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THE HOUSEKEEPER'S ROOM.
He was not so late the next morning.
Ere he had finished his breakfast he had made up his mind that he
must beware of the earl. He was satisfied that the experiences of
the past night could not be the consequence of one glass of wine. If
he asked him again, he would go to dinner with him, but would drink
nothing but water.
School was just over when Simmons came from his lordship, to inquire
after him, and invite him to dine with him that evening. Donald
immediately consented.
This time lady Arctura was not with the earl.
After as during dinner Donal declined to drink. His lordship cast on
him a keen, searching glance, but it was only a glance, and took no
farther notice of his refusal. The conversation, however, which had
not been brilliant from the first, now sank and sank till it was
not; and after a cup of coffee, his lordship, remarking that he was
not feeling himself, begged Donal to excuse him, and proceeded to
retire. Donal rose, and with a hope that his lordship would have a
good night and feel better in the morning, left the room.
The passage outside was lighted only by a rather dim lamp, and in
the distance Donal saw what he could but distinguish as the form of
a woman, standing by the door which opened upon the great staircase.
He supposed it at first to be one of the maids; but the servants
were so few compared with the size of the castle that one was seldom
to be met on stair or in passage; and besides, the form stood as if
waiting for some one! As he drew nearer, he saw it was lady Arctura,
and would have passed with an obeisance. But ere he could lay his
hand on the lock, hers was there to prevent him. He then saw that
she was agitated, and that she had stopped him thus because her
voice had at the moment failed her. The next moment, however, she
recovered it, and her self-possession as well.
"Mr. Grant," she said, in a low voice, "I wish to speak to you--if
you will allow me."
"I am at your service, my lady," answered Donal.
"But we cannot here! My uncle--"
"Shall we go into the picture-gallery?" suggested Donal; "there is
moonlight there."
"No; that would be still nearer my uncle. His hearing is sometimes
preternaturally keen; and besides, as you know, he often walks there
after his evening meal. But--excuse me, Mr. Grant--you will
understand me presently--are you--are you quite--?"
"You mean, my lady--am I quite myself this evening!" said Donal,
wishing to help her with the embarrassing question: "--I have drunk
nothing but water to-night."
With that she opened the door, and descended the stair, he
following; but as soon as the curve of the staircase hid the door
they had left, she stopped, and turning to him said,
"I would not have you mistake me, Mr. Grant! I should be ashamed to
speak to you if--"
"Indeed I am very sorry!" said Donal, "--though hardly so much to
blame as I fear you think me."
"You mistake me at once! You suppose I imagine you took too much
wine last night! It would be absurd. I saw what you took! But we
must not talk here. Come."
She turned again, and going down, led the way to the housekeeper's
room.
They found her at work with her needle.
"Mistress Brookes," said lady Arctura, "I want to have a little talk
with Mr. Grant, and there is no fire in the library: may we sit
here?"
"By all means! Sit doon, my lady! Why, bairn! you look as cold as if
you had been on the roof! There! sit close to the fire; you're all
trem'lin'!"
Lady Arctura obeyed like the child Mrs. Brookes called her, and sat
down in the chair she gave up to her.
"I've something to see efter i' the still-room," said the
housekeeper. "You sit here and hae yer crack. Sit doon, Mr. Grant.
I'm glad to see you an' my lady come to word o' mooth at last. I
began to think it wud never be!"
Had Donal been in the way of looking to faces for the interpretation
of words and thoughts, he would have seen a shadow sweep over lady
Arctura's, followed by a flush, which he would have attributed to
displeasure at this utterance of the housekeeper. But, with all his
experience of the world within, and all his unusually developed
power of entering into the feelings of others, he had never come to
pry into those feelings, or to study their phenomena for the sake of
possessing himself of them. Man was by no means an open book to
him--"no, nor woman neither," but he would have scorned to
supplement by such investigation what a lady chose to tell him. He
sat looking into the fire, with an occasional upward glance, waiting
for what was to come, and saw neither shadow nor flush. Lady Arctura
sat also gazing into the fire, and seemed in no haste to begin.
"You are so good to Davie!" she said at length, and stopped.
"No better than I have to be," returned Donal. "Not to be good to
Davie would be to be a wretch."
"You know, Mr. Grant, I cannot agree with you!"
"There is no immediate necessity, my lady."
