<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER III.</h2>
<p class="p2">The reason why Mrs. OʼGaghan, generally so
prompt and careful, though never very lucid, had
neglected better precautions in a matter so important,
was simply and solely this—Lady Nowell,
the delicate mother, was dying. It had been
known, ever since the birth, that she had scarcely
any chance of recovery. And Biddy loved her
with all her warm heart, and so did every one in
the house who owned a heart that could love. In
the great anxiety, all things were upside down.
None of the servants knew where to go for orders,
and few could act without them; the housekeeper
was all abroad; house–steward there was none;
head–butler Hogstaff cried in his pantry, and wiped
his eyes with the leathers; and, as for the master
of them all, Sir Cradock Nowell himself, he rarely
left the darkened room, and when he did he could
not see well.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>A sweet frail creature the young mother was,
wedded too early, as happens here more often than
we are aware of. Then disappointed, and grieving
still more at her husbandʼs disappointment, she had
set her whole heart so long and so vainly upon
prospective happiness, that now it was come she had
not the strength to do anything more than smile at
it. And smile she did, very sweetly, all the time
she knew she was dying; she felt so proud of those
two fine boys, and could not think how she had
them. Ever so many times Sir Cradock, hanging
fondly over her wan, sweet face, ordered the little
wretches away, who would keep on coming to
trouble her. But every time she looked up at him
with such a feeble glory, and such a dash of
humour,—“Youʼve got them at last, and now you
donʼt care a bit about them; but oh! please do for
my sake”; every time her fading eyes followed them
to the door, so that the loving husband, cold with
the shadow of the coming void, had to whisper,
“Bring them back, put them here between us”.</p>
<p>Although he knew that she was dying, he could
not feel it yet; the mind admitted that fearful
truth, but the heart repulsed it. Further as she
sunk, and further yet, from his pleading gaze, the
closer to her side he crept, the more he clasped her
shadowy hands, and raised her drooping neck; the
fonder grew the entreating words, the whispers of
the love–time, faint smiles that hoped to win her
smile, although they moved in tears. And smile
she did once more on earth, through the ashy hue—the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
shadow of the soulʼs wings fluttering—when
two fresh lives, bought by her death, were shown
for the farewell to her.</p>
<p>“And if itʼs wrong, then, sheʼll make it right”,
thought the conscientious Biddy. “I can take my
oath onʼt she knowed the differ from the very first;
though nobody else couldnʼt see it, barring the caps
they was put in. Now, if only that gossoon will
consent to her see them, once more, and it canʼt
hurt, the poor darlinʼ—and the blessing as comes
from the deathʼs gaze—— ”</p>
<p>Mrs. OʼGaghanʼs doubts were ended by the
entrance of the doctor, a spare, short man, with a
fiery face, red hair, and quick little eyes. He was
not more than thirty years old, but knew his duties
thoroughly; nevertheless, he would not have been
there but for the sudden emergency. He was now
come to fetch the nurse, having observed that the
poor motherʼs eyes were gleaming feebly, once and
again, towards the door that led to the nursery;
and at last she had tried to raise her hand, and
point in that direction. So in came Biddy, sobbing
hard, with a babe on either arm; and she curtseyed
cleverly to Sir Cradock without disturbing the equipoise.
But the motherʼs glance was not judicial,
as poor Biddy had expected—her heart and soul
were far beyond rosettes, and even titles. In one
long, yearning look, she lingered on her new–born
babes, then turned those hazy eyes in fondness to
her kneeling husbandʼs, then tried to pray or bless
the three, and shivered twice, and died.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>For days and weeks Sir Cradock Nowell bore
his life, but did not live. All his clear intellect and
strong will, noble plans, and useful labours, all his
sense of truth and greatness, lay benumbed and
frozen in the cold track of death. He could not
bear to see his children, he would not even hear of
them; “they had robbed him of his loved one,
and what good were they? Little red things;
perhaps he would love them when they grew like
their mother”. Those were not his expressions, for
he was proud and shy; but that was the form his
thoughts would take, if they could take any. No
wonder that he, for a time, was lost beyond the
verge of reason; because that blow, which most of
all stuns and defeats the upright man, had descended
on him—the blow to the sense of justice. This a
man of large mind feels often from his fellow–men,
never from his Maker. But Sir Cradock was a man
of intellect, rather than of mind. To me a large
mind seems to be strong intellect quickened with
warm heart. Sir Cradock Nowell had plenty of intellect,
and plenty of heart as well, but he kept the
two asunder. So much the better for getting on in
the world; so much the worse for dealing with
God. A man so constituted rarely wins, till overborne
by trouble, that only knowledge which falls
(like genius) where our Father listeth. So the
bereaved man measured justice by the ells and
inches of this world.</p>
<p>And it did seem very hard, that he who had
lived for twenty years, from light youth up to the
balance age of forty, not only without harming any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
fellow–mortal, but, upon fair average, to do good
in the world—it seemed, I say—it was, thought he—most
unjust that such a man could not set his
serious heart upon one little treasure without losing
it the moment he had learned its value. Now,
with pride to spur sad memory—bronze spurs to a
marble horse—he remembered how his lovely
Violet chose him from all others. Gallant suitors
crowded round her, for she was rich as well as
beautiful; but she quietly came from out them all
for him, a man of twice her age. And he who
had cared for none till then, and had begun to look
on woman as a stubby–bearded man looks back at
the romance of his first lather, he first admired her
grace and beauty, then her warmth of heart and
wit, then, scorning all analysis, her own sweet self;
and loved her.</p>
<p>A few days after the funeral he was walking
sadly up and down in his lonely library, caring no
whit for his once–loved books, for the news of the
