she is, I’m told. Out of the
-Indies, or Africa, or some of them places.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Dear me!” Our hostess is much puzzled. “Is he thinking
-of marrying her, Mrs. Quinlan?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“I wouldn’t put it past him. I wouldn’t put anything
-past him, Miss Carrie!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A black lady! Was this to be the end of twenty-five
-years’ expectation?</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Well, now, and is he bringing her with him to-morrow
-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Och, maybe he is! He’s coming by the midnight train,
-Miss Carrie, and the Lord knows what time in the world
-they’ll be up here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Oh, he must mean to marry her!” says Miss Carrie,
-and Mrs. Quinlan laughs again exhaustedly with an undercurrent
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_287'>287</span>of plaintiveness, and remarks once more that she
-wouldn’t put it past him.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We go through the house in Mrs. Quinlan’s wake. There
-is something that looks like a kitchen rubber laid over one
-corner of the mahogany table in the great red-papered
-dining-room; and on it a crusty loaf flanks a dim glass
-and a cracked plate. Mrs. Quinlan casts a phrase of explanation
-as she trails us around.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“He do be looking for his bit of dinner early.” We presume
-“he” to be the “crathur that gives no trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We pass through a bewildering series of bedrooms. The
-damp has been coming in very copiously at Curriestown.
-Mrs. Quinlan points out the worst places in each apartment
-as we go along:</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Look athere, now! Just cast your eye on that, Miss
-Carrie, and sure it’s nothing to what’s behind the bed. If
-ye could see the way it is at the back of that press, Miss
-Carrie, you’d be hard set to believe it. Och, the house is
-in a tirrible state! Me heart’s broke pulling the furniture
-about, thrying to get them bad bits covered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Some one suggests that perhaps the owner will have it
-painted for the black lady. But Honoria Quinlan is still
-of opinion that you couldn’t tell what he’d be at.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>On the way back we burst a tyre, not far from one of
-those hamlets which are typical of the western coast. Set
-in surroundings of the wildest beauty, it is practically
-deserted. The four walls of the ruined chapel gaping to
-the sky, and the long row of empty broken-down cottages
-testify still to the ruthless policy that laid the country
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_288'>288</span>waste in far Cromwellian times. Perhaps there are no
-more than fifteen smoking hearths left, beaten by passionate
-seas, guarded by the tremendous black cliffs. Life here, it
-would seem, must be hard won indeed from stony fields
-and treacherous waters.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Very soon, while the chauffeur worked at the wheel, a
-small knot of onlookers gathers about us; children with a
-tangled thatch of bleached hair, and eyes that look half-fiercely,
-half-appealingly out from under it. Black eyes
-they seem at first sight, set as they are with raven lashes.
-It is only on examination that you find them to be richly
-violet. There is an old man fantastically attired in a blanket
-laced with twine down to his knees. Such a creature of
-savage primitiveness he seems that one of the party is
-moved to ask him humorously if he has ever driven in a
-motor-car. He surveys us with his mild blue eyes that are
-as innocent as the child’s beside him, and shakes his shaggy
-white head.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Bedad, I have,” he then says unexpectedly. “And sure
-it never touched the ground at all but an odd time between
-here and Connemara.”</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>CLARE ROADS</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yet motor-cars must be very rare apparitions along these
-Clare roads; for at their approach the people fling themselves
-sideways into the ditches and against the walls,
-when they cannot escape through a gap into the fields.
-Even the dogs will flee. One poor Collie flattened himself
-on a bank in a paroxysm of terror that we cannot forget.
