for the masses, and she reminded Jane of it as a curious
fact. Jane acquiesced, having always considered
it a curious fact that her aunt should combine the
relish of a country life with the intensest social
ambition—a passion so sensitive as to make
the name her husband had inflicted on her a pain and
a burden. The name of Mattock gave her horrors.
She spoke of it openly to prove that Jane must marry
a title and John become a peer. Never was there
such a name to smell of the soil. She declared
her incapacity to die happy until the two had buried
Mattock. Her own one fatal step condemned her,
owing to the opinion she held upon the sacredness
of marriage, as Lackstraw on her tombstone, and to
Lackstraw above the earthly martyr would go bearing
the designation which marked her to be claimed by
him. But for John and Jane the index of Providence
pointed a brighter passage through life. They
had only to conquer the weakness native to them—the
dreadful tendency downward. They had, in the
spiritual sense, frail hearts. The girl had been
secretive about the early activity of hers, though
her aunt knew of two or three adventures wanting in
nothing save boldness to have put an end to her independence
and her prospects:—hence this Laundry business!
a clear sign of some internal disappointment.
The boy, however, had betrayed himself in his mother’s
days, when it required all her influence and his father’s
authority, with proof positive of the woman’s
unworthiness, to rescue him from immediate disaster.
Mrs. Lackstraw’s confidences on the theme of
the family she watched over were extended to Patrick
during their strolls among the ducks and fowls and
pheasants at her farm. She dealt them out in exclamations,
as much as telling him that now they knew him they
trusted him, notwithstanding the unaccountable part
he played as honorary secretary to that Laundry.
The confidences, he was aware, were common property
of the visitors one after another, but he had the
knowledge of his being trusted as not every Irishman
would have been. A service of six months to the
secretaryship established his reputation as the strange
bird of a queer species: not much less quiet,
honest, methodical, than an Englishman, and still
impulsive, Irish still; a very strange bird.
The disposition of the English to love the children
of Erin, when not fretted by them, was shown in the
treatment Patrick received from the Mattock family.
It is a love resembling the affection of the stage-box
for a set of favourite performers, and Patrick, a Celt
who had schooled his wits to observe and meditate,
understood his position with them as one of the gallant
and amusing race, as well as the reason why he had
won their private esteem. They are not willingly
suspicious: it agitates their minds to be so;
and they are most easily lulled by the flattery of
seeing their special virtues grafted on an alien stock:
for in this admiration of virtues that are so necessary