MI IL L I N I S UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN PRODUCTION NOTE University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign Library Brittle Books Project, 2013. COPYRIGHT NOTIFICATION,. In Public Domain. Published prior to 1923. This digital copy was made from the printed version held by the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. It was made in compliance with copyright law. Prepared for the Brittle Books Project, Main Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign by Northern Micrographics Brookhaven Bindery La Crosse, Wisconsin 2013 - UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS LIBRARY AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN STACKS POOR MISS FINCH WILKIE COLLINS'S NOVELS. Crown 8vo., cloth extra, 3s. 6d. each; post 8vo., boards, 2s. each; cloth limp, 2s. 6d. each. ANTONINA. THE FROZEN DEEP. BASIL. THE LAW AND THE LADY. HIDE AND SEEK. THE TWO DESTINIES. AFTER DARK. THE HAUNTED HOTEL. THE DEAD SECRET. THE FALLEN LEAVES. THE QUEEN OF HEARTS. JEZEBEL'S DAUGHTER. THE WOMAN IN WHITE. THE BLACK ROBE. NO NAME. HEART AND SCIENCE. MY MISCELLANIES. 'I SAY NO.' ARMADALE. A ROGUE'S LIFE. THE MOONSTONE. THE EVIL GENIUS. MAN AND WIFE. LITTLE NOVELS. POOR MISS FINCH. THE LEGACY OF CAIN. MISS OR MRS.? BLIND LOVE. THE NEW MAGDALEN. POPULAR EDITIONS. Medium 8vo., 6d. each. THE MOONSTONE. THE NEW MAGDALEN. THE WOMAN IN WHITE. THE DEAD SECRET. ANTONINA. MAN AND WIFE. London: CHATTO & WINDUS, III St. Martin's Lane, W.C. WILKIE COLLINS POOR MISS FINCH A DOMESTIC STORY LIBRARY EDITION LONDON CHATTO & WINDUS I90 TO MRS. ELLIOT, (OF THE DEANERY, BRISTOL). ILL you honour me by accepting the Dedication of this book, in remembrance of an uninterrupted friendship of many years ? More than one charming blind girl, in fiction and in the drama, has preceded " Poor Miss Finch." But, so far as I know, blindness in these cases has been always exhibited, more or less exclusively, from the ideal and the sentimental point of view. The attempt here made is to appeal to an interest of another kind, by exhibiting blindness as it really is. I have carefully gathered the informa- tion necessary to the execution of this purpose from competent authorities of all sorts. Whenever " Lucilla" acts or speaks in these pages, with reference to her blindness, she is doing or saying what persons afflicted as she is have done or said before her. Of the other features which I have added to produce and sustain interest in this central personage of my story, it does not become me to speak. It is for my readers to say if "Lucilla" has found her way to their sympathies. In this character, and more especially again in the characters of " Nugent Dubourg '" and " Madame Pratolungo," I have tried to present human nature in its inherent inconsistencies and self-contradictions- in its intricate mixture of good and evil, of great and small-as I see it in the world about me. But the faculty of observing character is so rare, the curiously mistaken tendency to look for logical consistency in human motives and human actions is so general, that I may possibly find the execution of this part of my task misunderstood--sometimes even resented--in certain quarters. However, T'me has stood my friend in relation to other characters of mine in other books--and who can say that Time may not help me again here ? Perhaps, one of these days, I may be able to make use of some of the many interesting 110945 stories of events that have really happened, which have been placed in my hands by persons who could speak as witnesses to the truth of the narrative. Thus far, I have not ventured to disturb the repose of these manuscripts in the locked drawer allotted to them. The true incidents are so "far-fetched ;" and the conduct of the real people is so " grossly improbable !" As for the object which I have had in view in writing this story, it is, I hope, plain enough to speak for itself. I subscribe to the article of belief which declares, that the conditions of human happiness are independent of bodily affliction, and that it is even possible for bodily affliction itself to take its place among the ingredients of happiness. These are the views which " Poor Miss Finch " is intended to advocate-and this is the impression which I hope to leave on the mind of the reader when the book is closed, W. C. Yanuary x6th, 1872. NOTE TO THE PRESENT EDITION. IN expressing my acknowledgments for the favourable reception accorded to the previous editions of this story, I may take the present opportunity of adverting to one of the characters, not alluded to in the Letter of Dedication. The German oculist -" Herr Grosse "-has impressed himself so strongly as a real personage on the minds of some of my readers afflicted with blindness, or suffering from diseases of the eye, that I have received several written applications requesting me to communi- cate his present address to patients desirous of consulting him i Sincerely appreciating the testimony thus rendered to the truth of this little study of character, I have been obliged to acknow- ledge to my correspondents-and I may as well repeat it here-- that Herr Grosse has no (individual) living prototype. Like the other Persons of the Drama, in this book and in the books which have preceded it, he is drawn from my general observa- tion of humanity. I have always considered it to be a mistake in Art to limit the delineation of character in fiction to a literary portrait taken from any one " sitter." The result of this process is generally (to my mind) to produce a caricature instead of a character. November 27th, 1872. iv Dedication. CONTENTS. PART THE FIRST. CHAPTER THE FIRST MADAMB PRATOLUNGO PRESENTS HERSELF . CHAPTER THE SECOND. MADAME PRATOLUNGO MAKES A VOYAGE ON LAND e CHAPTER THE THIRD. POOR MISS FINCH . . . CHAPTER THE FOURTH. TWILIGHT VIEW OF THE MAN . . . CHAPTER THE FIFTH. CANDLELIGHT VIEW OF THE MAN . . CHAPTER THE SIXTH. A CAGE OF FINCHES . . . CHAPTER THE SEVENTH. DAYLIGHT VIEW OF THE MAN . . . CHAPTER THE EIGHTH. TlHE PERJURY OF THE CLOCK . . . CHAPTER THE NINTI. 1'RE HERO OF THE TRIAL . . . CHAPTER THE TENTH. EIRST APPEARANCE OF JICKS . VAQC . in d a Q2, "*2 2 $9 * .35) vi Contents. PAGE CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH. BLIND LOVE . .* E CHAPTER THE TWELFTH. MR. FINCH SMELLS MONEY '* . . * 68 CHAPTER THE THIRTEENTH. SECOND APPEARANCE OF JICKS . . . , . 75 CHAPTER THE FOURTEENTH. DISCOVERIES AT BROWNDOWN . . * . * 79 CHAPTER THE FIFTEENTH. EVENTS AT THE BEDSIDE . . . 85 CHAPTER THE SIXTEENTH. FIRST RESULT OF THE ROBBERY , . * 0 CHAPTER THE SEVENTEENTH THE DOCTOR'S OPINION . . e 96 CHAPTER THE EIGHTEENTH. FAMILY TROUBLES . . . . . 100 CHAPTER THE NINETEENTH. SECOND RESULT OF THE ROBBERY . . . . 106 CHAPTER THE TWENTIETH. GOOD PAPA AGAIN . . . . . * * 6 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIRST. MADAME PRATOLUNGO RETURNS TO DIMCHURCH * s* 122 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SECOND. THE TWIN-BROTHER S LETTER . * * 127 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-THIRD. HE SETS US ALL RIGHT . * I34 CHAPTER THE TWFNTY-FOURTH. HE SEES LUCILLA . . . . . * * 144 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-FIFTH. NUGENT PUZZLES MADAME PRATOLUNGO . * * 151I CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SIXTH. HE PROVES EQUAL TO THE OCCASION 1 . . 60 Contents. vii PAGE CHAPTER THE TWENTY-SEVENTH. HE FINDS A WAY OUT OF IT . . . r67 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-EIGHTH. HE CROSSES THE RUBICON . . . . 176 CHAPTER THE TWENTY-NINTH. PARLIAMENTARY SUMMARY 1. . 88 CHAPTER THE THIRTIETH. HERR GROSSE . . . . . . . . 192 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-FIRST. " WHO SHALL DECIDE WHEN DOCTORS DISAGREE ?" . a . 202 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-SECOND. ALAS FOR THE MARRIAGE ! . . 209 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-THIRD. THE DAY BETWEEN . . . . . . 82 -0- PART THE SECOND. CHAPTER THE THIRTY-FOURTH NUGENT SHOWS HIS HAND . . . . g 236 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-FIFTH. LUCILLA TRIES HER SIGHT . . . * 245 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-SIXTH. THE BROTHERS MEET * * 261 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-SEVENTH THE BROTHERS CHANGE PLACES * * . * 269 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-EIGHTH. IS THERE NO EXCUSE FOR HIM ? . . , 281 CHAPTER THE THIRTY-NINTH. 1SHE LEARNS TO SEE . * 298 CHAPTER THE FORTIETH. TRACES OF NUGENT * * 308 CHAPTER THE FORTY-FIRST. A HARD TIME FOR MADAME PRATOLUNGO . . 3 5 viii Contents. CHAPTER THE FORTY-SECOND. THE STORY OF LUCILLA : TOLD BY HERSELF . CHAPTER THE FORTY-THIRD. EVCILLA'S JOURNAL, CONTINUED . CHAPTER THE FORTY-FOURTH. EUiCILLA'S JOURNAL, CONTINUED . . CHAPTER THE FORTY-FIFTH. iLCILLA'S JOURNAL, CONCLUDED .. CHAPTER THE FORTY-SIXTH. TNE ITALIAN STEAMER . . .. CHAPTER THE FORTY-SEVENTH. ON THE WAY TO THE END. FIRST STAGE . CHAPTER THE FORTY-EIGHTH. ON THE WAY TO THE END. SECOND STAGE . CHAPTER THE FORTY-NINTH ON THE WAY TO THE END. THIRD STAGE . CHAPTER THE FIFTIETH. THE END OF THE JOURNEY . . . EPILOGUE. 7JADAME PRATOLUNGO'S LAST WORDS, . * . 326 * * 333 * . 349 * . 365 * * 38o . . 397 * * 406 . * 411 � * 422 . , 42a ib_. POOR MISS FINCH. CHAPTER THE FIRST. MADAME PRATOLUNGO PRESENTS HERSELF. OU are here invited to read the story of an Event which occurred in an out-of-the-way corner of England, some years since. The persons principally concerned in the Event are :-a blind girl; two (twin) brothers; a skilled surgeon; and a curious foreign woman. I am the curious foreign woman. And I take it on myself--for reasons which will pre- sently appear--to tell the story. So far we understand each other. Good. I may make my- self known to you as briefly as I can. I am Madame Pratolungo--widow of that celebrated South American patriot, Doctor Pratolungo. I am French by birth. Before I married the Doctor, I went through many vicissitudes in my own country. They ended in leaving me (at an age which is of no consequence to anybody) with some experience of the world; with a cultivated musical talent on the pianoforte ; and with a comfortable little fortune unexpectedly bequeathed to me by a relative of my dear dead mother (which fortune I shared with good Papa and with my younger sisters). To these quali- fications I added another, the most precious of all, when I mar- ried the Doctor; namely--a strong infusion of ultra-liberal prin- ciples. Vize la Rdtjmblique / Some people do one thing, and some do another, in the way of celebrating the event of their marriage. Having become man and wife, Doctor Pratolungo and I took ship to Central America I 2 toor Miss Finc. -and devoted our honey-moon, in those disturbed districts, to the sacred duty of destroying tyrants. Ah ! the vital air of my noble husband was the air of revolu- tions. From his youth upwards he had followed the glorious profession of Patriot. Wherever the people of the Southern New World rose and declared their independence--and, in my time, that fervent population did nothing else--there was the Doctor self-devoted on the altar of his adopted country. He had been fifteen times exiled, and condemned to death in his absence, when I met with him in Paris--the picture of heroic poverty, with a brown complexion and one lame leg. Who could avoid falling in love with such a man? I was proud when he proposed to devote me on the altar of his adopted country. as well as himself-me, and my money. For, alas i everything is expensive in this world; including the destruction of tyrants and the saving of Freedom. All my money went in helping the sacred cause of the people. Dictators and filibusters flourished in spite of us. Before we had been a year married, the Doctor had to fly (for the sixteenth time) to escape being tried for his life. My husband condemned to death in his absence; and I with my pockets empty. This is how the Republic rewarded us. And yet, I love the Republic. Ah, you monarchy-people, sitting fat and contented under tyrants, respect that ! This time, we took refuge in England. The affairs of Central America went on without us. I thought of giving lessons in music. But my glorious hus- band could not spare me away from him. I suppose we should have starved, and made a sad little paragraph in the English newspapers--if the end had not come in another way. My poor Pratolungo was in truth worn out. He sank under his sixteenth exile. I was left a widow-with nothing but the inheritance of my husband's noble sentiments to console me. I went back for awhile to good Papa and my sisters in Paris. But it was not in my nature to remain and be a burden on them at home. I returned again to London, with recommendations : and encountered inconceivable disasters in the effort to earn a living honourably. Of all the wealth about me--the prodigal, insolent, ostentatious wealth--none fell to my share. What Madame Pratolungo presents Herself 3 might has anybody to be rich? I defy you, whoever you may be, to prove that anybody has a right to be rich. Without dwelling on my disasters, let it be enough to say that I got up one morning, with three pounds, seven shillings, and fourpence in my purse; with my fervid temper, and my republican principles-and with absolutely nothing in prospect, that is to say with not a halfpenny more to come to me, unless I could earn it for myself. In this sad case, what does an honest woman who is bent on winning her own independence by her own work, do? She takes three and sixpence out of her little humble store; and she advertises herself in a newspaper. One always advertises the best side of oneself. (Ah, poor humanity !) My best side was my musical side. In the days of my vicissitudes (before my marriage) I had at one time had a share in a millinery establishment in Lyons. At another time, I had been bedchamber-woman to a great lady in Paris. But in my present situation, these sides of myself were, for various reasons, not so presentable as the pianoforte side. I was riot a great player-far from it. But I had been soundly instructed; and I had, what you call, a competent skill on the instrument. Brief, I made the best of myself, I promise you, in my adver- tisement. The next day, I borrowed the newspaper, to enjoy the pride of seeing my composition in print. Ah, heaven ! what did I discover? I discovered what other wretched advertising people have found out before me. Above my own advertisement, the very thing I wanted was advertised for by somebody else ! Look in any newspaper; and you will see strangers who (if I may so express myself) exactly fit each other, advertising for each other, without knowing it. I had advertised myself as " accomplished musical companion for a lady. With cheerful temper to match." And there above me was my unknown necessitous fellow-creature, crying out in prin- ters' types :-" Wanted, a companion for a lady. Must be an accomplished musician, and have a cheerful temper. Testimo- nials to capacity, and first-rate references required." Exactly what I had offered ! "Apply by letter only, in the first instance.' 4 Poor Miss Finch. Exactly what I had said ! Fie upon me, I had spent three and sixpence for nothing. I threw down the newspaper, in a trans- port of anger (like a fool)--and then took it up again (like a sensible woman), and applied by letter for the offered place. My letter brought me into contact with a lawyer. The lawyer enveloped himself in mystery. It seemed to be a professional habit with him to tell nobody anything, if he could possibly help it. Drop by drop, this wearisome man let the circumstances out. The lady was a young lady. She was the daughter of a clergy- man. She lived in a retired part of the country. More even than that, she lived in a retired part of the house. Her father had married a second time. Having only the young lady as child by his first marriage, he had (I suppose by way of a change) a large family by his second marriage. Circumstances rendered it necessary for the young lady to live as much apart as she could from the tumult of a house-ful of children. So he went on, until there was no keeping it in any longer-and then he let it out. The young lady was blind ! Young--lonely-blind. I had a sudden inspiration. I felt I should love her. The question of my musical capacity was, in this sad case, a serious one. The poor young lady had one great pleasure to illumine her dark life- Music. Her companion was wanted to play from the book, and play worthily, the works of the great masters (whom this young creature adored)-and she, listening, would take her place next at the piano, and reproduce the music morsel by morsel, by ear. A professor was appointed to pro- nounce sentence on me, and declare if I could be trusted not to misinterpret Mozart, Beethoven, and the other masters who have written for the piano. Through this ordeal I passed with success. As for my references, they spoke for themselves. Not even the lawyer (though he tried hard) could pick holes in them. It was arranged on both sides that I should, in the first instance, go on a month's visit to the young lady. If we both wished it at the end of the time, I was to stay, on terms arranged to my perfect satisfaction. There was our treaty ! The next day I started for my visit by the railway. Madame Pratolungo presents Herself. My instructions directed me to travel to the town of Lewes in Sussex. Arrived there, I was to ask for the pony-chaise of my young lady's lather-described on his card as Reverend Tertius Finch. The chaise was to take me to the rectory-house in the village of Dimchurch. And the village of Dimchurch was situated among the South Down Hills, three or four miles from the coast. When I stepped into the railway carriage, this was all I knew. After my adventurous life--after the volcanic agitations of my republican career in the Doctor's time--was I about to bury my- self in a remote English village, and live a life as monotonous as the life of a sheep on a hill ? Ah, with all my experience, I had yet to learn that the narrowest human limits are wide enough to contain the grandest human emotions. I had seen the Drama of Life amid the turmoil of tropical revolutions. I was to see it again, with all its palpitating interest, in the breezy solitudes of the South Down Hills. CHAPTER THE SECOND. MADAMR PRATOLUNGO MAKES A VOYAGE ON LAND. A WELL-FED boy, with yellow Saxon hair; a little shabby green chaise; and a rough brown pony-these objects confronted me at the Lewes Station. I said to the boy, " Are you Reverend Finch's servant ?" And the boy answered, " I be he." We drove through the town--a hilly town of desolate clean houses. No living creatures visible behind the jealously-shut windows. No living creatures entering or departing through the sad-coloured closed doors. No theatre ; no place of amusement except an empty town-hall, with a sad policeman meditating on its spruce white steps. No customers in the shops, and nobody to serve them behind the counter, even if they had turned up. Here and there on the pavements, an inhabitant with a capacity for staring, and (apparently) a capacity for nothing else. I said to Reverend Finch's boy," Is this a rich place ?" Reverend Finch's boy brightened and answered, "That it be I" Good. 6 Poor Miss Finch. At any rate, they don't enjoy themselves here- the infamous rich! Leaving this town of unamused citizens immured in domestic tombs, we got on a fine high road-still ascending--with a spa- cious open country on either side of it. A spacious open country is a country soon exhausted by a sight-seer's eye. I have learnt from my poor Pratolungo the habit of -earching for the political convictions of my fellow- creatures, when I find myself in contact with them in strange places. Having nothing else to do, I searched Finch's boy. His political programme, I found to be :-As much meat and beer as I can contain ; and as little work to do for it as possible. In return for this, to touch my hat when I meet the Squire, and to be content with the station to which it has pleased God to call me. Miserable Finch's boy ! We reached the highest point of the road. On our right hand, the ground sloped away gently into a fertile valley-with a vil- lage and a church in it ; and beyond, an abominable privileged enclosure of grass and trees torn from the community by a tyrant, and called a Park; with the palace in which this enemy of mankind caroused and fattened, standing in the midst. On our left hand, spread the open country-a magnificent prospect of grand grassy hills, rolling away to the horizon ; bounded only by the sky. To my surprise, Finch's boy descended; took the pony by the head ; and deliberately led him off the high road, and on to the wilderness of grassy hills, on which not so much as a footpath was discernible anywhere, far or near. The chaise began to heave and roll like a ship on the sea. It became neces- sary to hold with both hands to keep my place. I thought first of my luggage--then of myself. "How much is there of this r " I asked. U Three mile on't," answered Finch's boy. I insisted on stopping the ship--I mean the chaise--and on getting out. We tied my luggage fast with a rope; and then we went on again, the boy at the pony's head, and I after them on foot. Ah, what a walk