-When I remember how along the English roads my heart
-is for ever in my mouth over the callous indifference of the
-British cur, I realize that canine folk are very much like
-human beings when all is said and done.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_289'>289</span>The Irish of the west have curious habits and customs
-which seem to link them with their forgotten eastern
-ancestral race. The women will draw their garments over
-their heads at the approach of a stranger, so closely that
-you may not get even a glimpse of their faces. Their
-husband is still “the master” to them, and they walk two
-steps behind him when they go abroad. But it is the old
-Catholic spirit that leads them to expect the greeting
-“God save all here!” when you enter their cottage, and
-“God bless the work!” when you pass them in the field.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>AN IRISH STRIKE</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We hurry away, much against our will, from these attractive
-scenes because of the breaking out of the railway
-strike. The newspapers are all very alarming, and we are
-threatened with being flung for an indefinite period upon the
-hospitality of our most hospitable friends. We do not
-fear for a minute that that would fail us, but we are due in
-England at appointed dates, and so we bustle off, “against
-the heart” as the French say.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But when you make acquaintance with a strike from an
-Irish point of view, it seems one huge joke. Never did we
-make a journey to the sound of so much laughter as that
-day. Every station was crowded with soldiers, and all the
-inhabitants mustered on the platforms to exchange sallies
-with them. An eager, curious, good-humoured gathering
-greets and speeds the train which is supposed to be kept
-running at imminent risk of riot and peril.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>A very splendid looking police-inspector came into our
-carriage and had an animated conversation on the prospects
-with an elderly gentleman whom he addressed as “Judge.”
-Both seemed inspired with glee.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>When we arrived in Dublin there was indeed a slight drawback
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_290'>290</span>in finding no porters available for our many boxes.
-But the stalwart man of the party made “no bones,” as
-they would say, about shouldering them himself, and this
-was accomplished amid the unstinted enthusiasm of the
-“jarvies.” He was aided ‹save the mark› by the only
-faithful porter, as old as Pantaloon, who quivered and
-quavered behind him. A further occasion for cheers.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Ah, will ye look at the gintleman! To think of the likes
-of him now, being put to carry the thrunks! Isn’t it
-ashamed of themselves they ought to be! Well done,
-Larry, it is a grand old boy ye are! Let me get a hould
-of the box, yer honour. Oh, begorra, isn’t it the stringth
-of ten ye do be having....”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“And how do ye like Dublin now, Mr. Smith?” we heard a
-pretty Irish girl saying to a stalwart young British soldier
-on the platform.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>He was grinning down at her in stolid admiration. She
-herself had dove-like eyes and a dove-like cooing voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We think he liked Dublin very much indeed.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>It was the laughing face behind the mask of tragedy.</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' id='Page_291'>291</span>
- <h2 class='c015'>XLI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='c005'></div>
-<div class='sidenote'>THE FALL OF THE LEAF</div>
-<p class='c008'>Once more has the Equinox come and
-dropped into the past. Autumn—the Fall,
-as our older and more
-poetic term had it to
-balance the image of
-Spring, and as America
-still prefers to call it—is
-about us.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image325.jpg' alt='bird in nest' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>We disagree radically
-with Chateaubriand’s
-estimate of the “russet
-and silver days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“A moral character”
-‹thus does the Father
-of <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Romantisme</span></i> meditate,
-in his usual melancholy
-mood, upon the season of shortening
-days and long-drawing nights›
-“is attached to autumnal scenes.... The leaves falling
-like our years, the flowers withdrawing like our hours,
-the colours of the clouds fading like our illusions, the
-light waning like our intelligence, the sun growing colder
-like our affections, the rivers becoming frozen like our
-lives—everything about Autumn bears secret relations to
-our destinies....”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Yes, we disagree with every one of these similes. Rather
-should Autumn be considered as the happy season of the
-task accomplished. The wine is pressed and stored, the
-fruit is garnered.... In the garden it is the time of eager
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_292'>292</span>preparation against new delights, another year; of solicitude
-for the treasures of beauty which are to brighten another
-Spring, another Summer. The seed of the dying Annuals
-has been saved; the more tender of the Perennials are
-timely withdrawn into shelter, while the hardier are cosily
-tucked in their own bed for the coming long winter sleep.
-It is the time of the tidying down and of the confident
-“good night—till next year!”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>“Colder, like our affections,” indeed! What will not
-love of rhetoric perpetrate?—and Christmastide drawing
-on apace!</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>The Master of the House has an old-fashioned weakness—what
-may be called a “Dickensy” weakness—for things
-Christmassy. And his family have all childlike tastes and
-are quite ready to minister to his picturesque fancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>We have a Christmas tree—a Spruce sapling, selected
-yearly for sacrifice in the territory called the Wilderness.
