âShall I stand, Miss Beaumont? Shall I hide the house from you if I stand?'
âSit down, Jack, you baby!' cried his guardian, breaking in with needless asperity. âSit down!'
âHe may just as well stand if he will,' said she. âJust pull back your soft hat, Mr Ford. Like a halo. Now you hide even the smoke from the chimneys. And it makes you look beautiful.'
âEvelyn! Evelyn! You are too hard on the boy. You'll tire him. He's one of those bookworms. He's not strong. Let him sit down.'
âAren't you strong?' she asked.
âI am strong!' he cried. It is quite true. Ford has no right to be strong, but he is. He never did his dumb-bells or played in his school fifteen. But the muscles came. He thinks they came while he was reading Pindar.
âThen you may just as well stand, if you will.'
âEvelyn! Evelyn! childish, selfish maiden! If poor Jack gets tired I will take his place. Why don't you want to see the house? Eh?'
Mrs Worters and the Miss Worters moved uneasily. They saw that their Harcourt was not quite pleased. Theirs not to question why. It was for Evelyn to remove his displeasure, and they glanced at her.
âWell, why don't you want to see your future home? I must sayâthough I practically planned the house myselfâthat it looks very well from here. I like the gables. Miss! Answer me!'
I felt for Miss Beaumont. A home-made gable is an awful thing, and Harcourt's mansion looked like a cottage with the dropsy. But what would she say?
She said nothing.
âWell?'
It was as if he had never spoken. She was as merry, as smiling, as pretty as ever, and she said nothing. She had not realized that a question requires an answer.
For us the situation was intolerable. I had to save it by making a tactful reference to the view, which, I said, reminded me a little of the country near Veii.
2
It did notâindeed it could not, for I have never been near Veii. But it is part of my system to make classical allusions. And at all events I saved the situation.
Miss Beaumont was serious and rational at once. She asked me the date of Veii. I made a suitable answer.
âI do like the classics,' she informed us. âThey are so natural. Just writing down things.'
âYe-es,' said I. âBut the classics have their poetry as well as their prose. They're more than a record of facts.'
âJust writing down things,' said Miss Beaumont, and smiled as if the silly definition pleased her.
Harcourt had recovered himself. âA very just criticism,' said he. âIt is what I always feel about the ancient world. It takes us but a very little way. It only writes things down.'
âWhat do you mean?' asked Evelyn.
âI mean thisâthough it is presumptuous to speak in the presence of Mr Inskip. This is what I mean. The classics are not everything. We owe them an enormous debt; I am the last to undervalue it; I, too, went through them at school. They are full of elegance and beauty. But they are not everything. They were written before men began to really feel.' He coloured crimson. âHence, the chilliness of classical artâits lack ofâof a something. Whereas later thingsâDanteâa Madonna of Raphaelâsome bars of Mendelssohnâ' His voice tailed reverently away. We sat with our eyes on the ground, not liking to look at Miss Beaumont. It is a fairly open secret that she also lacks a something. She has not yet developed her soul.
The silence was broken by the still small voice of Mrs Worters saying that she was faint with hunger.
The young hostess sprang up. She would let none of us help her: it was her party. She undid the basket and emptied out the biscuits and oranges from their bags, and boiled the kettle and poured out the tea, which was horrible. But we laughed and talked with the frivolity that suits the open air, and even Mrs Worters expectorated her flies with a smile. Over us all there stood the silent, chivalrous figure of Ford, drinking tea carefully lest it should disturb his outline. His guardian, who is a wag, chaffed him and tickled his ankles and calves.
âWell, this is nice!' said Miss Beaumont. âI am happy.'
âYour wood, Evelyn!' said the ladies.
âHer wood for ever!' cried Mr Worters. âIt is an unsatisfactory arrangement, a ninety-nine years' lease. There is no feeling of permanency. I reopened negotiations. I have bought her the wood for everâall right, dear, all right: don't make a fuss.'
âBut I must!' she cried. âFor everything's perfect! Everyone so kindâand I didn't know most of you a year ago. Oh, it is so wonderfulâand now a woodâa wood of my ownâa wood for ever. All of you coming to tea with me here! Dear Harcourtâdear peopleâand just where the house would come and spoil things, there is Mr Ford!'
