An Evening with Dressmakers
Introduction
“An Evening with Dressmakers” The Bradfordian. 2, 1-2 (1860): 12-15, 25-27.
This story distinguishes itself in several ways from the more typical content generally found in the monthly British periodical in which it was published. First, the work is significantly longer than most submissions—lengthy enough to be printed as installments in both the first and second issues of the 1860-61 volume (uncommon for The Bradfordian). Second, the tale’s protagonist is a rather selfish, dislikable character, but one that we are nonetheless inclined to identify with as the narrative unfolds. This interesting contradiction produces a narrative complexity not common in this typically plot-simple, local publication.
The story takes place during a weekend in the life of John Sprento (known to most as Mrs. Sprento’s husband), initially very pleased at the prospect of an entire weekend to himself, free from a burdensome wife and child who leave him to enjoy a few days at the bay with friends. He is struck with boredom, however, on the evening of the final day of his solitary weekend and, on a whim, decides to visit a former acquaintance: a dressmaker named Zabeth Wellbeaten.
Traveling to the dressmaker’s home, the reader becomes aware of the infatuation John has long held for Mrs. Wellbeaten. John recounts—confiding in an audience that he feels surely must understand from similar experience—his string of unrequited romances and love interests before and since the dressmaker.
Arriving at Mrs. Wellbeaten’s home, John is crestfallen to discover in the eyes of the dressmaker “no spark, no dying ember of an old fire”—evidence to him that his infatuation is indeed one-sided. The rest of the tale makes John and reader witness to a series of clients and visitors of Mrs. Wellbeaten, each of whom brings with them some business or drama that the angelic object of John’s affection handles with grace, poise, and wisdom. In John’s eyes the figure of Zabeth Wellbeaten is perfect to the point of deification. The story does not end with John back at home, receiving wife and daughter after their weekend getaway; it ends as John is peacefully serenaded by the Wellbeaten girls to the tune of “A Better Land”—a place John feels certain he’s just found.
Transcription
An Evening with Dressmakers
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Look here! Sea bathing for the Million! On Saturday next, at 3 o'clock p. m., a monster train will start for Morcambe Bay[1] returning on the following Monday. Fares there and back three shillings and sixpence!!
Such was the substance of a small hand bill furtively placed on the counter under the very noses of my wife and daughter, whose business it was and is to attend to the customers.
On the succeeding day when I came home to dinner, my beloved wife was spitting blood and my daughter Polly, could taste nothing, having completely lost her appetite. Well, I considered the frailty of femanine nature; I knew that my spouse for a series of months had been much overworked; harrassed besides, by many business and household cares; a change, I thought would be beneficial in more ways than one, for her health was not only giving way but her temper also needed repair.
That she was spitting blood or at least endeavouring to do so, any one might see, but to hint that the alarming tinge of the saliva, might be caused by suction of the gums would be to betray a suspicion without the shadow of proof, and to show myself mean and callous to a degree far beyond the superlative.
In short, I was quite willing to let my wife go to sea, but very unwilling to take charge of the baby during her absence; and how to rid myself of both, that was the question. Mary, said I, sniffing the air, I sometimes think this house has a bad breath. I'm sure, it has, said Mary. Last summer, long before Mrs. Bean's child died of typhus fever, the Doctor told them to send her to the seaside, hinting that a very short time there would so fortify her constitution as to render her safe for life; well, they neglected, and the poor thing died,—served 'em right.
Bless me, said I, pondering on this righteous visitation, how negligent we are of ourselves and of those nearest to us. Don't you think, Mary, our youngest child is getting ricketty.
Everybody, remarks it, said Mary, in a tone of unfeigned concern.
Indeed, said I, then why did not you name it before?
Because, said my wife abstractedly, there has been no suitable weather.
I like that! and so before a father may know that his child is growing irremediably deformed the weather must be consulted.
I did not say the weather was to be consulted, said my wife, rather angrily, I said there had been no suitable weather for taking an invalid to the country or the seaside.
But the weather, said I, is clearing up, and if you think seabathing would strengthen that dear child take him to Morcambe Bay on Saturday.
Well, John, I will think about it, the expences I dare say will be rather heavy, but looking as I do at that dear child I will go, with your permission.
You have my permission, dearest, a thousand times over, and the only regret I feel is that you will have no suitable company.
