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pubOne.info thank you for your continued support and wish to present you this new edition. WE were three quiet, lonely old men, and SHE was a lively, handsome young woman, and we were at our wits' end what to do with her.
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CHAPTER I.
Ā Ā OURSELVES.
Ā Ā WE were three quiet, lonely old men, and SHE was a
lively, handsome young woman, and we were at our wits' end what to
do with her.
Ā Ā A word about ourselves, first of all - a necessary
word, to explain the singular situation of our fair young
guest.
Ā Ā We are three brothers; and we live in a barbarous,
dismal old house called The Glen Tower. Our place of abode stands
in a hilly, lonesome district of South Wales. No such thing as a
line of railway runs anywhere near us. No gentleman's seat is
within an easy drive of us. We are at an unspeakably inconvenient
distance from a town, and the village to which we send for our
letters is three miles off.
Ā Ā My eldest brother, Owen, was brought up to the
Church. All the prime of his life was passed in a populous London
parish. For more years than I now like to reckon up, he worked
unremittingly, in defiance of failing health and adverse fortune,
amid the multitudinous misery of the London poor; and he would, in
all probability, have sacrificed his life to his duty long before
the present time if The Glen Tower had not come into his possession
through two unexpected deaths in the elder and richer branch of our
family. This opening to him of a place of rest and refuge saved his
life. No man ever drew breath who better deserved the gifts of
fortune; for no man, I sincerely believe, more tender of others,
more diffident of himself, more gentle, more generous, and more
simple-hearted than Owen, ever walked this earth.
Ā Ā My second brother, Morgan, started in life as a
doctor, and learned all that his profession could teach him at home
and abroad. He realized a moderate independence by his practice,
beginning in one of our large northern towns and ending as a
physician in London; but, although he was well known and
appreciated among his brethren, he failed to gain that sort of
reputation with the public which elevates a man into the position
of a great doctor. The ladies never liked him. In the first place,
he was ugly (Morgan will excuse me for mentioning this); in the
second place, he was an inveterate smoker, and he smelled of
tobacco when he felt languid pulses in elegant bedrooms; in the
third place, he was the most formidably outspoken teller of the
truth as regarded himself, his profession, and his patients, that
ever imperiled the social standing of the science of medicine. For
these reasons, and for others which it is not necessary to mention,
he never pushed his way, as a doctor, into the front ranks, and he
never cared to do so. About a year after Owen came into possession
of The Glen Tower, Morgan discovered that he had saved as much
money for his old age as a sensible man could want; that he was
tired of the active pursuit - or, as he termed it, of the dignified
quackery of his profession; and that it was only common charity to
give his invalid brother a companion who could physic him for
nothing, and so prevent him from getting rid of his money in the
worst of all possible ways, by wasting it on doctors' bills. In a
week after Morgan had arrived at these conclusions, he was settled
at The Glen Tower; and from that time, opposite as their characters
were, my two elder brothers lived together in their lonely retreat,
thoroughly understanding, and, in their very different ways,
heartily loving one another.
Ā Ā Many years passed before I, the youngest of the
three - christened by the unmelodious name of Griffith - found my
way, in my turn, to the dreary old house, and the sheltering quiet
of the Welsh hills. My career in life had led me away from my
brothers; and even now, when we are all united, I have still ties
and interests to connect me with the outer world which neither Owen
nor Morgan possess.
Ā Ā I was brought up to the Bar. After my first year's
study of the law, I wearied of it, and strayed aside idly into the
brighter and more attractive paths of literature. My occasional
occupation with my pen was varied by long traveling excursions in
all parts of the Continent; year by year my circle of gay friends
and acquaintances increased, and I bade fair to sink into the
condition of a wandering desultory man, without a fixed purpose in
life of any sort, when I was saved by what has saved many another
in my situation - an attachment to a good and a sensible woman. By
the time I had reached the age of thirty-five, I had done what
neither of my brothers had done before me - I had married.
Ā Ā As a single man, my own small independence, aided by
what little additions to it I could pick up with my pen, had been
sufficient for my wants; but with marriage and its responsibilities
came the necessity for serious exertion. I returned to my neglected
studies, and grappled resolutely, this time, with the intricate
difficulties of the law. I was called to the Bar. My wife's father
aided me with his interest, and I started into practice without
difficulty and without delay.