it was I What air over my head ; what grass under my feet I The sweetness of the inner land, and the crisp Madame Pratolungo mnakes a Voyage on Land. 7 saltness of the distant sea, were mixed in that delicious breeze. The short turf, fragrant with odorous herbs, rose and fell elastic, underfoot. The mountain-piles of white cloud moved in subinme procession along the blue field of heaven, overhead. The wild growth of prickly bushes, spread in great patches over the grass, was in a glory of yellow bloom. On we went; now up, now down; now bending to the right, and now turning to the left. I looked about me. No house; no road; no paths, fences, hedges, walls; no land-marks of any sort. All round us, turn which way we might, nothing was to be seen but the majestic solitude of the hills. No living creatures appeared but the white dots of sheep scattered over the soft green distance, and the skylark singing his hymn of happiness, a speck above my head. Truly a wonderful place ! Distant not more than a morning's drive from noisy and populous Brighton-a stranger to this neighbourhood could only have found his way by the compass, exactly as if he had been sailing on the sea ! The farther we penetrated on our land-voyage, the more wild and the more beautiful the solitary landscape grew. The boy picked his way as he chose-there were no barriers here. Plodding behind, I saw nothing, at one time, but the back of the chaise, tilted up in the air, both boy and pony being invisibly buried in the steep descent of the hill. At other times, the pitch was all the con- trary way; the whole interior of the ascending chaise was dis- closed to my view, and above the chaise the pony, and above the pony the boy-and, ah, my luggage swaying and rocking in the frail embraces of the rope that held it. Twenty times did I con- fidently expect to see baggage, chaise, pony, boy, all rolling down into the bottom of a valley together. But no ! Not the least little accident happened to spoil my enjoyment of the day. Politically contemptible, Finch's boy had his merit--he was master of his subject as guide and pony-leader among the South Down Hills. Arrived at the top of (as it seemed to me) our fiftieth grassy summit, I began to look about for signs of the village. Behind me, rolled back the long undulations of the hills, with the cloud-shadows moving over the solitudes that we had left. Before me, at a break in the purple distance, I saw the soft white 8 Poor Miss Finch. line of the sea. Beneath me, at my feet, opened the deepest valley I had noticed yet-with one first sign of the presence of Man scored hideously on the face of Nature, in the shape of a square brown patch of cleared and ploughed land on the grassy slope. I asked if we were getting near the village now. Finch's boy winked, and answered, " Yes, we be." Astonishing Finch's boy ! Ask him what questions I might, the resources of his vocabulary remained invariably the same. Still this youthful Oracle answered always in three monosyllabic words ! We plunged into the valley. Arrived at the bottom, I discovered another sign of Man. Be- hold the first road I had seen yet-a rough waggon-road ploughed deep in the chalky soil! We crossed this, and turned a corner of a hill. More signs of human life. Two small boys started up out of a ditch-apparently posted as scouts to give notice of our approach. They yelled, and set off running before us, by some short cut, known only to themselves. We turned again, round another winding of the valley, and crossed a brook. I considered it my duty to make myself acquainted with the local niames. What was the brook called ? It was called " The Cockshoot !" And the great hill, here, on my right? It was called " The Overblow ! " Five minutes more, and we saw our first house-lonely and little-built of mortar and flint from the hills. A name to this also? Certainly. Name of " Brown- down." Another ten minutes of walking, involving us more and more deeply in the mysterious green windings of the valley- and the great event of the day happened at last. Finch's boy pointed before him with his whip, and said (even at this supreme moment, still in three monosyllabic words) :- " Here we be ! " So this is Dimchurch ! I shake out the chalk-dust from the skirts of my dress. I long (quite vainly) for the least bit of looking-glass to see myself in. Here is the population (to the Lumber of at least five or six), gathered together, informed by )he scouts-and it is my woman's business to produce the best impression of myself that I can. We advance along the little road. I smile upon the population. The population stares at Madame Pratolungo makes a Voyage on Land. 9 me in return. On one side, I remark three or four cottages, and a bit of open ground; also an inn named "The Cross-Hands," and a bit more of open ground; also a tiny, tiny butcher's shop, with sanguinary insides of sheep on one blue pie-dish in the window, and no other meat than that, and nothing to see be- yond, but again the open ground, and again the hills; indicat- ing the end of the village this side. On the other side there ap- pears, for some distance, nothing but a long flint wall guarding the outhouses of a farm. Beyond this, comes another little group of cottages, with the seal of civilisation set on them, in the form of a post-office. The post-office deals in general commo- dities-in boots and bacon, biscuits and flannel, crinoline petti- coats and religious tracts. Farther on, behold another flint wall, a garden, and a private dwelling-house; proclaiming itself as the rectory. Farther yet, on rising ground, a little desolate church, with a tiny white circular steeple, topped by an extin- guisher in red tiles. Beyond this, the hills and the heavens once more. And there is Dimchurch ! As for the inhabitants-what am I to say ? I suppose I must tell the truth. I remarked one born gentleman among the inhabitants, and he was a sheep-dog. He alone did the honours of the place. He had a stump of a tail, which he wagged at me with extreme difficulty, and a good honest white and black face which he poked companionably into my hand. "Welcome, Madame Pratolungo, to Dimchurch; and excuse these male and female labourers who stand and stare at you. The good God who makes us all has made them too, but has not succeeded so well as with you and me." I happen to be one of the few people who can read dogs' language as written in dogs' faces. I cor- rectly report the language of the gentleman sheep-dog on this occasion. We opened the gate of the rectory, and passed in. So my Land-Voyage over the South Down Hills came prosperously to its end. To Poor Miss Finch. CHAPTER THE THIRD, POOR MISS FINCH. THE rectory resembled, in one respect, this narrative that I am now writing. It was in Two Parts. Part the First, in front, composed of the everlasting flint and mortar of the neighbour- hood, failed to interest me. Part the Second, running back at a right angle, asserted itself as ancient. It had been, in its time, as I afterwards heard, a convent of nuns. Here were snug little Gothic windows, and dark ivy-covered walls of vener- able stone : repaired in places, at some past period, with quaint red bricks. I had hoped that I should enter the house by this side of it. But no. The boy-after appearing to be at a loss what to do with me-led the way to a door on the modern side of the building, and rang the bell. A slovenly young maid-servant admitted me to the house. Possibly, this person was new to the duty of receiving visitors. Possibly, she was bewildered by a sudden invasion of children in dirty frocks, darting out on us in the hall, and then darting away again into invisible back regions, screeching at the sight of a stranger. At any rate, she too appeared to be at a loss what to do with me. After staring hard at my foreign face, she suddenly opened a door in the wall of the passage, and admitted me into a small room. Two more children in dirty frocks darted, screaming, out of the asylum thus offered to me. I men- tioned my name, as soon as I could make myself heard. The maid appeared to be terrified at the length of it. I gave her my card. The maid took it between a dirty finger and thumb-- looked at it as if it was some extraordinary natural curiosity- turned it round, exhibiting correct black impressions in various parts of it of her finger and thumb-gave up understanding it in despair, and left the room. She was stopped outside (as I gathered from the sounds) by a returning invasion of children in the hall. There was whispering ; there was giggling; there was, every now and then, a loud thump on the door. Prompted by the children, as I suppose-pushed in by them, certainly-the maid suddenly reappeared with a jerk, " Oh, if you please, come this way," she said. The invasion of children retreated again up the stairs-one of them in possession of my card, and waving it in triumph on the first landing. We penetrated to the other end of the passage. Again, a door was opened. Unannounced, I entered another, and a larger room. What did I see ? Fortune had favoured me at last. My lucky star had led me to the mistress of the house. I made my best curtsey, and found myself confronting a large, light-haired, languid, lymphatic lady--who had evidently been amusing herself by walking up and down the room, at the moment when I appeared. If there can be such a thing as a. damt woman-this was one. There was a humid shine on her colourless white face, and an overflow of water in her pale blue eyes. Her hair was not dressed ; and her lace cap was all on one side. The upper part of her was clothed in a loose jacket of blue merino; the lower part was robed in a dimity dressing gown of doubtful white. In one hand, she held a dirty dogs'- eared book, which I at once detected to be a Circulating Library novel. Her other hand supported a baby enveloped in flannel, sucking at her breast. Such was my first experience of Reverend Finch's Wife-destined to be also the experience of all after- time. Never completely dressed; never completely dry; always with a baby in one hand and a novel in the other--such was Finch's wife. "Oh! Madame Pratolungo ? Yes. I hope somebody has. told Miss Finch you are here. She has her own establishment, and manages everything herself. Have you had a pleasant journey ?" (These words were spoken vacantly, as if her mind was occupied with something else. My first impression of her suggested that she was a weak, good-natured woman, and that she must have originally occupied a station in the humbler ranks of life.) " Thank you, Mrs. Finch," I said. " I have enjoyed most heartily my journey among your beautiful hills." " Oh! you like the hills ? Excuse my dress. I was half an hour late this morning. When you lose half an :hour in this Poor IMiss Finch.i~ II 1 2 Poor Miss Finck. house, you never can pick it up again, try how you may." (I soon discovered that Mrs. Finch was always losing half an hour out of her day, and that she never, by any chance, succeeded in finding it again, as she had just told me.) "I understand, madam. The cares of a numerous family---" " Ah ! that's just where it is." (This was a favourite phrase with Mrs. Finch). " There's Finch, he gets up in the morning and goes and works in the garden. Then there's the washing of the children; and the dreadful waste that goes on in the kitchen. And Finch, he comes in without any notice, and wants his breakfast. And of course I can't leave the baby. And half an hour does slip away so easily, that how to overtake it again, I do assure you I really don't know." Here the baby began to exhibit symptoms of having taken more maternal nourishment than his infant stomach could comfortably contain. I held the novel, while Mrs. Finch searched for her handkerchief --first in her bedgown pocket; secondly, here, there, and every- where in the room. At this interesting moment there was a knock at the door, An elderly woman appeared-who offered a most refreshing contrast to the members of the household with whom I had made acquaintance thus far. She was neatly dressed, and she saluted me with the polite composure of a civilised being. " I beg your pardon, ma'am. My young lady has only this moment heard of your arrival. Will you be so kind as to follow me ?" I turned to Mrs. Finch. She had found her handkerchief, and had put her overflowing baby to rights again. I respect- fully handed back the novel. " Thank you," said Mrs. Finch. " I find novels compose my mind. Do you read novels too? Remind me--and I'll lend you this one to-morrow." I expressed my acknowledgments, and withdrew. At the door, I look round, saluting the lady of the house. Mrs. Finch was promenading the room, with the baby in one hand and the novel in the other, and the dimity bedgown trailing behind her. We ascended the stairs, and entered a bare white-washed passage, with drab-coloured doors in it, leading, as I presumed, into the sleeping chambers of the house. Every door opened as we passed; children peeped out at me, screamed at me, and banged the door to again. " What family has the present Mrs. Finch ?" I asked. The decent elderly woman was obliged to stop, and consider. "Including the baby, ma'am, and two sets of twins, and one seven months' child of deficient intellect-fourteen in all." Hearing this, I began- though I consider priests, kings, and capitalists to be the enemies of the human race--to feel a certain exceptional interest in Reverend Finch. Did he never wish that he had been a priest of the Roman Catholic Church, mercifully forbidden to marry at all ? While the question passed through my mind, my guide took out a key, and opened a heavy oaken door at the further end of the passage. " We are obliged to keep the door locked, ma'am," she ex. plained, " or the children would be in and out of our part of the house all day long." After my experience of the children, I oivn I looked at the oaken door with mingled sentiments of gratitude and respect. We turned a corner, and found ourselves in the vaulted cor- ridor of the ancient portion of the house. The casement windows, on one side-sunk deep in recesses- looked into the garden. Each recess was filled with groups of flowers in pots. On the other side, the old wall was gaily de- corated with hangings of bright chintz. The doors were coloured of a creamy white, with gilt mouldings. The brightly orna- mented matting under our feet I at once recognised as of South American origin. The ceiling above was decorated in delicate pale blue, with borderings of flowers. Nowhere down the whole extent of the place was so much as a single morsel of dark colour to be seen anywhere. At the lower end of the corridor, a solitary figure in a pure white robe was bending over the flowers in the window. This was the blind girl whose dark hours I had come to cheer. In the scattered villages of the South Downs, the simple people added their word of pity to her name, and called her compas- sionately-" Poor Miss Finch." As for me, I can only think of her by her pretty Christian name. She is " Lucilla" when my memory dwells on her. Let me call her " Lucilla " here. Por Misjs .Finch. 13 When my eyes first rested on her, she was picking off the dead leaves from her flowers. Her delicate ear detected the sound of my strange footstep, long before I reached the place at which she was standing. She lifted her head-and advanced quickly to meet me with a faint flush on her face, which came and died away again in a moment. I happen to have visited the picture gallery at Dresden in former years. As she ap- proached me, nearer and nearer, I was irresistibly reminded of the gem of that superb collection - the matchless Virgin of Raphael, called " The Madonna di San Sisto." The fair broad forehead; the peculiar fulness of the flesh between the eyebrow and the eyelid; the delicate outline of the lower face; the tender, sensitive lips; the colour of the complexion and the hair-all reflected, with a startling fidelity, the lovely creature of the Dresden picture. The one fatal point at which the resem- blance ceased, was in the eyes. The divinely-beautiful eyes of Raphael's Virgin were lost in the living likeness of her that con- fronted me now. There was no deformity; there was nothing to re- coil from, in my blind Lucilla. The poor, dim, sightless eyes had a faded, changeless, inexpressive look-and that was all. Above them, below them, rqund them, to the very edges of her eyelids, there was beauty, movement, life. In them-death ! A more charming creature-with that one sad drawback-I never saw. There was no other personal defect in her. She had the fine height, the well-balanced figure, and the length of the lower limbs, which make all a woman's movements graceful of them- selves. Her voice was delicious-clear, cheerful, sympathetic. This, and her smile-which added a charm of its own to the beauty of her mouth--won my heart, before she had got close enough to me to put her hand in mine. "Ah, my dear!" I said, in my headlong way, " I am so glad to see you !" The instant the words passed my lips, I could have cut my tongue out for reminding her in that brutal manner that she was blind. To my relief, she showed no sign of feeling it as I did. " May I see you, in my way ? ' she asked gently-and held up her pretty white hand. " May I touch your face? " I sat down at once on the window-seat. The soft rosy tips of her fingers seemed to cover my whole face in an instant. Three oor Missj= Finch.z 14 separate times she passed her hand rapidly over me; her own face absorbed all the while in breathless attention to what she was about. " Speak again ! " she said suddenly, holding her hand over me in suspense. I said a few words. She stopped me by a kiss. " No more ! " she exclaimed joyously. " Your voice says to my ears, what your face says to my fingers. I know I shall like you. Come in, and see the rooms we are going to live in together." As I rose, she put her arm round my waist-then instantly drew it away again, and shook her fingers impatiently, as if some- thing had hurt them. " A pin ? " I asked. "No! no ! What coloured dress have you got on ?" " Purple." " Ah! I knew it! Pray don't wear dark colours. I have my own blind horror of anything that is dark. Dear Madame Prato- lungo, wear pretty bright colours, to please me!" She put her arm caressingly round me again-round my neck, however, this time, where her hand could rest on my linen collar. "You will change your dress before dinner-won't you ?" she whispered. " Let me unpack for you, and choose which dress I like." The brilliant decorations of the corridor were explained to me now ! We entered the rooms; her bed-room, my bed-room, and our sitting-room between the two. I was prepared to find them, what they proved to be-as bright as looking-glasses, and gild- ing, and gaily-coloured ornaments, and cheerful knick-knacks of all sorts could make them. They were more like rooms in my lively native country than rooms in sober colourless England. The one thing which I own did still astonish me, was that all this sparkling beauty of adornment in Lucilla's habitation should have been provided for the express gratification of a young lady who could not see. Experience was yet to show me that the blind can live in their imaginations, and have their favourit, fancies and illusions like the rest of us. To satisfy Lucilla by changing my dark purple dress, it was necessary that I should first have my boxes. So far as I knew, Finch's boy had taken my luggage, along with the pony, to the Poor 1Miss Pinch.~z I5 stables. Before Lucilla could ring the bell to make inquiries, my elderly guide (who had silently left us while we were talking to- gether in the corridor) re-appeared, followed by the boy and a groom, carrying my things. These servants also brought with them certain parcels for their young mistress, purchased in the town, together with a bottle, wrapped in fair white paper, which looked like a bottle of medicine-and which had a part of its own to play in our proceedings, later in the day. "This is my old nurse," said Lucilla, presenting her attendant to me. " Zillah can do a little of everything-cooking included. She has had lessons at a London Club. You must like Zillah, Madame Pratolungo, for my sake. Are your boxes open ?" She went down on her knees before the boxes, as she asked the question. No girl with the full use of her eyes could have enjoyed more thoroughly than she did the trivial amusement of unpacking my clothes. This time, however, her wonderful deli- cacy of touch proved to be at fault. Of two dresses of mine which happened to be exactly the same in texture, though widely different in colour, she picked out the dark dress as being the light one. I saw that I disappointed her sadly when I told her of her mistake. The next guess she made, however, restored the tips of her fingers to their place in her estimation : she discovered the stripes in a smart pair of stockings of mine, and brightened up directly. " Don't be long dressing," she said, on leaving me. "We shall have dinner in half an hour. French dishes, in honour of your arrival. I like a nice dinner-I am what you call in your country, gourmande. See the sad consequence'!" She put one finger to her pretty chin. " I am getting fat ! I am threatened with a double chin-at two and twenty. Shocking! shocking ! " So she left me. And such was the first impression producea on my mind by "Poor Miss Finch." 