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Chapter VII--'Twas the face of Sir John Oxon the moon shone upon

A Lady of Quality





From that time henceforward into the young woman's dull life there
came a little change. It did not seem a little change to her, but a
great one, though to others it would have seemed slight indeed. She
was an affectionate, house-wifely creature, who would have made the
best of wives and mothers if it had been so ordained by Fortune, and
something of her natural instincts found outlet in the furtive
service she paid her sister, who became the empress of her soul. She
darned and patched the tattered hangings with a wonderful neatness,
and the hours she spent at work in the chamber were to her almost as
sacred as hours spent at religious duty, or as those nuns and novices
give to embroidering altar-cloths. There was a brightness in the
room that seemed in no other in the house, and the lingering essences
in the air of it were as incense to her. In secrecy she even busied
herself with keeping things in better order than Rebecca, Mistress
Clorinda's woman, had ever had time to do before. She also contrived
to get into her own hands some duties that were Rebecca's own. She
could mend lace cleverly and arrange riband-knots with taste, and
even change the fashion of a gown. The hard-worked tirewoman was but
too glad to be relieved, and kept her secret well, being praised many
times for the set or fashion of a thing into which she had not so
much as set a needle. Being a shrewd baggage, she was wise enough
always to relate to Anne the story of her mistress's pleasure, having
the wit to read in her delight that she would be encouraged to fresh
effort.

At times it so befell that, when Anne went into the bed-chamber,
she found the beauty there, who, if she chanced to be in the humour,
would detain her in her presence for a space and bewitch her over
again. In sooth, it seemed that she took a pleasure in showing her
female adorer how wondrously full of all fascinations she could be.
At such times Anne's plain face would almost bloom with excitement,
and her shot pheasant's eyes would glow as if beholding a goddess.

She neither saw nor heard more of the miniature on the riband.
It used to make her tremble at times to fancy that by some strange
chance it might still be under the bed, and that the handsome face
smiled and the blue eyes gazed in the very apartment where she
herself sat and her sister was robed and disrobed in all her
beauty.

She used all her modest skill in fitting to her own shape and
refurnishing the cast-off bits of finery bestowed upon her. It was
all set to rights long before Clorinda recalled to mind that she had
promised that Anne should sometime see her chance visitors take their
dish of tea with her.

But one day, for some cause, she did remember, and sent for
her.

Anne ran to her bedchamber and donned her remodelled gown with
shaking hands. She laughed a little hysterically as she did it,
seeing her plain snub-nosed face in the glass. She tried to dress
her head in a fashion new to her, and knew she did it ill and
untidily, but had no time to change it. If she had had some red she
would have put it on, but such vanities were not in her chamber or
Barbara's. So she rubbed her cheeks hard, and even pinched them, so
that in the end they looked as if they were badly rouged. It seemed
to her that her nose grew red too, and indeed 'twas no wonder, for
her hands and feet were like ice.

"She must be ashamed of me," the humble creature said to
herself. "And if she is ashamed she will be angered and send me away
and be friends no more."

She did not deceive herself, poor thing, and imagine she had the
chance of being regarded with any great lenience if she appeared
ill.

"Mistress Clorinda begged that you would come quickly," said
Rebecca, knocking at the door.

So she caught her handkerchief, which was scented, as all her
garments were, with dried rose-leaves from the garden, which she had
conserved herself, and went down to the chintz parlour trembling.

It was a great room with white panels, and flowered coverings to
the furniture. There were a number of ladies and gentlemen standing
talking and laughing loudly together. The men outnumbered the women,
and most of them stood in a circle about Mistress Clorinda, who sat
upright in a great flowered chair, smiling with her mocking, stately
air, as if she defied them to dare to speak what they felt.

Anne came in like a mouse. Nobody saw her. She did not,
indeed, know what to do. She dared not remain standing all alone, so
she crept to the place where her sister's chair was, and stood a
little behind its high back. Her heart beat within her breast till
it was like to choke her.

They were only country gentlemen who made the circle, but to her
they seemed dashing gallants. That some of them had red noses as
well as cheeks, and that their voices were big and their gallantries
boisterous, was no drawback to their manly charms, she having seen no
other finer gentlemen. They were specimens of the great conquering
creature Man, whom all women must aspire to please if they have the
fortunate power; and each and all of them were plainly trying to
please Clorinda, and not she them.

