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<h2> "EXIT TYRANNUS" </h2>
<p>The eventful day had arrived at last, the day which, when first named,
had seemed—like all golden dates that promise anything definite—so
immeasurably remote. When it was first announced, a fortnight before,
that Miss Smedley was really going, the resultant ecstasies had occupied
a full week, during which we blindly revelled in the contemplation and
discussion of her past tyrannies, crimes, malignities; in recalling to
each other this or that insult, dishonour, or physical assault, sullenly
endured at a time when deliverance was not even a small star on the
horizon; and in mapping out the golden days to come, with special new
troubles of their own, no doubt, since this is but a work-a-day world,
but at least free from one familiar scourge. The time that remained had
been taken up by the planning of practical expressions of the popular
sentiment. Under Edward's masterly direction, arrangements had been made
for a flag to be run up over the hen-house at the very moment when the
fly, with Miss Smedley's boxes on top and the grim oppressor herself
inside, began to move off down the drive. Three brass cannons, set on
the brow of the sunk-fence, were to proclaim our deathless sentiments
in the ears of the retreating foe: the dogs were to wear ribbons,
and later—but this depended on our powers of evasiveness and
dissimulation—there might be a small bonfire, with a cracker or two, if
the public funds could bear the unwonted strain.</p>
<p>I was awakened by Harold digging me in the ribs, and "She's going
to-day!" was the morning hymn that scattered the clouds of sleep.</p>
<p>Strange to say, it was with no corresponding jubilation of spirits
that I slowly realised the momentous fact. Indeed, as I dressed, a dull
disagreeable feeling that I could not define grew within me—something
like a physical bruise. Harold was evidently feeling it too, for after
repeating "She's going to-day!" in a tone more befitting the Litany, he
looked hard in my face for direction as to how the situation was to be
taken. But I crossly bade him look sharp and say his prayers and not
bother me. What could this gloom portend, that on a day of days like the
present seemed to hang my heavens with black?</p>
<p>Down at last and out in the sun, we found Edward before us, swinging on
a gate, and chanting a farm-yard ditty in which all the beasts appear
in due order, jargoning in their several tongues, and every verse begins
with the couplet—</p>
<p>"Now, my lads, come with me,<br/>
Out in the morning early!"<br/></p>
<p>The fateful exodus of the day had evidently slipped his memory entirely.
I touched him on the shoulder. "She's going to-day!" I said. Edward's
carol subsided like a water-tap turned off. "So she is!" he replied,
and got down at once off the gate: and we returned to the house without
another word.</p>
<p>At breakfast Miss Smedley behaved in a most mean and uncalled-for
manner. The right divine of governesses to govern wrong includes no
right to cry. In thus usurping the prerogative of their victims, they
ignore the rules of the ring, and hit below the belt. Charlotte was
crying, of course; but that counted for nothing. Charlotte even cried
when the pigs' noses were ringed in due season; thereby evoking the
cheery contempt of the operators, who asserted they liked it, and
doubtless knew. But when the cloud-compeller, her bolts laid aside,
resorted to tears, mutinous humanity had a right to feel aggrieved, and
placed in a false and difficult position. What would the Romans have
done, supposing Hannibal had cried? History has not even considered the
possibility. Rules and precedents should be strictly observed on both
sides; when they are violated, the other party is justified in feeling
injured.</p>
<p>There were no lessons that morning, naturally—another grievance!</p>
<p>The fitness of things required that we should have struggled to the last
in a confused medley of moods and tenses, and parted for ever, flushed
with hatred, over the dismembered corpse of the multiplication table.
But this thing was not to be; and I was free to stroll by myself
through the garden, and combat, as best I might, this growing feeling of
depression. It was a wrong system altogether, I thought, this going of
people one had got used to. Things ought always to continue as they had
been. Change there must be, of course; pigs, for instance, came and went
with disturbing frequency—</p>
<p>"Fired their ringing shot and passed,<br/>
Hotly charged and sank at last,"—<br/></p>
<p>but Nature had ordered it so, and in requital had provided for rapid
successors. Did you come to love a pig, and he was taken from you, grief
was quickly assuaged in the delight of selection from the new litter.