16 Poor iMiss Finch. T0?wihigt View of tke Man. 17 CHAPTER THE FOURTH. TWILIGHT VIEW OF THE MAN. Oux nice dinner had long since come to an end. We had chat- tered, chattered, chattered-as usual with women-all about ourselves. The day had declined; the setting sun was pouring its last red lustre into our pretty sitting-room-when Lucilla started as if she had suddenly remembered something, and rang the bell. Zillah came in. "The bottle from the chemist's," said Lu- cilla. " I ought to have remembered it hours ago." " Are you going to take it to Susan yourself, my dear ?" I was glad to hear the old nurse address her young lady in that familiar way. It was so thoroughly un-English. Down with the devilish system of separation between the classes in this country-that is what I say! " Yes; I am going to take it to Susan myself." " Shall I go with you ?" " No, no. Not the least occasion." She turned to me. " I suppose you are too tired to go out again, after your walk on the hills ?" she said. I had dined; I had rested; I was quite ready to go out again, and I said so. Lucilla's face brightened. For some reason of her own, she had apparently attached a certain importance to persuading me to go out with her. " It's only a visit to a poor rheumatic woman in the village," she said. " I have got an embrocation for her; and I can't very well send it. She is old and obstinate. If I take it to her, she will believe in the remedy. If anybody else takes it, she will throw it away. I had utterly forgotten her, in the interest of our nice long talk. Shall we get ready?" I had hardly closed the door of my bedroom when there was a knock at it. Lucilla ? No; the old nurse entering on tiptoe, with a face of mystery, and a finger confidentially placed on her lips. " I beg your pardon, ma'am," she began in a whisper. " E think you ought to know that my young lady has a purpose in taking you out with her this evening. She is burning with curi- osity-like all the rest of us for that matter. She took me out, and used my eyes to see with, yesterday evening; and they have not satisfied her. She is going to try your eyes, now." "What is Miss Lucilla so curious about ?" I inquired. "It's natural enough, poor dear," pursued the old woman, fol- lowing her own train of thought, without the slightest reference to my question. " We none of us can find out anything about him. He usually takes his walk at twilight. You are pretty sure to meet him to-night; and you will judge for yourself ma'am--with an innocent young creature like Miss Lucilla-- what it may be best to do ?" This extraordinary answer set my curiosity in a flame. "My good creature!" I said, "you forget that I am a stranger l I know nothing about it. Has this mysterious man got a name? Who is ' He' ?" As I said that, there was another knock at the door. Zillah whispered, eagerly, " Don't tell upon me, ma'am! You will see for yourself. I only speak for my young lady's good." She hobbled away, and opened the door-and there was Lucilla, with her smart garden hat on, waiting for me. We went out by our own door into the garden, and passing through a gate in the wall, entered the village. After the caution which the nurse had given me, it was im- possible to ask any questions, except at the risk of making mis- chief in our little household, on the first day of my joining it. I kept my eyes wide open, and waited for events. I also com- mitted a blunder at starting-I offered Lucilla my hand to lead her. She burst out laughing. " My dear Madame Pratolungo ! I know my way better than you do. I roam all over the neighbourhood, with nothing to help me but this." She held up a smart ivory walking-cane, with a bright silk tassel attached. With her cane in one hand, and her chemical bottle in the other-and her roguish little hat on the top of her head--she made the quaintest and prettiest picture I had seem I8 oor Miss Finch.zc Twilight View of the Man. for many a long day. " You shall guide me, my dear," I said- and took her arm. We went on down the village. Nothing in the least like a mysterious figure passed us in the twilight. The few scattered labouring people, whom I had al- ready seen, I saw again--and that was all. Lucilla was silent-- suspiciously silent as I thought, after what Zillah had told me. She had, as I fancied, the look of a person who was listening intently. Arrived at the cottage of the rheumatic woman, she stopped and went in, while I waited outside. The affair of the embrocation was soon over. She was out again in a minute-- and this time, she took my arm of her own accord. " Shall we go a little farther ?" she said. " It is so nice and cool at this hour of the evening." Her object in view, whatever it might be, was evidently an object that lay beyond the village. In the solemn, peaceful twilight we followed the lonely windings of the valley along which I had passed in the morning. When we came opposite the little solitary house, which I had already learnt to know as " Brown- down," I felt her hand unconsciously tighten on my arm. "Aha !" I said to myself. "'Has Browndown anything to do with this ?" " Does the view look very lonely to-night?" she asked, waving her cane over the scene before us. The true meaning of that question I took to be, " Do you see anybody walking out to-night ?" It was not my business to in- terpret her meaning, before she had thought fit to confide her secret to me. " To my mind, my dear," was all I said, " it is a very beautiful view." She fell silent again, and absorbed herself in her own thoughts. We turned into a new winding of the valley-and there, walking towards us from the opposite direction, was a human figure at last-the figure of a solitary man ! As we got nearer to each other I perceived that he was a gen- tleman; dressed in a light shooting-jacket, and wearing a felt hat of the conical Italian shape. A little nearer-and I saw that he was young. Nearer still--and I discovered that he was handsome, though in rather an effeminate way. At the same moment, Lucilla heard his footstep. Her colour instantly rose.; g19 so Poor Miss Finch. and once again I felt her hand tighten involuntarily round my arm. (Good! Here was the mysterious object of Zillah's warn. ing to me found at last!) I have, and I don't mind acknowledging it, an eye for a hand- some man. I looked at him as he passed us. Now I solemnly assure you, I am not an ugly woman. Nevertheless, as our eyes met, I saw the strange gentleman's face suddenly contract, with an expression which told me plainly that I had produced a dis- agreeable impression on him. With some difficulty-for my companion was holding my arm, and seemed to be disposed to 3top altogether-I quickened my pace so as to get by him rapidly; showing him, I dare say, that I thought the change in his face when I looked at him, an impertinence on his part. However that may be, after a momentary interval, I heard his step behind. The man had turned, and had followed us. He came close to me, on the opposite side to Lucilla, and took off his hat. " I beg your pardon, ma'am," he said. " You looked at me just now." At the first sound of his voice, I felt Lucilla start. Her hand began to tremble on my arm with some sudden agitation, incon- ceivable to me. In the double surprise of discovering this, and of finding myself charged so abruptly with the offence of look- ing at a gentleman, I suffered the most exceptional of all losses (where a woman is concerned)-the loss of my tongue. He gave me no time to recover myself. He proceeded with what he had to say-speaking, mind, in the tone of a perfectly well-bred man ; with nothing wild in his look, and nothing odd in his manner. " Excuse me, if I venture on asking you a very strange ques- tion," he went on. " Did you happen to be at Exeter, on the third of last month ?" (I must have been more or less than woman, if I had not secovered the use of my tongue now !) " I never was at Exeter in my life, sir," I answered. " May I ask, on my side, why you put the question to me ?' Instead of replying, he looked at Lucilla. ' Pardon me. once more. Perhaps this young lady--?"' Twilight View of the Man. 21 He was plainly on the point of inquiring next, whether Lucilla had been at Exeter-when he checked himself. In the breath- less interest which she felt in what was going on, she had turned her full face upon him. There was still light enough left for her eyes to tell their own sad story, in their own mute way. As he read the truth in them, the man's face changed from the keen look of scrutiny which it had worn thus far, to an expression of compassion-I had almost said, of distress. He again took off his hat, and bowed to me with the deepest respect. " I beg your pardon," he said, very earnestly. " I beg the young lady's pardon. Pray forgive me. My strange behaviour has its excuse-if I could bring myself to explain it. You dis- tressed me, when you looked at me. I can't explain why. Good evening." He turned away hastily, like a man confused and ashamed of himself-and left us. I can only repeat that there was nothing strange or flighty in his manner. A perfect gentleman, in ful possession of his senses--there is the unexaggerated and the just description of him. I looked at Lucilla. She was standing, with her blind face raised to the sky, lost in herself, like a person wrapped in ecstasy. " Who is that man ?" I asked. My question brought her down suddenly from heaven to earth. " Oh!" she said reproachfully, " I had his voice still in my ears -and now I have lost it ! 'Who is he ?'" she added, after a moment; repeating my question. " Nobody knows. Tell me -what is he like. Is he beautiful ? He must be beautiful, with that voice !" " Is this the first time you have heard his voice ?" I inquired. "Yes. He passed us yesterday, when I was out with Zillah. But he never spoke. What is he like ? Do, pray tell me-what is he like?" There was a passionate impatience in her tone which warned me not to trifle with her. The darkness was coming. I thought it wise to propose returning to the house. She consented to do anything I liked, as long as I consented, on my side, to describe the unknown man. Poor Miss Finch. All the way back, I was questioned and cross-questioned till I felt like a witness under skilful examination in a court of law Lucilla appeared to be satisfied, so far, with the results. "Ah !" she exclaimed, letting out the secret which her old nurse had confided to me. " You can use your eyes. Zillah could tell me nothing." When we got home again, her curiosity took another turn. "Exeter ?" she said, considering with herself. " He mentioned Exeter. I am like you-I never was there. What will books tell us about Exeter ?" She despatched Zillah to the other side of the house for a gazetteer. I followed the old woman into the corridor, and set her mind at ease, in a whisper. " I have kept what you told me a secret," I said. " The man was out in the twilight, as you foresaw. I have spoken to him ; and I am quite as crious as the rest of you. Get the book." Lucilla had (to confess the truth) infected me with her idea, that the gazetteer might help us in interpreting the stranger's remarkable question relating to the third of last month, and his extraordinary assertion that I had distressed him when I looked at him. With the nurse breathless on one side of me, and Lucilla breathless on the other, I opened the book at the letter "E," and found the place, and read aloud these lines, as follows :- "EXETER. A city and seaport in Devonshire. Formerly the seat of the West Saxon Kings. It has a large foreign and home commerce. Popula- tion 33,738. The Assizes for Devonlshire areheld at Exeter in the spring and summer." " Is that all ?" asked Lucilla. I shut the book, and answered, like Finch's boy, in three monosyllabic words : " That is alL" CHAPTER THE FIFTH. CANDLELIGHT VIEW OF THE MAN. THERE had been barely light enough left for me to read by. Zillah lit the candles and drew the curtains. The silence which betokens a profound disappointment reigned in the room. 22 Candlelight View of the Man. 23 "Who can he be ?" repeated Lucilla, for the hundredth tim4 SAnd why should your looking at him have distressed -him Guess, Madame Pratolungo !" The last sentence in the gazetteer's description of Exeter hung a little on my mind--in consequence of there being one word in it which I did not quite understand--the word "Assizes." I have, I hope, shown that I possess a competent knowledge of the English language, by this time. But my experience fails a little on the side of phrases consecrated to the use of the law. I inquired into the meaning of " Assizes," and was informed that it signified movable Courts, for trying prisoners at given times, in various parts of England. Hearing this, I had another of ny inspirations. I guessed immediately that the interesting stranger was a criminal escaped from the Assizes. Worthy old Zillah started to her feet, convinced that I had hit him off (as the English saying is) to a T. " Mercy preserve us !" cried the nurse, " I haven't bolted the garden door !" She hurried out of the room to defend us from robbery and murder, before it was too late. I looked at Lucilla. She was leaning back in her chair, with a smile of quiet contempt on her pretty face. " Madame Pratolungo," she remarked, " that is the -first foolish thing you have said, since you have been here." "Wait a little, my dear," I rejoined. "You have declared that nothing is known of this man. Now you mean by that--- nothing which satisfies you. He has not dropped down from Heaven,' I suppose? The :time when he came here,- must be known. Also, whether he came alone, or not. Also, how and where he has found a ,lodging in the village. Before I admit that my guess is completely wrong, I want to hear what general observation in Dimchurch has discovered on the subject of this gentleman. How long has he been here ?" Lucilla did .not, at first, appe'r to be much interested in the purely practical view of the question which I had just placed be- fore her:. " He has been here a week," she answered carelessly. . Did he come, as I came, over the hills?' S" a Yes." T With a guide, ;of course ? 24 Poor Miss Finch. Lucilla suddenly sat up in her chair. " With his brother," she said. " His twin brother, Madame Pratolungo." I sat up in my chair. The appearance of his twin-brother in the story was a complication in itself. Two criminals escaped from the Assizes, instead of one ! " How did they find their way here ?" I asked next. " Nobody knows." " Where did they go to, when they got here ?' "To the Cross-Hands--the little public-house in the village. The landlord told Zillah he was perfectly astonished at the re- semblance between them. It was impossible to know which was which--it was wonderful, even for twins. They arrived early in the day, when the tap-room was empty; and they had a long talk together in private. At the end of it, they rang for the landlord, and asked if he had a bed-room to let in the house. You must have seen for yourself that The Cross-Hands is a mere beer-shop. The landlord had a room that he could spare -a wretched place, not fit for a gentleman to sleep in. One of the brothers took the room for all that." " What became of the other brother ?" " He went away the same day--very unwillingly. The parting between them was most affecting. The brother who spoke to us to-night insisted on it-- or the other would have refused to leave .im. They both shed tears-" "They did worse than that," said old Zillah, re-entering the room at the moment. " I have made all the doors and windows fast, downstairs ; he can't get in now, my dear, if he tries." " What did they do that was worse than crying ?" I inquired. "Kissed each other!" said Zillah, with a look of profound disgust. "Two men! Foreigners, of course." " Our man is no foreigner," I said. " Did they give them- selves a name ?" " The landlord asked the one who stayed behind for his name," replied Lucilla. " He said it was ' Dubourg."' This confirmed me in my belief that I had guessed right. 'Dubourg" is as common a name in my country as "Jones" or "Thompson is in England-just the sort of feigned name Candlelight View of the Man. 25 that a man in difficulties would give among us. Was he a criminal countryman of mine ? No! There had been nothing foreign in his accent when he spoke. Pure English--there could be no doubt of that. And yet he had given a French name. Had he deliberately insulted my nation ? Yes! Not content with being stained by innumerable crimes, he had added to the list of his atrocities-he had insulted my nation! " Well?" I resumed. " We have left this undetected ruffian deserted in the public-house. Is he there still ?"' "Bless your heart!" cried the old nurse, " he is settled in the neighbourhood. He has taken Browndown." I turned to Lucilla. " Browndown belongs to Somebody," I said, hazarding another guess. " Did Somebody let it without a reference ?" "Browndown belongs to a gentleman at Brighton," answered Lucilla. "And the gentleman was referred to a well-known name in London--one of the great City merchants. Here is the most provoking part of the whole mystery. The merchant said, ' I have known Mr. Dubourg from his childhood. He has reasons for wishing to live in the strictest retirement. I answer for his being an honourable man, to whom you can safely let your house. More than this I am not authorised to tell you.' My father knows the landlord of Browndown; and that is what the reference said to him, word for word. Isn't it provoking? The house was let for six months certain, the next day. It is wretchedly furnished. Mr. Dubourg has had several things that he wanted sent from Brighton. Besides the furniture, a packing-case from London arrived at the house to-day. It was so strongly nailed up that the carpenter had to be sent for to open it. He reports that the case was full of thin plates of gold and silver; and it was accompanied by a box of extraordinary tools, the use of which was a mystery to the carpenter himself. Mr. Dubourg locked up these things in a room at the back of the house, and put the key in his pocket. He seemed to be pleased-he whistled a tune, and said, ' Now we shall do!' The landlady at the Cross-Hands is our authority for this. She does what little cooking he requires; and her daughter makes his bed, and so on. They go to him in the morning, and return to the inn in the evening. He has no servant with him. He is all by himself at night. Isn't it interesting? A mystery in real life. It baffles everybody." "You must be very strange people, my dear," I said, "to make a mystery of such a plain case as this." "Plain ?" repeated Lucilla, in amazement. " Certainly! The gold and silver plates, and the strange tools, and the living in retirement, and the sending the servants away at night--all point to the same conclusion. My guess is the right one. The man is an escaped criminal; and his form of crime is coining false money. He has been discovered at Exeter-he has escaped the officers of justice- and he is now going to begin again here. You can do as .you pleases If I happen to want change, I won't get it in this neighbourhood." Lucilla laid herself back in her chair again. I could see that she gave me up, in the matter of Mr. Dubourg, as a person wilfully and incorrigibly wrong. "A coiner of false money, recommended as an honourable sman by one of the first merchants iri London i" she exclaimed. "' We do some very eccentric things in England, occasionally- but there is a limit to our national madness, Madame Pra- tolungo, and you have reached it. Shall we have some music ?" She spoke a little sharply. Mr. Dubourg was the hero of her romance. She resented-seriously resented--any attempt on nmy part to lower him in her estimation. I persisted in my unfavourable opinion of him, nevertheless. The question between us (as I might have told her) was a ques- tion of believing, or not believing, in the .merchant of London To her mind, it was a sufficient guarantee of his integrity that he was a rich man. To my mind (speaking as a good Socialist), ,that very circumstance told dead against him. A capitalist is a robber of one sort, and a coiner is a robber of another sort. Whether the capitalist recommends the coiner, or the coiner the capitalist, is all one to me. In either case (to quote the language -of an excellent English play) the honest people arecthe soft easy cushions on which these knaves repose and fatten. It was on the tip of my tongue to put this large and liberal view of the 26 Poor Miss: Finch. Candlelitt View of the Man. 27 subject to Lucilla. But (alas !) it was easy to see that the poor child was infected by the narrow prejudices of the class amid which she lived. How could I find it in my heart to run the risk of a disagreement between us on the first day? No-it was not to be done. I gave the nice pretty blind girl a kiss. And we went to the piano together. And I put off making a good Socialist of Lucilla till a more convenient oppor- tunity. We might as well have left the piano unopened. The music was a failure. I played my best. From Mozart to Beethoven. From Beetho- ven to Schubert. From Schubert to Chopin. She listened with all the will in the world