Linnets and Valerians
When Nan and Robert went upstairs they found Timothy and Betsy already asleep and their faces wore that smug look of satisfaction which the faces of the well-fed so often wear in sleep, provided they are not having indigestion. Timothy in particular was looking so very smug that Robert shook him awake to hear how he himself had been treated. “The old brute!” he said angrily. “I won’t wash tonight.”
“Why not?” asked Nan, for they had opened the door between their rooms so that they could talk to each other.
“Because the old beast likes us to wash and I’m not going to oblige him,” said Robert. “And because hunger and dirt go together.” He sagged pitifully at the waist and his eyes had a hollow look. “If you’re starving you’re too weak to wash. I wish we had gone to Uncle Edgar at Birmingham. At least he would have fed us.”
“Uncle Ambrose does feed us,” said Timothy. “Betsy and I had raisins inside our baked apples. They were jolly good.”
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“Hold your tongue!” said Robert angrily.
“What did you wake me up for then?” demanded Timothy.
“Don’t quarrel, please,” said Nan peaceably. “Don’t you realize, Robert, that Birmingham is all trolley lines, shops and streets? No woods, no moors, no sheep, no pony and no bees. No Lady Alicia, or Ezra or Abednego or Moses. And would you really like to have no Uncle Ambrose?” Robert made no answer but she could see he had washed his ears. “And no adventure,” she went on. “Don’t you realize that we have started on a big adventure? Today something very exciting has begun to happen. We’re going to do something very important here. Don’t you know that?”
Robert grunted and put on his pajamas. His ears were the only part of himself that he had washed, he could bring himself to oblige Uncle Ambrose no further, but he was smiling as he got into the little bed lent by Lady Alicia, snuggled down into the feather mattress and pulled the patchwork quilt under his chin. “Good old Nan,” he said. “You’re right.”
There was a tap at the door and Ezra entered with two steaming bowls on a tray. “The Master says,” he informed them, “that he don’t want yee to go to bed hungry and gruel, he says, made without sugar, is not supper. Now sup it up, me dears. ’Tis nasty but nour- ishin’.”
They supped it up, Nan for love’s sake but Robert because he was starving.
7
Nan’s Parlor
The next day was Saturday and, as the cats had foretold, it rained. The children, accustomed to the wet seasons and dry seasons of India, weather as predictable as the layers in a sandwich cake, couldn’t get used to this mixed-grill English weather when you didn’t know what you were going to bite into next. Yesterday had been warm and sunny and today the southwesterly gale from the sea was emptying buckets of water over a drowning world. Robert, with a heroism that astonished no one more than himself, got up early, put on his wet weather outfit of mackintosh, boots and sou’wester, and went out into the garden to collect snails. He had a very special reason for wanting to earn a lot of money rather quickly and he remembered what Uncle
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Ambrose had said about early rising. But once he was out-of-doors he found it was fun collecting snails in the wet. There was so much water around that it was like being a diver at the bottom of the sea. It would be fun to be a diver and he was willing to bet the threepence he was likely to earn from the snails that they earned a good deal more an hour than he was doing.
The three other children, their faces pressed against the streaming windowpane in the intervals of dressing, saw his dripping figure against a background of trees lashed by the wind, but the moors and the distant hills had disappeared behind curtains of rain. Their world had contracted and Lion Tor and Linden Manor seemed very far away. It was almost as though they had dreamed the adventures of yesterday.
“I suppose we’d all better earn our livings today,” said Timothy, watching Robert. “No more sweets till we do.”
