Charlotte M. Yonge

Scenes and Characters, or, Eighteen Months at Beechcroft


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       Charlotte M. Yonge

      Scenes and Characters, or, Eighteen Months at Beechcroft

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066169855

       PREFACE

       PREFACE (1886)

       CHAPTER I THE ELDER SISTER

       CHAPTER II THE NEW COURT

       CHAPTER III THE NEW PRINCIPLE

       CHAPTER IV HONEST PHYL

       CHAPTER V VILLAGE GOSSIP

       CHAPTER VI THE NEW FRIEND

       CHAPTER VII SIR MAURICE

       CHAPTER VIII THE BROTHERS

       CHAPTER IX THE WASP

       CHAPTER X COUSIN ROTHERWOOD

       CHAPTER XI DANCING

       CHAPTER XII THE FEVER

       CHAPTER XIII A CURIOSITY MAP

       CHAPTER XIV CHRISTMAS

       CHAPTER XV MINOR MISFORTUNES

       CHAPTER XVI VANITY AND VEXATION

       CHAPTER XVII LITTLE AGNES

       CHAPTER XVIII DOUBLE, DOUBLE TOIL AND TROUBLE

       CHAPTER XIX THE RECTOR’S ILLNESS

       CHAPTER XX THE LITTLE NEPHEW

       CHAPTER XXI CHARITY BEGINS AT HOME

       CHAPTER XXII THE BARONIAL COURT

       CHAPTER XXIII JOYS AND SORROWS

       CHAPTER XXIV LOVE’S LABOUR LOST

       CHAPTER XXV THE THIRTIETH OF JULY

       CHAPTER XXVI THE CRISIS

       CHAPTER XXVII CONCLUSION

       Table of Contents

      Of those who are invited to pay a visit to Beechcroft, there are some who, honestly acknowledging that amusement is their object, will be content to feel with Lilias, conjecture with Jane, and get into scrapes with Phyllis, without troubling themselves to extract any moral from their proceedings; and to these the Mohun family would only apologise for having led a very humdrum life during the eighteen months spent in their company.

      There may, however, be more unreasonable visitors, who, professing only to come as parents and guardians, expect entertainment for themselves, as well as instruction for those who had rather it was out of sight—look for antiques in carved cherry-stones—and require plot, incident, and catastrophe in a chronicle of small beer.

      To these the Mohuns beg respectfully to observe, that they hope their examples may not be altogether devoid of indirect instruction; and lest it should be supposed that they lived without object, aim, or principle, they would observe that the maxim which has influenced the delineation of the different Scenes and Characters is, that feeling, unguided and unrestrained, soon becomes mere selfishness; while the simple endeavour to fulfil each immediate claim of duty may lead to the highest acts of self-devotion.

      New Court, Beechcroft,

       18th January.

       Table of Contents

      Perhaps this book is an instance to be adduced in support of the advice I have often given to young authors—not to print before they themselves are old enough to do justice to their freshest ideas.

      Not that I can lay claim to its being a production of tender and interesting youth. It was my second actual publication, and I believe I was of age before it appeared—but I see now the failures that more experience might have enabled me to avoid; and I would not again have given it to the world if the same characters recurring in another story had not excited a certain desire to see their first start.

      In fact they have been more or less my life-long companions. An almost solitary child, with periodical visits to the Elysium of a large family, it was natural to dream of other children and their ways and sports till they became almost realities. They took shape when my French master set me to write letters for him. The letters gradually became conversation and narrative, and the adventures of the family sweetened the toils of French composition. In the exigencies of village school building in those days gone by, before in every place

      “It there behoved him to set up the standard of her Grace,”

      the tale was actually printed for private sale, as a link between translations of short stories.

      This process only stifled the family in my imagination for a time. They awoke once more with new names, but substantially the same, and were my companions in many a solitary walk, the results of which were scribbled down in leisure moments to be poured into my mother’s ever patient