to be pleased. She thanked me again and again. She tried, at my invitation, to play herself; choosing the familiar compositions which she knew by ear. No! The abominable Dubourg, having got the uppermost place in her mind, kept it. She tried, and tried, and tried-and could do nothing. His voice was still in her ears-the only mdsic which could possess itself of her attention that night. I took her place, and began to play again. She suddenly snatched my hands off the keys. " Is Zillah here ?" she whispered. I told her Zillah had left the room. She laid her charming head on my shoulder, and sighed hysterically. " I can't help thinking of him," she burst out. " I am miserable for the first time in my life-no! I am happy for the first time in my life. Oh, what must you think of me ! I don't know what I am talking about. Why did you encourage him to speak to us? I might never have heard his voice but for you." She lifted her head again with a little shiver, and composed herself. One of her hands wandered here and there over the keys of the piano, playing softly. "His charming voice !" she whispered dreamily while she played. "Oh, his charming voice !" She paused again. Her hand dropped from the piano, and took mine. " Is this love ?" she said, half to herself, half to me. My duty as a respectable woman lay clearly before me--my duty was to tell her a lie. " It is nothing, my dear, but too much excitement and too much fatigue," I said. " To-morrow you shall be my young lady again. To-night you must be only my child. Come, and let me put you to bed." She yielded with a weary sigh. Ah, how lovely she looked in her pretty night-dress, on her knees at the bed-side--the inno- cent, afflicted creature-saying her prayers! I am, let me own, an equally headlong woman at loving and hating. When I had left her for the night, I could hardly have felt more tenderly interested in her if she had been really a child of my own. You have met with people of my sort-unless you are a very forbidding person indeed-who have talked to you in the most confidential manner of all their private affairs, on meeting you in a railway carriage, or sitting next to you at a table-d'h6te. For myself, I believe I shall go on running up sudden friendships with strangers to my dying day. Infamous Dubourg ! If I could have got into Browndown that night, I should have liked to have done to him what a Mexican maid of mine (at the Central American period of my career) did to her drunken husband-who was a kind of pedlar, dealing in whips and sticks. She sewed him strongly up one night in the sheet, while he lay snoring off his liquor in bed; and then she took his whole stock-in-trade out of the corner of the room, and broke it on him, to the last article on sale, until he was beaten to a jelly from head to foot. Not having this resource open to me, I sat myself down in my bedroom, to consider-if the matter of Dubourg went any further--what it was my business to do next. I have already mentioned that Lucilla and I had idled away the whole afternoon, woman-like, in talking of ourselves. You will best understand what course my reflections took, if I here relate the chief particulars which Lucilla communicated to me, concerning her own singular position in her father's house. 28 Poor IMiss Finch.t CHAPTER THE SIXTH. A CAGE OF FINCHES. LARGE families are--as my experience goes--of two sorts. We have the families whose members all admire each other. And we have the families whose members all detest each other. For myself, I prefer the second sort. Their quarrels are their own affair; and they have a merit which the first sort are never known to possess-the merit of being sometimes able to see the good qualities of persons who do not possess the advantage of being related to them by blood. The families whose members all admire each other, are families saturated with insufferable conceit. You happen to speak of Shakspere, among these peo. ple, as a type of supreme intellectual capacity. A female mem- ber of the family will not fail to convey to you that you would have illustrated your meaning far more completely if you had referred her to " dear Papa." You are out walking with a male member of the household; and you say of a woman who passes, "What a charming creature !" Your companion smiles at your simplicity, and wonders whether you have ever seen his sister when she is dressed for a ball. These are the families who cannot be separated without corresponding with each other every day. They read you extracts from their letters, and say, " Where is the writer by profession who can equal this ?" They talk of their private affairs, in your presence--and appear to think that you ought to be interested too. They enjoy their own jokes across you at table--and wonder how it is that you are not amused. In domestic circles of this sort the sisters sit habitually on the brothers' knees; and the husbands inquire into the wives' ailments, in public, as unconcernedly as if they were closeted in their own room. When we arrive at a more advanced stage of civilisation, the State will supply cages for these intolerable people; and notices will be posted at the corners of streets, " Beware of Number Twelve : a family in a state of mutual ad- miration is hung up there !" I gathered from Lucilla that the Finches were of the second Al Cage of Finch~s. 29 order of large families, as mentioned above. Hardly one of the members of this domestic group was on speaking terms with the other. And some of them had been separated for years, without once troubling Her Majesty's Post Office to con. vey even the slightest expression of sentiment from one to the other. The first wife of Reverend Finch was a Miss Batchford. The members of her family (limited at the time of the marriage to her brother and her sister) strongly disapproved of her choice of a husband. The rank of a Finch (I laugh at these contemp- tible distinctions !) was decided, in this case, to be not equal to the rank of a Batchford. Nevertheless, Miss married. Her brother and sister declined to be present at the ceremony. First quarreL Lucilla was born. Reverend Finch's elder brother (on speak- ing terms with no other member of the family) interfered with a Christian proposal-namely-to shake hands across the baby's cradle. Adopted by the magnanimous Batchfords. First recon- ciliation. Time passed. Reverend Finch-then officiating in a poor curacy near a great manufacturing town-felt a want (the want of money); and took a liberty (the liberty of attempting to borrow of his brother-in-law). Mr. Batchford, being a rich man, regarded this overture, it is needless to say, in the light of an insult. Miss Batchford sided with her brother. Second quarrel. Time passed, as before. Mrs. Finch the first died. Reverend Finch's elder brother (still at daggers drawn with the other members of the family) made a second Christian proposal-- namely-to shake hands across the wife's grave. Adopted once more by the bereaved Batchfords. Second reconciliation. Another lapse of time. Reverend Finch, left a widower with one daughter, became personally acquainted with an inhabitant of the great city near which he ministered, who was also a widower with one daughter. The status of the parent, in this case - social-political-religious - was Shoemaker- Radical- Baptist. Reverend Finch, still wanting money, swallowed it all; and married the daughter, with a dowry of three thousand ponds. Foor 1Miss Finch.. 30 This proceeding alienated from him for ever, not the Batchfords only, but the peacemaking elder brother as well. That excel- lent Christian ceased to be on speaking terms now with his brother the clergyman, as well as with all the rest of the family The complete isolation of Reverend Finch followed. Regularly every year did the second Mrs. Finch afford opportunities of shaking hands, not only over one cradle, but sometimes over two. Vain and meritorious fertility ! Nothing came of it, but a kind of compromise. Lucilla, quite overlooked among the rector's rapidly-increasing second family, was allowed to visit her maternal uncle and aunt at stated periods in every year. Born, to all appearance with the full possession of her sight, the poor child had become incurably blind before she was a year old. In all other respects, she presented a striking resemblance to her mother. Bachelor uncle Batchford, and his old maiden sister, both conceived the strongest affection for the child. " Our niece Lucilla," they said, " has justified our fondest hopes-she is a Batchford, not a Finch!" Lucilla's father (promoted, by this time, to the rectory of Dimchurch) let them talk. " Wait a bit, and money will come of it," was all he said. Truly money was wanted !-with fruitful Mrs. Finch multiplying cradles, year after year, till the doctor himself (employed on contract) got tired of it, and said one day, "It is not true that there is an end to everything : there is no end to the multiplying capacity of Mrs. Finch." Lucilla grew up from childhood to womanhood. She was twenty years old, before her father's expectations were realised, and the money came of it at last. Uncle Batchford died a single man. He divided his fortune between his maiden sister, and his niece. When she came of age, Lucilla was to have an income of fifteen hundred pounds a year--on certain conditions, which the will set forth at great length. The effect of these conditions was (first) to render it absolutely impossible for Reverend Finch, under any circtim- stances whatever, to legally inherit a single farthing of the money-and (secondly), to detach Lucilla from her father's household, and to place her under the care of her maiden aunt. A -Cage of Finches. 31I so long as she remained unmarried, for a period of three months in every year. The will avowed the object of this last condition in the plainest words. "I die as I have lived" (wrote uncle Batchford), "a High Churchman and a Tory. My legacy to my niece shall only take effect on these terms-namely-that she shall be re- moved at certain stated periods from the Dissenting and Radical influences to which she is subjected under her father's roof, and shall be placed under the care of an English gentlewoman who unites to the advantages of birth and breeding the possession of high and honourable principles "-etcetera, etcetera. Can you conceive Reverend Finch's feelings, sitting, with his daughter by his side, among the company, while the will was read, and hearing this? He got up, like a true Englishman, and made them a speech. " Ladies and gentlemen," he said, " I admit that I am a Liberal in politics, and that my wife's family are Dissenters. As an example of the principles thus engendered in my household, I beg to inform you that my daughter accepts this legacy with my full permission, and that I forgive Mr. Batchford." With that, he walked out, with his daughter on his arm. He had heard enough, please to observe, to satisfy him that Lucilla (while she lived unmarried) could do what she liked with her income. Before they had got back to Dimchurch, Reverend Finch had completed a domestic arrangement which permitted his daughter to occupy a perfectly independent posi- tion in the rectory, and which placed in her father's pockets-as Miss Finch's contribution to the housekeeping-five hundred a year. (Do you know what I felt when I heard this ? I felt the deepest regret that Finch of the liberal principles had not made a third with my poor Pratolungo and me in Central America. With him to advise us, we should have saved the sacred cause of Freedom without spending a single farthing on it !) The old side of the rectory, hitherto uninhabited, was put I order and furnished-of course at Lucilla's expense. On her twenty-first birthday, the repairs were completed; the first in- stalment of the housekeeping money was paid; and the daughter Poolr 1Miss Finch. 32 A Cage of Finches. 33 was established, as an independent lodger, in her own father's house ! In order to thoroughly appreciate Finch's ingenuity, it is ne- cessary to add here that Lucilla had shown, as she grew up, an increasing dislike of living at home. In her blind state, the endless turmoil of the children distracted her. She and her step-mother did not possess a single sympathy in common. Her relations with her father were in much the same condition She couil compassionate his poverty, and she could treat hiln with the forbearance and respect due to him from his child. As to really venerating and loving him--the less said about that the better. Her happiest days had been the days she spent with her uncle and aunt; her visits to the Batchfords had grown to be longer and longer visits with every succeeding year. If the father, in appealing to the daughter's sympathies, had not dexterously contrived to unite the preservation of her inde- pendence with the continuance of her residence under his roof, she would, on coming of age, either have lived altogether with her aunt, or have set up an establishment of her own. As it was, the rector had secured his five hundred a year, on terms acceptable to both sides--and, more than that, he had got her safe under his own eye. For, remark, there was one terrible pos- sibility threatening him in the future--the possibility of Luci!la's marriage ! Such was the strange domestic position of this interesting creature, at the time when I entered the house. You will now understand how completely puzzled I was when I recalled what had happened on the evening of my arrival, and when I asked myelf-in the matter of the mysterious stranger -what course I w vs to take next. I had found Lucilla a solitary being-helplessly dependent in her blindness on others--and, in that sad condition, without a mother, without a sister, without a friend even in whose sympathies she could take refuge, in whose advice she could trust. I had produced a first favourable im- pression on her; I had won her liking at once, as she had won mine. I had accompanied her on an evening walk, ini ocent of all suspicion of what was going on in her mind. I Lad by pure accident enabled a stranger to intensify the imaginary interest which she felt in him, by provoking him to speak in her hearing for the first time. In a moment of hysterical agitation -and in sheer despair of knowing who else to confide in-the poor, foolish, blind, lonely girl had opened her heart to me. What was I to do ? If the case had been an ordinary one, the whole affair would have been simply ridiculous. But the case of Lucilla was not the case of girls in general. The minds of the blind 'are, by cruel necessity, forced inward on themselves. They live apart from us--ah, how hopelessly far apart !-in their own dark sphere, of which we know nothing. What relief could come to Lucilla from the world outside? None! It was part of her desolate liberty to be free to dwell unremittingly on the ideal creature of her own dream. Within the narrow limit of the one impression that it had been possible for her to derive of this man--the impression of the beauty of his voice-her fancy was left to work unrestrained in the change- less darkness of her life. What a picture ! I shudder as I draw it. Oh, yes, it is easy, I know, to look at it the other way- to laugh at the folly of a girl, who first excites her imagination about a total stranger; and then, when she hears him speak, falls in love with his voice ! But add that the girl is blind; that the girl lives habitually in the world of her own imagina- tion; that the girl has nobody at home who can exercise a whole- some influence over her. Is there nothing pitiable in such a state of things as this? For myself, though I come of a light- hearted nation that laughs at everything-I saw my own face looking horribly grave and old, as I sat before the glass that night, brushing my hair. I looked at my bed. Bah ! what was the use of going to bed ? She was her own mistress. She was perfectly free to take her next walk to Browndown alone ! and to place herself, for all I knew to the contrary, at the mercy of a dishonourable and designing man. What was I ? Only her companion. I had no right to interfere- and yet, if anything happened, I should be blamed. It is so easy to say, " You ought to have done something." Whom could I consult? The worthy old nurse .Poor iliss Finch.z 34 A Cage of Fizches. only held the position of servant. Could I address myself to the lymphatic lady with the baby in one hand, and the novel in the other ? Absurd ! her stepmother was not to be thought of. Her father? Judging by hearsay, I had not derived a favourable impression of the capacity of Reverend Finch for interfering successfully in a matter of this sort. However, he was her father; and I could feel my way cautiously with him at first. Hearing Zillah moving about the corridor, I went out to her. In the cot'se of a little gossip, I introduced the name of the master of the house. How was it I had not seen him yet ? For an excellent reason. He had gone to visit a friend at Brighton. It was then Tuesday. He was expected back on "sermon-day" --that is to say on Saturday in the same week. I returned to my room, a little out of temper. In this state my mind works with wonderful freedom. I had another of my inspirations. Mr. Dubourg had taken the liberty of speaking to me that evening. Good. I determined to go alone to Brown- down the next morning, and take the liberty of speaking to Mr. Dubourg. Was this resolution solely inspired by my interest in Lucilla ? Or had my own curiosity been all the time working under the surface, and influencing the course of my reflections unknown to myself ? I went to bed without inquiring. I recommend you to go to bed without inquiring too. CHAPTER THE SEVENTH. DAYLIGHT VIEW OF THE MAN. WHEN I put out my candle that night, I made a mistake-I trusted entirely to myself to wake in good time in the morning. I ought to have told Zillah to call me. Hours passed before I could close my eyes. It was broken rest when it came, until the day dawned. Then I fell asleep at last in good earnest. When I woke, and looked at my watch, I was amazed to find that it was ten o'clock. I jumped out of bed, and rang for the old nurse. Was Lucllla 35 36 Poor Mss Finch. at home I' No : she had gone out for a little walk. By herself Yes--by herself. In what direction ? Up the valley, towards. Browndown. I instantly arrived at my own conclusion. She had got the start of me--thanks to my laziness in sleeping away the precious hours of the morning in bed. The one thing to do, was to follow her as speedily as possible. In half an hour more, I was out for a little walk by myself-and (what do you think?) my direction also was up the valley, towads Brown- down. A pastoral solitude reigned round the lonely little house. I went on beyond it, into the next winding of the valley. Not a human creature was to be seen. I returned to Browndown to reconnoitre. Ascending the rising ground on which the house was built, I approached it from the back. The windows were all open. I listened. (Do you suppose I felt scruples in such an emergency as this ? Oh, pooh ! pooh ! who but a fool would have felt anything of the sort !) I listened with both my ears. Through a window at the side of the house, I heard the sound of voices. Advancing noiselessly on the turf, I heard the voice of Dubourg. He was answered by a woman. Aha, I had caught her. Lucilla herself ! " Wonderful !" I heard him say. " I believe you have eyes in the ends of your fingers. Take this, now-and try if you can tell me what it is." "A little vase," she answered-speaking, I give you my word of honour, as composedly as if she had known him for years. "Wait ! what metal is it? Silver? No. Gold. Did you really make this yourself as well as the box ?" " Yes. It is an odd taste of mine-isn't it ?