Cavendish and Cicely Hyde, her great gossip, and a
young coloured wench, all washing their faces in the
May dew, which lay in a great flood as of diamonds
and pearls over everything. I minded well the
superstition, older than I, that, if a maid washed
her face in the first May dew, it would make her skin
wondrous fair, and I laughed to myself as I peeped
around the shutter to think that Mary Cavendish should
think that she stood in need of such amendment of
nature. Down she knelt, dragging the hem of her
chintz gown, which was as gay with a maze of printed
posies as any garden bed, and she thrust her hollowed
hands into the dew-laden green and brought them over
her face and rubbed till sure there was never anything
like it for sweet, glowing rosiness. And Cicely
Hyde, who must have come full early to Drake Hill
for that purpose, did likewise, and with more need,
as I thought, for she was a brown maid, not so fair
of feature as some, though she had a merry heart,
which gave to her such a zest of life and welcome
of friends as made her a favourite. Up she scooped
the dew and bathed her face, turning ever and anon
to Mary Cavendish with anxious inquiries, ending in
trills of laughter which would not be gainsaid in
May-time and youth-time by aught of so little moment
as a brown skin. “How look I now?”
she would cry out. “How look I now, sweetheart?
Saw you ever a lily as fair as my face?” Then
Mary, with her own face dripping with dew, with that
wonderful wet freshness of bloom upon it, would eye
her with seriousness as to any improvement, and bid
her turn this way and that. Then she would give
it as her opinion that she had best persevere, and
laugh somewhat doubtfully at first, then in a full
peal when Cicely, nothing daunted by such discouragement
in her friend’s eyes, went bravely to work again,
all her slender body shaking with mirth. But
the most curious sight of all, and that which occasioned
the two maids the most merriment, though of a covert
and even tender and pitying sort, was Mary’s
black serving-wench Sukey, a half-grown girl, who
had been bidden to attend her mistress upon this morning
frolic. She was seated at a distance, square
in the wet greenness, and was plunging both hands
into the May dew and scrubbing her face with a fierce
zeal, as if her heart was in that pretty folly, as
no doubt it was. And ever and anon as she rubbed
her cheeks, which shone the blacker and glossier for
it, she would turn the palms of her hands, which be
so curiously pale on a negro’s hands, to see
if perchance some of the darkness had stirred.
And when she saw not, then would she fall to scrubbing
again.
Presently up stood Mary and Cicely, and Cicely flashed
in the sun a little silver mirror which she had brought
and which had lain glittering in the grass a little
removed, and looked at herself, and saw that her brown
cheeks were as ever, with the exception of the flush
caused by rubbing, and tossed it with her undaunted
laugh to Mary. “The more fool be I!”
she cried out, “instead of washing mine own
face in the May dew, better had it been had I locked
thee in the clothes-press, Mary Cavendish, and not
let thee add to thy beauty, while I but gave my cheeks
the look of fever or the small-pox. I trow the
skin be off in spots, and all to no purpose! Look
at thyself, Mary Cavendish, and blush that thou be
so much fairer than one who loves thee!”