and there was a garden consisting of a variety of flower-beds
and flowering shrubs; broad concrete paths winding
throughout, and a beautiful silver stream meandering
hither and thither, and filling several small ponds
and fountains. That the grounds immediately appertaining
to the house were not intended as usual for the purposes
of a farm or kitchen-garden was evident. The reason
became equally apparent when, looking towards the
north, where no wall bounded them, I saw—over
a gate in the middle of a dense hedge of flowering
shrubs, which, with a ditch beyond it, formed the
limit of the park in that direction—an
extensive farm divided by the usual ditches into some
twenty-five or thirty distinct fields, and more than
a square mile in extent. This, as Eunane’s
native inquisitiveness and quickness had already learnt,
formed part of the estate attached to the mansion and
bestowed upon me by the Campta. It was admirably
cultivated, containing orchards, fields rich with
various thriving crops, and pastures grazed by the
Unicorn and other of the domestic birds and beasts
kept to supply Martial tables with milk, eggs, and
meat; producing nearly every commodity to which the
climate was suited, and, as a very short observation
assured me, capable of yielding a far greater income
than would suffice to sustain in luxury and splendour
a household larger than that enforced upon me.
We walked in this direction, my companion talking
fluently enough when once I had set her at ease, and
seemingly free from the shyness and timidity which
Eveena had at first displayed. She paused when
we reached a bridge that spanned the ditch dividing
the grounds from the farm, aware that, save on special
invitation, she might not, even in my company, go
beyond the former. I led her on, however, till
soon after we had crossed the ditch I saw a man approaching
us. On this, I desired Eunane to remain where
she was, seating her at the foot of a fruit tree in
one of the orchard plots, and proceeded to meet the
stranger. After exchanging the usual salute,
he came immediately to the point.
“I thought,” he said, “that you
would not care yourself to undertake the cultivation
of so extensive an estate. Indeed, the mere superintendence
would occupy the whole of one man’s attention,
and its proper cultivation would be the work of six
or eight. I have had some little experience in
agriculture, and determined to ask for this charge.”
“And who has recommended you?” I said.
“Or have you any sort of introduction or credentials
to me?”
He made a sign which I immediately recognised.
Caution, however, was imposed by the law to which
that sign appealed.
“You can read,” I said, “by starlight?”
“Better than by any other,” he rejoined
with a smile.
One or two more tokens interchanged left me no doubt
that the claim was genuine, and, of course, irresistible.
“Enough,” I replied. “You may
take entire charge on the usual terms, which, doubtless,
you know better than I.”