-to be fond of chasing in gold and silver. Years ago I met with a man in Italy, who taught me. It amused me, then-and it amuses me now. When I was recovering from an illness last spring, I shaped that vase out of the plain metal, and made the ornaments on it." " Another mystery revealed!" she exclaimed. " Now I know what you wanted with those gold and silver plates that came to you from London. Are you a.ware of what a character you have Daylikt View of the Man. got here? There are some of us who suspect you of coiing false money !" They both burst out laughing as gaily as a couple of children. I declare I wished myself one of the party ! But no. I had my duty to do as a respectable woman. My duty was to steal a little nearer, and see if any familiarities were passing between these two merry young people. One half of the open window was sheltered, on the outer side, by a Venetian blind. I stood behind the blind, and peeped in. (Duty ! oh, dear me, painful, but necessary duty !) Dubourg was sitting with his back to the window. Lucilla faced me opposite to him. Her cheeks were flushed with pleasure. She held in her lap a pretty little golden vase. Her clever fingers were passing over it rapidly, exactly as they had passed, the previous evening, over my face. " Shall I tell you what the pattern is on your vase ?" she went on. " Can you really do that ?" "You shall judge for yourself. The pattern is made of leaves, ,with birds placed among them, at intervals. Stop ! I think I have felt leaves like these on the old side of the rectory, against the wall. Ivy ?" "Amazing ! it is ivy." " The birds," she resumed. " I shan't be satisfied till I have told you what the birds are. Haven't I got silver birds like them-only much larger- for holding pepper, and mustard, and sugar, and so on. Owls !" she exclaimed, with a cry of triumph. "Little owls, sitting in ivy-nests. What a delightful pattern ! I never heard of anything like it before." " Keep the vase !" he said. " You will honour me, you will delight me, if you will keep the vase." She rose and shook her head-without giving him back the vase, however. " I might take it, if you were not a stranger," she said. "Why don't you tell us who you are, and what your reason is for living all by yourself in this dull place ?" He stood before her, with his head down, and sighed bitterly. " I know I ought to explain myself," he answered. " I can't 'be surprised if people are suspicious of me." He paused, and 37 38 Poor Miss Finch. added very earnestly, " I can't tell it to you. Oh, no-not to you /" " Why not ?" " Don't ask me !" She felt for the table, with her ivory cane, and put the vase down on it-very unwillingly. " Good morning, Mr. Dubourg," she said. He opened the door of the room for her in silence. Waiting close against the side of the house, I saw them appear under the porch, and cross the little walled enclosure in front. As she stepped out on the open turf beyond, she turned, and spoke to him again. " If you won't tell me your secret," she said, " will you tell it to some one else ? Will you tell it to a friend of mine ?" " To what friend ? " he asked. "To the lady whom you met with me last night." He hesitated. " I am afraid I offended the lady," he said. " So much the more reason for your explaining yourself," she rejoined. " If you will only satisfy her, I might ask you to come and see us-I might even take the vase." With that strong hint, she actually gave him her hand at parting. Her perfect self-possession, her easy familiarity with this stranger-so bold, and yet so innocent-petrified me. " I shall send my friend to you this morning," she said imperiously, striking her cane on the turf. " I insist on your telling her the whole truth." With that, she signed to him that he was to follow her no farther, and went her way back to the village. Does it not surprise you, as it surprised me ? Instead of her blindness making her nervous in the presence of a man unknown to her, it appeared to have exactly the contrary effect. It made her fearless. He stood on the spot where she had left him, watching her as she receded in the distance. His manner towards her, in the house and out of the house, had exhibited, it is only fair to say, the utmost consideration and respect. Whatever shyness there had been between them, was shyness entirely on his side. I had a short stuff dress on, which made no noise over the grass. I skirted the wall of the enclosure, and approached him unsus- Daylight View of the Man. pec:ied, from behind. " The charming creature !" he said to himself, still following her with his eyes. As the words passed his lips, I struck him smartly on the shoulder with my parasol. "Mr. Dubourg," I said, " I am waiting to hear the truth." He started violently--and confronted me in speechless dis- may; his colour coming and going like the colour of a young girl. Anybody who understands women will understand that this behaviour on his part, far from softening me towards him, only encouraged me to bully him. " In your present position in this place, sir," I went on, " do you think it honourable conduct on your part to decoy a young lady, to whom you are a perfect stranger, into your house-a young lady vwho claims, in right of her sad affliction, even more than the usual forbearance and respect which a gentleman owes to her sex ? " His shifting colour settled, for the time, into an angry red. "You are doing me a great injustice, ma'am," he answered. " It is a shame to say that I have failed in respect to the young lady i I feel the sincerest admiration and com)assion for her. Circumstances justify me in what I have done; I could not have acted otherwise. I refer you to the young lady herself." His voice rose higher and higher--he was thoroughly offended with me. Need I add (seeing the prospect not far off of his bullying me), that I unblushingly shifted my ground, and tried a little civility next ? " If I have done you an injustice, sir, I ask your pardon," I answered. " Having said so much, I have only to add that I shall be satisfied if I hear what the circumstances are, from yourself." This soothed his offended dignity. His gentler manner began to show itself again. "The truth is," he said, " that I owe my introduction to the young lady to an ill-tempered little dog belonging to the people at the inn. The dog had followed the person here who attends on me : and it startled the lady by flying out and barking at her as she passed this house. After I had driven away the dog, I begged her to come in and sit down until she had recovered herself. Am I to blame for doing that? I don't deny that I felt the deepest interest in her and that I did my best to amuse 39 her, while she honoured me by remaining in my house. May I ask if I have satisfied you? " With the best will in the world to maintain my unfavourable opinion of him, I was, by this time, fairly forced to acknowledge to myself that the opinion was wrong. His explanation was, in tone and manner as well as in language, the explanation of a gentleman. And, besides-though he was a little too effeminate for my taste-he really was such a handsome young man! His hair was of a fine bright chestnut colour, with a natural curl in it. His eyes were of the lightest brown I had ever seen-with a sin- gularly winning gentle modest expression in them. As for his complexion-so creamy and spotless and fair-he had no right to it : it ought to have been a woman's complexion, or at least a boy's. He looked indeed more like a boy than a man: his smooth face was quite uncovered, either by beard, whisker, or moustache. If he had asked me, I should have guessed him (though he was really three years older) to have been younger than Lucilla. " Our acquaintance has begun rather oddly, sir," I said. "You spoke strangely to me last night; and I have spoken hastily to you this morning. Accept my excuses-and let us try if we can't do each other justice in the end. I have something more to say o you before we part. Will you think me a very extraordinary woman, if I suggest that you may as well invite me next, to take a chair in your house ? " He laughed with the pleasantest good temper, and led the way in. We entered the room in which he had received Lucilla; and sat down together on the two chairs near the window-with this difference-that I contrived to possess myself of the seat which he had occupied, and so to place him with his face to the light. " Mr. Dubourg," I began, " you will already have guessed that I overheard what Miss Finch said to you at parting ?" He bowed, in silent acknowledgment that it was so-and be- gan to toy nervously with the gold vase which Lucilla had left on the table. "What do you propose to do ?" I went on. "You have spoken Poor 1Miss Finch.. 4o Day kht View of the Man. 41 of the interest you feel in my young friend. If it is a true inte- rest, it will lead you to merit her good opinion by complying with her request. Tell me plainly, if you please. Will you come and see us, in the character of a gentleman who has satisfied two ladies that they can receive him as a neighbour and a friend ? Or will you oblige me to warn the rector of Dimchurch that his daughter is in danger of permitting a doubtful character to force his acquaintance on her? " He put the vase back on the table, and turned deadly pale. " If you knew what I have suffered," he said; " if you had gone through what I have been compelled to endure----" His voice failed him; his soft brown eyes moistened; his head drooped. He said no more. In common with all women, I like a man to be a man. There was, to my mind, something weak and womanish in the manner in which this Dubourg met the advance which I had made to him. He not only failed to move my pity--he was in danger of stirring up my contempt. " I too have suffered," I answered. " I too have been com- pelled to endure. But there is this difference between us. My courage is not worn out. In your place, if I knew myself to be an honourable man, I would not allow the breath of suspicion to rest on me for an instant. Cost what it might, I would vindicate myself. I should be ashamed to cry-I should speak." That stung him. He started up on his feet. " Have you been stared at by hundreds of cruel eyes ?" he burst out passionately. " Have you been pointed at, without mercy, wherever you go? Have you been put in the pillory of the newspapers ? Has the photograph proclaimed your infamous notoriety in all the shop-windows ?" He dropped back into his chair, and wrung his hands in a frenzy. " Oh, the public !" he exclaimed; " the horrible public ! I can't get away from them -I can't hide myself, even here. You have had your stare at me, like the rest," he cried, turning on me fiercely. " I knew it when you passed me last night." " I never saw you out of this place," I answered. " As for the portraits of you, whoever you may be, I know nothing about them. I was far too anxious and too wretched, to amuse myself by looking into shop-windows before I came here. You, and your name, are equally strange to me. If you have any respect for yourself, tell me who you are. Out with the truth, sir ! You know as well as I do that you have gone too far to stop." I seized him by the hand. I was wrought up by the extra. ordinary outburst that had escaped him to the highest pitch of excitement : I was hardly conscious of what I said or did. At that supreme moment, we enraged, we maddened each other. His hand closed convulsively on my hand. His eyes looked wildly into mine. " Do you read the newspapers ?" he asked. " Yes." "Have you seen--?" " I have not seen the name of ' Dubourg ' " "' My name is not ' Dubourg.' " "What is it ?" He suddenly stooped over me; and whispered his name in my ear. In my turn I started, thunderstruck, to my feet. " Good God !" I cried. "You are the man who was tried for murder last month, and who was all but hanged, on the false testimony of aclock !" CHAPTER THE EIGHTH. THE PERJURY OF THE CLOCK. WE looked at one another in silence. Both alike, we were obliged to wait a little and recover ourselves. I may occupy the interval by answering two questions which will arise in your ihinds in this place. How did Dubourg come to be tried for his life ? And what was the connection between this serious matter and the false testimony of a clock. The reply to both these inquiries is to be found in the story which I call the Perjury of the Clock ? In briefly relating this curious incidental narrative (which I take from a statement of the circumstances placed in my pos- session) I shall speak of our new acquaintance at Browndown-- Por Aiss Fined,, 42 The Perjury of the Clock. 43 and shall continue to speak of him throughout these pages--by his assumed name. In the first place, it was the maiden name of his mother, and he had a right to take it if he pleased. In the second place, the date of our domestic drama at Dimchurch goes back as far as the years 'fifty-eight and 'fifty-nine; and real names are (now that it is all over) of no consequence to any- body. With " Dubourg" we have begun. With "Dubourg " let us go on to the end. On a summer evening, some years ago, a man was found murdered in a field near a certain town in the West of England. The name of the field was, " Pardon's Piece." The man was a small carpenter and builder in the town, who bore an indifferent character. On the evening in question, a distant relative of his, employed as farm-bailiff by a gentleman in the 'neighbourhood, happened to be passing a stile which led from the field into a road, and saw a gentleman leaving the field by way of this stile, rather in a hurry. He recognised the gentleman as Mr. Dubourg. The two passed each other on the road in opposite directions. After a certain lapse of time--estimated as being half an hour- the farm-bailiff had occasion to pass back along the same road. On reaching the stile, he heard an alarm raised, and entered the field to see what was the matter. He found several persons running from the farther side of Pardon's Piece towards a boy who was standing at the back of a cattle-shed, in a remote part of the enclosure, screaming with terror. At the boy's feet lay, face downwards, the dead body of a man, with his head horribly beaten in. His watch was under him, hanging out of his pocket by the chain. It had stopped--evidently in consequence of the concussion of its owner's fall on it--at half-past eight. The body was still warm. All the other valuables, like the watch, were left on it. The farm-bailiff instantly recognised the man as the carpenter and builder mentioned above. At the preliminary inquiry, the stoppage of the watch at half- past eight, was taken as offering good circumstantial evidence that the blow which had killed the man had been struck at that time. 44 Poor Miss Finch. The next question was--if any one had been seen near the body at half-past eight? The farm-bailiff declared that he had met Mr. Dubourg hastily leaving the field by the stile at that very time. Asked if he had looked at his watch, he owned that he had not done so. Certain previous circumstances which he mentioned as having impressed themselves on his memory, enabled him to feel sure of the truth of his assertion, without having consulted his watch. He was pressed on this important point; but he held to his declaration. At half-past eight he had seen Mr. Dubourg hurriedly leave the field. At half-past eight the watch of the murdered man had stopped. Had any other person been observed in or near the field at that time ? No witness could be discovered who had seen anybody else near the place. Had the weapon turned up, with which the blow had been struck? It had not been found. Was anyone known (robbery having plainly not been the motive of the crime) to have entertained a grudge against the murdered man ? It was no secret that he associated with doubtful characters, male and female; but suspicion failed to point to any one of them in particular. In this state of things, there was no alternative but to request Mr. Dubourg-well known in, and out of the town, as a young gentleman of independent fortune; bearing an excellent cha- racter-to give some account of himself. He immediately admitted that he had passed through the field. But in contradiction to the farm-bailiff, he declared that he had looked at his watch at the moment before he crossed the stile, and that the time by it was exactly a quarter past eight. Five minutes later-that is to say ten minutes before the murder had been committed, on the evidence of the dead man's watch-he had paid a visit to a lady living near Pardon's Piece; and had remained with her, until his watch, consulted once more on leaving the lady's house, informed him that it was a quarter to nine. Here was the defence called an " alibi." It entirely satisfied Mr. Dubourg's friends. To satisfy justice also, it was necessary to call the lady as a witness. In the meantime, another purely The Perjury of the Clock. 45 formal question was put to Mr. Dubourg. Did he know any- thing of the murdered man ? With some appearance of confusion, Mr. Dubourg admitted that he had been induced (by a friend) to employ the man on some work. Further interrogation extracted from him the fol- lowing statement of facts. That the work had been very badly done-that an exorbitant price had been charged for it-that the man, on being remon- strated with, had behaved in a grossly impertinent manner-that an altercation had taken place between them-that Mr. Dubourg had seized the man by the collar of his coat, and had turned him out'of the house-that he had called the man an infernal scoundrel (being in a passion at the time), and had threatened to " thrash him within an inch of his life" (or words to that effect) if he ever presumed to come near the house again; that he had sincerely regretted his own violence the moment he re- covered his self-possession; and, lastly, that, on his oath (the altercation having occurred six weeks ago), he had never spoken to the man, or set eyes on the man since. As the matter then stood, these circumstances were considered as being unfortunate circumstances for Mr. Dubourg-nothing more. He had his " alibi " to appeal to, and his character to appeal to; and nobody doubted the result. The lady appeared as witness. Confronted with Mr. Dubourg on the question of time, and forced to answer, she absolutely contradicted him, on the testi- mony of the clock on her own mantelpiece. In substance, her evidence was simply this. She had looked at her clock, when Mr. Dubourg entered the room; thinking it rather a late hour for a visitor to call on her. The clock (regulated by the maker, only the day before) pointed to twenty-five minutes to nine. Practical experiment showed that the time required to walk the distance, at a rapid pace, from the stile to the lady's house, was just five minutes. Here then was the statement of the farm-bailiff (himself a respectable witness) corroborated by another witness of excellent position and character. The clock, on being ex- amined next, was found to be right. The evidence of the clock- maker proved that he kept the key, and that there had been no necessity to set the clock and wind it up again, since he had performed both those acts on the day preceding Mr. Dubourg's visit. The accuracy of the clock thus vouched for, the conclu- sion on the evidence was irresistible. Mr. Dubourg stood con- victed of having been in the field at the time when the murder was committed; of having, by his own admission, had a quarrel with the murdered man, not long before, terminating in an as- sault and a threat on his side; and, lastly, of having attempted to set up an alibi by a false statement of the question of time. There was no alternative but to commit him to take his trial at the Assizes, charged with the murder of the builder in Pardon's Piece. The trial occupied two days. No new facts of importance were discovered in the interval. The evidence followed the course which it had taken at the preliminary examinations--with this difference only, that it was more carefully sifted. Mr. Dubourg had the double advantage of securing the services of the leading barrister on the circuit, and of moving the irrepressible sympathies of the jury, shocked at his position and eager for proof of his innocence. By the end of the first day, the evidence had told against him with such irresistible force, that his own counsel despaired of the result. When the prisoner took his place in the dock on the second day, there was but one conviction in the minds of the people in court - everybody said, " The clock will hang him." It was nearly two in the afternoon ; and the proceedings were on the point of being adjourned for half an hour, when the attorney for the prisoner was seen to hand a paper to the counsel for the defence. The counsel rose, showing signs of agitation which roused the curiosity of the audience. He demanded the immediate hearing of a new witness; whose evidence in the prisoner's favour he declared to be too important to be delayed for a single moment. After a short colloquy between the judge and the barristers on either side, the court decided to continue the sitting. The witness, appearing in the box, proved to be S young 46 Poor Miss~j Fincb.Z The Perjtiry of the Clock. woman, in delicate health. On the evening when the prisoner had paid his visit to the lady, she was in that lady's service as housemaid. The day after, she had been permitted (by previous arrangement with her mistress) to take a week's holiday, and to go on a visit to her parents, in the west of Cornwall. While there, she had fallen ill, and had not been strong enough since to return to her employment. Having given this preliminary account of herself, the housemaid then stated the following extraordinary particulars in relation to her mistress's clock. On the morning of the day when Mr. Dubourg had called at the house, she had been cleaning the mantlepiece. She had rubbed the part of it which was under the clock with her duster, had accidentally struck the pendulum, and had stopped it. Having once before done this, she had been severely reproved. Fearing that a repetition of the offence, only the day after the clock had been regulated by the maker, might lead perhaps to the withdrawal of her leave of absence, she had determined to put matters right again, if possible, by herself. After poking under the clock in the dark, and failing to set the pendulum going again properly in that way, she next at- tempted to lift the clock, and give it a shake. It was set in a marble case, with a bronze figure on the top ; and it was so heavy that she was obliged to hunt for something which she could use as a lever. The thing proved to be not easy to find on the spur of the moment. Having at last laid her hand on what she wanted, she contrived so to lift the clock a few inches and drop it again on the mantelpiece, as to set it going once more. The next necessity was of course to move the hands on. Here again she was met by an obstacle. There was a difficulty in opening the glass-case which protected the dial. After uselessly searching for some instrument to help her, she got from the foot- man (without telling him what she wanted it for) a small chisel. With this, she opened the case-after accidentally scratching the brass frame of it--and set the hands of the clock by gRess. She was flurried at the time; fearing that her mistress would discover her. Later in the day, she found that she had over- estimated the interval of time that had passed while she was 47 48 Poor Miss FiLnct. trying to put the clock right. She had, in fact, set it exactly a quarter of an hour too fast. No safe opportunity of secretly putting the clock right again had occurred, until the last thing at night. She had then moved the hands back to the right time. At the hour of the evening when Mr. Dubourg had called on her mistress, she positively swore that the clock was a quarter of an hour too fast. It had pointed, as her mistress had declared, to twenty-five minutes to nine-the right time then being, as Mr. Dubourg had asserted, twenty minutes past eight. Questioned why she had refrained from giving this extraordi- nary evidence at the inquiry before the magistrate, she declared that in the remote Cornish village to which she had gone the next day, and in which her illness had detained her from that time, nobody had heard of the inquiry or the trial. She would not have been then present to state the vitally important circum- stances to which she had just sworn, if the prisoner's twin- brother had not found her out on the previous day-had not questioned her if she knew anything about the clock--and had not (hearing what she had to tell) insisted on her taking the journey with him to the court the next morning. This evidence virtually decided the trial. There was a great burst of relief in the crowded assembly when the woman's state- ment had come to an end. She was closely cross-examined as a matter of course. Her character was inquired into; corroborative evidence (relating to the chisel and the scratches on the frame) was sought for and was obtained. The end of it was that, at a late hour on the second evening, the jury acquitted the prisoner, without leaving their box. It was not too much to say that his life had been saved by his brother. His brother alone had persisted, from first to last, in obstinately disbelieving the clock--for no better reason than that the clock was the witness which asserted the prisoner's guilt! He had worried everybody with incessant in- quiries-he had discovered the absence of the housemaid, after the trial had begun--and he had started off to interrogate the girl, knowing nothing, and .uspecting nothing; simply deter- mined to persist in the one everlasting question with which he The Perjury ol the Clock. 