Once upon a time, it matters
little when, and in stalwart England, it matters little where, a
fierce battle was fought. It was fought upon a long summer day when
the waving grass was green. Many a wild flower formed by the
Almighty Hand to be a perfumed goblet for the dew, felt its
enamelled cup filled high with blood that day, and shrinking
dropped. Many an insect deriving its delicate colour from harmless
leaves and herbs, was stained anew that day by dying men, and
marked its frightened way with an unnatural track. The painted
butterfly took blood into the air upon the edges of its wings. The
stream ran red. The trodden ground became a quagmire, whence, from
sullen pools collected in the prints of human feet and horses'
hoofs, the one prevailing hue still lowered and glimmered at the
sun.
Heaven keep us from a knowledge of the sights the moon beheld
upon that field, when, coming up above the black line of distant
rising-ground, softened and blurred at the edge by trees, she rose
into the sky and looked upon the plain, strewn with upturned faces
that had once at mothers' breasts sought mothers' eyes, or
slumbered happily. Heaven keep us from a knowledge of the secrets
whispered afterwards upon the tainted wind that blew across the
scene of that day's work and that night's death and suffering! Many
a lonely moon was bright upon the battle-ground, and many a star
kept mournful watch upon it, and many a wind from every quarter of
the earth blew over it, before the traces of the fight were worn
away.
They lurked and lingered for a long time, but survived in little
things; for, Nature, far above the evil passions of men, soon
recovered Her serenity, and smiled upon the guilty battle-ground as
she had done before, when it was innocent. The larks sang high
above it; the swallows skimmed and dipped and flitted to and fro;
the shadows of the flying clouds pursued each other swiftly, over
grass and corn and turnip-field and wood, and over roof and
church-spire in the nestling town among the trees, away into the
bright distance on the borders of the sky and earth, where the red
sunsets faded. Crops were sown, and grew up, and were gathered in;
the stream that had been crimsoned, turned a watermill; men
whistled at the plough; gleaners and haymakers were seen in quiet
groups at work; sheep and oxen pastured; boys whooped and called,
in fields, to scare away the birds; smoke rose from cottage
chimneys; sabbath bells rang peacefully; old people lived and died;
the timid creatures of the field, the simple flowers of the bush
and garden, grew and withered in their destined terms: and all upon
the fierce and bloody battle-ground, where thousands upon thousands
had been killed in the great fight. But, there were deep green
patches in the growing corn at first, that people looked at
awfully. Year after year they re-appeared; and it was known that
underneath those fertile spots, heaps of men and horses lay buried,
indiscriminately, enriching the ground. The husbandmen who ploughed
those places, shrunk from the great worms abounding there; and the
sheaves they yielded, were, for many a long year, called the Battle
Sheaves, and set apart; and no one ever knew a Battle Sheaf to be
among the last load at a Harvest Home. For a long time, every
furrow that was turned, revealed some fragments of the fight. For a
long time, there were wounded trees upon the battle-ground; and
scraps of hacked and broken fence and wall, where deadly struggles
had been made; and trampled parts where not a leaf or blade would
grow. For a long time, no village girl would dress her hair or
bosom with the sweetest flower from that field of death: and after
many a year had come and gone, the berries growing there, were
still believed to leave too deep a stain upon the hand that plucked
them.
