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<h2> CHAPTER XXI </h2>
<h3> LISTLESS </h3>
<p>It seemed an unfortunate thing for me, and unfavorable to my purpose, that
my host, and even my hostess too, should be so engrossed with their new
estate, its beauties and capabilities. Mrs. Hockin devoted herself at once
to fowls and pigs and the like extravagant economies, having bought, at
some ill-starred moment, a book which proved that hens ought to lay eggs
in a manner to support themselves, their families, and the family they
belonged to, at the price of one penny a dozen. Eggs being two shillings a
dozen in Bruntsea, here was a margin for profit—no less than two
thousand per cent, to be made, allowing for all accidents. The lady also
found another book, divulging for a shilling the author's purely
invaluable secret—how to work an acre of ground, pay house rent,
supply the house grandly, and give away a barrow-load of vegetables every
day to the poor of the parish, by keeping a pig—if that pig were
kept properly. And after that, pork and ham and bacon came of him, while
another golden pig went on.</p>
<p>Mrs. Hockin was very soft-hearted, and said that she never could make
bacon of a pig like that; and I answered that if she ever got him it would
be unwise to do so. However, the law was laid down in both books that
golden fowls and diamondic pigs must die the death before they begin to
overeat production; and the Major said, "To be sure. Yes, yes. Let them
come to good meat, and then off with their heads." And his wife said that
she was sure she could do it. When it comes to a question of tare and
tret, false sentiment must be excluded.</p>
<p>At the moment, these things went by me as trifles, yet made me more
impatient. Being older now, and beholding what happens with tolerance and
complacence, I am only surprised that my good friends were so tolerant of
me and so complacent. For I must have been a great annoyance to them, with
my hurry and my one idea. Happily they made allowance for me, which I was
not old enough to make for them.</p>
<p>"Go to London, indeed! Go to London by yourself!" cried the Major, with a
red face, and his glasses up, when I told him one morning that I could
stop no longer without doing something. "Mary, my dear, when you have done
out there, will you come in and reason—if you can—with Miss
Wood. She vows that she is going to London, all alone."</p>
<p>"Oh, Major Hockin—oh, Nicholas dear, such a thing has happened!"
Mrs. Hockin had scarcely any breath to tell us, as she came in through the
window. "You know that they have only had three bushels, or, at any rate,
not more than five, almost ever since they came. Erema, you know as well
as I do."</p>
<p>"Seven and three-quarter bushels of barley, at five and ninepence a
bushel, Mary," said the Major, pulling out a pocket-book; "besides Indian
corn, chopped meat, and potatoes."</p>
<p>"And fourteen pounds of paddy," I said—which was a paltry thing of
me; "not to mention a cake of graves, three sacks of brewers' grains, and
then—I forget what next."</p>
<p>"You are too bad, all of you. Erema, I never thought you would turn
against me so. And you made me get nearly all of it. But please to look
here. What do you call this? Is this no reward? Is this not enough? Major,
if you please, what do you call this? What a pity you have had your
breakfast!"</p>
<p>"A blessing—if this was to be my breakfast. I call that, my dear,
the very smallest egg I have seen since I took sparrows' nests. No wonder
they sell them at twelve a penny. I congratulate you upon your first egg,
my dear Mary."</p>
<p>"Well, I don't care," replied Mrs. Hockin, who had the sweetest temper in
the world. "Small beginnings make large endings; and an egg must be always
small at one end. You scorn my first egg, and Erema should have had it if
she had been good. But she was very wicked, and I know not what to do with
it."</p>
<p>"Blow it!" cried the Major. "I mean no harm, ladies. I never use low
language. What I mean is, make a pinhole at each end, give a puff, and
away goes two pennyworth, and you have a cabinet specimen, which your egg
is quite fitted by its cost to be. But now, Mary, talk to Miss Wood, if
you please. It is useless for me to say any thing, and I have three
appointments in the town"—he always called it "the town" now—"three
appointments, if not four; yes, I may certainly say four. Talk to Miss
Wood, my dear, if you please. She wants to go to London, which would be
absurd. Ladies seem to enter into ladies' logic. They seem to be able to
appreciate it better, to see all the turns, and the ins and outs, which no
man has intellect enough to see, or at least to make head or tail of.
