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<h1>Evelina's Garden</h1>
<p>On the south a high arbor-vitæ hedge separated Evelina's
garden from the road. The hedge was so high that when the
school-children lagged by, and the secrets behind it fired them with
more curiosity than those between their battered book covers, the
tallest of them by stretching up on tiptoe could not peer over. And
so they were driven to childish engineering feats, and would set to
work and pick away sprigs of the arbor-vitæ with their little
fingers, and make peep-holes—but small ones, that Evelina might
not discern them. Then they would thrust their pink faces into the
hedge, and the enduring fragrance of it would come to their nostrils
like a gust of aromatic breath from the mouth of the northern woods,
and peer into Evelina's garden as through the green tubes of vernal
telescopes.</p>
<p>Then suddenly hollyhocks, blooming in rank and file, seemed to be
marching upon them like platoons of soldiers, with detonations of
color that dazzled their peeping eyes; and, indeed, the whole garden
seemed charging with its mass of riotous bloom upon the hedge. They
could scarcely take in details of marigold and phlox and pinks and
London-pride and cock's-combs, and prince's-feather's waving overhead
like standards.</p>
<p>Sometimes also there was the purple flutter of Evelina's gown; and
Evelina's face, delicately faded, hung about with softly drooping
gray curls, appeared suddenly among the flowers, like another flower
uncannily instinct with nervous melancholy.</p>
<p>Then the children would fall back from their peep-holes, and
huddle off together with scared giggles. They were afraid of Evelina.
There was a shade of mystery about her which stimulated their
childish fancies when they heard her discussed by their elders. They
might easily have conceived her to be some baleful fairy intrenched
in her green stronghold, withheld from leaving it by the fear of some
dire penalty for magical sins. Summer and winter, spring and fall,
Evelina Adams never was seen outside her own domain of old
mansion-house and garden, and she had not set her slim lady feet in
the public highway for nearly forty years, if the stories were
true.</p>
<p>People differed as to the reason why. Some said she had had an
unfortunate love affair, that her heart had been broken, and she had
taken upon herself a vow of seclusion from the world, but nobody
could point to the unworthy lover who had done her this harm. When
Evelina was a girl, not one of the young men of the village had dared
address her. She had been set apart by birth and training, and also
by a certain exclusiveness of manner, if not of nature. Her father,
old Squire Adams, had been the one man of wealth and college learning
in the village. He had owned the one fine old mansion-house, with its
white front propped on great Corinthian pillars, overlooking the
village like a broad brow of superiority.</p>
<p>He had owned the only coach and four. His wife during her short
life had gone dressed in rich brocades and satins that rustled loud
in the ears of the village women, and her nodding plumes had dazzled
the eyes under their modest hoods. Hardly a woman in the village but
could tell—for it had been handed down like a folk-lore song
from mother to daughter—just what Squire Adams's wife wore when
she walked out first as bride to meeting. She had been clad all in
blue.</p>
<p>“Squire Adams's wife, when she walked out bride, she wore a
blue satin brocade gown, all wrought with blue flowers of a darker
blue, cut low neck and short sleeves. She wore long blue silk mitts
wrought with blue, blue satin shoes, and blue silk clocked stockings.
And she wore a blue crape mantle that was brought from over seas, and
a blue velvet hat, with a long blue ostrich feather curled over
it—it was so long it reached her shoulder, and waved when she
walked; and she carried a little blue crape fan with ivory
sticks.” So the women and girls told each other when the
Squire's bride had been dead nearly seventy years.</p>
<p>The blue bride attire was said to be still in existence, packed
away in a cedar chest, as the Squire had ordered after his wife's
death. “He stood over the woman that took care of his wife
whilst she packed the things away, and he never shed a tear, but she
used to hear him a-goin' up to the north chamber nights, when he
couldn't sleep, to look at 'em,” the women told.</p>
<p>People had thought the Squire would marry again. They said
Evelina, who was only four years old, needed a mother, and they
selected one and another of the good village girls. But the Squire
never married. He had a single woman, who dressed in black silk, and
wore always a black wrought veil over the side of her bonnet, come to
live with them, to take charge of Evelina. She was said to be a
distant relative of the Squire's wife, and was much looked up to by
the village people, although she never did more than interlace, as it
were, the fringes of her garments with theirs. “She's stuck
up,” they said, and felt, curiously enough, a certain pride in
the fact when they met her in the street and she ducked her long chin
stiffly into the folds of her black shawl by way of salutation.</p>
<p>When Evelina was fifteen years old this single woman died, and the
village women went to her funeral, and bent over her lying in a last
helpless dignity in her coffin, and stared with awed freedom at her
cold face. After that Evelina was sent away to school, and did not
return, except for a yearly vacation, for six years to come. Then she
returned, and settled down in her old home to live out her life, and
end her days in a perfect semblance of peace, if it were not
peace.</p>
<p>Evelina never had any young school friend to visit her; she had
never, so far as any one knew, a friend of her own age. She lived
alone with her father and three old servants. She went to meeting,
and drove with the Squire in his chaise. The coach was never used
after his wife's death, except to carry Evelina to and from school.