Ā Ā For the next twenty years my married life was a
scene of happiness and prosperity, on which I now look back with a
grateful tenderness that no words of mine can express. The memory
of my wife is busy at my heart while I think of those past times.
The forgotten tears rise in my eyes again, and trouble the course
of my pen while it traces these simple lines.
Ā Ā Let me pass rapidly over the one unspeakable misery
of my life; let me try to remember now, as I tried to remember
then, that she lived to see our only child - our son, who was so
good to her, who is still so good to me - grow up to manhood; that
her head lay on my bosom when she died; and that the last frail
movement of her hand in this world was the movement that brought it
closer to her boy's lips.
Ā Ā I bore the blow - with God's help I bore it, and
bear it still. But it struck me away forever from my hold on social
life; from the purposes and pursuits, the companions and the
pleasures of twenty years, which her presence had sanctioned and
made dear to me. If my son George had desired to follow my
profession, I should still have struggled against myself, and have
kept my place in the world until I had seen h im prosperous and
settled. But his choice led him to the army; and before his
mother's death he had obtained his commission, and had entered on
his path in life. No other responsibility remained to claim from me
the sacrifice of myself; my brothers had made my place ready for me
by their fireside; my heart yearned, in its desolation, for the
friends and companions of the old boyish days; my good, brave son
promised that no year should pass, as long as he was in England,
without his coming to cheer me; and so it happened that I, in my
turn, withdrew from the world, which had once been a bright and a
happy world to me, and retired to end my days, peacefully,
contentedly, and gratefully, as my brothers are ending theirs, in
the solitude of The Glen Tower.
Ā Ā How many years have passed since we have all three
been united it is not necessary to relate. It will be more to the
purpose if I briefly record that we have never been separated since
the day which first saw us assembled together in our hillside
retreat; that we have never yet wearied of the time, of the place,
or of ourselves; and that the influence of solitude on our hearts
and minds has not altered them for the worse, for it has not
embittered us toward our fellow-creatures, and it has not dried up
in us the sources from which harmless occupations and innocent
pleasures may flow refreshingly to the last over the waste places
of human life. Thus much for our own story, and for the
circumstances which have withdrawn us from the world for the rest
of our days.
Ā Ā And now imagine us three lonely old men, tall and
lean, and white-headed; dressed, more from past habit than from
present association, in customary suits of solemn black: Brother
Owen, yielding, gentle, and affectionate in look, voice, and
manner; brother Morgan, with a quaint, surface-sourness of address,
and a tone of dry sarcasm in his talk, which single him out, on all
occasions, as a character in our little circle; brother Griffith
forming the link between his two elder companions, capable, at one
time, of sympathizing with the quiet, thoughtful tone of Owen's
conversation, and ready, at another, to exchange brisk severities
on life and manners with Morgan - in short, a pliable, double-sided
old lawyer, who stands between the clergyman-brother and the
physician-brother with an ear ready for each, and with a heart open
to both, share and share together.
Ā Ā Imagine the strange old building in which we live to
be really what its name implies - a tower standing in a glen; in
past times the fortress of a fighting Welsh chieftain; in present
times a dreary land-lighthouse, built up in many stories of two
rooms each, with a little modern lean-to of cottage form tacked on
quaintly to one of its sides; the great hill, on whose lowest slope
it stands, rising precipitously behind it; a dark, swift-flowing
stream in the valley below; hills on hills all round, and no way of
approach but by one of the loneliest and wildest crossroads in all
South Wales.
Ā Ā Imagine such a place of abode as this, and such
inhabitants of it as ourselves, and them picture the descent among
us - as of a goddess dropping from the clouds - of a lively,
handsome, fashionable young lady - a bright, gay, butterfly
creature, used to flutter away its existence in the broad sunshine
of perpetual gayety - a child of the new generation, with all the
modern ideas whirling together in her pretty head, and all the
modern accomplishments at the tips of her delicate fingers. Imagine
such a light-hearted daughter of Eve as this, the spoiled darling
of society, the charming spendthrift of Nature's choicest treasures
of beauty and youth, suddenly flashing into the dim life of three
weary old men - suddenly dropped into the place, of all others,
which is least fit for her - suddenly shut out from the world in
the lonely quiet of the loneliest home in England. Realize, if it
be possible, all that is most whimsical and most anomalous in such
a situation as this, and the startling confession contained in the
opening sentence of these pages will no longer excite the faintest
emotion of surprise. Who can wonder now, when our bright young
goddess really descended on us, that I and my brothers were all
three at our wits' end what to do with her!
