(It is spring 1762. There will shortly be a General Election, and Charles Huntingdon is preparing to stand for election at his new home of Bereton)
I found
Martin Clifford still at work on a pile of papers, and when I told him of my
intention of standing for election to Parliament, he showed so little reaction that
I suspected he treated it as a mere youthful enthusiasm which he hoped would
soon to be abandoned. When, however, I repeated the information he pushed his
papers aside and turned to face me with a sad expression. He enquired whether I
was aware of the vast sums of money likely to be required, amounting, he feared
to several thousand pounds in the event of a contested poll? Where would I find
such large amounts without incurring up ruinous debts? I had already spent vast
sums on a new coach for my visit to Maybury. Where would it all end?
I told him to have no fears on this account,
for Lord Teesdale had promised to assist me, and so had an extremely wealthy
East India merchant: this last, of course, being a reference to Elizabeth
Newstead’s husband, who in strict truth knew nothing of my intentions. I
assured Clifford that I had the support of Sir James Wilbrahim, so there was
unlikely to be any contest, and added that Lord Teesdale’s man Oswald Jarrett
would be advising me on the voters of Bereton.
This last information did not appear to
please Clifford: perhaps he already knew Jarrett, or at least was familiar with
his reputation. I then attempted to mollify his pride by begging him to act as
my agent and legal advisor for the election, which after some thought he agreed
to do. But despite this grudging acquiescence he must have begun the work
speedily, for very soon he had produced me a list of certain men of influence
in the town, headed by Alderman Jabez Stout, whose support I needed to obtain.
When I told Mrs Timmis of my plans, she made
no comment of any kind but merely nodded her head and returned to her work. It
was almost as if the news had come as no surprise: I presumed one of the
servants must have overheard my conversation with Clifford. But I soon
discovered from Ned that she embarked on a campaign of her own on my behalf the
next time she was in town.
“She’s been doing rounds of all the
shopkeepers and tradesmen, and if she can’t get to them, she’s spoke to their
wives. There’s some as owes her favours, and there’s others as she knows their
darkest secrets; and she’s told them as has votes to cast them for you, and
them as don’t have votes to come out and halloo for you anyway, and I don’t
doubt as how most of ‘em ‘ll do as she bids them. My sister generally gets her
way!”
I did
not ask what the “favours” and “darkest secrets” might have been: my worthy
housekeeper’s spider’s-web of contacts throughout the district were best left
undisturbed.
Mrs Waring’s contribution was to offer to
search through my aunt’s papers for any information about past elections. She
undertook the task with glee, and the library tables were soon covered in
fresh heaps of books and documents.
Alderman Stout approved of my plans, but
dropped broad hints concerning considerable sums of money that I should be expected
to spend for the town’s benefit should I prove successful; drawing attention to
how neglectful Mr Bailey had been in this duty. I made a passing reference to
my walk by the old quarry, but he ignored it. I reflected that if I did become
a Member of Parliament, I would probably be obliged to suppress any smuggling,
but until then it would be best to ignore the issue.
Word of my intentions must have circulated
rapidly, because it was not long before I received a letter from no less a
personage than the Duke of Newcastle himself, asking whether, in the event of
my being elected, I should be counted among his “friends” in the coming
Parliament. I was surprised and flattered that this great man should find the
time from his work in finding the finance for the war to be interested in my
case. I replied reassuring him as to my intentions, and decided to raise this
matter with Lord Teesdale when I next met him.
I now attempted to return Sir James
Wilbrahim’s hospitality by hosting him to dinner, along with Clifford and Jabez
Stout, in order that we could discuss the coming election in the town. My
curate Mr Chamberlain was present to say grace, which duty he performed in
Latin, and at some length. But, although I provided the best wine I could
obtain, and Mrs Timmis and her cooks worked their hardest and provided a meal
that was certainly superior in quality to what I had been served at Stanegate, the
dinner was not a success. Sir James, though consuming vast quantities of both food
and wine, plainly considered that his fellow guests existed at an unbridgeable
gulf beneath him, and that he was personally insulted by their presence at the
table. He refused to exchange a single word with them throughout the meal.
Instead he grumbled throughout, his talk gradually degenerating to a monologue
of denunciation of the ministry, the bankers of the City and even the bishops.
He merely harrumphed when I attempted to discuss the coming election, and when
I suggested we should campaign side by side, he promised no more than that his
supporters might be willing to vote for me in preference to some stranger coming
from outside the town, and only if I agreed that this damned war, as he termed
it, should be brought to a close before the country was irretrievably ruined. He
left early, much to everyone’s relief, giving me only the coldest and most
formal thanks for the meal, and did not set foot in the Priory again for some
time.
