Lark Rise by Flora Thompson (recommended books to read .txt) 📕
The last words are true of the hamlet of Lark Rise. Because they were still an organic community, subsisting on the food, however scanty and monotonous, they raised themselves, they enjoyed good health and so, in spite of grinding poverty, no money to spend on amusements and hardly any for necessities, happiness. They still sang out-of-doors and kept May Day and Harvest Home. The songs were travesties of the traditional ones, but their blurred echoes and the remnants of the old salty country speech had not yet died and left the fields to their modern silence. The songs came from their own lips, not out of a box.
Charity (in the old sense) survived, and what Laura's mother called the 'seemliness' of a too industrious life. Yet the tradition of the old order was crumbling fast. What suffered most visibly was the inborn aesthetic faculty, once a common possession of all countrymen. Almanacs for samplers, the 'Present from Brighton
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and testified to the cleansing power of ‘the Blood’, forgetting
themselves and their own imperfections of speech in their ardour.
Others were less sincere, and some merely self-seeking poseurs who
took to preaching as the only means of getting a little limelight shed
on their undistinguished lives. One such was a young shop assistant from
the market town, who came, stylishly dressed, with a bunch of violets in
his buttonhole, smoothing his well-oiled hair with his hand and shaking
clouds of scent from his large white handkerchief. He emphatically did
not preach the Word. His perfume and buttonhole and pseudo-cultured
accent so worked upon the brethren that, after he had gone, they for
once forgot their rule of no criticism and exclaimed: ‘Did you ever see
such a la-de-da in all your draggings-up?’
Then there was the elderly man who chose for his text: ‘I will sweep
them off the face of the earth with the besom of destruction’, and
proceeded to take each word of his text as a heading. ‘I will sweep
them off the face of the earth. I will sweep them off the face of the
earth. I will sweep them off the face of the earth’, and so on. By the
time he had finished he had expounded the nature of God and justified
His ways to man to his own satisfaction; but he made such a sad mess of
it that the children’s ears burned with shame for him.
Some managed to be sincere Christians and yet quicker of wit and lighter
of hand. The host keeping the door one night was greeted by the arriving
minister with ‘I would rather be a doorkeeper in the house of my God,’
and capped it with ‘than dwell in the tents of the ungodly.’
Methodism, as known and practised there, was a poor people’s religion,
simple and crude; but its adherents brought to it more fervour than was
shown by the church congregation, and appeared to obtain more comfort
and support from it than the church could give. Their lives were
exemplary.
Many in the hamlet who attended neither church nor chapel and said they
had no use for religion, guided their lives by the light of a few homely
precepts, such as ‘Pay your way and fear nobody’; ‘Right’s right and
wrong’s no man’s right’; ‘Tell the truth and shame the devil’, and
‘Honesty is the best policy’.
Strict honesty was the policy of most of them; although there were a few
who were said to ‘find anything before ‘tis lost’ and to whom findings
were keepings. Children were taught to ‘Know it’s a sin to steal a pin’,
and when they brought home some doubtful finding, saying they did not
think it belonged to anybody, their mothers would say severely, ‘You
knowed it didn’t belong to you, and what don’t belong to you belongs to
somebody else. So go and put it back where you found it, before I gets
the stick to you.’
Liars were more detested than thieves. ‘A liar did ought to have a good
memory,’ they would say, or, more witheringly, ‘You can lock up from a
thief, but you can’t from a liar.’ Any statement which departed in the
least degree from plain fact was a lie; any one who ate a plum from an
overhanging bough belonging to a neighbour’s tree was a thief. It was a
stark code in which black was black and white was white; there were no
intermediate shades.
For the afflicted or bereaved there was ready sympathy. Had the custom
of sending wreaths to funerals been general then, as it is to-day, they
would certainly have subscribed their last halfpenny for the purpose.
But, at that time, the coffins of the country poor went flowerless to
the grave, and all they could do to mark their respect was to gather
outside the house of mourning and watch the clean-scrubbed farm wagon
which served as a hearse set out on its slow journey up the long,
straight road, with the mourners following on foot behind. At such times
the tears of the women spectators flowed freely, little children howled
aloud in sympathy, and any man who happened to be near broke into
extravagant praise of the departed. ‘Never speak ill of the dead’ was
one of their maxims and they carried it to excess.
In illness or trouble they were ready to help and to give, to the small
extent possible. Men who had been working all day would give up their
night’s rest to sit up with the ill or dying, and women would carry big
bundles of bed-linen home to wash with their own.
They carried out St. Paul’s injunction to weep with those who weep; but
when it came to rejoicing with those who rejoiced they were less ready.
There was nothing they disliked more than seeing one of their number
doing better or having more of anything than themselves. A mother whose
child was awarded a prize at school, or whose daughter was doing better
than ordinary in service, had to bear many pin-pricks of sarcasm, and if
a specially devoted young married couple was mentioned, some one was
bound to quote, ‘My dear to-day’ll be my devil to-morrow.’ They were, in
fact, poor fallible human beings.
