<h3>CHAPTER IX.</h3>
<h4>MISS MARRABLE.<br/> </h4>
<p>Whatever may be the fact as to the rank and proper calling of
Bullhampton, there can be no doubt that Loring is a town. There is a
market-place, and a High Street, and a Board of Health, and a Paragon
Crescent, and a Town Hall, and two different parish churches, one
called St. Peter Lowtown, and the other St. Botolph's Uphill, and
there are Uphill Street, and Lowtown Street, and various other
streets. I never heard of a mayor of Loring, but, nevertheless, there
is no doubt as to its being a town. Nor did it ever return members to
Parliament; but there was once, in one of the numerous bills that
have been proposed, an idea of grouping it with Cirencester and
Lechlade. All the world of course knows that this was never done; but
the transient rumour of it gave the Loringites an improved position,
and justified that little joke about a live dog being better than a
dead lion, with which the parson at Bullhampton regaled Miss Lowther
at the time.</p>
<p>All the fashion of Loring dwelt, as a matter of course, at Uphill.
Lowtown was vulgar, dirty, devoted to commercial and manufacturing
purposes, and hardly owned a single genteel private house. There was
the parsonage, indeed, which stood apart from its neighbours, inside
great tall slate-coloured gates, and which had a garden of its own.
But except the clergyman, who had no choice in the matter, nobody who
was anybody lived at Lowtown. There were three or four factories
there,—in and out of which troops of girls would be seen passing
twice a day, in their ragged, soiled, dirty mill dresses, all of whom
would come out on Sunday dressed with a magnificence that would lead
one to suppose that trade at Loring was doing very well. Whether
trade did well or ill, whether wages were high or low, whether
provisions were cheap in price, whether there were peace or war
between capital and labour, still there was the Sunday magnificence.
What a blessed thing it is for women,—and for men too
certainly,—that there should be a positive happiness to the female
sex in the possession, and in exhibiting the possession, of bright
clothing! It is almost as good for the softening of manners, and the
not permitting of them to be ferocious, as is the faithful study of
the polite arts. At Loring the manners of the mill hands, as they
were called, were upon the whole good,—which I believe was in a
great degree to be attributed to their Sunday magnificence.</p>
<p>The real West-end of Loring was understood by all men to lie in
Paragon Crescent, at the back of St. Botolph's Church. The whole of
this Crescent was built, now some twenty years ago, by Mrs. Fenwick's
father, who had been clever enough to see that as mills were made to
grow in the low town, houses for wealthy people to live in ought to
be made to grow in the high town. He therefore built the Paragon, and
a certain small row of very pretty houses near the end of the
Paragon, called Balfour Place,—and had done very well, and had made
money; and now lay asleep in the vaults below St. Botolph's Church.
No inconsiderable proportion of the comfort of Bullhampton parsonage
is due to Mr. Balfour's success in that achievement of Paragon
Crescent. There were none of the family left at Loring. The widow had
gone away to live at Torquay with a sister, and the only other child,
another daughter, was married to that distinguished barrister on the
Oxford circuit, Mr. Quickenham. Mr. Quickenham and our friend the
parson were very good friends; but they did not see a great deal of
each other, Mr. Fenwick not going up very often to London, and Mr.
Quickenham being unable to use the Vicarage of Bullhampton when on
his own circuit. As for the two sisters, they had very strong ideas
about their husbands' professions; Sophia Quickenham never hesitating
to declare that one was life, and the other stagnation; and Janet
Fenwick protesting that the difference to her seemed to be almost
that between good and evil. They wrote to each other perhaps once a
quarter. But the Balfour family was in truth broken up.</p>
<p>Miss Marrable, Mary Lowther's aunt, lived, of course, at Uphill; but
not in the Crescent, nor yet in Balfour Place. She was an old lady
with very modest means, whose brother had been rector down at St.