Breakfast in front of the kitchen fire with Ezra was a cheering experience but when they went into the library for lessons Uncle Ambrose was in such an extraordinarily sunny mood, as he waved them to their chairs, that their hearts sank. Their forebodings were correct for he worked them hard that morning. It was ghastly and yet at moments it was briefly rather glorious, like toiling up a mountainside with your lungs bursting and your legs aching but now and then being confronted with a wonderful view. Years later they discovered that Uncle Ambrose in his working days had been
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13!
considered one of the greatest educators in England, and they knew how privileged they had been to be taught by him. But today their future sentiments were unknown to them and the grounding seemed awfully gritty. But when it was dinnertime they were astonished, for the hours had flown. Never had hash and treacle tart tasted so good. They all helped Ezra wash up and then Robert put on his mackintosh and went down to the stable to polish Rob-Roy’s harness, Timothy sat on the kitchen floor cleaning shoes, Nan sat on the settle darning socks, and Betsy helped Ezra prepare the fruit for a plum cake for Sunday. Upon this domestic scene Uncle Ambrose, his afternoon nap accomplished, entered. The seat of the settle was high and Nan’s feet, he noticed, did not touch the floor. Nor was the light in her corner good enough for darning.
“Nan, my dear,” he said gently, “will you come with me? Bring your work with you.”
She put the socks into her workbasket and went with him with that feeling of trust and peace that the very sight of him inspired in her. Halfway down the dark cobwebbed passage that led from the kitchen to the library he stopped and she saw to her surprise that there was a door there that she had not noticed before. The passage was paneled with dark wood and the door, made of the same wood, was invisible unless you knew it was there. Uncle Ambrose lifted the latch and she followed him in. The room inside was a small paneled parlor.
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There was a bright wood fire burning in the basket grate and on the mantelpiece above were a china shepherd and shepherdess and two china sheep. Over the mantelpiece was a round mirror in a gilt frame. A rug lay on the polished floor, colored blue and pink like a pigeon’s breast. There was a little armchair, a small writing desk with drawers in it, a shelf of books above and a chair with gold legs in front of it. The latticed window had a windowseat and looked out on the terrace in front of the house, but the climbing rose outside grew around it so thickly that Nan had not noticed it when she had been in the garden two days ago. The curtains at the window and the cushions in the armchair were sprigged with carnations and forget-me-nots.
"Ezra lit the fire for you this morning,” said Uncle Ambrose.
“For me?” whispered Nan.
“This is your parlor,” said Uncle Ambrose.
“My parlor?” whispered Nan.
“My dear,” he said, “you are the lady of the house. Every mistress of a household has her parlor. It’s an odd thing but when I came here, having no wife or daughter, I yet furnished this little room. It cried out to me that I should furnish it. I am not a man of whims and fancies and I was slightly ashamed of myself, even alarmed, feared a softening of the brain, but I am ashamed no longer. I had, I think, a premonition of your coming. Your temperament, my dear, is reflective, as mine is, and as you grow older you will increasingly need some
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where to go when you wish to be private. I suggest that the younger children and myself enter this room only with your permission.” Nan knew that if she were to try and speak she would cry, which Uncle Ambrose would dislike intensely. Dropping her workbasket and darning on the floor she turned to him impulsively and he bent down and permitted her to hug him briefly. “Lady Alicia used this room, I fancy,” he said.
“Lady Alicia?” asked Nan, astonished.
“She is a daughter of a previous vicar,” expl
ained Uncle Ambrose. “He was a widower and she was an only child. When she was eighteen she married the squire of Linden Manor and thereafter her father kept bees to comfort him. I am the third vicar in succession to maintain his bees. You are wondering why I fancy that Lady Alicia used this room as a girl. To the right of the fireplace, hidden in the paneling, there is a cupboard and in it I found some children’s books with her name in them. She must have forgotten to take them to the Manor with her when she married. They are now on that shelf above your desk. Well, my dear, I will leave you to the enjoyment of your parlor.” He bowed to her as though she were Lady Alicia herself and left the room.
Nan sat down in the little armchair and folded her hands in her lap. A parlor of her own! She had never even had a bedroom of her own let alone a parlor. It was quiet in here, the noises of the house shut away, the sound of the wind and rain outside seeming only to
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intensify the indoor silence. The light of the flames was reflected in the paneling and the burning logs smelled sweet. Something inside her seemed to expand like a flower opening and she sighed with relief. She had not known before that she liked to be alone. She sat still for ten minutes, making friends with her room, and then she got up and moved slowly around it making friends with all it held.