She and the Squire also took long walks, but they never exchanged
aught but the merest civilities of good-days and nods with the
neighbors whom they met, unless indeed the Squire had some matter of
business to discuss. Then Evelina stood aside and waited, her fair
face drooping gravely aloof. She was very pretty, with a gentle
high-bred prettiness that impressed the village folk, although they
looked at it somewhat askance.</p>
<p>Evelina's figure was tall, and had a fine slenderness; her silken
skirts hung straight from the narrow silk ribbon that girt her slim
waist; there was a languidly graceful bend in her long white throat;
her long delicate hands hung inertly at her sides among her skirt
folds, and were never seen to clasp anything; her softly clustering
fair curls hung over her thin blooming cheeks, and her face could
scarce be seen, unless, as she seldom did, she turned and looked full
upon one. Then her dark blue eyes, with a little nervous frown
between them, shone out radiantly; her thin lips showed a warm red,
and her beauty startled one.</p>
<p>Everybody wondered why she did not have a lover, why some fine
young man had not been smitten by her while she had been away at
school. They did not know that the school had been situated in
another little village, the counterpart of the one in which she had
been born, wherein a fitting mate for a bird of her feather could
hardly be found. The simple young men of the country-side were at
once attracted and intimidated by her. They cast fond sly glances
across the meeting-house at her lovely face, but they were confused
before her when they jostled her in the doorway and the rose and
lavender scent of her lady garments came in their faces. Not one of
them dared accost her, much less march boldly upon the great
Corinthian-pillared house, raise the brass knocker, and declare
himself a suitor for the Squire's daughter.</p>
<p>One young man there was, indeed, who treasured in his heart an
experience so subtle and so slight that he could scarcely believe in
it himself. He never recounted it to mortal soul, but kept it as a
secret sacred between himself and his own nature, but something to be
scoffed at and set aside by others.</p>
<p>It had happened one Sabbath day in summer, when Evelina had not
been many years home from school, as she sat in the meeting-house in
her Sabbath array of rose-colored satin gown, and white bonnet
trimmed with a long white feather and a little wreath of feathery
green, that of a sudden she raised her head and turned her face, and
her blue eyes met this young man's full upon hers, with all his heart
in them, and it was for a second as if her own heart leaped to the
surface, and he saw it, although afterwards he scarce believed it to
be true.</p>
<p>Then a pallor crept over Evelina's delicately brilliant face. She
turned it away, and her curls falling softly from under the green
wreath on her bonnet brim hid it. The young man's cheeks were a hot
red, and his heart beat loudly in his ears when he met her in the
doorway after the sermon was done. His eager, timorous eyes sought
her face, but she never looked his way. She laid her slim hand in its
cream-colored silk mitt on the Squire's arm; her satin gown rustled
softly as she passed before him, shrinking against the wall to give
her room, and a faint fragrance which seemed like the very breath of
the unknown delicacy and exclusiveness of life came to his bewildered
senses.</p>
<p>Many a time he cast furtive glances across the meeting-house at
Evelina, but she never looked his way again. If his timid boy-eyes
could have seen her cheek behind its veil of curls, he might have
discovered that the color came and went before his glances, although
it was strange how she could have been conscious of them; but he
never knew.</p>
<p>And he also never knew how, when he walked past the Squire's house
of a Sunday evening, dressed in his best, with his shoulders thrust
consciously back, and the windows in the westering sun looked full of
blank gold to his furtive eyes, Evelina was always peeping at him
from behind a shutter, and he never dared go in. His intuitions were
not like hers, and so nothing happened that might have, and he never
fairly knew what he knew. But that he never told, even to his wife
when he married; for his hot young blood grew weary and impatient
with this vain courtship, and he turned to one of his villagemates,
who met him fairly half way, and married her within a year.</p>
<p>On the Sunday when he and his bride first appeared in the
meeting-house Evelina went up the aisle behind her father in an array
of flowered brocade, stiff with threads of silver, so wonderful that
people all turned their heads to stare at her. She wore also a new
bonnet of rose-colored satin, and her curls were caught back a
little, and her face showed as clear and beautiful as an angel's.</p>
<p>The young bridegroom glanced at her once across the meeting-house,
then he looked at his bride in her gay wedding finery with a faithful
look.</p>
<p>When Evelina met them in the doorway, after meeting was done, she
bowed with a sweet cold grace to the bride, who courtesied blushingly
in return, with an awkward sweep of her foot in the bridal satin
shoe. The bridegroom did not look at Evelina at all. He held his chin
well down in his stock with solemn embarrassment, and passed out
stiffly, his bride on his arm.</p>
<p>Evelina, shining in the sun like a silver lily, went up the
street, her father stalking beside her with stately swings of his
cane, and that was the last time she was ever seen at meeting. Nobody
knew why.</p>
<p>When Evelina was a little over thirty her father died. There was
not much active grief for him in the village; he had really figured
therein more as a stately monument of his own grandeur than anything
else. He had been a man of little force of character, and that little
had seemed to degenerate since his wife died. An inborn dignity of
manner might have served to disguise his weakness with any others
than these shrewd New-Englanders, but they read him rightly.