And so Anne gazed at them with admiring awe, waiting until there
should come a pause in which she might presume to call her sister's
attention to her presence; but suddenly, before she had indeed made
up her mind how she might best announce herself, there spoke behind
her a voice of silver.

"It is only goddesses," said the voice, "who waft about them as
they move the musk of the rose-gardens of Araby. When you come to
reign over us in town, Madam, there will be no perfume in the mode
but that of rose-leaves, and in all drawing-rooms we shall breathe
but their perfume."

And there, at her side, was bowing, in cinnamon and crimson,
with jewelled buttons on his velvet coat, the beautiful being whose
fair locks the sun had shone on the morning she had watched him ride
away--the man whom the imperial beauty had dismissed and called a
popinjay.

Clorinda looked under her lashes towards him without turning,
but in so doing beheld Anne standing in waiting.

"A fine speech lost," she said, "though 'twas well enough for
the country, Sir John. 'Tis thrown away, because 'tis not I who am
scented with rose-leaves, but Anne there, whom you must not ogle.
Come hither, sister, and do not hide as if you were ashamed to be
looked at."

And she drew her forward, and there Anne stood, and all of them
stared at her poor, plain, blushing face, and the Adonis in cinnamon
and crimson bowed low, as if she had been a duchess, that being his
conqueror's way with gentle or simple, maid, wife, or widow, beauty
or homespun uncomeliness.

It was so with him always; he could never resist the chance of
luring to himself a woman's heart, whether he wanted it or not, and
he had a charm, a strange and wonderful one, it could not be denied.
Anne palpitated indeed as she made her curtsey to him, and wondered
if Heaven had ever before made so fine a gentleman and so beautiful a
being.

She went but seldom to this room again, and when she went she
stood always in the background, far more in fear that some one would
address her than that she should meet with neglect. She was used to
neglect, and to being regarded as a nonentity, and aught else
discomfited her. All her pleasure was to hear what was said, though
'twas not always of the finest wit--and to watch Clorinda play the
queen among her admirers and her slaves. She would not have dared to
speak of Sir John Oxon frequently--indeed, she let fall his name but
rarely; but she learned a curious wit in contriving to hear all
things concerning him. It was her habit cunningly to lead Mistress
Margery to talking about him and relating long histories of his
conquests and his grace. Mistress Wimpole knew many of them, having,
for a staid and prudent matron, a lively interest in his ways. It
seemed, truly--if one must believe her long-winded stories--that no
duchess under seventy had escaped weeping for him and losing rest,
and that ladies of all ranks had committed follies for his sake.

Mistress Anne, having led her to this fruitful subject, would
sit and listen, bending over her embroidery frame with strange
emotions, causing her virgin breast to ache with their swelling. She
would lie awake at night thinking in the dark, with her heart
beating. Surely, surely there was no other man on earth who was so
fitted to Clorinda, and to whom it was so suited that this empress
should give her charms. Surely no woman, however beautiful or proud,
could dismiss his suit when he pressed it. And then, poor woman, her
imagination strove to paint the splendour of their mutual love,
though of such love she knew so little. But it must, in sooth, be
bliss and rapture; and perchance, was her humble thought, she might
see it from afar, and hear of it. And when they went to court, and
Clorinda had a great mansion in town, and many servants who needed a
housewife's eye upon their doings to restrain them from wastefulness
and riot, might it not chance to be that if she served well now, and
had the courage to plead with her then, she might be permitted to
serve her there, living quite apart in some quiet corner of the
house. And then her wild thoughts would go so far that she would
dream--reddening at her own boldness--of a child who might be born to
them, a lordly infant son and heir, whose eyes might be blue and
winning, and his hair in great fair locks, and whom she might nurse
and tend and be a slave to--and love--and love--and love, and who
might end by knowing she was his tender servant, always to be counted
on, and might look at her with that wooing, laughing glance, and even
love her too.

The night Clorinda laid her commands upon Mistress Wimpole
concerning the coming of Sir John Oxon, that matron, after receiving
them, hurried to her other charges, flurried and full of talk, and
poured forth her wonder and admiration at length.

