her maid, and hid herself in the
cellar. Whether the story
be a calumny or not, it is at least
characteristic.
After all, it was
mainly due to her that Holland House became
the focus of all that was
brilliant in Europe. In the
memoirs of her father - Sydney Smith - Mrs. Austin writes:
'The world has
rarely seen, and will
rarely, if ever, see
again all that was to be found within the walls of Holland
House. Genius and merit, in
whatever rank of life, became a
passport there; and all that was choicest and rarest in
Europe seemed attracted to that spot as their natural soil.'
Did we learn much at Temple Grove? Let others answer for
themselves. Acquaintance with the classics was the
staple of
a
liberal education in those times. Temple Grove was the
ATRIUM to Eton, and gerund-grinding was its RAISON D'ETRE.
Before I was nine years old I daresay I could repeat -
parrot, that is - several hundreds of lines of the AEneid.
This, and some
elementaryarithmetic,
geography, and drawing,
which last I took to kindly, were
dearly paid for by many
tears, and by
temporarily impaired health. It was due to my
pallid cheeks that I was removed. It was due to the
following six months - summer months - of a happy life that
my health was completely restored.
CHAPTER III
MR. EDWARD ELLICE, who
constantly figures in the memoirs of
the last century as 'Bear Ellice' (an
outrageous misnomer, by
the way), and who later on married my mother, was the chief
controller of my
youthfuldestiny. His first wife was a
sister of the Lord Grey of Reform Bill fame, in whose
Government he filled the office of War Minister. In many
respects Mr. Ellice was a
notable man. He possessed shrewd
intelligence, much force of
character, and an autocratic
spirit - to which he owed his sobriquet. His kindness of
heart, his powers of conversation, with
striking personality
and ample
wealth, combined to make him popular. His house in
Arlington Street, and his shooting lodge at Glen Quoich, were
famous for the number of
eminent men who were his frequent
guests.
Mr. Ellice's position as a
minister, and his habitual
residence in Paris, had brought him in touch with the leading
statesmen of France. He was
intimately acquainted with Louis
Philippe, with Talleyrand, with Guizot, with Thiers, and most
of the French men and French women whose names were bruited
in the early part of the nineteenth century.
When I was taken from Temple Grove, I was placed, by the
advice and
arrangement of Mr. Ellice, under the
charge of a
French family, which had fallen into decay - through the
change of
dynasty. The Marquis de Coubrier had been Master
of the Horse to Charles X. His widow - an old lady between
seventy and eighty - with three
maiden daughters, all
advanced in years, lived upon the
remnant of their estates in
a small village called Larue, close to Bourg-la-Reine, which,
it may be remembered, was occupied by the Prussians during
the siege of Paris. There was a
chateau, the former seat of
the family; and, adjoining it, in the same grounds, a pretty
and commodious
cottage. The first was let as a country house
to some
wealthy Parisians; the
cottage was occupied by the
Marquise and her three daughters.
The personal appearances of each of these four elderly
ladies, their
distinct idiosyncrasies, and their former high
position as members of a now moribund
nobility, left a
lasting
impression on my memory. One might expect, perhaps,
from such a prelude, to find in the old Marquise traces of
stately
demeanour, or a regretted
superiority. Nothing of
the kind. She herself was a short, square-built woman, with
large head and strong features, framed in a mob cap, with a
broad frill which flopped over her tortoise-shell spectacles.
She wore a black bombazine gown, and list slippers. When in
the garden, where she was always busy in the summer-time, she
put on
wooden sabots over her slippers.
Despite this
homelyexterior, she herself was a 'lady' in
every sense of the word. Her manner was
dignified and
courteous to
everyone. To her daughters and to myself she
was gentle and
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affectionate. Her voice was sympathetic,
almost
musical. I never saw her
temper ruffled. I never
heard her
allude to her antecedents.
The daughters were as
unlike their mother as they were to one
another. Adele, the
eldest, was very stout, with a profusion
of grey ringlets. She spoke English fluently. I gathered,
from her
mysterious nods and tosses of the head, (to be sure,
her head wagged a little of its own
accord, the ringlets too,
like lambs' tails,) that she had had an AFFAIRE DE COEUR with
an Englishman, and that the perfidious islander had removed
from the Continent with her misplaced
affections. She was a
trifle bitter, I thought - for I
applied her insinuations to
myself - against Englishmen generally. But, though cynical
in theory, she was
perfectlyamiable in practice. She
superintended the menage and spent the rest of her life in
making paper flowers. I should hardly have known they were
flowers, never having seen their prototypes in nature. She
assured me, however, that they were beautiful copies -
undoubtedly she believed them to be so.
Henriette, the youngest, had been the beauty of the family.
This I had to take her own word for, since here again there
was much room for
imagination and faith. She was a confirmed
invalid, and, poor thing! showed every
symptom of it. She
rarely left her room except for meals; and although it was
summer when I was there, she never moved without her
chauffrette. She seemed to live for the sake of patent
medicines and her chauffrette; she was always swallowing the
one, and feeding the other.
The middle daughter was Aglae. Mademoiselle Aglae took
charge - I may say, possession - of me. She was tall, gaunt,
and bony, with a sharp aquiline nose, pomegranate cheek-
bones, and large saffron teeth ever much in evidence. Her
speciality, as I soon discovered, was
sentiment. Like her
sisters, she had had her 'affaires' in the plural. A Greek
prince, so far as I could make out, was the last of her
adorers. But I sometimes got into scrapes by mixing up the
Greek
prince with a Polish count, and then confounding either
one or both with a Hungarian pianoforte player.
Without formulating my deductions, I came
instinctively to
the
conclusion that 'En fait d'amour,' as Figaro puts it,
'trop n'est pas meme assez.' From Miss Aglae's point of view
a lover was a lover. As to the
superiority of one over
another, this was - nay, is -
purely subjective. 'We receive
but what we give.' And, from what Mademoiselle then told me,
I cannot but infer that she had given without stint.
Be that as it may, nothing could be more kind than her care
of me. She tucked me up at night, and used to send for me in
the morning before she rose, to
partake of her CAFE-AU-LAIT.
In return for her indulgences, I would 'make eyes' such as I
had seen Auguste, the young man-servant, cast at Rose the
cook. I would present her with little scraps which I copied
in roundhand from a
volume of French poems. Once I drew, and
coloured with red ink, two hearts pierced with an arrow, a
copious pool of red ink beneath, emblematic of both the
quality and quantity of my
passion. This work of art
produced so deep a sigh that I abstained thenceforth from
repeating such sanguinary endearments.
Not the least interesting part of the family was the
servants. I say 'family,' for a French family,
unlike an
English one, includes its domestics;
wherein our neighbours
have the
advantage over us. In the British
establishment the
household is but too often thought of and treated as
furniture. I was as fond of Rose the cook and maid-of-all-
work as I was of anyone in the house. She showed me how to
peel potatoes, break eggs, and make POT-AU-FEU. She made me
little delicacies in
pastry - swans with split almonds for
wings, comic little pigs with cloves in their eyes - for all