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<h4>CHAPTER XII.</h4>
<h3>ARABELLA TREFOIL.<br/> </h3>
<p>On the Sunday the party from Bragton went to the parish church,—and
found it very cold. The duty was done by a young curate who lived in
Dillsborough, there being no house in Bragton for him. The rector
himself had not been in the church for the last six months, being an
invalid. At present he and his wife were away in London, but the
vicarage was kept up for his use. The service was certainly not
alluring. It was a very wet morning and the curate had ridden over
from Dillsborough on a little pony which the rector kept for him in
addition to the £100 per annum paid for his services. That he should
have got over his service quickly was not a matter of surprise,—nor
was it wonderful that there should have been no soul-stirring matter
in his discourse as he had two sermons to preach every week and to
perform single-handed all the other clerical duties of a parish lying
four miles distant from his lodgings. Perhaps had he expected the
presence of so distinguished a critic as the Senator from Mickewa he
might have done better. As it was, being nearly wet through and muddy
up to his knees, he did not do the work very well. When Morton and
his friends left the church and got into the carriage for their
half-mile drive home across the park, Mrs. Morton was the first to
speak. "John," she said, "that church is enough to give any woman her
death. I won't go there any more."</p>
<p>"They don't understand warming a church in the country," said John
apologetically.</p>
<p>"Is it not a little too large for the congregation?" asked the
Senator.</p>
<p>The church was large and straggling and ill arranged, and on this
particular Sunday had been almost empty. There was in it an harmonium
which Mrs. Puttock played when she was at home, but in her absence
the attempt made by a few rustics to sing the hymns had not been a
musical success. The whole affair had been very sad, and so the
Paragon had felt it who knew,—and was remembering through the whole
service,—how these things are done in transatlantic cities.</p>
<p>"The weather kept the people away I suppose," said Morton.</p>
<p>"Does that gentleman generally draw large congregations?" asked the
persistent Senator.</p>
<p>"We don't go in for drawing congregations here." Under the
cross-examination of his guest the Secretary of Legation almost lost
his diplomatic good temper. "We have a church in every parish for
those who choose to attend it."</p>
<p>"And very few do choose," said the Senator. "I can't say that they're
wrong." There seemed at the moment to be no necessity to carry the
disagreeable conversation any further as they had now reached the
house. Mrs. Morton immediately went up-stairs, and the two gentlemen
took themselves to the fire in the so-called library, which room was
being used as more commodious than the big drawing-room. Mr. Gotobed
placed himself on the rug with his back to the fire and immediately
reverted to the Church. "That gentleman is paid by tithes I suppose."</p>
<p>"He's not the rector. He's a curate."</p>
<p>"Ah;—just so. He looked like a curate. Doesn't the rector do
anything?" Then Morton, who was by this time heartily sick of
explaining, explained the unfortunate state of Mr. Puttock's health,
and the conversation was carried on till gradually the Senator
learned that Mr. Puttock received £800 a year and a house for doing
nothing, and that he paid his deputy £100 a year with the use of a
pony. "And how long will that be allowed to go on, Mr. Morton?" asked
the Senator.</p>
<p>To all these inquiries Morton found himself compelled not only to
answer, but to answer the truth. Any prevarication or attempt at
mystification fell to the ground at once under the Senator's
tremendous powers of inquiry. It had been going on for four years,
and would probably go on now till Mr. Puttock died. "A man of his age
with the asthma may live for twenty years," said the Senator who had
already learned that Mr. Puttock was only fifty. Then he ascertained
that Mr. Puttock had not been presented to, or selected for the
living on account of any peculiar fitness;—but that he had been a
fellow of Rufford at Oxford till he was forty-five, when he had
thought it well to marry and take a living. "But he must have been
asthmatic then?" said the Senator.</p>
<p>"He may have had all the ailments endured by the human race for
anything I know," said the unhappy host.</p>
<p>"And for anything the bishop cared as far as I can see," said the
Senator. "Well now, I guess, that couldn't occur in our country. A
minister may turn out badly with us as well as with you. But we don't
appoint a man without inquiry as to his fitness,—and if a man can't
do his duty he has to give way to some one who can. If the sick
gentleman took the small portion of the stipend and the working man
the larger, would not better justice be done, and the people better
served?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Puttock has a freehold in the parish."</p>
<p>"A freehold possession of men's souls! The fact is, Mr. Morton, that
the spirit of conservatism in this country is so strong that you
cannot bear to part with a shred of the barbarism of the middle ages.