The Seasons in their course, however, though they passed as
lightly as the summer clouds themselves, obliterated, in the lapse
of time, even these remains of the old conflict; and wore away such
legendary traces of it as the neighbouring people carried in their
minds, until they dwindled into old wives' tales, dimly remembered
round the winter fire, and waning every year. Where the wild
flowers and berries had so long remained upon the stem untouched,
gardens arose, and houses were built, and children played at
battles on the turf. The wounded trees had long ago made Christmas
logs, and blazed and roared away. The deep green patches were no
greener now than the memory of those who lay in dust below. The
ploughshare still turned up from time to time some rusty bits of
metal, but it was hard to say what use they had ever served, and
those who found them wondered and disputed. An old dinted corselet,
and a helmet, had been hanging in the church so long, that the same
weak half-blind old man who tried in vain to make them out above
the whitewashed arch, had marvelled at them as a baby. If the host
slain upon the field, could have been for a moment reanimated in
the forms in which they fell, each upon the spot that was the bed
of his untimely death, gashed and ghastly soldiers would have
stared in, hundreds deep, at household door and window; and would
have risen on the hearths of quiet homes; and would have been the
garnered store of barns and granaries; and would have started up
between the cradled infant and its nurse; and would have floated
with the stream, and whirled round on the mill, and crowded the
orchard, and burdened the meadow, and piled the rickyard high with
dying men. So altered was the battle-ground, where thousands upon
thousands had been killed in the great fight.
Nowhere more altered, perhaps, about a hundred years ago, than
in one little orchard attached to an old stone house with a
honeysuckle porch; where, on a bright autumn morning, there were
sounds of music and laughter, and where two girls danced merrily
together on the grass, while some half-dozen peasant women standing
on ladders, gathering the apples from the trees, stopped in their
work to look down, and share their enjoyment. It was a pleasant,
lively, natural scene; a beautiful day, a retired spot; and the two
girls, quite unconstrained and careless, danced in the freedom and
gaiety of their hearts.
If there were no such thing as display in the world, my private
opinion is, and I hope you agree with me, that we might get on a
great deal better than we do, and might be infinitely more
agreeable company than we are. It was charming to see how these
girls danced. They had no spectators but the apple-pickers on the
ladders. They were very glad to please them, but they danced to
please themselves (or at least you would have supposed so); and you
could no more help admiring, than they could help dancing. How they
did dance!
Not like opera-dancers. Not at all. And not like Madame
Anybody's finished pupils. Not the least. It was not quadrille
dancing, nor minuet dancing, nor even country-dance dancing. It was
neither in the old style, nor the new style, nor the French style,
nor the English style: though it may have been, by accident, a
trifle in the Spanish style, which is a free and joyous one, I am
told, deriving a delightful air of off-hand inspiration, from the
chirping little castanets. As they danced among the orchard trees,
and down the groves of stems and back again, and twirled each other
lightly round and round, the influence of their airy motion seemed
to spread and spread, in the sun-lighted scene, like an expanding
circle in the water. Their streaming hair and fluttering skirts,
the elastic grass beneath their feet, the boughs that rustled in
the morning air-the flashing leaves, the speckled shadows on the
soft green ground-the balmy wind that swept along the landscape,
glad to turn the distant windmill, cheerily-everything between the
two girls, and the man and team at plough upon the ridge of land,
where they showed against the sky as if they were the last things
in the world-seemed dancing too.
At last, the younger of the dancing sisters, out of breath, and
laughing gaily, threw herself upon a bench to rest. The other
leaned against a tree hard by. The music, a wandering harp and
fiddle, left off with a flourish, as if it boasted of its
freshness; though the truth is, it had gone at such a pace, and
worked itself to such a pitch of competition with the dancing, that
it never could have held on, half a minute longer. The
apple-pickers on the ladders raised a hum and murmur of applause,
and then, in keeping with the sound, bestirred themselves to work
again like bees.
The more actively, perhaps, because an elderly gentleman, who
was no other than Doctor Jeddler himself-it was Doctor Jeddler's
house and orchard, you should know, and these were Doctor Jeddler's
daughters-came bustling out to see what was the matter, and who the
deuce played music on his property, before breakfast. For he was a
great philosopher, Doctor Jeddler, and not very musical.
'Music and dancing
to-day!' said the Doctor, stopping short, and speaking to
himself. 'I thought they dreaded to-day. But it's a world of
contradictions. Why, Grace, why, Marion!' he added, aloud, 'is the
world more mad than usual this morning?'
'Make some allowance for it, father, if it be,' replied his
younger daughter, Marion, going close to him, and looking into his
face, 'for it's somebody's birth-day.'
