Northrop Hall
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In the first years of the twentieth century life at Northrop Hall - carries on as it has always done under the watchful eye of the dowager Lady Arndale. Her son Charles now runs the estate as his father had done before him, supported by his amenable wife Elspeth, who models herself on her mother-in-law. In a few years' time their eldest son, Teddy, now away at public school will return to learn the ways of the estate, which in due course he will inherit.
Lady Arndale does, however, have some worries; her younger son, William, has got himself a very beautiful but quite unsuitable wife. Selina has come from nowhere and Lady Arndale recognizes an adventuress when she sees one, even if poor William doesn't. She disapproves of their gadding about in the fashionable London society created by King Edward, but now he has just died and the new King George is believed to share the strict morals of his grandmother, the great Queen Victoria, for whose passing Lady Arndale is still in mourning. So no doubt Selina will be influenced to change her ways.
All the same she is glad that it is Charles who will inherit and preserve the traditional way of life at the hall, the hierarchy where everyone knows his place and his duty. Witchart, the all-powerful butler, in command of the indoor staff, ensures the smooth running of the household while Jimson, the head gardener, ensures perfection in the grounds with an invisible army of undergardeners who must never be seen by the gentry as they stroll among the flower beds or wander in the park.
In the nursery Nanny Stone's rules as she did when Master Charles was a child. Now his younger children, Rupert and Laura, live with her in the nursery and no doubt when their elder brother Teddy finishes his education and comes home, he will marry and Nanny will look after his children too. Governesses come and go but Nanny Stone, in her black bombazine dress with jet buttons, is a permanent fixture, as unchanging as the nursery chimneypiece.
In the school which Lady Arndale founded forty-five years ago, the children of the estate workers are taught by Miss Poole who was appointed, at the age of fifteen, when the school was built. Here they learn to read and write and recite their catechism. The girls are taught needlework so that the best of them can be usefully employed as lady's maids up at the hall. The boys are taught to be obedient farm workers. They too know their place in the hierarchy; regularly they sing:
The rich man at his castle,
The poor man at his gate,
God made them high or lowly
And ordered their estate.
It is a well ordered, predictable existence in which everyone, master and servant alike, knows their place. But the storm clouds are gathering over Europe and soon the outbreak of "the war to end all wars" will turn their world upside down, destroying all their old certainties.
Margaret Bacon
Margaret Bacon was brought up in the Yorkshire Dales, and educated at The Mount School, York and at Oxford. She taught history before her marriage to a Civil Engineer whose profession entailed much travel and frequent moves of house. Her first book, 'Journey to Guyana', was an account of two years spent in South America. Her subsequent books, including one children's novel, have all been fiction. She has two daughters and is now settled in Wiltshire.
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Northrop Hall - Margaret Bacon
NORTHROP HALL
Margaret Bacon
Copyright 2011 Margaret Bacon
Smashwords Edition
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'That is a very bad word, Rupert. We must wash out your mouth with soap water.'
'It's not fair,' he told her indignantly, cheeks flushing, eyes accusing. He quite liked the taste of soap actually; it was the injustice of it that maddened him.
'Papa said it yesterday. I heard him.'
'That's as maybe,' Nanny said calmly, as she led him to the washstand, placed a bar of Pears soap in a mug and poured hot water from the jug on to it.
'He was in the office with Mr Shaw and I was outside and I heard him. We must consider closing the school,
he said. It's ridiculous to keep it open for so few children,
he said. Bloody ridiculous,
he said.'
'That's twice you've said it now,' Nanny told him, glancing at his younger sister who was playing on the hearthrug as if absorbed in rearranging the furniture in the dolls' house, but with a telltale stillness about her which showed that she was listening to every word. 'So that'll need two soap rinses.'
'I didn't say it. I quoted it. A quotation doesn't count.'
'Twice,' Nanny repeated, fishing the soap, soft and slippery now, out of the mug.
She watched as he rinsed and spat into the blue and white china bowl. Twice.
