God's Good Man - Marie Corelli (i want to read a book .txt) š
- Author: Marie Corelli
- Performer: -
Book online Ā«God's Good Man - Marie Corelli (i want to read a book .txt) šĀ». Author Marie Corelli
-ā
āMr. Walden donāt---,ā put in Mrs. Spruce, quickly.
āAnd I like to think of Him as all love and pity and goodness,ā went on Maryllia, not heeding herāāand I donāt say prayers, because I think He knows what is best for me without my asking. Do you understand? So itās really no use my going to church, unless just out of curiosityāand perhaps I will some day do that,āIāll see about it! But I must know Mr. Walden a little better first,āI must find out for myself what kind of a man he is, before I make up my mind to endure such a martyrdom as listening to a sermon! I simply loathe sermons! I suppose I must have had too many of them when I was a child. Surely you remember, Spruce, that I used to be taken into Riversford to church?ā Mrs. Spruce nodded emphatically in the affirmative. āYes!ābecause when father was alive the church here was only a ruin. And I used to go to sleep over the sermons alwaysā and once I fell off my seat and had to be carried out. It was dreadful! Now Uncle Fred never went to church,ānor Aunt Emily. So Iāve quite got out of the way of goingānobody is very particular about it in Paris or London, you see. But perhaps Iāll try and hear Mr. Walden preachājust onceāand Iāll tell you then what I think about it. Iāll put his card on the mantelpiece to remind me!ā
And she suited the action to the word, Mrs. Spruce gazing at her in a kind of mild stupefaction. It seemed such a very odd thing to stick up a clergymanās card as a reminder to go to church ājust onceā some Sunday.
Meanwhile Maryllia continued, āNow, Spruce, you must begin to be busy! You must prepare the Manor for the reception of all sorts of people, small and great. I feel that the time has come for ācompany, company!ā And in the first place Iām going to send for Cicely Bourne,āsheās my pet āgeniusāāand Iām paying the cost of her musical education in Paris. Sheās an orphanālike meāsheās all alone in the worldālike me;āand weāre devoted to each other. Sheās only a childājust over fourteenābut sheās simply a wonder!āthe most wonderful musical wonder in the world!āand she has a perfectly marvellous voice. Her master Gigue says that when she is sixteen she will have emperors at her feet! Emperors! There are only a few,ābut theyāll all be grovelling in the dust before her! You must prepare some pretty rooms for her, Spruce, those two at the top of the house that look right over the lawn and woodsāand make everything as cosy as you can. Iāll put the finishing touches. And I must send to London for a grand piano. Thereās only the dear old spinet in the drawing-room,āitās sweet to sing to, and Cicely will love it,ābut she must have a glorious āgrandā as well. I shall wire to her to- day,āI know sheāll come at once. She will arrive direct from Paris,ālet me see!āāand she paused meditativelyāāwhen can she arrive? This is Friday,āyes!āprobably she will arrive here Sunday or Monday morning. So you can get everything ready.ā
āVery well, Miss,ā and Mrs. Spruce, with the usual regulation ādipā of respectful submission to her mistress was about to withdraw, when Maryllia called her back and handed over to her care the wicker basket full of visiting-cards.
āPut them all by,āāshe saidāāWhen Cicely comes weāll go through them carefully together, and discuss what to eat, drink and avoid. Till then, I shall blush unseen, wasting my sweetness on the desert air! Time enough and to spare for making the acquaintance of the ācounty.ā Who was it that said: Never know your neighboursā? I forget,ābut he was a wise man, anyway!ā
Mrs. Spruce ādippedā a second time in silence, and was then allowed to depart on her various household duties. The good womanās thoughts were somewhat chaotically jumbled, and most fervently did she long to send for āPasson,ā her trusted adviser and chief consoler, or else go to him herself and ask him what he thought concerning the non-church-going tendencies of her mistress. Was she altogether a lost sheep? Was there no hope for her entrance into the heavenly fold?
āWhich I canāt and wonāt believe sheās wicked,āāsaid Mrs. Spruce to herselfāāWith that sweet childie face anā eyes she couldnāt be! Māappen ātis bad example,āāer āMerican aunt āavinā no religion as ātwere, anā āer uncle, Mr. Frederick, was never no great shakes in āis young days if all the truth was told. Well, well! The Lord āe knows āis own, anā my āpinion is He aināt a-goinā to do without Miss Maryllia, for itās allus āturn again, turn again, why will āee dieā sort of thing with Him, anā He donāt give out in āis patience. Iām glad sheās goinā to āave a friend to stay with āer,āthatāll do āer good and āearten her upāanā mebbe the friendāll want to go to church, anā Miss Maryllia āull go with her, anā once they listens to Passon ātwill be all right, for āis voice do draw you up into a little bit oā heaven somehow, whether ye likes it or not, anā if Miss Maryllia once āears āim, sheāll be wanting to āear āim againā so itās best to leave it all in the Lordās āands which makes the hill straight anā the valleys crooked, anā knows whatās good for both man and beast. Miss Maryllia aināt goinā to miss the Way, the Truth anā the LifeāIām sartin sure oā that!ā
Thus Mrs. Spruce gravely cogitated, while Maryllia herself, unaware of the manner in which her immortal destinies were being debated by the old housekeeper, put on her hat, and ran gaily across the lawn, her great dog bounding at her side, making for the usual short-cut across the fields to the village. Arrived there she went straight to the post-office, a curious little lop-sided half-timbered cottage with a projecting window, wherein, through the dusty close-latticed panes could be spied various strange edibles, such as jars of acidulated drops, toffee, peppermint balls, and barley-sugarā likewise one or two stray oranges, some musty-looking cakes, a handful or so of old nuts, and slabs of chocolate protruding from shining wrappers of tin-foil,āwhile a flagrant label of somebodyās āChoice Teaā was suspended over the whole collection, like a flag of triumph. The owner of this interesting stock-in-trade and the postmistress of St. Rest, was a quaint-looking little woman, very rosy, very round, very important in her manner, very brisk and bright with her eyes, but very slow with her fingers.
