<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Robina’s</span> letter was dated
Monday evening, and reached us Tuesday morning.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>“I hope you caught your train,” she wrote.
“Veronica did not get back till half-past six. She
informed me that you and she had found a good deal to talk about,
and that ‘one thing had led to another.’ She is
a quaint young imp, but I think your lecture must have done her
good. Her present attitude is that of gentle forbearance to
all around her—not without its dignity. She has not
snorted once, and at times is really helpful. I have given
her an empty scribbling diary we found in your desk, and most of
her spare time she remains shut up with it in the bedroom.
She tells me you and she are writing a book together. I
asked her what about. She waved me aside with the assurance
that I would know ‘all in good time,’ and that it was
going to do good. I caught sight of just the title-page
last night. It was lying open on the dressing-table:
‘Why the Man in the Moon looks sat upon.’ It
sounds like a title of yours. But I would not look further,
though tempted. She has drawn a picture underneath.
It is really not bad. The old gentleman really does look
sat upon, and intensely disgusted.</p>
<p>“‘Sir Robert’—his name being Theodore,
which doesn’t seem to suit him—turns out to be the
only son of a widow, a Mrs. Foy, our next-door neighbour to the
south. We met her coming out of church on Sunday
morning. She was still crying. Dick took Veronica on
ahead, and I walked part of the way home with them. Her
grandfather, it appears, was killed many years ago by the
bursting of a boiler; and she is haunted, poor lady, by the
conviction that Theodore is the inheritor of an hereditary
tendency to getting himself blown up. She attaches no blame
to us, seeing in Saturday’s catastrophe only the hand of
the Family Curse. I tried to comfort her with the idea that
the Curse having spent itself upon a futile effort, nothing
further need now be feared from it; but she persists in taking
the gloomier view that in wrecking our kitchen, Theodore’s
‘Doom,’ as she calls it, was merely indulging in a
sort of dress rehearsal; the finishing performance may be relied
upon to follow. It sounds ridiculous, but the poor woman
was so desperately in earnest that when an unlucky urchin, coming
out of a cottage we were passing, tripped on the doorstep and let
fall a jug, we both screamed at the same time, and were equally
surprised to find ‘Sir Robert’ still between us and
all in one piece. I thought it foolish to discuss all this
before the child himself; but did not like to stop her. As
a result, he regards himself evidently as the chosen foe of
Heaven, and is not, unnaturally, proud of himself. She
called here this (Monday) afternoon to leave cards; and, at her
request, I showed her the kitchen and the mat over which he had
stumbled. She seemed surprised that the ‘Doom’
had let slip so favourable a chance of accomplishing its
business, and gathered from the fact added cause for
anxiety. Evidently something much more thorough is in store
for Master Theodore. It was only half a pound of gunpowder,
she told me. Doctor Smallboy’s gardener had bought it
for the purpose of raising the stump of an old elm-tree, and had
left it for a moment on the grass while he had returned to the
house for more brown paper. She seemed pleased with the
gardener, who, as she said, might, if dishonestly inclined, have
charged her for a pound. I wanted to pay for—at all
events—our share, but she would not take a penny. Her
late lamented grandfather she regards as the person responsible
for the entire incident, and perhaps it may be as well not to
disturb her view. Had I suggested it, I feel sure she would
have seen the justice of her providing us with a new kitchen
range.</p>
<p>“Wildly exaggerated accounts of the affair are flying
round the neighbourhood; and my chief fear is that Veronica may
discover she is a local celebrity. Your sudden
disappearance is supposed to have been heavenward. An old
farm labourer who saw you pass on your way to the station speaks
of you as ‘the ghost of the poor gentleman himself;’
and fragments of clothing found anywhere within a radius of two
miles are being preserved, I am told, as specimens of your
remains. Boots would appear to have been your chief
apparel. Seven pairs have already been collected from the
surrounding ditches. Among the more public-spirited there
is talk of using you to start a local museum.”</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>These first three paragraphs I did not read to
Ethelbertha. Fortunately they just filled the first sheet,
which I took an opportunity of slipping into my pocket
unobserved.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>“The new boy arrived on Sunday morning,” she
continued. “His name—if I have got it
right—is William. Anyhow, that is the nearest I can
get to it. His other name, if any, I must leave you to
extract from him yourself. It may be Berkshire that he
talks, but it sounds more like barking. Please excuse the
pun; but I have just been talking to him for half an hour, trying
to make him understand that I want him to go home, and maybe, as
a result, I am feeling a little hysterical. Anything more
rural I cannot imagine. But he is anxious to learn, and a
fairly wide field is in front of him. I caught him after
our breakfast on Sunday calmly throwing everything left over onto
the dust-heap. I pointed out to him the wickedness of
wasting nourishing food, and impressed upon him that the proper
place for victuals was inside us. He never answers.
