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conference. A sentiment is no part of a political propinquity.”

With that, he retired into the recesses of his ‘general store,’ leaving Bainton chuckling to himself, with a broad grin on his weatherbeaten countenance.

The ‘Petol’ board displayed on the front of Mr. Netlips’ shop, however, was just one of those slight indications which showed the vague change that had crept over the erstwhile tranquil atmosphere of St. Rest. Among other signs and tokens of internal disquiet was the increasing pomposity of the village post-mistress, Mrs. Tapple. Mrs. Tapple had grown so accustomed to various titles and prefixes of rank among the different guests who came in turn to stay at the Manor, that whereas she had at one time stood in respectful awe of old Pippitt because he was a ‘Sir,’ she now regarded him almost with contempt. What was a ‘Sir’ to a ‘Lord’? Nothing!—less than nothing! For during one week she had sold stamps to a real live Marquis and post-cards to a ‘Right Honourable,’ besides despatching numerous telegrams for the Countess of Beaulyon. By all the gods and little fishes, Sir Morton Pippitt had sunk low indeed!—for when Mrs. Tapple, bridling with scorn, said she ‘wondered ‘ow a man like ‘im wot only made his money in bone-boilin’ would dare to be seen with Miss Vancourt’s real quality’ it was felt that she was expressing an almost national sentiment.

Taking everything into consideration, it was not to be denied that the new element infused into the little village community had brought with it a certain stir and excitement, but also a sense of discontent. And John Walden, keenly alive to every touch of feeling, was more conscious of the change than many another man would have been who was not endowed with so quick and responsive a nature. He noted the quaint self-importance of Mrs. Tapple with a kindly amusement, not altogether unmixed with pain,—he watched regretfully the attempts made by the young girls of his little parish to trick themselves out with cheap finery imported from the town of Riversford, in order to imitate in some fashion, no matter how far distant, the attire of Lady Beaulyon, whose dresses were a wonder, and whose creditors were legion,—and he was sincerely sorry to see that even gentle and pretty Susie Prescott had taken to a new mode of doing her hair, which, though elaborate, did not suit her at all, and gave an almost bold look to an otherwise sweet and maidenly countenance.

“But I am old,—and old-fashioned too!”—he said to himself, resignedly—“The world must move on—and as it moves it is bound to leave old times behind it—and me with them. I must not complain— nor should I, even in my own heart, find too many reproaches for the ways of the young.”

And involuntarily he recalled Tennyson’s lines:—

“Only ‘dust to dust’ for me that sicken at your lawless din,— Dust in wholesome old-world dust before the newer world begin!”

“‘Wholesome old-world dust’!” he mused—“Yes! I think it WAS more wholesome than our too heavily manured soil!”

And a wave of pained regret and yearning arose in him for the days when life was taken more quietly, more earnestly, more soberly—with the trust and love of God inspiring the soul to purity and peace— when to find a woman who was at the same time an atheist was a thing so abnormal and repulsive as to excite the utmost horror in society. Society! why, now, many women in society were atheists, and made no secret of their shame!

“I must not dwell on these thoughts,”—he said, resolutely. “The sooner I see Brent, the better. I’ve accepted his invitation for the last week of this month—I can be spared then for two or three days- indeed, I doubt whether I shall even be missed! The people only want me on Sundays now-and—though I do try not to notice it,—a good many of the congregation are absent from their usual places.”

He sighed. He would not admit to himself that it was Maryllia Vancourt—‘Maryllia Van’—or rather her guests who had exercised a maleficent influence on his little cure of souls, and that because the ‘quality’ did not go to church on Sundays, then some of the villagers,—like serfs under the sway of nobles,—stayed away also. He realised that he had given offence to this same ‘quality,’ by pausing in his reading, when they entered late on the one occasion they did attend divine service,—but he did not care at all for that. He knew, that the truth of the mischief wrought by the idle, unthinking upper classes of society, is always precisely what the upper classes do not want to hear;—and he was perfectly aware in his own mind that his short, but explicit sermon, on the ‘Soul,’ had not been welcome to any one of his aristocratic hearers, while it had been a little over the heads of his own parishioners.

“Mere waste of words!” he mused, with a kind of self-reproach—“I don’t know why I chose the text or subject at all. Yes—yes!—I do know! Why do I play the deceiver with myself! She was there—so winsome—so pretty!—and her soul is sweet and pure;—it must be sweet and pure, if it can look out of such clear windows as her eyes. Let all the world go, but keep that soul, I thought!—and so I spoke as I did. But I think she scarcely listened—it was all waste of time, waste of words,—waste of breath! I shall be glad to see dear old Brent again. He wants to talk to me, he says—and I most certainly want to talk to him. After the dinner-party at the Manor, I shall be free. How I dread that party! How I wish I were not going! But I have promised her—and I must not break my word!”