āWhich I gets the rheumatiz so bad in my joints,ā she was wont to sayāāthat I often wonders āow I knows postage-stamps from telegram- forms anā register papers from money-orders, anā if you doos them things wrong Goveānment never forgives you!ā
āAh, youāll never get into no trouble with Goveānment, Missis Tapple!ā her gossips were wont to assure her, āFor you be as ezack as ezack!ā
A compliment which Mrs. Tapple accepted without demur, feeling it to be no more than her just due. She was, however, in spite of her āezackā methods, always a little worried when anything out of the ordinary occurred, and she began to feel slightly flustered directly she saw Maryllia swing open her garden gate. She had already, during the last few days, been at some trouble to decipher various telegrams which the lady of the Manor had sent down by Primmins for immediate despatch, such as one to a certain Lord Roxmouth which had run as follows:āāNo time to reply to your letter. In love with pigs and poultry.ā
āIt IS āpigs and poultry,ā aināt it?ā she had asked anxiously of Primmins, after studying the message for a considerable time through, her spectacles. And Primmins, gravely studying it, too, had replied:ā
āIt is undoubtedly āpigs and poultry.āā
āAnd it IS āin loveā you think?ā pursued Mrs. Tapple, with perplexity furrowing her brow.
āIt is certainly āin love,āā rejoined Primmins, and the faintest suggestion of a wink affected his left eyelid.
Thereupon the telegram was āsent throughā to Riversford on its way to London, though not without serious misgivings in Mrs. Tappleās mind as to whether it might not be returned with a āGoveānmentā query as to its correctness. And now, when Maryllia herself entered the office, and said smilingly, āGood-morning! Some foreign telegram-forms, please!ā Mrs. Tapple felt that the hour was come when her powers of intelligence were about to be tried to the utmost; and she accordingly began to experience vague qualms of uneasiness.
āForeign telegram-forms, Miss? Is it for Ameriky?ā
āOh, no!āonly for Paris,āāand while the old lady fumbled nervously in her āofficialā drawer, Maryllia glanced around the little business establishment with amused interest. She had a keen eye for small details, and she noticed with humorous appreciation Mrs. Tappleās pink sun-bonnet hanging beside the placarded āPost Office Savings Bankā regulations, and a half side of bacon suspended from the ceiling, apparently for ācuringā purposes, immediately above the telegraphic apparatus. After a little delay, the required pale yellow āForeign and Colonialā forms were found, and Mrs. Tapple carefully flattened them out, and set them on her narrow office counter.
āWill you have a pencil, or pen and ink, Miss?ā she enquired.
āPen and ink, please,ā replied Maryllia; whereat the old postmistress breathed a sigh of relief. It would be easier to make out anything at all āstrange and uncommonā in pen and ink than in pencil-marks which had a trick of ārubbing.ā Leaning lightly against the counter Maryllia wrote in a clear bold round hand:
āMiss CICELY BOURNE, ā17 RUE CROISIE, PARIS. āCome to me at once. Shall want you all summer. Have wired Gigue. Start to-morrow. āMARYLLIA VANCOURT.āShe pushed this over to Mrs. Tapple, who thankfully noting that she was writing another, took time to carefully read and spell over every word, and mastered it all without difficulty. Meanwhile Maryllia prepared her second message thus:
āLouis GIGUE, āCONSERVATOIRE, PARIS. āJe desire que Cicely passe lāete avec moi et quāelle arrive immediatement. Elle peut tres-bien continuer ses etudes ici. Vous pouvez suivre, cher maitre, a votre plaisir. āMARYLLIA VANCOURT.āāItās rather long,āāshe said thoughtfully, as she finished it. āBut for Gigue it is necessary to explain fully. I hope you can make it out?ā
Poor Mrs. Tapple quivered with inward agitation as she took the terrible telegram in hand, and made a brave effort to rise to the occasion.
āYes, Miss,ā she stammered, āLouis GigueāG.i.g.u.e., thatās rightā yesāat the Conservatory, Paris.ā
āāNo, no!ā said Maryllia, with a little laughāāNot Conservatoryā ConservatoireāTOIRE, t.o.i.r.e., the place where they study music.ā
āOh, yesāI see!ā and Mrs. Tapple tried to smile knowingly, as she
Comments (0)