He stands stock still, with his mouth as wide open as it will
go—which is saying a good deal—and one trusts that
one’s words are entering into him. All Sunday
afternoon he was struggling valiantly against an almost
supernatural sleepiness. After tea he got worse, and I
began to think he would be no use to me. We none of us ate
much supper; and Dick, who appears able to understand him, helped
him to carry the things out. I heard them talking, and then
Dick came back and closed the door behind him. ‘He
wants to know,’ said Dick, ‘if he can leave the
corned beef over till to-morrow. Because, if he eats it all
to-night, he doesn’t think he will be able to walk
home.’</p>
<p>“Veronica takes great interest in him. She has
evidently a motherly side to her character, for which we none of
us have given her credit. She says she is sure there is
good in him. She sits beside him while he chops wood, and
tells him carefully selected stories, calculated, she argues, to
develop his intelligence. She is careful, moreover, not to
hurt his feelings by any display of superiority. ‘Of
course, anyone leading a useful life, such as yours,’ I
overheard her saying to him this morning, ‘don’t
naturally get much time for reading. I’ve nothing
else to do, you see, ’cept to improve myself.’</p>
<p>“The donkey arrived this afternoon while I was
out—galloping, I am given to understand, with ’Opkins
on his back. There seems to be some secret between those
two. We have tried him with hay, and we have tried him with
thistles; but he seems to prefer bread-and-butter. I have
not been able as yet to find out whether he takes tea or coffee
in the morning. But he is an animal that evidently knows
his own mind, and fortunately both are in the house. We are
putting him up for to-night with the cow, who greeted him at
first with enthusiasm and wanted to adopt him, but has grown cold
to him since on discovering that he is not a calf. I have
been trying to make friends with her, but she is so very
unresponsive. She doesn’t seem to want anything but
grass, and prefers to get that for herself. She
doesn’t seem to want to be happy ever again.</p>
<p>“A funny thing happened in church. I was
forgetting to tell you. The St. Leonards occupy two pews at
the opposite end from the door. They were all there when we
arrived, with the exception of the old gentleman himself.
He came in just before the ‘Dearly Beloved,’ when
everybody was standing up. A running fire of suppressed
titters followed him up the aisle, and some of the people laughed
outright. I could see no reason why. He looked a
dignified old gentleman in his grey hair and tightly buttoned
frock coat, which gives him a somewhat military appearance.
But when he came level with our pew I understood. Hurrying
back from his morning round, and with no one there to superintend
him, the dear old absent-minded thing had forgotten to change his
breeches. From a little above the knee upward he was a
perfect Christian; but his legs were just those of a disreputable
sinner.</p>
<p>“‘What’s the joke?’ he whispered to me
as he passed—I was in the corner seat. ‘Have I
missed it?’</p>
<p>“We called round on them after lunch, and at once I was
appealed to for my decision.</p>
<p>“‘Now, here’s a plain sensible girl,’
exclaimed the old gentleman the moment I entered the
room.’ (You will notice I put no comma after
‘plain.’ I am taking it he did not intend
one. You can employ one adjective to qualify another,
can’t you?) ‘And I will put it to her, What
difference can it make to the Almighty whether I go to church in
trousers or in breeches?’</p>
<p>“‘I do not see,’ retorted Mrs. St. Leonard
somewhat coldly, ‘that Miss Robina is in any better
position than myself to speak with authority on the views of the
Almighty’—which I felt was true. ‘If it
makes no difference to the Almighty, then why not, for my sake,
trousers?’</p>
<p>“‘The essential thing,’ he persisted,
‘is a contrite heart.’ He was getting very
cross.</p>
<p>“‘It may just as well be dressed
respectably,’ was his wife’s opinion. He left
the room, slamming the door.</p>
<p>“I do like Janie the more and more I see of her. I
do hope she will let me get real chums with her. She does
me so much good. (I read that bit twice over to
Ethelbertha, pretending I had lost the place.) I suppose it
is having rather a silly mother and an unpractical father that
has made her so capable. If you and Little Mother had been
proper sort of parents I might have been quite a decent sort of
girl. But it’s too late finding fault with you
now. I suppose I must put up with you. She works so
hard, and is so unselfish. But she is not like some good
people, who make you feel it is hopeless your trying to be
good. She gets cross and impatient; and then she laughs at
herself, and gets right again that way. Poor Mrs. St.
