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CHAPTER XXV
COMMEMORATION
The end of the academic year was now at hand, and Oxford was beginning to put on her gayest clothing. The college gardeners were in a state of unusual activity, and the lawns and flower-beds which form such exquisite settings to many of the venerable grey, gabled buildings, were as neat and as bright as hands could make them. Cooks, butlers and their a.s.sistants were bestirring themselves in kitchen and b.u.t.tery, under the direction of bursars jealous of the fame of their houses, in the preparation of the abundant and solid fare with which Oxford is wont to entertain all comers. Everything the best of its kind, no stint but no nonsense, seems to be the wise rule which the University hands down and lives up to in these matters. However we may differ as to her degeneracy in other departments, all who have ever visited her will admit that in this of hospitality she is still a great national teacher, acknowledging and preaching by example the fact, that eating and drinking are important parts of man's life, which are to be allowed their due prominence, and not thrust into a corner, but are to be done soberly and thankfully, in the sight of G.o.d and man. The coaches were bringing in heavy loads of visitors; carriages of all kinds were coming in from the neighbouring counties; and lodgings in the High-street were going up to fabulous prices.
In one of these High-street lodgings, on the evening of the Sat.u.r.day before Commemoration, Miss Winter and her cousin are sitting. They have been in Oxford during the greater part of the day, having posted up from Englebourn; but they have only just come in, for the younger lady is still in her bonnet, and Miss Winter's lies on the table. The windows are wide open, and Miss Winter is sitting at one of them; while her cousin is busied in examining the furniture and decorations of their temporary home, now commenting upon these, now pouring out praises of Oxford.
"Isn't it too charming? I never dreamt that any town could be so beautiful. Don't you feel wild about it, Katie?"
"It is the queen of towns, dear. But I know it well, you see, so that I can't be quite so enthusiastic as you."
"Oh, those dear gardens! what was the name of those ones with the targets up, where they were shooting? Don't you remember?"
"New College Gardens, on the old city wall, you mean?"
"No, no. They were nice and sentimental. I should like to go and sit and read poetry there. But I mean the big ones, the gorgeous, princely ones, with wicked old Bishop Laud's gallery looking into them."
"Oh! St. John's, of course."
"Yes, St. John's. Why do you hate Laud so, Katie?"
"I don't hate him, dear. He was a Berkshire man, you know. But I think he did a great deal of harm to the Church."
"How did you think my new silk looked in the garden? How lucky I brought it, wasn't it? I shouldn't have liked to have been in nothing but muslin. They don't suit here; you want something richer amongst the old buildings, and on the beautiful velvety turf of the gardens. How do you think I looked?"
"You looked like a queen, dear; or a lady-in-waiting, at least."
"Yes, a lady-in-waiting on Henrietta Maria. Didn't you hear one of the gentlemen say that she was lodged in St. John's when Charles marched to relieve Gloucester? Ah! Can't you fancy her sweeping about the gardens, with her ladies following her, and Bishop Laud walking just a little behind her, and talking in a low voice about--let me see--something very important?"
"Oh, Mary, where has your history gone? He was Archbishop, and was safely locked up in the Tower."
"Well, perhaps he was; then he couldn't be with her, of course.
How stupid of you to remember, Katie. Why can't you make up your mind to enjoy yourself when you come out for a holiday?"
"I shouldn't enjoy myself any the more for forgetting dates,"
said Katie, laughing.
"Oh, you would though; only try. But let me see, it can't be Laud. Then it shall be that cruel drinking old man, with the wooden leg made of gold, who was governor of Oxford when the king was away. He must be hobbling along after the queen in a buff coat and breastplate, holding his hat with a long drooping white feather in his hand.
"But you wouldn't like it at all, Mary; it would be too serious for you. The poor queen would be too anxious for gossip, and you ladies-in-waiting would be obliged to walk after her without saying a word."
"Yes, that would be stupid. But then she would have to go away with the old governor to write dispatches; and some of the young officers with long hair and beautiful lace sleeves, and large boots, whom the king had left behind, wounded, might come and walk perhaps, or sit in the sun in the quiet gardens."
Mary looked over her shoulder with the merriest twinkle in her eye, to see how her steady cousin would take this last picture.
"The college authorities would never allow that," she said quietly, still looking out the window; "if you wanted beaus, you must have had them in black gowns."
"They would have been jealous of the soldiers, you think? Well, I don't mind; the black gowns are very pleasant, only a little stiff. But how do you think my bonnet looked.
"Charmingly, but when are you going to have done looking in the gla.s.s? You don't care for the buildings, I believe, a bit. Come and look at St. Mary's; there is such a lovely light on the steeple!"
"I'll come directly, but I must get these flowers right. I'm sure there are too many in this tr.i.m.m.i.n.g."
Mary was trying her new bonnet on over and over again before the mantel-gla.s.s, and pulling out and changing the places of the blush-rose buds with which it was trimmed. Just then a noise of wheels, accompanied by a merry tune on a cornopean, came in from the street.
"What's that, Katie?" she cried, stopping her work for a moment.
"A coach coming up from Magdalen Bridge. I think it is a cricketing party coming home."
"Oh, let me see," and she tripped across to the window, bonnet in hand, and stood beside her cousin. And, then, sure enough, a coach covered with cricketers returning from a match drove past the window. The young ladies looked out at first with great curiosity; but, suddenly finding themselves the mark for a whole coach load of male eyes, shrank back a little before the cricketers had pa.s.sed on towards the "Mitre." As the coach pa.s.sed out of sight, Mary gave a pretty toss of her head, and said--
"Well, they don't want for a.s.surance, at any rate. I think they needn't have stared so."
"It was our fault," said Katie; "we shouldn't have been at the window. Besides, you know you are to be a lady-in-waiting on Henrietta Maria up here, and of course you must get used to being stared at."
"Oh yes, but that was to be by young gentlemen wounded in the wars, in lace ruffles, as one sees them in pictures. That's a very different thing from young gentlemen in flannel trousers and straw hats, driving up the High street on coaches. I declare one of them had the impudence to bow as if he knew you."
"So he does. That was my cousin."
"Your cousin! Ah, I remember. Then he must be my cousin, too."
"No, not at all. He is no relation of yours."
"Well I sha'n't break my heart. But is he a good partner?"
"I should say, yes. But I hardly know. We used to be a great deal together as children, but papa has been such an invalid lately."
"Ah, I wonder how uncle is getting on at the Vice-Chancellor's.
Look, it is past eight by St. Mary's. When were we to go?"
"We were asked for nine."
"Then we must go and dress. Will it be very slow and stiff, Katie? I wish we were going to something not quite so grand."
"You'll find it very pleasant, I dare say."
"There won't be any dancing, though, I know, will there?"
"No; I should think certainly not."
"Dear me! I hope there will be some young men there--I shall be so shy, I know, if there are nothing but wise people. How do you talk to a Regius Professor, Katie? It must be awful."
"He will probably be at least as uncomfortable as you, dear,"
said Miss Winter, laughing, and rising from the window; "let us go and dress."
"Shall I wear my best gown?--What shall I put in my hair?"
At this moment the door opened, and the maid-servant introduced Mr. Brown.