CHAPTER I
The Squire of Allington
Of course there was a Great House at
Allington. How otherwise should there have been a Small House? Our
story will, as its name imports, have its closest relations with
those who lived in the less dignified domicile of the two; but it
will have close relations also with the more dignified, and it may
be well that I should, in the first instance, say a few words as to
the Great House and its owner.
The squires of Allington had been squires of
Allington since squires, such as squires are now, were first known
in England. From father to son, and from uncle to nephew, and, in
one instance, from second cousin to second cousin, the sceptre had
descended in the family of the Dales; and the acres had remained
intact, growing in value and not decreasing in number, though
guarded by no entail and protected by no wonderful amount of
prudence or wisdom. The estate of Dale of Allington had been
coterminous with the parish of Allington for some hundreds of
years; and though, as I have said, the race of squires had
possessed nothing of superhuman discretion, and had perhaps been
guided in their walks through life by no very distinct principles,
still there had been with them so much of adherence to a sacred
law, that no acre of the property had ever been parted from the
hands of the existing squire. Some futile attempts had been made to
increase the territory, as indeed had been done by Kit Dale, the
father of Christopher Dale, who will appear as our squire of
Allington when the persons of our drama are introduced. Old Kit
Dale, who had married money, had bought outlying farms—a bit of
ground here and a bit there—talking, as he did so, much of
political influence and of the good old Tory cause. But these farms
and bits of ground had gone again before our time. To them had been
attached no religion. When old Kit had found himself pressed in
that matter of the majority of the Nineteenth Dragoons, in which
crack regiment his second son made for himself quite a career, he
found it easier to sell than to save—seeing that that which he sold
was his own and not the patrimony of the Dales. At his death the
remainder of these purchases had gone. Family arrangements required
completion, and Christopher Dale required ready money. The outlying
farms flew away, as such new purchases had flown before; but the
old patrimony of the Dales remained untouched, as it had ever
remained.
It had been a religion among them; and seeing
that the worship had been carried on without fail, that the vestal
fire had never gone down upon the hearth, I should not have said
that the Dales had walked their ways without high principle. To
this religion they had all adhered, and the new heir had ever
entered in upon his domain without other encumbrances than those
with which he himself was then already burdened. And yet there had
been no entail. The idea of an entail was not in accordance with
the peculiarities of the Dale mind. It was necessary to the Dale
religion that each squire should have the power of wasting the
acres of Allington—and that he should abstain from wasting them. I
remember to have dined at a house, the whole glory and fortune of
which depended on the safety of a glass goblet. We all know the
story. If the luck of Edenhall should be shattered, the doom of the
family would be sealed. Nevertheless I was bidden to drink out of
the fatal glass, as were all guests in that house. It would not
have contented the chivalrous mind of the master to protect his
doom by lock and key and padded chest. And so it was with the Dales
of Allington. To them an entail would have been a lock and key and
a padded chest; but the old chivalry of their house denied to them
the use of such protection.
I have spoken something slightingly of the
acquirements and doings of the family; and indeed their
acquirements had been few and their doings little. At Allington,
Dale of Allington had always been known as a king. At Guestwick,
the neighbouring market town, he was a great man—to be seen
frequently on Saturdays, standing in the market-place, and laying
down the law as to barley and oxen among men who knew usually more
about barley and oxen than did he. At Hamersham, the assize town,
he was generally in some repute, being a constant grand juror for
the county, and a man who paid his way. But even at Hamersham the
glory of the Dales had, at most periods, begun to pale, for they
had seldom been widely conspicuous in the county, and had earned no
great reputation by their knowledge of jurisprudence in the grand
jury room. Beyond Hamersham their fame had not spread itself.
They had been men generally built in the same
mould, inheriting each from his father the same virtues and the
same vices—men who would have lived, each, as his father had lived
before him, had not the new ways of the world gradually drawn away
with them, by an invisible magnetism, the upcoming Dale of the
day—not indeed in any case so moving him as to bring him up to the
spirit of the age in which he lived, but dragging him forward to a
line in advance of that on which his father had trodden. They had
been obstinate men; believing much in themselves; just according to
their ideas of justice; hard to their tenants—but not known to be
hard even by the tenants themselves, for the rules followed had
ever been the rules on the Allington estate; imperious to their
wives and children, but imperious within bounds, so that no Mrs.
Dale had fled from her lord’s roof, and no loud scandals had
existed between father and sons; exacting in their ideas as to
money, expecting that they were to receive much and to give little,
and yet not thought to be mean, for they paid their way, and gave
money in parish charity and in county charity. They had ever been
steady supporters of the Church, graciously receiving into their
parish such new vicars as, from time to time, were sent to them
from King’s College, Cambridge, to which establishment the gift of
the living belonged—but, nevertheless, the Dales had ever carried
on some unpronounced warfare against the clergyman, so that the
intercourse between the lay family and the clerical had seldom been
in all respects pleasant.