-It must be said that the wide library, with the capacious
-hearth and the beamed ceiling, lends a suitable scenery to
-this homelike ‹but, we fear, obsolescent› entertainment.
-The tree is lit up on the first night for ourselves; on the
-second for the household; and a third time for the children.
-For the true pleasures of Yule would be incomplete without
-a “foregathering-and-rejoicing-together” ‹as only a
-tough German compound word could express it› of all
-grades of age and station. The children, in this case, are
-those of the Catechism class and of our <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">employés</span></i>—which
-pompous term must be understood to refer to the gardener,
-the chauffeur, the under-gardener, and the “occasional
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_293'>293</span>help.” This last has five of them—so it mounts up
-satisfactorily.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THINGS CHRISTMASSY</div>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image330.jpg' alt='bird bath hanging from tree' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The beloved “furry ones” are not forgotten. Loki, who
-is always in a state of violent excitement on Christmas
-Tree nights, has a toy animal to make acquaintance with,
-tease, and finally worry. Some one ‹it must have been
-Juvenal› suggested tying up nice clean bones in red ribbons;
-but out of regard for Grandma’s
-carpet, the succulent
-thought has never been “materialized.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Master of the House, and
-Juvenal, are also full of solicitude
-for the feathery things in
-Winter. The bird-baths are
-carefully thawed—it seems, by
-the way, to be in the coldest
-days of the year that they appear
-to prefer to bathe; sand
-baths are generally found sufficient
-in the Summer, one
-wonders why. In cold weather
-generally, cocoanuts filled with
-fat are disposed in various
-parts of the garden, around
-which tits and finches of every
-shade dispute noisily all day.
-But on Christmas day the terraces, the balustrades
-and steps round the house are further
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_294'>294</span>disfigured with such an abundance of crumbs and other
-tempting morsels, that, even with the help of all the black
-birds from neighbouring copses, they cannot come even
-with the whole of the feast.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>We give each other enchanting presents. The lovely
-little carved-wood Joan of Arc, on a bracket in Grandpa’s
-library; the Madonna of Cluny “prayer-stick” in one
-corner of the chimney-piece; the Medici copy of Filippino
-Lippi’s wonderful angel in the National Gallery, in the
-grey and yellow bedroom; the cut-glass goblets painted
-with purple plums and red cherries and blue grapes in the
-drawing-room—all these were this year’s Christmas gifts,
-cunningly chosen, we think, and a constant delight to
-our eyes.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki’s Grandma, after the fashion of a lady in a recent
-celebrated lawsuit, likes to choose her own presents. But
-she is not so indelicate as to demand money and buy it
-herself—No, she drops an absent hint, as Christmastide
-draws near. If this is not satisfactory, she abandons
-diplomacy for an engaging frankness.... But she is always
-overwhelmed with surprise and delight when “the very
-thing she wanted” duly appears about the Tree. The
-Master of the Villino, on his side, has had all the pleasure
-of purchasing; and, being of a guileless nature, is often
-quite persuaded that the choice was his own.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In fact we all become like children again at Christmas; and
-this, after all, cannot be displeasing to the Christ Child. It
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_295'>295</span>is a time of hectic preparation, of pleasurable brain-racking
-over the suitability of gifts; of endless tying up of parcels
-for foreign and home dispatch. We decorate the Villino
-with round compact Holly-wreaths, which Adam makes
-with rare raste and adroitness. Never was such a year as
-the last for Hollies; and some of the trees were still scarlet
-with them in the late Spring.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>HUES OF WINTER</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>As for Juvenal, he shows a recrudescence of genius in the
-devising of table decoration with unthought-of evergreens;
-with rich-toned leaves in the sear and the brown and
-purpling hues of Winter, brightened with an astonishing
-variety of haws, hips, and berries.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>In the little Chapel a crib is built up in a stone manger
-brought from Rome. Therein lies the Italian <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Bambino</span></i>,
-purchased two generations ago by a dear one who has
-now gone from us. It is the quaintest little wax figure
-imaginable, with its painted red curls and one wax foot
-uplifted in the act of kicking.—The story goes that the
-original much venerated image in a certain Roman church,
-the object of yearly pilgrimages, was purloined, or for
-some reason moved to another Church, to the woe and
-indignation of the faithful of the district. But on the first
-Christmas night after this translation, a loud knocking was
-heard at the door of the original Church, and the small
-figure was discovered, kicking with all its might for re-admittance.