Don't think of it, dear, said my Mary rather unguardedly; Mrs. Smith and I arranged yesterday to go together.
I wished my Mary had not confessed quite so much.
While granting this permission, I had experienced such feelings as swell the bosom of an Autocrat, but no sooner did I perceive that I was but giving my assent and seal to measures already discussed and carried, than I felt, like the Bourbon, how pitiable a wretch is your constitutional King.[2]
After a wor of fuss, wife and daughter, baby and luggage, were on their way to the water, and I was left like the last rose of summer, very much the worse for the recent storms and buffetings. How I got over the intervals lying between 3 o'clock on Saturday, and 8 o'clock p.m. on Monday, I cannot even attempt to describe; but I remember, too well, the sense of loneliness that came over me at the above named time. The shop was closed, the children put to bed, the servant asleep in a chair, and a profound silence reigned through the whole house. Such periods have something terrrible about them to Pater familias;[3] the hush so strange and gravelike, oppressed and frightened me; the very mice that ventured to show themselves at their holes wore an amazed and fear-stricken look.
The train was not due till half-past eleven, and I knew from experience that excursion trains were always behind time.
Every moment I expected a ghost to appear, for I had been deep in table rapping for weeks, and the spirits had given promises of higher "manifestations" which I felt were about to be fulfilled. As I sat in the deepening twilight, I must confess that any noise usual in a large family, a brawl between the two boys, or even the unappeasable scream of an infant in the torments of flatulence, would have been preferable to that fearful, that awful deadness. The very air seemed thickening and solidifying around me; already it felt denser than water, while ever and for ever the clock let fall its sledge hammer, at long intervals, on the outraged and shuddering tympanum. In another hour I should probably have been a howling maniac, but luckily my eyes, just then, fell on a concertina[4] lying upon a shelf.
In less than ten minutes all the terrors of isolation were forgotten; Rosseau's Dream[5], and God save the Emperor[6], had already been played and I was luxuriating in a river of sweet sounds, rising and falling, yet ever floating onwards on the long billows of the "Zauberflotte"[7] when a professional, a wretch with a cultivated ear, living in the adjoining yard, sprang over the wall and bursting into the house, knife in hand, threatened to slit the educated bellows, and my own windpipe also, if the horrid braying, as he called it, were not discontinued. With a deep sigh I put down the instrument, feeling for the moment that profound dejection that now and then comes to all men in advance of their era, for it is indeed saddening to be placed, as it were, in a world of infants, and be denied the fellowship of equal minds.
As I replaced the concertina on its shelf, I spied an envelope from which I drew a neat lady-like business card; on one side were the words, Mrs. Wellbeaten, Dress and Bonnet Maker; on the other an invitation to her house, addressed to Mrs. and Mr. Sprento. On the instant I resolved to repair the clay tenement and go thither.
In my youth I had known the lady; we were in fact, neighbours, and in the habit of seeing each other daily. Young as she was, she had penetration enough to perceive that she had made a conquest, for I betrayed my secret every way except in words. How long my passion would have remained tongue-tied by a sense of unworthiness I do not know, but I do know that I never told my love, "But let concealment like a worm ith' bud" feed;[8] here truth insists on a slight alteration of the text, feed on my freckled cheek. That I loved her I am persuaded, for I had begun to hoard up money with a view to its future investment "In my cottage near a wood"[9] where, in her sweet society, I had secretly determined to spend a long and happy life.
But my Zabeth had loftier, if less romantic aims, for as soon as a wool merchant, of twice my weight, offered her his purse and person, I fell like a dewdrop from a water-lily, into the broad river of humanity, where my individuality was as it were annihilated. I do not know that she ever seemed aware of my existence after that wool merchant had shown himself. Amazing as all this was at the time, it was nothing new, for my enemy was one of those magnificent animals that seem born for conquest; a rival in whom the lovers of Tennyson would recognize the "curled and oiled Assyrian Bull."[10] Like most of that class, too, he was a go-a-head fellow, cash, health, reputation, were all wasted in fast living. His career, it is true, had all the noise and brilliancy of a pyrotechnic display, but it had also its brevity and its inglorious finale of smoke and stench. In eight years my Zabeth was a penniless widow with three children; her future a long line of hard labour and stint, with the parish poorhouse for a terminus.
