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Chapter XXI--An heir is born

A Lady of Quality





In a fair tower whose windows looked out upon spreading woods,
and rich lovely plains stretching to the freshness of the sea,
Mistress Anne had her abode which her duchess sister had given to her
for her own living in as she would. There she dwelt and prayed and
looked on the new life which so beauteously unfolded itself before
her day by day, as the leaves of a great tree unfold from buds and
become noble branches, housing birds and their nests, shading the
earth and those sheltering beneath them, braving centuries of
storms.

To this simile her simple mind oft reverted, for indeed it
seemed to her that naught more perfect and more noble in its high
likeness to pure Nature and the fulfilling of God's will than the
passing days of these two lives could be.

"As the first two lived--Adam and Eve in their garden of
Eden--they seem to me," she used to say to her own heart; "but the
Tree of Knowledge was not forbidden them, and it has taught them
naught ignoble."

As she had been wont to watch her sister from behind the ivy of
her chamber windows, so she often watched her now, though there was
no fear in her hiding, only tenderness, it being a pleasure to her
full of wonder and reverence to see this beautiful and stately pair
go lovingly and in high and gentle converse side by side, up and down
the terrace, through the paths, among the beds of flowers, under the
thick branched trees and over the sward's softness.

"It is as if I saw Love's self, and dwelt with it--the love
God's nature made," she said, with gentle sighs.

For if these two had been great and beauteous before, it seemed
in these days as if life and love glowed within them, and shone
through their mere bodies as a radiant light shines through alabaster
lamps. The strength of each was so the being of the other that no
thought could take form in the brain of one without the other's
stirring with it.

"Neither of us dare be ignoble," Osmonde said, "for 'twould make
poor and base the one who was not so in truth."

"'Twas not the way of my Lady Dunstanwolde to make a man feel
that he stood in church," a frivolous court wit once said, "but in
sooth her Grace of Osmonde has a look in her lustrous eyes which
accords not with scandalous stories and play-house jests."

And true it was that when they went to town they carried with
them the illumining of the pure fire which burned within their souls,
and bore it all unknowing in the midst of the trivial or designing
world, which knew not what it was that glowed about them, making
things bright which had seemed dull, and revealing darkness where
there had been brilliant glare.

They returned not to the house which had been my Lord of
Dunstanwolde's, but went to the duke's own great mansion, and there
lived splendidly and in hospitable state. Royalty honoured them, and
all the wits came there, some of those gentlemen who writ verses and
dedications being by no means averse to meeting noble lords and
ladies, and finding in their loves and graces material which might be
useful. 'Twas not only Mr. Addison and Mr. Steele, Dr. Swift and Mr.
Pope, who were made welcome in the stately rooms, but others who were
more humble, not yet having won their spurs, and how these worshipped
her Grace for the generous kindness which was not the fashion, until
she set it, among great ladies, their odes and verses could scarce
express.

"They are so poor," she said to her husband. "They are so poor,
and yet in their starved souls there is a thing which can less bear
flouting than the dull content which rules in others. I know not
whether 'tis a curse or a boon to be born so. 'Tis a bitter thing
when the bird that flutters in them has only little wings. All the
more should those who are strong protect and comfort them."

She comforted so many creatures. In strange parts of the town,
where no other lady would have dared to go to give alms, it was
rumoured that she went and did noble things privately. In dark
kennels, where thieves hid and vagrants huddled, she carried her
beauty and her stateliness, the which when they shone on the poor
rogues and victims housed there seemed like the beams of the warm and
golden sun.

Once in a filthy hovel in a black alley she came upon a poor
girl dying of a loathsome ill, and as she stood by her bed of rags
she heard in her delirium the uttering of one man's name again and
again, and when she questioned those about she found that the
sufferer had been a little country wench enticed to town by this man
for a plaything, and in a few weeks cast off to give birth to a child
in the almshouse, and then go down to the depths of vice in the
kennel.

"What is the name she says?" her Grace asked the hag nearest to
her, and least maudlin with liquor. "I would be sure I heard it
aright."

