Dale's Own Opinion. If ever our own fortune would allow us to be perfectly happy, the consumation is prevented and spoiled by the obstinately intruding unhappiness of others. The reverend person who was of opinion that the bliss of the blessed would be increased and, so to say, vivified by the sight of the tortures of the damned, finds few supporters nowadays, perhaps because our tenderer feelings shrink from such a ruthless application of the doctrine that only by contemplating the worse can we enjoy the better; perhaps also because we are not so sure as he was that we should not be the onlooked rather than the onlookers if ever his picture came to be realized. So sensitive are we to the ills that others suffer that at times we feel almost a grudge against them for their persistence—however unwilling it be—in marring our perfect contentment; surely they could let us forget them for once in a way. This last was Dale Bannister's frame of mind as he lay, idly and yet not peacefully, on his sofa next morning. This Doctor, with his unflinching logic and unrestrained zeal, was a Dale lit his pipe and set himself to consider with impartiality whether Roberts had in fact any grievance against him. He wanted to satisfy himself that there was no basis for the Doctor's indignation; his self-esteem demanded Dale disposed of this question, but he still lay on the sofa and thought. It had been a gain to him, he said to himself, to see this new side of life; the expedition to Littlehill was well justified. It is good for a man to take a flag of truce and go talk with the enemy in the gate. He may not change his own views,—Dale was conscious of no change in his,—but he comes to see how other people may hold different ones, and the reason, or anyhow the naturalness, of theirs. A man of Roberts' fierce Puritan temper could not feel nor appreciate what appealed to him so strongly in such a life as they lived, for instance, at the Grange. It had a beauty so its own, that unquestioned superiority, not grasped as a prize or valued as an The course of these reflections produced in Dale a return to his usual equanimity. It was plainly impossible to please everybody. He must act as seemed right to himself, neglecting the frowns of unreasonable grumblers. No doubt Roberts was devoted to him, and Arthur Angell too. Yet Roberts abused him, and Arthur bothered him with imploring letters, which warned him against the subtle temptations of his new life. It was a curious sort of devotion which showed itself mainly in criticism It may be asserted that every man is the victim of a particular sort of follies, the follies engendered by his particular sort of surroundings; they make a fool's circle within which each of us has a foot planted; for the rest, we may be, and no doubt generally are, very sensible people. If we set aside Squire Delane's special and indigenous illusions, he was very far indeed from a fool, and after dinner that evening he treated his distinguished guest with no small tact. The young man was beyond question a force; was it outside of ingenuity to turn him in a better direction? "Everybody approves of your letter," he said. "Roberts had no business to drag your name in." "Of course one is exposed to that sort of thing." "It's a penalty of greatness. But the case is peculiar when you're actually living in the place." "That's exactly what I feel. It's making me a party in a local quarrel." "That's what he wanted to do; he wanted to fight under your shield." "I didn't come here to fight at all." "I should think not; and you haven't found us thirsting for battle, have you?" "I have found a kinder welcome than I had any right to expect." "My dear fellow! Much as we differ, we're all proud of counting you as a Denshire man. And I don't suppose we shall quarrel much about Denshire affairs. Oh, I know you think the whole system of country life an iniquity. I don't go so deep myself. I say, there it is. Perhaps it might be changed, but, pending that, sensible men can work together to make the best of it. At any rate, they can avoid treading on one another's corns." "I want to avoid everybody's corns, if they'll avoid mine." "Well, we'll try. I dare say we shall pull together. At any rate, it's very pleasant dining together. Shall we go upstairs and ask Janet for a song?" Mrs. Delane had evidently caught her cue from her husband, and she treated Dale not as a sinner who repenteth,—a mode of reception which, after all, requires great tact to make it acceptable,—but as one who had never been a sinner at all. She asked Dale if he had been overwhelmed by callers. He replied that he had not suffered much in that way. "I knew it," she said. "You have frightened them, Mr. Bannister; they