Margaret Ogilvy
CHAPTER VIII
A PANIC IN THE HOUSE
I was sitting at my desk in London when a telegram came
announcing that my mother was again dangerously ill, and I seized
my hat and hurried to the station. It is not a memory of
one night only. A score of times, I am sure, I was called
north thus suddenly, and reached our little town trembling, head
out at railway-carriage window for a glance at a known face which
would answer the question on mine. These illnesses came as
regularly as the backend of the year, but were less regular in
going, and through them all, by night and by day, I see my sister
moving so unwearyingly, so lovingly, though with failing
strength, that I bow my head in reverence for her. She was
wearing herself done. The doctor advised us to engage a
nurse, but the mere word frightened my mother, and we got between
her and the door as if the woman was already on the stair.
To have a strange woman in my mother’s room—you who
are used to them cannot conceive what it meant to us.
Then we must have a servant. This seemed only less
horrible. My father turned up his sleeves and clutched the
besom. I tossed aside my papers, and was ready to run the
errands. He answered the door, I kept the fires going, he
gave me a lesson in cooking, I showed him how to make beds, one
of us wore an apron. It was not for long. I was led
to my desk, the newspaper was put into my father’s
hand. ‘But a servant!’ we cried, and would have
fallen to again. ‘No servant, comes into this
house,’ said my sister quite fiercely, and, oh, but my
mother was relieved to hear her! There were many such
scenes, a year of them, I daresay, before we yielded.
I cannot say which of us felt it most. In London I was
used to servants, and in moments of irritation would ring for
them furiously, though doubtless my manner changed as they opened
the door. I have even held my own with gentlemen in plush,
giving one my hat, another my stick, and a third my coat, and all
done with little more trouble than I should have expended in
putting the three articles on the chair myself. But this
bold deed, and other big things of the kind, I did that I might
tell my mother of them afterwards, while I sat on the end of her
bed, and her face beamed with astonishment and mirth.
From my earliest days I had seen servants. The manse had
a servant, the bank had another; one of their uses was to pounce
upon, and carry away in stately manner, certain naughty boys who
played with me. The banker did not seem really great to me,
but his servant—oh yes. Her boots cheeped all the way
down the church aisle; it was common report that she had flesh
every day for her dinner; instead of meeting her lover at the
pump she walked him into the country, and he returned with wild
roses in his buttonhole, his hand up to hide them, and on his
face the troubled look of those who know that if they take this
lady they must give up drinking from the saucer for
evermore. For the lovers were really common men, until she
gave them that glance over the shoulder which, I have noticed, is
the fatal gift of servants.
According to legend we once had a servant—in my
childhood I could show the mark of it on my forehead, and even
point her out to other boys, though she was now merely a wife
with a house of her own. But even while I boasted I
doubted. Reduced to life-size she may have been but a woman
who came in to help. I shall say no more about her, lest
some one comes forward to prove that she went home at night.
Never shall I forget my first servant. I was eight or
nine, in velveteen, diamond socks (‘Cross your legs when
they look at you,’ my mother had said, ‘and put your
thumb in your pocket and leave the top of your handkerchief
showing’), and I had travelled by rail to visit a
relative. He had a servant, and as I was to be his guest
she must be my servant also for the time being—you may be
sure I had got my mother to put this plainly before me ere I set
off. My relative met me at the station, but I wasted no
time in hoping I found him well. I did not even cross my
legs for him, so eager was I to hear whether she was still
there. A sister greeted me at the door, but I chafed at
having to be kissed; at once I made for the kitchen, where, I
knew, they reside, and there she was, and I crossed my legs and
put one thumb in my pocket, and the handkerchief was
showing. Afterwards I stopped strangers on the highway with
an offer to show her to them through the kitchen window, and I
doubt not the first letter I ever wrote told my mother what they
are like when they are so near that you can put your fingers into
them.
But now when we could have servants for ourselves I shrank
from the thought. It would not be the same house; we should
have to dissemble; I saw myself speaking English the long day
through. You only know the shell of a Scot until you have
entered his home circle; in his office, in clubs, at social
gatherings where you and he seem to be getting on so well he is
really a house with all the shutters closed and the door
locked. He is not opaque of set purpose, often it is
against his will—it is certainly against mine, I try to
keep my shutters open and my foot in the door but they will bang
to. In many ways my mother was as reticent as myself,
though her manners were as gracious as mine were rough (in vain,
alas! all the honest oiling of them), and my sister was the most
reserved of us all; you might at times see a light through one of
my chinks: she was double-shuttered. Now, it seems to be a
law of nature that we must show our true selves at some time, and
as the Scot must do it at home, and squeeze a day into an hour,
what follows is that there he is self-revealing in the
superlative degree, the feelings so long dammed up overflow, and
thus a Scotch family are probably better acquainted with each
other, and more ignorant of the life outside their circle, than
any other family in the world. And as knowledge is
sympathy, the affection existing between them is almost painful
in its intensity; they have not more to give than their
neighbours, but it is bestowed upon a few instead of being
distributed among many; they are reputed niggardly, but for
family affection at least they pay in gold. In this, I
believe, we shall find the true explanation why Scotch
literature, since long before the days of Burns, has been so
often inspired by the domestic hearth, and has treated it with a
passionate understanding.