And when a rag is sent to the winds you shriek with agony at the
disruption, and think that the wound will be mortal." As Mr. Gotobed
said this he extended his right hand and laid his left on his breast
as though he were addressing the Senate from his own chair. Morton,
who had offered to entertain the gentleman for ten days, sincerely
wished that he were doing so.</p>
<p>On the Monday afternoon the Trefoils arrived. Mr. Morton, with his
grandmother and both the carriages, went down to receive them,—with
a cart also for the luggage, which was fortunate, as Arabella
Trefoil's big box was very big indeed, and Lady Augustus, though she
was economical in most things, had brought a comfortable amount of
clothes. Each of them had her own lady's maid, so that the two
carriages were necessary. How it was that these ladies lived so
luxuriously was a mystery to their friends, as for some time past
they had enjoyed no particular income of their own. Lord Augustus had
spent everything that came to his hand, and the family owned no house
at all. Nevertheless Arabella Trefoil was to be seen at all parties
magnificently dressed, and never stirred anywhere without her own
maid. It would have been as grievous to her to be called on to live
without food as to go without this necessary appendage. She was a
big, fair girl whose copious hair was managed after such a fashion
that no one could guess what was her own and what was purchased. She
certainly had fine eyes, though I could never imagine how any one
could look at them and think it possible that she should be in love.
They were very large, beautifully blue, but never bright; and the
eyebrows over them were perfect. Her cheeks were somewhat too long
and the distance from her well-formed nose to her upper lip too
great. Her mouth was small and her teeth excellent. But the charm of
which men spoke the most was the brilliance of her complexion. If, as
the ladies said, it was all paint, she, or her maid, must have been a
great artist. It never betrayed itself to be paint. But the beauty on
which she prided herself was the grace of her motion. Though she was
tall and big she never allowed an awkward movement to escape from
her. She certainly did it very well. No young woman could walk across
an archery ground with a finer step, or manage a train with more
perfect ease, or sit upon her horse with a more complete look of
being at home there. No doubt she was slow, but though slow she never
seemed to drag. Now she was, after a certain fashion, engaged to
marry John Morton and perhaps she was one of the most unhappy young
persons in England.</p>
<p>She had long known that it was her duty to marry, and especially her
duty to marry well. Between her and her mother there had been no
reticence on this subject. With worldly people in general, though the
worldliness is manifest enough and is taught by plain lessons from
parents to their children, yet there is generally some thin veil even
among themselves, some transparent tissue of lies, which, though they
never quite hope to deceive each other, does produce among them
something of the comfort of deceit. But between Lady Augustus and her
daughter there had for many years been nothing of the kind. The
daughter herself had been too honest for it. "As for caring about
him, mamma," she had once said, speaking of a suitor, "of course I
don't. He is nasty, and odious in every way. But I have got to do the
best I can, and what is the use of talking about such trash as that?"
Then there had been no more trash between them.</p>
<p>It was not John Morton whom Arabella Trefoil had called nasty and
odious. She had had many lovers, and had been engaged to not a few,
and perhaps she liked John Morton as well as any of them,—except
one. He was quiet, and looked like a gentleman, and was reputed for
no vices. Nor did she quarrel with her fate in that he himself was
not addicted to any pleasures. She herself did not care much for
pleasure. But she did care to be a great lady,—one who would be
allowed to swim out of rooms before others, one who could snub
others, one who could show real diamonds when others wore paste, one
who might be sure to be asked everywhere even by the people who hated
her. She rather liked being hated by women and did not want any man
to be in love with her,—except as far as might be sufficient for the
purpose of marriage. The real diamonds and the high rank would not be
hers with John Morton. She would have to be content with such rank as
is accorded to Ministers at the Courts at which they are employed.