"But I suppose one may be fair to another!" she went on, doubtingly,
"--and it is only fair to confess that he is much more manageable
since you came. Only that is no good if it does not come from the
right source."
"Grapes do not come from thorns, my lady. We must not allow in evil
a power of good."
She did not reply.
"He minds everything I say to him now," she resumed. "What is it
makes him so good?--I wish I had had such a tutor!"
She stopped again: she had spoken out of the simplicity of her
thought, but the words when said looked to her as if they ought not
to have been said.
"Something is working in her!" thought Donal. "She is so different!
Her voice is different!"
"But that is not what I wanted to speak to you about, Mr. Grant,"
she re-commenced, "--though I did want you to know I was aware of
the improvement in Davie. I wished to say something about my uncle."
Here followed another pause.
"You may have remarked," she said at length, "that, though we live
together, and he is my guardian, and the head of the house, there is
not much communication between us."
"I have gathered as much: I ask no questions, but I cannot tell
Davie not to talk to me!"
"Of course not.--Lord Morven is a strange man. I do not understand
him, and I do not want to judge him, or make you judge him. But I
must speak of a fact, concerning yourself, which I have no right to
keep from you."
Once more a pause followed. There was nothing now of the grand dame
about Arctura.
"Has nothing occurred to wake a doubt in you?" she said at last,
abruptly. "Have you not suspected him of--of using you in any way?"
"I have had an undefined ghost of a suspicion," answered Donal.
"Please tell me what you know."
"I should know nothing--although, my room being near his, I should
have been the more perplexed about some things--had he not made an
experiment upon myself a year ago."
"Is it possible?"
"I sometimes fancy I have not been so well since. It was a great
shock to me when I came to myself:--you see I am trusting you, Mr.
Grant!"
"I thank you heartily, my lady," said Donal.
"I believe," continued lady Arctura, gathering courage, "that my
uncle is in the habit of taking some horrible drug for the sake of
its effect on his brain. There are people who do so! What it is I
don't know, and I would rather not know. It is just as bad, surely,
as taking too much wine! I have heard himself remark to Mr.
Carmichael that opium was worse than wine, for it destroyed the
moral sense more. Mind I don't say it is opium he takes!"
"There are other things," said Donal, "even worse!--But surely you
do not mean he dared try anything of the sort on you!"
"I am sure he gave me something! For, once that I dined with
him,--but I cannot describe the effect it had upon me! I think he
wanted to see its operation on one who did not even know she had
taken anything. The influence of such things is a pleasant one, they
say, at first, but I would not go through such agonies as I had for
the world!"
She ceased, evidently troubled by the harassing remembrance. Donal
hastened to speak.
"It was because of such a suspicion, my lady, that this evening I
would not even taste his wine. I am safe to-night, I trust, from the
insanity--I can call it nothing else--that possessed me the last two
nights."
"Was it very dreadful?" asked lady Arctura.
"On the contrary, I had a sense of life and power such as I could
never of myself have imagined!"
"Oh, Mr. Grant, do take care! Do not be tempted to take it again. I
don't know where it might not have led me if I had found it as
pleasant as it was horrible; for I am sorely tried with painful
thoughts, and feel sometimes as if I would do almost anything to get
rid of them."
"There must be a good way of getting rid of them! Think it of God's
mercy," said Donal, "that you cannot get rid of them the other way."
"I do; I do!"
"The shield of his presence was over you."
"How glad I should be to think so! But we have no right to think he
cares for us till we believe in Christ--and--and--I don't know that
I do believe in him!"
"Wherever you learned that, it is a terrible lie," said Donal. "Is
not Christ the same always, and is he not of one mind with God? Was
it not while we were yet sinners that he poured out his soul for us?
It is a fearful thing to say of the perfect Love, that he is not
doing all he can, with all the power of a maker over the creature he
has made, to help and deliver him!"
"I know he makes his sun to shine and his rain to fall upon the evil
and the good; but those good things are only of this world!"
"Are those the good things then that the Lord says the Father will
give to those that ask him? How can you worship a God who gives you
all the little things he does not care much about, but will not do
his best for you?"
"But are there not things he cannot do for us till we believe in
Christ?"
"Certainly there are. But what I want you to see is that he does all
that can be done. He finds it very hard to teach us, but he is never
tired of trying. Anyone who is willing to be taught of God, will by
him be taught, and thoroughly taught."
