CHAPTER 27
Father and Sons
Things were not going on any better at
Hamley Hall. Nothing had occurred to change the state of
dissatisfied feeling into which the squire and his eldest son had
respectively fallen; and the long continuance merely of
dissatisfaction is sure of itself to deepen the feeling. Roger did
all in his power to bring the father and son together; but
sometimes wondered if it would not have been better to leave them
alone; for they were falling into the habit of each making him
their confidant, and so defining emotions and opinions which would
have had less distinctness if they had been unexpressed. There was
little enough relief in the daily life at the Hall to help them all
to shake off the gloom; and it even told on the health of both the
squire and Osborne. The squire became thinner, his skin as well as
his clothes began to hang loose about him, and the freshness of his
colour turned to red streaks, till his cheeks looked like Eardiston
pippins, instead of resembling ‘a Katherine pear on the side that’s
next the sun.’ Roger thought that his father sat indoors and smoked
in his study more than was good for him, but it had become
difficult to get him far afield; he was too much afraid of coming
across some sign of the discontinued drainage works, or being
irritated afresh by the sight of his depreciated timber. Osborne
was wrapt up in the idea of arranging his poems for the press, and
so working out his wish for independence. What with daily writing
to his wife—taking his letters himself to a distant post-office,
and receiving hers there—touching up his sonnets, &c., with
fastidious care; and occasionally giving himself the pleasure of a
visit to the Gibsons, and enjoying the society of the two pleasant
girls there, he found little time for being with his father.
Indeed, Osborne was too self-indulgent, or ‘sensitive,’ as he
termed it, to bear well with the squire’s gloomy fits, or too
frequent querulousness. The consciousness of his secret, too, made
Osborne uncomfortable in his father’s presence. It was very well
for all parties that Roger was not ‘sensitive,’ for, if he had
been, there were times when it would have been hard to bear little
spurts of domestic tyranny, by which his father strove to assert
his power over both his sons. One of these occurred very soon after
the night of the Hollingford charity ball.
Roger had induced his father to come out with him;
and the squire had, on his son’s suggestion, taken with him his
long-unused spud. The two had wandered far afield; perhaps the
elder man had found the unwonted length of exercise too much for
him; for, as he approached the house, on his return, he became what
nurses call in children ‘fractious,’ and ready to turn on his
companion for every remark he made. Roger understood the case by
instinct, as it were, and bore it all with his usual sweetness of
temper. They entered the house by the front door; it lay straight
on their line of march. On the old cracked yellow-marble slab,
there lay a card with Lord Hollingford’s name on it, which
Robinson, evidently on the watch for their return, hastened out of
his pantry to deliver to Roger.
‘His lordship was very sorry not to see you, Mr.
Roger, and his lordship left a note for you. Mr. Osborne took it, I
think, when he passed through. I asked his lordship if he would
like to see Mr. Osborne, who was indoors, as I thought. But his
lordship said he was pressed for time, and told me to make his
excuses.’
‘Didn’t he ask for me?’ growled the squire.
‘No, sir; I can’t say as his lordship did. He would
never have thought of Mr. Osborne, sir, if I hadn’t named him. It
was Mr. Roger he seemed so keen after.’
‘Very odd,’ said the squire. Roger said nothing,
although he naturally felt some curiosity He went into the
drawing-room, not quite aware that his father was following him.
Osborne sat at a table near the fire, pen in hand, looking over one
of his poems, and dotting the i‘s, crossing the t’s, and now and
then pausing over the alteration of a word.
‘Oh, Roger!’ he said, as his brother came in,
‘here’s been Lord Hollingford wanting to see you.’
‘I know,’ replied Roger.
‘And he’s left a note for you. Robinson tried to
persuade him it was for my father, so he’s added a “junior” (Roger
Hamley, Esq., junior) in pencil.’ The squire was in the room by
this time, and what he had overheard rubbed him up still more the
wrong way. Roger took his unopened note and read it.