"'Tis the name of a gentleman, your ladyship may be sure," the
beldam answered; "'tis always the name of a gentleman. And this is
one I know well, for I have heard more than one poor soul mumbling it
and raving at him in her last hours. One there was, and I knew her,
a pretty rosy thing in her country days, not sixteen, and distraught
with love for him, and lay in the street by his door praying him to
take her back when he threw her off, until the watch drove her away.
And she was so mad with love and grief she killed her girl child when
'twas born i' the kennel, sobbing and crying that it should not live
to be like her and bear others. And she was condemned to death, and
swung for it on Tyburn Tree. And, Lord! how she cried his name as
she jolted on her coffin to the gallows, and when the hangman put the
rope round her shuddering little fair neck. 'Oh, John,' screams she,
'John Oxon, God forgive thee! Nay, 'tis God should be forgiven for
letting thee to live and me to die like this.' Aye, 'twas a bitter
sight! She was so little and so young, and so affrighted. The
hangman could scarce hold her. I was i' the midst o' the crowd and
cried to her to strive to stand still, 'twould be the sooner over.
But that she could not. 'Oh, John,' she screams, 'John Oxon, God
forgive thee! Nay, 'tis God should be forgiven for letting thee to
live and me to die like this!'"

Till the last hour of the poor creature who lay before her when
she heard this thing, her Grace of Osmonde saw that she was tended,
took her from her filthy hovel, putting her in a decent house and
going to her day by day, until she received her last breath, holding
her hand while the poor wench lay staring up at her beauteous face
and her great deep eyes, whose lustrousness held such power to
sustain, protect, and comfort.

"Be not afraid, poor soul," she said, "be not afraid. I will
stay near thee. Soon all will end in sleep, and if thou wakest, sure
there will be Christ who died, and wipes all tears away. Hear me say
it to thee for a prayer," and she bent low and said it soft and clear
into the deadening ear, "He wipes all tears away--He wipes all tears
away."

The great strength she had used in the old days to conquer and
subdue, to win her will and to defend her way, seemed now a power but
to protect the suffering and uphold the weak, and this she did, not
alone in hovels but in the brilliant court and world of fashion, for
there she found suffering and weakness also, all the more bitter and
sorrowful since it dared not cry aloud. The grandeur of her beauty,
the elevation of her rank, the splendour of her wealth would have
made her a protector of great strength, but that which upheld all
those who turned to her was that which dwelt within the high soul of
her, the courage and power of love for all things human which bore
upon itself, as if upon an eagle's outspread wings, the woes dragging
themselves broken and halting upon earth. The starving beggar in the
kennel felt it, and, not knowing wherefore, drew a longer, deeper
breath, as if of purer, more exalted air; the poor poet in his garret
was fed by it, and having stood near or spoken to her, went back to
his lair with lightening eyes and soul warmed to believe that the
words his Muse might speak the world might stay to hear.

From the hour she stayed the last moments of John Oxon's victim
she set herself a work to do. None knew it but herself at first, and
later Anne, for 'twas done privately. From the hag who had told her
of the poor girl's hanging upon Tyburn Tree, she learned things by
close questioning, which to the old woman's dull wit seemed but the
curiousness of a great lady, and from others who stood too deep in
awe of her to think of her as a mere human being, she gathered clues
which led her far in the tracing of the evils following one wicked,
heartless life. Where she could hear of man, woman, or child on whom
John Oxon's sins had fallen, or who had suffered wrong by him, there
she went to help, to give light, to give comfort and encouragement.
Strangely, as it seemed to them, and as if done by the hand of
Heaven, the poor tradesmen he had robbed were paid their dues, youth
he had led into evil ways was checked mysteriously and set in better
paths; women he had dragged downward were given aid and chance of
peace or happiness; children he had cast upon the world, unfathered,
and with no prospect but the education of the gutter, and a life of
crime, were cared for by a powerful unseen hand. The pretty country
girl saved by his death, protected by her Grace, and living
innocently at Dunstanwolde, memory being merciful to youth, forgot
him, gained back her young roses, and learned to smile and hope as
though he had been but a name.

"Since 'twas I who killed him," said her Grace to her inward
soul, "'tis I must live his life which I took from him, and making it
better I may be forgiven--if there is One who dares to say to the
poor thing He made, 'I will not forgive.'"

Surely it was said there had never been lives so beautiful and
noble as those the Duke of Osmonde and his lady lived as time went
by. The Tower of Camylott, where they had spent the first months of
their wedded life, they loved better than any other of their seats,
and there they spent as much time as their duties of Court and State
allowed them. It was indeed a splendid and beautiful estate, the
stately tower being built upon an eminence, and there rolling out
before it the most lovely land in England, moorland and hills, thick
woods and broad meadows, the edge of the heather dipping to show the
soft silver of the sea.