-Captured and carried in with devotion and
-joy, it was re-established with much pomp in its old
-quarters, but ever after remained with a little kicking leg in
-the air!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Our Crib, surrounded with Roman Hyacinths and White
-Narcissus and Primulas, is fragrant and poetic; but we do
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_296'>296</span>not attempt to show anything more than the one image.
-Want of space prevents it. Our ambition, however, finds
-larger scope in the village Chapel. There Juvenal has built
-a very noble stable, thatched with heather; and all the
-figures of those first scenes of the Greatest Story in the
-World will take their place this year.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Last year the tragedy happened that the <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Joseph and
-Our Lady; the Ox and the Ass; the Kings and Shepherds,
-which had been ordered in secret to surprise every one,
-remained on the high seas detained by December gales,
-until too late.—But our coming Noel will be the richer for
-the enforced postponement of the Holy Picture.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>At the last Yuletide the Mistress of Villino was unable,
-after a long year’s illness, to join the family party at
-Midnight Mass in the village below the hill. ‹Midnight
-Mass, be it noted in parenthesis, has an extraordinary
-charm for the household and indeed for the neighbourhood.
-And, when all is said and done, it certainly is as picturesque
-and touching a ceremony as ever men of goodwill are
-happy to join in. It seems to bring one in direct touch
-with the simplicity of the shepherds of those far-off hills.›
-But as the excluded <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">padrona</span></i> was lying quietly in bed
-waiting for the sounds of departure, she was touched and
-charmed to hear the strains of a carol rising softly from
-the terrace beneath her windows:</p>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>See amid the winter’s snow,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Born for us on earth below,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>See, the tender Lamb appears,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Promised from eternal years!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='lg-container-l c022'>
- <div class='linegroup'>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><span class='pageno' id='Page_297'>297</span><i>Hail, thou ever blessed morn!</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Hail, Redemption’s happy dawn!</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Sing, through all Jerusalem,</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Christ is born in Bethlehem!</i></div>
- </div>
- <div class='group'>
- <div class='line'><i>Lo, within a manger lies</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>He Who built the starry skies;</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>He, Who throned in heights sublime</i></div>
- <div class='line'><i>Sits amid the Cherubim!</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>All the household had gathered there to give her this
-pleasure and make her feel that she was not altogether shut
-out from the Christmas privileges! Wrapped in their
-thick cloaks, with Juvenal swinging a lantern, they stood
-in a long row and chanted to her. It was one of those
-small sweetnesses in life that leave a lasting memory.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a picture in a garden paper of Japanese single
-Asters growing wild in grass: the seeds had been mixed
-by mistake, but the result, according to the illustration,
-was singularly attractive. When we saw it we said that
-the experiment should be made at Villino Loki!—Many
-indeed are the experiments, many the improvements to be
-made within our small acres.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>But what a difference lies between conception and execution.
-Of late ‹for an instance› we had revolved round the agreeable
-thought of a Pool and a wet place generally, for Iris
-Kæmpheri, Spiræa and other moisture-loving darlings. We
-had indeed intended something altogether choice in the
-shape of a large sunken basin with a piping faun on the
-edge of it. Oh, something quite delightful.... But an inconvenient
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_298'>298</span>attack of “conscience”—in other words the heavy
-memory of garden bills, already incurred over the Autumn
-lists, rose up and barred the way. We felt something like
-Scrooge when the ghost with the bony finger ‹horrible vision
-of our youth› pointed to the tomb. Only, on our tablet
-what was written was the ghastly total of our bulbous
-liabilities! Like Scrooge, we covered our faces with our hands.