Mrs
Timmis was understandably upset by Sir James’s rudeness. I attempted to console
her by praising her work and that of her kitchen workers, and promised to
reward them all. I said that the fault was mine, for rashly attempting to heal
the long feud between the Priory and Stanegate.
One
afternoon I rode over to Stanegate in the hope of recovering the ground I had
lost at the unfortunate dinner, only to be told by William that Sir James was
away attending to business at one of his outlying farms. I was about to return
home, only to be summoned back. Louisa was alone in the house with a few
servants, but having heard my voice she had me shown in. She was very much the
mistress of her home in her father’s absence as she ordered tea to be served.
It was brought by a maid of about Louisa’s
own age, whom she treated more like a friend than a servant. The fat
housekeeper, whom Mrs Timmis had referred to as “that dreadful Mrs Piddock”,
regarded me with ill-concealed suspicion before she was ordered back to the
kitchen, and I was sure that William was lurking somewhere, out of sight but
prepared to spring (albeit arthritically) to the defence of his young mistress,
should that be necessary.
I had brought from London a dozen silk
handkerchiefs, together with a novel and two books of poetry which I had intended
to give to Sir James to pass on to Louisa; but which I was now able to present
to her in person. She was so delighted that she kissed me on the cheek: an innocent
enough gesture, though I doubted whether her father would have approved.
Louisa was much more open in the absence of
her father and the Rector, and chatted away merrily. She was thrilled to hear
that I was campaigning to be elected to Parliament. “Oh, I’m sure you’ll win!”
she exclaimed, clapping her hands with excitement, “My father will vote for
you, and so will all his friends! I’ll tell them to! And then when you and my
father are in Parliament together, perhaps you can persuade him to take me to
London! I would dearly love to see London, but my father seldom goes there, and
even when he does he never takes me. And the King! We can meet the King! Have
you met him yet?”
She was disappointed when I admitted that I
had not yet even set eyes on our new monarch, and she wanted to know: when
would he choose his Queen? I said that I was sure that even now Europe was
being scoured for a suitable bride; and meanwhile there were rumours that he
was deeply in love with someone of noble family who was no older than Louisa
herself, or even that he had been secretly married to a beautiful Quaker girl, though
I did not believe a word of that. Louisa thought it was all most romantic.
She demanded to know everything about
London: the famous buildings, the marvellous shops, the theatres and concerts
and art exhibitions. I described these as well as I could, and told her of my
experiences in the town, though of course omitting any mention of Elizabeth
Newstead or of the wilder adventures of Lord Staines and his friends. She was
enthralled, and kept asking me to tell more.
“You see, I have hardly ever strayed from
home, or met anyone except your aunt, Mrs Andrew. The Rector taught me my letters and the
Catechism. Sometimes, years ago, when my father was away for days at a time, Mrs
Andrew heard I was alone here with just the servants for company, and arranged
for me to be brought over to the Priory. She was always very kind to me. She
told me all about the theatres and concerts she went to when she was younger.
She read books with me and taught me some French and Latin too. Her instruction
was far kinder than Mr Bunbridge, who was a very severe teacher. And the books we
have here are all so very dull! And when I was at the Priory I could run around
the village and climb trees, and play games with the village children, who
taught me to fish in the mere. I loved it! But then all that was stopped, for
Mr Bunbridge had told my father that none of this was fitting for a young lady
in my situation; and if I needed any further instruction, he would undertake
it. My father approved of me learning French, but Mr Bunbridge didn’t teach it
like Mrs Andrew did. And my father said I should be doing needlework instead of
reading books. I hate needlework! And now I can’t even go into the town on my
own; Mrs Piddock has to accompany me, and even then I’m hardly ever permitted
to speak to anyone! If it wasn’t for Becky, my maid here, I would never know
what’s happening!”
I said that I hoped she wasn’t too unhappy
with her life.
“Oh, I’m never unhappy for long!” she said.
“I can always sing. Becky teaches me the country airs. And I found a fife, that
one of the soldiers must have dropped, and I taught myself to play it, but only
when my father isn’t here. But I would love to have a proper music teacher.”
I replied that unfortunately my own
incapacity for music prevented me from helping her.
As we drank more tea, Louisa told me how my
aunt had been greatly interested in the history of Stanegate, and had begged
leave to inspect the older parts of the house; but Sir James had never invited
her. I said I would be delighted to look round, if she would be kind enough to
guide me.
“I’ll show you something!” she said, and
took me by the hand to lead me through the library into the oldest part of the
house and up a stone spiral staircase. Mrs Piddock followed us uninvited,
muttering complaints about her painful feet.
Louisa threw open a door. “There!” she said,
“What do you think of that?”
