CHAPTER LIII
Loquitur Hopkins
The squire had been told that his niece Bell
had accepted Dr. Crofts, and he had signified a sort of
acquiescence in the arrangement, saying that if it were to be so,
he had nothing to say against Dr. Crofts. He spoke this in a
melancholy tone of voice, wearing on his face that look of subdued
sorrow which was now habitual to him. It was to Mrs. Dale that he
spoke on the subject. “I could have wished that it might have been
otherwise,” he said, “as you are well aware. I had family reasons
for wishing that it might be otherwise. But I have nothing to say
against it. Dr. Crofts, as her husband, shall be welcome to my
house.” Mrs. Dale, who had expected much worse than this, began to
thank him for his kindness, and to say that she also would have
preferred to see her daughter married to her cousin. “But in such a
matter the decision should be left entirely to the girl. Don’t you
think so?”
“I have not a word to say against her,” he
repeated. Then Mrs. Dale left him, and told her daughter that her
uncle’s manner of receiving the news had been, for him, very
gracious. “You were his favourite, but Lily will be so now,” said
Mrs. Dale.
“I don’t care a bit about that—or, rather, I
do care, and think it will be in every way better. But as I, who am
the naughty one, will go away, and as Lily, who is the good one,
will remain with you, doesn’t it almost seem a pity that you should
be leaving the house?”
Mrs. Dale thought it was almost a pity, but
she could not say so now. “You think Lily will remain,” she
said.
“Yes, mamma; I feel sure she will.”
“She was always very fond of John Eames—and
he is doing so well.”
“It will be of no use, mamma. She is fond of
him—very fond. In a sort of a way she loves him—so well, that I
feel sure she never mentions his name without some inward reference
to her old childish thoughts and fancies. If he had come before Mr.
Crosbie it would have all been well with her. But she cannot do it
now. Her pride would prevent her, even if her heart permitted it.
Oh! dear; it’s very wrong of me to say so, after all that I have
said before; but I almost wish you were not going. Uncle
Christopher seems to be less hard than he used to be; and as I was
the sinner, and as I am disposed of—”
“It is too late now, my dear.”
“And we should neither of us have the courage
to mention it to Lily,” said Bell.
On the following morning the squire sent for
his sister-in-law, as it was his wont to do when necessity came for
any discussion on matters of business. This was perfectly
understood between them, and such sending was not taken as
indicating any lack of courtesy on the part of Mr. Dale. “Mary,” he
said, as soon as Mrs. Dale was seated, “I shall do for Bell exactly
what I have proposed to do for Lily. I had intended more than that
once, of course. But then it would all have gone into Bernard’s
pocket; as it is, I shall make no difference between them. They
shall each have a hundred a year—that is, when they marry. You had
better tell Crofts to speak to me.”
“Mr. Dale, he doesn’t expect it. He does not
expect a penny.”
“So much the better for him; and, indeed, so
much the better for her. He won’t make her the less welcome to his
home because she brings some assistance to it.”
“We have never thought of it—any of us. The
offer has come so suddenly that I don’t know what I ought to
say.”
“Say—nothing. If you choose to make me a
return for it—; but I am only doing what I conceive to be my duty,
and have no right to ask for a kindness in return.”
“But what kindness can we show you, Mr.
Dale?”
“Remain in that house.” In saying these last
words he spoke as though he were again angry—as though he were
again laying down the law to them—as though he were telling her of
a duty which was due to him and incumbent on her. His voice was as
stern and his face as acid as ever. He said that he was asking for
a kindness; but surely no man ever asked for kindness in a voice so
peremptory. “Remain in that house.” Then he turned himself in
towards his table as though he had no more to say.
But Mrs. Dale was beginning, now at last, to
understand something of his mind and real character. He could be
affectionate and forbearing in his giving; but when asking, he
could not be otherwise than stern. Indeed, he could not ask; he
could only demand.
“We have done so much now,” Mrs. Dale began
to plead.
“Well, well, well. I did not mean to speak
about that. Things are unpacked easier than they are packed. But,
however— Never mind. Bell is to go with me this afternoon to
Guestwick Manor. Let her be up here at two. Grimes can bring her
box round, I suppose.”
“Oh, yes: of course.”
“And don’t be talking to her about money
before she starts. I had rather you didn’t—you understand. But when
you see Crofts, tell him to come to me. Indeed, he’d better come at
once, if this thing is to go on quickly.”
It may easily be understood that Mrs. Dale
would disobey the injunctions contained in the squire’s last words.