"I am afraid I am doing wrong in listening to you, Mr. Grant--and
the more that I cannot help wishing what you say might be true! But
are you not in danger--you will pardon me for saying it--of
presumption?--How can all the good people be wrong?"
"Because the greater part of their teachers have set themselves to
explain God rather than to obey and enforce his will. The gospel is
given to convince, not our understandings, but our hearts; that
done, and never till then, our understandings will be free. Our Lord
said he had many things to tell his disciples, but they were not
able to hear them. If the things be true which I have heard from
Sunday to Sunday since I came here, the Lord has brought us no
salvation at all, but only a change of shape to our miseries. They
have not redeemed you, lady Arctura, and never will. Nothing but
Christ himself, your lord and friend and brother, not all the
doctrines about him, even if every one of them were true, can save
you. Poor orphan children, we cannot find our God, and they would
have us take instead a shocking caricature of him!"
"But how should sinners know what is or is not like the true God?"
"If a man desires God, he cannot help knowing enough of him to be
capable of learning more--else how should he desire him? Made in the
image of God, his idea of him cannot be all wrong. That does not
make him fit to teach others--only fit to go on learning for
himself. But in Jesus Christ I see the very God I want. I want a
father like him. He reproaches some of those about him for not
knowing him--for, if they had known God, they would have known him:
they were to blame for not knowing God. No other than the God
exactly like Christ can be the true God. It is a doctrine of devils
that Jesus died to save us from our father. There is no safety, no
good, no gladness, no purity, but with the Father, his father and
our father, his God and our God."
"But God hates sin and punishes it!"
"It would be terrible if he did not. All hatred of sin is love to
the sinner. Do you think Jesus came to deliver us from the
punishment of our sins? He would not have moved a step for that. The
horrible thing is being bad, and all punishment is help to deliver
us from that, nor will punishment cease till we have ceased to be
bad. God will have us good, and Jesus works out the will of his
father. Where is the refuge of the child who fears his father? Is it
in the farthest corner of the room? Is it down in the dungeon of the
castle, my lady?"
"No, no!" cried lady Arctura, "--in his father's arms!"
"There!" said Donal, and was silent.
"I hold by Jesus!" he added after a pause, and rose as he said it,
but stood where he rose.
Lady Arctura sat motionless, divided between reverence for distorted
and false forms of truth taught her from her earliest years, and
desire after a God whose very being is the bliss of his creatures.
Some time passed in silence, and then she too rose to depart. She
held out her hand to Donal with a kind of irresolute motion, but
withdrawing it, smiled almost beseechingly, and said,
"I wish I might ask you something. I know it is a rude question, but
if you could see all, you would answer me and let the offence go."
"I will answer you anything you choose to ask."
"That makes it the more difficult; but I will--I cannot bear to
remain longer in doubt: did you really write that poem you gave to
Kate Graeme--compose it, I mean, your own self?"
"I made no secret of that when I gave it her," said Donal, not
perceiving her drift.
"Then you did really write it?"
Donal looked at her in perplexity. Her face grew very red, and tears
began to come in her eyes.
"You must pardon me!" she said: "I am so ignorant! And we live in
such an out-of-the-way place that--that it seems very unlikely a
real poet--! And then I have been told there are people who have a
passion for appearing to do the thing they are not able to do, and I
was anxious to be quite sure! My mind would keep brooding over it,
and wondering, and longing to know for certain!--So I resolved at
last that I would be rid of the doubt, even at the risk of offending
you. I know I have been rude--unpardonably rude, but--"
"But," supplemented Donal, with a most sympathetic smile, for he
understood her as his own thought, "you do not feel quite sure yet!
What a priori reason do you see why I should not be able to write
verses? There is no rule as to where poetry grows: one place is as
good as another for that!"
"I hope you will forgive me! I hope I have not offended you very
much!"
"Nobody in such a world as this ought to be offended at being asked
for proof. If there are in it rogues that look like honest men, how
is any one, without a special gift of insight, to be always sure of
the honest man? Even the man whom a woman loves best will sometimes
tear her heart to pieces! I will give you all the proof you can
desire.--And lest the tempter should say I made up the proof itself
between now and to-morrow morning, I will fetch it at once."
"Oh, Mr. Grant, spare me! I am not, indeed I am not so bad as that!"
"Who can tell when or whence the doubt may wake again, or what may
wake it!"
"At least let me explain a little before you go," she said.
"Certainly," he answered, reseating himself, in compliance with her
example.
