<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER IV</h2>
<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">I had</span> questioned János on our homeward way
concerning my new acquaintances; but the fellow
was so ill-disposed by nature to external gossip, so
wholly occupied with the minute fulfilment of his
daily task, which was to watch over the well-being
and safety of his master, that he had gathered no
acquaintance with affairs outside his province.
With the head factor, however, whom I sent for
immediately after supper, I was more fortunate.
This man, Karl Schultz, is Saxon-born, and consequently
one of the few of my numerous dependants
with whom I can hold converse here. It was but
natural that among the peasantry the advent of
strangers, evidently of wealth and distinction,
should have created some stir, and it is Schultz’s
business, among many other things, to know what
the peasantry talk about; although in this more
contented part of the world this sort of knowledge
is not of such importance as among our neighbours
the Poles. Schultz, therefore, was aware of the
arrival of the ladies, likewise of the rumour of
smallpox, which had, so he informed me, not only<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
driven all the servants out of the Castle of
Schreckendorf, but spread something like a panic
over the country-side. Tidings had also come to
his ears that two gentlemen—one of them suffering
from the dreadful malady (doubtless the poor
Chamberlain)—had been abandoned in their carriage
by their postillions and servants at the small
village of Kittlitz, some forty miles from here,
just over the Lusatian border. He corroborated,
in fact, greatly to my joy, all that I had been told;
for I had had an uneasy fear upon me, now and
again, as I marched home in the evening chill,
that I had been too ready to lend credence to a
romantic and improbable story. But, better than
all, Schultz, having felt a special curiosity concerning
visitors from his own country, had, despite
the attempt to keep the matter secret, contrived
to satisfy himself to the full as to their identity.
And thus did I, to my no small triumph, from
the first day easily penetrate the ill-guarded
incognita.</p>
<p>The beautiful wandering Princess was the only
daughter of the old reigning house of Lausitz-Rothenburg;
and it was from Georgenbrunn,
where she had been on a visit to her aunt the
Dowager Duchess of Saxony, that the second outbreak
of the epidemic had driven her to take<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
refuge with the Countess Schreckendorf in our
neighbourhood.</p>
<p>Vastly satisfied with my discovery, and not a
little fluttered by the impending honour, I made
elaborate preparations the next day against the
coming of such guests. We rifled the gardens,
the greenhouses, and the storerooms, and contrived
a collation the elegance of which taxed our resources
to the uttermost.</p>
<p>Not in peasant garb did I start at noon upon
my romantic quest, but in my finest riding suit of
mulberry cloth embroidered with green and silver,
(of what good auguries did I not think when I
remembered that green and white were actually
the colours of the Maison de Lusace, and that in
this discreet manner I could wear on my sleeve
the mark of a delicate homage?), ruffles of finest
Mechlin fluttered on my throat and wrists, and a
hat of the very latest cock was disposed jauntily
at the exact angle prescribed by the Vienna mode.</p>
<p>With my trim fellows behind me, and with as
perfect a piece of horseflesh between my knees as
the Emperor himself could ever hope to bestride,
I set out in high delight and anticipation.</p>
<p>Now, on this freezing winter’s night, when I
look back upon those days and the days that
followed, it seems to me as though it were all a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
dream. The past events are wrapped to memory
in a kind of haze, out of which certain hours
marked above the rest stand out alone in clearness.—That
particular day stands forth perhaps
the clearest of all.</p>
<p>I remember that the Princess Ottilie looked
even more queenly to my mind than at first, with
her fair hair powdered and a patch upon the satin
whiteness of her chin. In the complacency of my
young man’s vanity, I was exceedingly elated that
she should have considered it worth while to adorn
herself for me. I remember, too, that the lady-in-waiting
examined me critically, and cast a look
of approval upon my altered appearance; that she
spoke less and that her mistress spoke more than
upon our first meeting; that even the presence,
mute, dark, and scowling, of their female attendant
could not spoil the pleasure of our intercourse.</p>
<p>In the vineyards, it is true, an incident occurred
which for a moment threatened to mar my perfect
satisfaction. The peasant girls—it is the custom
of the country on the appearance of strangers in
the midst of their work—gathered round each
lady, surrounding her in wild dancing bands, threatening
in song to load her shoulders with a heavy
hodful of grapes unless she paid a ransom. It was
of course most unseemly, considering the quality of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
the company I was entertaining, and I had not foreseen
the possibility of such a breach of respect.
Never before, it was evident, in the delicately nurtured
life of the Princess, had such rough amusement
been allowed to approach her. This being
the case, it was not astonishing that the admirable
composure of her usual attitude should break down—her
dignity give way to the emotion of fear.