Feeling a desire to appear to the best advantage, I went up stairs to rejuvenate; with this end in view I laid rather a heavy tax on the side locks to hide the baldness at the crown, and, what with one device and another, I coaxed myself into the belief that I was not a bad-looking fellow. Nay, in the vanity of my heart, I must have fancied that Mrs. Wellbeaten would experience a feeling of regret at having rejected me, for as I descended the stairs, I detected myself whistling in the exhortative mood, the Yankee ditty, "Oh Susannah, don't you cry for me."
And now reader, while we journey together to this Dressmaker's, let us talk of old sweethearts and their ways.
Has it ever been your fate to meet one face to face, after ten, fifteen, or as in my case, five and twenty years of total estrangement; if so, what were your feelings, what were hers? But the question in that form is perhaps absurd enough, for characters vary, and with character, thoughts, feelings, actions. The proud, worldly woman, who took you up as a pearl fisher takes up an oyster, and dashed you down when she found you valueless, can meet you anywhere. Should you encounter her in the street, she does not speak, or smile, or frown; she does not seek your eye or shrink from it, but she ignores you; when she gazes on you she gazes on vacancy.
Then there is that waxen beauty, with her small graceful head and doll-like face, the girl that you worshipped when you read novels and attended the theatre, but whom you relinquished when you discovered that human life was more serious than a comedy, and that to waltz well, was not the only end of your creation. Yet this lady meets you with a half-pitying smile, believing to this hour that you are a miserable, repentant, heart-broken man.
Besides these, there is perhaps yet another, whom this world is pleased to call an old maid. What parted you we will not say, perhaps a word hastily spoken and for ever repented of; the whisper of an evil tongue; or the "pride which not a world could bow."[11] Well, you are married, you have a lovely wife, many beautiful children, a prosperous business, the esteem and friendship of good men; yet gladly would you tell this Lone One that all is not lost; that you have a faith in her goodness and purity that nothing can shake; a friendship that in the hour of need would put forth a hand from the ends of the earth to help or soothe; an esteem and a reverance that will endure to the end. You would fain tell her all this, but you cannot, you see her sometimes, but unluckily, you think, she never sees you. Be not deceived, she sees you afar off, she knows too well, your visage, your voice, your tread.
When she turns aside to gaze with an absorbing interest at surgical instruments, or carpenters' tools, I charge you, on your manhood to let her alone. Would you know why she does not speak, I will tell you; the lump is in her throat and she cannot. Yet mysterious ties bind you to her; strange yearnings that you cannot understand, stir you when you do but even fancy you see her.
Far away on the wild, lone, moorland, as you sit in the warm sunshine of the holy Sabbath, she comes unbidden to your side. There, as the stormy tumults of every-day life subside into a calm, your heart turns to her, you know not why, as the needle when at rest points to the mystic pole. Whenever and wherever you rise above the low level of outward life, there she is, looking on you from serene heights, as one that has waited for your coming. The wife that works side by side with you in harness, fighting with you the rude hard battle of life, you can love, but it is only with a finite and an earthly affection. Deeper and deeper still lie within you the seeds of an infinite and eternal love, that may lie dormant here, but will hereafter spring up, and grace with flowers the gardens of paradise.
Twin souls are ye prisoned in the heaving and troubled womb of Time, blindly feeling each other in the dark, but as yet scarce knowing that ye are akin, and little dreaming that the mysterious mother is binding your souls together with sweet bonds that will last through eternity.
She, too, knows not her soul's mate, for lovers have come and departed, and still she sits alone, saying, "He comes not yet."
First came a youth, sweet voiced, smooth tongued, angel-visaged, fair as Belial[12] and as false and hollow. He talked of love, of marriage, but friends came to his rescue; friends who told him his love was poor and plain; and that he was handsome and beauty an article of commerce. The youth looked again at his glass, and into his arithmetic, kissed the weeper and went his way, the God of this world smiling on his votary.
Then came a small soul, fearful and unbelieving, who looked admiringly at his mistress, then sorrowfully at his maiden sister, and saw not in the wide world bread for both. So he, too, departed, and the forsaken one' wept afresh, remembering, in her sorrow, that you went not away like these, but with the arrow in your proud breaking, bleeding heart. Some day she will know that your strong, instinctive, unreasoning love, would have rushed through, or overleapt, like the Nubian lion, the barriers of straw and reeds that scares them away. Some day she will know that they loved her not, or only a little, after the fashion of their sickly, selfish, timid natures.