CHAPTER II.
OUR DILEMMA.
WHO is the young lady? And how did she find her way into The Glen Tower?
Her name (in relation to which I shall have something more to say a little further on) is Jessie Yelverton. She is an orphan and an only child. Her mother died while she was an infant; her father was my dear and valued friend, Major Yelverton. He lived long enough to celebrate his darling's seventh birthday. When he died he intrusted his authority over her and his responsibility toward her to his brother and to me.
When I was summoned to the reading of the major's will, I knew perfectly well that I should hear myself appointed guardian and executor with his brother; and I had been also made acquainted with my lost friend's wishes as to his daughter's education, and with his intentions as to the disposal of all his property in her favor. My own idea, therefore, was, that the reading of the will would inform me of nothing which I had not known in the testator's lifetime. When the day came for hearing it, however, I found that I had been over hasty in arriving at this conclusion. Toward the end of the document there was a clause inserted which took me entirely by surprise.
After providing for the education of Miss Yelverton under the direction of her guardians, and for her residence, under ordinary circumstances, with the major's sister, Lady Westwick, the clause concluded by saddling the child's future inheritance with this curious condition:
From the period of her leaving school to the period of her reaching the age of twenty-one years, Miss Yelverton was to pass not less than six consecutive weeks out of every year under the roof of one of her two guardians. During the lives of both of them, it was left to her own choice to say which of the two she would prefer to live with. In all other respects the condition was imperative. If she forfeited it, excepting, of course, the case of the deaths of both her guardians, she was only to have a life-interest in the property; if she obeyed it, the money itself was to become her own possession on the day when she completed her twenty-first year.
This clause in the will, as I have said, took me at first by surprise. I remembered how devotedly Lady Westwick had soothed her sister-in-law's death-bed sufferings, and how tenderly she had afterward watched over the welfare of the little motherless child - I remembered the innumerable claims she had established in this way on her brother's confidence in her affection for his orphan daughter, and I was, therefore, naturally amazed at the appearance of a condition in his will which seemed to show a positive distrust of Lady Westwick's undivided influence over the character and conduct of her niece.
A few words from my fellow-guardian, Mr. Richard Yelverton, and a little after-consideration of some of my deceased friend's peculiarities of disposition and feeling, to which I had not hitherto attached sufficient importance, were enough to make me understand the motives by which he had been influenced in providing for the future of his child.
Major Yelverton had raised himself to a position of affluence and eminence from a very humble origin. He was the son of a small farmer, and it was his pride never to forget this circumstance, never to be ashamed of it, and never to allow the prejudices of society to influence his own settled opinions on social questions in general.
Acting, in all that related to his intercourse with the world, on such principles as these, the major, it is hardly necessary to say, held some strangely heterodox opinions on the modern education of girls, and on the evil influence of society over the characters of women in general. Out of the strength of those opinions, and out of the certainty of his conviction that his sister did not share them, had grown that condition in his will which removed his daughter from the influence of her aunt for six consec utive weeks in every year. Lady Westwick was the most light-hearted, the most generous, the most impulsive of women; capable, when any serious occasion called it forth, of all that was devoted and self-sacrificing, but, at other and ordinary times, constitutionally restless, frivolous, and eager for perpetual gayety. Distrusting the sort of life which he knew his daughter would lead under her aunt's roof, and at the same time gratefully remembering his sister's affectionate devotion toward his dying wife and her helpless infant, Major Yelverton had attempted to make a compromise, which, while it allowed Lady Westwick the close domestic intercourse with her niece that she had earned by innumerable kind offices, should, at the same time, place the young girl for a fixed period of every year of her minority under the corrective care of two such quiet old-fashioned guardians as his brother and myself. Such is the history of the clause in the will. My friend little thought, when he dictated it, of the extraordinary result to which it was one day to lead.
For some years, however, events ran on smoothly enough. Little Jessie was sent to an excellent school, with strict instructions to the mistress to make a good girl of her, and not a fashionable young lady. Although she was reported to be anything but a pattern pupil in respect of attention to her lessons, she became from the first the chosen favorite of every one about her. The very offenses which she committed against the discipline of the school were of the sort which provoke a smile even on the stern countenance of authority itself. One of these quaint freaks of mischief may not inappropriately be mentioned here, inasmuch as it gained her the pretty nickname under which she will be found to appear occasionally in these pages.