Such had been the Dales of Allington, time
out of mind, and such in all respects would have been the
Christopher Dale of our time, had he not suffered two accidents in
his youth. He had fallen in love with a lady who obstinately
refused his hand, and on her account he had remained single; that
was his first accident. The second had fallen upon him with
reference to his father’s assumed wealth. He had supposed himself
to be richer than other Dales of Allington when coming in upon his
property, and had consequently entertained an idea of sitting in
Parliament for his county. In order that he might attain this
honour he had allowed himself to be talked by the men of Hamersham
and Guestwick out of his old family politics, and had declared
himself a Liberal. He had never gone to the poll, and, indeed, had
never actually stood for the seat. But he had come forward as a
liberal politician, and had failed; and, although it was well known
to all around that Christopher Dale was in heart as thoroughly
conservative as any of his forefathers, this accident had made him
sour and silent on the subject of politics, and had somewhat
estranged him from his brother squires.
In other respects our Christopher Dale was,
if anything, superior to the average of the family. Those whom he
did love he loved dearly. Those whom he hated he did not ill-use
beyond the limits of justice. He was close in small matters of
money, and yet in certain family arrangements he was, as we shall
see, capable of much liberality. He endeavoured to do his duty in
accordance with his lights, and had succeeded in weaning himself
from personal indulgences, to which during the early days of his
high hopes he had become accustomed. And in that matter of his
unrequited love he had been true throughout. In his hard, dry,
unpleasant way he had loved the woman; and when at least he learned
to know that she would not have his love, he had been unable to
transfer his heart to another. This had happened just at the period
of his father’s death, and he had endeavoured to console himself
with politics, with what fate we have already seen. A constant,
upright, and by no means insincere man was our Christopher
Dale—thin and meagre in his mental attributes, by no means even
understanding the fullness of a full man, with power of eye-sight
very limited in seeing aught which was above him, but yet worthy of
regard in that he had realised a path of duty and did endeavour to
walk therein. And, moreover, our Mr. Christopher Dale was a
gentleman.
Such in character was the squire of
Allington, the only regular inhabitant of the Great House. In
person, he was a plain, dry man, with short grizzled hair and thick
grizzled eyebrows. Of beard, he had very little, carrying the
smallest possible grey whiskers, which hardly fell below the points
of his ears. His eyes were sharp and expressive, and his nose was
straight and well formed—as was also his chin. But the nobility of
his face was destroyed by a mean mouth with thin lips; and his
forehead, which was high and narrow, though it forbad you to take
Mr. Dale for a fool, forbad you also to take him for a man of great
parts, or of a wide capacity. In height, he was about five feet
ten; and at the time of our story was as near to seventy as he was
to sixty. But years had treated him very lightly, and he bore few
signs of age. Such in person was Christopher Dale, Esq., the squire
of Allington, and owner of some three thousand a year, all of which
proceeded from the lands of that parish.
And now I will speak of the Great House of
Allington. After all, it was not very great; nor was it surrounded
by much of that exquisite nobility of park appurtenance which
graces the habitations of most of our old landed proprietors. But
the house itself was very graceful. It had been built in the days
of the early Stuarts, in that style of architecture to which we
give the name of the Tudors. On its front it showed three pointed
roofs, or gables, as I believe they should be called; and between
each gable a thin tall chimney stood, the two chimneys thus raising
themselves just above the three peaks I have mentioned. I think
that the beauty of the house depended much on those two chimneys;
on them, and on the mullioned windows with which the front of the
house was closely filled. The door, with its jutting porch, was by
no means in the centre of the house. As you entered, there was but
one window on your right hand, while on your left there were three.
And over these there was a line of five windows, one taking its
place above the porch. We all know the beautiful old Tudor window,
with its stout stone mullions and its stone transoms, crossing from
side to side at a point much nearer to the top than to the bottom.
Of all windows ever invented it is the sweetest. And here, at
Allington, I think their beauty was enhanced by the fact that they
were not regular in their shape. Some of these windows were long
windows, while some of them were high. That to the right of the
door, and that at the other extremity of the house, were among the
former. But the others had been put in without regard to
uniformity, a long window here, and a high window there, with a
general effect which could hardly have been improved. Then above,
in the three gables, were three other smaller apertures. But these
also were mullioned, and the entire frontage of the house was
uniform in its style.
Round the house there were trim gardens, not
very large, but worthy of much note in that they were so
trim—gardens with broad gravel paths, with one walk running in
front of the house so broad as to be fitly called a terrace. But
this, though in front of the house, was sufficiently removed from
it to allow of a coach-road running inside it to the front door.
The Dales of Allington had always been gardeners, and their garden
was perhaps more noted in the county than any other of their
properties. But outside the gardens no pretensions had been made to
the grandeur of a domain. The pastures round the house were but
pretty fields, in which timber was abundant. There was no deer-park
at Allington; and though the Allington woods were well known, they
formed no portion of a whole of which the house was a part. They
lay away, out of sight, a full mile from the back of the house; but
not on that account of less avail for the fitting preservation of
foxes.
