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<h2> CHAPTER III </h2>
<p>From the day she stepped into it Mrs Murchison knew that the Plummer Place
was going to be the bane of her existence. This may have been partly
because Mr Murchison had bought it, since a circumstance welded like that
into one’s life is very apt to assume the character of a bane, unless
one’s temperament leads one to philosophy, which Mrs Murchison’s didn’t.
But there were other reasons more difficult to traverse: it was plainly
true that the place did require a tremendous amount of “looking after,” as
such things were measured in Elgin, far more looking after than the
Murchisons could afford to give it. They could never have afforded, in the
beginning, to possess it had it not been sold, under mortgage, at a
dramatic sacrifice. The house was a dignified old affair, built of wood
and painted white, with wide green verandahs compassing the four sides of
it, as they often did in days when the builder had only to turn his hand
to the forest. It stood on the very edge of the town; wheatfields in the
summer billowed up to its fences, and corn-stacks in the autumn camped
around it like a besieging army. The plank sidewalk finished there; after
that you took the road or, if you were so inclined, the river, into which
you could throw a stone from the orchard of the Plummer Place. The house
stood roomily and shadily in ornamental grounds, with a lawn in front of
it and a shrubbery at each side, an orchard behind, and a vegetable
garden, the whole intersected by winding gravel walks, of which Mrs
Murchison was wont to say that a man might do nothing but weed them and
have his hands full. In the middle of the lawn was a fountain, an empty
basin with a plaster Triton, most difficult to keep looking respectable
and pathetic in his frayed air of exile from some garden of Italy sloping
to the sea. There was also a barn with stabling, a loft, and big carriage
doors opening on a lane to the street. The originating Plummer, Mrs
Murchison often said, must have been a person of large ideas, and she
hoped he had the money to live up to them. The Murchisons at one time kept
a cow in the barn, till a succession of “girls” left on account of the
milking, and the lane was useful as an approach to the backyard by the
teams that brought the cordwood in the winter. It was trying enough for a
person with the instinct of order to find herself surrounded by
out-of-door circumstances which she simply could not control but Mrs
Murchison often declared that she could put up with the grounds if it had
stopped there. It did not stop there. Though I was compelled to introduce
Mrs Murchison in the kitchen, she had a drawing-room in which she might
have received the Lieutenant-Governor, with French windows and a cut-glass
chandelier, and a library with an Italian marble mantelpiece. She had an
icehouse and a wine cellar, and a string of bells in the kitchen that
connected with every room in the house; it was a negligible misfortune
that not one of them was in order. She had far too much, as she declared,
for any one pair of hands and a growing family, and if the ceiling was not
dropping in the drawing-room, the cornice was cracked in the library or
the gas was leaking in the dining-room, or the verandah wanted reflooring
if anyone coming to the house was not to put his foot through it; and as
to the barn, if it was dropping to pieces it would just have to drop. The
barn was definitely outside the radius of possible amelioration—it
passed gradually, visibly, into decrepitude, and Mrs Murchison often
wished she could afford to pull it down.</p>
<p>It may be realized that in spite of its air of being impossible to
“overtake”—I must, in this connection, continue to quote its
mistress—there was an attractiveness about the dwelling of the
Murchisons the attractiveness of the large ideas upon which it had been
built and designed, no doubt by one of those gentlefolk of reduced income
who wander out to the colonies with a nebulous view to economy and
occupation, to perish of the readjustment. The case of such persons, when
they arrive, is at once felt to be pathetic; there is a tacit local
understanding that they have made a mistake. They may be entitled to
respect, but nothing can save them from the isolation of their difference
and their misapprehension. It was like that with the house. The house was
admired—without enthusiasm—but it was not copied. It was felt
to be outside the general need, misjudged, adventitious; and it wore its
superiority in the popular view like a folly. It was in Elgin, but not of
it: it represented a different tradition; and Elgin made the same
allowance for its bedroom bells and its old-fashioned dignities as was
conceded to its original master’s habit of a six-o’clock dinner, with
wine.</p>
<p>The architectural expression of the town was on a different scale,
beginning with “frame,” rising through the semidetached, culminating
expensively in Mansard roofs, cupolas and modern conveniences, and
blossoming, in extreme instances, into Moorish fretwork and silk portieres
for interior decoration. The Murchison house gained by force of contrast:
one felt, stepping into it, under influences of less expediency and more
dignity, wider scope and more leisured intention; its shabby spaces had a