-No wonder the faun took fright and leaped into next year.</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE TURN OF THE YEAR</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Well, now, another year has come; and it is passing,
-taking us upon yet another round of garden pleasures, of
-old hopes and ambitions renewed—with many new delights
-and new disappointments, as of old; with also fresh
-openings on the bright horizon.
-New interests too. Of
-these, some of the smaller
-are not the least engrossing.
-To Villino Loki this year, for example,
-has come a new Pekinese. It is
-a Princess, very small, very sleek; chestnut-hued,
-with a face like a pansy. She
-has got a little jutting under-jaw, an extremely flat nose;
-and, in moments of excitement, her eyes display an amazing
-amount of white rim. But they are becoming very beautiful
-eyes for all that. They were the brightest of “boot-buttons”
-when she came first.</p>
-
-<div class='figright id006'>
-<img src='images/image335.jpg' alt='dog' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Loki was, naturally, very angry. He did his best to kill
-her; which was ungrateful, as she was really procured, at
-great cost and difficulty, to be his Imperial Bride! She, on
-her side, liked him awfully, and told him so. On her first
-motor drive down here from London, as she waggled and
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_299'>299</span>smirked at him from an opposite lap, he sat on his Ma-Ma’s
-knee and pulled a series of grimaces in return, the like of
-which you can only find painted on Chinese screens or cast
-in Chinese bronze.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>THE NEW PEKY</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>The ways of the new Peky are an endless source of amusement
-and joy. We tried to call her Mimosa; but, as usual
-with the youngest of the family, she remains “Baby.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>She has a coat the colour of a ripe chestnut, which will, we
-think, almost rival Loki’s in luxuriance. Her eyes have
-the same proportion to her face as those of a Dicky Doyle
-fairy. She has the oddest tastes, loving among many other
-unexpected things the flavour of tobacco. If she can get
-hold of a pipe or a cigarette she will sit and suck it, sniffing
-with enchantment, till one would swear she was smoking.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>All the dogs, of course, have their coffee after lunch and
-dinner in orthodox fashion, so there is nothing astounding
-in her having taken to it with gusto from the very first—but,
-for her, the stronger the better!</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>Like most Pekies, she begs and “prays” without ever
-having had to be taught the art. She has furthermore a
-talent quite her own—that of elaborately waltzing in front
-of you when she wants anything very particularly.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>One of the dearest peculiarities of the breed is, as we have
-said, the rapture of their welcome on the return of any
-member of the family. The Master of the House is sensitive
-to this attention, and is quite hurt if he misses Loki’s
-clamorous greeting. The other day “the Baby” was sent
-into the Hall to meet him on his home-coming. No sooner
-did he appear than she solemnly began her dance and preceded
-him as he advanced, conscientiously executing her
-finest <i><span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">pas de fascination</span></i>. This consists of leaping into the
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_300'>300</span>air, turning round upon herself, and coming down on to her
-front paws. Little Eastern as she is, she knew no better
-way of expressing her feelings towards “the Master.”</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>From what far ancestress, bred in the secret sinister
-splendours of a Manchu Palace, did she inherit this
-accomplishment?</p>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div id='win' class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_301'>301</span>
-<a href='images/image327_lg.jpg'><img src='images/image327.jpg' alt='WINTER' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic002'>
-<p>WINTER</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c015'>XLII</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>It is the dream of the owners of Villino Loki to build on
-another wing; but, so far, funds do not run to this. The
-Villino is sadly short of guest chambers; that is because
-one room has been for ever allotted to the little Oratory.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>This little Chapel is a haven of peace. One’s thoughts
-turn to it when one has the misfortune to be away from
-home. Over the altar there hangs a large, wonderfully
-beautiful crucifix. The figure, white majolica, was bought
-in a villainous den of a curiosity shop on the Tiber. We
-remember how it shone out of the darkness at us, and we
-felt it <em>had</em> to be ours! It is now affixed to a large gilt
