The Daughters of Mrs Peacock

BOOK: The Daughters of Mrs Peacock
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Gerald Bullett

The Daughters of
Mrs Peacock

FOR
ANN CLAIRE
twenty years hence

The Chapters

I
Five in Family

II
A Proposal

III
Midsummer Revels

IV
Catherine in Action

V
Sarah: Julia: Sarah

VI
Catherine and Robert

VII
A Game of Chess

VIII
Twenty-First Birthday

IX
Epilogue

A Note on the Author

Chapter One
Five in Family

Taking their seats at the breakfast-table this April morning, the three Peacock daughters—Julia, Sarah, and Catherine Ann—could have no thought to spare for the character of the epoch in which an obliging Providence had placed them. Living in the green middle of England, untroubled by politics, untouched by news from abroad, they accepted without question the world they shared with each other and with their parents. Each in her dreams and daydreams, her bright hopes and shadowy fears, was a person apart, a solitary spirit; but so soon as they came together, as just now in the mere act of entering the breakfast-room, their individual isolation was dissolved in a warm if unthinking family relationship. They had a mother to rule them, a father to provide for them, servants to minister to their comfort; and it was beyond their imagining that things could have been or ever would be different. God was in his heaven, Victoria on her throne, and all was right with the world. True, there were wicked people here and there, atheists and lawbreakers and the like; there were poor people, who did not get enough to eat; and somewhere in distant parts of the earth there were the unfortunate heathen, of various colours, for whom it was one's duty to pray; but these three categories did not constitute a serious problem.
The poor were conveniently divided into two classes: the deserving poor, who could be visited and helped a little, and the undeserving, who were best forgotten. There were also, of course, the rich: people with titles and large estates, all busily engaged in propping up the divinely-established order. They too were taken unenviously for granted. The Peacocks did not consider themselves rich, but they were comfortable, and well content to be so. They occupied, both geographically and socially, the best position of all, the middle position; and having no taste for extremes they were proud of it, or would have been had they given it a thought.

‘Good morning, my dears,' said Mrs Peacock, sailing into the room in the wake of a large silver teapot, which was carried, like an emblem of state, by Jenny the parlourmaid, prim and respectful in cap and apron. The girl had been christened Euphemia, but Mrs Peacock considered the name unsuitable for one in her station, and being precluded by good sense and natural kindliness from aping the manners of the upper classes and calling her Briggs, she had decided on Jenny, to everyone's satisfaction.

‘Good morning, Mama,' said the girls in chorus.

‘We shall not wait,' their mother announced. ‘Your father is out of sorts. I'm keeping him in bed. Catherine!'

To Catherine, as the youngest, fell the duty and privilege of saying grace.

‘For what we are about to receive, may the Lord make us truly thankful. For Christ's sake, Amen.'

The bowed heads lifted. Napkins, extracted from
their rings, were unfolded. Breakfast began. Sunlight from the broad sash-windows overlooking the street made the silver and crockery on table and sideboard gleam, enhanced the whiteness of the napery, set the glass lustres on the chimneypiece brilliantly glittering, and gilded the contours of a pair of equestrian bronzes that stood, high rearing, on either side of the great marble clock, in front of the overmantel looking-glass. From the opposite, pink-beflowered wall, Grandfather and Grandmother Bartlow, in maple frames, gazed self-consciously at distance, seeming to set the seal of their approval on the cheerful domestic scene: even in heaven, Mrs Peacock believed, it was a satisfaction to them that their daughter held them in pious and dutiful remembrance. The space above the sideboard was occupied by an engraving of Landseer's
Shoeing the Bay Mare
. Its fellow,
The Old Shepherd's Chief Mourner
, was elsewhere, in the servants' parlour. Both were from the Bartlow home.

A curious observe might, though with some difficulty, have discerned a likeness between the venerable Bartlows on the wall and the ripe fruit of their marriage who was now, and had been for a quarter of a century, Edmund Peacock's wife. Tall, and with a certain stateliness of carriage, she in her middle years was still both comely and vigorous: dark eyes, dark hair, decided features, a gipsy-brown complexion, and a slim but womanly figure which child-bearing had surprisingly not impaired. The only one of her daughters who resembled her, and that to an almost comical degree, was the firstborn, Julia, who had just completed her twenty-third year. Julia, earnestly co-operating with nature, by force of filial
admiration had made herself into an echo of her mother, copying her manner, adopting her opinions, and blushing with pleasure, prettily enough, when strangers remarked on the physical likeness between them. She was in fact Mother's Blessing, zealous to establish her law in the minds of Sarah and Catherine, and shocked when, as sometimes happened, they showed signs of indifference or even of rebelliousness. For these younger girls, especially Catherine who was but lately emerged from her teens, were highspirited and inclined to be independent, so far as that was possible in a rigidly ordered world: it was sometimes difficult to believe that they were their mother's daughters. They had nothing of her darkness, Sarah being medium-fair in colouring, brown hair and blue eyes, and Catherine fairer still, with a sanguine complexion and eyes whose fugitive bronze gleam, like fire in a sky-reflecting pool, matched the warm tone of her hair. Sarah was round-faced and comely; Catherine was slighter, with smaller and more delicately modelled features; both were by an inch or so less tall than their sister. Julia loved them dearly, as in duty bound. So far as they would let her she watched over them with anxious affection. But Mama was the centre of her universe. She was happy in having one of Mama's names, Emily, for her own second, and was a little jealous of Catherine Ann for having the other. Sarah, the middle one, had received only one name at her christening, perhaps because she was not the boy her parents had petitioned for in their prayers. She suffered the penalty without complaint, and now, at twenty-two, she enjoyed being Sarah Peacock, contemplating her
image in the glass with a mixture of irony and resignation. The world had been at no pains to conceal from her that she was less pretty than her sisters, but nature had compensated by giving her a keen eye for human absurdity and a rich capacity for enjoying it.