Good-by for the present; I had better be off."</p>
<p>"I should think you had," exclaimed Mrs. Hockin, as her husband marched
off, with his side-lights on, and his short, quick step, and
well-satisfied glance at the hill which belonged to him, and the beach,
over which he had rights of plunder—or, at least, Uncle Sam would
have called them so, strictly as he stood up for his own.</p>
<p>"Now come and talk quietly to me, my dear," Mrs. Hockin began, most
kindly, forgetting all the marvel of her first-born egg. "I have noticed
how restless you are, and devoid of all healthy interest in any thing.
'Listless' is the word. 'Listless' is exactly what I mean, Erema. When I
was at your time of life, I could never have gone about caring for
nothing. I wonder that you knew that I even had a fowl; much more how much
they had eaten!"</p>
<p>"I really do try to do all I can, and that is a proof of it," I said. "I
am not quite so listless as you think. But those things do seem so little
to me."</p>
<p>"My dear, if you were happy, they would seem quite large, as, after all
the anxieties of my life, I am able now to think them. It is a power to be
thankful for, or, at least, I often think so. Look at my husband! He has
outlived and outlasted more trouble than any one but myself could reckon
up to him; and yet he is as brisk, as full of life, as ready to begin a
new thing to-morrow—when, at our age, there may be no to-morrow,
except in that better world, my dear, of which it is high time for him and
me to think, as I truly hope we may spare the time to do."</p>
<p>"Oh, don't talk like that," I cried. "Please, Mrs. Hockin, to talk of your
hens and chicks—at least there will be chicks by-and-by. I am almost
sure there will, if you only persevere. It seems unfair to set our minds
on any other world till justice has been done in this."</p>
<p>"You are very young, my child, or you would know that in that case we
never should think of it at all. But I don't want to preach you a sermon,
Erema, even if I could do so. I only just want you to tell me what you
think, what good you imagine that you can do."</p>
<p>"It is no imagination. I am sure that I can right my father's wrongs. And
I never shall rest till I do so."</p>
<p>"Are you sure that there is any wrong to right?" she asked, in the warmth
of the moment; and then, seeing perhaps how my color changed, she looked
at me sadly, and kissed my forehead.</p>
<p>"Oh, if you had only once seen him," I said; "without any exaggeration,
you would have been satisfied at once. That he could ever have done any
harm was impossible—utterly impossible. I am not as I was. I can
listen to almost any thing now quite calmly. But never let me hear such a
wicked thing again."</p>
<p>"You must not go on like that, Erema, unless you wish to lose all your
friends. No one can help being sorry for you. Very few girls have been
placed as you are. I am sure when I think of my own daughters I can never
be too thankful. But the very first thing you have to learn, above all
things, is to control yourself."</p>
<p>"I know it—I know it, of course," I said; "and I keep on trying my
very best. I am thoroughly ashamed of what I said, and I hope you will try
to forgive me."</p>
<p>"A very slight exertion is enough for that. But now, my dear, what I want
to know is this—and you will excuse me if I ask too much—what
good do you expect to get by going thus to London? Have you any friend
there, any body to trust, any thing settled as to what you are to do?"</p>
<p>"Yes, every thing is settled in my own mind," I answered, very bravely: "I
have the address of a very good woman, found among my father's papers, who
nursed his children and understood his nature, and always kept her faith
in him. There must be a great many more who do the same, and she will be
sure to know them and introduce me to them; and I shall be guided by their
advice."</p>
<p>"But suppose that this excellent woman is dead, or not to be found, or has
changed her opinion?"</p>
<p>"Her opinion she never could change. But if she is not to be found, I
shall find her husband, or her children, or somebody; and besides that, I
have a hundred things to do. I have the address of the agent through whom
my father drew his income, though Uncle Sam let me know as little as he
could. And I know who his bankers were (when he had a bank), and he may
have left important papers there."</p>
<p>"Come, that looks a little more sensible, my dear; bankers may always be
relied upon. And there may be some valuable plate, Erema. But why not let
the Major go with you? His advice is so invaluable."</p>
<p>"I know that it is, in all ordinary things. But I can not have him now,
for a very simple reason. He has made up his mind about my dear father—horribly,
horribly; I can't speak of it. And he never changes his mind; and
sometimes when I look at him I hate him."</p>
<p>"Erema, you are quite a violent girl, although you so seldom show it. Is