The shepherd had a shepherd’s pipe in his hand, the shepherdess had a crook wreathed with flowers and a pale blue frock looped up over a flowered petticoat, and the sheep had blue ribbons around their necks. The little mirror over the mantelpiece was so old that when she looked in it the face she saw seemed not her own. It smiled at her from a long way away, a much older face, making her think of Lady Alicia when this had been her room. Nan moved on to the desk, sat down in the chair and let down the lid. Inside was a row of little pigeonholes and they contained pale pink notepaper and envelopes, a crystal inkpot with ink in it, a pen and two small keys on a ring. Fastened to the inside of the lowered lid was a sheet of pink blotting paper and across one corner of it Uncle Ambrose had written in his beautiful pointed handwriting, “Nan Linnet,” and at that, since he was not here to see her, Nan did cry. She cried out all her longing for her father, the burden of being the eldest and responsible for the other children, the relief of having found a home at last, and her love for Uncle Ambrose, and when she had finished she blew
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her nose and felt marvelous. The three little drawers below were empty, and she was pleased, for she wanted to keep her workbasket in them, and her darning, and the few little treasures she had, such as her mother’s fan and coral necklace, that she was always afraid Betsy would borrow and lose. Then she looked at Lady Alicia’s books in the shelf on top of the desk. They were Hans Andersens Fairy Tales, Gullivers Travels, The Fair- child Family and Pilgrims Progress. She took them up one by one, turned the yellowing pages and looked at the old-fashioned pictures. Lady Alicia had written her maiden name in them, Mary Alicia Trumpington, in a large young hand. Nan could not imagine how she could have borne to leave them behind when she married and went away. Only five of them. Were there any more in the cupboard that Uncle Ambrose had not taken out?
It took her quite a long time to find the cupboard, it was so well hidden in the paneling, and she would not have found it at all had not her exploring fingers felt the small keyhole. The cupboard was locked but she remembered the two keys on the key ring in her desk and fetched them. One of them, not the bright one that was the desk key but the other, unlocked the cupboard door. It seemed empty but kneeling down Nan felt with her hand inside it, and her fingers touched something in the darkest corner. She took it out and looked at it. It was a notebook with covers of hard marbled board and inside, the yellow pages were covered with
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fine clear copperplate handwriting. On the flyleaf of the book was written, Emma Cobley. Her book.
Nan got up and her instinct was to drop the book as though it were a snake, but she held on. On the floor by her chair was her workbasket and the darning but they would have to wait while she looked at this book. As she turned to sit down she found herself looking in the glass again for Lady Alicia but the far-off smiling face was not the same, it was that of a dark-skinned girl with bright eyes like Emma Cobley’s. Nan sat down in the armchair with shaking knees but nevertheless she opened the book and began to read.
Uncle Ambrose went back to the kitchen where Timothy was still laboriously cleaning shoes, but he did not know how to do it and he was not getting on very well. There were black lines under his eyes and Uncle Ambrose’s heart smote him. This child, he feared, was not as strong as the others and would need special care. “We’ll finish these in my library,” he said. “I’ll help you.” Timothy could not believe his ears and neither could Ezra, for as far as he knew the Master had never cleaned a shoe in his life. He watched with his eyes nearly dropping out of his head as Uncle Ambrose scooped up an armful of boots and shoes from the floor and left the room with his dignity unaffected, Timothy scurrying after with the box of brushes and polishes.
But in the library, with newspaper spread on the table and the boots and shoes arranged in rows, it trans-
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spired that Uncle Ambrose had cleaned shoes as a boy and had not forgotten the trick of it. He showed Timothy exactly how to set about it and he cleaned away himself with great concentration. Hector paced up and down the table like Napoleon on the deck of the Bell- erophon, the cover of a can of polish in his beak.
