<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Had</span> all things gone as ordered, our
arrival at the St. Leonards’ on Friday afternoon would have
been imposing. It was our entrance, so to speak, upon the
local stage; and Robina had decided it was a case where small
economies ought not to be considered. The livery stable
proprietor had suggested a brougham, but that would have
necessitated one of us riding outside. I explained to
Robina that, in the country, this was usual; and Robina had
replied that much depended upon first impressions. Dick
would, in all probability, claim the place for himself; and, the
moment we were started, stick a pipe in his mouth. She
selected an open landau of quite an extraordinary size, painted
yellow. It looked to me an object more appropriate to a
Lord Mayor’s show than to the requirements of a Christian
family; but Robina seemed touchy on the subject, and I said no
more. It certainly was roomy. Old Glossop had turned
it out well, with a pair of greys—seventeen hands, I judged
them. The only thing that seemed wrong was the
coachman. I can’t explain why, but he struck me as
the class of youth one associates with a milk-cart.</p>
<p>We set out at a gentle trot. Veronica, who had been in
trouble most of the morning, sat stiffly on the extreme edge of
her seat, clothed in the attitude of one dead to the world; Dick,
in lavender gloves that Robina had thoughtfully bought for him,
next to her. Ethelbertha, Robina, and myself sat perched on
the back seat; to have leaned back would have been to lie
down. Ethelbertha, having made up her mind she was going to
dislike the whole family of the St. Leonards, seemed disinclined
for conversation. Myself I had forgotten my
cigar-case. I have tried the St. Leonard cigar. He
does not smoke himself; but keeps a box for his friends. He
tells me he fancies men are smoking cigars less than
formerly. I did not see how I was going to get a smoke for
the next three hours. Nothing annoys me more than being
bustled and made to forget things. Robina, who has recently
changed her views on the subject of freckles, shared a parasol
with her mother. They had to hold it almost horizontally in
front of them, and this obscured their view. I could not
myself understand why people smiled as we went by. Apart
from the carriage, which they must have seen before, we were not,
I should have said, an exhilarating spectacle. A party of
cyclists laughed outright. Robina said there was one thing
we should have to be careful about, living in the country, and
that was that the strong air and the loneliness combined
didn’t sap our intellect. She said she had noticed
it—the tendency of country people to become prematurely
silly. I did not share her fears, as I had by this time
divined what it was that was amusing folks. Dick had
discovered behind the cushions—remnant of some recent
wedding, one supposes—a large and tastefully bound Book of
Common Prayer. He and Veronica sat holding it between
them. Looking at their faces one could almost hear the
organ pealing.</p>
<p>Dick kept one eye on the parasol; and when, on passing into
shade, it was lowered, he and Veronica were watching with rapt
ecstasy the flight of swallows. Robina said she should tell
Mr. Glossop of the insults to which respectable people were
subject when riding in his carriage. She thought he ought
to take steps to prevent it. She likewise suggested that
the four of us, leaving the Little Mother in the carriage, should
walk up the hill. Ethelbertha said that she herself would
like a walk. She had been balancing herself on the edge of
a cushion with her feet dangling for two miles, and was
tired. She herself would have preferred a carriage made for
ordinary-sized people. Our coachman called attention to the
heat of the afternoon and the length of the hill, and recommended
our remaining where we were; but his advice was dismissed as
exhibiting want of feeling. Robina is, perhaps, a trifle
over-sympathetic where animals are concerned. I remember,
when they were children, her banging Dick over the head with the
nursery bellows because he would not agree to talk in a whisper
for fear of waking the cat. You can, of course, overdo
kindness to animals, but it is a fault on the right side; and, as
a rule, I do not discourage her. Veronica was allowed to
remain, owing to her bad knee. It is a most unfortunate
affliction. It comes on quite suddenly. There is
nothing to be seen; but the child’s face while she is
suffering from it would move a heart of stone. It had been
troubling her, so it appeared, all the morning; but she had said
nothing, not wishing to alarm her mother. Ethelbertha, who
thinks it may be hereditary—she herself having had an aunt
who had suffered from contracted ligament—fixed her up as
comfortably as the pain would permit with cushions in the centre
of the back seat; and the rest of us toiled after the
carriage.</p>
<p>I should not like to say for certain that horses have a sense
of humour, but I sometimes think they must. I had a horse
years ago who used to take delight in teasing girls. I can
describe it no other way. He would pick out a girl a
quarter of a mile off; always some haughty, well-dressed girl who
was feeling pleased with herself. As we approached he would
eye her with horror and astonishment. It was too marked to
escape notice. A hundred yards off he would be walking
sideways, backing away from her; I would see the poor lady
growing scarlet with the insult and annoyance of it.
