<h1> <SPAN name="30"></SPAN>Chapter XXX. </h1>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Ant</i>. He misses not much.</p>
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Seb</i>. No; he doth but mistake the truth totally.</p>
</blockquote>
<blockquote>
<p>Tempest.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>It was the very next morning that several ladies and gentlemen were
gathered on the piazza of the hotel at Montepoole, to brace minds or
appetites with the sweet mountain air while waiting for breakfast. As they
stood there a young countryman came by bearing on his hip a large basket
of fruit and vegetables.</p>
<p>"O look at those lovely strawberries!" exclaimed Constance Evelyn running
down the steps.--"Stop if you please--where are you going with these?"</p>
<p>"Marm!" responded the somewhat startled carrier.</p>
<p>"What are you going to do with them?"</p>
<p>"I ain't going to do nothin' with 'em."</p>
<p>"Whose are they? Are they for sale?"</p>
<p>"Well, 'twon't deu no harm, as I know," said the young man making a virtue
of necessity, for the fingers of Constance were already hovering over the
dainty little leaf-strewn baskets and her eyes complacently searching for
the most promising;--"I ha'n't got nothin' to deu with 'em."</p>
<p>"Constance!" said Mrs. Evelyn from the piazza,--"don't take that! I dare
say they are for Mr. Sweet."</p>
<p>"Well, mamma!--" said Constance with great equanimity,--"Mr. Sweet gets
them for me, and I only save him the trouble of spoiling them. My taste
leads me to prefer the simplicity of primitive arrangements this morning."</p>
<p>"Young man!" called out the landlady's reproving voice, "won't you never
recollect to bring that basket round the back way?"</p>
<p>"'Tain't no handier than this way," said Philetus, with so much
belligerent demonstration that the landlady thought best in presence of
her guests to give over the question.</p>
<p>"Where do you get them?" said Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"How?--" said Philetus.</p>
<p>"Where do they come from? Are they fresh picked?"</p>
<p>"Just afore I started."</p>
<p>"Started from where?" said a gentleman standing by Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"From Mr. Rossitur's down to Queechy."</p>
<p>"Mr. Rossitur's!" said Mrs. Evelyn;--"does he send them here?"</p>
<p>"He doos not," said Philetus;--"he doosn't keep to hum for a long spell."</p>
<p>"Who does send them then?" said Constance.</p>
<p>"Who doos? It's Miss Fliddy Ringgan."</p>
<p>"Mamma!" exclaimed Constance looking up.</p>
<p>"What does she have to do with it?" said Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"There don't nobody else have nothin' to deu with it--I guess she's pretty
much the hull," said her coadjutor. "Her and me was a picking 'em afore
sunrise."</p>
<p>"All that basketful!"</p>
<p>"'Tain't all strawberries--there's garden sass up to the top."</p>
<p>"And does she send that too?"</p>
<p>"She sends that teu," said Philetus succinctly.</p>
<p>"But hasn't she any help in taking care of the garden?" said Constance.</p>
<p>"Yes marm--I calculate to help considerable in the back garden--she won't
let no one into the front where she grows her posies."</p>
<p>"But where is Mr. Hugh?"</p>
<p>"He's to hum."</p>
<p>"But has he nothing to do with all this? does he leave it all to his
cousin?"</p>
<p>"He's to the mill."</p>
<p>"And Miss Ringgan manages farm and garden and all?" said Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"She doos," said Philetus.</p>
<p>And receiving a gratuity which he accepted without demonstration of any
kind whatever, the basket-bearer at length released moved off.</p>
<p>"Poor Fleda!" said Miss Evelyn as he disappeared with his load.</p>
<p>"She's a very clever girl," said Mrs. Evelyn dismissing the subject.</p>
<p>"She's too lovely for anything!" said Constance. "Mr. Carleton,--if you
will just imagine we are in China, and introduct a pair of familiar
chop-sticks into this basket, I shall be repaid for the loss of a
strawberry by the expression of ecstasy which will immediately spread
itself over your features. I intend to patronize the natural mode of
eating in future. I find the ends of my fingers decidedly odoriferous."</p>
<p>He smiled a little as he complied with the young lady's invitation, but
the expression of ecstasy did not come.</p>
<p>"Are Mr. Rossitur's circumstances so much reduced?" he said, drawing