Thirty years of always knowing best had armoured her with implacable righteousness; her employer would no more have thought of arguing with Nanny Stone than she would have disputed the ten commandments with Moses.
Children argued with her, of course; children did, and Rupert more than most, but none of it made any more impact on her than paper arrows on armour plating.
She had been there for as long as any of the children could remember, as much a fixture as the shutters on the windows or the tall, brass-knobbed fireguard on which she hung their clothes to air. She never had a day off and belonged in the nursery like the chimney piece.
She didn't change any more than the other fixtures; always dressed in a black bombazine dress with carved jet buttons, protected by an apron and stiff cuffs, her hair drawn back into a plait which was wound around her head, nothing about her varied. The seasons came and went, the weather altered, but Nanny Stone never changed. And her behaviour, her standards, her everything, was as predictable as her clothes.
She always followed punishment with religious admonition.
'Tonight, you must ask God for forgiveness,' she told him. 'Never forget that he sent his only son to save your soul.'
'Why didn't he come himself?'
'Because...' if she hesitated, it was only for a second '...because he was too busy. He had a lot of things to see to, being God. And that's enough of questions.'
'Why did he only have one son? I mean, my parents have four of us and they're just mortals.'
'Dicky Paste's father has just had another son and he's only an undergardener,' his sister pointed out from the hearthrug.
'Oh, can we go and see it? I like Dicky Paste. We used to go to see them with Teddy and Diana so it wouldn't be fair if we couldn't go by ourselves now, just because they're not here.'
'There is no cause to argue,' Nanny told him. 'I shall ask permission. And now we must get ready to go down and see your mamma.'
Reluctantly they reached for brushes and combs, clean boots and buttonhooks. This hour downstairs was the treat of the day, but that didn't make the preliminaries any less tedious.
There were four flights of stairs down from the day nursery. The top flight was steep so Nanny went carefully, holding on to the bannister and looking down at her feet. Laura, knowing her manners, hovered alongside, but the next stairs were shallower so she ran ahead with Rupert, eager to get into the drawing room. Soon she would be sitting by her mother, smelling that sweet lavender smell, listening to fairy stories, or Lob-lie-by-the-Fire or The Water Babies or Jackanapes, or Mrs Gaskell or – oh anything. It didn't matter; it was all wonderful. And if you sat on the floor the carpet felt lovely after the nursery linoleum. On good days, there might be biscuits as well as stories, biscuits and lemonade which Cook made in a big glass jug. If it was a bad day there would be Grandmama. They waited by the door until Nanny caught up with them.
They saw at once that Grandmama had decided to join them; she was sitting by the fireside, casting her black and gloomy presence over their golden hour. But they knew how they must behave; they went across to her, each in turn planting a kiss on that cheek which was surprisingly soft so that you feared your mouth might sink into its folds.
Her grandmother's cheeks always reminded Laura of the dough which Cook sometimes let them play with if she was in a good mood, especially if their parents were away, when they seemed to spend more time in the kitchen and the maids would spoil them and say, 'Oh, you're a caution you are and no mistake' and even Mademoiselle would unbend and call them her little cabbages. There was a special sort of bread bun which Cook made, into whose soft surface she would let them press a glacé cherry; the uncooked dough felt just like Grandmama's cheek.
Duty done, they were free to run across to their mother, kiss her firm, pink cheeks and settle down for a story, Laura sitting on the floor, leaning back against her mother's knees, Rupert on a stool alongside.
From her armchair by the fireside old Lady Arndale watched them, her eyes so hooded that they seemed to be closed. Her grandchildren hoped that she slept, that she wouldn't spoil their hour by firing questions at them about their catechism or make them recite their tables.
But although she watched them, her mind this afternoon was not on her grandchildren. She was thinking about the school, now under threat of closure. Building a school for the estate workers had been the pinnacle of her achievement in establishing her family as landed gentry and she could not bear to see it closed.
There had been no school here, of course, when they had bought the estate in 1863; it had been much smaller then, only two hundred acres with four farms and a neglected hall set in an even more neglected garden. It belonged to a very distant relation of her mother and was going, as she kept telling her husband, for a song.