We were in a large, cold room, with a bare
wooden floor and without furniture except for a few old chairs and a table. The oak panels on the walls stopped a few inches short of the plain
ceiling. A large stone fireplace of grey stone jutted into the room, but it was clear that
no fire had been lit there for many years. There were with shelves of ancient books, but what Louisa had brought me there to show me was above the fireplace. I beheld a most grotesquely
carved structure, with every inch was covered in strange,
staring faces, ridiculous caryatids and festoons of foliage. I had never seen anything like it, and I gazed at it with
awe, though not with admiration, for it must have been the work of a
wood-carver of genius, but one sadly devoid of learning or taste.
“I told Mrs Andrew about it, and she said it
must have been carved long ago”, Louisa explained. “When I was small it used to
frighten me. I still don’t like to come here on my own. It’s mostly just a room
for the servants. But I think Mr Bunbridge is interested in it. I know he comes
up here sometimes to look at the old books.”
After a while, with Sir James still not
having returned home, I felt it was time for me to depart, and so I rode home
after a most pleasant time with the young mistress of Stanegate. I promised to
provide her with more books, and to come to see her whenever I could. I was
perhaps in danger of becoming Miss Louisa’s schoolmaster, but reflected that
there were many less pleasant ways of passing my time.
Mrs Waring was greatly interested in my
description of the curiously carved overmantel.
“Mrs Andrew often requested to be allowed to
inspect it, and all the other old rooms of Stanegate, but she was never allowed
entry to the house, on account of her Whiggish politics. Such ridiculous
conduct, and so impolite to a lady! She thought it must be from the reign of
Elizabeth or James the First, by some local tradesman ignorant of true artistic
principles, so she said. But she also said that she would not have been
surprised if there wasn’t a priest’s hole somewhere, or a secret cupboard for
holding the superstitious Papist vestments and chalice, for it was said that the
family were all Papists in those days.”
I mentioned that the Rector, Mr Bunbridge,
sometimes consulted the old books in the room, and she answered with a snort.
“Mrs Andrew thought Bunbridge was no true
scholar, and all his so-called learning was a mere lumber-room! And he said
openly that no woman could ever aspire to scholarship, so she despised him! And
so did I, for he spread rumours that I was a Dissenter and a republican, which
I am not and never was!”
I called upon her to guide me in choosing
suitable works to lend to Miss Louisa Wilbrahim. She was extremely reluctant
to let any more of her precious volumes out of her sight, and I also discovered that
she had the very strictest standards as to what might be suitable for a young maiden
to read. Eventually I was able to remove from her shelves a few books of poetry
to which Sir James could not possibly object and arranged for them to be delivered
to Stanegate, along with a note to say that Miss Wilbrahim could keep them as
long as she fancied.
I now prepared to make my journey to
Maybury, the home of my new mentor and guide through the treacherous thickets
of politics, the Earl of Teesdale. My new carriage was freshly painted, the
brasswork polished and the axles greased, and the horses impeccably groomed. My
best clothes, which had not been worn since I came down from London, were
brushed and carefully packed. Henry the silent coachman was provided with a new
coat for the occasion.
Mrs Timmis asked, “Should I find you a
manservant, sir? Or do you already have someone in mind?”
“Ellen acts as my valet. She’s become very
careful and reliable. She even shaves me in the mornings, and she’s never once
cut me!”
“But lor, sir, you can’t take her!” she
exclaimed, “I hope you’ll forgive me speaking plain, sir, but really you can’t!
Everyone’ll think she’s your mistress! And her ladyship the Countess will be shocked, and
the gentlemen will chaff you about it, and talk behind your back about what
they’d like to do with Ellie! And can you imagine what the servants at Maybury
will say to the poor girl? No, sir: you can’t take Ellie; I’m not having it,
that I’m not!”
She stood there with her hands on her wide
hips, looking positively fierce, as if she was dealing with a dishonest
tradesman or an idle servant. I wondered how Lord Staines would have dealt with
the situation. For my part I had no wish to argue with my formidable
housekeeper.
“Very well then; what do you suggest?” I
replied.
“Well, sir; if you’d permit me to make a
suggestion, you might take Robert Barton as your valet. He’s a waiter at the
Queen’s Head. He’s sober and he’s trustworthy. He overhears all the gossip and
stores it away in his head; he knows how to keep his mouth shut, but if he
trusts you, then he might tell you what he’s learnt. Should I have a word with
the landlord, sir? He owes me a favour, and I’m sure he can be persuaded to
release Robert for a few days. And if you’d give me permission, sir, I might
tell Robert that you’d be interested in what the folks as Maybury are saying”.
I nodded agreement. I was relieved that she
did not think that little Ellie actually was my mistress, and that I had not
made any attempt to bring about this consummation: nothing in the household
could have remained concealed from Mrs Timmis, and probably nothing in Bereton
either.