‘What does he say?’ asked the squire.
Roger handed him the note. It contained an
invitation to dinner to meet M. Geoffroi St. H., whose views on
certain subjects Roger had been advocating in the article Lord
Hollingford had spoken about to Molly, when he danced with her at
the Hollingford ball. M. Geoffroi St.cj H.
was in England now, and was expected to pay a visit at the Towers
in the course of the following week. He had expressed a wish to
meet the author of the paper which had already attracted the
attention of the French comparative anatomists;1 and
Lord Hollingford added a few words as to his own desire to make the
acquaintance of a neighbour whose tastes were so similar to his
own; and then followed a civil message from Lord and Lady
Cumnor.
Lord Hollingford’s hand was cramped and rather
illegible. The squire could not read it all at once, and was enough
put out to decline any assistance in deciphering it. At last he
made it out.
‘So my lord-lieutenant is taking some notice of the
Hamleys at last. The election is coming on, is it? But I can tell
him we’re not to be got so easily. I suppose this trap is set for
you, Osborne? What’s this you’ve been writing that the French
mounseer is so taken with?’
‘It is not me, sir!’ said Osborne. ‘Both note and
call are for Roger.’
‘I don’t understand it,’ said the squire. ‘These
Whig fellows have never done their duty by me; not that I want it
of them. The Duke of Debenham used to pay the Hamleys a respect due
to ’em—the oldest landowners in the county—but since he died, and
this shabby Whig lord has succeeded him, I’ve never dined at the
lord-lieutenant’s —no, not once.’
‘But I think, sir, I’ve heard you say Lord Cumnor
used to invite you,—only you did not choose to go,’ said
Roger.
‘Yes. What d’ye mean by that? Do you suppose I was
going to desert the principles of my family, and curry favour with
the Whigs?ck No!
leave that to them. They can ask the heir of the Hamleys fast
enough when a county election is coming on.’
‘I tell you, sir,’ said Osborne, in the irritable
tone he sometimes used when his father was particularly
unreasonable, ‘It is not me Lord Hollingford is inviting; it is
Roger. Roger is making himself known for what he is, a first-rate
fellow,’ continued Osborne—a sting of self-reproach mingling with
his generous pride in his brother—‘and he is getting himself a
name; he’s been writing about these new French theories and
discoveries, and this foreign savantcl very
naturally wants to make his acquaintance, and so Lord Hollingford
asks him to dine. It’s as clear as can be,’ lowering his tone, and
addressing himself to Roger; ‘it has nothing to do with politics,
if my father would but see it.’
Of course the squire heard this little aside with
the unlucky uncertainty of hearing which is a characteristic of the
beginning of deafness; and its effect on him was perceptible in the
increased acrimony of his next speech.
‘You young men think you know everything. I tell
you it’s a palpable Whig trick. And what business has Roger—if it
is Roger the man wants—to go currying favour with the French? In my
day we were content to hate ’em and to lick ’em. But it’s just like
your conceit, Osborne, setting yourself up to say it’s your younger
brother they’re asking, and not you; I tell you it’s you. They
think the eldest son was sure to be called after his father,
Roger—Roger Hamley, junior. It’s as plain as a pike-staff. They
know they can’t catch me with chaff, but they’ve got up this French
dodge. What business had you to go writing about the French, Roger?
I should have thought you were too sensible to take any notice of
their fancies and theories; but if it is you they’ve asked, I’ll
not have you going and meeting these foreigners at a Whig house.
They ought to have asked Osborne. He’s the representative of the
Hamleys, if I’m not; and they can’t get me, let ‘em try ever so.
Besides, Osborne has got a bit of the mounseer about him, which he
caught with being so fond of going off to the Continent, instead of
coming back to his good old English home.’
