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Jane and the Genius of the Place Page 18


  “Of course,” her husband replied. “You must have Sothey, Austen—he is quite the genius of our little place, as the saying goes, ha! ha! I should not order a spade to be shifted, without I consulted Sothey.”4

  “He is your chief gardener?” Neddie idly enquired.

  ” Gardener! Good God, no!” Finch-Hatton cried.

  His daughter, the inscrutable Louisa, echoed a shocked and irreverent, “Julian, a gardener? Lord!”

  “Mr. Sothey is the second son of the Earl of Matlock,” Lady Elizabeth assured us. “His mother and I were quite the best of friends, before poor Honoria died. I have made it a little cause, you know, to look out for Julian— to further his interest, and so on, where a word or two might help. Particularly since the Earl went all to pieces in that shocking way, a few years ago …”

  She left the matter hanging. I had never heard of the Earl of Madock, much less his shocking ruin; but Lizzy nodded shrewdly.

  “It is a pity, is it not, that those who most lack success at the tables, are the very ones who game to their ruin?”

  “And his heir is just like him!” Lady Elizabeth cried, as hot on the scent as a foxhound. “The Honourable Cecil Sothey has fled to Switzerland these two years or more, and how he lives no one can say!”

  “But the younger son takes an interest in … landscape?” I ventured.

  “Exacdy so! Julian was always of an artistic disposition— a painter in oils, and put to study with the finest masters of Europe, before Buonaparte quite destroyed the Grand Tour, and the Earl’s circumstances brought an end to all education. But dear Julian’s taste is entirely beyond dispute, is it not, my love?”

  Mr. Finch-Hatton had withdrawn his pocket-watch once more, and was studying it intendy.

  “Mamma, “Miss Louisa cried in a warning tone, “if you do not leave off chattering, we shall be late for dinner at Eastwell. And then what will Julian say?”

  “He is presendy a guest at Eastwell Park?” I enquired.

  “At last!” Louisa exclaimed. “Julian has been all the summer promising to come, and never setting foot through the door! I declare I was quite distracted with disappointment. But there it is! One lady’s misfortune is another’s good luck. No one will want Julian at The Larches, I daresay, now that Mrs. Grey—”

  “Louisa!” her mother interjected sternly. “It does not do to talk of such things. I am sure Mr. Austen is already sick to death of that odious woman. I quite pity you, Mr. Austen. To be let in for such a tiresome business, and in such heat!”

  There was a fractional pause. Then my brother enquired negligently—as tho’ merely from politeness— “Mr. Sothey was a guest at The Larches?”

  “Julian served Mr. Grey as consultant for nearly half a year,” Lady Elizabeth confided proudly. “And you know how much the park is admired! There is nothing to equal The Larches in all of Kent—tho’ it is the Garden of England.”

  “So I have been assured. I regret that I have never had occasion to tour the full extent of Grey’s grounds,” Neddie replied smoothly. “But as you are intimate with Mr. Sothey, perhaps you have been more fortunate.”

  “We were often invited to pay a call,” Lady Elizabeth said vaguely, “but that woman, you know—I could never approve her. To pay a visit might lend a certain countenance to her behaviour. And Julian was so very much occupied—but now that Mrs. Grey is dead, it would not do for him to remain in the house. Julian determined to come to us directly, the very day of the Dreadful Event.”

  “Mamma,” Miss Louisa urged again.

  “To devote six months,” Neddie observed, “to a single estate! Mr. Sothey must have found a great deal to employ his time.”

  “Mr. Grey, I believe, has a passion for improvement,” Mr. Finch-Hatton interjected approvingly.

  “And as Grey was called so often to Town, Mr. Sothey must frequently have acted in his stead,” Neddie mused.

  The implication—that the landscape designer had found more than mere parkland to occupy his attention— was entirely lost on Lady Elizabeth.

  “Julian is a very responsible, steady sort of young man,” Lady Elizabeth cried, “and if he possessed the fortune he ought, I should never say nay to him! Our Louisa and Julian have known one another since childhood, you understand—I make nothing of any trifling attachment, of course—but, then, one does not often meet with a girl as good-looking; and now that Julian is grown into such a sprig of fashion, all the young ladies are quite wild about him.”

  “Mamma,” Miss Louisa wailed in exasperation.

  “My dear—the time!” Mr. Finch-Hatton exclaimed.

  “And how long will Mr. Sothey be with you, ma’am?” I enquired hurriedly.

  “We are so fortunate as to have his undivided attention for several weeks,” Lady Elizabeth replied. “We met with him quite by chance at that unfortunate race-meeting, you know, and he told us it would at last be in his power to pay us a visit. I was overjoyed! I declare I could not stop talking of it, until that lamentable woman put flight to every other consideration.” This was the nearest approach she would allow herself to strangulation. “But, however, it is immaterial now. We expect Julian for dinner this evening.”

  “Then you had certainly better be on your way,” Lizzy supplied, with her usual good breeding, as though she had never been jilted of a dinner partner herself, nor vexed beyond imagining by the quantity of effort undergone only this morning in the Godmersham kitchens. “I suppose we cannot hope to see you for several weeks, if Mr. Sothey intends to engross all your time.”

  “As to that—I cannot say, to be sure—but we are to have quite a little dinner gathering at Eastwell on the morrow—should be charmed, if you are not engaged? You might meet Mr. Sothey, go over his plans for the grounds, and judge of his talents yourselves!”

  “You are all kindness, Lady Elizabeth,” said my brother swiftly. A quelling look to his wife, who might have refused the invitation, went unnoticed by the Finch-Hattons.

  “You are too good, ma’am,” said Lizzy distantly.

  Lady Elizabeth smiled at her with infinite condescension. “Tho’ Julian shall be much taken up with our little place, Mrs. Austen, I am sure that Mr. Finch-Hatton would be delighted to spare him, should you require a consultation about your grounds. I am strongly of the opinion that you should have that Bendey down—and I do not think I flatter myself when I say, that my opinions on matters of Taste are everywhere celebrated.”

  And so the Finch-Hattons were shown to their barouche-landau, without having taken so much as a glass of Madeira—in a fever, one supposes, to welcome the genius of Eastwell Park.

  We watched them the length of the sweep, and when they had crossed the little stone bridge and were labouring up the hill to the Ashford road, Lizzy muttered, “Insufferable woman! I quite detest her. Must we indeed go to Eastwell on the morrow? Could not we decline a full hour after we are expected, and afford them all the misery they have served to us?”

  Neddie laughed and carried his wife’s hand to his lips. “We cannot. You know it is impossible. Such a display of carelessness would expose you to Lady Elizabeth’s scorn; and you could never bear to appear as vulgar as she. I fear that you have been bested by a Gendeman Improver, my dear—and there is nothing for it but to submit.”

  “It is of no consequence, Neddie.” She let fall the drape across the window, and turned away. “They had not been alighted from their carriage five minutes, before I considered the exchange an admirable one. Mr. Sothey must be formed of sterner stuff than we, to contemplate a visit of some weeks to Eastwell!”

  “Perhaps you underrate Miss Louisa’s charms,” I suggested.

  “The Finch-Hattons generally rate them so high themselves, that one must forever fall short,” she replied. “But I stand by my original claim. Mr. Sothey is a martyr to a peculiar cause, known only to himself—and is much to be pitied.”

  Neddie raised his brows expressively in my direction. He was considering, no doubt, the curious fact of Mr. Sothey
’s departure for Eastwell Park on the very day of Mrs. Grey’s murder. We had heard nothing before this of Sothey’s presence in the Grey household; and yet so protracted a visit—even under the guise of an estate’s improvement—must be remarkable. Valentine Grey had told us nothing of it, nor of his designer’s abrupt departure. Was this the matter he would keep dark—the element of the story that required a desperate diversion?

  “I quite long to meet Mr. Sothey,” I observed, “being but too susceptible myself to every Sprig of Fashion. And the delight of uniting the honour with another tour of Eastwell Park, is almost too much to be borne! —Tho’ I doubt I am improved enough myself, since last summer, to stand comparison with that noble place.”

  “Have a care, Jane,” my brother advised, as the dinner bell rang. “Lady Elizabeth may appear foolish at times, and suffer from a lamentable taste; but she is not a stupid woman. Even an irony so disguised as yours, cannot entirely escape her notice.”

  1 Eastwell Park sat four miles south of Godmersham on the road to Ashford, now the A20. It was the home of the Finch-Hattons until 1893. The house designed by Bonomi was razed in 1926, and its successor is presenuy operated as a hotel.—Editor’s note.

  2 Those who possessed country manners (like Jane Austen’s parents) generally dined around three or four o’clock in the afternoon. But stylish, fashionable people accustomed to the habits of London adopted the practise of dining at seven. It was considered dreadfully old-fashioned to do otherwise. Hence Lady Elizabeth’s sense of slight.—Editor’s note.

  4 It was Alexander Pope (1688-1744) who remarked that nothing could be achieved in landscape design without respect for the “genius of the place”—the governing spirit of a particular landscape. He referred to an idea first stated by Horace, that every place possessed a resident genie, that must be propitiated if Beauty was to be achieved. Pope probably intended this to mean a respect for the natural attributes of the terrain; but at times his words were interpreted quite literally as a respect for the resident god. Grottoes were built to house Pan or a water nymph, as at the great gardens of Stourhead in Wiltshire.—Editor’s note.

  Friday,

  23 August 1805

  IF THERE IS ANY SORT OF UNPLEASANTNESS TO BE FACED in the coming day—depend upon it, it will rain.

  The heat broke with a vengeance above our heads about an hour before dawn, lashing the early morning darkness with a petulant violence. I drowsed under the persistent patter of raindrops, content to drift in the twilight between dream and waking. I expected the storm to pass on directly, and leave the world new-washed under an August sun. By nine o’clock, however—when all but our indolent Lizzy had assembled in the breakfast parlour—a steady deluge veiled the meadows from our sight. The dun-coloured grasses were flattened with the pelting drops, and the willows at the riverbank were streaming like a mermaid’s tresses.

  “The Wingham road will be a morass of mud,” Neddie pronounced with decided gloom. “Such a day for a funeral!”

  “—And such a funeral for the day!” Henry added. “It is well you go in black, brother—for the wet cannot mar such a shade.”

  Neddie returned no answer; Henry’s caprice can prove a sore trial, at times.

  “I believe I shall bear you company, Ned,” he added, after an interval. “It would never do to send forth the Justice without a proper escort. I might be your outrider, and lend a certain style.”

  The Justice in question surveyed his brother’s fawn-coloured riding breeches and elegant salmon-and-green waistcoat with a critical air. “I declare you look almost Roman, Henry. The very thing for a Papist rite. Do not alter the slightest particular, I beg—excepting, perhaps, the addition of a black armband.”

  Mrs. Grey was to be interred in the family vault at The Larches itself, with an elderly Catholic priest pressed into service. Where such a man had been found in the cathedral town of Canterbury, was a question best left to Mr. Valentine Grey; that gentleman must have resources of which we knew nothing.

  “I understand,” Henry confided to the table in general, “that there was some talk of shipping the body back to France. The French Comte is said to have been most insistent. Grey, however, would have none of it—and so in English earth she will lie. The fellows at the Hound and Tooth could talk of little else.”

  ‘You astonish me,” I said, over my teacup. “I thought nothing could turn them from laying bets on the fate of Mr. Collingforth.”

  My brothers set out for The Larches a quarter-hour later, for the service was to be at eleven o’clock, and they would require every moment of the interval. In respect of the mire, they went mounted on two of Neddie’s hunters, who might gallop over hill and hedgerow if the road proved impassable. I watched their progress some few moments from the breakfast parlour window— Neddie’s easy hands and graceful seat, and Henry’s scrabbling dash. The elder brother could never look anything but the country gendeman; the younger, nothing but a man of Town.

  “The post is come, Jane,” Lizzy informed me from the door, “and you have a letter from Cassandra. Pray do not stand on ceremony with me; I beg you would read it.”

  The packet’s direction was written remarkably ill; my sister had undoubtedly scrawled it in considerable discomposure of mind. I broke the seal without further apology, and endeavoured to make out the hasty lines.

  Mr. Edward Bridges, Cassandra reported, had been besieged yesterday morning by creditors at the very doors of the Farm itself, to the embarrassment of his sisters and the extreme displeasure of his formidable mother. Lady Bridges had dismissed the harried men encamped upon her door, with instructions to apply for recompense to her Canterbury solicitor, a Mr. Bane; and then was closeted with her errant son for several hours. Mr. Bridges emerged, looking utterly wretched, and having furnished his mother with a complete list of his tradesmen’s debts, and obligations of honour; his losses at race-meetings, cockfights, cricket wagers, and so on. He was made so thoroughly uncomfortable by Lady Bridges’s discovery, that he threw himself on Cassandra’s mercy, and begged forthwith for an interview. It seems that Lady Bridges had offered her son little choice: He must marry sensibly, and respectably, and quite soon; and he must marry a lady of whom his mother could approve. Mr. Bridges relied upon Cassandra’s compassion—her interest as a friend—her unselfish devotion to the welfare of his family, which all of them had frequendy remarked—in short, he drove my sister into the drawing-room corner with the energy of a catde-herder intent upon his dinner.

  Cassandra was thus placed in a most dreadful position. She had been a guest in the Bridges household nearly a month, and had received nothing but kindness at their hands; she had always looked with affection upon the entire family; and she was conscious, moreover, of the peculiar tie that existed between her generous brother, Neddie, and his wife’s relations. A sense of obligation must very nearly overwhelm; but she recovered her senses before any hasty betrothal might be forced upon her; expressed her gratitude to Mr. Bridges for his esteem—and refused him.

  She wrote to inform me that she would be returning to Godmersham on Monday.

  I read the bulk of this letter aloud to Lizzy. To her credit, she retained a tolerable measure of composure, and expressed her feelings most eloquently in the determined shredding of a piece of toast. When I had concluded, she said briskly, “And I suppose that this letter”—pointing with a butter knife to the sealed packet lying next to her plate—“will be a summons from Mamma.”

  “A summons?”

  “For yourself.” She broke the seal and unfolded a single sheet of determined script, underlined in places and closed with several flourishes. A moment sufficed to peruse it; Lizzy was familiar of old with her mother’s style and purpose.

  “It is as I suspect, Jane. You are to return to the Farm in Cassandra’s carriage; it shall wait only five minutes to deposit your sister, before flying away with yourself. The coachman’s instructions are quite explicit; he is not to return from Godmersham, without he carries you as hi
s passenger.”

  “Your mother is very nearly terrifying, Lizzy. How did you manage to survive your infancy?”

  “She would not have had it any other way, I assure you. We were fairly beaten or cajoled out of every dangerous illness, and never suffered to put on airs. Shall you detest the visit very much, Jane?”

  “Not at all. Tho’ I dislike being driven from my Yellow Room without even the slightest consultation of my wishes, I think I shall find ample scope for enjoyment. Captain Woodford’s troops, you know, are to march directly past the Farm on their highly-secret deployment from Chatham to Deal; I expect a skirmish, or at least a protest, from the assembled pheasant-hunters of the neighbourhood.”

  “Now be, be, serious, my dear Jane. Tho’ your visit would do much to soften the blow of Edward’s ruin— and ease his relations at home immeasurably—I cannot urge you to go.”

  “I assure you, Lizzy, that I shall account the favour as the merest trifle. I cannot undertake to accept your brother’s proposal of marriage, however. I was always inclined to follow Cassandra’s lead in everything, you know; and at the advanced age of nearly thirty, I should not like to diverge from her example.”

  Lizzy was almost provoked to laughter; she expressed once more her sense of my goodness; and went off to the morning-room to write to her mother. I was left in all the shame of one who knows that her private motives are hardly so noble as her public professions; for I intended to profit from my visit to Goodnestone, in a thorough study of Mr. Bridges’s uneasy circumstances. He had earned Denys Collingforth’s public contempt, fallen out completely with Captain Woodford, and had moved in fear since Mrs. Grey’s murder; now creditors hounded his very door. Such a parade of misfortune could hardly arise from coincidence. I was determined to know the reason for it.

  But if I was to quit Godmersham in a few days’ time, I must avail myself of its beauties while yet they remained to me. I glanced out the window and perceived that it had ceased to rain. Pale sunshine was drifting lightly over the damp meadow grasses, and glinting along the parapet of the bridge; the prospect was more inviting than it had been in days.