Collected works of j s f.., p.84
Collected Works of J S Fletcher, page 84
“That’ll be your job, lass,” she said. “It’s linen, is that; sheets, and table-cloths, and napery, and the good Lord knows what. The maister’s mother bowt it, and took great store in it, but it hevn’t been so well seen to sin’ she were takken, poor thing. I’ve a deal to do wi’ the cookin’, and there’s three men in the house besides the maister, and I can’t pretend to be much of a hand at gettin’ things up, and layin’ tables with napkins and so on. You’ll be able to do that, I des’say.” Elisabeth answered that she thought she would.
“The maister,” said Mally, “is a very particular man about them things, and he’s gotten more so lately. You see, he’s a great reader, and he’s high-larnt, and keeps very good company, and when he has onnybody here he likes his table to look smart. And, Lord love ye, I don’t know nowt about layin’ a table wi’ napkins and things, but I hope you do, my lass, I’m sure.”
“I think I can manage all that,” said Elisabeth, secretly amused at the old servant’s confession.
“Well, lass, well, I’ll answer for the cookin’, and that’s the main part, to my mind,” said Mally. “Better a bare board and plenty to eat, than a fine table wi’ nowt on it.”
With this wise remark she led the way downstairs and along a passage to a back-kitchen, in which the three men-servants to whom she had referred sat round a roaring wood fire. One of them had just returned from the statute-hiring fair, and had brought back with him a song-paper, the contents of which he was singing over to his companions. All three stared hard at Elisabeth.
“Now, then,” said Mally, “that’s Bill, and this is Tom, and yon’s Reuben. They can all ate like sojers on a march, and they keep me bakin’ every day. Reuben, hes ta filled t’ boiler?”
“Aye,” said Reuben. “Long sin’.”
“And hes ta locked t’ hen-hoil door, and browt t’ kay in?”
“Aye — aboon an hour agoöa.”
“Well, there’ll be a hot tatie for all on ye at supper-time — if ye’re good lads, mind,” said Mally, retiring with Elisabeth. “I hev’ to give ’em a bit of a treat, you know, lass,” she said apologetically, as they went back to the front-kitchen. “ ’Cos they do little jobs for me now and then. You can do owt wi’ men if ye nobbut fill their bellies.”
At nine o’clock, Mally and Elisabeth having washed up the tea-things which the former fetched from the parlour, Mally called the three men into the front-kitchen, where they sat on a bench against the wall in an attitude that suggested schoolboy-like attention. Elisabeth wondered what this might mean, and was still more mystified when Mally knocked loudly at the parlour door, and cried, “All ready, maister!” In response to her summons Hepworth presently appeared, carrying a huge Bible. He laid it on the table in the centre of the kitchen, and opening it, read a chapter from the New Testament. Elisabeth, who had never been present at such a service, listened curiously as he read. He had a full, deep voice, and read with some artistic perception, and the three men on the kitchen bench seemed to enjoy the reading, and kept their eyes fixed on their master’s face. As soon as the chapter was finished Hepworth closed the book and stood up. The three men said, “Good-night, maister,” and stamped away down the passage.
“Now, Mally,” said Hepworth, coming over to the fireside. “You’ll see after Elisabeth, I’m sure. You’ll know what she’ll—”
“Go your ways, maister,” said Mally. “Leave women-folk to see to theirsens. Men’s nobbut in the way at t’ best o’ times.”
Hepworth laughed, and bidding the two women good-night, went back to his parlour.
“Now, lass,” said Mally, “we’ll hev’ a bit o’ supper, and then to bed. ‘Early to sleep and early to rise,’ you know, and I’m a rare un for getting up wi’ the lark.”
“I should like to set the table for Mr. Hepworth’s breakfast in the morning,” said Elisabeth. “What time will he have it?”
“He’s up at six, lass, and he’s out till seven, and about half-past he’s ready and keen,” said Mally. “Aye, you can wait on him — it’ll tak’ a deal off my shoulders.” Accordingly, Elisabeth rose early next morning and proceeded to prepare the parlour for her master’s breakfast. It was a somewhat old-fashioned and gloomy apartment, sadly in need of a touch of brightness here and there. Elisabeth reduced it to something like homeliness, and laid the breakfast-table with care and taste. She hunted out a fine linen-cloth, and going out into the garden cut a bunch of chrysanthemums and arranged them in a china bowl in the centre of the table. This done, she borrowed a clean white apron from Mally, and looked very neat and smart when she carried Hepworth’s breakfast into the parlour. Hepworth smiled approval.