49 persecuted everybody belonging to the house: "The clock is going to hang my brother; can you tell me anything about the clock ? " Four months later, the mystery of the crime was cleared up. One of the disreputable companions of the murdered man con- f4essed on his death-bed that he had done the deed. There was nothing interesting or remarkable in the circumstances. Chance which had put innocence in peril, had offered impunity to guilt. An infamous woman; a jealous quarrel; and an absence at the moment of witnesses on the spot--these were really the common- place materials which had composed the tragedy of Pardon's Piece. CHAPTER THE NINTH. THE HERO OF THE TRIAL. ' You have forced it out of me. Now you have had your way never mind my feelings--Go !" Those were the first words the Hero of the Trial said to me, when he was able to speak again ! He withdrew with a curious sullen resignation to the farther end of the room. There he stood looking at me, as a man might have looked who carried some contagion about him, and who wished to preserve a healthy fellow-creature from the peril of touching him. " Why should I go ?" I asked. "You are a bold woman," he said, " to remain in the same room with a man who has been pointed at as a murderer, and who has been tried for his life." The same unhealthy state of mind which had brought him to Dimchurch, and which had led him to speak to me as he had spoken on the previous evening, was, as I understood it, now irritating him against me as a person who had made his own ,quick temper the means of entrapping him into letting out the truth. How was I to deal with a man in this condition? I d~ecided to perform the feat which you call in England, "taking the bull by the horns." " I see but one man here,' I said. " A man honourably ac- quitted of a crime which he was incapable of committing. A man who deserves my interest, and claims my sympathy. Shake hands, Mr. Dubourg." I spoke to him in a good hearty voice, and I gave him a good hearty squeeze. The poor, weak, lonely, persecuted young fellow dropped his head on my shoulder like a child, and burst out crying. "Don't despise me!" he said, as soon as he had got his breath again. " It breaks a man down to have stood in the dock, and to have had hundreds of hard-hearted people staring at him in horror-without his deserving it. Besides, I have been very lonely, ma'am, since my brother left me." We sat down again, side by side. He was the strangest com- pound of anomalies I had ever met with. Throw him into one of those passions in which he flamed out so easily-and you would have said, This is a tiger. Wait till he had coolea down Vgain to his customary mild temperature--and you would have said with equal truth, This is a lamb. " One thing rather surprises me, Mr. Dubourg," I went on. " I can't quite understand -" "Don't call me 'Mr. Dubourg,'" he interposed. " You remind me of the disgrace which has forced me to change my name. Call me by my Christian name. It's a foreign name. You are a foreigner by your accent--you will like me all the better for having a foreign name. I was christened 'Oscar'-after my mother's brother : my mother was a Jersey woman. Call me ' Oscar.'-What is it you don't understand?" " In your present situation," I resumed, "I don't understand your brother leaving you here all by yourself." He was on the point of flaming out again at that. "Not a word against my brother !" he exclaimed fiercely. " My brother is the noblest creature that God ever created ! You must own that yourself-you know what he did at the trial. I should have died on the scaffold but for that angel. I insist on it that he is not a man. He is an angel !" (I admitted that his brother was an angel. The concession instantly pacified him.) " People say there is no difference between us," he went on, Poor Miss Pinch.c~ .50 The Hero of the Trial. drawing his chair companionably close to mine. " Ah, people are so shallow ! Personally, I grant you, we are exactly alike. (You have heard that we are twins?) But there it ends, unfor- tunately for me. Nugent-(my brother was christened Nugent after my father)-Nugent is a hero! Nugent is a genius; I should have died if he hadn't taken care of me after the trial. I had nobody but him. We are orphans; we have no brothers or sisters. Nugent felt the disgrace even more than I felt it- but he could control himself. It fell more heavily on him than it did on me. I'll tell you why. Nugent was in a fair way to make our family name-the name that we have been obliged to drop--famous all over the world. He is a painter--a landscape painter. Have you never heard of him ? Ah, you soon will ! Where do you think he has gone to ? He has gone to the wilds of America, in search of new subjects. He is going to found a school of landscape painting. On an immense scale. A scale that has never been attempted yet. Dear fellow ! Shall I tell you what he said when he left me here? Noble words-I call them noble words. 'Oscar ! I go to make our assumed name famous. You shall be honourably known-you shall be illus- trious, as the brother of Nugent Dubourg.' Do you think I could stand in the way of such a career as that ? After what he has sacrificed for me, could I let Such a Man stagnate here -for no better purpose than to keep me company ? What does it matter about my feeling lonely ? Who am I ? Oh, if you had seen how he bore with the horrible notoriety that followed us, after the trial ! He was constantly stared at and pointed at, for me. Not a word of complaint escaped him. He snapped his fingers at it. 'That for public opinion ' he said. What strength of mind-eh ? From one place after another we moved and moved, and still there were the photographs, and the news- papers, and the whole infamous story (' romance in real life, they called it), known beforehand to everybody. He never lost heart. 'We shall find a place yet' (that was the cheerful way he put it); 'you have nothing to do with it, Oscar; you are safe in my hands ; I promise you exactly the place of refuge you want.' It was he who got all the information, and found out this lonely part of England where you live. I thought it 4--- 5t 5 2 Poor Miss Finck. pretty as we wandered about the hills-it wasn't half grand enough for him. We lost ourselves. I began to feel nervous. He didn't mind it a bit. 'You have Me with you,' he said; 'My luck is always to be depended on. Mark what I say ! We shall stumble on a village !' You will hardly believe me-in ten minutes more, we stumbled, exactly as he had foretold, on this place. He didn't leave me-when I had prevailed on him to go-without a recommendation. He recommended me to the landlord of the inn here. He said, ' My brother is delicate; my brother wishes to live in retirement ; you will oblige me by looking after my brother.' Wasn't it kind? The landlord seemed to be quite affcected by it. Nugent cried when he took leave of me. Ah, what would I not give to have a heart like his and a mind like his! It's something-isn't it?--to have a face like him. I often say that to myself when I look in the glass. Excuse my running on in this way. When I once begin to talk of Nugent, I don't know when to leave off." One thing, at any rate, was plainly discernible in this other- wise inscrutable young man. He adored his twin-brother. It would have been equally clear to me that Mr. Nugent Du- bourg deserved to be worshipped, if I could have reconciled to my mind his leaving his brother to shift for himself in such a place as Dimchurch. I was obliged to remind myself of the admirable service which he had rendered at the trial, before I could decide to do him the justice of suspending my opinion of him, in his absence. Having accomplished this act of magna- nimity, I took advantage of the first opportunity to change the subject. The most tiresome information that I am acquainted with, is the information which tells us of the virtues of an absent person-when that absent person happens to be a stranger. " Is it true that you have taken Browndown for six months ?" I asked. " Are you really going to settle at Dimchurch ?" "Yes--if you keep my secret," he answered. "The people here know nothing about me. Don't, pray don't, tell them who I am ! You will drive me away, if you do." " I must tell Miss Finch who you are," I said. " No ! no! no !" he exclaimed eagerly. "I can't bear the idea of her knowing it. I have been so horribly degraded. The Hero of the Trial. What will she think of me ?" He burst into another explosion of rhapsodies on the subject of Lucilla-mixed up with renewed petitions to me to keep his story concealed from everybody. I lost all patience with his want of common fortitude and common sense. "Young Oscar, I should like to box your ears !" I said. " You are in a villanously unwholesome state about this matter. Have you nothing else to think of ? Have you no profession ? Are you not obliged to work for your living ?" I spoke, as you perceive, with some force of expression-aided by a corresponding asperity of voice and manner. Mr. Oscar Dubourg looked at me with the puzzled air of a man who feels an overflow of new ideas forcing itself into his mind. He modestly admitted the degrading truth. From his childhood upwards, he had only to put his hand in his pocket, and to find the money there, without any preliminary necessity of earning it first. His father had been a fashionable portrait- painter, and had married one of his sitters-an heiress. Oscar and Nugent had been left in the detestable position of indepen- dent gentlemen. The dignity of labour was a dignity unknown to these degraded young men. " I despise a wealthy idler," I said to Oscar, with my republican severity. "You want the ennobling influence of labour to make a man of you. Nobody has a right to be idle-nobody has a right to be rich. You would be in a more wholesome state of mind about yourself, my young gentleman, if you had to earn your bread and cheese be- fore you ate it." He stared at me piteously. The noble sentiments which I had inherited from Doctor Pratolungo, completely bewildered Mr. Oscar Dubourg. " Don't be angry with me," he said, in his innocent way. " I couldn't eat my cheese, if I did earn it. I can't digest cheese. Besides, I employ myself as much as I can." He took his little golden vase from the table behind him, and told me what I haa already heard him tell Lucilla while I was listening at the win- dow. " You would have found me at work this morning," he went on, "if the stupid people who send me my metal plates had not made a mistake. The alloy, in the gold and silver both, 53 5 4 Poor M1iss Finck. is all wrong this time. I must return the plates to be melted again before I can do anything with them. They are all ready to go back to-day, when the cart comes. If there are any labouring people here who want money, I'm sure I will give them some of mine with the greatest pleasure. It isn't my fault, ma'am, that my father married my mother. And how could I help it if he left two thousand a year each to my brother and me ?" Two thousand a year each to his brother and him ! And the illustrious Pratolungo had never known what it was to have five pounds sterling at his disposal before his union with Me ! I lifted my eyes to the ceiling. In my righteous indignation, I forgot Lucilla and her curiosity about Oscar-I forgot Oscar and his horror -of Lucilla discovering who he was. I opened my lips to speak. In another moment I should have launched my thunderbolts against the whole infamous system of modern society, when I was silenced by the most extraordinary and un- expected interruption that ever closed a woman's lips. CHAPTER THE TENTH. FIRST APPEARANCE OF JICKS. THERE walked in, at the open door of the room - softly, suddenly, and composedly-a chubby female child, who could not possibly have been more than three years old. She had no hat or cap on het �ead. A dirty pinafore covered her from her chin to her feet. This amazing apparition advanced into the middle of the room, holding hugged under one arm a ragged and disreputable-looking doll; stared hard, first at Oscar, then at me ; advanced to my knees ; laid the disreputable doll on my lap; and, pointing to a vacant chair at my side, claimed the rights of hospitality in these words : "Jicks will sit down." How was it possible, under these circumstances, to attack the infamous system of modern society? It was only possible to kiss " Jicks." First Appearance of 7icks. " Do you know who this is ?" I inquired, as I lifted our visitor on to the chair. Oscar burst out laughing. Like me, he now saw this myste- rious young lady for the first time. Like me, he wondered what the extraordinary nick-name under which she had presented her- self could possibly mean. We looked at the child. The child--with its legs stretched out straight before it, terminating in a pair of little dusty boots with holes in them-lifted its large round eyes, overshadowed by a penthouse of unbrushed flaxen hair; looked gravely at us in return ; and made a second call on our hospitality, as follows : "Jicks will have something to drink." While Oscar ran into the kitchen for some milk, I succeeded in discovering the identity of "Jicks." Something-I cannot well explain what-in the manner in which the child had drifted into the room with her doll, re- minded me of the lymphatic lady of the rectory, drifting back- wards and forwards with the baby in one hand and the novel in the other. I took the liberty of examining "Jicks's" pinafore. and discovered the mark in one corner : -" Selina Finch." Exactly as I had supposed, .here was a member of Mrs. Finch's numerous family. Rather a young member, as it struck me, to be wandering hatless round the environs of Dimchurch, all by herself. Oscar returned with the milk in a mug. The child-insisting on taking the mug into her own hands- steadily emptied it to the last drop-recovered her breath with a gasp--looked at me with a white moustache of milk on her upper lip-and announced the conclusion of her visit, in these terms : " Jicks will get down again." I deposited our young friend on the floor. She took her doll, and stood for a moment deep in thought. What was she going to do next ? We were not kept long in suspense. She suddenly put her little hot fat hand into mine, and tried to pull me aft-- her out of the room. " What do you want ?" I asked. Jicks answered in one untranslatable compound word : " Man-Gee-gee." 55 56 Poor Miss Finch. I suffered myself to be pulled out of the room-to see " Man- Gee-gee," to play " Man-Gee-gee," or to eat " Man-Gee-gee," it was impossible to tell which. I was pulled along the passage-- I was pulled out to the front door. There-having approached the house inaudibly to us, over the grass-stood the horse, cart, #and man, waiting to take the case of gold and silver plates back to London. I looked at Oscar, who had followed me. We now understood, not only the masterly compound word of Jicks (sig- nifying man and horse, and passing over cart as unimportant), but the polite attention of Jicks in entering the house to inform us, after a rest and a drink, of a circumstance which had escaped our notice. The driver of the cart had, on his own acknowledgment, been investigated and questioned by this extraordinary child, strolling up to the door of Browndown to see what he was doing there. Jicks was a public character at Dimchurch. The driver knew all about her. She had been nicknamed " Gipsy" from her wandering habits, and had short- ened the name in her own dialect, into "Jicks." There was no keeping her in at the rectory, try how you might: they had long since abandoned the effort in despair. Sooner or later, she turned up again-or somebody brought her back-or one of the sheep-dogs found her asleep under a bush, and gave the alarm. "What goes on in that child's head," said the driver, regarding Jicks with a sort of superstitious admiration, " the Lord only knows. She has a will of her own, and a way of her own. She is a child; and she aint a child. At three years of age, she's a riddle none of us can guess. And that's the long and the short of what I know about her." While this explanation was in progress, the carpenter who had nailed up the case, and the carpenter's son, accompanying him, joined us in front of the house. They followed Oscar in, and came out again, bearing the heavy burden of precious metal- more than one man could conveniently lift-between them. The case deposited in the cart, carpenter senior and carpenter junior got in after it, wanting " a lift " to Brighton. Carpenter senior, a big burly man, made a joke. " It's a lonely country between this and Brighton, sir," he said to Oscar. " Three of us will be none too many to see your precious packing-case safe First Appearance of .7icks. into the railway station." Oscar took it seriously. " Are there any robbers in this neighbourhood ?" he asked. " Lord love you, sir !" said the driver, " robbers would starve in these parts; we have got nothing worth thieving here." Jicks-still watching the proceedings with an interest which allowed no detail to escape unnoticed-assumed the responsibility of starting the men on their journey. The odd child waved her chubby hand im- periously to her friend the driver, and cried in her loudest voice, "Away !" The driver touched his hat with comic respect. "All right, miss-time's money, aint it?" He cracked his whip, and the cart rolled off noiselessly over the thick close turf of the South Downs. It was time for me to go back to the rectory, and to restore the wandering Jicks, for the time being, to the protection of home. I returned to Oscar, to say good-bye. " I wish I was going back with you," he said. " You will be as free as I am to come and to go at the rectory," I answered, " when they know what has passed this morning be- tween you and me. In your own interests, I am determined to tell them who you are. You have nothing to fear, and every- thing to gain, by my speaking out. Clear your mind of fancies and suspicions that are unworthy of you. By to-morrow we shall be good neighbours ; by the end of the week we shall be good friends. For the present, as we say in France, au revoir !" I turned to take Jicks by the hand. While I had been speaking to Oscar the child had slipped away from me. Not a sign of her was to be seen. Before we could stir a step to search for our lost