“The Squire wa'n't ever one to set the river a-fire,”
they said. Then, moreover, he left none of his property to the
village to build a new meeting-house or a town-house. It all went to
Evelina.</p>
<p>People expected that Evelina would surely show herself in her
mourning at meeting the Sunday after the Squire died, but she did
not. Moreover, it began to be gradually discovered that she never
went out in the village street nor crossed the boundaries of her own
domains after her father's death. She lived in the great house with
her three servants—a man and his wife, and the woman who had
been with her mother when she died. Then it was that Evelina's garden
began. There had always been a garden at the back of the Squire's
house, but not like this, and only a low fence had separated it from
the road. Now one morning in the autumn the people saw Evelina's
man-servant, John Darby, setting out the arbor-vitæ hedge, and
in the spring after that there were ploughing and seed-sowing
extending over a full half-acre, which later blossomed out in
glory.</p>
<p>Before the hedge grew so high Evelina could be seen at work in her
garden. She was often stooping over the flower-beds in the early
morning when the village was first astir, and she moved among them
with her watering-pot in the twilight—a shadowy figure that
might, from her grace and her constancy to the flowers, have been
Flora herself.</p>
<p>As the years went on, the arbor-vitæ hedge got each season a
new growth and waxed taller, until Evelina could no longer be seen
above it. That was an annoyance to people, because the quiet mystery
of her life kept their curiosity alive, until it was in a constant
struggle, as it were, with the green luxuriance of the hedge.</p>
<p>“John Darby had ought to trim that hedge,” they said.
They accosted him in the street: “John, if ye don't cut that
hedge down a little it'll all die out.” But he only made a
surly grunting response, intelligible to himself alone, and passed
on. He was an Englishman, and had lived in the Squire's family since
he was a boy.</p>
<p>He had a nature capable of only one simple line of force, with no
radiations or parallels, and that had early resolved itself into the
service of the Squire and his house. After the Squire's death he
married a woman who lived in the family. She was much older than
himself, and had a high temper, but was a good servant, and he
married her to keep her to her allegiance to Evelina. Then he bent
her, without her knowledge, to take his own attitude towards his
mistress. No more could be gotten out of John Darby's wife than out
of John Darby concerning the doings at the Squire's house. She met
curiosity with a flash of hot temper, and he with surly taciturnity,
and both intimidated.</p>
<p>The third of Evelina's servants was the woman who had nursed her
mother, and she was naturally subdued and undemonstrative, and
rendered still more so by a ceaseless monotony of life. She never
went to meeting, and was seldom seen outside the house. A passing
vision of a long white-capped face at a window was about all the
neighbors ever saw of this woman.</p>
<p>So Evelina's gentle privacy was well guarded by her own household,
as by a faithful system of domestic police. She grew old peacefully
behind her green hedge, shielded effectually from all rough bristles
of curiosity. Every new spring her own bloom showed paler beside the
new bloom of her flowers, but people could not see it.</p>
<p>Some thirty years after the Squire's death the man John Darby
died; his wife, a year later. That left Evelina alone with the old
woman who had nursed her mother. She was very old, but not feeble,
and quite able to perform the simple household tasks for herself and
Evelina. An old man, who saved himself from the almshouse in such
ways, came daily to do the rougher part of the garden-work in John
Darby's stead. He was aged and decrepit; his muscles seemed able to
perform their appointed tasks only through the accumulated inertia of
a patiently toilsome life in the same tracks. Apparently they would
have collapsed had he tried to force them to aught else than the
holding of the ploughshare, the pulling of weeds, the digging around
the roots of flowers, and the planting of seeds.</p>
<p>Every autumn he seemed about to totter to his fall among the
fading flowers; every spring it was like Death himself urging on the
resurrection; but he lived on year after year, and tended well
Evelina's garden, and the gardens of other maiden-women and widows in
the village. He was taciturn, grubbing among his green beds as
silently as a worm, but now and then he warmed a little under a fire
of questions concerning Evelina's garden. “Never see none sech
flowers in nobody's garden in this town, not sence I knowed 'nough to
tell a pink from a piny,” he would mumble. His speech was
thick; his words were all uncouthly slurred; the expression of his
whole life had come more through his old knotted hands of labor than
through his tongue. But he would wipe his forehead with his
shirt-sleeve and lean a second on his spade, and his face would
change at the mention of the garden. Its wealth of bloom illumined
his old mind, and the roses and honeysuckles and pinks seemed for a
second to be reflected in his bleared old eyes.</p>
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