But now, when it was no question of a peerless pig, but only of a
governess, Nature seemed helpless, and the future held no litter of
oblivion. Things might be better, or they might be worse, but they would
never be the same; and the innate conservatism of youth asks neither
poverty nor riches, but only immunity from change.</p>
<p>Edward slouched up alongside of me presently, with a hang-dog look on
him, as if he had been caught stealing jam. "What a lark it'll be when
she's really gone!" he observed, with a swagger obviously assumed.</p>
<p>"Grand fun!" I replied, dolorously; and conversation flagged.</p>
<p>We reached the hen-house, and contemplated the banner of freedom lying
ready to flaunt the breezes at the supreme moment.</p>
<p>"Shall you run it up," I asked, "when the fly starts, or—or wait a
little till it's out of sight?"</p>
<p>Edward gazed around him dubiously. "We're going to have some rain, I
think," he said; "and—and it's a new flag. It would be a pity to spoil
it. P'raps I won't run it up at all."</p>
<p>Harold came round the corner like a bison pursued by Indians. "I've
polished up the cannons," he cried, "and they look grand! Mayn't I load
'em now?"</p>
<p>"You leave 'em alone," said Edward, severely, "or you'll be blowing
yourself up" (consideration for others was not usually Edward's strong
point). "Don't touch the gunpowder till you're told, or you'll get your
head smacked."</p>
<p>Harold fell behind, limp, squashed, obedient. "She wants me to write to
her," he began, presently. "Says she doesn't mind the spelling, it I'll
only write. Fancy her saying that!"</p>
<p>"Oh, shut up, will you?" said Edward, savagely; and once more we were
silent, with only our thoughts for sorry company.</p>
<p>"Let's go off to the copse," I suggested timidly, feeling that something
had to be done to relieve the tension, "and cut more new bows and
arrows."</p>
<p>"She gave me a knife my last birthday," said Edward, moodily, never
budging. "It wasn't much of a knife—but I wish I hadn't lost it."</p>
<p>"When my legs used to ache," I said, "she sat up half the night, rubbing
stuff on them. I forgot all about that till this morning."</p>
<p>"There's the fly!" cried Harold suddenly. "I can hear it scrunching on
the gravel."</p>
<p>Then for the first time we turned and stared one another in the face.</p>
<hr>
<p>The fly and its contents had finally disappeared through the gate: the
rumble of its wheels had died away; and no flag floated defiantly in
the sun, no cannons proclaimed the passing of a dynasty. From out the
frosted cake of our existence Fate had cut an irreplaceable segment;
turn which way we would, the void was present. We sneaked off in
different directions, mutually undesirous of company; and it seemed
borne in upon me that I ought to go and dig my garden right over, from
end to end. It didn't actually want digging; on the other hand, no
amount of digging could affect it, for good or for evil; so I worked
steadily, strenuously, under the hot sun, stifling thought in action. At
the end of an hour or so, I was joined by Edward.</p>
<p>"I've been chopping up wood," he explained, in a guilty sort of way,
though nobody had called on him to account for his doings.</p>
<p>"What for?" I inquired, stupidly. "There's piles and piles of it chopped
up already."</p>
<p>"I know," said Edward; "but there's no harm in having a bit over.
You never can tell what may happen. But what have you been doing all
this digging for?"</p>
<p>"You said it was going to rain," I explained, hastily; "so I thought
I'd get the digging done before it came. Good gardeners always tell you
that's the right thing to do."</p>
<p>"It did look like rain at one time," Edward admitted; "but it's passed
off now. Very queer weather we're having. I suppose that's why I've felt
so funny all day."</p>
<p>"Yes, I suppose it's the weather," I replied. "<i>I've</i> been feeling funny
too."</p>
<p>The weather had nothing to do with it, as we well knew. But we would
both have died rather than have admitted the real reason.</p>
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