Gipsy, her voice reached our ears, raised shrill and angry in the regions behind us, at the side of the house. " Go away ! " we heard the child cry out impatiently. "Ugly men, go away !" We turned the corner, and discovered two shabby strangers, resting themselves against the side wall of the house. Their cadaverous faces, their brutish expressions, and their trowsy clothes, proclaimed them, to my eye, as belonging to the vilest blackguard type that the civilized earth has yet produced-tn~ blackguard of London growth. There they-Iounged, with thi 57 hands in their pockets and their backs against the wall, as if they were airing themselves on the outer side of a public-house -and there stood Jicks, with her legs planted wide apart on the turf, asserting the rights of property (even at that early age !) and ordering the rascals off. " What are you doing there ?" asked Oscar sharply. One of the men appeared to be on the point of making an insolent answer. The other-the younger and the viler-looking villain of the two-checked him, and spoke first. " We've had a longish walk, sir," said the fellow, with an im- pudent assumption of humility ; "and we've took the liberty of resting our backs against your wall, and feasting our eyes on the beauty of your young lady here." He pointed to the child. Jicks shook her fist at him, and ordered him off more fiercely than ever. " There's an inn in the village," said Oscar. " Rest there, if you please-my house is not an inn." The elder man made a second effort to speak, beginning with an oath. The younger checked him again. " Shut up, Jim !" said the superior blackguard of the two. " The gentleman recommends the tap at the inn. Come and drink the gentleman's health." He turned to the child, and took off his hat to her with a low bow. " Wish you good morn- ing, Miss ! You're just the style, you are, that I admire. Please don't engage yourself to be married till I come back." His savage companion was so tickled by this delicate plea- santry that he burst suddenly into a roar of laughter. Arm in arm, the two ruffians walked off together in the direction of the village. Our funny little Jicks became a tragic and terrible Jicks, all on a sudden. The child resented the insolence of the two men as if she really understood it. I never saw so young a creature in such a furious passion before. She picked up a stone, and thiew it at them before I could stop her. She screamed, and stamped her tiny feet alternately on the ground, till she was purple in the face. She threw herself down, and rolled in fury on the grass. Nothing pacified her but a rash promise of Oscar's (which he was destined to hear of for many a long day afterwards) to send for the police, and to have the 58 Poor Hiss Finch.. First Appearance of _icks. two men soundly beaten for daring to laugh at Jicks. She got up from the ground, and dried her eyes with her knuckles, and fixed a warning look on Oscar. " Mind !" said this curious child, with her bosom still heaving under the dirty pinafore, (' the men are to be beaten. And Jicks is to see it." I said nothing to Oscar, at the time, but I felt some secret uneasiness on the way home--an uneasiness inspired by the appearance of the two men in the neighbourhood of Brown- down. It was impossible to say how long they might have been lurk- ing about the outside of the house, before the child discovered them. They might have heard, through the open window, what Oscar had said to me on the subject of his plates of precious metal ; and they might have seen the heavy packing-case placed in the cart. I felt no apprehension about the safe arrival of the case at Brighton; the three men in the cart were men enough to take good care of it. My fears were for the future. Oscar was living, entirely by himself, in a lonely house, more than half a mile distant from the village. His fancy for chasing in the precious metals might have its dangers, as well as its attractions, if it became known beyond the pastoral limits of Dimchurch. Advancing from one suspicion to another, I asked myself if the two men had roamed by mere accident into our remote part of the world-or whether they had deliberately found their way to Browndown with a purpose in view. Having this doubt in my mind, and happening to encounter the old nurse, Zillah, in the garden as I entered the rectory gates with my little charge, I put the question to her plainly, " Do you see many strangers at Dimchurch ?" " Strangers ?" repeated the old woman. " Excepting your- self, ma'am, we see no strangers here, from one year's end to another." I determined to say a warning word to Oscar before his pre- cious metals were sent back to Browndown. 59 6o Poor Miss Finck. CHAPTER THE ELEVENTH. BLIND LOVE. LUCILLA was at the piano when I entered the sitting-room. " I wanted you of all things," she said. " I have sent all over the house in search of you. Where have you been ?" I told her. She sprang to her feet with a cry of delight. " You have persuaded him to trust you-you have discovered everything. You only said ' I have been at Browndown'-and I heard it in your voice. Out with it ! out with it!" She never moved-she seemed hardly to breathe-while I was telling her all that had passed at the interview between Oscar and me. As soon as I had done, she got up in a violent hurry -flushed and eager-and made straight for her bed-room door. " What are you going to do ?" I asked. " I want my hat and my stick," she answered. "You are going out ?" " Yes." " Where ?" "Can you ask the question ? To Browndown of course!" I begged her to wait a moment, and hear a word or two that I had to say. It is, I suppose: almost needless to add that my object in speaking to her was to protest against the glaring im- propriety of her paying a second visit, in one day, to a man who was a stranger to her. I declared, in the plainest terms, that such a proceeding would be sufficient, in the estimation of any civilised community, to put her reputation in peril. The result of my interference was curious and interesting in the extreme. It showed me that the virtue called Modesty (I am not speaking of Decency, mind) is a virtue of purely artificial growth; and that the successful cultivation of it depends in the first instance, not on the influence of the tongue, but on the influence of the eye. Suppose the case of an average young lady (conscious of feel. Blind Love. dr ing a first love) to whom I might have spoken in the sense that I have just mentioned-what would she have done ? She would assuredly have shown some natural and pretty confusion, and would, in all human probability, have changed colour more or less while she was listening to me. Lucilla's charming face revealed but one expression-an expression of disappointment, slightly mixed perhaps with surprise. I be- lieved her to be then, what I knew her to be afterwards, as pure a creature as ever walked the earth. And yet, of the natural and becoming confusion, of the little inevitable feminine changes of colour which I had expected to see, not so much as a vestige appeared--and this, remember, in the case of a person of un- usually sensitive and impulsive nature: quick, on the most trifling occasions, to feel and to express its feeling in no ordinary degree. What did it mean ? It meant that here was one strange side shown to me of the terrible affliction that darkened her life. It meant that modesty is essentially the growth of our own consciousness of the eyes of others judging us-and that blindness is never bashful, for the one simple reason that blindness cannot see. The most modest girl in cxistence is bolder with her lover in the dark than in the light. The female model who "sits" for the first time in a drawing academy, and who shrinks from the ordeal, is persuaded, in the last resort, to enter the students' room by having a band- age bound over her eyes. My poor Lucilla had always the bandage over her eyes. My poor Lucilla was never to meet her lover in the light. She had grown up with the passions of a woman--and yet, she had never advanced beyond the fearless and primitive innocence of a child. Ah, if ever there was a sacred charge confided to any mortal creature, here surely was a sacred charge confided to Me ! I could not endure to see the poor pretty blind face turned so insensibly towards mine, after such words as I had just said to her. She was standing within my reach. I took her by the arm, and made her sit on my knee. " My dear !" I said, very earnestly, "you must not go to him again to-day." " I have got so much to say to him," she answered impatiently. " I want to tell him how deeply I feel for him, and how anxious I am to make his life a happier one if I can." " My dear Lucilla ! you can't say this to a young man. It is as good as telling him, in plain words, that you are fond of him !" " I am fond of him." " Hush ! hush ! Keep it to yourself, until you'are sure that he is fond of you. It is the man s place, my love-not the woman's -to own the truth first in matters of this sort." " That is very hard on the women. If they feel it first, they ought to own it first." She paused for a moment, considering with herself-and abruptly got off my knee. " I must speak to him !" she burst out. " I must tell him that I have heard his story, and that I think all the better of him after it, instead of the worse !" She was again on her way to get her hat. My only chance of stopping her was to invent a compromise. " Write him a note," I said--and then suddenly remembered that she Was blind. "You shall dictate," I added; " and I will hold the pen. Be content with that for to-day. For my sake, Lucilla !" She yielded--not very willingly, poor thing. But she jealously declined to let me hold the pen. " My first note to him must be all written by me," she said. " I can write-in my own roundabout away. It's long and tire- some ; but still I can do it. Come and see." She led the way to a writing-table in a corner of the room, and sat for awhile with the pen in her hand, thinking. Her irresis- tible smile broke suddenly like a glow of light over her face. " Ah !" she exclaimed, " I know how to tell him what I think." Guiding the pen in her right hand with the fingers of her left hand, she wrote slowly, in large childish characters, these words : - DEAR MR. OSCAR,-I have heard all about you. Please send me the little gold vase.-Your friend, LUCILLA." She enclosed and directed the letter, and clapped her hand s for joy. " He will know what that means !" she said gaily. 62 Poor MWiss Fizch. Blind Love. 63 It was useless to attempt making a second remonstrance. I rang the bell, under protest (imagine her receiving a present from a gentleman to whom she had spoken for the first time that morning !)--and the groom was sent off to Browndown with the letter. In making this concession, I privately said to my- self, "-I shall keep a tight hand over Oscar; he is the manage- able person of the two !" The interval before the return of the groom was not an easy interval to fill up. I proposed some music. Lucilla was still too full of her new interest to be able to give her attention to any- thing else. She suddenly remembered that her father and her step-mother ought both to be informed that Mr. Dubourg was a perfectly presentable person at the rectory: she decided on writing to her father. On this occasion, she made no difficulty about permitting me to hold the pen, while she told me what to write. We produced between us rather a flighty, enthusiastic, high-flown sort of letter. I felt by no means sure that we should raise a favourable impres- sion of our new neighbour in the mind of Reverend Finch. That was, however, not my affair. I appeared to excellent advantage in the matter, as the judicious foreign lady who had insisted on making inquiries. For the rest, it was a point of honour with me-writing for a person who was blind--not to change a single word in the sentences which Lucilla dictated to me. The letter completed, I wrote the address of the house in Brighton at which Mr. Finch then happened to be staying; and I was next about to close the envelope in due course--when Lucilla stopped me. " Wait a little," she said. " Don't close the letter yet." I wondered why the envelope was to be left open, and why Lucilla looked a little confused when she forbade me to close it Another unexpected revelation of the influence of their afflicticz on the natures of the blind, was waiting to enlighten me ia those two points. After consultation between us, it had been decided, at Lucilla's express request, that I should inform Mrs. Finch that the mystery at Browndown was now cleared up. Lucilla openly owned to having no great relish for the society of her s zp- q64 Poor Miss Finck. mother, or for the duty invariably devolving on anybody who was long in the company of that fertile lady, of either finding her handkerchief or holding her baby. A duplicate key of the door of communication between the two sides of the house was given to me; and I left the room. Before performing my errand, I went for a minute into my bedchamber to put away my hat and parasol. Returning into the corridor, and passing the door of the sitting-room, I found that it had been left ajar by some one who had entered after I had left; and I heard Lucilla's voice say, " Take that letter out 'of the envelope, and read it to me." I pursued my way along the passage--very slowly, I own- and I heard the first sentences of the letter which I had written under Lucilla's dictation, read aloud to her in the old nurse's voice. The incurable suspicion of the blind--always abandoned to the same melancholy distrust of the persons about them; always doubting whether some deceit is not being practised on them by the happy people who can see -had urged Lucilla, even in the trifling matter of the letter, to put me to the test, behind my back. She was using Zillah's eyes to make sure that I had really written all that she had dictated to me-exactly as, on many an after occasion, she used my eyes to make sure of Zillah's complete performance of tasks allotted to her in the house. No experience of the faithful devotion of those who live with them ever thoroughly satisfies the blind. Ah, poor things, always in the dark! always in the dark! In opening the door of communication, it appeared as if I had also opened all the doors of all the bedchambers in the rectory. The moment I stepped into the passage, out popped the children from one room after another, like rabbits out of their burrows. "Where is your mamma ?" I asked. The rabbits answered by one universal shriek, and popped back again into their burrows. I went down the stairs to try my luck on the ground floor. The window on the landing had a view over the front garden. looked out, and saw the irrepressible Arab of the family, our small chubby Jicks, wandering in the garden, all by herself; Blind Love. 65 evidently on the watch for her next opportunity of escaping from the house. This curious little creature cared nothing for the society of the other children. Indoors, she sat gravely retired in corners, taking her meals (whenever she could) on the floor. Out of doors, she roamed till she could walk no longer, and then lay down anywhere, like a little animal, to sleep. She happened to look up as I stood at the window. Seeing me, she waved her hand indicatively in the direction of the rectory gate. " What is it ?" I asked. The Arab answered, " Jicks wants to get out." At the same moment, the screaming of a baby below, in- formed me that I was in the near neighbourhood of Mrs. Finch. I advanced towards the noise, and found myself standing before the open door of a large storeroom at the extreme end of the passage. In the middle of the room (issuing household commodities to the cook) sat Mrs. Finch. She was robed this time in a petticoat and a shawl; and she had the baby and the novel laid together flat on their backs in her lap. "Eight pounds of soap ? Where does it all go to I wonder !" groaned Mrs. Finch to the accompaniment of the baby's screams. " Five pounds of soda for the laundry ? One would think we did the washing for the whole village. Six pounds of candles ? You must eat candles, like the Russians: who ever heard of burning six pounds of candles in a week ? Ten pounds of sugar? Who gets it all? I never taste sugar from one year's end to another. Waste, nothing but waste." Here Mrs. Finch looked my way, and saw me at the door. "Oh? Madame Pratolungo ? How d'ye do? Don't go away-I've just done. A bottle of blacking ? My shoes are a disgrace to the house. Five pounds of rice ? If I had Indian servants, five pounds of rice would last them for a year. There! take the things away into the kitchen. Excuse my dress, Madame Pratolungo. How am I to dress, with all I have got to do ? What do you say? My time must indeed be fully occupied ? Ah, that's just where it is ! When you have lost half an hour in the morning, and can't pick it up again-to say nothing of having the store-room on your mind, and the children's dinner late, and the baby 66 Poor Miss Finch. fractious---one slips on a petticoat and a shawl, and, gives it up in despair. What can I have done with my handkerchief? Would you mind looking among those bottles behind you? Oh, here it is, under the baby. Might I trouble you to hold my book for one moment ? I think the baby will be quieter if I put him the other way." Here Mrs. Finch turned the baby over on his stomach, and patted him briskly on the back. At this change in his circumstances, the unappeasable infant only roared louder than ever. His mother appeared to be perfectly unaffected by the noise. This resigned domestic martyr looked placidly up at me, as I stood before her, bewildered, with the novel in my hand. " Ah, that's a very interesting story," she went on. " Plenty of love in it, you know. You have come for it, haven't you? I remember I promised to lend it to you yesterday." Before I could answer the cook appeared again, in search of more household commodities. Mrs. Finch repeated the woman's demands, one by one as she made them, in tones of despair. "Another bottle of vinegar ? I believe you water the garden with vinegar ! More starch ? The Queen's washing, I'm firmily persuaded, doesn't come to so much as ours. Sandpaper? Sandpaper means wastepaper in this profligate house I shall tell your master. I really can NOT make the housekeeping money last at this rate. Don't go, Madame Pratolungo ! I shall have done directly. What ! You must go ! Oh, then, put the book back on my lap, please-and look behind that sack of flour. The first volume slipped down there this morning, and I haven't had time to pick it up since. (Sandpaper ! Do you think I'm made of sandpaper 1) Have you found the first volume? Ah, that's it. All over flour ! there's a hole in the sack I suppose. Twelve sheets of sandpaper used in a week ! What for? I defy any of you to tell me what for. Waste ! waste ! shameful sinful waste !" At this point in Mrs. Finch's lamentations, I made my escape with the book, and left the sub- ject of Oscar Dubourg to be introduced at a fitter opportunity. The last words I heard, through the screams of the baby, as I ascended the stairs, were words still relating to the week's pro- digal consumption of sandpaper. Let us drop a tear, if you please, over the woes of Mrs. Finch, and leave the British nation apostrophising domestic economy in the odorous seclusion of her own storeroom. I had just related to Lucilla, the failure: of my expedition to the other side of the house, when the groom returned, bringing with him the gold vase, and a letter. Oscar's, answer was. judiciously modelled to imitate the bre vity of Lucilla's note. "You have made me a happy man, again. When may I follow the vase?" There, in two sentences, 'Was the whole letter. I had another discussion with Lucilla, relating to the propriety of our receiving Oscar in Reverend Finch's absence. It was only possible to persuade her to wait until she had at least heard from her father, by consenting to take another walk towards Browndown the next morning. This new concession. satisfied{ her. She had received his present; she had exchanged letters with him-that was enough to content her for the time. " Do you think he is getting fond of me ?" she asked,: the last thing at night; taking her gold vase to bed with her, poor dear -exactly as she might have taken a new toy to bed with her when she was a child. " Give him time, my love," I answered. "' It isn't everybody who can travel at your pace in such a serious matter as this." My banter had no effect upon her. "' Go away with your candle," she said. " The darkness makes no difference to me. I can see him in my thoughts." She nestled her head comfortably on the pillows, and tapped me saucily on the cheek, as I bent over her. " Own the advantage I have over you now," she said. " You can't see at night without your candle.. I could go all over the house, at this moment, without making a false step anywhere." When I left her that night, I sincerely believe "poor Miss Finch" was the happiest woman in England. SBlind Love. 67 CHAPTER THE TWELFTH. MR. FINCH SMELLS MONEY. A DOMESTIC alarm deferred for some hours our proposed walk to Browndown. The old nurse, Zillah, was taken ill in the night. She was so little relieved by such remedies as we were able to apply, that it became necessary to summon the doctor in the morning. He lived at some distance from Dimchurch; and he had to send back to his own house for the medicines required. As a necessary result of these delays, it was close on one o'clock in the afternoon before the medical remedies had their effect, and the nurse was sufficiently recovered to permit of our leaving her in the servants' care. We had dressed for our walk (Lucilla being ready long before I was), and had got as far as the garden gate on our way to Browndown--when we heard, on the other side of the wall, a man's voice, pitched in superbly deep bass tones, pronouncing these words : " Believe me, my dear sir, there is not the least difficulty. I have only to send the cheque to my bankers at Brighton." Lucilla started, and caught hold of me by the arm. "My father !" she exclaimed in the utmost atonishment, "Who is he talking to ?" The key of the gate was in my possession. " What a grand voice your father has got !" I said, as I took the key out of my pocket. I opened the gate. There, confronting us on the thres- hold, arm in arm, as if they had known each other from child- hood, stood Lucilla's father, and-Oscar Dubourg ! Reverend Finch opened the proceedings by folding his daughter affectionately in his arms. " My dear child ! " he said, " I received your letter-your most interesting letter-this morning. The moment I read it I felt that I owed a duty to Mr. Dubourg. As pastor of Dim- church, it was clearly incumbent on me to comfort a brother in affliction. I really felt. so to speak, a longing to hold out the 68 Poor Miss Finch.. Mr. Finck smells Money. 