It was quite out of the question that she should return to her
daughters and not tell them the result of her morning’s interview
with their uncle. A hundred a year in the doctor’s modest household
would make all the difference between plenty and want, between
modest plenty and endurable want. Of course she told them, giving
Bell to understand that she must dissemble so far as to pretend
ignorance of the affair.
“I shall thank him at once,” said Bell; “and
tell him that I did not at all expect it, but am not too proud to
accept it.”
“Pray don’t, my dear; not just now. I am
breaking a sort of promise in telling you at all—only I could not
keep it to myself. And he has so many things to worry him! Though
he says nothing about it now, he has half broken his heart about
you and Bernard.” Then, too, Mrs. Dale told the girls what request
the squire had just made, and the manner in which he had made it.
“The tone of his voice as he spoke brought tears into my eyes. I
almost wish we had not done anything.”
“But, mamma,” said Lily, “what difference can
it make to him? You know that our presence near him was always a
trouble to him. He never really wanted us. He liked to have Bell
there when he thought that Bell would marry his pet.”
“Don’t be unkind, Lily.”
“I don’t mean to be unkind. Why shouldn’t
Bernard be his pet? I love Bernard dearly, and always thought it
the best point in Uncle Christopher that he was so fond of him. I
knew, you know, that it was no use. Of course I knew it, as I
understood all about—somebody else. But Bernard is his pet.”
“He’s fond of you all, in his own way,” said
Mrs. Dale.
“But is he fond of you?—that’s the question,”
said Lily. “We could have forgiven him anything done to us, and
have put up with any words he might have spoken to us, because he
regards us as children. His giving a hundred a year to Bell won’t
make you comfortable in this house if he still domineers over you.
If a neighbour be neighbourly, near neighbourhood is very nice. But
Uncle Christopher has not been neighbourly. He has wanted to be
more than an uncle to us, on condition that he might be less than a
brother to you. Bell and I have always felt that his regard on such
terms was not worth having.”
“I almost feel that we have been wrong,” said
Mrs. Dale; “but in truth I never thought that the matter would be
to him one of so much moment.”
When Bell had gone, Mrs. Dale and Lily were
not disposed to continue with much energy the occupation on which
they had all been employed for some days past. There had been life
and excitement in the work when they had first commenced their
packing, but now it was grown wearisome, dull, and distasteful.
Indeed so much of it was done that but little was left to employ
them, except those final strappings and fastenings, and that last
collection of odds and ends which could not be accomplished till
they were absolutely on the point of starting. The squire had said
that unpacking would be easier than packing, and Mrs. Dale, as she
wandered about among the hampers and cases, began to consider
whether the task of restoring all the things to their old places
would be very disagreeable. She said nothing of this to Lily, and
Lily herself, whatever might be her thoughts, made no such
suggestion to her mother.
“I think Hopkins will miss us more than
anyone else,” she said. “Hopkins will have no one to scold.”
Just at that moment Hopkins appeared at the
parlour window, and signified his desire for a conference.
“You must come round,” said Lily. “It’s too
cold for the window to be opened. I always like to get him into the
house, because he feels himself a little abashed by the chairs and
tables; or, perhaps, it is the carpet that is too much for him. Out
on the gravel-walks he is such a terrible tyrant, and in the
greenhouse he almost tramples upon one!”
Hopkins, when he did appear at the parlour
door, seemed by his manner to justify Lily’s discretion. He was not
at all masterful in his tone or bearing, and seemed to pay to the
chairs and tables all the deference which they could have
expected.
“So you be going in earnest, ma’am,” he said,
looking down at Mrs. Dale’s feet.
As Mrs. Dale did not answer him at once, Lily
spoke: “Yes, Hopkins, we are going in a very few days, now. We
shall see you sometimes, I hope, over at Guestwick.”
“Humph!” said Hopkins. “So you be really
going! I didn’t think it’d ever come to that, miss; I didn’t
indeed—and no more it oughtn’t; but of course it isn’t for me to
speak.”
“People must change their residence
sometimes, you know,” said Mrs. Dale, using the same argument by
which Eames had endeavoured to excuse his departure to Mrs.
Roper.
“Well, ma’am; it ain’t for me to say
anything. But this I will say, I’ve lived here about t’ squire’s
place, man and boy, jist all my life, seeing I was born here, as
you knows, Mrs. Dale; and of all the bad things I ever see come
about the place, this is a sight the worst.”
“Oh, Hopkins!”
“The worst of all, ma’am; the worst of all!
It’ll just kill t’ squire! There’s ne’ery doubt in the world about
that. It’ll be the very death of t’ old man.”