Here was this beauteous woman chatelaine and queen, wife of her
husband as never before, he thought, had wife blessed and glorified
the existence of mortal man. All her great beauty she gave to him in
tender, joyous tribute; all her great gifts of mind and wit and grace
it seemed she valued but as they were joys to him; in his stately
households in town and country she reigned a lovely empress, adored
and obeyed with reverence by every man or woman who served her and
her lord. Among the people on his various estates she came and went
a tender goddess of benevolence. When she appeared amid them in the
first months of her wedded life, the humble souls regarded her with
awe not unmixed with fear, having heard such wild stories of her
youth at her father's house, and of her proud state and bitter wit in
the great London world when she had been my Lady Dunstanwolde; but
when she came among them all else was forgotten in their wonder at
her graciousness and noble way.

"To see her come into a poor body's cottage, so tall and grand a
lady, and with such a carriage as she hath," they said, hobnobbing
together in their talk of her, "looking as if a crown of gold should
sit on her high black head, and then to hear her gentle speech and
see the look in her eyes as if she was but a simple new-married girl,
full of her joy, and her heart big with the wish that all other women
should be as happy as herself, it is, forsooth, a beauteous sight to
see."

"Ay, and no hovel too poor for her, and no man or woman too
sinful," was said again.

"Heard ye how she found that poor wench of Haylits lying sobbing
among the fern in the Tower woods, and stayed and knelt beside her to
hear her trouble? The poor soul has gone to ruin at fourteen, and
her father, finding her out, beat her and thrust her from his door,
and her Grace coming through the wood at sunset--it being her way to
walk about for mere pleasure as though she had no coach to ride
in--the girl says she came through the golden glow as if she had been
one of God's angels--and she kneeled and took the poor wench in her
arms--as strong as a man, Betty says, but as soft as a young
mother--and she said to her things surely no mortal lady ever said
before--that she knew naught of a surety of what God's true will
might be, or if His laws were those that have been made by man
concerning marriage by priests saying common words, but that she
surely knew of a man whose name was Christ, and He had taught love
and helpfulness and pity, and for His sake, He having earned our
trust in Him, whether He was God or man, because He hung and died in
awful torture on the Cross--for His sake all of us must love and help
and pity--'I you, poor Betty,' were her very words, 'and you me.'
And then she went to the girl's father and mother, and so talked to
them that she brought them to weeping, and begging Betty to come
home; and also she went to her sweetheart, Tom Beck, and made so
tender a story to him of the poor pretty wench whose love for him had
brought her to such trouble, that she stirred him up to falling in
love again, which is not man's way at such times, and in a week's
time he and Betty went to church together, her Grace setting them up
in a cottage on the estate."

"I used all my wit and all my tenderest words to make a picture
that would fire and touch him, Gerald," her Grace said, sitting at
her husband's side, in a great window, from which they often watched
the sunset in the valley spread below; "and that with which I am so
strong sometimes--I know not what to call it, but 'tis a power people
bend to, that I know--that I used upon him to waken his dull soul and
brain. Whose fault is it that they are dull? Poor lout, he was born
so, as I was born strong and passionate, and as you were born noble
and pure and high. I led his mind back to the past, when he had been
made happy by the sight of Betty's little smiling, blushing face, and
when he had kissed her and made love in the hayfields. And this I
said--though 'twas not a thing I have learned from any chaplain--that
when 'twas said he should make an honest woman of her, it was my
thought that she had been honest from the first, being too honest to
know that the world was not so, and that even the man a woman loved
with all her soul, might be a rogue, and have no honesty in him. And
at last--'twas when I talked to him about the child--and that I put
my whole soul's strength in--he burst out a-crying like a schoolboy,
and said indeed she was a fond little thing and had loved him, and he
had loved her, and 'twas a shame he had so done by her, and he had
not meant it at the first, but she was so simple, and he had been a
villain, but if he married her now, he would be called a fool, and
laughed at for his pains. Then was I angry, Gerald, and felt my eyes
flash, and I stood up tall and spoke fiercely: 'Let them dare,' I
said--'let any man or woman dare, and then will they see what his
Grace will say.'"

Osmonde drew her to his breast, laughing into her lovely
eyes.

"Nay, 'tis not his Grace who need be called on," he said; "'tis
her Grace they love and fear, and will obey; though 'tis the
sweetest, womanish thing that you should call on me when you are
power itself, and can so rule all creatures you come near."