“Manual labor,” said Uncle Ambrose, holding up his right-hand Sunday boot and admiring the shine he had got on it, “can be of great assistance in the development both of intellectual and spiritual powers.”
“Yes, sir,” said Timothy dutifully, rubbing away at Betsy’s indoor strap shoes.
“The Cistercian monks are agriculturists,” continued Uncle Ambrose, “and all great saints either dig or cook according to sex or temperament.”
“We aren’t digging or cooking,” said Timothy.
Uncle Ambrose looked at him over the top of his spectacles. “Do you consider that you and I are great saints?”
“No, sir,” said Timothy.
“I am glad to find you possessed both of humility and observation,” said Uncle Ambrose. “Pass me the brown polish.”
Both of them worked so hard that the work was soon done and Uncle Ambrose, rising, held out his hand. “We deserve a respite,” he said, and seating himself in his armchair by the fire, Hector on his shoulder, he took Timothy on his knees and reached for a book on the shelf beside him. For one awful moment Timothy
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thought he was to be educated in the middle of the afternoon, then he saw that the book was full of pictures and knew that Uncle Ambrose would never be so mean. It was to be another of the wonderful storytelling times, and he was to have it all to himself. He leaned back against Uncle Ambrose’s shoulder and abandoned himself to the enjoyment and honor of the occasion, but twenty minutes later he gave a little gasp of surprise and sat up gazing at the new picture on the page. For there he was again, terrible yet wonderful, sitting this time not on a rock in the middle of an empty fountain but among the roots of a great tree in a forest glade. He was not now listening in sadness for the dying echoes of vanished music but making the music, his musical instrument held to his lips, his strong fingers spread on the reeds. Nor, in this picture, was he lonely, for woodland creatures were creeping out of the forest to be near him, drawn by his music, and the trees were full of singing birds. For a whole minute Timothy could hear the music, beautiful, thin and unearthly, and the singing of the birds. Then he whispered, “The goat man!”
“You know the picture?” asked Uncle Ambrose.
“No, sir,” said Timothy. “But I saw the goat man yesterday.”
“You surprise me,” ejaculated Uncle Ambrose. “Where did you see him?”
“In t
he garden of the fountain at Linden Manor,” said Timothy. “He sits there on a rock.”
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“Ah!” said Uncle Ambrose. “A fountain perhaps.” “But he isn’t playing anymore, only listening to the echoes, and he’s sad.”
“No doubt,” said Uncle Ambrose, and he sounded sad too. “Turned to stone. Silenced by men’s unbelief.” “Who is he, sir?” asked Timothy.
“The Great God Pan,” said Uncle Ambrose. “The spirit of nature. Men worshiped him in ancient Greece.” “Don’t they now?” asked Timothy.
“No,” said Uncle Ambrose. “They don’t believe in him now.”
“Is he real?” asked Timothy eagerly.
“Not now.”
“Was he ever real?”
“When men believed in him he was real to them.” “Not now?”
“Not now.”
“Not now,” echoed Timothy sadly, and the echoes were like a bell tolling.
There was a long sad silence and then Timothy asked, “Is he the goat in the poetry?”
“What poetry?” asked Uncle Ambrose.
“The poetry you taught us. ‘Star of evening, bringing all things that bright dawn has scattered, you bring the sheep, you bring the goat, you bring the child back to its mother.’ ”
Uncle Ambrose looked at Timothy with affection and he said, “He might be. We’ll say he is.”
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“Shall we believe in him?” suggested Timothy.
Uncle Ambrose's eyes twinkled. “That, Timothy,” he said, “is a most unsuitable suggestion to make to a clergyman of the Church of England. I am no longer permitted to believe in the ancient gods. You of course can do as you wish.”
Timothy, with shining eyes, closed the book. “I wish,”hesaid.