Opposite to her, he would shy the entire width of the road, and
make pretence to bolt. Looking back I would see her vainly
appealing to surrounding nature for a looking-glass to see what
it was that had gone wrong with her.</p>
<p>“What is the matter with me,” she would be crying
to herself; “that the very beasts of the field should shun
me? Do they take me for a gollywog?”</p>
<p>Halfway up the hill, the off-side grey turned his head and
looked at us. We were about a couple of hundred yards
behind; it was a hot and dusty day. He whispered to the
near-side grey, and the near-side grey turned and looked at us
also. I knew what was coming. I’ve been played
the same trick before. I shouted to the boy, but it was too
late. They took the rest of the hill at a gallop and
disappeared over the brow. Had there been an experienced
coachman behind them, I should not have worried. Dick told
his mother not to be alarmed, and started off at fifteen miles an
hour. I calculated I was doing about ten, which for a
gentleman past his first youth, in a frock suit designed to
disguise rather than give play to the figure, I consider
creditable. Robina, undecided whether to go on ahead with
Dick or remain to assist her mother, wasted vigour by running
from one to the other. Ethelbertha’s one hope was
that she might reach the wreckage in time to receive
Veronica’s last wishes.</p>
<p>It was in this order that we arrived at the St.
Leonards’. Veronica, under an awning, sipping iced
sherbet, appeared to be the centre of the party. She was
recounting her experiences with a modesty that had already won
all hearts. The rest of us, she had explained, had
preferred walking, and would arrive later. She was
evidently pleased to see me, and volunteered the information that
the greys, to all seeming, had enjoyed their gallop.</p>
<p>I sent Dick back to break the good news to his mother.
Young Bute said he would go too. He said he was fresher
than Dick, and would get there first. As a matter of
history he did, and was immediately sorry that he had.</p>
<p>This is not a well-ordered world, or it would not be our good
deeds that would so often get us into trouble.
Robina’s insistence on our walking up the hill had been
prompted by tender feeling for dumb animals: a virtuous emotion
that surely the angels should have blessed. The result had
been to bring down upon her suffering and reproach. It is
not often that Ethelbertha loses her temper. When she does
she makes use of the occasion to perform what one might describe
as a mental spring-cleaning. All loose odds and ends of
temper that may be lying about in her mind—any scrap of
indignation that has been reposing peacefully, half forgotten, in
a corner of her brain, she ferrets out and brushes into the
general heap. Small annoyances of the year before
last—little things she hadn’t noticed at the
time—incidents in your past life that, so far as you are
concerned, present themselves as dim visions connected maybe with
some previous existence, she whisks triumphantly into her
pan. The method has its advantages. It leaves her,
swept and garnished, without a scrap of ill-feeling towards any
living soul. For quite a long period after one of these
explosions it is impossible to get a cross word out of her.
One has to wait sometimes for months. But while the
clearing up is in progress the atmosphere round about is
disturbing. The element of the whole thing is its
comprehensive swiftness. Before they had reached the summit
of the hill, Robina had acquired a tolerably complete idea of all
she had done wrong since Christmas twelvemonth: the present
afternoon’s proceedings—including as they did the
almost certain sacrificing of a sister to a violent death,
together with the probable destruction of a father, no longer of
an age to trifle with apoplexy—being but a fit and proper
complement to what had gone before. It would be long, as
Robina herself that evening bitterly declared, before she would
again give ear to the promptings of her better nature.</p>
<p>To take next the sad case of Archibald Bute: his sole desire
had been to relieve, at the earliest moment possible, the
anxieties of a sister and a mother. Robina’s new hat,
not intended for sport, had broken away from its
fastenings. With it, it had brought down her hair.