'Somebody's birth-day, Puss!' replied the Doctor. 'Don't you
know it's always somebody's birth-day? Did you never hear how many
new performers enter on this-ha! ha! ha!-it's impossible to speak
gravely of it-on this preposterous and ridiculous business called
Life, every minute?'
'No, father!'
'No, not you, of course; you're a woman-almost,' said the
Doctor. 'By-the-by,' and he looked into the pretty face, still
close to his, 'I suppose it's
your birth-day.'
'No! Do you really, father?' cried his pet daughter, pursing up
her red lips to be kissed.
'There! Take my love with it,' said the Doctor, imprinting his
upon them; 'and many happy returns of the-the idea!-of the day. The
notion of wishing happy returns in such a farce as this,' said the
Doctor to himself, 'is good! Ha! ha! ha!'
Doctor Jeddler was, as I have said, a great philosopher, and the
heart and mystery of his philosophy was, to look upon the world as
a gigantic practical joke; as something too absurd to be considered
seriously, by any rational man. His system of belief had been, in
the beginning, part and parcel of the battle-ground on which he
lived, as you shall presently understand.
'Well! But how did you get the music?' asked the Doctor.
'Poultry-stealers, of course! Where did the minstrels come
from?'
'Alfred sent the music,' said his daughter Grace, adjusting a
few simple flowers in her sister's hair, with which, in her
admiration of that youthful beauty, she had herself adorned it
half-an-hour before, and which the dancing had disarranged.
'Oh! Alfred sent the music, did he?' returned the Doctor.
'Yes. He met it coming out of the town as he was entering early.
The men are travelling on foot, and rested there last night; and as
it was Marion's birth-day, and he thought it would please her, he
sent them on, with a pencilled note to me, saying that if I thought
so too, they had come to serenade her.'
'Ay, ay,' said the Doctor, carelessly, 'he always takes your
opinion.'
'And my opinion being favourable,' said Grace, good-humouredly;
and pausing for a moment to admire the pretty head she decorated,
with her own thrown back; 'and Marion being in high spirits, and
beginning to dance, I joined her. And so we danced to Alfred's
music till we were out of breath. And we thought the music all the
gayer for being sent by Alfred. Didn't we, dear Marion?'
'Oh, I don't know, Grace. How you tease me about Alfred.'
'Tease you by mentioning your lover?' said her sister.
'I am sure I don't much care to have him mentioned,' said the
wilful beauty, stripping the petals from some flowers she held, and
scattering them on the ground. 'I am almost tired of hearing of
him; and as to his being my lover-'
'Hush! Don't speak lightly of a true heart, which is all your
own, Marion,' cried her sister, 'even in jest. There is not a truer
heart than Alfred's in the world!'
'No-no,' said Marion, raising her eyebrows with a pleasant air
of careless consideration, 'perhaps not. But I don't know that
there's any great merit in that. I-I don't want him to be so very
true. I never asked him. If he expects that I-But, dear Grace, why
need we talk of him at all, just now!'
It was agreeable to see the graceful figures of the blooming
sisters, twined together, lingering among the trees, conversing
thus, with earnestness opposed to lightness, yet, with love
responding tenderly to love. And it was very curious indeed to see
the younger sister's eyes suffused with tears, and something
fervently and deeply felt, breaking through the wilfulness of what
she said, and striving with it painfully.
The difference between them, in respect of age, could not exceed
four years at most; but Grace, as often happens in such cases, when
no mother watches over both (the Doctor's wife was dead), seemed,
in her gentle care of her young sister, and in the steadiness of
her devotion to her, older than she was; and more removed, in
course of nature, from all competition with her, or participation,
otherwise than through her sympathy and true affection, in her
wayward fancies, than their ages seemed to warrant. Great character
of mother, that, even in this shadow and faint reflection of it,
purifies the heart, and raises the exalted nature nearer to the
angels!
The Doctor's reflections, as he looked after them, and heard the
purport of their discourse, were limited at first to certain merry
meditations on the folly of all loves and likings, and the idle
imposition practised on themselves by young people, who believed
for a moment, that there could be anything serious in such bubbles,
and were always undeceived-always!