“That looks very nice, Elisabeth,” said he. “I see you know one part of your duties, at any rate.”
CHAPTER IV. HEPWORTH
IN THE EYES of most people thereabouts Hepworth was a man of some peculiarity. He had now reached the age of forty years, and was known to be well-to-do even to the verge of affluence, and yet he had never shown any desire to marry and settle down after the accustomed fashion of country folk. While his mother lived there had been excuses found for him. It was said that he was such a good son that he would not share his devotion between her and a wife. Certainly he devoted himself to her with a constancy and affection that was rare. She was an invalid for many years before her death, and in Hepworth she found a tender nurse. In him, so far as she was concerned, were united feminine gentleness and masculine pity. The country folk made his devotion a proverb, and thought well of him for the manifesting of qualities which are always esteemed by people who are chiefly influenced by their natural environment, and who accordingly esteem the domestic virtues at a high standard. When the old mother died, however, it was usually supposed that Hepworth would soon give a new mistress to the Home Farm. Certainly he had never shown any partiality for any particular person of the opposite sex, and there was therefore no one’s name that could be coupled with his own. Young women there were plenty, a Jane here, and a Susan there, who would make excellent wives for a farmer, and it was thought that upon one or other of these he would shortly look with favour. He was at that time but thirty years old — an age which country folk deem a suitable one for marriage — and it seemed unnatural that so prosperous and healthy a man should not take a wife to himself. As the years passed by and he made no sign and showed no liking for female society, it was said that he was taking a long time to pick and choose; now that ten years had gone and he still remained single, some of his neighbours began to think that there was to be neither choosing nor picking, and logically enough they considered his behaviour peculiar. It was not according to tradition, which is the main rule of life amongst a conservative people.
If Hepworth had cared to confess the truth to any of his few friends, he would have told them that he refrained from marriage and even from the thought of marriage for one simple and amply sufficient reason. He had never known what it was to have any feeling of love for woman. Filial affection he knew to its deepest possibilities and would never forget, for he had worshipped his mother as a saint, and retained of her memories and impressions that were nothing short of sacred. But of actual passion, the strong, healthy, not-to-be-resisted desire of man for woman, he knew nothing — there had been nothing in his life so far to call it into existence. From boyhood he had led an active life; at fifteen he was called upon to assist his mother in superintending the affairs of the farm, and it had been necessary for many years that he should not only superintend the labour of others, but also engage in labour with his own hands. He had risen early and worked till sunset, and if he was not then too tired for aught but sleep, he devoted himself to books, for which he had a passion as great as for the brown acres that he tilled. All his life, then, had been devoted to work, to books, and to his mother, and when the companionship of his mother was taken from him, he turned to his books and to his work with renewed zest, finding in them a true and real consolation. One other factor remained in the solitude of his surroundings. In his farmstead he was almost a hermit. One other farm-house and a row of cottages made up with his own house the hamlet in which he lived. There was one village a mile-and-a-half away, and another nearly three miles distant, in which he might have found society had he cared to seek it, but the solitude in which he had mainly lived had exerted its full force on his mind, which was naturally receptive, and as he grew older he found that he was happier with his own thoughts for company than when in the society of men and women.