Leonard! I cannot help feeling sorry for her. She
would have been so happy as the wife of a really respectable City
man, who would have gone off every morning with a flower in his
buttonhole and have worn a white waistcoat on Sundays. I
don’t believe what they say: that husbands and wives should
be the opposite of one another. Mr. St. Leonard ought to
have married a brainy woman, who would have discussed philosophy
with him, and have been just as happy drinking beer out of a
tea-cup: you know the sort I mean. If ever I marry it will
be a short-tempered man who loves music and is a good dancer; and
if I find out too late that he’s clever I’ll run away
from him.</p>
<p>“Dick has not yet come home—nearly eight
o’clock. Veronica is supposed to be in bed, but I can
hear things falling. Poor boy! I expect he’ll
be tired; but to-day is an exception. Three hundred sheep
have had to be brought all the way from Ilsley, and must be
‘herded’—I fancy it is called—before
anybody can think of supper. I saw to it that he had a good
dinner.</p>
<p>“And now to come to business. Young Bute has been
here all day, and has only just left. He is coming down
again on Friday—which, by the way, don’t forget is
Mrs. St. Leonard’s ‘At Home’ day. She
hopes she may then have the pleasure of making your acquaintance,
and thinks that possibly there may be present one or two people
we may like to know. From which I gather that half the
neighbourhood has been specially invited to meet you. So
mind you bring a frock-coat; and if Little Mother can put her
hand easily on my pink muslin with the spots—it is either
in my wardrobe or else in the bottom drawer in Veronica’s
room, if it isn’t in the cardboard box underneath
mother’s bed—you might slip it into your bag.
But whatever you do don’t crush it. The sash I feel
sure mother put away somewhere herself. He sees no
reason—I’m talking now about young Bute,—if you
approve his plans, why work should not be commenced
immediately. Shall I write old Slee to meet you at the
house on Friday? From all accounts I don’t think
you’ll do better. He is on the spot, and they say he
is most reasonable. But you have to get estimates,
don’t you? He suggests—Mr. Bute, I
mean—throwing what used to be the dairy into the passage,
which will make a hall big enough for anything. We might
even give a dance in it, he thinks. But all this you will
be able to discuss with him on Friday. He has evidently
taken a great deal of pains, and some of his suggestions sound
sensible. But of course he must fully understand that it is
what we want, not what he thinks, that is important. I told
him you said I could have my room exactly as I liked it myself;
and I have explained to him my ideas. He seemed at first to
be under the impression that I didn’t know what I was
talking about, so I made it quite clear to him that I did, with
the result that he has consented to carry out my instructions, on
condition that I put them down in black and white—which I
think just as well, as then there can be no excuse afterwards for
argument. I like him better than I did the first
time. About everything else he can be fairly amiable.
It is when he talks about ‘frontal elevations’ and
‘ground plans’ that he irritates me. Tell
Little Mother that I’ll write her to-morrow.
Couldn’t she come down with you on Friday? Everything
will be ship-shape by then; and—”</p>
<p>The remainder was of a nature more private. She
concluded with a postscript, which also I did not read to
Ethelbertha.</p>
<p>“Thought I had finished telling you everything, when
quite a stylish rat-tat sounded on the door. I placed an
old straw hat of Dick’s in a prominent position, called
loudly to an imaginary ‘John’ not to go without the
letters, and then opened it. He turned out to be the local
reporter. I need not have been alarmed. He was much
the more nervous of the two, and was so full of excuses that had
I not come to his rescue I believe he would have gone away
forgetting what he’d come for. Nothing save an
overwhelming sense of duty to the Public (with a capital P) could
have induced him to inflict himself upon me. Could I give
him a few details which would enable him to set rumour
right? I immediately saw visions of headlines:
‘Domestic Tragedy!’ ‘Eminent Author blown
up by his own Daughter!’ ‘Once Happy Home now a
Mere Wreck!’ It seemed to me our only plan was to
enlist this amiable young man upon our side; I hope I did not
overdo it. My idea was to convey the impression that one
glance at him had convinced me he was the best and noblest of
mankind; that I felt I could rely upon his wit and courage to
save us from a notoriety that, so far as I was concerned, would
sadden my whole life; and that if he did so eternal gratitude and
admiration would be the least I could lay at his feet. I
can be nice when I try. People have said so. We
parted with only a pressure of the hand, and I hope he
won’t get into trouble, but I see <i>The Berkshire
Courier</i> is going to be deprived of its prey. Dick has
just come in. He promises to talk when he has finished
eating.”</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>Dick’s letter, for which Ethelbertha seemed to be
strangely impatient, reached us on Wednesday morning.</p>
<p>“If ever you want to find out, Dad, what hard work
really means, you try farming,” wrote Dick; “and yet
I believe you would like it. Hasn’t some old Johnny
somewhere described it as the poetry of the ploughshare?