He went on repeating much of what he had said
before, till he left the room. Osborne had kept on replying to his
unreasonable grumblings, which had only added to his anger; and as
soon as the squire was fairly gone, Osborne turned to Roger, and
said—
‘Of course you’ll go, Roger? ten to one he’ll be in
another mind to-morrow’
‘No,’ said Roger, bluntly enough—for he was
extremely disappointed; ‘I won’t run the chance of vexing him. I
shall refuse.’
‘Don’t be such a fool!’ exclaimed Osborne. ‘Really,
my father is too unreasonable. You heard how he kept contradicting
himself; and such a man as you to be kept under like a child
by———’
‘Don’t let us talk any more about it, Osborne,’
said Roger, writing away fast. When the note was written, and sent
off, he came and put his hand caressingly on Osborne’s shoulder as
he sat pretending to read, but in reality vexed with both his
father and his brother, though on very different grounds.
‘How go the poems, old fellow? I hope they’re
nearly ready to bring out.’
‘No, they’re not; and if it were not for the money,
I shouldn’t care if they were never published. What’s the use of
fame, if one mayn’t reap the fruits of it?’
‘Come, now, we’ll have no more of that; let’s talk
about the money. I shall be going up for my fellowship examination
next week, and then we’ll have a purse in common, for they’ll never
think of not giving me a fellowship now I’m senior wrangler. I’m
short enough myself at present, and I don’t like to bother my
father; but when I’m fellow, you shall take me down to Winchester,
and introduce me to the little wife.’
‘It will be a month next Monday since I left her,’
said Osborne, laying down his papers and gazing into the fire, as
if by so doing he could call up her image. ‘In her letter this
morning she bids me give you such a pretty message. It won’t bear
translating into English; you must read it for yourself,’ continued
he, pointing out a line or two in a letter he drew out of his
pocket.
Roger suspected that one or two of the words were
wrongly spelt; but their purport was so gentle and loving, and had
such a touch of simple, respectful gratitude in them, that he could
not help being drawn afresh to the little unseen sister-in-law,
whose acquaintance Osborne had made by helping her to look for some
missing article of the children’s, whom she was taking for their
daily walk in Hyde Park. For Mrs. Osborne Hamley had been nothing
more than a French bonne;cm very
pretty, very graceful, and very much tyrannized over by the rough
little boys and girls she had in charge. She was a little orphan
girl, who had charmed the heads of a travelling English family, as
she brought madame some articles of lingerie at an hotel; and she
had been hastily engaged by them as bonne to their children, partly
as a pet and play-thing herself, partly because it would be so good
for the children to learn French from a native (of Alsace!). By and
by her mistress ceased to take any particular notice of Aimée in
the bustle of London and London gaiety; but though feeling more and
more forlorn in a strange land every day, the French girl strove
hard to do her duty. One touch of kindness, however, was enough to
set the fountain gushing; and she and Osborne naturally fell into
an ideal state of love, to be rudely disturbed by the indignation
of the mother, when accident discovered to her the attachment
existing between her children’s bonne and a young man of an
entirely different class. Aimée answered truly to all her
mistress’s questions; but no worldly wisdom, nor any lesson to be
learnt from another’s experience, could in the least disturb her
entire faith in her lover. Perhaps Mrs. Townshend did no more than
her duty in immediately sending Aimée back to Metz, where she had
first met with her, and where such relations as remained to the
girl might be supposed to be residing. But, altogether, she knew so
little of the kind of people or life to which she was consigning
her deposed protégée that Osborne, after listening with impatient
indignation to the lecture which Mrs. Townshend gave him when he
insisted on seeing her in order to learn what had become of his
love, that the young man set off straight for Metz in hot haste,
and did not let the grass grow under his feet until he had made
Aimee his wife. All this had occurred the previous autumn, and
Roger did not know of the step his brother had taken until it was
irrevocable. Then came the mother’s death, which, besides the
simplicity of its own overwhelming sorrow, brought with it the loss