The Rector visited each cottage in turn, working his way conscientiously
round the hamlet from door to door, so that by the end of the year he
had called upon everybody. When he tapped with his gold-headed cane at a
cottage door there would come a sound of scuffling within, as unseemly
objects were hustled out of sight, for the whisper would have gone round
that he had been seen getting over the stile and his knock would have
been recognized.
The women received him with respectful tolerance. A chair was dusted
with an apron and the doing of housework or cooking was suspended while
his hostess, seated uncomfortably on the edge of one of her own chairs,
waited for him to open the conversation. When the weather had been
discussed, the health of the inmates and absent children inquired about,
and the progress of the pig and the prospect of the allotment crops,
there came an awkward pause, during which both racked their brains to
find something to talk about. There was nothing. The Rector never
mentioned religion. That was looked upon in the parish as one of his
chief virtues, but it limited the possible topics of conversation. Apart
from his autocratic ideas, he was a kindly man, and he had come to pay a
friendly call, hoping, no doubt, to get to know and to understand his
parishioners better. But the gulf between them was too wide; neither he
nor his hostess could bridge it. The kindly inquiries made and answered,
they had nothing more to say to each other, and, after much ‘ah-ing’ and
‘er-ing’, he would rise from his seat, and be shown out with alacrity.
His daughter visited the hamlet more frequently. Any fine afternoon she
might have been seen, gathering up her long, full skirts to mount the
stile and tripping daintily between the allotment plots. As a widowed
clergyman’s only daughter, parochial visiting was, to her, a sacred
duty; but she did not come in any district-visiting spirit, to criticize
household management, or give unasked advice on the bringing up of
children; hers, like her father’s, were intended to be friendly calls.
Considering her many kindnesses to the women, she might have been
expected to be more popular than she was. None of them welcomed her
visits. Some would lock their doors and pretend to be out; others would
rattle their teacups when they saw her coming, hoping she would say, as
she sometimes did, ‘I hear you are at tea, so I won’t come in.’
The only spoken complaint about her was that she talked too much. ‘That
Miss Ellison; she’d fair talk a donkey’s hind leg off,’ they would say;
but that was a failing they tolerated in others, and one to which they
were not averse in her, once she was installed in their best chair and
some item of local gossip was being discussed.
Perhaps at the root of their unease in her presence was the subconscious
feeling of contrast between her lot and theirs. Her neat little figure,
well corseted in; her dear, high-pitched voice, good clothes, and faint
scent of lily-of-the-valley perfume put them, in their workaday garb and
all blowsed from their cooking or water-fetching, at a disadvantage.
She never suspected she was unwanted. On the contrary, she was most
careful to visit each cottage in rotation, lest jealousy should arise.
She would inquire about every member of the family in turn, listen to
extracts from letters of daughters in service, sympathize with those who
had tales of woe to tell, discuss everything that had happened since her
last visit, and insist upon nursing the baby the while, and only smile
good-naturedly when it wetted the front of her frock.
Her last visit of the day was always to the end house, where, over a cup
of tea, she would become quite confidential. She and Laura’s mother were
‘Miss Margaret’ and ‘Emma’ to each other, for they had known each other
from birth, including the time when Emma was nurse to Miss Margaret’s
young friends at the neighbouring rectory.
Laura, supposed to be deep in her book, but really all ears, learnt
that, surprisingly, Miss Ellison, the great Miss Ellison, had her
troubles. She had a brother, reputed ‘wild’ in the parish, whom her
father had forbidden the house, and much of their talk was about ‘my
brother Robert’, or ‘Master Bobbie’, and the length of time since his
last letter, and whether he had gone to Brazil, as he had said he
should, or whether he was still in London. ‘What I feel, Emma, is that
he is such a boy, and you know what the world is—what perils–-‘ Then
Emma’s cheerful rejoinder: ‘Don’t you worry yourself, Miss Margaret. He
can look after himself all right, Master Bob can.’
Sometimes Emma would venture to admire something Miss Margaret was
wearing. ‘Excuse me, Miss Margaret, but that mauve muslin really does
become you’; and Miss Ellison would look pleased. She had probably few
compliments, for one of her type was not likely to be admired in those
days of pink and white dollishness, although her clear, healthy pallor,
with only the faintest flush of pink, her broad white brow, grey eyes,
and dark hair waving back to the knot at her nape were at least
distinguished looking. And she could not at that time have been more
than thirty, although to Laura she seemed quite old, and the hamlet
women called her an old maid.
Such a life as hers must have been is almost unimaginable now. Between
playing the harmonium in church, teaching in Sunday school, ordering her
father’s meals and overseeing the maids, she must have spent hours doing
needlework. Coarse, unattractive needlework, too, crossover shawls and
flannel petticoats for the old women, flannel shirts and long, thick
knitted stockings for the old men, these, as well as the babies’ print
frocks, were all made by her own hands. Excepting a fortnight’s visit a
year to relatives, the only outing she was known to have was a weekly
drive to the market town, shopping, in her father’s high, yellow-wheeled
dogcart, with the fat fox-terrier, Beppo, panting behind.
Half-way through the decade, the Rector began to feel the weight of his
seventy odd years, and a succession of curates came to share his work
and to provide new subjects of conversation for his parishioners.
Several appeared and vanished without leaving any
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