He began to think about one or two matters that to him were not altogether pleasing. Chief among these was the fact that Sir Morton Pippitt had driven over twice now ‘to inspect the church’— accompanied by Lord Roxmouth, and the Reverend ‘Putty’ Leveson. Once Lord Roxmouth had left his card at the rectory, and had written on it: ‘Wishing to have the pleasure of meeting Mr. Walden’—a pleasure which had not, so far, been gratified. Walden understood that Lord Roxmouth was, or intended to be, the future husband of Miss Vancourt. He had learned something of it from Bishop Brent’s letter- but now that his lordship was staying as a guest at Badsworth Hall, rumour had spread the statement so very generally that it was an almost accepted fact. Three days had been sufficient to set the village and county talking;-Roxmouth and his tools never did their mischievous work by halves. John Walden accepted the report as others accepted it—only reserving to himself an occasion to ask Miss Vancourt if it were indeed true. Meantime, he kept himself apart from the visitors—he had no wish to meet Lord Roxmouth— though he knew that a meeting was inevitable at the forthcoming dinner-party at Abbot’s Manor. Bainton had that dinner-party on his mind as well as his master. He had heard enough of it on all sides. Mrs. Spruce had gabbled of it, saying that ‘what with jellies an’ ices an’ all the things as has to be thought of an’ got in ready,’ she was ‘fair mazed an’ moithered.’ And she held forth on the subject to one of her favourite cronies, Mrs. Keeley, whose son Bob was still in a state of silent and resentful aggressiveness against the ‘quality’ for the death of his pet dog.

“It’s somethin’ too terrible, I do assure you!” she said—“the way these ladies and gentlemen from Lunnon eats fit to bust themselves! When they fust came down, I sez to cook, I sez—‘Lord bless ‘em, they must ‘ave all starved in their own ‘omes’—an’ she laughed—she ‘avin ‘sperience, an’ cooked for ‘ouse-parties ever since she learned makin’ may’nases [mayonnaise] which she sez was when she was twenty, an’ she’s a round sixty now, an’ she sez, ‘Lor, no! It do frighten one at first wot they can put into their stummicks, Missis Spruce, but don’t you worry—you just get the things, and they’ll know how to swaller ‘em.’ Well now, Missis Keeley, if you’ll b’lieve me”—and here Mrs. Spruce drew a long breath and began to count on her fingers—“This is ‘ow we do every night for the visitors, makin’ ready for hextras, in case any gentleman comes along in a motor which isn’t expected—fust we ‘as horduffs---”

“Save us!” exclaimed Mrs. Keeley—“What’s they?”

“Well I calls ‘em kickshaws, but the right name is horduffs, Primmins sez, bein’ a butler he should know the French, an’ ‘tis a French word, an’ it’s nothin’ but little dishes ‘anded round, olives an’ anchovies, an’ sardines an’ messes of every kind, enough to make ye sick to look at ‘em—they swallers ‘em, an’ then we sends in soup—two kinds, white an’ clear. They swallers THAT, an’ the fish goes in—two kinds—the old Squire never had but one—THAT goes down, an’ then comes the hentreys. Them’s sometimes two—sometimes four—it just depends on the number we ‘as at table. They’se all got French names—there’s nothing plain English about them. But they’se only bits o’ meat an’ fowl, done up in different ways with sauces an’ vegetables, an’ the quality eats ‘em up as though they was two bites of an apple. Then we sends in the roast and b’iled—and they takes good cuts off both—then there’s game,—now that’s nearly allus all eat up, for I like to pick a bone now and then myself if it comes down on a dish an’ no one else wants it—but there’s never a morsel left for me, I do assure you! Then comes puddings an’ sweets—then cheese savouries—then ices—an’ then coffee—an’ all the time the wine’s a-goin’, Primmins sez, every sort, claret, ‘ock, chably, champagne,—an’ the Lord alone He knows wot their poor insides feels like when ‘tis all a-mixin’ up together an’ workin’ round arterwards. But, as I sez, ‘tain’t no business o’ mine if the fash’nables ‘as trained their stummicks to be like the ostriches which eats, as I’m told, ‘ard iron nails with a relish, I onny know I should ‘a’ bin dead an’ done with long ago if I put a quarter of the stuff into me which they puts into theirselves, while some of the gentlemen drinks enough whiskey an’ soda to drown ‘em if ‘twas all put in a tub at once---”

“But Miss Vancourt,” interrupted Mrs. Keeley, who had been listening to her friend’s flow of language in silent wonder,—“She don’t eat an’ drink like that, do she?”

“Miss Maryllia, bless ‘er ‘art, sits at her table like a little queen,”—said Mrs. Spruce, with emotion—“Primmins sez she don’t eat scarce nothin’, and don’t say much neither. She just smiles pretty, an’ puts in a word or two, an’ then seems lookin’ away as if she saw somethink beautiful which nobody else can see. An’ that Miss Cicely Bourne, she’s just a pickle!—‘ow she do play the comic, to be sure!—she ran into the still-room the other day an’ danced round like a mad thing, an’ took off all the ladies with their airs an’ graces till I nearly died o’ larfin’! She’s a good little thing, though, takin’ ‘er all round, though a bit odd in ‘er way, but that comes of bein’ in France an’ learnin’ music, I expect. But I really must be goin’—there’s heaps an’ heaps to do, but by an’ by we’ll have peace an’ quiet again—they’re all a-goin’ next week.”

“Well, I shan’t be sorry!”—and Mrs. Keeley gave a short sigh of satisfaction—“I’m fair sick o’ seein’ them motor-cars whizzin’ through the village makin’ such a dust an’

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