redundancy the pleasanter and its yellow plaster cornices a charm the
greater for the numerous close-set examples of contemporary taste in red
brick which made, surrounded by geranium beds, so creditable an appearance
in the West Ward. John Murchison in taking possession of the house had
felt in it these satisfactions, had been definitely penetrated and soothed
by them, the more perhaps because he brought to them a capacity for
feeling the worthier things of life which circumstances had not previously
developed. He seized the place with a sense of opportunity leaping sharp
and conscious out of early years in the grey “wynds” of a northern
Scottish town; and its personality sustained him, very privately but none
the less effectively, through the worry and expense of it for years. He
would take his pipe and walk silently for long together about the untidy
shrubberies in the evening, for the acute pleasure of seeing the big horse
chestnuts in flower; and he never opened the hall door without a feeling
of gratification in its weight as it swung under his hand. In so far as he
could, he supplemented the idiosyncrasies he found. The drawing-room
walls, though mostly bare in their old-fashioned French paper—lavender
and gilt, a grape-vine pattern—held a few good engravings; the
library was reduced to contain a single bookcase, but it was filled with
English classics. John Murchison had been made a careful man, not by
nature, by the discipline of circumstances; but he would buy books. He
bought them between long periods of abstinence, during which he would
scout the expenditure of an unnecessary dollar, coming home with a parcel
under his arm for which he vouchsafed no explanation, and which would
disclose itself to be Lockhart, or Sterne, or Borrow, or Defoe. Mrs
Murchison kept a discouraging eye upon such purchases; and when her
husband brought home Chambers’s Dictionary of English Literature, after
shortly and definitely repulsing her demand that he should get himself a
new winter overcoat, she declared that it was beyond all endurance. Mrs
Murchison was surrounded, indeed, by more of “that sort of thing” than she
could find use or excuse for; since, though books made but a sporadic
appearance, current literature, daily, weekly, and monthly, was
perpetually under her feet. The Toronto paper came as a matter of course,
as the London daily takes its morning flight into the provinces, the local
organ as simply indispensable, the Westminster as the corollary of church
membership and for Sunday reading. These were constant, but there were
also mutables—Once a Week, Good Words for the Young, Blackwood’s,
and the Cornhill they used to be; years of back numbers Mrs Murchison had
packed away in the attic, where Advena on rainy days came into the
inheritance of them, and made an early acquaintance with fiction in Ready
Money Mortiboy and Verner’s Pride, while Lorne, flat on his stomach beside
her, had glorious hours on The Back of the North Wind. Their father
considered such publications and their successors essential, like tobacco
and tea. He was also an easy prey to the subscription agent, for works
published in parts and paid for in instalments, a custom which Mrs
Murchison regarded with abhorrence. So much so that when John put his name
down for Masterpieces of the World’s Art, which was to cost twenty dollars
by the time it was complete, he thought it advisable to let the numbers
accumulate at the store.</p>
<p>Whatever the place represented to their parents, it was pure joy to the
young Murchisons. It offered a margin and a mystery to life. They saw it
far larger than it was; they invested it, arguing purely by its difference
from other habitations, with a romantic past. “I guess when the Prince of
Wales came to Elgin, Mother, he stayed here,” Lorne remarked, as a little
boy. Secretly he and Advena took up boards in more than one unused room,
and rapped on more than one thick wall to find a hollow chamber; the house
revealed so much that was interesting, it was apparent to the meanest
understanding that it must hide even more. It was never half lighted, and
there was a passage in which fear dwelt—wild were the gallopades
from attic to cellar in the early nightfall, when every young Murchison
tore after every other, possessed, like cats, by a demoniac ecstasy of the
gloaming. And the garden, with the autumn moon coming over the apple trees
and the neglected asparagus thick for ambush, and a casual untrimmed boy
or two with the delicious recommendation of being utterly without
credentials, to join in the rout and be trusted to make for the back fence
without further hint at the voice of Mrs Murchison—these were joys
of the very fibre, things to push ideas and envisage life with an
attraction that made it worth while to grow up.</p>
<p>And they had all achieved it—all six. They had grown up sturdily,
emerging into sobriety and decorum by much the same degrees as the old
house, under John Murchison’s improving fortunes, grew cared for and
presentable. The new roof went on, slate replacing shingles, the year Abby
put her hair up; the bathroom was contemporary with Oliver’s leaving
school; the electric light was actually turned on for the first time in
honour of Lorne’s return from Toronto, a barrister and solicitor; several