the whole world divided, then, into two camps—those who think as you
wish and those who are led by their judgment to think otherwise? And are
you to hate all who do not think as you wish?"</p>
<p>"No, because I do not hate you," I said; "I love you, though you do not
think as I wish. But that is only because you think your husband must be
right of course. But I can not like those who have made up their minds
according to their own coldness."</p>
<p>"Major Hockin is not cold at all. On the contrary, he is a warm-hearted
man—I might almost say hot-hearted."</p>
<p>"Yes, I know he is. And that makes it ten times worse. He takes up every
body's case—but mine."</p>
<p>"Sad as it is, you almost make me smile," my hostess answered, gravely;
"and yet it must be very bitter for you, knowing how just and kind my
husband is. I am sure that you will give him credit for at least desiring
to take your part. And doing so, at least you might let him go with you,
if only as a good protection."</p>
<p>"I have no fear of any one; and I might take him into society that he
would not like. In a good cause he would go any where, I know. But in my
cause, of course he would be scrupulous. Your kindness I always can rely
upon, and I hope in the end to earn his as well."</p>
<p>"My dear, he has never been unkind to you. I am certain that you never can
say that of him. Major Hockin unkind to a poor girl like you!"</p>
<p>"The last thing I wish to claim is any body's pity," I answered, less
humbly than I should have spoken, though the pride was only in my tone,
perhaps. "If people choose to pity me, they are very good, and I am not at
all offended, because—because they can not help it, perhaps, from
not knowing any thing about me. I have nothing whatever to be pitied for,
except that I have lost my father, and have nobody left to care for me,
except Uncle Sam in America."</p>
<p>"Your Uncle Sam, as you call him, seems to be a very wonderful man,
Erema," said Mrs. Hockin, craftily, so far as there could be any craft in
her; "I never saw him—a great loss on my part. But the Major went up
to meet him somewhere, and came home with the stock of his best tie
broken, and two buttons gone from his waistcoat. Does Uncle Sam make
people laugh so much? or is it that he has some extraordinary gift of
inducing people to taste whiskey? My husband is a very—most
abstemious man, as you must be well aware, Miss Wood, or we never should
have been as we are, I am sure. But, for the first time in all my life, I
doubted his discretion on the following day, when he had—what shall
I say?—when he had been exchanging sentiments with Uncle Sam."</p>
<p>"Uncle Sam never takes too much in any way," I replied to this new attack;
"he knows what he ought to take, and then he stops. Do you think that it
may have been his 'sentiments,' perhaps, that were too strong and large
for the Major?"</p>
<p>"Erema!" cried Mrs. Hockin, with amazement, as if I had no right to think
or express my thoughts on life so early; "if you can talk politics at
eighteen, you are quite fit to go any where. I have heard a great deal of
American ladies, and seen not a little of them, as you know. But I thought
that you called yourself an English girl, and insisted particularly upon
it."</p>
<p>"Yes, that I do; and I have good reason. I am born of an old English
family, and I hope to be no disgrace to it. But being brought up in a
number of ways, as I have been without thinking of it, and being quite
different from the fashionable girls Major Hockin likes to walk with—"</p>
<p>"My dear, he never walks with any body but myself!"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I remember! I was thinking of the deck. There are no fashionable
girls here yet. Till the terrace is built, and the esplanade—"</p>
<p>"There shall be neither terrace nor esplanade if the Major is to do such
things upon them."</p>
<p>"I am sure that he never would," I replied; "it was only their dresses
that he liked at all, and that very, to my mind, extraordinary style, as
well as unbecoming. You know what I mean, Mrs. Hockin, that wonderful—what
shall I call it?—way of looping up."</p>
<p>"Call me 'Aunt Mary,' my dear, as you did when the waves were so dreadful.
You mean that hideous Mexican poncho, as they called it, stuck up here,
and going down there. Erema, what observation you have! Nothing ever seems
to escape you. Did you ever see any thing so indecorous?"</p>
<p>"It made me feel just as if I ought not to look at them," I answered, with
perfect truth, for so it did; "I have never been accustomed to such
things. But seeing how the Major approved of them, and liked to be walking
up and down between them, I knew that they must be not only decorous, but
attractive. There is no appeal from his judgment, is there?"</p>
<p>"I agree with him upon every point, my dear child; but I have always
longed to say a few words about that. For I can not help thinking that he
went too far."</p>
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