Part 18 (1/2)
”Yes, I am sure.”
”And what will Mary Swanwick do with this money won in evil ways?”
”I do not know.”
”It is well that she should be counseled.”
”Do you not think, sir, as a man of sense and a gentleman and more, that it may be well to leave a high-minded woman to dispose of this matter?
If she goes wrong, will it not then be time to interfere? There is not a ha'-penny of greed in her. Let her alone.”
The Quaker sat still a moment, his lean figure bent over his staff.
”Thou art right,” he said, looking up. ”The matter shall rest, unless worse come of it.”
”Why not see Mr. Langstroth about it?” said the German, mischievously inclined. ”He is of Friends, I presume.”
”He is not,” said Pemberton. ”He talked in the war of going forth from us with Wetherill, but he hath not the courage of a house-fly. His doings are without conscience, and now he is set in his ways. He hath been temperately dealt with long ago and in vain. An obstinate man; when he sets his foot down thou hast to dig it up to move him. I shall not open the matter with Josiah Langstroth. I have been led to speak harshly. Farewell.”
When Mrs. Swanwick heard of this and had talked of it to Margaret, the Pearl said, ”We will not take the money, and uncle cannot; and it may go.” Her decisiveness both pleased and astonished the mother. It was a maturing woman who thus antic.i.p.ated Schmidt's advice and her own, and here for a little while the matter lay at rest.
Not all Friends, however, were either aware of what Pemberton had learned or were fully satisfied, so that one day Daniel Offley, blacksmith, a noisy preacher in meetings and sometimes advised of elders to sit down, resolved to set at rest alike his conscience and his curiosity. Therefore, on a February afternoon, being the 22d, and already honored as the birthday of Was.h.i.+ngton, he found Margaret alone, as luck would have it. To this unusual house, as I have said, came not only statesmen, philosophers, and the rich. Hither, too, came the poor for help, the lesser Quakers, women and men, for counsel or a little sober gossip. All were welcome, and Offley was not unfamiliar with the ways of the house.
He found Margaret alone, and sitting down, began at once and harshly to question her in a loud voice concerning the story of her worldly vanity, and asked why she could thus have erred.
The girl had had too much of it. Her conscience was clear, and Pemberton, whom she loved and respected, had been satisfied, as Schmidt had told them. She grew red, and rising, said: ”I have listened to thee; but now I say to thee, Daniel Offley, that it is none of thy business.
Go home and shoe thy horses.”
He was not thus to be put down. ”This is only to add bad temper to thy other faults. As a Friend and for many of the Society, I would know what thee has done with thee devil wages of the lottery.”
[Ill.u.s.tration: ”'Thou canst not shoe my conscience'”]
She looked at him a moment. The big, ruddy face struck her as comical.
Her too often repressed sense of humor helped her, and crying, ”Thou canst not shoe my conscience, Daniel Offley,” she fled away up-stairs, her laughter ringing through the house, a little hysterical, perhaps, and first cousin to tears. The amazed preacher, left to his meditations, was shocked into taking off his beaver and saying strong words out of a far away past.
She was angry beyond the common, for Schmidt had said it was all of it unwise and meddlesome, nor was the mother better pleased than he when she came to hear of Offley's visit. ”I am but half a Friend,” she confessed to Schmidt, not liking altogether even the gentler inquiries of John Pemberton.
When on the next Sunday Madame de Courval was about to set out for the Swedes' church, Mrs. Swanwick said, ”It is time to go to meeting, my child.”
”I am not going, mother.”
”But thou didst not go last First Day.”
”No. I cannot, mother. May I go with madame?”
”Why not?” said Schmidt, looking up from his book. And so the Pearl went to Gloria Dei.
”They have lost a good Quaker by their impertinence,” said Schmidt to himself. ”She will never again go to meeting.” And, despite much gentle urging and much persuasive kindness, this came at last to be her custom, although she still wore unchanged her simple Quaker garb. Madame at least was pleased, but also at times thoughtful of the future when the young vicomte would walk between them down Swanson Street to church.
There was, of course, as yet no news of the _Marie_, and many bets on the result of the bold venture were made in the coffee-houses, for now, in March of the year '93, the story of the king's death and of war between France and England began further to embitter party strife and alarm the owners of s.h.i.+ps. If the vicomtesse was anxious, she said no word of what she felt. Outside of the quiet home where she sat over her embroidery there was an increase of political excitement, with much abuse, and in the gazettes wild articles over cla.s.sic signatures. With Jacobin France for exemplars, the half-crazed Republicans wore tricolor c.o.c.kades, and the _bonnet rouge_ pa.s.sed from head to head at noisy feasts when ”ca Ira” and the ”Ma.r.s.eillaise” were sung. Many persons were for war with England, but the wiser of both parties were for the declaration of neutrality, proclaimed of late amid the fury of extreme party sentiment. The new French minister eagerly looked for by the republicans was soon to come and to add to the embarra.s.sment of the Government whatever of mischief insolent folly could devise.