CHAPTER 7
--Pray, good shepherd, what Fair swain is this that dances with your daughter?
He sings several times faster than you"ll tell money; he utters them as he had eaten ballads, and all men"s ears grow to his tunes.
--WINTER"S TALE
It was a glorious day in June, the sky of pure deep dazzling blue, the sunshine glowing with brightness, but with cheerful freshness in the air that took away all sultriness, the sun tending westward in his long day"s career, and casting welcome shadows from the tall firs and horse-chestnuts that shaded the lawn. A long rank of haymakers--men and women--proceeded with their rakes, the white shirt-sleeves, straw bonnets, and ruddy faces, radiant in the bath of sunshine, while in the shady end of the field were idler haymakers among the fragrant piles, Charles half lying on the gra.s.s, with his back against a tall hayc.o.c.k; Mrs. Edmonstone sitting on another, book in hand; Laura sketching the busy scene, the sun glancing through the chequered shade on her glossy curls; Philip stretched out at full length, hat and neck-tie off, luxuriating in the cool repose after a dusty walk from Broadstone; and a little way off, Amabel and Charlotte pretending to make hay, but really building nests with it, throwing it at each other, and playing as heartily as the heat would allow.
They talked and laughed, the rest were too hot, too busy, or too sleepy for conversation, even Philip being tired into enjoying the "dolce far niente"; and they basked in the fresh breezy heat and perfumy hay with only now and then a word, till a cold, black, damp nose was suddenly thrust into Charles"s face, a red tongue began licking him; and at the same moment Charlotte, screaming "There he is!" raced headlong across the swarths of hay, to meet Guy, who had just ridden into the field.
He threw Deloraine"s rein to one of the haymakers, and came bounding to meet her, just in time to pick her up as she put her foot into a hidden hole, and fell prostrate.
In another moment he was in the midst of the whole party, who crowded round and welcomed him as if he had been a boy returning from his first half-year"s schooling; and never did little school-boy look more holiday-like than he, with all the sunshine of that June day reflected, as it were, in his glittering eyes and glowing face, while Bustle escaping from Charles"s caressing arm, danced round, wagging his tail in ecstasy, and claiming his share of the welcome. Then Guy was on the ground by Charles, rejoicing to find him out there, and then, some dropping into their former nests on the hay, some standing round, they talked fast and eagerly in a confusion of sound that did not subside for the first ten minutes so as to allow anything to be clearly heard. The first distinct sentence was Charlotte"s "Bustle, darling old fellow, you are handsomer than ever!"
"What a delicious day!" next exclaimed Guy, following Philip"s example, by throwing off hat and neck-tie.
"A spontaneous tribute to the beauty of the day," said Charles.
"Really it is so ultra-splendid as to deserve notice!" said Philip, throwing himself completely back, and looking up.
"One cannot help revelling in that deep blue!" said Laura.
"Tomorrow"ll be the happiest time of all the glad new year," hummed Guy.
"Ah you will teach us all now," said Laura, "after your grand singing lessons."
"Do you know what is in store for you, Guy?" said Amy. "Oh! haven"t you heard about Lady Kilcoran"s ball?"
"You are to go, Guy," said Charlotte. "I am glad I am not. I hate dancing."
"And I know as much about it as Bustle," said Guy, catching the dog by his forepaws, and causing him to perform an uncouth dance.
"Never mind, they will soon teach you," said Mrs. Edmonstone.
"Must I really go?"
"He begins to think it serious," said Charles.
"Is Philip going?" exclaimed Guy, looking as if he was taken by surprise.
"He is going to say something about dancing being a healthful recreation for young people," said Charles.
"You"ll be disappointed," said Philip. "It is much too hot to moralize."
"Apollo unbends his bow," exclaimed Charles. "The captain yields the field."
"Ah! Captain Morville, I ought to have congratulated you," said Guy. "I must come to Broadstone early enough to see you on parade."
"Come to Broadstone! You aren"t still bound to Mr. Lascelles," said Charles.
"If he has time for me," said Guy. "I am too far behind the rest of the world to afford to be idle this vacation."
"That"s right, Guy," exclaimed Philip, sitting up, and looking full of approval. "With so much perseverance, you must get on at last. How did you do in collections?"
"Tolerably, thank you."
"You must be able to enter into the thing now," proceeded Philip. "What are you reading?"
"Thucydides."
"Have you come to Pericles" oration? I must show you some notes that I have on that. Don"t you get into the spirit of it now?"
"Up-hill work still," answered Guy, disentangling some cinders from the silky curls of Bustle"s ear.
"Which do you like best--that or the ball?" asked Charles.
"The hay-field best of all," said Guy, releasing Bustle, and blinding him with a heap of hay.
"Of course!" said Charlotte, "who would not like hay-making better than that stupid ball?"
"Poor Charlotte!" said Mrs. Edmonstone; commiseration which irritated Charlotte into standing up and protesting,
"Mamma, you know I don"t want to go."
"No more do I, Charlotte," said her brother, in a mock consoling tone.
"You and I know what is good for us, and despise sublunary vanities."
"But you will go, Guy," said Laura; "Philip is really going."
"In spite of Lord Kilcoran"s folly in going to such an expense as either taking Allonby or giving the ball," said Charles.
"I don"t think it is my business to bring Lord Kilcoran to a sense of his folly," said Philip. "I made all my protests to Maurice when first he started the notion, but if his father chose to take the matter up, it is no concern of mine."
"You will understand, Guy," said Charles, "that this ball is specially got up by Maurice for Laura"s benefit."
"Believe as little as you please of that speech, Guy," said Laura; "the truth is that Lord Kilcoran is very good-natured, and Eveleen was very much shocked to hear that Amy had never been to any ball, and I to only one, and so it ended in their giving one."
"When is it to be?"
"On Thursday week," said Amy. "I wonder if you will think Eveleen as pretty as we do!"
"She is Laura"s great friend, is not she?"
"I like her very much; I have known her all my life, and she has much more depth than those would think who only know her manner." And Laura looked pleadingly at Philip as she spoke.
"Are there any others of the family at home?" said Guy.
"The two younger girls, Mabel and Helen, and the little boys," said Amy.