They did not want to give their boy into the charge
of a flashy man of the world with a substratum of learning. Mr. Last
was, it was evident, a quiet and unworldly scholar, more at home
among books than among men; the very tutor Arabella and himself had
desired for their little son. Mr. Marsh was profoundly grateful to
Miss Pilliner for the great service she had rendered to Arabella, to
himself, and to Henry.
And, indeed, as Mr. Meredith Mandeville would have said, Last
looked the part. No doubt, the spectacles helped to create the
remote, retired, Dominie Sampson impression.
In a week's time it was settled, he was to begin his duties. Mr.
Marsh wrote a handsome cheque, "to defray any little matters of
outfit, travelling expenses, and so forth; nothing to do with your
salary." He was to take train to a certain large town in the west,
and there he would be met and driven to the house, where Mrs. Marsh
and his pupil were already established—"beautiful country, Mr.
Last; I am sure you will appreciate it."
There was a famous farewell gathering of the old friends. Zouch
and Medwin, Garraway and Noel came from near and far. There was
grilled sole before the mighty steak, and a roast fowl after it. They
had decided that as it was the last time, perhaps, they would not go
to the play, but sit and talk about the mahogany. Zouch, who was
understood to be the ruler of the feast, had conferred with the head
waiter, and when the cloth was removed, a rare and curious port was
solemnly set before them. They talked of the old days when they were
up at Wells together, pretended—though they knew
better—that the undergraduate who had cut his own father in
Piccadilly was a friend of theirs, retold jokes that must have been
older than the wine, related tales of Moll and Meg, and the famous
history of Melcombe, who screwed up the Dean in his own rooms. And
then there was the affair of the Poses Plastiques. Certain lewd
fellows, as one of the Dons of Wells College expressed it, had
procured scandalous figures from the wax-work booth at the fair, and
had disposed them by night about the fountain in the college garden
in such a manner that their scandal was shamefully increased. The
perpetrators of this infamy had never been discovered: the five
friends looked knowingly at each other, pursed their lips, and passed
the port.
The old wine and the old stories blended into a mood of gentle
meditation; and then, at the right moment, Noel carried them off to
Blacks' and new company. Last sought out old Mandeville and related,
with warm gratitude, the happy issue of his intervention.
The chimes sounded, and they all went their several ways.
II
Though Joseph Last was by no means a miracle of observation and
deduction, he was not altogether the simpleton among his books that
Mr. Marsh had judged him. It was not so very long before a certain
uneasiness beset him in his new employment.
At first everything had seemed very well. Mr. Marsh had been right
in thinking that he would be charmed by the scene in which the White
House was set. It stood, terraced on a hillside, high above a grey
and silver river winding in esses through a lonely, lovely valley.
Above it, to the east, was a vast and shadowy and ancient wood,
climbing to the high ridge of the hill, and descending by height and
by depth of green to the level meadows and to the sea. And, standing
on the highest point of the wood above the White House, Last looked
westward between the boughs and saw the lands across the river, and
saw the country rise and fall in billow upon billow to the huge dim
wall of the mountain, blue in the distance, and white farms shining
in the sun on its vast side. Here was a man in a new world. There had
been no such country as this about Dunham in the Midlands, or in the
surroundings of Blackheath or Oxford; and he had visited nothing like
it on his reading parties. He stood amazed, enchanted under the green
shade, beholding a great wonder. Close beside him the well bubbled
from the grey rocks, rising out of the heart of the hill.
And in the White House, the conditions of life were altogether
pleasant. He had been struck by the dark beauty of Mrs. Marsh, who
was clearly, as Miss Pilliner had told him, a great many years
younger than her husband.
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