She called—nay, she screamed—to me for help.
The while her pert lady-in-waiting, no whit abashed,
laughed back at her circle of grinning sunburnt
prancers, threw mocking good-humoured gibes at
them in German, and finally was sharp enough to
draw her purse and pay for her footing, crying
out to her mistress to do the same. But the latter
was in no state to listen to advice, and, alas! I
found myself powerless to deliver the distressed
lady. In my ignorance of their language I could
do nothing short of use brute force to control my
savages, who were after all (it seems) but acting in
good faith upon an old-established privilege. So
I was fain, in my turn, to summon Schultz to the
rescue from a distant part of the ground. He,
practical fellow, made no bones about the matter;
with a bellow and a knowing whirl of his cane
every stroke of which told with a dull thwack, he
promptly dispersed the indiscreet merrymakers.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I suppose it is my English blood that rises
within me at the sight of a woman struck. Upon
the impulse of the first moment I had well-nigh
wrenched the staff from his hands and laid it
about his shoulders; but fortunately, on second
thought, I had wisdom enough to refrain from an
act which would have been so fatal to all future
discipline. Nevertheless, as I stood by, a passive
spectator of it, the blood mounted, for very shame,
to my cheek, and I felt myself degraded to the
level of my administrator’s brutality.</p>
<p>The poor fools fell apart, screaming between
laughter and pain. One handsome wench I
marked, indeed, who withdrew to the side of a
sullen gipsy-looking fellow, her husband or lover
apparently; and as she muttered low in his ear
they both cast looks charged with such murderous
import, not only at the uncompromising justiciary,
but also at me, and the man’s hand stole instinctively
to his back with so significant a gesture,
that I realised for the first time quite fully that
there might be good reasons for János’s precautions
anent the lord’s precious person when the lord took
his walks abroad.</p>
<p>Another girl passed me close by, sobbing aloud,
as she returned to her labour. She rubbed her
shoulder sorely, and the tears hopped off the rim<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
of her fat cheeks, contorted like those of a blubbering
child. In half-ashamed and sneaking fashion,
yet unable to resist the urging of my heart,
I followed her behind the next row of vines and
touched her on the arm.</p>
<p>She recognised me with a start, and I, all fearful
of being noticed by the others, in haste and without
a word—as what word could I find in which
to communicate with a Slovack?—hastily dropped
a consolatory coin, the first that met my touch, into
her palm.</p>
<p>It was a poor plain creature with dull eyes, coarse
lips, and matted hair, and she gazed at me a moment
stupidly bewildered. But the next instant,
reading I know not what of sympathy and benevolence
in my face, as a dog may read in his master’s
eyes, she fell at my feet, letting the gold slip out of
her grasp that she might the better seize my hand
in hers and cover it with kisses, pouring forth the
while a litany of gratitude, as unintelligible to me
as if she had been indeed a dog whining at my feet.</p>
<p>To put an end to the absurd situation, distasteful
to my British free-born pride for all my foreign
training, I pushed her from me and turned away,
to find the lady-in-waiting at my elbow.</p>
<p>Instead, however, of making my weakness a
mark for her wit, this latter, to my great relief,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
and likewise to my astonishment, looked wistfully
from the ugly besmeared face to the coin lying on
the black soil, then at my countenance, which at
that moment was, I felt, that of a detected schoolboy.
And then, without a word, she followed me
back to her mistress’s side.</p>
<p>My august visitor had not yet regained her
wonted serenity. Still fluttered, she showed me
something of a pouting visage. I thought to discern
in her not only satisfaction at the punishment
she had seen administered, but some resentment
at my passive attitude. And this, I confess, surprised
me in her, who seemed so gentle and
womanly. But I told myself then that it was but
natural in one born as she was to a throne.</p>
<p>On the other hand, while I confounded myself
in excuses and explanations, blaming myself for
having (through my inexperience of this country)
neglected to prevent the possibility of so untoward
an incident, I heard behind me the voice of the
young Court lady, rating Schultz in most explicit
German for the heaviness of his hand upon my
folk. And, as the Princess gradually became mollified
towards me and showed me once again her
own smiling graciousness, I contrasted her little
show of haughtiness with the unreserve of her
companion, and convinced myself that it did but<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
become her (being what she was). The while I
watched Mademoiselle Ottilie, mingling with peasants
as if she had been born among them, with
an ever renewed wonder that she should have been
chosen for the high position she occupied.</p>
<p>Later on my guest, according to her promise,
condescended to rest and refresh herself in the
castle. This was the culminating moment of a
golden afternoon. I felt the full pride of possession
when I led her in through the old halls that
bore the mark of so many centuries of noble
masters; although indeed, as a Jennico, I had no
inherited right to peacock in the glories of the
House of Tollendhal. But, at each portrait before
which she was gracious enough to halt, I took care
to speak of some notable contemporary among the
men and women of my own old line, in that distant
enchanted island of the North, where the men
are so brave and strong and the women so fair.