After these came an old man with a bloated purse, and a loveless withered heart, offering her all the delights of harlotzy without its shame, but she broke away from rejoicing friends, and ran to her room to kneel down and pray. There her poor heart beat loudly, awfully, like an alarm bell at midnight, and the tumult within her was like that of startled multitudes rushing to arms, while a voice that sounded like thine shouted in her ears, "treason, treason." The old man got his brief answer and went, for she remembered the olden time, the days spent in Eden, when at sight of you her eyes were filled with happy tears, when all labours were light and pleasant, all duties delightful, when the rich dowry of your love raised her so far above the reach of fortune, that her life of stint and thankless toil was one perpetual song of joy and thanksgiving!
Well done! poor yearning heart! she has tasted the manna that falls from heaven, and she will not fill herself with swinish husks.
Bless me, reader, what street is this? I have grown hoarse with talking of your old flames, forgetting I am seeking one of my own. Ah, here is Mrs. Wellbeaten's door.
With a daring hand and a bold heart I raised the knocker and knocked.
A gigantic lass, evidently from the rural districts, opened the door and asked me who I was.
The question puzzled me not a little; for years, at church and in the market, I had been so overshadowed by Mrs. Sprento that the query was very seldom put, and the right answer not cut and dried.
Even before the introduction of crinolines, I should hardly have had the self-assertion to announce myself as Mr. Sprento, and after that event my poor claims to notice were, I considered, totally extinguished, and I felt myself more than ever an appendage. But the uncultivated hoyden was little disposed to make allowances for my confusion of mind, and thinking, probably, that I was deaf, she asked the question again with variations and aggravations, that increased my mental disquiet.
Is it a man or a woman, asked a voice, that I knew for Mrs. Wellbeaten.
It's some deaf and dumb person begging, said the ex-milkmaid.
No, said I, reddening with shame, it is not a beggar but Mrs. Sprento's husband.
Is it a man, again asked the mistress, in a tone that would be answered.
No, said the apprentice, it's only Mrs. Sprento's husband.
Oh, indeed! said my Zabeth of old days, Mr. Sprento, is it? Lucy take the muslin dress off the arm-chair; pray come forward, sir, and be seated. I stepped forward into the work-room, at the door of which I encountered Zabeth, who had risen to receive me. She smiled, and once more I clasped that little hand to whose pressure for a quarter of a century I had been a stranger. Once more I looked on that bright fair face, still fair and bright, and wearing that nameless, thoughtful sweetness, that trials, rightly and meekly borne, alone can give. Once more looked into the depths of those earnest eyes, and upwards to that serene and lofty brow; a brow that gave to her person, slight and fragile, the majesty of Juno.[13]
Well, you are anxious, perhaps, to know what I saw there—nothing!
In the clasp of that hand, in that open gracious smile, in the beam of those mild eyes, there was visible the pleasure one feels in meeting an old neighbour and acquaintance; traces of other pleasure, other feeling, there were none.
What! no spark, no dying ember of an old fire? No, I was indeed defunct.
Mrs. Wellbeaten, said I, my wife is gone to the sea-side, and will not return till near midnight; I have endured her absence till I can endure it no longer, and I come to seek in your society a refuge from the miseries of solitude. You are welcome, Mr. Sprento; and if you will not think me too selfish, I will own that I wish you were often compelled to make my house your asylum, for indeed I take little pleasure in the visits of my own sex.
In my youth I did once attempt, insanely enough, to express in measures the dimensions of a measureless love, and describe in numbers, graces of mind and person, that baffled all description, and defied numeration tables to represent their multitude. This effusion I sent to the Editor of a Local Journal, who, counting it a literary curiosity of the age, inserted it in his next impression, and although I am not, I trust a vain man, yet I do maintain that when seen in its printed form and at a certain distance, it bore a striking resemblance to genuine poetry. Need I say that I carefully cut out the lines and sent them to Zabeth, and that Zabeth, amid its rubbishly absurdities, found traces of sense and discernment, and passages worthy of being printed in letters of gold. To this circumstance I partly ascribe the cordial welcome I received, and to it especially the flattering words just recorded, words that would seem to imply that I was very agreeable company.
Indeed, Mrs. Wellbeaten, said I, how is it you like the ladies so little, for my own part I always prefer them to gentlemen; but tastes vary you know.
If you could stay with us an hour or two you would probably discover the cause for yourself, said Zabeth.
