Charles Kingsley

Two Years Ago, Volume II


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by her magnificent beauty and her magnificent voice, as up rose, leaping into the clear summer air, and rolling away over the still blue sea, that glorious melody which has now become the national anthem to the nobler half of the New World. Honour to woman, and honour to old England, that from Felicia Hemans came the song which will last, perhaps, when modern Europe shall have shared the fate of ancient Rome and Greece!

      Valencia's singing was the reflex of her own character; and therefore, perhaps, all the more fitted to the song, the place, and the audience. It was no modest cooing voice, tender, suggestive, trembling with suppressed emotion, such as, even though narrow in compass, and dull in quality, will touch the deepest fibres of the heart, and, as delicate scents will sometimes do, wake up long-forgotten dreams, which seem memories of some antenatal life.

      It was clear, rich, massive, of extraordinary compass, and yet full of all the graceful ease, the audacious frolic, of perfect physical health, and strength, and beauty; had there been a trace of effort in it, it might have been accused of "bravura:" but there was no need of effort where nature had bestowed already an all but perfect organ, and all that was left for science was to teach not power, but control. Above all, it was a voice which you trusted; after the first three notes you felt that that perfect ear, that perfect throat, could never, even by the thousandth part of a note, fall short of melody; and you gave your soul up to it, and cast yourself upon it, to bear you up and away, like a fairy steed, whither it would, down into the abysses of sadness, and up to the highest heaven of joy; as did those wild and rough, and yet tenderhearted and imaginative men that day, while every face spoke new delight, and hung upon those glorious notes,—

      "As one who drinks from a charmed cup

      Of sparkling, and foaming, and murmuring wine"—

      and not one of them, had he had the gift of words, but might have said with the poet:—

      "I have no life, Constantia, now but thee,

      While, like the world-surrounding air, thy song

      Flows on, and fills all things with melody.

      Now is thy voice tempest swift and strong,

      On which, like one in a trance upborne,

      Secure o'er rocks and waves I sweep,

      Rejoicing like a cloud of morn.

      Now 'tis the breath of summer night,

      Which, when the starry waters sleep

      Round western isles, with incense-blossoms bright,

      Lingering, suspends my soul in its voluptuous flight."

      At last it ceased: and all men drew their breaths once more; while a low murmur of admiration ran through the crowd, too well-bred to applaud openly, as they longed to do.

      "Did you ever hear the like of that, Gentleman Jan?"

      "Or see? I used to say no one could hold a candle to our Grace but she— she looked like a born queen all the time!"

      "Well, she belongs to us, too, so we've a right to be proud of her. Why, here's our Grace all the while!"

      True enough; Grace had been standing among the crowd all the while, rapt, like them, her eyes fixed on Valencia, and full, too, of tears. They had been called up first by the melody itself, and then, by a chain of thought peculiar to Grace, by the faces round her.

      "Ah! if Grace had been here!" cried one, "we'd have had her dra'ed off in the midst of the children."

      "Ah! that would ha' been as nat'ral as life!"

      "Silence, you!" says Gentleman Jan, who generally feels a mission to teach the rest of the quay good manners, "'Tis the gentleman's pleasure to settle who he'll dra' off, and not wer'n."

      To which abnormal possessive pronoun, Claude rejoined,—

      "Not a bit! whatever you like. I could not have a better figure for the centre. I'll begin again."

      "Oh, do come and sit among the children, Grace!" says Valencia.

      "No, thank your ladyship."

      Valencia began urging her; and many a voice round, old as well as young, backed the entreaty.

      "Excuse me, my lady," and she slipped into the crowd; but as she went she spoke low, but clear enough to be heard by all: "No: it will be time enough to flatter me, and ask for my picture, when you do what I tell you—what God tells you!"

      "What's that, then, Grace dear?"

      "You know! I've asked you to save your own lives from cholera, and you have not the common sense to do it. Let me go home and pray for you!"

      There was an awkward silence among the men, till some fellow said,—

      "She'm gone mad after that doctor, I think, with his muck-hunting notions."

      And Grace went home, to await the hour of afternoon school.

      "What a face!" said Mellot.

      "Is it not? Come and see her in her school, when the children go in at two o'clock. Ah! there are Scoutbush and St. Père."

      "We are going to the school, my lord. Don't you think that, as patron of things in general here, it would look well if you walked in, and signified your full approbation of what you know nothing about?"

      "So much so, that I was just on my way there with Campbell. But I must just speak to that lime-burning fellow. He wants a new lease of the kiln, and I suppose he must have it. At least, here he comes, running at me open-mouthed, and as dry as his own waistband. It makes one thirsty to look at him. I'll catch you up in five minutes!"

      So the three went off to the school.

* * * * *

      Grace was telling, in her own sweet way, that charming story of the Three Trouts, which, by the by, has been lately pirated (as many things are) by a religious author, whose book differs sufficiently from the liberal and wholesome morality of the true author of the tale.

      "What a beautiful story, Grace!" said Valencia. "You will surpass Hans Anderssen some day."

      Grace blushed, and was silent a moment.

      "It is not my own, my lady."

      "Not your own? I should have thought that no one but you and Anderssen could have made such an ending to it."

      Grace gave her one of those beseeching, half-reproachful looks, with which she always answered praise; and then,—"Would you like to hear the children repeat a hymn, my lady?"

      "No. I want to know where that story came from."

      Grace blushed, and stammered.

      "I know where," said Campbell. "You need not be ashamed of having read the book, Miss Harvey. I doubt not that you took all the good from it, and none of the harm, if harm there be."

      Grace looked at him; at once surprised and relieved.

      "It was a foolish romance-book, sir, as you seem to know. It was the only one which I ever read, except Hans Anderssen's,—which are not romances, after all. But the beginning was so full of God's truth, sir, —romance though it was,—and gave me such precious new light about educating children, that I was led on unawares. I hope I was not wrong."

      "This schoolroom proves that you were not," said Campbell. "'To the pure, all things are pure.'"

      "What is this mysterious book? I must know!" said Valencia.

      "A very noble romance, which I made Mellot read once, containing the ideal education of an English nobleman, in the middle of the last century."

      "The Fool of Quality?" said Mellot. "Of course! I thought I had heard the story before. What a well-written book it is, too, in spite of all extravagance and prolixity. And how wonderfully ahead of his generation the man who wrote it, in politics as well as in religion!"

      "I must read it," said Valencia. "You must lend it me, Saint Père."

      "Not yet, I think."

      "Why?" whispered she, pouting. "I suppose I am not as pure as Grace Harvey?"

      "She has