But, the home-adorning, self-denying qualities of Grace, and her
sweet temper, so gentle and retiring, yet including so much
constancy and bravery of spirit, seemed all expressed to him in the
contrast between her quiet household figure and that of his younger
and more beautiful child; and he was sorry for her sake-sorry for
them both-that life should be such a very ridiculous business as it
was.
The Doctor never dreamed of inquiring whether his children, or
either of them, helped in any way to make the scheme a serious one.
But then he was a Philosopher.
A kind and generous man by nature, he had stumbled, by chance,
over that common Philosopher's stone (much more easily discovered
than the object of the alchemist's researches), which sometimes
trips up kind and generous men, and has the fatal property of
turning gold to dross and every precious thing to poor account.
'Britain!' cried the Doctor. 'Britain! Holloa!'
A small man, with an uncommonly sour and discontented face,
emerged from the house, and returned to this call the unceremonious
acknowledgment of 'Now then!'
'Where's the breakfast table?' said the Doctor.
'In the house,' returned Britain.
'Are you going to spread it out here, as you were told last
night?' said the Doctor. 'Don't you know that there are gentlemen
coming? That there's business to be done this morning, before the
coach comes by? That this is a very particular occasion?'
'I couldn't do anything, Dr. Jeddler, till the women had done
getting in the apples, could I?' said Britain, his voice rising
with his reasoning, so that it was very loud at last.
'Well, have they done now?' replied the Doctor, looking at his
watch, and clapping his hands. 'Come! make haste! where's
Clemency?'
'Here am I, Mister,' said a voice from one of the ladders, which
a pair of clumsy feet descended briskly. 'It's all done now. Clear
away, gals. Everything shall be ready for you in half a minute,
Mister.'
With that she began to bustle about most vigorously; presenting,
as she did so, an appearance sufficiently peculiar to justify a
word of introduction.
She was about thirty years old, and had a sufficiently plump and
cheerful face, though it was twisted up into an odd expression of
tightness that made it comical. But, the extraordinary homeliness
of her gait and manner, would have superseded any face in the
world. To say that she had two left legs, and somebody else's arms,
and that all four limbs seemed to be out of joint, and to start
from perfectly wrong places when they were set in motion, is to
offer the mildest outline of the reality. To say that she was
perfectly content and satisfied with these arrangements, and
regarded them as being no business of hers, and that she took her
arms and legs as they came, and allowed them to dispose of
themselves just as it happened, is to render faint justice to her
equanimity. Her dress was a prodigious pair of self-willed shoes,
that never wanted to go where her feet went; blue stockings; a
printed gown of many colours, and the most hideous pattern
procurable for money; and a white apron. She always wore short
sleeves, and always had, by some accident, grazed elbows, in which
she took so lively an interest, that she was continually trying to
turn them round and get impossible views of them. In general, a
little cap placed somewhere on her head; though it was rarely to be
met with in the place usually occupied in other subjects, by that
article of dress; but, from head to foot she was scrupulously
clean, and maintained a kind of dislocated tidiness. Indeed, her
laudable anxiety to be tidy and compact in her own conscience as
well as in the public eye, gave rise to one of her most startling
evolutions, which was to grasp herself sometimes by a sort of
wooden handle (part of her clothing, and familiarly called a busk),
and wrestle as it were with her garments, until they fell into a
symmetrical arrangement.
Such, in outward form and garb, was Clemency Newcome; who was
supposed to have unconsciously originated a corruption of her own
Christian name, from Clementina (but nobody knew, for the deaf old
mother, a very phenomenon of age, whom she had supported almost
from a child, was dead, and she had no other relation); who now
busied herself in preparing the table, and who stood, at intervals,
with her bare red arms crossed, rubbing her grazed elbows with
opposite hands, and staring at it very composedly, until she
suddenly remembered something else she wanted, and jogged off to
fetch it.
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