"Nay," she said, with softly pleading face, "let me not rule.
Rule for me, or but help me; I so long to say your name that they may
know I speak but as your wife."

"Who is myself," he answered--"my very self."

"Ay," she said, with a little nod of her head, "that I
know--that I am yourself; and 'tis because of this that one of us
cannot be proud with the other, for there is no other, there is only
one. And I am wrong to say, 'Let me not rule,' for 'tis as if I
said, 'You must not rule.' I meant surely, 'God give me strength to
be as noble in ruling as our love should make me.' But just as one
tree is a beech and one an oak, just as the grass stirs when the
summer wind blows over it, so a woman is a woman, and 'tis her nature
to find her joy in saying such words to the man who loves her, when
she loves as I do. Her heart is so full that she must joy to say her
husband's name as that of one she cannot think without--who is her
life as is her blood and her pulses beating. 'Tis a joy to say your
name, Gerald, as it will be a joy"--and she looked far out across the
sun- goldened valley and plains, with a strange, heavenly sweet smile
-- "as it will be a joy to say our child's--and put his little mouth
to my full breast."

"Sweet love," he cried, drawing her by the hand that he might
meet the radiance of her look--"heart's dearest!"

She did not withhold her lovely eyes from him, but withdrew them
from the sunset's mist of gold, and the clouds piled as it were at
the gates of heaven, and they seemed to bring back some of the far-
off glory with them. Indeed, neither her smile nor she seemed at
that moment to be things of earth. She held out her fair, noble
arms, and he sprang to her, and so they stood, side beating against
side.

"Yes, love," she said--"yes, love--and I have prayed, my Gerald,
that I may give you sons who shall be men like you. But when I give
you women children, I shall pray with all my soul for them--that they
may be just and strong and noble, and life begin for them as it began
not for me."

* * *

In the morning of a spring day when the cuckoos cried in the
woods, and May blossomed thick, white and pink, in all the hedges,
the bells in the grey church-steeple at Camylott rang out a joyous,
jangling peal, telling all the village that the heir had been born at
the Tower. Children stopped in their play to listen, men at their
work in field and barn; good gossips ran out of their cottage door,
wiping their arms dry, from their tubs and scrubbing-buckets, their
honest red faces broadening into maternal grins.

"Ay, 'tis well over, that means surely," one said to the other;
"and a happy day has begun for the poor lady--though God knows she
bore herself queenly to the very last, as if she could have carried
her burden for another year, and blenched not a bit as other women
do. Bless mother and child, say I."

"And 'tis an heir," said another. "She promised us that we
should know almost as quick as she did, and commanded old Rowe to
ring a peal, and then strike one bell loud between if 'twere a boy,
and two if 'twere a girl child. 'Tis a boy, heard you, and 'twas
like her wit to invent such a way to tell us."

In four other villages the chimes rang just as loud and merrily,
and the women talked, and blessed her Grace and her young child, and
casks of ale were broached, and oxen roasted, and work stopped, and
dancers footed it upon the green.

"Surely the new-born thing comes here to happiness," 'twas said
everywhere, "for never yet was woman loved as is his mother."

In her stately bed her Grace the duchess lay, with the face of
the Mother Mary, and her man-child drinking from her breast. The
duke walked softly up and down, so full of joy that he could not sit
still. When he had entered first, it was his wife's self who had
sate upright in her bed, and herself laid his son within his arms.

"None other shall lay him there," she said, "I have given him to
you. He is a great child, but he has not taken from me my
strength."

He was indeed a great child, even at his first hour, of limbs
and countenance so noble that nurses and physicians regarded him
amazed. He was the offspring of a great love, of noble bodies and
great souls. Did such powers alone create human beings, the earth
would be peopled with a race of giants.

Amid the veiled spring sunshine and the flower-scented silence,
broken only by the twittering of birds nesting in the ivy, her Grace
lay soft asleep, her son resting on her arm, when Anne stole to look
at her and her child. Through the night she had knelt praying in her
chamber, and now she knelt again. She kissed the new-born thing's
curled rose-leaf hand and the lace frill of his mother's night-rail.
She dared not further disturb them.

"Sure God forgives," she breathed--"for Christ's sake. He would
not give this little tender thing a punishment to bear."







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Burnett page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter XXII--Mother Anne.

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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