On a certain autumn night shortly after the Midsummer vacation, the mistress of the school fancied she saw a light under the door of the bedroom occupied by Jessie and three other girls. It was then close on midnight; and, fearing that some case of sudden illness might have happened, she hastened into the room. On opening the door, she discovered, to her horror and amazement, that all four girls were out of bed - were dressed in brilliantly-fantastic costumes, representing the four grotesque "Queens" of Hearts, Diamonds, Spades, and Clubs, familiar to us all on the pack of cards - and were dancing a quadrille, in which Jessie sustained the character of The Queen of Hearts. The next morning's investigation disclosed that Miss Yelverton had smuggled the dresses into the school, and had amused herself by giving an impromptu fancy ball to her companions, in imitation of an entertainment of the same kind at which she had figured in a "court-card" quadrille at her aunt's country house.
The dresses were instantly confiscated and the necessary punishment promptly administered; but the remembrance of Jessie's extraordinary outrage on bedroom discipline lasted long enough to become one of the traditions of the school, and she and her sister-culprits were thenceforth hailed as the "queens" of the four "suites" by their class-companions whenever the mistress's back was turned, Whatever might have become of the nicknames thus employed in relation to the other three girls, such a mock title as The Queen of Hearts was too appropriately descriptive of the natural charm of Jessie's character, as well as of the adventure in which she had taken the lead, not to rise naturally to the lips of every one who knew her. It followed her to her aunt's house - it came to be as habitually and familiarly connected with her, among her friends of all ages, as if it had been formally inscribed on her baptismal register; and it has stolen its way into these pages because it falls from my pen naturally and inevitably, exactly as it often falls from my lips in real life.
When Jessie left school the first difficulty presented itself - in other words, the necessity arose of fulfilling the conditions of the will. At that time I was already settled at The Glen Tower, and her living six weeks in our dismal solitude and our humdrum society was, as she herself frankly wrote me word, quite out of the question. Fortunately, she had always got on well with her uncle and his family; so she exerted her liberty of choice, and, much to her own relief and to mine also, passed her regular six weeks of probation, year after year, under Mr. Richard Yelverton's roof.
During this period I heard of her regularly, sometimes from my fellow-guardian, sometimes from my son George, who, whenever his military duties allowed him the opportunity, contrived to see her, now at her aunt's house, and now at Mr. Yelverton's. The particulars of her character and conduct, which I gleaned in this way, more than sufficed to convince me that the poor major's plan for the careful training of his daughter's disposition, though plausible enough in theory, was little better than a total failure in practice. Miss Jessie, to use the expressive common phrase, took after her aunt. She was as generous, as impulsive, as light-hearted, as fond of change, and gayety, and fine clothes - in short, as complete and genuine a woman as Lady Westwick herself. It was impossible to reform the "Queen of Hearts," and equally impossible not to love her. Such, in few words, was my fellow-guardian's report of his experience of our handsome young ward.
So the time passed till the year came of which I am now writing - the ever-memorable year, to England, of the Russian war. It happened that I had heard less than usual at this period, and indeed for many months before it, of Jessie and her proceedings. My son had been ordered out with his regiment to the Crimea in 1854, and had other work in hand now than recording the sayings and doings of a young lady. Mr. Richard Yelverton, who had been hitherto used to write to me with tolerable regularity, seemed now, for some reason that I could not conjecture, to have forgotten my existence. Ultimately I was reminded of my ward by one of George's o...
Table of contents
- THE QUEEN OF HEARTS.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- CHAPTER III.
- CHAPTER IV.
- THE FAMILY SECRET.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- CHAPTER III.
- THE DREAM-WOMAN.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- CHAPTER III.
- CHAPTER IV.
- MAD MONKTON
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- CHAPTER III.
- CHAPTER IV.
- CHAPTER V.
- CHAPTER VI.
- THE PARSON'S SCRUPLE.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- A PLOT IN PRIVATE LIFE.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- CHAPTER III.
- CHAPTER IV.
- CHAPTER V.
- CHAPTER VI.
- FAUNTLEROY.
- CHAPTER I.
- CHAPTER II.
- Copyright