âHa! ha!' laughed Mr Worters, and slipped his hand up round the boy's ankle. What happened I do not know, but Ford collapsed on to the ground with a sharp cry. To an outsider it might have sounded like a cry of anger or pain. We, who knew better, laughed uproariously.
âDown he goes! Down he goes!' and they struggled playfully, kicking up the mould and the dry leaves.
âDon't hurt my wood!' cried Miss Beaumont.
Ford gave another sharp cry. Mr Worters withdrew his hand. âVictory!' he exclaimed. âEvelyn! behold the family seat!' But Miss Beaumont, in her butterfly fashion, had left us, and was strolling away into her wood.
We packed up the tea-things and then split into groups. Ford went with the ladies. Mr Worters did me the honour to stop by me.
âWell!' he said, in accordance with his usual formula, âand how go the classics?'
âFairly well.'
âDoes Miss Beaumont show any ability?'
âI should say that she does. At all events she has enthusiasm.'
âYou do not think it is the enthusiasm of a child? I will be frank with you, Mr Inskip. In many ways Miss Beaumont's practically a child. She has everything to learn: she acknowledges as much herself. Her new life is so differentâso strange. Our habitsâour thoughtsâshe has to be initiated into them all.'
I saw what he was driving at, but I am not a fool, and I replied: âAnd how can she be initiated better than through the classics?'
âExactly, exactly,' said Mr Worters. In the distance we heard her voice. She was counting the beech-trees. âThe only question isâthis Latin and Greekâwhat will she do with it? Can she make anything of it? Can sheâwell, it's not as if she will ever have to teach it to others.'
âThat is true.' And my features might have been observed to become undecided.
âWhether, since she knows so littleâI grant you she has enthusiasm. But ought one not to divert her enthusiasmâsay to English literature? She scarcely knows her Tennyson at all. Last night in the conservatory I read her that wonderful scene between Arthur and Guinevere. Greek and Latin are all very well, but I sometimes feel we ought to begin at the beginning.'
âYou feel,' said I, âthat for Miss Beaumont the classics are something of a luxury.'
âA luxury. That is the exact word, Mr Inskip. A luxury. A whim. It is all very well for Jack Ford. And here we come to another point. Surely she keeps Jack back? Her knowledge must be elementary.'
âWell, her knowledge is elementary: and I must say that it's difficult to teach them together. Jack has read a good deal, one way and another, whereas Miss Beaumont, though diligent and enthusiasticâ'
âSo I have been feeling. The arrangement is scarcely fair on Jack?'
âWell, I must admitâ'
âQuite so. I ought never to have suggested it. It must come to an end. Of course, Mr Inskip, it shall make no difference to you, this withdrawal of a pupil.'
âThe lessons shall cease at once, Mr Worters.'
Here she came up to us. âHarcourt, there are seventy-eight trees. I have had such a count.'
He smiled down at her. Let me remember to say that he is tall and handsome, with a strong chin and liquid brown eyes, and a high forehead and hair not at all grey. Few things are more striking than a photograph of Mr Harcourt Worters.
âSeventy-eight trees?'
âSeventy-eight.'
âAre you pleased?'
âOh, Harcourtâ!'
I began to pack up the tea-things. They both saw and heard me. It was their own fault if they did not go further.
âI'm looking forward to the bridge,' said he. âA rustic bridge at the bottom, and then, perhaps, an asphalt path from the house over the meadow, so that in all weathers we can walk here dry-shod. The boys come into the woodâlook at all these initialsâand I thought of putting a simple fence, to prevent anyone but ourselvesâ'
âHarcourt!'
âA simple fence,' he continued, âjust like what I have put round my garden and the fields. Then at the other side of the copse, away from the house, I would put a gate, and have keysâtwo keys, I thinkâone for me and one for youânot more; and I would bring the asphalt pathâ'
âBut, Harcourtâ'
âBut, Evelyn!'
âIâIâIâ'
âYouâyouâyouâ?'
âIâI don't want an asphalt path.'
âNo? Perhaps you are right. Cinders perhaps. Yes. Or even gravel.'
âBut, HarcourtâI don't want a path at all. IâIâcan't afford a path.'