"Miss Graeme told me that you had never seen a garden like theirs
before!"
"I never did. There are none such, I fancy, in our part of the
country."
"Nor in our neighbourhood either."
"Then what is surprising in it?"
"Nothing in that. But is there not something in your being able to
write a poem like that about a garden such as you had never seen?
One would say you must have been familiar with it from childhood to
be able so to enter into the spirit of the place!"
"Perhaps if I had been familiar with it from childhood, that might
have disabled me from feeling the spirit of it, for then might it
not have looked to me as it looked to those in whose time such
gardens were the fashion? Two things are necessary--first, that
there should be a spirit in a place, and next that the place should
be seen by one whose spirit is capable of giving house-room to its
spirit.--By the way, does the ghost-lady feel the place all right?"
"I am not sure that I know what you mean; but I felt the grass with
her feet as I read, and the wind lifting my hair. I seemed to know
exactly how she felt!"
"Now tell me, were you ever a ghost?"
"No," she answered, looking in his face like a child--without even a
smile.
"Did you ever see a ghost?"
"No, never."
"Then how should you know how a ghost would feel?"
"I see! I cannot answer you."
Donal rose.
"I am indeed ashamed!" said lady Arctura.
"Ashamed of giving me the chance of proving myself a true man?"
"That, at least, is no longer necessary!"
"But I want my revenge. As a punishment for doubting one whom you
had so little ground for believing, you shall be compelled to see
the proof--that is, if you will do me the favour to wait here till I
come back. I shall not be long, though it is some distance to the
top of Baliol's tower."
"Davie told me your room was there: do you not find it cold? It must
be very lonely! I wonder why mistress Brookes put you there!"
Donal assured her he could not have had a place more to his mind,
and before she could well think he had reached the foot of his
stair, was back with a roll of papers, which he laid on the table.
"There!" he said, opening it out; "if you will take the trouble to
go over these, you may read the growth of the poem. Here first you
see it blocked out rather roughly, and much blotted with erasures
and substitutions. Here next you see the result copied--clean to
begin with, but afterwards scored and scored. You see the words I
chose instead of the first, and afterwards in their turn rejected,
until in the proofs I reached those which I have as yet let stand. I
do not fancy Miss Graeme has any doubt the verses are mine, for it
was plain she thought them rubbish. From your pains to know who
wrote them, I believe you do not think so badly of them!"
She thought he was satirical, and gave a slight sigh as of pain. It
went to his heart.
"I did not mean the smallest reflection, my lady, on your desire for
satisfaction," he said; "rather, indeed, it flatters me. But is it
not strange the heart should be less ready to believe what seems
worth believing? Something must be true: why not the worthy--oftener
at least than the unworthy? Why should it be easier to believe hard
things of God, for instance, than lovely things?--or that one man
copied from another, than that he should have made the thing
himself? Some would yet say I contrived all this semblance of
composition in order to lay the surer claim to that to which I had
none--nor would take the trouble to follow the thing through its
development! But it will be easy for you, my lady, and no bad
exercise in logic and analysis, to determine whether the genuine
growth of the poem be before you in these papers or not."
"I shall find it most interesting," said lady Arctura: "so much I
can tell already! I never saw anything of the kind before, and had
no idea how poetry was made. Does it always take so much labour?"
"Some verses take much more; some none at all. The labour is in
getting the husks of expression cleared off, so that the thought may
show itself plainly."
At this point Mrs. Brookes, thinking probably the young people had
had long enough conference, entered, and after a little talk with
her, lady Arctura kissed her and bade her good night. Donal retired
to his aerial chamber, wondering whether the lady of the house had
indeed changed as much as she seemed to have changed.
>From that time, whether it was that lady Arctura had previously
avoided meeting him and now did not, or from other causes, Donal and
she met much oftener as they went about the place, nor did they ever
pass without a mutual smile and greeting.
The next day but one, she brought him his papers to the schoolroom.
She had read every erasure and correction, she told him, and could
no longer have had a doubt that the writer of the papers was the
maker of the verses, even had she not previously learned thorough
confidence in the man himself.
"They would possibly fail to convince a jury though!" he said, as he
rose and went to throw them in the fire.
Divining his intent, Arctura darted after him, and caught them just
in time.
"Let me keep them," she pleaded, "--for my humiliation!"
"Do with them what you like, my lady," said Donal. "They are of no
value to me--except that you care for them."
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