Why did we ever take to bothering about anything
else—shutting ourselves up in stuffy offices, worrying
ourselves to death about a lot of rubbish that isn’t any
good to anybody? I wish I could put it properly, Dad; you
would see just what I mean. Why don’t we live in
simply-built houses and get most everything we want out of the
land: which we easily could? You take a dozen poor devils
away from walking behind the plough and put them down into
coal-mines, and set them running about half-naked among a lot of
roaring furnaces, and between them they turn out a machine that
does the ploughing for them. What is the sense of it?
Of course some things are useful. I would like a motor-car,
and railways and steamboats are all right; but it seems to me
that half the fiddle-faddles we fancy we want we’d be just
as well, if not better, without, and there would be all that time
and energy to spare for the sort of things that everybody ought
to have. It’s everywhere just like it was at
school. They kept us so hard at it, studying Greek roots,
we hadn’t time to learn English grammar. Look at
young Dennis Yewbury. He’s got two thousand acres up
in Scotland. He could lead a jolly life turning the place
into some real use. Instead of which he lets it all run to
waste for nothing but to breed a few hundred birds that
wouldn’t keep a single family alive; while he works from
morning till night at humbugging people in a beastly hole in the
City, just to fill his house with a host of silly gim-cracks and
dress up himself and his women-folk like peacocks. Of
course we would always want clever chaps like you to tell us
stories; and doctors we couldn’t do without, though I guess
if we were leading sensible lives we’d be able to get along
with about half of them. It seems to me that what we want
is a comfortable home, enough to eat and drink, and a few fal-lal
sort of things to make the girls look pretty; and that all the
rest is rot. We would all of us have time then to think and
play a bit, and if we were all working fairly at something really
useful and were contented with our own share, there’d be
enough for everybody.</p>
<p>“I suppose this is all nonsense, but I wish it
wasn’t. Anyway, it’s what I mean to do myself;
and I’m awfully much obliged to you, Dad, for giving me
this chance. You’ve hit the right nail on the head
this time. Farming was what I was meant for; I feel
it. I would have hated being a barrister, setting people by
the ears and making my living out of other people’s
troubles. Being a farmer you feel that in doing good to
yourself you are doing good all round. Miss Janie agrees
with all I say. I think she is one of the most sensible
girls I have ever come across, and Robin likes her awfully.
So is the old man: he’s a brick. I think he has taken
a liking to me, and I know I have to him. He’s the
dearest old fellow imaginable. The very turnips he seems to
think of as though they were so many rows of little
children. And he makes you see the inside of things.
Take fields now, for instance. I used to think a field was
just a field. You scraped it about and planted it with
seeds, and everything else depended on the weather. Why,
Dad, it’s alive! There are good fields that want to
get on—that are grateful for everything you do for them,
and take a pride in themselves. And there are brutes of
fields that you feel you want to kick. You can waste a
hundred pounds’ worth of manure on them, and it only makes
them more stupid than they were before. One of our
fields—a wizened-looking eleven-acre strip bordering the
Fyfield road—he has christened Mrs. Gummidge: it seems to
feel everything more than any other field. From whatever
point of the compass the wind blows that field gets the most harm
from it. You would think to look at it after a storm that
there hadn’t been any rain in any other field—that
that particular field must have got it all; while two days’
sunshine has the effect upon it that a six weeks’ drought
would on any other field. His theory (he must have a theory
to account for everything; it comforts him. He has just hit
upon a theory that explains why twins are born with twice as much
original sin as other children, and doesn’t seem to mind
now what they do) is that each odd corner of the earth has gained
a character of its own from the spirits of the countless dead men
buried in its bosom. ‘Robbers and thieves,’ he
will say, kicking the sod of some field all stones and thistles;
‘silly fighting men who thought God built the world merely
to give them the fun of knocking it about. Look at them,
the fools! stones and thistles—thistles and stones: that is
their notion of a field.’ Or, leaning over the gate
of some field of rich-smelling soil, he will stretch out his arms
as though to caress it: ‘Brave lads!’ he will say;
‘kindly honest fellows who loved the poor peasant
folk.’ I fancy he has not got much sense of humour;
or if he has, it is a humour he leaves you to find out for
yourself. One does not feel one wants to laugh, listening
even to his most whimsical ideas; and anyhow it is a fact that of
two fields quite close to one another, one will be worth ten
pounds an acre and the other dear at half a crown, and there
seems to be nothing to explain it. We have a seven-acre
patch just halfway up the hill. He says he never passes it
without taking off his hat to it. Whatever you put in it
does well; while other fields, try them with what you will, it is
always the very thing they did not want. You might fancy
them fractious children, always crying for the other
child’s bun. There is really no reason for its being
such a good field, except its own pluck. It faces the east,
and the wood for half the day hides it from the sun; but it makes
the best of everything, and even on the greyest day it seems to
be smiling at you. ‘Some happy-hearted Mother
Thing—a singer of love songs the while she toiled,’
he will have it, must lie sleeping there. By-the-bye, what
a jolly field Janie would make! Don’t you think so,
Dad?</p>
<p>“What the dickens, Dad, have you done to Veronica?