day, or his business, and listless to look at anything,
even the autumn sunset; when the door was
opened quietly, and shyly through the shadows
stole his schoolfellow of yore, his truest friend,
John Rosedew. With this gentleman I take a
very serious liberty; but he never yet was known
to resent a liberty taken honestly. That, however,
does not justify me. “John Rosedew” I intend
to call him, because he likes it best; and so he
would though ten times a Bachelor of Divinity, a
late Vice–Principal of his college, and the present
Rector of Nowelhurst. Formerly I did my best,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
loving well the character, to describe that simple–minded,
tender–hearted yeoman, John Huxtable,
of Tossilʼs Barton, in the county of Devon. Like
his, as like any two of Natureʼs ever–varied works,
were the native grain and staple of the Rev. John
Rosedew. Beside those little inborn and indying
variations which Nature still insists on, that she
may know her sons apart, those two genial Britons
differed both in mental and bodily endowments,
and through education. In spite of that, they
were, and are, as like to one another as any two
men can be who have no smallness in them. Small
men run pretty much of a muchness; as the calibre
increases, so the divergence multiplies.</p>
<p>Farmer Huxtable was no fool; but having once
learned to sign his name, he had attained his maximum
of literary development; John Rosedew, on
the other hand, although a strong and well–built
man, who had pulled a good oar in his day, was
not, in bulk and stature, a match for Hercules or
Milo. Unpretending, gentle, a lover of the truth,
easily content with others, but never with himself,
even now, at the age of forty, he had not overcome
the bashfulness and diffidence of a fine and sensitive
nature. And, first–rate scholar as he was, he
would have lost his class at Oxford solely through
that shyness, unless a kind examiner, who saw his
blushing agony, had turned from some commonplace
of Sophocles to a glorious passage of Pindar.
Then, carried away by the noble poet, John Rosedew
forgot the schools, the audience, even the row<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
of examiners, and gave grand thoughts their grand
expression, breathing free as the winds of heaven.
Nor till his voice began to falter from the high
emotion, and his heart beat fast, though not from
shame, and the tears of genius touched by genius
were difficult to check, not till then knew he, or
guessed, that every eye was fixed upon him, that
every heart was thrilling, that even the stiff examiners
bent forward like eager children, and the
young men in the gallery could scarcely keep from
cheering. Then suddenly, in the full sweep of
magnificence, he stopped, like an eagle shot.</p>
<p>Now the parson, ruddy cheeked, with a lock of
light brown hair astray upon his forehead, and his
pale, blue eyes looking much as if he had just
awoke and rubbed them, came shyly and with deep
embarrassment into the darkening room. For days
and days he had thought and thought, but could
not at all determine whether, and when, and how,
he ought to visit his ancient friend. His own heart
first suggested that he ought to go at once, if only
to show the bereaved one that still there were some
to love him. To this right impulse—and the impulse
of a heart like this could seldom be a wrong
one—rose counter–checks of worldly knowledge,
such little as he had. And it seemed to many
people strange and unaccountable, that if Mr.
Rosedew piqued himself upon anything whatever,
it was not on his learning, his purity, or benevolence,
it was not on his gentle bearing, or the
chivalry of his soul, but on a fine acquirement,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>
whereof in all opinions (except, indeed, his own)
he possessed no jot or tittle—a strictly–disciplined
and astute experience of the world. Now this
supposed experience told him that it might seem
coarse and forward to offer the hard grasp of
friendship ere the soft clasp of love was cold;
that he, as the clergyman of the parish, would
appear to presume upon his office; that no proud
man could ever bear to have his anguish pryed
into. These, and many other misgivings and objections,
met his eager longings to help his dear old
friend.</p>
<p>Suddenly and to his great relief—for he knew
not how to begin, though he felt how and mistrusted
it—the old friend turned upon him from
his lonely pacing, and held out both his hands.
Not a word was said by either; what they meant
required no telling, or was told by silence. Long
time they sat in the western window, John Rosedew
keeping his eyes from sunset, which did not
suit them then. At last he said, in a low voice,
which it cost him much to find—</p>
<p>“What name, dear Cradock, for the younger
babe? Your own, of course, for the elder”.</p>
<p>“No name, John, but his sweet motherʼs; unless
you like to add his uncleʼs”.</p>
<p>John Rosedew was puzzled lamentably. He
could not bear to worry his friend any more upon
the subject; and yet it seemed to him sad, false
concord, to christen a boy as “Violet”. But he
argued that, in botanical fact, a violet is male as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
well as female, and at such a time he could not
think of thwarting a widowerʼs yearnings. In
spite of all his worldly knowledge, it never occurred
to his simple mind that poor Sir Cradock meant
the ladyʼs maiden surname, which I believe was
“Incledon”. And yet he had suggestive precedent
brought even then before him, for Sir Cradock
Nowellʼs brother bore the name of “Clayton”;
which name John Rosedew added now, and found
relief in doing so.</p>
<p>Thus it came to pass, that the babe without
rosette was baptized as “Violet Clayton”, while
the owner of the bauble received the name of
“Cradock”—Cradock Nowell, now the ninth in
lineal succession. The father was still too broken
down to care about being present; godfathers and
godmothers made all their vows by proxy. Mrs.
OʼGaghan held the infants, and one of them
cried, and the other laughed. The rosette was
there in all its glory, and received a tidy sprinkle;
and the wearer of it was, as usual, the one who
took things easily. As the common children said,
who came to see the great ones “loustering”, the
whole affair was rather like a white burying than a
baptism. Nevertheless, the tenants and labourers
moistened their semi–regenerate clay with many a
fontful of good ale, to ensure the success of the
ceremony.</p>
<hr class="chap" /></div>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span></p>
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