The husband she had married in Lancashire came from a wealthy old cotton family. Trade, alas, but very old trade, as her own mother had pointed out to her in mitigation, very well established trade, not the sort of trade you got nowadays. She herself was the only child of well-to-do parents who died shortly after she was married, leaving her a considerable inheritance. So, as she explained to her husband, there was no reason why they should not buy the estate. Why not move south, why not exchange the bleak Lancashire landscape for the gentler Gloucestershire countryside and the life of a mill owner for that of a country gentleman?
He had taken a great deal of persuading. 'I invest in South American railways, I invest in banks and assurance companies and I get a good return. But what sort of return would I get on land, eh? Tell me that,' he had objected, his northern accent getting stronger as his doubts multiplied.
'The return on investment in land is of a different kind,' she told him gently, but with the firmness of one who came of a family who knew about such things. 'It is a social and perhaps political return, a return for which our children will bless you. We have the next generation to consider.'
She had known, of course, that it would be hard for him to resist the pleas of his beautiful young wife, especially now that she was pregnant.
So they had bought Northrop Hall and immediately set about embellishing it, adding a nursery wing and extending the servants' quarters. They modernized the existing building and even installed a lavatory on one of the half-landings for the use of women and children. The men would, of course, her husband insisted, go outside, as they had always done.
The estate was small but over the next few years they added three small villages, two hamlets and six independent farms. They also owned the church and the right to appoint the vicar as well as the clerk to the parish and the overseer of the workhouse. She would have liked her husband to enter Parliament but he drew the line at that, limiting his political activities to supporting the local candidate at election times, transporting all his estate workers to the voting station and making sure that they voted as they were bidden, though it was hard to be quite sure after that dreadful Mr Gladstone introduced secret ballot, which seemed to her a very sneaky and un-English way of doing things. She also saw to it that her husband gave large donations to their own party, in return for which he gained his knighthood.
She was the one most interested in gardens so it was she who had supervised the landscaping of the neglected grounds around the house, replacing overgrown hedges with a ha-ha to lengthen the view, introducing fashionable parterres and rose gardens, classical statuary, loggias and pergolas. In the great debate between formality and nature she came down heavily on the side of the former.
When all these improvements had been wrought, Lady Arndale was satisfied that their way of life was indistinguishable from that of the landed gentry who had owned their estates for generations, but she was aware that when it came to philanthropy they had the edge over her. True, she supported local charities, donated money for the Sunday School, helped the clothing society and the lying-in society, but more impressive than any of this was to found a school for the children of the estate workers. A school would be the final proof that they had arrived.
The decision to do so was timely, for her husband had just bought more land which included a tiny village whose three families no longer worshipped at their local church which was falling into disrepair. He didn't like waste of any kind so it seemed a good use of stone to have the church pulled down and rebuilt as the school his wife so fervently wanted in Northrop. He found just the right site for it, set back from the road, sheltered by a line of trees and with ample space for a playground. It did, of course, look exactly like the church it had once been, which occasionally confused antiquarian visitors to the parish.
Of all her duties as lady of the manor, supervising this school had given her the most satisfaction. The actual management of it was, of course, left to the vicar and the church wardens, but she kept a watchful eye on it herself; it was she who had seen to it that the girls were provided with plain, serviceable bonnets and the boys with jackets. It was she who visited the school to inspect the girls' needlework. A fine seamstress herself, she considered herself to be a strict but fair judge, dismissing with contemptuous eye and biting tongue the bungled efforts of the less skilful, so that they crept back to their desks with bowed heads, shamed into tears. But for a child who produced a particularly fine piece of work, evenly sewn with tiny stitches, her admiration was genuine and her praise instant as she made a mental note to see to it that the girl got a place as undernursemaid or lady's maid or some other position at the hall where her gift might be exploited.