think you came in search of studious retirement." "Oh, I hate both study and retirement, Mrs. Delane." "Well, I shall tell people that—may I? Now, when I was at the Cransfords' yesterday,—he's our Lord Lieutenant, you know,—they were wondering whether they might call." "I am delighted to see anyone." "From the Mayor upward—or, I suppose, Hedger would think I ought to say downward. We heard what fun you made of the poor man." "Mr. Bannister will be more respectful to the Lord Lieutenant," said Janet, smiling. "I suppose I disapprove of Lord Lieutenants," remarked Dale, with a laugh. "You'll like Lady Cransford very much, and she'll like you. She gives so many balls that a bachelor household is a godsend." "Bannister hardly depends on that for a welcome, my dear," said the Squire from the hearthrug. "Now I declare, meeting him just as a friend like this, I'm always forgetting that he's a famous man." "Please go on, Mrs. Delane. It's a capital exchange. But when are you going to give me the pleasure of seeing you at Littlehill?" Mrs. Delane paused for just a second. "I should like to visit your hermit's cell. But I'm so busy just now, and I dare say you are. When your guests forsake you, perhaps we will come and relieve your solitude. Janet, will you give us some music?" Dale followed Janet to the piano, with a little frown on his brow. Why wouldn't she come now? Was it—— Janet's voice dispersed the frown and the reflection. She sang a couple of songs, choosing them out of a book. As she turned over the leaves, Dale saw that some of the airs were set to words of his own writing. When Janet came to one of these, she turned the leaf hastily. The Squire had gone out, and Mrs. Delane, with the privilege of near relationship, was absorbed in a novel. "Will you do me a great favor?" he said. "What, Mr. Bannister?" "I should like to hear you sing words of mine. See, here are two or three." She glanced through them; then she shut the book and made as though to rise. "You won't do it?" Janet blushed and looked troubled. "I'm so sorry, Mr. Bannister; but I can't sing those words. I—I don't like them." "I am sorry they are so bad," he answered in an offended tone. "Oh, of course, so far as power and—and beauty goes, everything in the book is trash compared to them. But I can't sing them." "I won't press you." "I know you are angry. Please don't be angry, Mr. Bannister. I can't do what I think wrong, can I?" "Oh, I have no right to be angry." "There, you wouldn't say that unless you were angry. People never do." "You have such a wretchedly bad opinion of me, Miss Delane." "Do you mind that?" "You know I do." "Then one would think you would try to change it." "Ah, how can I?" "Write something I should delight in singing." "If I do, may I dedicate it to you?" "I'm afraid that wouldn't be allowed." "But if it were allowed, would you allow it?" "You know how proud any girl would be of it—of course you know." "You don't do justice to my humility." "Do justice to yourself first, Mr. Bannister." "What sort of songs do you like?" "Oh, anything honest, and manly, and patriotic, and—and nice in feeling." "A catholic taste—and yet none of mine satisfy it." "I will not be quarreled with," declared Janet. "My only wish is to propitiate you." "Then you know now how to do it." It must be allowed that conversations of this nature have a pleasantness of their own, and Dale left the Grange with a delightful feeling of having been treated as he ought to be treated. He found Philip Hume writing and smoking in the study. "Well, been stroked the right way, old man?" asked Philip, throwing down his pen. Dale helped himself to whisky and soda water, without replying. "I've been having a talk with Nellie," pursued Philip. "What's wrong with Nellie?" "She's got some notion in her head that she and her mother ought to go." Dale was lighting a cigar. "Of course I told her it was all nonsense, and that you meant them to stay as long as they liked. She's got some maggot in her head about propriety—all nonsense, when her mother's here." "I don't want them to go, if they like staying," said Dale. "Well, we should be slow without Nellie, shouldn't we? You must blow her up for thinking of it. She only wants to be persuaded." "She can do as she likes." "You don't seem very enthusiastic about it, one way or the other." "Well, my dear Phil, I can't be expected to cry at the idea of little Nellie Fane leaving us." "Yet you made rather a point of her coming—but that was two months ago." "Really, you might leave Nellie and me to settle it." "What I told her was right, I suppose?" "Well, you don't suppose I wanted you to tell her to pack up?" "I don't know what you want, old man," said Philip; "and I doubt if you do." |