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    Scenes of Clerical Life

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    child: he tended it, he dandled it, he chatted to it, living with it alone in

      his one room above the fruit-shop, only asking his landlady to take care of the

      marmoset during his short absences in fetching and carrying home work. Customers

      frequenting that fruit-shop might often see the tiny Caterina seated on the

      floor with her legs in a heap of pease, which it was her delight to kick about;

      or perhaps deposited, like a kitten, in a large basket out of harm's way.

      Sometimes, however, Sarti left his little one with another kind of protectress.

      He was very regular in his devotions, which he paid thrice a-week in the great

      cathedral, carrying Caterina with him. Here, when the high morning sun was

      warming the myriad glittering pinnacles without, and struggling against the

      massive gloom within, the shadow of a man with a child on his arm might be seen

      flitting across the more stationary shadows of pillar and mullion, and making

      its way towards a little tinsel Madonna hanging in a retired spot near the

      choir. Amid all the sublimities of the mighty cathedral, poor Sarti had fixed on

      this tinsel Madonna as the symbol of Divine mercy and protection,�just as a

      child, in the presence of a great landscape, sees none of the glories of wood

      and sky, but sets its heart on a floating feather or insect that happens to be

      on a level with its eye. Here, then, Sarti worshipped and prayed, setting

      Caterina on the floor by his side; and now and then, when the cathedral lay near

      some place where he had to call, and did not like to take her, he would leave

      her there in front of the tinsel Madonna, where she would sit, perfectly good,

      amusing herself with low crowing noises and see-sawings of her tiny body. And

      when Sarti came back, he always found that the Blessed Mother had taken good

      care of Caterina.

      That was briefly the history of Sarti, who fulfilled so well the orders Lady

      Cheverel gave him, that she sent him away again with a stock of new work. But

      this time, week after week passed, and he neither reappeared nor sent home the

      music intrusted to him. Lady Cheverel began to be anxious, and was thinking of

      sending Warren to inquire at the address Sarti had given her, when one day, as

      she was equipped for driving out, the valet brought in a small piece of paper

      which he said had been left for her ladyship by a man who was carrying fruit.

      The paper contained only three tremulous lines, in Italian:�

      "Will the Eccelentissima, for the love of God, have pity on a dying man, and

      come to him?"

      Lady Cheverel recognised the handwriting as Sarti's in spite of its

      tremulousness, and, going down to her carriage, ordered the Milanese coachman to

      drive to Strada Quinquagesima, Numero 10. The coach stopped in a dirty narrow

      street opposite La Pazzini's fruit-shop, and that large specimen of womanhood

      immediately presented herself at the door, to the extreme disgust of Mrs Sharp,

      who remarked privately to Mr Warren that La Pazzini was a "hijeous porpis." The

      fruit-woman, however, was all smiles and deep curtsies to the Eccelentissima,

      who, not very well understanding her Milanese dialect, abbreviated the

      conversation by asking to be shown at once to Signor Sarti. La Pazzini preceded

      her up the dark narrow stairs, and opened a door through which she begged her

      ladyship to enter. Directly opposite the door lay Sarti, on a low miserable bed.

      His eyes were glazed, and no movement indicated that he was conscious of their

      entrance.

      On the foot of the bed was seated a tiny child, apparently not three years old,

      her head covered by a linen cap, her feet clothed with leather boots, above

      which her little yellow legs showed thin and naked. A frock, made of what had

      once been a gay flowered silk, was her only other garment. Her large dark eyes

      shone from out her queer little face, like two precious stones in a grotesque

      image carved in old ivory. She held an empty medicine-bottle in her hand, and

      was amusing herself with putting the cork in and drawing it out again, to hear

      how it would pop.

      La Pazzini went up to the bed, and said, "Ecco la nobilissima donna!" but

      directly after screamed out, "Holy mother! he is dead!"