69 right hand of friendship to this sorely-tried man. I borrowed my friend's carriage, and drove straight to Browndown. We have had a long and cordial talk. I have brought Mr. Dubourg home with me. He must be one of us. My dear child, Mr. Dubourg must be one of us. Let me introduce you. My eldest daughter--Mr. Dubourg." He performed the ceremony of presentation, with the most impenetrable gravity, as if he really believed that Oscar and his daughter now met each other for the first time ! Never had I set my eyes on a meaner-looking man than this rector. In height he barely reached up to my shoulder. In substance, he was so miserably lean that he looked the living picture of starvation. He would have made his fortune in the streets of London, if he had only gone out and shown himself to the public in ragged clothes. His face was deeply pitted with the small-pox. His short grisly hair stood up stiff and straight on his head like hair fixed in a broom. His small whitish-grey eyes had a restless, inquisitive, hungry look in them, indescrib- ably irritating and uncomfortable to see. The one personal dis- tinction he possessed consisted in his magnificent bass voice--a voice which had no sort of right to exist in the person who used it. Until one became accustomed to the contrast, there was something perfectly unbearable in hearing those superb big tones come out of that contemptible little body. The famous Latin phrase conveys, after all, the best description I can give of Reverend Finch. He was in very truth-Voice, and nothing else. " Madame Pratolungo, no doubt ?' he went on, turning to me. " Delighted to make the acquaintance of my daughter's judicious companion and friend. You must be one of us-like Mr. Du- bourg. Let me introduce you. Madame Pratolungo-Mr. Dubourg. This is the old side of the rectory, my dear sir. We had it put in repair-let me see : how long since ?-we had it put in repair just after Mrs. Finch's last confinement but one." ,(I soon discovered that Mr. Finch reckoned time by his wife's confinements.) " You will find it very curious and interesting inside. Lucilla, my child! (It has pleased Providence, Mr. .Dubourg, to afflict my daughter with blindness. Inscrutable 70 Poor Miss Finch. Providence!) Lucilla, this is your side of the house. Take Mr. Dubourg's arm, and lead the way. Do, the honours, my child. Madame Pratolungo, let me offer you my arm. I regret that I was not present, when you arrived, to welcome you at the rectory. Consider yourself-do pray consider yourself-one of us." He stopped, and lowered his prodigious voice to a confidential growl. " Delightful person, Mr.. Dubourg.- I can't tell you how pleased I am with him. And what a sad story! Cultivate Mr. Dubourg, my dear madam. As a favour- to Me-cultivate Mr. Dibourg !" He said this with an appearance of the deepest anxiety- and more, he emphasised it by affectionately squeezing my hand. I have met with a great many audacious people in my time But the atidacity of Reverend Finch-persisting to our faces in the assumption that he had been the first to discover our neigh- bour, and that Lucilla and I were perfectly incapable of under. standing and appreciating Oscar, unassisted by himn-was en- tirelyj ithout a parallel in my experience. I asked myself what his conduct in this matter--so entirely unexpected by Lucilla, as well as by me-could possibly mean. My knowledge of his character, obtained through his daughter,- and my memory of what we heard him say on the other side of the wall, suggested that his conduct might mean-Money. We assembled in the sitting-room. The only person among us who was quite at his ease was Mr. Finch. He never let his daughter and his guest alone for a single moment. " My child, show Mr. Dubourg this; show Mr. Dubourg that. Mr. Dubourg, my daughter possesses this; my daughter possesses that." So he went on, all round the room. Oscar appeared to feel a little daunted by the overwhelming attentions of his new friend. Lucilla was, as I could see, secretly irritated at finding herself authorised by her father to pay those attentions to Oscar which she would have preferred offering to him of her own accord. As for me, I was already beginning to weary of the patronising politeness of the little priest with the big voice. It was a relief to us all, when a message on domestic affairs arrived' in the midst of the proceedings from Mrs. Finch, Mr. Finch smells Money. requesting to see her husband immediately on the rectory side of the house. Forced to leave us, Reverend Finch made his farewell speech; taking Oscar's hand into a kind of paternal custody in both his own hands. He spoke with such sonorous cordiality, that the china and glass ornaments on Lucilla's chiffonnier actually jingled an accompaniment to his booming bass notes. " Come to tea, my dear sir. Without ceremony. To-night at six. We must keep up your spirits, Mr. Dubourg. Cheerful society, and a little music. Lucilla, my dear child, you will play for Mr. Dubourg, won't you ? Madame Pratolungo will do the same-at My request- I am sure. We shall make even dull Dimchurch agreeable to our new neighbour before we have done, What does the poet say? ' Fixed to no spot is happiness sin- cere; 'tis nowhere to be found, or everywhere.' How cheering! how true ! Good day; good day." The glasses left off jingling. Mr. Finch's wizen little legs took him out of the room. The moment his back was turned, we both assailed Oscar with the same question. What had passed at the interview between the rector and himself ? Men are all alike incompetent to satisfy women, when the question between the sexes is a question of small details. A woman, in Oscar's position, would have been able to relate to us, not only the whole conversation with the rector, but every little trifling incident which had noticeably illustrated it. As things were, we could only extract from our unsatisfactory mai the barest outline of the interview. The colouring and the fill- ing-in we were left to do for ourselves. Oscar had, on his own confession, acknowledged his visitor's kindness, by opening his whole heart to the sympathising rector, and placing that wary priest and' excellent man of business in possession of the completest knowledge of all his affairs. In return, Reverend Finch had spoken in the frankest manner, on his side. He had drawn a sad picture of the poverty-stricken condition of Dimchurch, viewed as an ecclesiastical endowment; and he had spoken in such feeling terms of the neglected con- dition of the ancient and interesting church, that poor simple 7r Oscar. smitten with pity, had produced his cheque-book, and had subscribed on the spot towards the Fund for repairing the ancient round tower. They had been still occupied with the subject of the tower and the subscription, when we had opened the garden gate and had let them in. Hearing this, I now understood the motives under which our reverend friend was acting as well as if they had been my own. It was plain to my mind that the rector had taken his financial measure of Oscar, and had privately satisfied himself, that if he encouraged the two young people in cultivating each other's society, money (to use his own phrase) might come of it. He had, as I believed, put forward " the round tower," in the first instance, as a feeler; and he would follow it up, in due time, by an appeal of a more personal nature to Oscar's well-filled purse. Brief, he was, in my opinion, quite sharp enough (after having studied his young friend's character) to foresee an addition to his income, rather than a subtraction from it, if the relations between Oscar and his daughter ended in a marriage. Whether Lucilla arrived, on her side, at the same conclusion as mine, is what I cannot venture positively to declare. I can only relate that she looked ill at ease as the facts came out; and that she took the first opportunity of extinguishing her father, viewed as a topic of conversation. As for Oscar, it was enough for him that he had already se- cured his placed as friend of the house. He took leave of us in the highest spirits. I had my eye on them when he and Lucilla said good-bye. She squeezed his hand. I saw her do it. At the rate at which things were now going on, I began to ask myself whether Reverend Finch would not appear at tea-time in his robes of office, and celebrate the marriage of his " sorely- tried" young friend between the first cup and the second. At our little social assembly in the evening, nothing passed worthy of much remark. Lucilla and I (I cannot resist recording this) were both beautifully dressed, in honour of the occasion; Mrs. Finch serving us to perfection, by way of contrast. She had made an immense effort--she was half dressed. Her evening costume was an ancient green silk skirt (with traces of past babies visible Poor Mciss Finzch. 7Z Mr. Finck smells Money. on it to an experienced eye), topped by the everlasting blue merino jacket. "I lose everything belonging to me," Mrs. Finch whispered in my ear. " I have got a body to this dress, and it can't be found anywhere." The rector's prodigious voice was never silent: the pompous and plausible little man talked, talked, talked, in deeper and deeper bass, until the very tea-cups on the table shuddered under the influence of him. The elder children, admitted to the family festival, ate till they could eat no more; stared till they could stare no more ; yawned till they could yawn no more-and then went to bed. Oscar got on well with everybody. Mrs. Finch was naturally in- terested in him as one of twins-though she was also surprised and disappointed at hearing that his mother had begun and ended with his brother and himself. As for Lucilla, she sat in silent happiness, absorbed in the inexhaustible delight of hear- ing Oscar's voice. She found as many varieties of expression in listening to her beloved tones, as the rest of us find in looking at our beloved face. We had music later in the evening--and 1 then heard, for the first time, how charmingly Lucilla played. She was a born musician, with a delicacy and subtlety of touch such as few even of the greatest virtuosi possess. Oscar was enchanted. In a word, the evening was a success. I contrived, when our guest took his departure, to say my con- templated word to him in private, on the subject of his solitary position at Browndown. Those doubts of Oscar's security in his lonely house, which I have described as having been suggested to me by the dis- covery of the two ruffians lurking under the wall, still maintained their place in my mind ; and still urged me to warn him to take precautions of some sort, before the precious metals which he had sent to London to be melted, came back to him again. He gave me the opportunity I wanted, by looking at his watch, and apologising for protracting his visit to a terribly late hour, for the country-the hour of midnight. " Is your servant sitting up for you ?" I asked, assuming to be ignorant of his domestic arrangements. He pulled out of his pocket a great clumsy key. " This is my only servant at Bro wndown," he said. "By four 73 or five in the afternoon, the people at the inn have done all for me that I want. After that time, there is nobody in the house but myself." :He shook hands with us. The rector escorted him as far as the front door. I slipped out while they were saying their last words, and joined Oscar, when he advanced alone into the garden. " I want a breath of fresh air," I said. " I'll go with you as far as the gate." He began to talk of Lucilla directly, I surprised him by returning abruptly to the subject of his position at Browndown. " Do you think it's wise," I asked, "to be all by yourself at night in such a lonely house as yours? Why don't you have a mnan-servant ?" "I detest strange servants," he answered. " I infinitely pre- fer being by myself." " When do you expect your gold and silver plates to be re- turned to you ?" " In about a week." "What would be the value of them, in money-at a rough guess ?" "At a rough guess--about seventy or eighty pounds." ".In a week's time then," I said, " you will have seventy or eighty pounds' worth of property at Browndown. Property which a thief need only put into the melting-pot, to have no fear of its being traced into his hands." Oscar stopped, and looked at me. " What can you be thinking of !" he asked. "There are no thieves in this primitive place." " There are thieves in other places," I answered. " And they may come here. Have you forgotten those two men whom we caught hanging about Browndown yesterday ?" He smiled. I had recalled to him a humorous association --nothing more. -- "It was not we who caught them," he said. " It was that strange child. What do you say to my having Jicks to sleep in the house and take care of me?" " I am not joking," I rejoined. " I never met with two more Poor 2Miss Finch. 74 Mr. Finch smells Money. 75 ill-looking villains in my life. The window was open when you were telling me about the necessity for melting the plates again. They:may know as well as we do, that your gold and silver will be returned to you after a time." :f' What an imagination you have got !" he exclaimed. " You see a "couple of shabby excursionists from Brighton, who have wandered to Dimchurch-and you instantly transform them into a pair of housebreakers in a conspiracy to rob and murder me ! You and my brother Nugent would just suit each other. His imagination runs away with him, exactly like yours." " Take my advice," I answered gravely. " Don't persist in sleeping at Browndown without a living creature in the house with you;" He was in wild good spirits. He kissed my hand, and thanked me in his :voluble exaggerated way for the interest that I took in him. " All right !" he said, as he opened the gate. "-I'll have a living creature in the house with me. I'll get a dog." We parted. I had told him what was on my mind. I could: do no more. After all, it might be quite possible that his view :was the right one, and mine the wrong. CHAPTER THE THIRTEENTH. SECOND APPEARANCE OF JICKS. FivE more days passed. During that interval, we saw our new neighbour constantly. Either:Oscar came to the rectory, or we went to Browndown. Reverend Finch waited, with a masterly assumption of suspecting nothing, until the relations between the two young people were ripe enough to develop into relations of acknowledged love. They were already(under Lucilla's influence) advancing rapidly to that point. You are not to blame my poor blind girl, if you :please, for frankly encouraging the man she loved. He was the most backward man-viewed as a suitor-whom. I ever met with. The fonder he grew of her, the more timid: and self-distrust- ful he became. I own I don't like a modest man ;:and I cannot honestly say that Mr. Oscar D ubourg, on. closer acquaintance, advanced himself much in my estimation. However, Lucilla understood him, and that was enough. She was determined to have the completest possible image of him in her mind. Every- body in the house who had seen him (the children included) she examined and cross-examined on the subject of his personal appearance, as she had already examined and cross-examined me. His features and his colour, his height and his breadth; his ornaments and his clothes-on all these points she collected evidence, in every direction and in the smallest detail. It was an especial relief and delight to her to hear, on all sides, that his complexion was fair. There was no reasoning with her against her blind horror of dark shades of colour, whether seen in men, women, or things. She was quite unable to account for it; she could only declare it. " I have the strangest instincts of my own about some things," she said to me one day. " For instance, I knew that Oscar was bright and fair-I mean I felt it in myself-on that delightful evening when I first heard the sound of his voice. It went straight from my ear to my heart ; and it described him, just as the rest of you have described him to me since. Mrs. Finch tells me his complexion is lighter than mine. Do you think so too? I am so glad to hear that he is fairer than I am i Did you ever meet before with a person like me ? I have the oddest ideas in this blind head of mine. I associate life and beauty with light colours, and death and crime with dark colours. If I married a man with a dark complexion, and if I recovered my sight afterwards, I should run away from him." This singular prejudice of hers against dark people was a little annoying to me on personal grounds. It was a sort of reflection on my own taste. Between ourselves, the late Doctor Prato- lungo was of a fine mahogany brown all over. As for affairs in general at Dimchurch, my chronicle of the five days finds little to dwell on that is worth recording. We were not startled by any second appearance of the two ruffians at Browndown--neither was any change made by Oscar in his domestic establishment. He was favoured with more than one visit from our little wandering Jicks. On each occasion, the child gravely reminded him of his rash promise to appeal to the 76 Por .1I2iss Finch~ Second Appearance of Yicks. police, and visit with corporal punishment the two ugly strangers who had laughed at her. When were the men to be beaten ? and when was Jicks to see it? Such were the serious questions with which this young lady regularly opened the proceedings, on each occasion when she favoured Oscar with a morning call. On the sixth day, the gold and silver plates were returned to Browndown from the manufactory in London. The next morning a note arrived for me from Oscar. It ran thus :- " DEAR MADAME PRATOLUNGO,--I regret to inform you that nothing happened to me last night. My locks and bolts are in their usual good order; my gold and silver plates are safe in the workshop : and I myself am now eating my breakfast with an uncut throat.--Yours ever, " OSCAR." After this, there was no more to be said. Jicks might persist in remembering the two ill-looking strangers. Older and wiser people dismissed them from all further consideration. Saturday came-making the tenth day since the memorable morning when I had forced Oscar to disclose himself to me in the little side-room at Browndown. In the forenoon we had a visit from him at the rectory. In the afternoon we went to Browndown, to see him begin a new piece of chasing in gold-a casket for holding gloves-destined to take its place on Lucilla's toilet-table when it was done. We left him industriously at work; determined to go on as long as the daylight lasted. Early in the evening, Lucilla sat down at her pianoforte; and I paid a visit by appointment to the rectory side of the house. Unhappy Mrs. Finch had determined to institute a complete reform of her wardrobe. She had entreated me to give her the benefit of " my French taste," in the capacity of confidential critic and adviser. "I can't afford to buy any new things," said the poor lady. " But a deal might be done in altering what I have got by me, if a clever person took the matter up." Who could resist that piteous appeal ? I resigned myself to the baby, the novel, and the children in general; and (Reverend Finch being out of the way, writing his sermon) I presented myself in 77 Mrs. Finch's parlour, full of ideas, with my scissors and my pat tern-paper ready in my hand. We had only begun our operations, when one of the elder children arrived with a message from the nursery. It was tea-time; and, as usual, Jicks was missing. She was searched for, first in the lower regions of the house ; secondly in the garden. Not a trace of her was to be discovered in either quarter. Nobody was surprised or alarmed. We said, " Oh, d