There is a harmless contrivance for building up the female hair
called, I am told, a pad. It can be made of combings, and
then, of course, is literally the girl’s own hair. He
came upon Robina at the moment when, retracing her steps and with
her back towards him, she was looking for it. With his
usual luck, he was the first to find it. Ethelbertha
thanked him for his information concerning Veronica, but seemed
chiefly anxious to push on and convince herself that it was
true. She took Dick’s arm, and left Robina to follow
on with Bute.</p>
<p>As I explained to him afterwards, had he stopped to ask my
advice I should have counselled his leaving the job to Dick, who,
after all, was only thirty seconds behind him. As regarded
himself, I should have suggested his taking a walk in the
opposite direction, returning, say, in half an hour, and
pretending to have just arrived. By that time Robina, with
the assistance of Janie’s brush and comb, and possibly her
powder-puff, would have been feeling herself again. He
could have listened sympathetically to an account of the affair
from Robina herself—her version, in which she would have
appeared to advantage. Give her time, and she has a sense
of humour. She would have made it bright and
whimsical. Without asserting it in so many words, she would
have conveyed the impression—I know her way—that she
alone, throughout the whole commotion, had remained calm and
helpful. “Dear old Dick” and “Poor dear
papa”—I can hear her saying it—would have
supplied the low comedy, and Veronica, alluded to with affection
free from sentimentality, would have furnished the dramatic
interest. It is not that Robina intends to mislead, but she
has the artistic instinct. It would have made quite a
charming story; Robina always the central figure. She would
have enjoyed telling it, and would have been pleased with the
person listening. All this—which would have been the
reward of subterfuge—he had missed. Virtuous
intention had gained for him nothing but a few scattered
observations from Robina concerning himself; the probable object
of his Creator in fashioning him—his relation to the scheme
of things in general: observations all of which he had felt to be
unjust.</p>
<p>We compared experiences over a pipe that same evening; and he
told me of a friend of his, a law student, who had shared
diggings with him in Edinburgh. A kinder-hearted young man,
Bute felt sure, could never have breathed; nor one with a
tenderer, more chivalrous regard for women; and the misery this
brought him, to say nothing of the irritation caused to quite a
number of respectable people, could hardly be imagined, so young
Bute assured me, by anyone not personally acquainted with the
parties. It was the plain and snappy girl, and the less
attractive type of old maid, for whom he felt the most
sorrow. He could not help thinking of all they had missed,
and were likely to go on missing; the rapture—surely the
woman’s birthright—of feeling herself adored, anyhow,
once in her life; the delight of seeing the lover’s eye
light up at her coming. Had he been a Mormon he would have
married them all. They too—the neglected that none
had invited to the feast of love—they also should know the
joys of home, feel the sweet comfort of a husband’s
arm. Being a Christian, his power for good was
limited. But at least he could lift from them the
despairing conviction that they were outside the pale of
masculine affection. Not one of them, so far as he could
help it, but should be able to say:</p>
<p>“I—even I had a lover once. No, dear, we
never married. It was one of those spiritual loves; a
formal engagement with a ring would have spoiled
it—coarsened it. No; it was just a beautiful thing
that came into my life and passed away again, leaving behind it a
fragrance that has sweetened all my days.”</p>
<p>That is how he imagined they would talk about it, years
afterwards, to the little niece or nephew, asking artless
questions—how they would feel about it themselves.
Whether law circles are peculiarly rich in unattractive
spinsters, or whether it merely happened to be an exceptional
season for them, Bute could not say; but certain it was that the
number of sour-faced girls and fretful old maids in excess of the
demand seemed to be greater than usual that winter in Edinburgh,
with the result that young Hapgood had a busy time of it.