      It was so. The entreaty had not been sent in time for Sarti to carry out his

      project of asking the great English lady to take care of his Caterina. That was

      the thought which haunted his feeble brain as soon as he began to fear that his

      illness would end in death. She had wealth�she was kind�she would surely do

      something for the poor orphan. And so, at last, he sent that scrap of paper,

      which won the fulfilment of his prayer, though he did not live to utter it. Lady

      Cheverel gave La Pazzini money that the last decencies might be paid to the dead

      man, and carried away Caterina, meaning to consult Sir Christopher as to what

      should be done with her. Even Mrs Sharp had been so smitten with pity by the

      scene she had witnessed when she was summoned up-stairs to fetch Caterina, as to

      shed a small tear, though she was not at all subject to that weakness; indeed,

      she abstained from it on principle, because, as she often said, it was known to

      be the worst thing in the world for the eyes.

      On the way back to her hotel, Lady Cheverel turned over various projects in her

      mind regarding Caterina, but at last one gained the preference over all the

      rest. Why should they not take the child to England, and bring her up there?

      They had been married twelve years, yet Cheverel Manor was cheered by no

      children's voices, and the old house would be all the better for a little of

      that music. Besides, it would be a Christian work to train this little Papist

      into a good Protestant, and graft as much English fruit as possible on the

      Italian stem.

      Sir Christopher listened to this plan with hearty acquiescence. He loved

      children, and took at once to the little black-eyed monkey�his name for Caterina

      all through her short life. But neither he nor Lady Cheverel had any idea of

      adopting her as their daughter, and giving her their own rank in life. They were

      much too English and aristocratic to think of anything so romantic. No! The

      child would be brought up at Cheverel Manor as a proteg�e, to be ultimately

      useful, perhaps, in sorting worsteds, keeping accounts, reading aloud, and

      otherwise supplying the place of spectacles when her ladyship's eyes should wax

      dim.

      So Mrs Sharp had to procure new clothes, to replace the linen cap, flowered

      frock, and leathern boots; and now, strange to say, little Caterina, who had

      suffered many unconscious evils in her existence of thirty moons, first began to

      know conscious troubles. "Ignorance," says Ajax, "is a painless evil;" so, I

      should think, is dirt, considering the merry faces that go along with it. At any

      rate, cleanliness is sometimes a painful good, as any one can vouch who has had

      his face washed the wrong way, by a pitiless hand with a gold ring on the third

      finger. If you, reader, have not known that initiatory anguish, it is idle to

      expect that you will form any approximate conception of what Caterina endured

      under Mrs Sharp's new dispensation of soap-and-water. Happily, thi
    s purgatory

      came presently to be associated in her tiny brain with a passage straightway to

      a seat of bliss �the sofa in Lady Cheverel's sitting-room, where there were toys

      to be broken, a ride was to be had on Sir Christopher's knee, and a spaniel of

      resigned temper was prepared to undergo small tortures without flinching.

      CHAPTER IV.

      In three months from the time of Caterina's adoption�namely, in the late autumn

      of 1763� the chimneys of Cheverel Manor were sending up unwonted smoke, and the

      servants were awaiting in excitement the return of their master and mistress

      after a two years' absence. Great was the astonishment of Mrs Bellamy, the

      housekeeper, when Mr Warren lifted a little black-eyed child out of the

      carriage, and great was Mrs Sharp's sense of superior information and

      experience, as she detailed Caterina's history, interspersed with copious

      comments, to the rest of the upper servants that evening, as they were taking a

      comfortable glass of grog together in the housekeeper's room.

      A pleasant room it was, as any party need desire to muster in on a cold November

      evening. The fireplace alone was a picture: a wide and deep recess with a low

      brick altar in the middle, where great logs of dry wood sent myriad sparks up

      the dark chimney-throat; and over the front of this recess a large wooden

      entablature bearing this motto, finely carved in old English letters, "Fear God

      and honour the King." And beyond the party, who formed a half-moon with their

      chairs and well-furnished table round this bright fireplace, what a space of

      chiaroscuro for the imagination to revel in! Stretching across the far end of

      the room, what an oak table, high enough surely for Homer's gods, standing on

      four massive legs, bossed and bulging like sculptured urns! and, lining the

      distant wall, what vast cupboards, suggestive of inexhaustible apricot jam and

      promiscuous butler's perquisites! A stray picture or two had found their way

      down there, and made agreeable patches of dark brown on the buff-coloured walls.

      High over the loud-resounding double door hung one which, from some indications

      of a face looming out of blackness, might, by a great synthetic effort, be

      pronounced a Magdalen. Considerably lower down hung the similitude of a hat and

      feathers, with portions of a ruff, stated by Mrs Bellamy to represent Sir

      Francis Bacon, who invented gunpowder, and, in her opinion, "might ha' been

      better emplyed."