And the house stood much too near the road
for purposes of grandeur, had such purposes ever swelled the breast
of any of the squires of Allington. But I fancy that our ideas of
rural grandeur have altered since many of our older country seats
were built. To be near the village, so as in some way to afford
comfort, protection, and patronage, and perhaps also with some view
to the pleasantness of neighbourhood for its own inmates, seemed to
be the object of a gentleman when building his house in the old
days. A solitude in the centre of a wide park is now the only site
that can be recognised as eligible. No cottage must be seen, unless
the cottage orné of the gardener. The
village, if it cannot be abolished, must be got out of sight. The
sound of the church bells is not desirable, and the road on which
the profane vulgar travel by their own right must be at a distance.
When some old Dale of Allington built his house, he thought
differently. There stood the church and there the village, and,
pleased with such vicinity, he sat himself down close to his God
and to his tenants.
As you pass along the road from Guestwick
into the village you see the church near to you on your left hand;
but the house is hidden from the road. As you approach the church,
reaching the gate of it which is not above two hundred yards from
the high road, you see the full front of the Great House. Perhaps
the best view of it is from the churchyard. The lane leading up to
the church ends in a gate, which is the entrance into Mr. Dale’s
place. There is no lodge there, and the gate generally stands
open—indeed, always does so, unless some need of cattle grazing
within requires that it should be closed. But there is an inner
gate, leading from the home paddock through the gardens to the
house, and another inner gate, some thirty yards farther on, which
will take you into the farmyard. Perhaps it is a defect at
Allington that the farmyard is very close to the house. But the
stables, and the straw-yards, and the unwashed carts, and the lazy
lingering cattle of the homestead, are screened off by a row of
chestnuts, which, when in its glory of flower, in the early days of
May, no other row in England can surpass in beauty. Had anyone told
Dale of Allington—this Dale or any former Dale—that his place
wanted wood, he would have pointed with mingled pride and disdain
to his belt of chestnuts.
Of the church itself I will say the fewest
possible number of words. It was a church such as there are, I
think, thousands in England—low, incommodious, kept with difficulty
in repair, too often pervious to the wet, and yet strangely
picturesque, and correct too, according to great rules of
architecture. It was built with a nave and aisles, visibly in the
form of a cross, though with its arms clipped down to the trunk,
with a separate chancel, with a large square short tower, and with
a bell-shaped spire, covered with lead and irregular in its
proportions. Who does not know the low porch, the perpendicular
Gothic window, the flat-roofed aisles, and the noble old grey tower
of such a church as this? As regards its interior, it was dusty; it
was blocked up with high-backed ugly pews; the gallery in which the
children sat at the end of the church, and in which two ancient
musicians blew their bassoons, was all awry, and looked as though
it would fall; the pulpit was an ugly useless edifice, as high
nearly as the roof would allow, and the reading-desk under it
hardly permitted the parson to keep his head free from the dangling
tassels of the cushion above him. A clerk also was there beneath
him, holding a third position somewhat elevated; and upon the whole
things there were not quite as I would have had them. But,
nevertheless, the place looked like a church, and I can hardly say
so much for all the modern edifices which have been built in my
days towards the glory of God. It looked like a church, and not the
less so because in walking up the passage between the pews the
visitor trod upon the brass plates which dignified the
resting-places of the departed Dales of old.
Below the church, and between that and the
village, stood the vicarage, in such position that the small garden
of the vicarage stretched from the churchyard down to the backs of
the village cottages. This was a pleasant residence, newly built
within the last thirty years, and creditable to the ideas of
comfort entertained by the rich collegiate body from which the
vicars of Allington always came. Doubtless we shall in the course
of our sojourn at Allington visit the vicarage now and then, but I
do not know that any further detailed account of its comforts will
be necessary to us.
Passing by the lane leading to the vicarage,
the church, and to the house, the high road descends rapidly to a
little brook which runs through the village. On the right as you
descend you will have seen the “Red Lion,” and will have seen no
other house conspicuous in any way. At the bottom, close to the
brook, is the post-office, kept surely by the crossest old woman in
all those parts. Here the road passes through the water, the
accommodation of a narrow wooden bridge having been afforded for
those on foot. But before passing the stream, you will see a cross
street, running to the left, as had run that other lane leading to
the house. Here, as this cross street rises the hill, are the best
houses in the village. The baker lives here, and that respectable
woman, Mrs. Frummage, who sells ribbons, and toys, and soap, and
straw bonnets, with many other things too long to mention. Here,
too, lives an apothecary, whom the veneration of this and
neighbouring parishes has raised to the dignity of a doctor. And
here also, in the smallest but prettiest cottage that can be
imagined, lives Mrs. Hearn, the widow of a former vicar, on terms,
however, with her neighbour the squire which I regret to say are
not as friendly as they should be. Beyond this lady’s modest
residence, Allington Street, for so the road is called, turns
suddenly round towards the church, and at the point of the turn is
a pretty low iron railing with a gate, and with a covered way,
which leads up to the front door of the house which stands there, I
will only say here, at this fag end of a chapter, that it is the
Small House at Allington. Allington Street, as I have said, turns
short round towards the church at this point, and there ends at a
white gate, leading into the churchyard by a second entrance.
So much it was needful that I should say of
Allington Great House, of the Squire, and of the village. Of the
Small House, I will speak separately in a further chapter.