He made love to them, not obtrusively, which might have laid them
open to ridicule—many of them were old enough to have been
his mother—but more by insinuation, by subtle
suggestion. His feelings, so they gathered, were too deep
for words; but the adoring eyes with which he would follow their
every movement, the rapt ecstasy with which he would drink in
their lightest remark about the weather, the tone of almost
reverential awe with which he would enquire of them concerning
their lesser ailments—all conveyed to their sympathetic
observation the message that he dared not tell. He had no
favourites. Sufficient it was that a woman should be
unpleasant, for him to pour out at her feet the simulated passion
of a lifetime. He sent them presents—nothing
expensive—wrapped in pleasing pretence of anonymity;
valentines carefully selected for their compromising
character. One carroty-headed old maid with warts he had
kissed upon the brow.</p>
<p>All this he did out of his great pity for them. It was a
beautiful idea, but it worked badly. They did not
understand—never got the hang of the thing: not one of
them. They thought he was really gone on them. For a
time his elusiveness, his backwardness in coming to the point,
they attributed to a fit and proper fear of his fate; but as the
months went by the feeling of each one was that he was carrying
the apprehension of his own unworthiness too far. They gave
him encouragement, provided for him “openings,” till
the wonder grew upon them how any woman ever did get
married. At the end of their resources, they consulted
bosom friends. In several instances the bosom friend turned
out to be the bosom friend of more than one of them. The
bosom friends began to take a hand in it. Some of them came
to him with quite a little list, insisting—playfully at
first—on his making up his mind what he was going to take
and what he was going to leave; offering, as reward for prompt
decision, to make things as easy for him as possible with the
remainder of the column.</p>
<p>It was then he saw that his good intentions were likely to end
in catastrophe. He would not tell the truth: that the whole
scheme had been conceived out of charity towards all
ill-constructed or dilapidated ladies; that personally he
didn’t care a hang for any of them; had only taken them on,
vulgarly speaking, to give them a treat, and because nobody else
would. That wasn’t going to be a golden memory,
colouring their otherwise drab existence. He explained that
it was not love—not the love that alone would justify a
man’s asking of a woman that she should give herself to him
for life—that he felt and always should feel for them, but
merely admiration and deep esteem; and seventeen of them thought
that would be sufficient to start with, and offered to chance the
rest.</p>
<p>The truth had to come out. Friends who knew his noble
nature could not sit by and hear him denounced as a heartless and
eccentric profligate. Ladies whose beauty and popularity
were beyond dispute thought it a touching and tender thing for
him to have done; but every woman to whom he had ever addressed a
kind word wanted to wring his neck.</p>
<p>He did the most sensible thing he could, under all the
circumstances; changed his address to Aberdeen, where he had an
aunt living. But the story followed him. No woman
would be seen speaking to him. One admiring glance from
Hapgood would send the prettiest girls home weeping to their
mothers. Later on he fell in love—hopelessly, madly
in love. But he dared not tell her—dared not let a
living soul guess it. That was the only way he could show
it. It is not sufficient, in this world, to want to do
good; there’s got to be a knack about it.</p>
<p>There was a man I met in Colorado, one Christmas-time. I
was on a lecturing tour. His idea was to send a loving
greeting to his wife in New York. He had been married
nineteen years, and this was the first time he had been separated
from his family on Christmas Day. He pictured them round
the table in the little far-away New England parlour; his wife,
his sister-in-law, Uncle Silas, Cousin Jane, Jack and Willy, and
golden-haired Lena. They would be just sitting down to
dinner, talking about him, most likely; wishing he were among
them. They were a nice family and all fond of him.
What joy it would give them to know that he was safe and sound;
to hear the very tones of his loved voice speaking to them!
Modern science has made possible these miracles. True, the
long-distance telephone would cost him five dollars; but what is
five dollars weighed against the privilege of wafting happiness
to an entire family on Christmas Day! We had just come back
from a walk. He slammed the money down, and laughed aloud
at the thought of the surprise he was about to give them all.</p>
<p>The telephone bell rang out clear and distinct at the precise
moment when his wife, with knife and fork in hand, was preparing
to carve the turkey. She was a nervous lady, and twice that
week had dreamed that she had seen her husband without being able
to get to him. On the first occasion she had seen him enter
a dry-goods store in Broadway, and hastening across the road had
followed him in. He was hardly a dozen yards in front of
her, but before she could overtake him all the young lady
assistants had rushed from behind their counters and, forming a
circle round her, had refused to let her pass, which in her dream
had irritated her considerably. On the next occasion he had
boarded a Brooklyn car in which she was returning home. She
had tried to attract his attention with her umbrella, but he did
not seem to see her; and every time she rose to go across to him
the car gave a jerk and bumped her back into her seat. When
she did get over to him it was not her husband at all, but the
gentleman out of the Quaker Oats advertisement. She went to
the telephone, feeling—as she said herself
afterwards—all of a tremble.</p>
<p>That you could speak from Colorado to New York she would not
then have believed had you told her. The thing was in its
early stages, which may also have accounted for the voice
reaching her strange and broken. I was standing beside him
while he spoke. We were in the vestibule of the Savoy Hotel
at Colorado Springs. It was five o’clock in the
afternoon, which would be about seven in New York. He told
her he was safe and well, and that she was not to fret about
him. He told her he had been that morning for a walk in the
Garden of the Gods, which is the name given to the local park;
they do that sort of thing in Colorado. Also that he had
drunk from the silicial springs abounding in that favoured
land. I am not sure that “silicial” was the
correct word. He was not sure himself: added to which he
pronounced it badly. Whatever they were, he assured her
they had done him good. He sent a special message to his
Cousin Jane—a maiden lady of means—to the effect that
she could rely upon seeing him soon. She was a touchy old
lady, and liked to be singled out for special attention. He
made the usual kind enquiries about everybody, sent them all his
blessing, and only wished they could be with him in this
delectable land where it seemed to be always sunshine and balmy
breezes. He could have said more, but his time being up the
telephone people switched him off; and feeling he had done a good
and thoughtful deed, he suggested a game of billiards.</p>
<p>Could he have been a witness of events at the other end of the
wire, his condition would have been one of less
self-complacence. Long before the end of the first sentence
his wife had come to the conclusion that this was a message from
the dead. Why through a telephone did not greatly worry
her. It seemed as reasonable a medium as any other she had
ever heard of—indeed a trifle more so. Later, when
she was able to review the matter calmly, it afforded her some
consolation to reflect that things might have been worse.