I came with the intention of staying three!
Then you shall go forward into our sanctum, you will there be out of the way, and without being seen yourself you will be able to hear everything.
So saying, without rising from her seat, she pushed open a door, and pointed to a chair in a line with her own, but within a neat little sitting-room.
There, Sprento, when the street-door opens you can shut that, and hear my friends talk, and if what you hear should beget a desire to see them, you can peep through that little curtained window in the partition, and gratify your curiosity.
Zabeth had hardly finished speaking when a knock was heard at the door, and a patroness was announced.
The new comer shut the door, and with head half awry and a keen ratty look at Zabeth, commenced as follows,
Now Mrs. Wellbeaten, I shan't stand this, you have cabbaged half a yard of my bonnet silk, and unless you give it up quietly, I will send a policeman with a search warrant.
Send him, said the compliant Mrs. Wellbeaten.
Oh, you wretch, you think you can do as you like but you will find out your mistake, Mrs. Lumby has examined that bonnet and she says the silk must be somewhere.
Mrs. Lumby is correct.
Then I will either have it or die for it.
Die you may and must, but you will get no more silk.
Shan't I though, then I'll tell you what I'll do, my fine madam, I'll blast your character, I'll tell everybody what a thief you are.
Don't, so many will know what a liar you are.
Well I never! and so people must not only be robbed by you but abused, why you little thieving aggravating wretch I'll murder you, and so saying, she snatched up a quarto volume lying on the table, and hurled it with all her force at the head of the dressmaker. A timely obeisance, to the coming missive, saved the head of my friend, but irremediably damaged mine, for it flew forwards and sent the knob of the door, behind which I sat with my eye to the keyhole, against my forehead, with a violence that made me a very marked, if not a very remarkable man.
Well, Sprento, said my hostess, how do you like No. 1?
In the parlance of the green room, said I, her performance would be called a decided hit; I think nothing but its uncommon thickness has saved my skull from being fractured.
There is one thing, my friend, that surprises me, you made no attempt to clear yourself of the dreadful charge of theft.
Mrs. Wellbeaten laughed pleasantly, and replied as follows:—In her present temper it would be impossible to make my innocence apparent; at some future time when the bonnet is taken to pieces to be cleaned, she will discover that I have not robbed her of a shred. You think, perhaps, I ought to purge my character of a stain so monstrous as this; I tell you, sir, that I cannot clear my character of foul charges; the accusations are so numerous that the refutation of them would consume all my time. The stains on my character, like the designs on Hoyles Prints[14], are "warranted fast;" or, like the spots on the hands of Lady Macbeth,[15] they defy detergents, and grow more distinct for the washing. For years it has been my doom to labour under charges of some kind; one thinks me a thief, another says I am an extortioner, a third whispers that I cannot pay my debts, and a fourth declares me a swindler. Instead, therefore, of patching up a character which can never more be made decent or respectable, I stay at home and try to silence all slanderers by a virtuous and industrious life.
Another knock at the door, and another woman enters.
Nah Missis, is me gahn doin?
Yes ma'am, its here, quite ready.
Rowl it up, will ya, and lap it i' this ere enkutcher.
The dress was wrapped up and tied up as desired, and placed before her on the counter.
Hah mitch is it?
Half-a-crown, said Zabeth.
Can ya change a suvrin? asked the hag, holding a new farthing between her finger and thumb.
Indeed ma'am I can't, but I will send my daughter to get it changed.
Noa, noa, niver mind it nah, it’ll be reyt, it’ll all be reyt, and so saying she took up the bundle, walked out and shut the door after her.
Mrs. Wellbeaten, I asked, how long did you and your daughter work at that dress?
We began yesterday, after dinner, and finished as the Foundry bell was ringing eight.
There was then, I remarked, fourteen hours labour in it for a single person, and the remuneration, you say, half-a-crown.
Yes, full fourteen hours of labour, but not quite half-a-crown; in this instance, believing the woman to be poor, we found hooks and eyes, whalebone, and braid. Our actual wages perhaps will be two shillings.
I am not a man in any way soft-hearted. I have as little sympathy for ill-fortune as most men, but here I found it necessary to pull out my handkerchief and blow my nose, for the waters of compassion had always in me an odd preference for the nasal channel.
Mr. Sprento, said Zabeth, I fear I am a great fool.