Nevertheless, there were occasions on which Hepworth went into the world. On market and fair days he mixed with men, and transacted his business in a fashion that showed him to be keenly alive to his own interests. He was a scrupulously fair dealer, but was not to be over-reached or deceived. Those who knew him as farmer and business man spoke highly and admiringly of his capabilities; he was, they said, the man to make money and to keep it. But in addition to being a strict man of business, Hepworth was also a man of religion. His ancestors for three generations had been devout and fervent Methodists, and in the peculiar tenets and dogmas of that body his mother had instructed him from infancy. His earliest acquaintance with religious literature came from the writings of Wesley and his contemporary apostles. With the Jewish scriptures he was intimate to a strange degree, and their poetry, their imagination, and their mystic influence had tended to fill his mind with something of the awful and mysterious. Never in a position to doubt the accuracy of all that had been taught to him, he accepted the whole creed of historic Christianity with something like childlike confidence. To him there was nothing questionable, nothing impossible in what he believed to be the scheme of salvation. It was a vast, magnificent poem, in which justice and mercy were blended with infinite love. He had never considered it from outside, for underneath its shadow he had always dwelt. When he was still a young man, Hepworth, moved thereto by certain impulses of his own nature and persuaded by his mother and the ministers at Sicaster, began to preach in the village chapels. There were other farmers in the neighbourhood who were occupied on Sundays in the same work. These he soon out-distanced in the path of popular appreciation, though he knew nothing of the fact himself. To hear him preach to his rustic audiences was to catch some notion of the mysterious tragedy of the world. When he escaped from himself into the region of prophecy he was half-poet and half-seer. He saw behind the veil, and the people saw with him. His lonely communings amongst the woods and fields, and his solitary pilgrimages to the distant villages where he had preaching engagements to fulfil, tended to develop in him the mysticism which had been planted in his nature by his early training, and it thus came about that when he spoke to the people his utterances came as from the hill-tops and the lonely places.
At the time of Elisabeth’s coming to the Home Farm, Hepworth was living his usual quiet and solitary life. He was entirely occupied with his farming, his books and his thoughts. He was in all respects a serious and sober man, taking the colour of his life from the quiet tints that surrounded him on every side, and there was no thought of change within him. Elisabeth, who at that time had much trouble of her own, thought him the loneliest man she had ever known. He ate his meals in loneliness, he went about his farm in loneliness, and he sat alone in his parlour through the long winter evenings reading his books. He rarely conversed with any of his servants, except upon matters of business. It seemed to her that he was wrapped up in himself.
Hepworth had been attracted to Elisabeth in the hiring-fair at Sicaster by the pathetic hopelessness of her face. He felt sure that she had some secret trouble, and stood in need of help. Now that she was under his roof he watched her narrowly. Within a few days of her coming there he found that she was able to accomplish all that he had engaged her to do. She was neat, orderly, and precise, and displayed the qualities of taste and management which he desired. His table was now well-ordered, and his rooms made more habitable: he felt that if occasion arose he could bring a friend or a customer to dine with him, and count upon finding things as he wished them to be. He had a certain native taste about the details of daily life which his loneliness had developed into fads and fancies that were utterly puzzling to old Mally, whose ideas were all of the rough-and-ready order. Elisabeth satisfied him in these respects: he quickly decided that he had done well in engaging her.
Though he had never paid much attention to women, Hepworth found himself studying Elisabeth with some curiosity. He quickly became aware that she was of a superior class to that from which domestic servants are usually drawn, and that there was about her a certain refinement that gave her some claim to distinction. Now that she was constantly within his view he saw that she was an engaging young woman, with a face that had even pretensions to beauty. She was always neat and tidy, and conveyed an impression of quiet resource, as she moved about her household duties. Hepworth fancied that the first week of her residence at the farm improved her personal appearance, and that some colour was beginning to come into her pale cheeks. In spite of this, however, Elisabeth’s eyes and mouth were still sad, and the pathetic look which had struck him when he first caught sight of her, remained there, and was rarely chased away.
Hepworth stood by his hearth one morning, watching Elisabeth arrange his breakfast-table. She was unaware of the scrutiny he bestowed upon her, and moved about, unconscious that he followed every detail of her work.
“You do your work very well, Elisabeth,” said Hepworth, after a time. “I am very pleased with you.”
Elisabeth looked up and coloured slightly at this word of praise.
“I am very glad, sir,” she answered.
“I don’t think you have been used to that sort of work,” he said, somewhat diffidently. “At least, not to do it yourself.”
Elisabeth made no answer.
“I hope you are quite comfortable here,” he said. “Old Mally is rather rough, I know, and perhaps you—”
Elisabeth interrupted him hastily.
“I am very comfortable, sir, indeed I am — and Mally is very kind to me,” she said. “Nobody could be kinder — and I’m glad I give you satisfaction. It was very good of you to engage me as you did — I wanted some help badly enough!” she added, with a sudden burst of confidence.