rooms had been done up for Abby’s wedding. Abby had married, early and
satisfactorily, Dr Harry Johnson, who had placidly settled down to await
the gradual succession of his father’s practice; “Dr Harry and Dr Henry”
they were called. Dr Harry lived next door to Dr Henry, and had a good
deal of the old man’s popular manner. It was an unacknowledged
partnership, which often provided two opinions for the same price; the
town prophesied well of it. That left only five at home, but they always
had Abby over in the West Ward, where Abby’s housekeeping made an interest
and Abby’s baby a point of pilgrimage. These considerations almost
consoled Mrs Murchison declaring, as she did, that all of them might have
gone but Abby, who alone knew how to be “any comfort or any dependence” in
the house; who could be left with a day’s preserving; and I tell you that
to be left by Mrs Murchison with a day’s preserving, be it cherries or
strawberries, damsons or pears, was a mark of confidence not easy to
obtain. Advena never had it; Advena, indeed, might have married and
removed no prop of the family economy. Mrs Murchison would have been
“sorry for the man”—she maintained a candour toward and about those
belonging to her that permitted no illusions—but she would have
stood cheerfully out of the way on her own account. When you have seen
your daughter reach and pass the age of twenty-five without having learned
properly to make her own bed, you know without being told that she will
never be fit for the management of a house—don’t you? Very well
then. And for ever and for ever, no matter what there was to do, with a
book in her hand—Mrs Murchison would put an emphasis on the “book”
which scarcely concealed a contempt for such absorption. And if, at the
end of your patience, you told her for any sake to put it down and attend
to matters, obeying in a kind of dream that generally drove you to take
the thing out of her hands and do it yourself, rather than jump out of
your skin watching her.</p>
<p>Sincerely Mrs Murchison would have been sorry for the man if he had
arrived, but he had not arrived. Advena justified her existence by taking
the university course for women at Toronto, and afterward teaching the
English branches to the junior forms in the Collegiate Institute, which
placed her arbitrarily outside the sphere of domestic criticism. Mrs
Murchison was thankful to have her there—outside—where little
more could reasonably be expected of her than that she should be down in
time for breakfast. It is so irritating to be justified in expecting more
than seems likely to come. Mrs Murchison’s ideas circulated strictly in
the orbit of equity and reason; she expected nothing from anybody that she
did not expect from herself; indeed, she would spare others in far larger
proportion. But the sense of obligation which led her to offer herself up
to the last volt of her energy made her miserable when she considered that
she was not fairly done by in return. Pressed down and running over were
the services she offered to the general good, and it was on the ground of
the merest justice that she required from her daughters “some sort of
interest” in domestic affairs. From her eldest she got no sort of
interest, and it was like the removal of a grievance from the hearth when
Advena took up employment which ranged her definitely beyond the necessity
of being of any earthly use in the house. Advena’s occupation to some
extent absorbed her shortcomings, which was much better than having to
attribute them to her being naturally “through-other,” or naturally
clever, according to the bias of the moment. Mrs Murchison no longer
excused or complained of her daughter; but she still pitied the man.</p>
<p>“The boys,” of course, were too young to think of matrimony. They were
still the boys, the Murchison boys; they would be the boys at forty if
they remained under their father’s roof. In the mother country, men in
short jackets and round collars emerge from the preparatory schools; in
the daughter lands boys in tailcoats conduct serious affairs. Alec and
Oliver, in the business, were frivolous enough as to the feminine
interest. For all Dr Drummond’s expressed and widely known views upon the
subject, it was a common thing for one or both of these young men to stray
from the family pew on Sunday evenings to the services of other
communions, thereafter to walk home in the dusk under the maples with some
attractive young person, and be sedately invited to finish the evening on
her father’s verandah. Neither of them was guiltless of silk ties knitted
or handkerchiefs initialled by certain fingers; without repeating scandal,
one might say by various fingers. For while the ultimate import of these
matters was not denied in Elgin, there was a general feeling against
giving too much meaning to them, probably originating in a reluctance
among heads of families to add to their responsibilities. These early
spring indications were belittled and laughed at; so much so that the
young people them selves hardly took them seriously, but regarded them as
a form of amusement almost conventional. Nothing would have surprised or
embarrassed them more than to learn that their predilections had an
imperative corollary, that anything should, of necessity, “come of it.”