Your last observation, said I, may have truth, but it wants originality, I was thinking the same thing before you spoke.
I believe, added my friend, that the woman is dishonest, and that the half-crown is lost.
Your creed, Zabeth, is as pregnant with truth as it is void of consolation. A more crafty, dishonest and plausable woman is not often found among working people; the warning was on my lips but she was gone before it could be uttered. Surely, Zabeth, you have friends among the middle orders of a different stamp to these.
Mr. Sprento, you see the velvet cape hanging yonder.
I do.
Well, a fortnight ago, one, that you would have called a lady, sent for me to her house; I went; she requested me to make up that cape in a peculiar style which she fully explained. The material was costly, and the lady at fault in her reckoning. I saw her error and pointed it out, but she was headstrong, unteachable, imperious. She went so far as to remind me that she was the lady, I the menial. That was enough, I sat down grimly to my work. I asked repeatedly for instructions which I followed to the letter. At ten o'clock at night the robe was finished and tried on.
Oh! my cape, my cape, my beautiful cape, screamed the lady, spoiled, spoiled, quite spoiled. For once I lost my temper; from the poor I can take much, I know their trials, their sore straits, but from the vulgar rich I will take nothing, I will not lay upon my soul the sin of fostering the pride which is their curse and ours; so I approached this frantic woman, and I said, do you say I spoiled your cape; did I not tell you repeatedly that if made in that way you would not be able to move your arms? Young man, said I, appealing to her son, did I not forewarn her the result would be precisely what you see?
You certainly did, said the son.
Very well, you shall not say then, here or elsewhere, now or hereafter, that I spoiled this cape, I will not suffer work like this to be shewn anywhere as mine. I have three daughters to support, and my character for skill at least, shall not be impeached. Take it off ma'am, or I will; she hesitated, and then began to take it off, protesting all the while she would not. And now, ma'am, I said, you must suffer me to take home this cape and I will make it as it should be made.
Never! never! did I think to rule her in her own house?
Very well, madam, as you will, but if you do not permit me to finish it, I will burn it before your eyes, and pay you its value, be it what it may.
I seized the cape and stepped towards the fire. Quick, said I, with your answer, as in a moment more it will be all in a blaze.
The answer came in time, I brought it home. I have finished it with unusual care, the lady will call for it to night, and—Here Zabeth was interrupted by a knock. Here she is, said I; talk of the devil, and you know the proverb, and I slunk into my hiding-place. The lady caused quite a tumult, much shuffling of chairs, and rustling of satin, but at last the silk velvet cape was put on, and the lady was in raptures. The tasteful artiste had far outgone her poor conceptions of the graceful, and the lady pronounced it faultless.
Mrs. Wellbeaten, said she, in a fit of gratified vanity, you shall be my only needlewoman; at times you forget what is due to your superiors, but the past shall be forgiven.
Indeed! said I, mentally.
Take the cape home, Lucy, and your mistress will call upon me to-morrow for the money.
I must have the money to night, said Zabeth.
The lady stared like a tragedy queen, but the dressmaker was unabashed.
I seldom get so insulted, said she, but pray name the sum, and name enough and you shall be paid.
Nine shillings, ma'am. Seven and sixpence for making the cape, and one and sixpence for the foolish work done at your own house.
The lady put down the money, saying, you are, I suppose, now satisfied, and you will attend to-morrow for your future orders.
No ma'am, I shall not attend to-morrow, or on any day. The last stitch I shall ever sew for you in this world is in the cape you have gotten. Good night, madam.
Grandly and sublimely sailed away that rich lady on her cloud of shimmering satin, but grander still, sublimer far seemed that little dressmaker, as her form rose to its tiny height, as the bright face, for an instant and but for an instant, darkened like a thunder-cloud, and her eye flashed back the lightning of her proud disdain.
When the door had closed on that gorgeous drapery, and Zabeth was about to resume her work, I rose and grasped her hand, for I felt that through all time and on through the "eternity to come" the soul that is within me had found a sister.
Esteem, reverance, admiration, in a word every kindly feeling were awaking within me, as I gazed on that noble woman, so tender yet so heroic, so gentle yet so firm, so even-tempered yet so sorely tried.
Not long, however, was I fated to indulge this pleasing reverie, for another intruder stumbled in, and this time it was a man and drunk!
This person's business will best appear from his own words.