And, without stretching any point, I am sure the
line of Jennico lost nothing in the comparison.</p>
<p>She was, I saw, beyond mistake impressed. I
rejoiced to note that I was rapidly becoming a
person of importance in her eyes. Even the lady-in-waiting
continued to measure me with an altered
and thoughtful look.</p>
<p>Between the eating of our meal together—which,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
as I said, was quite a delicate little feast,
and did honour to my barefooted kitchen retinue—and
the departure of my visitors, I took them
through many of the chambers, and showed them
some of the treasures, quaint antiquities, and relics
that my great-uncle had inherited or himself collected.
On a little table under his picture—yonder
on that wall it hangs before me—I had
spread forth in a glass case, with a sort of tender
and pious memory of the rigid old hero, his own
personal decorations and honours, from the first
cross he had won in comparative youth to the last
blazing order that a royal hand had pinned over
the shrunken chest of the field-marshal. In this
portrait, painted some five years before his death,
my uncle had insisted on appearing full face, with
a fine scorn of any palliation of the black patch or
the broken jaw. It is a grim enough presentment
in consequence,—the artist having evidently rather
relished his task,—and sometimes, indeed, when I
am alone here in this great room at night, and it
seems as if the candle-light does but serve to
heighten the gloom of the shadows, I find my
uncle’s one eye following me with so living a
sternness that I can scarce endure it.</p>
<p>But that day of which I am writing, I thought
there was benignity in the fierce orb as it surveyed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
such honourable company, and even an actual
touch of geniality in the set of the black patch.</p>
<p>As I opened the case, both the ladies fell,
women-like, to fingering the rich jewels. There
was a snuff-box set around with diamonds, upon
the lid of which was painted a portrait of the
Dauphine. This, Maria Theresa had herself given
to my uncle on the occasion of her daughter’s
marriage, to which it was deemed my uncle’s firm
attitude in council over the Franco-Austrian difficulty
had not a little contributed.</p>
<p>With a cry of admiration, the Princess took it
up. “Ach, what diamonds!” she said. I looked
from the exquisite face on the ivory to the no less
exquisite countenance bending above it, and I was
struck by the resemblance which had no doubt
unconsciously been haunting me ever since I first
met her. The arch of the dark eyebrow, the
supercilious droop of the eyelid, the curve of the
short upper lip, and the pout of the full under
one, even the high poise of the head on the long
throat, were curiously similar. I exclaimed upon
the coincidence, while the Princess flushed with a
sort of mingled pleasure and bashfulness.</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Ottilie took up the miniature in
her turn, and, after gravely comparing it with her
own elfish, sunburnt visage in the glass, gazed at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
her mistress; then, heaving a lugubrious sigh, she
assented to my remarks, adding, however, that
there was no ground for surprise, as the Princess
Marie Ottilie was actually cousin to her Royal
Highness the Dauphine.</p>
<p>The Princess blushed again, and lifted up her
hand as if to warn her companion. But the latter,
with her almost uncanny perspicacity, continued,
turning to me:</p>
<p>“Of course, M. de Jennico” (she had at last
mastered my name)—“of course, M. de Jennico
has found out all about us by this time, and is
perfectly aware of her Highness’s identity.”</p>
<p>Then she added, and her eyes danced:</p>
<p>“Since M. de Jennico is so fond of genealogy”
(among the curiosities of the place I had naturally
shown them my uncle’s monumental pedigree),
“he can amuse himself in tracing the connection
and relationships—no doubt he has the ’Almanach
de Gotha’—between the houses of Hapsburg
and the Catholic house of Lausitz-Rothenburg.”</p>
<p>And indeed, although she meant this in sarcasm,
when, after I had escorted them home, I returned,
through the mists and shades of twilight, to my
solitude (now peopled for me with delightful present,
and God knows what fantastic future, visions),
I did produce that excellent new book, the “Almanach<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
de Gotha,” and found great interest in
tracing the blood-relation between the Dauphine
and the fairest of princesses. And afterwards,
moved by some spirit of vainglory, I amused myself
by comparing on the map the relative sizes of
the Duchy of Lausitz and the lands of Tollendhal.</p>
<p>And next I was moved to unroll once again
my uncle’s pedigree, and to study the fine chain
of noble links of which I stand the last worthy
Jennico, when something that had been lying unformed
in my mind during these last hours of
strange excitement suddenly took audacious and
definite shape.</p>
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