He gave a roar of triumphant laughter. âDearest! As if you were going to be bothered? The path's part of my present.'
âThe wood is your present,' said Miss Beaumont. âDo you knowâI don't care for the path. I'd rather always come as we came to-day. And I don't want a bridge. Noânor a fence either. I don't mind the boys and their initials. They and the girls have always come up to Other Kingdom and cut their names together in the bark. It's called the Fourth Time of Asking. I don't want it to stop.'
âUgh!' He pointed to a large heart transfixed by an arrow. âUgh! Ugh!' I suspect that he was gaining time.
âThey cut their names and go away, and when the first child is born they come again and deepen the cuts. So for each child. That's how you know: the initials that go right through to the wood are the fathers and mothers of large families, and the scratches in the bark that soon close up are boys and girls who were never married at all.'
âYou wonderful person! I've lived here all my life and never heard a word of this. Fancy folk-lore in Hertfordshire! I must tell the Archdeacon: he will be delightedâ'
âAnd, Harcourt, I don't want this to stop.'
âMy dear girl, the villagers will find other trees! There's nothing particular in Other Kingdom.'
âButâ'
âOther Kingdom shall be for us. You and I alone. Our initials only.' His voice sank to a whisper.
âI don't want it fenced in.' Her face was turned to me; I saw that it was puzzled and frightened. âI hate fences. And bridges. And all paths. It is my wood. Please: you gave me the wood.'
âWhy, yes!' he replied, soothing her. But I could see that he was angry. âOf course. But aha! Evelyn, the meadow's mine; I have a right to fence thereâbetween my domain and yours!'
âOh, fence me out, if you like! Fence me out as much as you like! But never in. Oh, Harcourt, never in. I must be on the outside, I must be where anyone can reach me. Year by yearâwhile the initials deepenâthe only thing worth feelingâand at last they close upâbut one has felt them.'
âOur initials!' he murmured, seizing upon the one word which he had understood and which was useful to him. âLet us carve our initials now. You and Iâa heart if you like it, and an arrow and everything. H. W.âE. B.'
âH. W.,' she repeated, âand E. B.'
He took out his pen-knife and drew her away in search of an unsullied tree. âE. B., Eternal Blessing. Mine! Mine! My haven from the world! My temple of purity. Oh, the spiritual exaltationâyou cannot understand it, but you will! Oh, the seclusion of Paradise. Year after year alone together, all in all to each otherâyear after year, soul to soul, E. B., Everlasting Bliss!'
He stretched out his hand to cut the initials. As he did so she seemed to awake from a dream. âHarcourt!' she cried, âHarcourt! What's that? What's that red stuff on your finger and thumb?'
III
Oh, my goodness! Oh, all ye goddesses and gods! Here's a mess. Mr Worters has been reading Ford's inflammatory note-book.
âIt is my own fault,' said Ford. âI should have labelled it “Practically Private”. How could he know he was not meant to look inside?'
I spoke out severely, as an
employé
should. âMy dear boy, none of that. The label came unstuck. That was why Mr Worters opened the book. He never suspected it was private. Seeâthe label's off.'
âScratched off,' Ford retorted grimly, and glanced at his ankle.
I affected not to understand. âThe point is this. Mr Worters is thinking the matter over for four-and-twenty hours. If you take my advice you will apologize before that time elapses.'
âAnd if I don't?'
âYou know your own affairs of course. But don't forget that you are young and practically ignorant of life, and that you have scarcely any money of your own. As far as I can see, your career practically depends on the favour of Mr Worters. You have laughed at him. He does not like being laughed at. It seems to me that your course is obvious.'
âApology?'
âComplete.'
âAnd if I don't?'
âDeparture.'
He sat down on the stone steps and rested his head on his knees. On the lawn below us was Miss Beaumont, draggling about with some croquet balls. Her lover was out in the meadow, superintending the course of the asphalt path. For the path is to be made, and so is the bridge, and the fence is to be built round Other Kingdom after all. In time Miss Beaumont saw how unreasonable were her objections. Of her own accord, one evening in the drawing-room, she gave her Harcourt permission to do what he liked. âThat wood looks nearer,' said Ford.