Zabeth, said he, my own Zabeth, I'm here again you see. Ah, girl those were happy days when we lived at Linley, green woods and pleasant fields they were through which we rambled after school-hours. There I gathered you the prettiest flowers, the finest nuts and blackberries. I wanted none for myself, Zabeth, I gave them all to you, because I loved you, yes, I loved you; and here overcome with drink and tender recollections, he wept plenteously. After a while he rose up, and looking at his lost love, muttered to himself, No, no, I was not good enough. I'm a fallen lost man, not half good enough, yet I loved her, and then he said aloud, good bye, and God bless you. Don't be grieved, Zabeth, you know I never see you only when I get drink, and think of the old times.
Good night, James, good night, go right home to your wife and your little ones.
I will, Zabeth, I will, God bless you, you tell me to do what is right, and I will do it. After I have been here they never can get me back to the alehouse. Good night, Zabeth, good night.
And the poor, fallen lost man, staggered out into the street, and straightway as if a strong angel had seized him by the hand, in the gloom of the night and amid the darkness of his own soul, through all hindrances and temptations, he walked resolutely on to his home, his wife, and his little ones.
After the last visitor had gone, I looked at the face of Zabeth. Some women, I know, would have laughed and jested at his foolish tears, but in her face there was a silent, mournful profound compassion, and I felt more and more that we were akin. It was now getting rather late, the work was all folded up and put aside, Maria, the eldest daughter, prepared a repast of toast and coffee, and I drew up to the table and partook with them.
When the frugal meal was over, Maria, Jane and Emma, drew from under the sofa some music of the new school and began to sing.
The poetry was well-chosen, simple, yet heart-stirring, and what is rare, happily married to music worthy of it. The New Notation, so far as they were concerned, was no failure, for their singing was delightful. "The Better Land"[16] was one of the songs I remember, and the others were equally good. What was better, it lifted us all off the ground, it raised us above the mists and smoke of this world into the pure air and the clear sunshine.
All of us felt that above and beyond the turmoil and dust of this earthly grovelling life, there was a region of stainless ether— radiant with the smile of God—where, throned above all cloud and storm, reigns for ever, peace, peace.
I rose with a glad and thankful heart, took my leave of that untrumpeted heroine and her daughters, and so ended "An evening with dressmakers."
Notes
- ↑ Morecambe Bay is a large bay in northwest England, nearly due east of the Isle of Man and just to the south of the Lake District National Park
- ↑ The Bourbon Restoration regime was a constitutional monarchy. As a constitutional monarch, Louis XVIII's royal prerogative was reduced substantially by the Charter of 1814, France's new constitution
- ↑ The pater familias was the head of a Roman family. The term is Latin for "father of the family" or the "owner of the family estate"
- ↑ A free-reed musical instrument, similar to an accordion
- ↑ A tune from the one-act opera “Le Devin du Village” ("The Village Soothsayer") by Jean-Jacques Rousseau
- ↑ “Gott erhalte Franz den Kaiser” (God Save Emperor Francis) was originally written as an anthem to Francis II, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire and later of Austria
- ↑ “The Magic Flute” (German: Die Zauberflöte) is an opera in two acts by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart to a German libretto by Emanuel Schikaneder
- ↑ From Shakespeare’s Twelfth Night; Viola speaking to Orsino in 2.4.110-111
- ↑ Classical composer Matthias Holst published his "In my cottage near a wood, or, J'aime mieux m'amie: a celebrated French air, with variations, for the piano forte or harp" early in the 19th century
- ↑ “That jewelled mass of millinery, That oiled and curled Assyrian Bull.” Alfred Lord Tennyson
- ↑ From “Fare Thee Well," an 1816 poem by George Gordon Byron
- ↑ A term occurring in the Hebrew Bible which later became personified as a demon in Jewish and Christian texts
- ↑ An ancient Roman goddess, the protector and special counselor of the state. Juno's own warlike aspect among the Romans is apparent in her attire: She often appeared sitting pictured with a peacock armed and wearing a goatskin cloak
- ↑ Popular washable clothing prints of the time
- ↑ From Shakespeare’s Macbeth “Out, damned spot…” 5.1.30
- ↑ Written by Felicia Hemans, an English poet of the early Victorian period
Edited by: Duerden, Jacob: section 1, Winter 2013
From: Volume 2, Issue 1 (The Bradfordian) and Volume 2, Issue 2 (The Bradfordian)