That “garden,” together with the “silicial
springs”—which she took to be
“celestial,” there was not much difference the way he
pronounced it—was distinctly reassuring. The
“eternal sunshine” and the “balmy
breezes” likewise agreed with her knowledge of heavenly
topography as derived from the Congregational Hymn-Book.
That he should have needed to enquire concerning the health of
herself and the children had puzzled her. The only
explanation was that they didn’t know everything, not even
up. There—may be, not the new-comers. She had
answered as coherently as her state of distraction would permit,
and had then dropped limply to the floor. It was the sound
of her falling against the umbrella-stand and upsetting it that
brought them all trooping out from the dining-room.</p>
<p>It took her some time to get the thing home to them; and when
she had finished, her brother Silas, acting on the impulse of the
moment, rang up the Exchange, with some vague idea of getting
into communication with St. Peter and obtaining further
particulars, but recollected himself in time to explain to the
“hulloa girl” that he had made a mistake.</p>
<p>The eldest boy, a practical youth, pointed out, very sensibly,
that nothing could be gained by their not going on with their
dinner, but was bitterly reproached for being able to think of
any form of enjoyment at a moment when his poor dear father was
in heaven. It reminded his mother of the special message to
Cousin Jane, who up to that moment had been playing the part of
comforter. With the collapse of Cousin Jane, dramatic in
its suddenness, conversation disappeared. At nine
o’clock the entire family went dinnerless to bed.</p>
<p>The eldest boy—as I have said, a practical
youth—had the sense to get up early the next morning and
send a wire, which brought the glad news back to them that their
beloved one was not in heaven, but was still in Colorado.
But the only reward my friend got for all his tender
thoughtfulness was the vehement injunction never for the
remainder of his life to play such a fool’s trick
again.</p>
<p>There were other cases I could have recited showing the ill
recompense that so often overtakes the virtuous action; but, as I
explained to Bute, it would have saddened me to dwell upon the
theme.</p>
<p>It was quite a large party assembled at the St.
Leonards’, including one or two county people, and I should
have liked, myself, to have made a better entrance. A large
lady with a very small voice seemed to be under the impression
that I had arranged the whole business on purpose. She said
it was “so dramatic.” One good thing came out
of it: Janie, in her quiet, quick way, saw to it that Ethelbertha
and Robina slipped into the house unnoticed by way of the
dairy. When they joined the other guests, half an hour
later, they had had a cup of tea and a rest, and were feeling
calm and cool, with their hair nicely done; and Ethelbertha
remarked to Robina on the way home what a comfort it must be to
Mrs. St. Leonard to have a daughter so capable, one who knew just
the right thing to do, and did it without making a fuss and a
disturbance.</p>
<p>Everyone was very nice. Of course we made the usual
mistake: they talked to me about books and plays, and I gave them
my views on agriculture and cub-hunting. I’m not
quite sure what fool it was who described a bore as a man who
talked about himself. As a matter of fact it is the only
subject the average man knows sufficiently well to make
interesting. There’s a man I know; he makes a fortune
out of a patent food for infants. He began life as a dairy
farmer, and hit upon it quite by accident. When he talks
about the humours of company promoting and the tricks of the
advertising agent he is amusing. I have sat at his table,
when he was a bachelor, and listened to him by the hour with
enjoyment. The mistake he made was marrying a broad-minded,
cultured woman, who ruined him—conversationally, I
mean. He is now well-informed and tiresome on most
topics. That is why actors and actresses are always such
delightful company: they are not ashamed to talk about
themselves. I remember a dinner-party once: our host was
one of the best-known barristers in London. A famous lady
novelist sat on his right, and a scientist of world-wide
reputation had the place of honour next our hostess, who herself
had written a history of the struggle for nationality in South
America that serves as an authority to all the Foreign Offices in
Europe. Among the remaining guests were a bishop, the
editor-in-chief of a London daily newspaper, a man who knew the
interior of China as well as most men know their own club, a
Russian revolutionist just escaped from Siberia, a leading
dramatist, a Cabinet Minister, and a poet whose name is a
household word wherever the English tongue is spoken. And
for two hours we sat and listened to a wicked-looking little
woman who from the boards of a Bowery music-hall had worked her
way up to the position of a star in musical comedy.