‘And what are my girls going to do with themselves this morning?' inquired Mrs Peacock with a commanding smile, as breakfast neared its end.

Recognizing the question for what it was, the prelude to instruction, Julia waited meekly for the sequel, turning dark eyes on her mother. Catherine, absorbed in thoughts of her own, paid no attention.

‘We don't know yet, Mama,' said Sarah. ‘But we shall in a minute.'

‘You, Sarah, shall help me with the butter-making,' said Mrs Peacock. ‘And my Julia, I think, must go and see poor Dolly Bateson, with a basket of eggs. She wasn't at church on Sunday: that means she's had another of her attacks.'

‘Very well, Mama,' said Julia. ‘That will be nice.'

‘Then one of you must get Harry Dawkins to drive you into Newtonbury with a message for Mr Crabbe from your father.'

‘Would that be Catherine, I wonder?' said Sarah. ‘I knew we should learn our destinies in time, if we were patient.'

‘May I, Mama?' said Catherine eagerly. The prospect of Newtonbury allured her. ‘And may I go and speak to Papa first?'

‘If you do, you must be careful not to disturb him. He may be asleep.'

‘I do hope Papa is not ill?' said Julia, on a note of anxious inquiry.

‘No, not ill, my dear. I wouldn't say ill. But his cough's troubling him. I'm afraid he's caught a new chill.'

‘Shall you send for the doctor, Mama?'

‘Time enough,' said her mother. ‘We'll see how he is after a day in bed.'

‘Poor Papa!' said Catherine, who hated being kept in bed. ‘It's such a lovely day too. The sunshine would do him good.'

Julia's admonishing look said as plainly as speech that Mama knew best. It was the first article of her religion.

Mrs Peacock said, in gentle rebuke: ‘Your father, Catherine, is not a young girl.'

‘Else we should not be here, Kitty,' explained Sarah gravely. ‘Remember that, child.'

‘What are you giggling at, Catherine?'

‘Nothing, Mama.'

‘There is no need for
you
to be silly, just because Sarah is.'

‘But we like being silly sometimes,' said Catherine, with simple veracity. ‘Don't we, Sarah?'

‘Innocent laughter,' said Sarah, ‘is said to be one of the privileges of the young, Mama.'

‘I like to see happy young faces about me,' said Mrs Peacock, ‘but there are times when laughter is out of place. With your father lying ill in bed——'

‘But, Mama,' cried Sarah, ‘you said he was
not
ill!'

‘That will do, Sarah. I do not
argue
with my children.'

‘How true,' murmured Sarah pianissimo. Only Catherine heard her.

Julia said earnestly: ‘We are all very sorry for Papa. Aren't we, girls?'

‘Indeed yes,' said Catherine. ‘Mama knows that, don't you, Mama?'

‘But how will Mr Crabbe manage without him?' asked Sarah, joining in the peacemaking endeavour. ‘Is he a clever man, Mama?'

‘With your father to guide him, I fancy he does well enough,' said Mrs Peacock loftily.

‘But
without
Papa?' Sarah insisted. ‘Will he ruin us? Shall we all starve? That will be a new experience.' Her placid smile made it seem an attractive one.

The greater part of Edmund Peacock's income was derived from the firm of Peacock and Crabbe, solicitors, of which, inheriting from his father, he was the senior partner. He had rural interests as well, in the shape of some sixty-five acres of grass and ploughland, with a bailiff and three men to do the work, and enjoyed nothing so much as riding round his estate on summer evenings, counting his sheep, admiring his cattle, and discussing crops and weather with John Sampson. Farming, he believed, was in his blood, transmitted to him from his father's father, who had devoted his whole life to it, with much profit to himself and his heirs. It gratified Edmund that though only a tenth part of the original farm remained to him he was living in the same farmhouse, with its barns and granary, stables and byres; and he sometimes regretted that his father had broken with family tradition by taking to the law. It was a long stone house, decently proportioned; and that its front door opened straight on to the road was no hardship in these days of
horsedrawn traffic, of which, moreover, there was not much. Here was rural seclusion, enlivened by the serene leisurely bustle of seedtime and harvest, milking and sheep-shearing: yet the thriving town of Newtonbury, where in black coat and white collar he practised his major profession, was only three stations away, on a branch line. Mrs Peacock, therefore, enjoyed the best of two worlds. She had the status of a professional man's lady and the homelier pleasure of being a farmer's wife. She played both parts with an equal and effortless facility. Her butter was without peer. Her cheeses were the pride of the county. And her handmaidens held her in high respect.

‘I am sorry not only for Papa,' remarked Sarah with mock-solemnity. ‘I am sorry too for poor Mrs Bateson. She missed a treat by not going to church on Sunday. But don't tell her, Julia. It wouldn't be kind.'

‘What
do
you mean, Sarah?' said Julia unguardedly.

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