“That’s nonsense, Hopkins,” said Lily.
“Very well, miss. I don’t say but what it is
nonsense; only you’ll see. There’s Mr. Bernard—he’s gone away; and
by all accounts he never did care very much for the place. They say
all he’s a-going to the Hingies. And Miss Bell is going to be
married—which is all proper, in course; why shouldn’t she? And why
shouldn’t you, too, Miss Lily?”
“Perhaps I shall, some day, Hopkins.”
“There’s no day like the present, Miss Lily.
And I do say this, that the man as pitched into him would be the
man for my money.” This, which Hopkins spoke in the excitement of
the moment, was perfectly unintelligible to Lily, and Mrs. Dale,
who shuddered as she heard him, said not a word to call for any
explanation. “But,” continued Hopkins, “that’s all as it may be,
Miss Lily, and you be in the hands of Providence—as is
others.”
“Exactly so, Hopkins.”
“But why should your mamma be all for going
away? She ain’t going to marry no one. Here’s the house, and
there’s she, and there’s t’ squire; and why should she be for going
away? So much going away all at once can’t be for any good. It’s
just a breaking up of everything, as though nothing wasn’t good
enough for nobody. I never went away, and I can’t abide it.”
“Well, Hopkins; it’s settled now,” said Mrs.
Dale, “and I’m afraid it can’t be unsettled.”
“Settled—well. Tell me this: do you expect,
Mrs. Dale, that he’s to live there all alone by hisself without
anyone to say a cross word to—unless it be me or Dingles; for
Jolliffe’s worse than nobody, he’s so mortial cross hisself. Of
course he can’t stand it. If you goes away, Mrs. Dale, Mister
Bernard, he’ll be squire in less than twelve months. He’ll come
back from the Hingies, then, I suppose?”
“I don’t think my brother-in-law will take it
in that way, Hopkins.”
“Ah, ma’am, you don’t know him—not as I knows
him; all the ins and outs and crinks and crannies of him. I knows
him as I does the old apple-trees that I’ve been a-handling for
forty year. There’s a deal of bad wood about them old cankered
trees, and some folk say they ain’t worth the ground they stand on;
but I know where the sap runs, and when the fruit-blossom shows
itself I know where the fruit will be the sweetest. It don’t take
much to kill one of them old trees—but there’s life in ‘m yet if
they be well handled.”
“I’m sure I hope my brother’s life may be
long spared to him,” said Mrs. Dale.
“Then don’t be taking yourself away, ma’am,
into them gashly lodgings at Guestwick. I says they are gashly for
the likes of a Dale. It is not for me to speak, ma’am, of course.
And I only came up now just to know what things you’d like with you
out of the greenhouse.”
“Oh, nothing, Hopkins, thank you,” said Mrs.
Dale.
“He told me to put up for you the best I
could pick, and I means to do it;” and Hopkins, as he spoke,
indicated by a motion of his head that he was making reference to
the squire.
“We shan’t have any place for them,” said
Lily.
“I must send a few, miss, just to cheer you
up a bit. I fear you’ll be very dolesome there. And the doctor—he
ain’t got what you can call a regular garden, but there is a bit of
a place behind.”
“But we wouldn’t rob the dear old place,”
said Lily.
“For the matter of that what does it signify?
T’ squire’ll be that wretched he’ll turn sheep in here to destroy
the place, or he’ll have the garden ploughed. You see if he don’t.
As for the place, the place is clean done for, if you leave it. You
don’t suppose he’ll go and let the Small House to strangers. T’
squire ain’t one of that sort any ways.”
“Ah me!” exclaimed Mrs. Dale, as soon as
Hopkins had taken himself off.
“What is it, mamma? He’s a dear old man, but
surely what he says cannot make you really unhappy.”
“It is so hard to know what one ought to do.
I did not mean to be selfish, but it seems to me as though I were
doing the most selfish thing in the world.”
“Nay, mamma; it has been anything but
selfish. Besides, it is we that have done it; not you.”
“Do you know, Lily, that I also have that
feeling as to breaking up one’s old mode of life of which Hopkins
spoke. I thought that I should be glad to escape from this place,
but now that the time has come I dread it.”
“Do you mean that you repent?”
Mrs. Dale did not answer her daughter at
once, fearing to commit herself by words which could not be
retracted. But at last she said, “Yes, Lily; I think I do repent. I
think that it has not been well done.”
“Then let it be undone,” said Lily.