Peter's, and she had passed the greatest part of her life within
those slate-coloured gates. When he died, and when she, almost
exactly at the same time, found that it would be expedient that she
should take charge of her niece, Mary, she removed herself up to a
small house in Botolph Lane, in which she could live decently on her
£300 a year. It must not be surmised that Botolph Lane was a squalid
place, vile, or dirty, or even unfashionable. It was narrow and old,
having been inhabited by decent people long before the Crescent, or
even Mr. Balfour himself, had been in existence; but it was narrow
and old, and the rents were cheap, and here Miss Marrable was able to
live, and occasionally to give tea-parties, and to provide a
comfortable home for her niece, within the limits of her income. Miss
Marrable was herself a lady of very good family, the late Sir Gregory
Marrable having been her uncle; but her only sister had married a
Captain Lowther, whose mother had been first cousin to the Earl of
Periwinkle; and therefore on her own account, as well as on that of
her niece, Miss Marrable thought a good deal about blood. She was one
of those ladies,—now few in number,—who within their heart of
hearts conceive that money gives no title to social distinction, let
the amount of money be ever so great, and its source ever so
stainless. Rank to her was a thing quite assured and ascertained, and
she had no more doubt as to her own right to pass out of a room
before the wife of a millionaire than she had of the right of a
millionaire to spend his own guineas. She always addressed an
attorney by letter as Mister, raising up her eyebrows when appealed
to on the matter, and explaining that an attorney is not an esquire.
She had an idea that the son of a gentleman, if he intended to
maintain his rank as a gentleman, should earn his income as a
clergyman, or as a barrister, or as a soldier, or as a sailor. Those
were the professions intended for gentlemen. She would not absolutely
say that a physician was not a gentleman, or even a surgeon; but she
would never allow to physic the same absolute privileges which, in
her eyes, belonged to law and the church. There might also possibly
be a doubt about the Civil Service and Civil Engineering; but she had
no doubt whatever that when a man touched trade or commerce in any
way he was doing that which was not the work of a gentleman. He might
be very respectable, and it might be very necessary that he should do
it; but brewers, bankers, and merchants, were not gentlemen, and the
world, according to Miss Marrable's theory, was going astray, because
people were forgetting their landmarks.</p>
<p>As to Miss Marrable herself nobody could doubt that she was a lady;
she looked it in every inch. There were not, indeed, many inches of
her, for she was one of the smallest, daintiest, little old women
that ever were seen. But now, at seventy, she was very pretty, quite
a woman to look at with pleasure. Her feet and hands were exquisitely
made, and she was very proud of them. She wore her own grey hair of
which she showed very little, but that little was always exquisitely
nice. Her caps were the perfection of caps. Her green eyes were
bright and sharp, and seemed to say that she knew very well how to
take care of herself. Her mouth, and nose, and chin, were all
well-formed, small, shapely, and concise, not straggling about her
face as do the mouths, noses, and chins of some old ladies—ay, and
of some young ladies also. Had it not been that she had lost her
teeth, she would hardly have looked to be an old woman. Her health
was perfect. She herself would say that she had never yet known a
day's illness. She dressed with the greatest care, always wearing
silk at and after luncheon. She dressed three times a day, and in the
morning would come down in what she called a merino gown. But then,
with her, clothes never seemed to wear out. Her motions were so
slight and delicate, that the gloss of her dresses would remain on
them when the gowns of other women would almost have been worn to
rags. She was never seen of an afternoon or evening without gloves,
and her gloves were always clean and apparently new. She went to
church once on Sundays in winter, and twice in summer, and she had a
certain very short period of each day devoted to Bible reading; but
at Loring she was not reckoned to be among the religious people.