“Yes?” said Hepworth. “Then I am glad, very glad, Elisabeth. And if — perhaps I could help you further?”
Elisabeth shook her head.
“No, sir, thank you. I am much obliged to you, but you can’t.”
“You have had trouble, Elisabeth, you told me that, I think?”
“Yes, sir. But — it’s no use, sir, I can’t talk about it. It was more than trouble, and sometimes—”
She seemed to be about to say more, but suddenly stopped and hurried from the room. Hepworth looked after her with curiosity, not unmixed with pity. He wished that he had not spoken to her — it was evident that whatever trouble she had was still keen and poignant. He had supposed that it referred to the death of her husband — that much she had told him — but her last words seemed to suggest something further in the nature of mystery.
CHAPTER V. THE VILLAGE CHAPEL
ON THE SECOND Sunday after Elisabeth’s arrival at the farm, Mally informed her that Mr. Hepworth was to preach at the chapel of the neighbouring village that afternoon, and invited her to be present.
“You didn’t stir out o’ t’ house last Sunday,” said Mally, “but you mun göa to-däay, my lass, for it’ll do you good. T’ maister’s a varry high-larnt man, and I don’t reckon to understand all ‘at he says, mysen, but I’m sure it’s good, ‘cos he uses sich long words. I’ll get all t’ work done i’ good time efter dinner and göa wi’ you to hear him.”
Accordingly Mally and Elisabeth set out for the village chapel early in the afternoon. The old servant was attired in her Sunday best, and was proud and pleased in consequence. She drew Elisabeth’s attention to its gorgeousness as she aired each garment before the kitchen fire.
“I bowt this here gown piece,” said Mally, “seven year agoöa at Cornchester fair, and I’ve kept it for best iver sin’. That theer jacket, now — I bowt that at t’ best shop i’ Sicaster when t’ owd missis died. It hed crape trimming then, but I tuke ’em off, and Polly Jones, ‘at lives at Hornforth, an’s larnin’ t’ dressmakin’ at Sicaster, she’s retrimmed it wi’ black braid i’ what she called t’ milintary fashion — summat ‘at t’ sodgers weer, I reckon. I allus did believe i’ bein’ smart, you knaw. Now what do you think to my bonnet? — I’ve nobbut hed it fower year, so it’s quite in t’ fashion, as t’ saying goes.”
Elisabeth looked at the bonnet and said it was very nice. It was large and prodigal of design and colour, and Mally drew her attention to the fact that there were no less than eight sorts of flowers in it, to say nothing of a humming-bird perched at the top of an artificial spray of some tropical plant.
“It’s a bit heavy, to be sewer,” said Mally. “But Lord love ye, everybody knows ‘at pride’s painful. If ye want to be i’ t’ fashion you mun mak’ up your mind to be a bit uncomfortable.”
They then set out for the chapel along the road which Elisabeth had travelled with Hepworth as they returned from Sicaster after the statute-hiring fair. Mally carried a hymn-book in one hand and a clean pocket-handkerchief, scented with dried lavender, in the other. She informed Elisabeth that she had a paper of mint lozenges in her pocket, and that she never went to chapel without them.
“There’s nowt like heyin’ summat to suck at,” she said. “When t’ preycher’s busy wi’ his firstly and secondly I can bide, but when he comes to t’ thirdly and lastly I mun hev’ summat i’ my mouth, or else I get fidgety. So if tha’ wants a lozenge, lass, tha’ mun nudge my elbow, and I’ll gi’ thi one.”
The village chapel stood near the entrance to the long street of farmsteads and cottages, and upon a slight eminence, approached by a winding path, up which several persons were slowly climbing as Mally and Elisabeth drew near. It was a quaint, four-square erection of red brick, that had been worn to a deep colour by the rain and storm of nearly a century. Above its narrow doorway a tablet of sandstone had been cemented to the wall, apparently in readiness for an inscription which was never placed there. Before the door a tiny yard or enclosure, thickly carpeted with long grass, made an open-air vestibule to the chapel. Two or three ancient men, clad in antiquated garments of sombre hue, stood about the grass, and greeted the old servant with brotherly affection. They enquired if Mr. Hepworth was coming behind.