Must a woman come into our house and discover that I was not
such a dreary dog as I had the reputation of being? Was I
to be seen at last with the veil of dourness lifted? My
company voice is so low and unimpressive that my first remark is
merely an intimation that I am about to speak (like the whir of
the clock before it strikes): must it be revealed that I had
another voice, that there was one door I never opened without
leaving my reserve on the mat? Ah, that room, must its
secrets be disclosed? So joyous they were when my mother
was well, no wonder we were merry. Again and again she had
been given back to us; it was for the glorious to-day we thanked
God; in our hearts we knew and in our prayers confessed that the
fill of delight had been given us, whatever might befall.
We had not to wait till all was over to know its value; my mother
used to say, ‘We never understand how little we need in
this world until we know the loss of it,’ and there can be
few truer sayings, but during her last years we exulted daily in
the possession of her as much as we can exult in her
memory. No wonder, I say, that we were merry, but we liked
to show it to God alone, and to Him only our agony during those
many night-alarms, when lights flickered in the house and white
faces were round my mother’s bedside. Not for other
eyes those long vigils when, night about, we sat watching, nor
the awful nights when we stood together, teeth
clenched—waiting—it must be now. And it was not
then; her hand became cooler, her breathing more easy; she smiled
to us. Once more I could work by snatches, and was glad,
but what was the result to me compared to the joy of hearing that
voice from the other room? There lay all the work I was
ever proud of, the rest is but honest craftsmanship done to give
her coal and food and softer pillows. My thousand letters
that she so carefully preserved, always sleeping with the last
beneath the sheet, where one was found when she died—they
are the only writing of mine of which I shall ever boast. I
would not there had been one less though I could have written an
immortal book for it.
How my sister toiled—to prevent a stranger’s
getting any footing in the house! And how, with the same
object, my mother strove to ‘do for herself’ once
more. She pretended that she was always well now, and
concealed her ailments so craftily that we had to probe for
them:—
‘I think you are not feeling well to-day?’
‘I am perfectly well.’
‘Where is the pain?’
‘I have no pain to speak of.’
‘Is it at your heart?’
‘No.’
‘Is your breathing hurting you?’
‘Not it.’
‘Do you feel those stounds in your head
again?’
‘No, no, I tell you there is nothing the matter with
me.’
‘Have you a pain in your side?’
‘Really, it’s most provoking I canna put my hand
to my side without your thinking I have a pain there.’
‘You have a pain in your side!’
‘I might have a pain in my side.’
‘And you were trying to hide it! Is it very
painful?’
‘It’s—it’s no so bad but what I can
bear it.’
Which of these two gave in first I cannot tell, though to me
fell the duty of persuading them, for whichever she was she
rebelled as soon as the other showed signs of yielding, so that
sometimes I had two converts in the week but never both on the
same day. I would take them separately, and press the one
to yield for the sake of the other, but they saw so easily
through my artifice. My mother might go bravely to my
sister and say, ‘I have been thinking it over, and I
believe I would like a servant fine—once we got used to
her.’
‘Did he tell you to say that?’ asks my sister
sharply.
‘I say it of my own free will.’
‘He put you up to it, I am sure, and he told you not to
let on that you did it to lighten my work.’
‘Maybe he did, but I think we should get one.’
‘Not for my sake,’ says my sister obstinately, and
then my mother comes ben to me to say delightedly, ‘She
winna listen to reason!’
But at last a servant was engaged; we might be said to be at
the window, gloomily waiting for her now, and it was with such
words as these that we sought to comfort each other and
ourselves:—
‘She will go early to her bed.’
‘She needna often be seen upstairs.’
‘We’ll set her to the walking every
day.’
‘There will be a many errands for her to run.
We’ll tell her to take her time over them.’
‘Three times she shall go to the kirk every Sabbath, and
we’ll egg her on to attending the lectures in the
hall.’
‘She is sure to have friends in the town.
We’ll let her visit them often.’
‘If she dares to come into your room, mother!’
‘Mind this, every one of you, servant or no servant, I
fold all the linen mysel.’
‘She shall not get cleaning out the east
room.’
‘Nor putting my chest of drawers in order.’
‘Nor tidying up my manuscripts.’
‘I hope she’s a reader, though. You could
set her down with a book, and then close the door canny on
her.’
And so on. Was ever servant awaited so
apprehensively? And then she came—at an anxious time,
too, when her worth could be put to the proof at once—and
from first to last she was a treasure. I know not what we
should have done without her.