Herb of Grace | Page 4

Rosa Nouchette Carey
XIX "A TOUCH OF THE TARTAR" XX A WHITE SUN-BONNET XXI "IF I WERE ONLY LIKE YOU" XXII "TWO MAIDEN LADIES OF UNCERTAIN AGE" XXIII SAINT ELIZABETH! XXIV DOWN BY THE POOL XXV "IT HAS GONE VERY DEEP" XXVI "I SEE LIGHT NOW" XXVII HUGH ROSSITER SPINS HIS YARN XXVIII "THE LADY CALLING HERSELF MISS JACOBI" XXIX "SHE IS A WICKED WOMAN" XXX IN KENSINGTON GARDENS XXXI PLOT AND COUNTERPLOT XXXII STORM AND STRESS XXXIII "HE WILL COME RIGHT" XXXIV TRAVELLING THROUGH SAHARA XXXV VIA DOLOROSA XXXVI "I HAVE BEEN A COWARD" XXXVII THE PARTING OF THE WAYS XXXVIII TANGLED THREADS XXXIX THE NEW CURATE-IN-CHARGE XL "HE IS MY RIVAL STILL" XLI "YOU CAN BE DINAH'S FRIEND" XLII THE WHIRLIGIG OF TIME XLIII A MAY AFTERNOON XLIV "MY DEAREST REST"

HERB OF GRACE
CHAPTER I
INTRODUCES A LOVER OF THE PICTURESQUE
Our adventures hover round us like bees round the hive when preparing to swarm.--MAETERLINCK.
From boyhood Malcolm Herrick had been a lover of the picturesque. In secret he prided himself on possessing the artistic faculty, and yet, except in the nursery, he had never drawn a line, or later on spoilt canvas and daubed himself in oils under the idea that he was an embryo Millais or Turner. But nevertheless he had the seeing eye, and could find beauty where more prosaic people could only see barrenness: a stubble field newly turned up by the plough moved him to admiration, while a Surrey lane, with a gate swinging back on its hinges, and a bowed old man carrying faggots, in the smoky light of an October evening, gave him a feeling akin to ecstasy. More than one of his school-fellows remembered how, even in the cricket field, he would stand as though transfixed, looking at the storm clouds, with their steely edges, coming up behind the copse, but the palms of his hands were outstretched and he never failed to catch the ball.
"Nature intended me for an artist or a poet," Malcolm would say, for he was given at times to a hard, merciless introspection, when he took himself and his motives to pieces, "but circumstances have called me to the bar. To be sure I have never held a brief, and my tastes are purely literary, but all the same I am a member of the legal profession."
Malcolm Herrick used his Englishman's right of grumbling to a large extent; with a sort of bitter and acrid humility, he would accuse himself of having missed his vocation and his rightful heritage, of being neither "fish, flesh, nor good red herring;" nevertheless his post for the last two years had pleased him well: he was connected with a certain large literary society which gave his legal wits plenty of scope. In his leisure hours he wrote moderately well- expressed papers on all sorts of social subjects with a pithy raciness and command of language that excited a good deal of comment.
Herrick was a clever fellow, people said; "he would make his mark when he was older, and had got rid of his cranks;" but all the same he was not understood by the youth of his generation. "The Fossil," as they called him at Lincoln, was hardly modern enough for their taste; he was a survival of the mediaeval age--he took life too gravely, and gave himself the airs of a patriarch.
In person he was a thin spare man, somewhat sallow, and with dark melancholy eyes that were full of intelligence. When he smiled, which he did more rarely than most people, he looked at least ten years younger.
In reality he was nearly thirty, but he never measured his age by years. "I have not had my innings yet," he would say; "I am going to renew my youth presently; I mean to have my harvest of good things like other fellows, and eat, drink, and be merry;" but from all appearance the time had not come yet.
Malcolm Herrick's chambers were in Lincoln's Inn. Thither he was turning his footsteps one sultry July afternoon, when as usual he paused at a certain point, while a smile of pleasure stole to his lips.
Familiarity had not yet dulled the edge of his enjoyment; now, as ever, it soothed and tranquillised him to turn from the noisy crowded streets into this quiet spot with its gray old buildings, its patch of grass, and the broad wide steps up and down which men, hurrying silently, passed and repassed intent on the day's work.
As usual at this hour, the flagged court was crowded by pigeons, strutting fearlessly between the feet of the passers-by, and filling the air with their soft cooing voices.
"Ah, my friend the cobbler," he said to himself, and he moved a little nearer to watch the pretty sight. A child's perambulator--a very shabby, rickety concern--had been pushed
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