The fall would be great from what she had once expected,—and
therefore she was miserable. There had been a young man, of immense
wealth, of great rank, whom at one time she really had fancied that
she had loved;—but just as she was landing her prey, the prey had
been rescued from her by powerful friends, and she had been all but
broken-hearted. Mr. Morton's fortune was in her eyes small, and she
was beginning to learn that he knew how to take care of his own
money. Already there had been difficulties as to settlements,
difficulties as to pin-money, difficulties as to residence, Lady
Augustus having been very urgent. John Morton, who had really been
captivated by the beauty of Arabella, was quite in earnest; but there
were subjects on which he would not give way. He was anxious to put
his best leg foremost so that the beauty might be satisfied and might
become his own, but there was a limit beyond which he would not go.
Lady Augustus had more than once said to her daughter that it would
not do;—and then there would be all the weary work to do again!</p>
<p>Nobody seeing the meeting on the platform would have imagined that
Mr. Morton and Miss Trefoil were lovers,—and as for Lady Augustus it
would have been thought that she was in some special degree offended
with the gentleman who had come to meet her. She just gave him the
tip of her fingers and then turned away to her maid and called for
the porters and made herself particular and disagreeable. Arabella
vouchsafed a cold smile, but then her smiles were always cold. After
that she stood still and shivered. "Are you cold?" asked Morton. She
shook her head and shivered again. "Perhaps you are tired?" Then she
nodded her head. When her maid came to her in some trouble about the
luggage, she begged that she might not be "bothered;" saying that no
doubt her mother knew all about it. "Can I do anything?" asked
Morton. "Nothing at all I should think," said Miss Trefoil. In the
meantime old Mrs. Morton was standing by as black as thunder—for the
Trefoil ladies had hardly noticed her.</p>
<p>The luggage turned up all right at last,—as luggage always does, and
was stowed away in the cart. Then came the carriage arrangement.
Morton had intended that the two elder ladies should go together with
one of the maids, and that he should put his love into the other,
which having a seat behind, could accommodate the second girl without
disturbing them in the carriage. But Lady Augustus had made some
exception to this and had begged that her daughter might be seated
with herself. It was a point which Morton could not contest out there
among the porters and drivers, so that at last he and his grandmother
had the phaeton together with the two maids in the rumble. "I never
saw such manners in all my life," said the Honourable Mrs. Morton,
almost bursting with passion.</p>
<p>"They are cold and tired, ma'am."</p>
<p>"No lady should be too cold or too tired to conduct herself with
propriety. No real lady is ever so."</p>
<p>"The place is strange to them, you know."</p>
<p>"I hope with all my heart that it may never be otherwise than strange
to them."</p>
<p>When they arrived at the house the strangers were carried into the
library and tea was of course brought to them. The American Senator
was there, but the greetings were very cold. Mrs. Morton took her
place and offered her hospitality in the most frigid manner. There
had not been the smallest spark of love's flame shown as yet, nor did
the girl as she sat sipping her tea seem to think that any such spark
was wanted. Morton did get a seat beside her and managed to take away
her muff and one of her shawls, but she gave them to him almost as
she might have done to a servant. She smiled indeed,—but she smiled
as some women smile at everybody who has any intercourse with them.
"I think perhaps Mrs. Morton will let us go up-stairs," said Lady
Augustus. Mrs. Morton immediately rang the bell and prepared to
precede the ladies to their chambers. Let them be as insolent as they
would she would do what she conceived to be her duty. Then Lady
Augustus stalked out of the room and her daughter swum after her.
"They don't seem to be quite the same as they were in Washington,"
said the Senator.</p>
<p>John Morton got up and left the room without making any reply. He was
thoroughly unhappy. What was he to do for a week with such a houseful
of people? And then, what was he to do for all his life if the
presiding spirit of the house was to be such a one as this? She was
very beautiful,—certainly. So he told himself; and yet as he walked
round the park he almost repented of what he had done. But after
twenty minutes' fast walking he was able to convince himself that all
the fault on this occasion lay with the mother. Lady Augustus had
been fatigued with her journey and had therefore made everybody near
her miserable.</p>
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