-carved wood cross made for us by the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">doratore</span></i> in <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Piazza
-Nicosia</span></i>.... Excellent ruffian! The cross has one arm
-much longer than the other, though no one would know it
-who did not measure; and it has the inimitable stamp of
-the artistic hand bound by no slavish measure or hideous
-time-saving mechanism.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The Chapel is chiefly white and gold. Two large Donatello
-angels, warm ivory-coloured, from the <i><span lang="it" xml:lang="it">Manifattura di Signa</span></i>,
-carry the red Sanctuary lamps. One is certainly the real
-Donatello—the other, we fear, a poor foundling. But they
-both look very well.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>There is a great window over the moor.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The few small statues are, we think, attractive; chiefly
-decorated with bronzy golds and deep colours. There is
-<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Louis, King of France, specially carved by a Bavarian
-artist; a slender noble figure with a face of grave asceticism,
-holding up the Crown of Thorns. And there is a sternly
-warlike <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Michael, all golden, resting on his sword. And
-a <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Anthony ‹a real discovery this› lifting a pale countenance
-that seems on fire with ardour towards the Divine
-Infant who stands on his book—<abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> Anthony is “in glory”;
-his habit golden over the brown. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr> George, a fine splash
-of colour, charges the dragon over the fireplace. It is a
-most satisfying dragon with red jaws open and a green
-claw tearing at the lance that has conquered him. <abbr title='Saint'>St.</abbr>
-George’s iron-grey horse, with flowing crimson trappings,
-starts aside and rolls a distraught eye—as well he might. It
-is all in plaster and in rather deep relief. Two tall golden
-wood-carved Roman church candlesticks flank it on either
-side, fitted with electric light.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_302'>302</span>
-<img src='images/image339.jpg' alt='garden view' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c008'><span class='pageno' id='Page_303'>303</span>We have placed square Compton pots with Italian wreaths,
-filled with palms and flowering plants, one on each side of
-the altar step.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>At night, when there is no light in the Oratory, except
-that of the Sanctuary lamps, the shadows of the palms
-look like angels’ wings, crossing and re-crossing....</p>
-
-<hr class='c017' />
-
-<p class='c008'>But, just as to a Garden there is no end—no end to its
-wants or to our desires for it; to its phases, its transmutation
-surprises; to our joys and disappointments in it—so
-there is no end to a Garden and Country House
-gossip. We might go on for ever—like Tennyson’s Brook!
-And meanwhile the year is passing on, in its stately
-pomp.</p>
-
-<div class='sidenote'>SUMMER ONCE MORE ... AND AFTER</div>
-
-<p class='c008'>Full Summer is once more upon the Garden. The Delphiniums
-are rampant. We are in the centre of a heat
-wave, and our dry hill-side pants in the sun. At the fall
-of eve our souls rejoice in the sound of the refreshing
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_304'>304</span>showers when the watering begins; for one thirsts sympathetically
-with the cherished borders....</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>The moor is deepening to purple. The trees wear the
-deep green that precedes the turn. Life is rushing by with
-us so quickly that it seems but the “blink of an eye,” as
-the Germans say, since we were peering for the first bulb
-shoot.... In a little while the Ramblers and Wichurianas
-will be one blaze of glory; and in a little while again the
-Autumn winds will be shouting up the valley and the
-Bracken turning gold over the rolling hills; and again in a
-little while again it will be the Winter and the snow and
-we shall be watching for the Spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'>And it will be all even as before and yet all quite different.
-And so year by year.... And one day our garden will
-bloom for other eyes than ours.</p>
-
-<p class='c008'><i><span lang="la" xml:lang="la">Nunc tibi—mox aliis</span></i>, the Book-Lover’s motto has it. How
-true also of the beloved Garden!... Another “eye-blink.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<span class='pageno' id='Page_305'>305</span>
-<img src='images/image342.jpg' alt='path down garden' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c023' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c008'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span><i>This was written long before anyone here dreamed of the near possibility
-of another German war.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Our Sentimental Garden, by
-Agnes Sweetman Castle and Egerton Castle
-
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