of the kind, tender mediatrix, who could always soften and turn his
father’s heart. It is doubtful, however, if even she could have
succeeded in this, for the squire looked high, and over high, for
the wife of his heir; he detested all foreigners, and moreover held
all Roman Catholics in dread and abomination something akin to our
ancestors’ hatred of witchcraft. All these prejudices were
strengthened by his grief Argument would always have glanced
harmless away off his shield of utter unreason; but a loving
impulse, in a happy moment, might have softened his heart to what
he most detested in the former days. But the happy moments came not
now, and the loving impulses were trodden down by the bitterness of
his frequent remorse, not less than by his growing irritability; so
Aimée lived solitary in the little cottage near Winchester in which
Osborne had installed her when she first came to England as his
wife, and in the dainty furnishing of which he had run himself so
deeply into debt. For Osborne consulted his own fastidious taste in
his purchases rather than her simple childlike wishes and wants,
and looked upon the little Frenchwoman rather as the future
mistress of Hamley Hall than as the wife of a man who was wholly
dependent on others at present. He had chosen a southern county as
being far removed from those midland shires where the name of
Hamley of Hamley was well and widely known; for he did not wish his
wife to assume only for a time a name which was not justly and
legally her own. In all these arrangements he had willingly striven
to do his full duty by her; and she repaid him with passionate
devotion and admiring reverence. If his vanity had met with a
check, or his worthy desires for college honours had been
disappointed, he knew where to go for a comforter; one who poured
out praise till her words were choked in her throat by the rapidity
of her thoughts, and who poured out the small vials of her
indignation on every one who did not acknowledge and bow down to
her husband’s merits. If she ever wished to go to the château—that
was his home—and to be introduced to his family, Aimée never hinted
a word of it to him. Only she did yearn, and she did plead, for a
little more of her husband’s company; and the good reasons which
had convinced her of the necessity of his being so much away when
he was present to urge them, failed in their efficacy when she
tried to reproduce them to herself in his absence.
The afternoon of the day on which Lord Hollingford
called, Roger was going upstairs, three steps at a time, when, at a
turn on the landing, he encountered his father. It was the first
time he had seen him since their conversation about the Towers’
invitation to dinner. The squire stopped his son by standing right
in the middle of the passage.
‘Thou’rt going to meet the mounseer, my lad?’ said
he, half as affirmation, half as question.
‘No sir; I sent off James almost immediately with a
note declining it. I don’t care about it—that’s to say, not to
signify.’
‘Why did you take me up so sharp, Roger?’ said his
father, pettishly. ‘You all take me up so hastily nowadays. I think
it’s hard when a man mustn’t be allowed a bit of crossness when
he’s tired and heavy at heart—that I do.’
‘But, father, I should never like to go to a house
where they had slighted you.’
‘Nay, nay, lad,’ said the squire, brightening up a
little; ‘I think I slighted them. They asked me to dinner, after my
lord was made lieutenant, time after time, but I never would go
near ’em. I call that my slighting them.’
And no more was said at the time; but the next day
the squire again stopped Roger.
‘I’ve been making Jem try on his livery-coat that
he hasn’t worn this three or four years—he’s got too stout for it
now.’
‘Well, he needn’t wear it, need he? and Dawson’s
lad will be glad enough of it,—he’s sadly in want of
clothes.’
‘Aye, aye; but who’s to go with you when you call
at the Towers? It’s but polite to call after Lord What’s-his-name
has taken the trouble to come here; and I shouldn’t like you to go
without a groom.’
‘My dear father! I shouldn’t know what to do with a
man riding at my back. I can find my way to the stable-yard for
myself, or there’ll be some man about to take my horse. Don’t
trouble yourself about that.’
‘Well, you’re not Osborne, to be sure. Perhaps it
won’t strike ’em as strange for you. But you must look up, and hold
your own, and remember you’re one of the Hamleys, who’ve been on
the same land for hundreds of years, while they’re but trumpery
Whig folk who only came into the county in Queen Anne’s
time.’