She wanders about everywhere with an exercise book in her hand,
and when you say anything to her, instead of answering you back,
she sits plump down wherever she is and writes for all
she’s worth. She won’t say what she’s up
to. She says it’s a private matter between you and
her, and that later on things are going to be seen in their true
light. I told her this morning what I thought of her for
forgetting to feed the donkey. I was prepared, of course,
for a hundred explanations: First, that she had meant to feed the
donkey; secondly, that it wasn’t her place to feed the
donkey; thirdly, that the donkey would have been fed if
circumstances over which she had no control had not arisen
rendering it impossible for her to feed the donkey; fourthly,
that the morning wasn’t the proper time to feed the donkey,
and so on. Instead of which, out she whips this ridiculous
book and asks me if I would mind saying it over again.</p>
<p>“I keep forgetting to ask Janie what it is he has been
accustomed to. We have tried him with thistles, and
we’ve tried him with hay. The thistles he scratches
himself against; but for the hay he appears to have no use
whatever. Robin thinks his idea is to save us
trouble. We are not to get in anything especially for
him—whatever we may happen to be having ourselves he will
put up with. Bread-and-butter cut thick, or a slice of cake
with an apple seems to be his notion of a light lunch; and for
drink he fancies tea out of a slop-basin, with two knobs of sugar
and plenty of milk. Robin says it’s waste of time
taking his meals out to him. She says she is going to train
him to come in when he hears the gong. We use the alarm
clock at present for a gong. I don’t know what I
shall do when the cow goes away. She wakes me every morning
punctually at half-past four, but I’m in a blue funk that
one of these days she will oversleep herself. It is one of
those clocks you read about. You wrote something rather
funny about one once yourself, but I always thought you had
invented it. I bought it because they said it was an extra
loud one, and so it is. The thing that’s wrong about
it is that, do what you will, you can’t get it to go off
before six o’clock in the morning. I set it on Sunday
evening for half-past four—we farmers do have to work, I
can tell you. But it’s worth it. I had no idea
that the world was so beautiful. There is a light you never
see at any other time, and the whole air seems to be full of
fluttering song. You feel—but you must get up and
come out with me, Dad. I can’t describe it. If
it hadn’t been for the good old cow, Lord knows what time
I’d have been up. The clock went off at half-past
four in the afternoon, just as they were sitting down to tea, and
frightened them all out of their skins. We have fiddled
about with it all we know, but there’s no getting it to do
anything between six p.m. and six am. Anything you want of
it in the daytime it is quite agreeable to. But it seems to
have fixed its own working hours, and isn’t going to be
bustled out of its proper rest. I got so mad with it myself
I wanted to pitch it out of the window, but Robin thought we
ought to keep it till you came, that perhaps you might be able to
do something with it—writing something about it, she
means. I said I thought alarm clocks were pretty well
played out by this time; but, as she says, there is always a new
generation coming along to whom almost everything must be
fresh. Anyhow, the confounded thing cost seven and six, and
seems to be no good for anything else.</p>
<p>“Whatever was it that you really did say to Robin about
her room? Young Bute came round to me on Monday quite upset
about it. He says it is going to be all windows, and will
look, when finished, like an incorrect copy of the Eddystone
lighthouse. He says there will be no place for the bed, and
if there is to be a fireplace at all it will have to be in the
cupboard, and that the only way, so far as he can see, of her
getting in and out of it will be by a door through the
bathroom. She said that you said she could have it entirely