Education, as she observed herself without regret, had not been
compulsory throughout the waterside district of Chicago in her
young days; and, compelled to earn her own living from the age of
thirteen, opportunity for supplying the original deficiency had
been wanting. But she knew her subject, which was
Herself—her experiences, her reminiscences: and bad sense
enough to stick to it. Until the moment when she took
“the liberty of chipping in,” to use her own
expression, the amount of twaddle talked had been
appalling. The bishop had told us all he had learnt about
China during a visit to San Francisco, while the man who had
spent the last twenty years of his life in the country was busy
explaining his views on the subject of the English drama.
Our hostess had been endeavouring to make the scientist feel at
home by talking to him about radium. The dramatist had
explained at some length his views of the crisis in Russia.
The poet had quite spoilt his dinner trying to suggest to the
Cabinet Minister new sources of taxation. The Russian
revolutionist had told us what ought to have been a funny story
about a duck; and the lady novelist and the Cabinet Minister had
discussed Christian Science for a quarter of an hour, each under
the mistaken impression that the other one was a believer in
it. The editor had been explaining the attitude of the
Church towards the New Theology; and our host, one of the
wittiest men at the Bar, had been talking chiefly to the
butler. The relief of listening to anybody talking about
something they knew was like finding a match-box to a man who has
been barking his shins in the dark. For the rest of the
dinner we clung to her.</p>
<p>I could have made myself quite interesting to these good
squires and farmers talking to them about theatres and the
literary celebrities I have met; and they could have told me dog
stories and given me useful information as to the working of the
Small Holdings Act. They said some very charming things
about my books—mostly to the effect that they read and
enjoyed them when feeling ill or suffering from mental
collapse. I gathered that had they always continued in a
healthy state of mind and body it would not have occurred to them
to read me. One man assured me I had saved his life.
It was his brain, he told me. He had been so upset by
something that had happened to him that he had almost lost his
reason. There were times when he could not even remember
his own name; his mind seemed an absolute blank. And then
one day by chance—or Providence, or whatever you choose to
call it—he had taken up a book of mine. It was the
only thing he had been able to read for months and months!
And now, whenever he felt himself run down—his brain like a
squeezed orange (that was his simile)—he would put
everything else aside and read a book of mine—any one: it
didn’t matter which. I suppose one ought to be glad
that one has saved somebody’s life; but I should like to
have the choosing of them myself.</p>
<p>I am not sure that Ethelbertha is going to like Mrs. St.
Leonard; and I don’t think Mrs. St. Leonard will much like
Ethelbertha. I have gathered that Mrs. St. Leonard
doesn’t like anybody much—except, of course, when it
is her duty. She does not seem to have the time. Man
is born to trouble, and it is not bad philosophy to get oneself
accustomed to the feeling. But Mrs. St. Leonard has given
herself up to the pursuit of trouble to the exclusion of all
other interests in life. She appears to regard it as the
only calling worthy a Christian woman. I found her alone
one afternoon. Her manner was preoccupied; I asked if I
could be of any assistance.</p>
<p>“No,” she answered, “I am merely trying to
think what it can be that has been worrying me all the
morning. It has clean gone out of my head.”</p>
<p>She remembered it a little later with a glad sigh.</p>
<p>St. Leonard himself, Ethelbertha thinks charming. We are
to go again on Sunday for her to see the children. Three or
four people we met I fancy we shall be able to fit in with.
We left at half-past six, and took Bute back with us to
supper.</p>
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