<h2><SPAN name="page177"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>XIX.<br/> <i>PICTURES ON THE LINE</i>.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">All</span> through his own part of the
country John Osbaldiston was familiarly known as
“Nails.” And this expressive locution was
adopted in the first place to indicate the business out of which
the millionaire had amassed his fortune; and in the second place
to give some necessarily inadequate notion of the hardness of his
nature. As John Osbaldiston was a millionaire it may be
taken for granted that his nick-name was never mentioned before
his face. Besides being the possessor of enormous wealth
the retired nail-maker was a Justice of the Peace, a
Deputy-Lieutenant, and lived in confident expectation that when
the Radicals came in—if they ever <i>did</i> come
in—he should be rewarded for his unswerving <SPAN name="page178"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>devotion by
a baronetcy. The beauty of this hope was somewhat marred
when Osbaldiston reflected that his wife was dead, and that he
had no son to inherit the title. He was a hard, pompous
man, full of prejudices, and the happiest moments of his life
were those which he spent upon the bench sentencing the peccant
rustics. Fortunately for the country side, John Osbaldiston
never sat on the bench alone, and his own view as to the
depravity of human nature could not take effect in sentences
unless a majority of the bench was with him. And the
majority never was with him.</p>
<p>John Osbaldiston’s father had founded the business in
the town of Belchester and had purchased the estate upon which
John now lived, and to which he had greatly added; absorbing the
estates of the smaller country gentlemen as in other days he had
absorbed the business of the smaller nail-makers. The house
on the estate was a large, solid building, without any
pretensions to architectural beauty, but capable of holding in
its vast apartments half the <i>élite</i> of the county,
if half the <i>élite</i> of the county should ever feel
inclined to visit it together. John Osbaldiston was a great
<SPAN name="page179"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>picture
buyer, and his galleries were the envy of his neighbours, and
even of patrons of the Fine Arts living at a distance.
Indeed, the fame of the Osbaldiston collection had travelled
almost as far as his nails. He was not much of a
critic. Some people said that he was not much of a judge,
but bought pictures as farmers buy sheep—by the
brand. Whatever truth there may be in these reflections,
one thing is certain, that many of the best examples of the most
esteemed painters had found their way into the galleries of
Bradland Hall—as the Osbaldiston house was called.
Whether the contemplation of these accumulated works of art gave
the millionaire any artistic pleasure it is impossible to say;
but he was very proud of their possession, and it gave him an
exquisite sense of satisfaction when at any sale in London his
agent outbid the agent of his blue-blooded neighbour, the Duke of
Sandown, for the possession of an example which both were anxious
to acquire. But, notwithstanding this pride of possession,
the nail-maker of Belchester was not ostentatious. His
nature was a puzzle. He was as inscrutable as he was
hard.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page180"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>The
Master of Bradland Hall had one possession which gave him more
anxiety than all his other treasures put together; and that
possession was his daughter Bella, a thoughtless, light-hearted,
high-spirited girl of seventeen, who had been a source of untold
trouble to a succession of nursery-governesses, governesses,
masters, mistresses, and professors. Her nature was as soft
as the paternal nature was hard. She was easily led, though
difficult to drive, and worst of all, was not awed to any
appreciable extent by the frowns of her father, when he did frown
at her, which, comparatively speaking, was seldom. What
little affection he had to bestow was given to his only
child—the child of his old age; and it must be admitted at
once, that if Bella reciprocated the affection, she had a most
undemonstrative way of doing it. The daughter had a way of
putting her father down, which amounted almost to snubbing.
Done in private, the old gentleman bore such unfilial ebullitions
in silence; though when performed before the menials he resented
it with great bitterness. I have already said that John
Osbaldiston was full of prejudices. For the <SPAN name="page181"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>purposes of
this narrative it is necessary to mention but one of them.