She didn't visit the school so much now, of course, though she did go occasionally, pushed in her wheelchair by Witchart, the butler, or by Jimson, the head gardener, when she was doing a tour of the grounds. The garden was one of the few things about which she and her daughter-in-law disagreed. Elspeth loved informality, colour and exuberance in a garden in the modern fashion. But she was a dear girl and in every other respect deferred to her mother-in-law, indeed modelled herself upon her, so Lady Arndale had happily conceded that so long as the formal gardens remained near the house, nature could prevail beyond. Thus they divided the supervision between them and it suited her anyway, as she grew old and infirm, to confine herself to the area near the hall, to the parterres, the conservatory, the greenhouses, while Elspeth and her husband made decisions about the rest. Jimson understood the arrangement, as did his staff.
Elspeth was over at the piano now, accompanying the children as they sang, as she herself used to do in the old days. Elspeth was lovely in her pale pink teagown, especially so since she had only just discarded the mourning she had been in for the King's death. She herself had not altered her dress when King Edward died; there was no need since she was still in mourning for Queen Victoria.
The death of the King was sad, of course, but it was nothing to the shock that Queen Victoria's death had been. She herself had been born in the same year that the great queen had come to the throne and, like almost everyone else in Britain, had known no other monarch. She had not liked or approved of the Edwardian Age. Maybe all that high living had suited high society in London, but it was not at all the style which suited the country gentry. Fortunately George V seemed much more Victorian in his ways; not for him all that racing, that dashing off to foreign spas and having to do with immoral women. The court would set a better example, she thought approvingly, under a new king who was more like his grandmother, who loved the countryside as Queen Victoria had done, who was more of a family man and, according to Charles, an excellent shot.
It was a relief to her that Charles was her elder son. His younger brother, William, who lived with his fashionable wife in London, was very Edwardian in his ways. Unlike dear Charles, he hardly ever saw his own children, was out every night with his wife at dinners and balls and theatres. She was a beauty, of course, but that was no excuse for gadding about all day forever shopping and going to her dressmaker or attending matinees and, if she was at home, reading unsuitable books and letting the children read them too, even the girl. She'd come from nowhere, Selina had, and without a penny too. She, Lady Arndale, knew an adventuress when she saw one, even if poor innocent young William didn't. She tried not to think about them, or their impending arrival next month.
She turned her mind instead to the much pleasanter prospect of Charles' family, relaxing as she thought of dear Teddy, doing so well at school, cast in his father's mould he was. Looking ahead she could see, as clearly as any ancient prophetess might have done, his future mapped out before him. He would leave school with honour, a credit to his family, he would go up to Oxford – when would that be, 1914 or 1915? – and study some subject, she was not sure what but certainly something suitable for a young gentleman.
Then in the fullness of time, he would return home to learn from his father all he needed to know about the estate, gradually taking over more and more of the burden of responsibility, as Charles had once taken over from his father, until the time came when Teddy would take over altogether. Charles and Elspeth would continue to give him advice, of course, as she had always done and intended to go on doing while life was in her. Not that her advice was always taken, she thought, grim again for a moment.
She hadn't approved of young Diana being sent to that place in France. It was all very well for them to say that it was a Protestant convent, she still felt in her bones that words like convent and prioress smacked of popery. She sensed too that there was an obstinate streak in her granddaughter that irked her. She didn't know where the girl got it from, certainly not from her mother, the amenable Elspeth.
As for the two youngest, it was too early to tell. Rupert was said to be argumentative, but certainly he never argued with her. His father had never been difficult so it couldn't be in Rupert's blood. Anyway if he did show signs of rebelliousness no doubt boarding school would soon knock it out of him, if Nanny hadn't already done so.
Then there was little Laura, such a sweet little girl with her huge watchful eyes taking everything in. Untidy, alas, with her unruly hair and with stockings that never seemed to stay up, but time and Nanny and her devoted mamma would put everything right, Lady Arndale thought, relaxed now as she thought affectionately of Charles' children.
She must have dropped off for a moment, for she awoke with a start when Nanny came in to collect Rupert and Laura. They came over to her, as she knew they would, to give her a goodnight kiss; she gave them her blessing and refrained from inviting them to recite their twelve times table.