"She is a wondrous lady!" she said--"she is indeed! It is not
alone her beauty, but her spirit and her wit. Mark you how she sees
all things and lets none pass, and can lay a plan as prudent as any
lady old enough to be twice her mother. She knows all the ways of
the world of fashion, and will guard herself against gossip in such a
way that none can gainsay her high virtue. Her spirit is too great
to allow that she may even seem to be as the town ladies. She will
not have it! Sir John will not find his court easy to pay. She will
not allow that he shall be able to say to any one that he has seen
her alone a moment. Thus, she says, he cannot boast. If all ladies
were as wise and cunning, there would be no tales to tell." She
talked long and garrulously, and set forth to them how Mistress
Clorinda had looked straight at her with her black eyes, until she
had almost shaken as she sat, because it seemed as though she dared
her to disobey her will; and how she had sat with her hair trailing
upon the floor over the chair's back, and at first it had seemed that
she was flushed with anger, but next as if she had smiled.

"Betimes," said Mistress Wimpole, "I am afraid when she smiles,
but to-night some thought had crossed her mind that pleased her. I
think it was that she liked to think that he who has conquered so
many ladies will find that he is to be outwitted and made a mock of.
She likes that others shall be beaten if she thinks them impudent.
She liked it as a child, and would flog the stable-boys with her
little whip until they knelt to beg her pardon for their
freedoms."

That night Mistress Anne went to her bed-chamber with her head
full of wandering thoughts, and she had not the power to bid them
disperse themselves and leave her--indeed, she scarce wished for it.
She was thinking of Clorinda, and wondering sadly that she was of so
high a pride that she could bear herself as though there were no
human weakness in her breast, not even the womanly weakness of a
heart. How could it be possible that she could treat with disdain
this gallant gentleman, if he loved her, as he surely must? Herself
she had been sure that she had seen an ardent flame in his blue eyes,
even that first day when he had bowed to her with that air of grace
as he spoke of the fragrance of the rose leaves he had thought wafted
from her robe. How could a woman whom he loved resist him? How could
she cause him to suffer by forcing him to stand at arm's length when
he sighed to draw near and breathe his passion at her feet?

In the silence of her chamber as she disrobed, she sighed with
restless pain, but did not know that her sighing was for grief that
love--of which there seemed so little in some lives--could be wasted
and flung away. She could not fall into slumber when she lay down
upon her pillow, but tossed from side to side with a burdened
heart.

"She is so young and beautiful and proud," she thought. "It is
because I am so much older that I can see these things--that I see
that this is surely the one man who should be her husband. There may
be many others, but they are none of them her equals, and she would
scorn and hate them when she was once bound to them for life. This
one is as beautiful as she--and full of grace, and wit, and spirit.
She could not look down upon him, however wrath she was at any time.
Ah me! She should not spurn him, surely she should not!"

She was so restless and ill at ease that she could not lie upon
her bed, but rose therefrom, as she often did in her wakeful hours,
and went to her lattice, gently opening it to look out upon the
night, and calm herself by sitting with her face uplifted to the
stars, which from her childhood she had fancied looked down upon her
kindly and as if they would give her comfort.

To-night there were no stars. There should have been a moon
three- quarters full, but, in the evening, clouds had drifted across
the sky and closed over all heavily, so that no moonlight was to be
seen, save when a rare sudden gust made a ragged rent, for a moment,
in the blackness.

She did not sit this time, but knelt, clad in her night-rail as
she was. All was sunk into the profoundest silence of the night. By
this time the entire household had been long enough abed to be
plunged in sleep. She alone was waking, and being of that simple
mind which, like a child's, must ever bear its trouble to a
protecting strength, she looked up at the darkness of the cloudy sky
and prayed for the better fortune of the man who had indeed not
remembered her existence after the moment he had made her his
obeisance. She was too plain and sober a creature to be
remembered.

"Perchance," she murmured, "he is at this moment also looking at
the clouds from his window, because he cannot sleep for thinking that
in two days he will be beneath her father's roof and will see her
loveliness, and he must needs be contriving within his mind what he
will say, if she do but look as if she might regard him with favour,
which I pray she will."