He had a rooted antipathy to railways and everything connected
with them. This was no doubt strange in a man who had made
his money in connection with iron, and whose commercial course
was entirely connected with the manufacturing town of
Belchester. But his rooted antipathy may be accounted for
by the fact that, on two occasions he came into collision with a
railway company—not on the lines, but in the law
courts—and that on each occasion he was beaten by the
defendant company. The first occasion was a mere affair
connected with alleged negligence resulting in the loss of a
consignment of nails. But the second occasion was when the
Great Nor’-West by Western Railway Company proposed to have
a branch line from Belchester to Balt—a little village
situated on the Bradland estate. Osbaldiston spent
thousands and thousands in opposing the Bill, and when finally it
was passed, went to law on the question of compensation; though,
on a fine night, with the wind blowing towards him, the shriek of
the engine could barely be heard at the Hall. It was then
<SPAN name="page182"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>that
John Osbaldiston declared his eternal hatred of all railways
whatsoever, and swore a great oath that he would never travel by
that means of transit, so long as there was any other mode of
conveyance available.</p>
<p>In the early spring of 1879, John Osbaldiston was sitting in
his library delivering himself of portentous platitudes on the
subject of frivolity, for the edification of Miss Bella, when the
afternoon post arrived, and brought a letter bearing the
Belchester postmark. Having perused it, John Osbaldiston
settled his neck in his collar, and handed the communication to
his daughter, who read it out with many interjections of
disapproval. The following is a copy of the letter.</p>
<blockquote><p style="text-align: right">“<span class="smcap">Belchester Institute</span>,<br/>
<span class="smcap">Belchester</span> —, 1879.</p>
<p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,—A Committee
having been appointed to consider the long-mooted question of
opening a Loan Exhibition of Works of Art, in connection with the
Institute, it has been resolved to hold the proposed Exhibition
in the summer of the present year. Regarding your own long
and honourable connection with the town, it has been resolved to
consult you generally on the subject, and to request you to lend
us a few examples from your magnificent collection. When it
is known that you have contributed to the walls of our <SPAN name="page183"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Exhibition,
the example upon the minds of other collectors will be
prodigious, and the success of our efforts be secured.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">“Your obedient servant,<br/>
<span class="smcap">Amos Black</span>, <i>Hon. Sec.</i></p>
<p>“<span class="smcap">John Osbaldiston</span>, <span class="smcap">Esq.</span>, J.P., D.L.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Well, I never,” exclaimed Bella.
“Such impudence!”</p>
<p>“I see nothing impudent about it,” replied the
father, sternly. “I owe everything to
Belchester. Belchester shall not find me
ungrateful.”</p>
<p>“Of course not, dear papa. But supposing
Belchester rewards your gratitude by poking its umbrellas through
your Titians or by cutting little bits out of your
Turners!”</p>
<p>“Belchester has trusted <i>me</i>. <i>I</i> will
trust Belchester,” replied her parent, pompously.</p>
<p>“But you <i>can’t</i> send to Belchester,”
she said, trying another tack.</p>
<p>“And why, pray?”</p>
<p>“Because there is no way of sending them except by the
Great Nor’-West by Western Railway Company’s branch
line.”</p>
<p>“They shall go by van,” he replied decisively.</p>
<p><SPAN name="page184"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>And
there was an end of the matter.</p>
<p>The distance between Bradland Hall and Belchester is nearly
thirty miles, and when John Osbaldiston had replied to the
Secretary of the Belchester Institute, graciously according to
the request of the Committee, he personally saw to the selection
and packing of the pictures, in a van also selected with great
care. He made arrangement for a change of horses on the
road, and he consigned the precious cargo to two men, in whose
steadiness, and sobriety, and general possession of character, he
could place the utmost confidence. These selected
characters quite justified the confidence reposed in them, and
drove so steadily and so slowly, that the roadside population
might have supposed the van to contain a corpse.</p>
<p>Two miles from Belchester there is a level crossing; and over
this crossing the van containing Osbaldiston’s masterpieces
had to be taken. Just as the hoofs of the off horse left
the up line his knees seemed to give way, he fell, and seemed
unable to get up again. Every effort was made to raise him;
but in vain. Then attempts were made to move the van which
stood right across the rails. But <SPAN name="page185"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>too
late. It all seemed to occur in a moment. The express
came rushing up. The van was knocked into matchwood, and
the masterpieces from Bradland Hall were master <i>pieces</i>
indeed—mere fragments of frame and canvas, some strewed by
the side of the line, and some adhering to the engine and
carriages of the express, which lay on its side a short distance
further on.</p>
<p>A telegram brought John Osbaldiston to the spot in process of
time. And he spent many days in Belchester mad with
himself, with the Institute, with the railway, and with the world
in general. When he returned home his anger was
increased. He found a letter from Bella:—</p>
<blockquote><p>“<span class="smcap">Dear Pa</span>.—I
knew you would never consent, so I have run away to be
married. He is a man very highly connected, but has been
unfortunate, and is at present a guard on the Nor’-West by
Western. He is so handsome, and we are so happy. Do
forgive us.</p>
<p style="text-align: right">“<span class="smcap">Bella</span>.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Never!” cried the crushed nail-maker. And
he never did.</p>
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