Meanwhile Nanny had one of her quick words with her mistress concerning the children's wish to go and see the Pastes' new baby.
'But of course, Nanny,' Elspeth said. 'We always encourage them to play with the estate children. So long as they don't get too familiar, of course. I suppose...?' She glanced at the children and touched her hair significantly.
It was a gesture which Nanny interpreted correctly. 'Quite safe, ma'am,' she confirmed. 'No lice in the Paste family.'
They were very nearly late to bed that night, delayed by their father who came into the hall just as they were going upstairs. The children rushed up to him, Laura reaching him first, to be swept up in his arms and swung up high. Rupert had a more reserved embrace as befitted his age and sex.
Nanny watched, impassive. Nobody looking at her could have guessed how her heart delighted to see her Mr Charles playing with his children. He had been just under a year old when she had come here, aged thirteen, as undernurse to old Nanny Bradshaw. She had been here ever since and looked after his children as she had once looked after him. She had lifted him on to the same rocking horse, washed him in the same bath tub in front of the fire, she had heard him say the same prayers.
'Nanny,' he was saying now, 'I haven't seen you for nearly a week. How is everything in the nursery? Off you go, you two. Upstairs. Nanny will follow in a moment.'
'Well, Mr Charles,' she said, when they were out of earshot, 'I think Rupert is getting restless.'
He nodded.
'Yes, I've noticed. He should be at school, of course, but they insist on another term off. He was so very ill with the diphtheria, you remember.'
Remember? Would she ever forget it? She'd thought they'd lose him, as they'd lost little Louise with it forty years ago.
'He might have been better off in the schoolroom, but with Teddy away at school and Diana abroad, it would have been a bit intense for him. Dr Portly says it's important in such cases not to overtax the brain. Physical exercise is of course excellent for him.'
'He gets plenty of that. He goes out on his pony and he loves bicycling round the estate. He needs occupation.'
'I'll ask Thomson to make time to take him out shooting. He was very good with Teddy.'
She nodded. She trusted the keeper absolutely. He knew about keeping boys in order as well as getting them to shoot straight.
'And I'll take him around with me whenever it's suitable.'
'He'll enjoy that. There's nothing he likes better than going round the estate with you, Mr Charles.'
'Yes, they've all taken splendidly to it. I've much to be grateful for. Well, I'd better let you go up now, Nanny,' he said, touching her hand in a little gesture that unconsciously conveyed that if she'd been his mother, granny to his little ones, it would have been a kiss. Not that she would ever have allowed such a thought even to form in her head, much less express it. Any more than he would.
The children were playing funerals when she got back into the day nursery. Rupert had spread a rug over his sister, who was lying under the table, and was chanting:
Ashes to ashes,
Dust to dust,
If God doesn't take you,
The devil must.
'That's not a very nice game, Rupert,' she told him. 'Now, wash hands before supper.'
'Everybody said the King's funeral was splendid. Nanny,' Rupert objected, as his sister went obediently towards the washstand. 'And even if they aren't nice, we can't do without them. What would have happened to King Edward if there weren't any funerals? He'd still just be lying about, wouldn't he?'
'Hands, Rupert,' Nanny repeated, ignoring what he said, and going to open the door. 'I can hear the supper being brought upstairs now.'
Mary-Ann, small for her fourteen years, was carrying a tray which was so wide she could only just spread her arms far enough out to grasp the sides of it. She was flushed and breathing hard after climbing the five flights of stairs from basement to nursery.
She was very new to the job and so unused to the ways of the hall that she dropped a little curtsey when Nanny thanked her.
'No need for that, my girl,' Nanny told her. 'Put the tray on that table.'
'Yes ma'am, sorry ma'am. I mean... ' And she fled.
They always had cocoa and plates of bread and butter for supper, but tonight there was a currant bun apiece as well.
'Very kind of Cook, I'm sure,' Nanny said. 'But not to be touched until the bread is all eaten.'