      But this evening the mind is but slightly arrested by the great Verulam, and is

      in the humour to think a dead philosopher less interesting than a living

      gardener, who sits conspicuous in the halfcircle round the fireplace. Mr Bates

      is habitually a guest in the housekeeper's room of an evening, preferring the

      social pleasures there�the feast of gossip and the flow of grog�to a bachelor's

      chair in his charming thatched cottage on a little island, where every sound is

      remote but the cawing of rooks and the screaming of wild geese: poetic sounds,

      doubtless, but, humanly speaking, not convivial.

      Mr Bates was by no means an average person, to be passed without special notice.

      He was a sturdy Yorkshireman, approaching forty, whose face Nature seemed to

      have coloured when she was in a hurry, and had no time to attend to nuances, for

      every inch of him visible above his neckcloth was of one impartial redness; so

      that when he was at some distance your imagination was at liberty to place his

      lips anywhere between his nose and chin. Seen closer, his lips were discerned to

      be of a peculiar cut, and I fancy this had something to do with the peculiarity

      of his dialect, which, as we shall see, was individual rather than provincial.

      Mr Bates was further distinguished from the common herd by a perpetual blinking

      of the eyes; and this, together with the red-rose tint of his complexion, and a

      way he had of hanging his head forward, and rolling it from side to side as he

      walked, gave him the air of a Bacchus in a blue apron, who, in the present

      reduced circumstances of Olympus, had taken to the management of his own vines.

      Yet, as gluttons are often thin, so sober men are often rubicund; and Mr Bates

      was sober, with that manly, British, churchman-like sobriety which can carry a

      few glasses of grog without any perceptible clarification of ideas.

      "Dang my boottens!" observed Mr Bates, who, at the conclusion of Mrs Sharp's

      narrative, felt himself urged to his strongest interjection, "it's what I

      shouldn't ha' looked for from Sir Cristhifer an' my ledy, to bring a furrin

      child into the coonthry; an' depend on't, whether you an' me lives to see't or

      noo, it'll coom to soom harm. The first sitiation iver I held�it was a hold,

      hancient habbey, wi' the biggest orchard o'apples an' pears you ever see�there

      was a French valet, an' he stool silk stoockins, an' shirts, an' rings, an'

      iverythin' he could ley his hans on, an' run awey at last wi' th' missis's

      jewl-box. They're all alaike, them furriners. It roons i' th' blood."

      "Well," said Mrs Sharp, with the air of a person who held liberal views, but

      knew where to draw the line, "I'm not a-going to defend the furriners, for I've

      as good reason to know what they are as most folks, an' nobody 'll iver hear me

      say but what they're next door to heathens, and the hile they eat wi' their

      victuals is enough to turn any Christian's stomach. But for all that� an' for

      all as the trouble in respect o' washin' an' managin' has fell upo' me through

      the journey� I can't say but what I think as my Lady an' Sir Cristifer's done a

      right thing by a hinnicent child as doesn't know its right han' from its left,

      i' bringing it where it'll learn to speak summat better nor gibberish, and be

      brought up i' the true religion. For as for them furrin churches as Sir

      Cristifer is so unaccountable mad after, wi' picturs o' men an' women a-showin'

      therselves just for all the world as God made 'em, I think, for my part, as it's

      welly a sin to go into 'em."

      "You're likely to have more foreigners, however," said Mr Warren, who liked to

      provoke the gardener, "for Sir Christopher has engaged some Italian workmen to

      help in the alterations in the house."

      "Olterations!" exclaimed Mrs Bellamy, in alarm. "What olterations?"

      "Why," answered Mr Warren, "Sir Christopher, as I understand, is going to make a

      clean new thing of the old Manor-house, both inside and out. And he's got

      portfolios full of plans and pictures coming. It is to be cased with stone, in

      the Gothic style�pretty near like the churches, you know, as far as I can make

      out; and the ceilings are to be beyond anything as has been seen in the country.

      Sir Christopher's been giving a deal of study to it."

      "Dear heart alive!" said Mrs Bellamy, "we shall be pisined wi' lime an' plaster,

      an' hev the house full o'workmen colloguing wi' the maids, an' meckin' no end o'

      mischief."

