Marcella | Page 5

Mrs. Humphry Ward
take the adoration first. When Marcella came to Cliff House she was
recommended by the same relation who gave her "Marmion" to the
kind offices of the clergyman of the parish, who happened to be known
to some of the Boyce family. He and his wife--they had no
children--did their duty amply by the odd undisciplined child. They
asked her to tea once or twice; they invited her to the school-treat,
where she was only self-conscious and miserably shy; and Mr. Ellerton
had at least one friendly and pastoral talk with Miss Frederick as to the
difficulties of her pupil's character. For a long time little came of it.
Marcella was hard to tame, and when she went to tea at the Rectory
Mrs. Ellerton, who was refined and sensible, did not know what to
make of her, though in some unaccountable way she was drawn to and
interested by the child. But with the expansion of her thirteenth year
there suddenly developed in Marcie's stormy breast an overmastering
absorbing passion for these two persons. She did not show it to them
much, but for herself it raised her to another plane of existence, gave
her new objects and new standards. She who had hated going to church
now counted time entirely by Sundays. To see the pulpit occupied by
any other form and face than those of the rector was a calamity hardly
to be borne; if the exit of the school party were delayed by any accident
so that Mr. and Mrs. Ellerton overtook them in the churchyard,
Marcella would walk home on air, quivering with a passionate delight,
and in the dreary afternoon of the school Sunday she would spend her
time happily in trying to write down the heads of Mr. Ellerton's sermon.

In the natural course of things she would, at this time, have taken no
interest in such things at all, but whatever had been spoken by him had
grace, thrill, meaning.
Nor was the week quite barren of similar delights. She was generally
sent to practise on an old square piano in one of the top rooms. The
window in front of her overlooked the long white drive and the distant
high road into which it ran. Three times a week on an average Mrs.
Ellerton's pony carriage might be expected to pass along that road.
Every day Marcella watched for it, alive with expectation, her fingers
strumming as they pleased. Then with the first gleam of the white pony
in the distance, over would go the music stool, and the child leapt to the
window, remaining fixed there, breathing quick and eagerly till the
trees on the left had hidden from her the graceful erect figure of Mrs.
Ellerton. Then her moment of Paradise was over; but the afterglow of it
lasted for the day.
So much for romance, for feelings as much like love as childhood can
know them, full of kindling charm and mystery. Her friendship had
been of course different, but it also left deep mark. A tall, consumptive
girl among the Cliff House pupils, the motherless daughter of a
clergyman-friend of Miss Frederick's, had for some time taken notice
of Marcella, and at length won her by nothing else, in the first instance,
than a remarkable gift for story-telling. She was a parlour-boarder, had
a room to herself, and a fire in it when the weather was cold. She was
not held strictly to lesson hours; many delicacies in the way of food
were provided for her, and Miss Frederick watched over her with a
quite maternal solicitude. When winter came she developed a
troublesome cough, and the doctor recommended that a little suite of
rooms looking south and leading out on the middle terrace of the
garden should be given up to her. There was a bedroom, an
intermediate dressing-room, and then a little sitting-room built out upon
the terrace, with a window-door opening upon it.
Here Mary Lant spent week after week. Whenever lesson hours were
done she clamoured for Marcie Boyce, and Marcella was always eager
to go to her. She would fly up stairs and passages, knock at the
bedroom door, run down the steps to the queer little dressing-room
where the roof nearly came on your head, and down more steps again
to the sitting-room. Then when the door was shut, and she was

crooning over the fire with her friend, she was entirely happy. The tiny
room was built on the edge of the terrace, the ground fell rapidly below
it, and the west window commanded a broad expanse of tame arable
country, of square fields and hedges, and scattered wood. Marcella,
looking back upon that room, seemed always to see it flooded with the
rays of wintry sunset, a kettle boiling on the
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