to her own idea, and that he was just to carry out her
instructions; but, as he points out, you can’t have a room
in a house as if the rest of the house wasn’t there, even
if it is your own room. Nobody, it seems, will be able to
have a bath without first talking it over with her, and arranging
a time mutually convenient. I told him I was sure you never
meant him to do anything absurd; and that his best plan would be
to go straight back to her, explain to her that she’d been
talking like a silly goat—he could have put it politely, of
course—and that he wasn’t going to pay any attention
to her. You might have thought I had suggested his walking
into a den of lions and pulling all their tails. I
don’t know what Robin has done to him, but he seems quite
frightened of her. I had to promise that I would talk to
her. He’d better have done it himself. I only
told her just what he said, and off she went in one of her
tantrums. You know her style: If she liked to live in a
room where she could see to do her hair that was no business of
his, and if he couldn’t design a plain, simple bedroom that
wasn’t going to look ridiculous and make her the
laughing-stock of all the neighbourhood, then the Royal Institute
of British Architects must have strange notions of the sort of
person entitled to go about the country building houses; that if
he thought the proper place for a fire was in a cupboard, she
didn’t; that his duty was to carry out the instructions of
his employers, and if he imagined for a moment she was going to
consent to remain shut up in her room till everybody in the house
had finished bathing it would be better for us to secure the
services of somebody possessed of a little commonsense; that next
time she met him she would certainly tell him what she thought of
him, also that she should certainly decline to hold any further
communication with him again; that she doesn’t want a
bedroom now of any sort—perhaps she may be permitted a
shakedown in the pantry, or perhaps Veronica will allow her an
occasional night’s rest with her, and if not it
doesn’t matter. You’ll have to talk to her
yourself. I’m not going to say any more.</p>
<p>“Don’t forget that Friday is the St.
Leonards’ ‘At Home’ day. I’ve
promised Janie that you shall be there in all your best
clothes. (Don’t tell her I’m calling her
Janie. It might offend her. But nobody calls her Miss
St. Leonard.) Everybody is coming, and all the children are
having their hair washed. You will have it all your own way
down here. There’s no other celebrity till you get to
Boss Croker, the Tammany man, the other side of Ilsley
Downs. Artists they don’t count. The rumour was
all round the place last week that you were here incognito in the
person of a dismal-looking Johnny, staying at the
‘Fisherman’s Retreat,’ who used to sit all day
in a punt up the backwater drinking whisky. It made me
rather mad when I saw him. I suppose it was the whisky that
suggested the idea to them. They have got the notion in
these parts that a literary man is a sort of inspired
tramp. A Mrs. Jaggerswade—or some such
name—whom I met here on Sunday and who is coming on Friday,
took me aside and asked me ‘what sort of things’ you
said when you talked? She said she felt sure it would be so
clever, and, herself, she was looking forward to it; but would
I—‘quite between ourselves’—advise her to
bring the children.</p>
<p>“I say, you will have to talk seriously to
Veronica. Country life seems to agree with her.
She’s taken to poaching already—she and the
twins. It was the one sin that hitherto they had never
committed, and I fancy the old man was feeling proud of
this. Luckily I caught them coming home—with ten dead
rabbits strung on a pole, the twins carrying it between them on
their shoulders, suggesting the picture of the spies returning
from the promised land with that bunch of grapes—Veronica
scouting on ahead with, every ten yards, her ear to the ground,
listening for hostile footsteps. The thing that troubled
her most was that she hadn’t heard me coming; she seemed to
fear that something had gone wrong with the laws of Nature.