Indeed, there were those who said that she was very worldly-minded,
and that at her time of life she ought to devote herself to other
books than those which were daily in her hands. Pope, Dryden, Swift,
Cowley, Fielding, Richardson, and Goldsmith, were her authors. She
read the new novels as they came out, but always with critical
comparisons that were hostile to them. Fielding, she said, described
life as it was; whereas Dickens had manufactured a kind of life that
never had existed, and never could exist. The pathos of Esmond was
very well, but Lady Castlemaine was nothing to Clarissa Harlowe. As
for poetry, Tennyson, she said, was all sugar-candy; he had neither
the common sense, nor the wit, nor, as she declared, to her ear the
melody of Pope. All the poets of the present century, she declared,
if put together, could not have written the Rape of the Lock. Pretty
as she was, and small, and nice, and lady-like, I think she liked her
literature rather strong. It is certain that she had Smollett's
novels in a cupboard up-stairs, and it was said that she had been
found reading one of Wycherley's plays.</p>
<p>The strongest point in her character was her contempt of money. Not
that she had any objection to it, or would at all have turned up her
nose at another hundred a year had anybody left to her such an
accession of income; but that in real truth she never measured
herself by what she possessed, or others by what they possessed. She
was as grand a lady to herself, eating her little bit of cold mutton,
or dining off a tiny sole, as though she sat at the finest banquet
that could be spread. She had no fear of economies, either before her
two handmaids or anybody else in the world. She was fond of her tea,
and in summer could have cream for twopence; but when cream became
dear, she saved money and had a pen'north of milk. She drank two
glasses of Marsala every day, and let it be clearly understood that
she couldn't afford sherry. But when she gave a tea-party, as she
did, perhaps, six or seven times a year, sherry was always handed
round with cake before the people went away. There were matters in
which she was extravagant. When she went out herself she never took
one of the common street flies, but paid eighteen pence extra to get
a brougham from the Dragon. And when Mary Lowther,—who had only
fifty pounds a year of her own, with which she clothed herself and
provided herself with pocket-money,—was going to Bullhampton, Miss
Marrable actually proposed to her to take one of the maids with her.
Mary, of course, would not hear of it, and said that she should just
as soon think of taking the house; but Miss Marrable had thought that
it would, perhaps, not be well for a girl so well-born as Miss
Lowther to go out visiting without a maid. She herself very rarely
left Loring, because she could not afford it; but when, two summers
back, she did go to Weston-super-Mare for a fortnight, she took one
of the girls with her.</p>
<p>Miss Marrable had heard a great deal about Mr. Gilmore. Mary, indeed,
was not inclined to keep secrets from her aunt, and her very long
absence,—so much longer than had at first been intended,—could
hardly have been sanctioned unless some reason had been given. There
had been many letters on the subject, not only between Mary and her
aunt, but between Mrs. Fenwick and her very old friend Miss Marrable.
Of course these latter letters had spoken loudly the praises of Mr.
Gilmore, and Miss Marrable had become quite one of the Gilmore
faction. She desired that her niece should marry; but that she should
marry a gentleman. She would have infinitely preferred to see Mary an
old maid, than to hear that she was going to give herself to any
suitor contaminated by trade. Now Mr. Gilmore's position was exactly
that which Miss Marrable regarded as being the best in England. He
was a country gentleman, living on his own acres, a justice of the
peace, whose father and grandfather and great-grandfather had
occupied exactly the same position. Such a marriage for Mary would be
quite safe; and in those days one did hear so often of girls making,
she would not say improper marriages, but marriages which in her eyes
were not fitting! Mr. Gilmore, she thought, exactly filled that
position which entitled a gentleman to propose marriage to such a
lady as Mary Lowther.</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear, I am glad to have you back again. Of course I have
been a little lonely, but I bear that kind of thing better than most
people. Thank God, my eyes are good."</p>
<p>"You are looking so well, Aunt Sarah!"</p>
<p>"I am well. I don't know how other women get so much amiss; but God
has been very good to me."</p>
<p>"And so pretty," said Mary, kissing her.</p>
<p>"My dear, it's a pity you're not a young gentleman."</p>
<p>"You are so fresh and nice, aunt. I wish I could always look as you
do."</p>
<p>"What would Mr. Gilmore say?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Mr. Gilmore, Mr. Gilmore, Mr. Gilmore! I am so weary of Mr.
Gilmore."</p>
<p>"Weary of him, Mary?"</p>
<p>"Weary of myself because of him—that is what I mean. He has behaved
always well, and I am not at all sure that I have. And he is a
perfect gentleman. But I shall never be Mrs. Gilmore, Aunt Sarah."</p>
<p>"Janet says that she thinks you will."</p>
<p>"Janet is mistaken. But, dear aunt, don't let us talk about it at
once. Of course you shall hear everything in time, but I have had so
much of it. Let us see what new books there are. Cast Iron! You don't
mean to say you have come to that?"</p>
<p>"I shan't read it."</p>
<p>"But I will, aunt. So it must not go back for a day or two. I do love
the Fenwicks, dearly, dearly, both of them. They are almost, if not
quite, perfect. And yet I am glad to be at home."</p>
<p><SPAN name="c10" id="c10"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />