Mistress and Maid eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 411 pages of information about Mistress and Maid.

Mistress and Maid eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 411 pages of information about Mistress and Maid.

Elizabeth hoped so for his boy’s sake, and little as she liked him, she tried to conquer her antipathy as much as she could.  She always ways took care to treat him with extreme respect, and to bring up little Henry to do the same.  And, as often happens, Mr. Ascott began gradually to comport himself in a manner deserving of respect.  He ceased his oaths and his coarse language; seldom flew into a passion; and last, not least, the butler avouched that master hardly ever went to bed “muzzy” now.  Toward all his domestics, and especially his son’s nurse, he behaved himself more like a master and less like a tyrant; so that the establishment at Russell Square went on in a way more peaceful than had ever been known before.

There was no talk of his giving it a new mistress; he seemed to have had enough of matrimony.  Of his late wife he never spoke; whether he loved her or not, whether he had regretted her or not, the love and regret were now alike ended.

Poor Selina!  It was Elizabeth only, who, with a sacred sense of duty, occasionally talked to little Henry about “mamma up there”—­pointing to the blank bit of blue sky over the trees of Russell Square, and hoped in time to make him understand something about her, and how she had loved him, her “baby.”  This love, the only beautiful emotion her life had known, was the one fragment that remained of it after her death; the one remembrance she left to her child.

Little Henry was not in the least like her, nor yet like his father.  He took after some forgotten type, some past generation of either family, which reappeared in this as something new.  To Elizabeth he was a perfect revelation of beauty and infantile fascination.  He filled up every corner of her heart.  She grew fat and flourishing, even cheerful; so cheerful that she bore with equanimity the parting with her dear Miss Hilary, who went away in glory and happiness as Mrs. Robert Lyon, to live in Liverpool, and Miss Leaf with her.  Thus both Elizabeth’s youthful dreams ended in nothing, and it was more than probable that for the future their lives and hers being so widely apart, she would see very little of her beloved mistresses any more.  But they had done their work in her and for her; and it had borne fruit a hundred fold, and would still.

“I know you will take care of this child—­he is the hope of the family,” said Miss Leaf, when she was giving her last kiss to little Henry.  “I could not bear to leave him, if I were not leaving him with you.”

And Elizabeth had taken her charge proudly in her arms, knowing she was trusted, and in vowing to be worthy of that trust.

Another dream was likewise ended; so completely that she sometimes wondered if it was ever real, whether she had ever been a happy girl, looking forward as girls do to wifehood and motherhood; or whether she had not been always the staid middle aged person she was now, whom nobody ever suspected of any such things.

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Project Gutenberg
Mistress and Maid from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.