They had found the whole collection hanging from a tree, and had
persuaded themselves that Providence must have been expecting
them. I insisted on their going back with me and showing me
the tree, much to their disgust. And fortunately the keeper
wasn’t about—they are men that love making a
row. I talked some fine moral sentiment to her. But
she says you have told her that it doesn’t matter whether
you are good or bad, things happen to you just the same; and this
being so she feels she may as well enjoy herself. I asked
her why she never seemed able to enjoy herself being good—I
believe if I’d always had a kid to bring up I’d have
been a model chap myself by this time. Her answer was that
she supposed she was born bad. I pointed out to her that
was a reflection on you and Little Mother; and she answered she
guessed she must be a ‘throw-back.’ Old
Slee’s got a dog that ought to have been a fox-terrier, but
isn’t, and he seems to have been explaining things to
her.</p>
<p>“A thing that will trouble you down here, Dad, is the
cruelty of the country. They catch these poor little
wretches in traps, leaving them sometimes for days suffering what
must be to them nothing short of agony—to say nothing of
the terror and the hunger. I tried putting my finger in one
of the beastly things and keeping it there for just two minutes
by my watch. It seemed like twenty. The pain grows
more intense with every second, and I’m not a soft, as you
know. I’ve lain half an hour with a broken leg, and
that wasn’t as bad. One hears the little creatures
screaming, but cannot find them. Of course when one draws
near they keep silent. It makes one quite dislike country
people. They are so callous. When you speak to them
about it they only grin. Janie goes nearly mad about
it. Mr. St. Leonard tried to get the clergyman to say
something on the subject, but he answered that he thought it
better ‘for the Church to confine herself to the
accomplishment of her own great mission.’ Ass!</p>
<p>“Bring Little Mother down; we want to show her off on
Friday. And make her put on something pretty. Ask her
if she’s got that lilac thing with lace she wore at
Cambridge for the May Week the year before last. Tell her
not to be silly; it wasn’t a bit too young. Nash said
she looked like something out of an old picture, and he’s
going to be an artist. Don’t let her dress
herself. She doesn’t understand it. And will
you get me a gun—”</p>
<p>The remainder of the letter was taken up with instructions
concerning the gun. It seemed a complicated sort of
gun. I wished I hadn’t read about the gun to
Ethelbertha. It made her nervous for the rest of the
day.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>Veronica’s letter followed on Thursday morning. I
read it going down in the train. In transcribing I have
thought it better, as regards the spelling, to adopt the more
conventional forms.</p>
<div class="gapspace"> </div>
<p>“You will be pleased to hear,” Veronica wrote,
“that we are all quite well. Robin works very
hard. But I think it does her good. And of course I
help her. All I can. I am glad she has got a
boy. To do the washing-up. I think that was too much
for her. It used to make her cross. One cannot blame
her. It is trying work. And it makes you mucky.
He is a good boy. But has been neglected. So
doesn’t know much. I am teaching him grammar.
He says ‘you was’ and ‘her be.’ But
is getting better. He says he went to school. But
they couldn’t have taken any trouble with him. Could
they? The system, I suppose, was rotten. Robina says
I mustn’t overdo it. Because you want him to talk
Berkshire. So I propose confining our attention to the
elementary rules. He had never heard of Robinson
Crusoe. What a life! We went to church on
Sunday. I could not find my gloves. And Robina was
waxy. But Mr. St. Leonard came without his trousers.
Which was worse. We found them in the evening. The
little boy that blew up our stove was there with his
mother. But I didn’t speak to her. He’s
got a doom. That’s what made him blow it up. He
couldn’t help it. So you see it wasn’t my
fault. After all. His grandfather was blown up.
And he’s going to be blown up again. Later on.
But he is very brave. And is going to make a will. I
like all the St. Leonards very much. We went there to tea
on Sunday. And Mr. St. Leonard said I was bright. I
think Miss Janie very beautiful. And so does Dick.
She makes me think of angels. So she does Dick. And
he says she is so kind to her little brothers and sisters.
It is a good sign. I think she ought to marry Dick.
It would steady him. He works very hard. But I think
it does him good. We have breakfast at seven. And I
lay the table. It is very beautiful in the morning.
When you are once up. Mrs. St. Leonard has twins.
They are a great anxiety to her. But she would not part
from them. She has had much trouble. And is sometimes
very sad. I like the girl best. Her name is
Winnie. She is more like a boy. His name is
Wilfrid. But sometimes they change clothes. Then
you’re done. They are only nearly seven. But
they know a lot. They are going to teach me swimming.
Is it not kind of them? The two older boys are at home for
their holidays. But they give themselves a lot of
airs. And they called me a flapper. I told him
he’d be sorry. When he was a man. Because
perhaps I’d grow up beautiful. And then he’d
fall in love with me. But he said he wouldn’t.