nearer to Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"Do you know them!" exclaimed both the daughters at once.</p>
<p>"I knew Mrs. Rossitur very well some years ago, when she was in Paris."</p>
<p>"They are all broken to pieces," said Mrs. Evelyn, as Mr. Carleton's eye
went back to her for his answer;--"Mr. Rossitur failed and lost
everything--bankrupt--a year or two after they came home."</p>
<p>"And what has he been doing since?'</p>
<p>"I don't know!--trying to farm it here; but I am afraid he has not
succeeded well--I am afraid not. They don't look like it. Mrs. Rossitur
will not see anybody, and I don't believe they have done any more than
struggle for a living since they came here."</p>
<p>"Where is Mr. Rossitur now?"</p>
<p>"He is at the West somewhere--Fleda tells me he is engaged in some
agencies there; but I doubt," said Mrs. Evelyn shaking her head
compassionately,--"there is more in the name of it than anything else. He
has gone down hill sadly since his misfortunes. I am very sorry for them."</p>
<p>"And his niece takes care of his farm in the meantime?"</p>
<p>"Do you know her?" asked both the Miss Evelyns again.</p>
<p>"I can hardly say that," he replied. "I had such a pleasure formerly. Do I
understand that <i>she</i> is the person to fill Mr. Rossitur's place when
he is away?"</p>
<p>"So she says."</p>
<p>"And so she acts," said Constance. "I wish you had heard her yesterday. It
was beyond everything. We were conversing very amicably, regarding each
other through a friendly vista formed by the sugar-bowl and tea-pot, when
a horrid man, that looked as if he had slept all his life in a hay-cock
and only waked up to turn it over, stuck his head in and immediately
introduced a clover-field; and Fleda and he went to tumbling about the
cocks till I do assure you I was deluded into a momentary belief that
hay-making was the principal end of human nature, and looked upon myself
as a burden to society; and after I had recovered my locality and ventured
upon a sentence of gentle commiseration for her sufferings, Fleda went off
into a eulogium upon the intelligence of hay-makers in general and the
strength of mind barbarians are universally known to possess."</p>
<p>The manner still more than the matter of this speech was beyond the
withstanding of any good-natured muscles, though the gentleman's smile was
a grave one and quickly lost in gravity. Mrs. Evelyn laughed and reproved
in a breath; but the laugh was admiring and the reproof was stimulative.
The bright eye of Constance danced in return with the mischievous delight
of a horse that has slipped his bridle and knows you can't catch him.</p>
<p>"And this has been her life ever since Mr. Rossitur lost his property?"</p>
<p>"Entirely,--sacrificed!--" said Mrs. Evelyn, with a compassionately
resigned air;--"education, advantages and everything given up; and set
down here where she has seen nobody from year's end to year's end but the
country people about--very good people--but not the kind of people she
ought to have been brought up among."</p>
<p>"Oh mamma!" said the eldest Miss Evelyn in a deprecatory tone,--"you
shouldn't talk so--it isn't right--I am sure she is very nice--nicer now
than anybody else I know; and clever too."</p>
<p>"Nice!" said Edith. "I wish <i>I</i> had such a sister!"</p>
<p>"She is a good girl--a very good girl," said Mrs. Evelyn, in a tone which
would have deterred any one from wishing to make her acquaintance.</p>
<p>"And happy, mamma--Fleda don't look miserable--she seems perfectly happy
and contented!"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Evelyn,--"she has got accustomed to this state of
things--it's her life--she makes delicious bread and puddings for her
aunt, and raises vegetables for market, and oversees her uncle's farmers,
and it isn't a hardship to her; she finds her happiness in it. She is a
very good girl! but she might have been made something much better than a
farmer's wife."</p>
<p>"You may set your mind at rest on that subject, mamma," said Constance,
still using her chop-sticks with great complacency;--"it's my opinion that
the farmer is not in existence who is blessed with such a conjugal
futurity. I think Fleda's strong pastoral tastes are likely to develope
themselves in a new direction."</p>
<p>Mrs. Evelyn looked with a partial smile at the pretty features which the