      "That ye may ley your life on, Mrs Bellamy," said Mr Bates. "Howiver, I'll noot

      denay that the Goothic stayle's prithy anoof, an' it's woonderful how near them

      stoon-carvers cuts oot the shapes o' the pine apples, an' shamrucks, an' rooses.

      I dare sey Sir Cristhifer 'll me
    ck a naice thing o' the Manor, an' there woont

      be many gentlemen's houses i' the coonthry as 'll coom up to't, wi' sich a

      garden an' pleasure-groons an' wallfruit as King George maight be prood on."

      "Well, I can't think as th' house can be better nor it is, Gothic or no Gothic,"

      said Mrs Bellamy; "an' I've done the picklin' an' preservin' in it fourteen year

      Michaelmas was a three weeks. But what does my lady say to't?"

      "My lady knows better than cross Sir Cristifer in what he's set his mind on,"

      said Mr Bellamy, who objected to the critical tone of the conversation. "Sir

      Cristifer 'll hev his own way, that you may tek your oath. An' i' the right on't

      too. He's a gentleman born, an's got the money. But come, Mester Bates, fill

      your glass, an' my lady, an' then you shall give us a sung. Sir Cristifer

      doesn't come hum from Italy ivery night."

      This demonstrable position was accepted without hesitation as ground for a

      toast; but Mr Bates, apparently thinking that his song was not an equally

      reasonable sequence, ignored the second part of Mr Bellamy's proposal. So Mrs

      Sharp, who had been heard to say that she had no thoughts at all of marrying Mr

      Bates, though he was "a sensable fresh-coloured man as many a woman 'ud snap at

      for a husband," enforced Mr Bellamy's appeal.

      "Come, Mr Bates, let us hear 'Roy's Wife.' I'd rether hear a good old sung like

      that, nor all the fine 'talian toodlin'."

      Mr Bates, urged thus flatteringly, stuck his thumbs into the armholes of his

      waistcoat, threw himself back in his chair with his head in that position in

      which he could look directly towards the zenith, and struck up a remarkably

      staccato rendering of "Roy's Wife of Aldivalloch." This melody may certainly be

      taxed with excessive iteration, but that was precisely its highest

      recommendation to the present audience, who found it all the easier to swell the

      chorus. Nor did it at all diminish their pleasure that the only particular

      concerning "Roy's Wife" which Mr Bates's enunciation allowed them to gather, was

      that she "chated" him,�whether in the matter of garden stuff or of some other

      commodity, or why her name should, in consequence, be repeatedly reiterated with

      exultation, remaining an agreeable mystery.

      Mr Bates's song formed the climax of the evening's good-fellowship, and the

      party soon after dispersed �Mrs Bellamy, perhaps, to dream of quicklime flying

      among her preserving-pans, or of lovesick housemaids reckless of unswept

      corners�and Mrs Sharp to sink into pleasant visions of independent housekeeping

      in Mr Bates's cottage, with no bells to answer, and with fruit and vegetables ad

      libitum.

      Caterina soon conquered all prejudices against her foreign blood; for what

      prejudices will hold out against helplessness and broken prattle? She became the

      pet of the household, thrusting Sir Christopher's favourite bloodhound of that

      day, Mrs Bellamy's two canaries, and Mr Bates's largest Dorking hen, into a

      merely secondary position. The consequence was, that in the space of a summer's

      day she went through a great cycle of experiences, commencing with the somewhat

      acidulated goodwill of Mrs Sharp's nursery discipline. Then came the grave

      luxury of her ladyship's sitting-room, and, perhaps, the dignity of a ride on

      Sir Christopher's knee, sometimes followed by a visit with him to the stables,

      where Caterina soon learned to hear without crying the baying of the chained

      bloodhounds, and to say, with ostentatious bravery, clinging to Sir

      Christopher's leg all the while, "Dey not hurt Tina." Then Mrs Bellamy would

      perhaps be going out to gather the roseleaves and lavender, and Tina was made

      proud and happy by being allowed to carry a handful in her pinafore; happier

      still, when they were spread out on sheets to dry, so that she could sit down

      like a frog among them, and have them poured over her in fragrant showers.

      Another frequent pleasure was to take a journey with Mr Bates through the

     


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