She spoke grimly. Only plain food at night was one of her rules and she saw this infringement as an attempt to undermine her authority, just another skirmish in the war ceaselessly waged between kitchen and nursery. But she could manage them, she'd seen cooks come and go, though not as frequently as the tutors and governesses with whom she'd likewise done battle over the years. They were better educated than she was, she'd never be foolish enough to deny it, but they didn't have the control that she had. Where children were concerned the final decision was always hers.
'And don't gobble, Rupert, or you'll get tummy ache and need medicine.'
She glanced significantly at the remedies on the shelf: formamint, pommadavine and, most dreaded, castor oil, next to Nursing Notes and a well-worn Handbook of Instruction on the Care of Children. Rupert's jaws moved more slowly, knowing that Nanny's favourite quotation from that book was, 'The bowels should be kept well open.'
Since his brief sojourn at school, Rupert had been promoted to having his own room, one floor down. He washed there while Nanny saw to the filling of the brown bath in the night nursery for his sister. When she was little, Laura's favourite moment of the day, second only to the precious hour with Mamma, was being lifted out of the bath on to a big towel, previously warmed over the tall fender round the fire and spread across Nanny's capacious lap.
'Who's a newborn baby?' Nanny used to half chant, half yodel; because she wasn't much good at singing, and she'd wrap her in the warm thickness of the towel, rocking her to and fro. This happened every night unless Nanny was cross over some misdeed, so Laura had learned to be especially good from tea time onwards; nursery memory tended to be blessedly short.
She was too big for anything like that now, of course, but still when Nanny handed her the thick bath towel from the fender there was something comforting about the warm fluffiness of it, which lingered even now as she methodically dried herself while Nanny emptied the bath water into two buckets for the kitchen staff to remove. Usually this chore was left to the nursemaid but it was her day off and Nanny didn't believe in leaving work for her to do when she came in. This she explained to Laura so that she would learn from it consideration for others.
'Just like your mother sees that as little work as possible is done on a Sunday so that the staff can rest and worship. And now time for your hair.'
Every night the long fair hair was brushed and combed and tied up in rags to make it curly for the next day. In dry weather it sometimes stayed curly, but usually the curls dropped out by mid-morning. Rupert said it was stupid and if she had any sense she'd refuse to have it done as he would if he was a girl. She told him he wasn't and she didn't and that was that. And he told her that she sounded just like Nanny.
On Thursday nights her mother heard her prayers. She came in tonight just as her hair was finished; it was always like that, as if everyone knew to the minute what everyone else was doing. Nanny left them to go and have her own supper and Laura knelt by her bedside. First the Lord's Prayer, which she got through without a mistake, and then 'God Bless all Her Relations', whom she named in order of seniority starting with Grandmama, then, since she was allowed to add on any extra she chose, she offered up the kitchen cat, a pet rabbit and the Pastes' new baby for blessing. Her mother, changed now from her teagown into her dinnerdress, sat quietly in the armchair, listening. Then she hugged her daughter, kissed her goodnight, told her to sleep tight and tip-toed out, as if sleep might already have come.
Sleep did not come easily to Laura; she was still awake when Nanny came up. Her bed was on the other side of the night nursery and she had a thin screen behind which she prepared for the night. The lamplight shone dimly through it, illuminating her shadowy figure as she undressed with her back to Laura, contriving to keep herself completely covered until she was into her nightdress.
Laura watched fascinated, as first of all she spread her nightdress on the bed and took off her apron and cuffs. Then her hands disappeared up her skirts and came out holding a stocking which was placed on the chair. The other one followed, then her drawers, then her flannel petticoat, then, very slowly and with much twisting and turning, her stays. And now she hunched up her shoulders and eased her arms out of the sleeves of her dress, pushing it upwards until it covered her head and hung like a tent over her body.
Her arms were free now and reached out to take the nightdress off the bed. Hidden under the tent-like covering of her dress she manoeuvred herself into the nightgown and not until it covered her completely from head to foot did she remove her black bombazine.
Reassured by this familiar ritual, bemused with watching