business of eating the strawberries displayed in sundry novel and
picturesque points of view; and asked what she meant?</p>
<p>"I don't know,--" said Constance, intent upon her basket,--"I feel a
friend's distress for Mr. Thorn--it's all your doing, mamma,--you won't be
able to look him in the face when we have Fleda next fall--I am sure I
shall not want to look at his! He'll be too savage for anything."</p>
<p>"Mr. Thorn!" said Mr. Carleton.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Evelyn in an indulgent tone,--"he was very attentive to
her last winter when she was with us, but she went away before anything
was decided. I don't think he has forgotten her."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't think anybody could forget her," said Edith.</p>
<p>"I am confident he would be here at this moment," said Constance, "if he
wasn't in London."</p>
<p>"But what is 'all mamma's doing,' Constance?" inquired her sister.</p>
<p>"The destruction of the peace of the whole family of Thorns--shouldn't
sleep sound in my bed if I were she with such a reflection. I look forward
to heart-rending scenes,--with a very disturbed state of mind."</p>
<p>"But what have I done, my child?" said Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"Didn't you introduce your favourite Mr. Olmney to Miss Ringgan last
summer? I don't know!--her native delicacy shrunk from making any
disclosures, and of course the tongue of friendship is silent,--but they
were out ages yesterday while I was waiting for her, and their parting at
the gate was--I feel myself unequal to the task of describing it!" said
Constance ecstatically;--"and she was in the most elevated tone of mind
during our whole interview afterwards, and took all my brilliant remarks
with as much coolness as if they had been drops of rain--more, I presume,
considering that it was hay-time."</p>
<p>"Did you see him?" said Mrs. Evelyn.</p>
<p>"Only at that impracticable distance, mamma; but I introduced his name
afterwards in my usual happy manner and I found that Miss Ringgan's cheeks
were by no means indifferent to it. I didn't dare go any further."</p>
<p>"I am very glad of it! I hope it is so!" said Mrs. Evelyn energetically.
"It would be a most excellent match. He is a charming young man and would
make her very happy."</p>
<p>"You are exciting gloomy feelings in Mr. Carleton's mind, mamma, by your
felicitous suggestions. Mr. Carleton, did your ears receive a faint
announcement of ham and eggs which went quite through and through mine
just now?"</p>
<p>He bowed and handed the young lady in; but Constance declared that though
he sat beside her and took care of her at breakfast he had on one of his
intangible fits which drove her to the last extreme of impatience, and
captivation.</p>
<p>The sun was not much more than two hours high the next morning when a
rider was slowly approaching Mr. Rossitur's house from the bridge, walking
his horse like a man who wished to look well at all he was passing. He
paused behind a clump of locusts and rose-acacias in the corner of the
courtyard as a figure bonneted and gloved came out of the house and began
to be busy among the rose-bushes. Another figure presently appeared at the
hall-door and called out,</p>
<p>"Fleda!--"</p>
<p>"Well, Barby--"</p>
<p>This second voice was hardly raised, but it came from so much nearer that
the words could be distinctly heard.</p>
<p>"Mr. Skillcorn wants to know if you're going to fix the flowers for him to
carry?"</p>
<p>"They're not ready, and it won't do for him to vait--Mr. Sweet must send
for them if he wants them. Philetus must make haste back, for you know Mr.
Douglass wants him to help in the barn meadow. Lucas won't be here and now
the weather is so fine I want to make haste with the hay."</p>
<p>"Well, will you have the samp for breakfast?"</p>
<p>"No--we'll keep that for dinner. I'll come in and poach some eggs,
Barby,--if you'll make me some thin pieces of toast--and call me when it's
time. Thin, Barby."</p>
<p>The gentleman turned his horse and galloped back to Montepoole.</p>
<p>Some disappointment was created among a portion of Mr. Sweet's guests that
afternoon by the intelligence that Mr. Carleton purposed setting off the
next morning to join his English friends at Saratoga on their way to the
falls and Canada. Which purpose was duly carried into effect.</p>
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