From the path below, that moment there rose a slight sound, so
slight a one that for a moment she thought she must have been
deceived in believing it had fallen upon her ear. All was still
after it for full two minutes, and had she heard no more she would
have surely forgotten she had heard aught, or would have believed
herself but the victim of fancy. But after the long pause the same
sound came again, though this time it was slighter; yet, despite its
slightness, it seemed to her to be the crushing of the earth and
stone beneath a cautious foot. It was a foot so cautious that it was
surely stealthy and scarce dared to advance at all. And then all was
still again. She was for a moment overcome with fears, not being of
a courageous temper, and having heard, but of late, of a bold gipsy
vagabond who, with a companion, had broken into the lower rooms of a
house of the neighbourhood, and being surprised by its owner, had
only been overcome and captured after a desperate fight, in which
shots were exchanged, and one of the hurriedly-awakened servants
killed. So she leaned forward to hearken further, wondering what she
should do to best alarm the house, and, as she bent so, she heard the
sound again and a smothered oath, and with her straining eyes saw
that surely upon the path there stood a dark- draped figure. She
rose with great care to her feet, and stood a moment shaking and
clinging to the window-ledge, while she bethought her of what
servants she could wake first, and how she could reach her father's
room. Her poor heart beat in her side, and her breath came quickly.
The soundlessness of the night was broken by one of the strange
sudden gusts of wind which tossed the trees, and tore at the clouds
as they hurried. She heard the footsteps again, as if it feared its
own sound the less when the wind might cover it. A faint pale gleam
showed between two dark clouds behind which the moon had been hidden;
it grew brighter, and a jagged rent was torn, so that the moon
herself for a second or so shone out dazzling bright before the
clouds rushed over her again and shut her in.

It was at this very instant Mistress Anne heard the footsteps
once more, and saw full well a figure in dark cloak and hat which
stepped quickly into the shade of a great tree. But more she
saw--and clapped her hand upon her mouth to stifle the cry that would
have otherwise risen in spite of her--that notwithstanding his fair
locks were thrust out of sight beneath his hat, and he looked strange
and almost uncomely, it was the face of Sir John Oxon, the moon,
bursting through the jagged clouds, had shone upon.







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Burnett page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter VIII--Two meet in the deserted rose garden, and the old Earl of Dunstanwolde is made a happy man.

A Lady of Quality

Chapter I--The twenty-fourth day of November 1690
Chapter II--In which Sir Jeoffry encounters his offspring
Chapter III--Wherein Sir Jeoffry's boon companions drink a toast
Chapter IV--Lord Twemlow's chaplain visits his patron's kinsman, and Mistress Clorinda shines on her birthday night
Chapter V--"Not I," said she. "There thou mayst trust me. I would not be found out."
Chapter VI--Relating how Mistress Anne discovered a miniature
Chapter VII--'Twas the face of Sir John Oxon the moon shone upon
Chapter VIII--Two meet in the deserted rose garden, and the old Earl of Dunstanwolde is made a happy man
Chapter IX--"I give to him the thing he craves with all his soul-- myself"
Chapter X--"Yes--I have marked him"
Chapter XI--Wherein a noble life comes to an end
Chapter XII--Which treats of the obsequies of my Lord of Dunstanwolde, of his lady's widowhood, and of her return to town
Chapter XIII--Wherein a deadly war begins
Chapter XIV--Containing the history of the breaking of the horse Devil, and relates the returning of his Grace of Osmonde from France
Chapter XV--In which Sir John Oxon finds again a trophy he had lost
Chapter XVI--Dealing with that which was done in the Panelled Parlour
Chapter XVII--Wherein his Grace of Osmonde's courier arrives from France
Chapter XVIII--My Lady Dunstanwolde sits late alone and writes
Chapter XIX--A piteous story is told, and the old cellars walled in
Chapter XX--A noble marriage
Chapter XXI--An heir is born
Chapter XXII--Mother Anne
Chapter XXIII--"In One who will do justice, and demands that it shall be done to each thing He has made, by each who bears His image"
Chapter XXIV--The doves sate upon the window-ledge and lowly cooed and cooed

 


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