Something, of course, occasionally did come of it; and, usually after
years of “attention,” a young man of Elgin found himself mated to a young
woman, but never under circumstances that could be called precipitate or
rash. The cautious blood and far sight of the early settlers, who had much
to reckon with, were still preponderant social characteristics of the town
they cleared the site for. Meanwhile, however, flowers were gathered, and
all sorts of evanescent idylls came and went in the relations of young men
and maidens. Alec and Oliver Murchison were already in the full tide of
them.</p>
<p>From this point of view they did not know what to make of Lorne. It was
not as if their brother were in any way ill calculated to attract that
interest which gave to youthful existence in Elgin almost the only flavour
that it had. Looks are looks, and Lorne had plenty of them; taller by an
inch than Alec, broader by two than Oliver, with a fine square head and
blue eyes in it, and features which conveyed purpose and humour, lighted
by a certain simplicity of soul that pleased even when it was not
understood. “Open,” people said he was, and “frank”—so he was, frank
and open, with horizons and intentions; you could see them in his face.
Perhaps it was more conscious of them than he was. Ambition, definitely
shining goals, adorn the perspectives of young men in new countries less
often than is commonly supposed. Lorne meant to be a good lawyer, squarely
proposed to himself that the country should hold no better; and as to more
selective usefulness, he hoped to do a little stumping for the right side
when Frank Jennings ran for the Ontario House in the fall. It wouldn’t be
his first electioneering: from the day he became chairman of the Young
Liberals the party had an eye on him, and when occasion arose, winter or
summer, by bobsleigh or buggy, weatherbeaten local bosses would convey him
to country schoolhouses for miles about to keep a district sound on
railway policy, or education, or tariff reform. He came home smiling with
the triumphs of these occasions, and offered them, with the slow,
good-humoured, capable drawl that inspired such confidence in him, to his
family at breakfast, who said “Great!” or “Good for you, Lorne!” John
Murchison oftenest said nothing, but would glance significantly at his
wife, frowning and pursing his lips when she, who had most spirit of them
all, would exclaim, “You’ll be Premier yet, Lorne!” It was no part of the
Murchison policy to draw against future balances: they might believe
everything, they would express nothing; and I doubt whether Lorne himself
had any map of the country he meant to travel over in that vague future,
already defining in local approbation, and law business coming freely in
with a special eye on the junior partner. But the tract was there,
subconscious, plain in the wider glance, the alerter manner; plain even in
the grasp and stride which marked him in a crowd; plain, too, in the
preoccupation with other issues, were it only turning over a leader in the
morning’s Dominion, that carried him along indifferent to the allurements
I have described. The family had a bond of union in their respect for
Lorne, and this absence of nugatory inclinations in him was among its
elements. Even Stella who, being just fourteen, was the natural mouthpiece
of family sentiment, would declare that Lorne had something better to do
than go hanging about after girls, and for her part she thought all the
more of him for it.</p>
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