The dinner-party at Guestwick Manor on that
day was not very bright, and yet the earl had done all in his power
to make his guests happy. But gaiety did not come naturally to his
house, which, as will have been seen, was an abode very unlike in
its nature to that of the other earl at Courcy Castle. Lady de
Courcy at any rate understood how to receive and entertain a
houseful of people, though the practice of doing so might give rise
to difficult questions in the privacy of her domestic relations.
Lady Julia did not understand it; but then Lady Julia was never
called upon to answer for the expense of extra servants, nor was
she asked about twice a week who the —— was to pay the
wine-merchant’s bill? As regards Lord De Guest and the Lady Julia
themselves, I think they had the best of it; but I am bound to
admit, with reference to chance guests, that the house was dull.
The people who were now gathered at the earl’s table could hardly
have been expected to be very sprightly when in company with each
other. The squire was not a man much given to general society, and
was unused to amuse a table full of people. On the present occasion
he sat next to Lady Julia, and from time to time muttered a few
words to her about the state of the country. Mrs. Eames was
terribly afraid of everybody there, and especially of the earl,
next to whom she sat, and whom she continually called “my lord,”
showing by her voice as she did so that she was almost alarmed by
the sound of her own voice. Mr. and Mrs. Boyce were there, the
parson sitting on the other side of Lady Julia, and the parson’s
wife on the other side of the earl. Mrs. Boyce was very studious to
show that she was quite at home, and talked perhaps more than
anyone else; but in doing so she bored the earl most exquisitely,
so that he told John Eames the next morning that she was worse than
the bull. The parson ate his dinner, but said little or nothing
between the two graces. He was a heavy, sensible, slow man, who
knew himself and his own powers. “Uncommon good stewed beef,” he
said, as he went home; “why can’t we have our beef stewed like
that?” “Because we don’t pay our cook sixty pounds a year,” said
Mrs. Boyce. “A woman with sixteen pounds can stew beef as well as a
woman with sixty,” said he; “she only wants looking after.” The
earl himself was possessed of a sort of gaiety. There was about him
a lightness of spirit which often made him an agreeable companion
to one single person. John Eames conceived him to be the most
sprightly old man of his day—an old man with the fun and frolic
almost of a boy. But this spirit, though it would show itself
before John Eames, was not up to the entertainment of John Eames’s
mother and sister, together with the squire, the parson, and the
parson’s wife of Allington. So that the earl was overweighted and
did not shine on this occasion at his own dinner-table. Dr. Crofts,
who had also been invited, and who had secured the place which was
now peculiarly his own, next to Bell Dale, was no doubt happy
enough; as, let us hope, was the young lady also; but they added
very little to the general hilarity of the company. John Eames was
seated between his own sister and the parson, and did not at all
enjoy his position. He had a full view of the doctor’s felicity, as
the happy pair sat opposite to him, and conceived himself to be
hardly treated by Lily’s absence.
The party was certainly very dull, as were
all such dinners at Guestwick Manor. There are houses, which, in
their everyday course, are not conducted by any means in a sad or
unsatisfactory manner—in which life, as a rule, runs along merrily
enough; but which cannot give a dinner-party; or, I might rather
say, should never allow themselves to be allured into the attempt.
The owners of such houses are generally themselves quite aware of
the fact, and dread the dinner which they resolved to give quite as
much as it is dreaded by their friends. They know that they prepare
for their guests an evening of misery, and for themselves certain
long hours of purgatory which are hardly to be endured. But they
will do it. Why that long table, and all those supernumerary
glasses and knives and forks, if they are never to be used? That
argument produces all this misery; that and others cognate to it.
On the present occasion, no doubt, there were excuses to be made.
The squire and his niece had been invited on special cause, and
their presence would have been well enough. The doctor added in
would have done no harm. It was good-natured, too, that invitation
given to Mrs. Eames and her daughter. The error lay in the parson
and his wife. There was no necessity for their being there, nor had
they any ground on which to stand, except the party-giving ground.
Mr. and Mrs. Boyce made the dinner-party, and destroyed the social
circle. Lady Julia knew that she had been wrong as soon as she had
sent out the note.
Nothing was said on that evening which has
any bearing on our story. Nothing, indeed, was said which had any
bearing on anything. The earl’s professed object had been to bring
the squire and young Eames together; but people are never brought
together on such melancholy occasions. Though they sip their port
in close contiguity, they are poles asunder in their minds and
feelings. When the Guestwick fly came for Mrs. Eames, and the
parson’s pony phaeton came for him and Mrs. Boyce, a great relief
was felt; but the misery of those who were left had gone too far to
allow of any reaction on that evening. The squire yawned, and the
earl yawned, and then there was an end of it for that night.