So I let him see what I thought of him. The little girl is
very nice. She is about my own age. Her name is
Sally. We are going to write a play. But we
sha’n’t let Bertie act in it. Unless he turns
over a new leaf. I’m going to be a princess that
doesn’t know it. But only feels it. And
she’s going to be a wicked witch. What wants me to
marry her son. What’s a sight. But I
won’t, because I’d rather die first. And am in
love with a swineherd. That is a genius. Only nobody
suspects it. I wear a crown in the last act. And
everybody rejoices. Except her. I think it will be
good. We have nearly finished the first act. She
writes very well. And has a sense of atmosphere. And
I tell her what to say. Miss Janie is going to make me a
dress with a train. And gold spangles. And Robina is
going to lend me her blue necklace. Anything will do of
course for the old witch. So it won’t be much trouble
to anyone. Mr. Bute is going to paint us some
scenery. And we are going to invite everybody. He is
very nice. Robina says he thinks too much of himself.
By a long chalk. But she is very critical where men are
concerned. She admits it. She says she can’t
help it. I find him very affable. And so does
Dick. We think Robina will get over it. And he has
promised not to be angry with her. Because I have told him
that she does not mean it. It is only her way. She
says she feels it is unjust of her. Because really he is
rather charming. I told him that. And he said I was a
dear little girl. He is going to get me a real crown.
Robina says he has nice eyes. I told him that. And he
laughed. There is a gentleman comes here that I think is in
love with Robina. But I shouldn’t say anything to her
about it. If I was you. She is very snappy about
it. He is not handsome. But he looks good. He
writes for the papers. But I don’t think he is
rich. And Robina is very nice to him. Until
he’s gone. Then she gets mad. It all began with
the explosion. So perhaps it was fate. He is going to
keep it out of the papers. As much as he can. But of
course he owes a duty to the public. I am going to decline
to see him. I think it better. Mr. Slee says
everything will be in apple-pie order to-morrow. So you can
come down. And we are going to have Irish stew. And
roly-poly pudding. It will be a change. He is very
nice. And says he was always in trouble himself when he was
a little boy. It’s all experience. We are all
going on Friday to a party at Mr. St. Leonard’s. And
you have got to come too. Robina says I can wear my new
frock. But we can’t find the sash. It is very
strange. Because I remember having seen it. You
didn’t take it for anything, did you? We shall have
to get a new one, I suppose. It is very annoying. My
new shoes have also not worn well. And they ought to
have. Because Robina says they were expensive. The
donkey has come. And he is sweet. He eats out of my
hand. And lets me kiss him. But he won’t
go. He goes a little when you shout at him. Very
loud. Me and Robina went for a drive yesterday after
tea. And Dick ran beside. And shouted. But he
got hoarse. And then he wouldn’t go no more.
And Robina did not like it. Because Dick shouted swear
words. He says they come naturally to you when you
shout. And Robina said it was horrible. And that
people would hear him. So we got out. And pushed him
home. But he is very strong. And we were all very
tired. And Robina says she hates him. Dick is going
to give Mr. ’Opkins half a crown. To tell him how he
makes him go. Because Mr. ’Opkins makes him
gallop. Robina says it must be hypnotism. But Dick
thinks it might be something simpler. I think Mr.
’Opkins very nice. He says you promised to lend him a
book. What would help him to talk like a real country
boy. So I have lent him a book about a window. By Mr.
Bane. What came to see us last year. It has a lot of
funny words in it. And he is going to learn them up.
But he don’t know what they mean. No more do I.
I have written a lot of the book. It promises to be very
interesting. It is all a dream. He is just the
ordinary grown-up father. Neither better nor worse.
And he goes up and up. It is a pleasant sensation.
Till he reaches the moon. And there everything is
different. It is the children that know everything.
And are always right. And the grown-ups have to do all what
they tell them. They are kind but firm. It is very
good for him. And when he wakes up he is a better
man. I put down everything that occurs to me. Like
you suggested. There is quite a lot of it. And it
makes you see how unjustly children are treated. They said
I was to feed the donkey. Because it was my donkey.
And I fed him. And there wasn’t enough supper for
Dick. And Dick said I was an idiot. And Robina said I
wasn’t to feed him. And in the morning there
wasn’t anything to feed him on. Because he
won’t eat anything but bread-and-butter. And the
baker hadn’t come. And he wasn’t there.
Because the man that comes to milk the cow had left the door
open. And I was distracted. And Dick asked had I fed
him. And of course I hadn’t fed him. And lord
how Dick talked. Never waited to hear anything, mind
you. I let him talk. But it just shows you. We
are all very happy. But shall be pleased to see you.
Once again. The peppermint creams down here are not
good. And are very dear. Compared with London
prices. Isn’t this a good letter? You said I
was to always write just as I thought. So I’m doing
it. I think that’s all.”</p>
<p>I read selections from this letter aloud to Ethelbertha.
She said she was glad she had decided to come down with me.</p>
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