Part 14 (2/2)
Woolwich.” And intercourse with the Ganpies was largely leavened by concrete joys in the shape of presents, pantomimes, tips, and all things dear to the heart of youth all the world over.
Such were the Ganpies. Nothing shadowy about them. They were a glorious reality; beloved, familiar, frequent.
They were still comparatively young people when their daughter married, and Mrs Grantly was a grandmother at forty-one. They would have liked a large family themselves, but seeing that Providence had only seen fit to bestow on them one child, they looked upon the six grandchildren as an attempt to make amends.
Mrs Grantly's one quarrel with Marjory Ffolliot was on the score of what she called her ”n.i.g.g.ardliness and greed,” in refusing to hand over entirely one of the six to their grandparents.
It is true that the large house on the edge of Woolwich Common was seldom without one or two of the Ffolliot children. Mr Ffolliot was most accommodating, and was more then ready to accept the General's constant invitations to his offspring; but in spite of these concessions Mrs Grantly was never wholly satisfied, and it was something of a grievance with her that Marjory was so firm in her refusal to ”give away” any one of the six.
Casual observers would have said that Mrs Grantly was by far the stronger character of the two, but people who knew General Grantly well, realised that his daughter had her full share of his quiet strength and determination. Mrs Ffolliot, like her father, was easy-going, gentle, and tolerant; it was only when you came ”up against” either of them that you realised the solid rock beneath the soft exterior.
Now there was nothing hidden about Mrs Grantly. She appeared exactly what she was. Everything about her was definite and decided, though she was various and unexpected as our British weather. She was an extraordinary mixture of whimsicality and common sense, of heroic courage and craven timidity, of violence and tenderness, of impulsiveness and caution. In very truth a delightful bundle of paradox. Quick-witted and impatient, she had yet infinite toleration for the simpleton, and could on occasion suffer fools with a gladness quite unshared by her much gentler daughter or her husband. But the sn.o.b, the sycophant, and, above all, the humbug met with short shrift at her hands, and the insincere person hated her heartily. She spoke her mind with the utmost freedom on every possible occasion, and as she had plenty of brains and considerable shrewdness her remarks were generally illuminating.
The villagers at Redmarley adored her, for, from her very first visit she made her presence felt.
It had long been the custom at Redmarley for the ladies in the village and neighbourhood to meet once a week during the earlier winter months to make garments for presentation to the poor at Christmas, and the first meeting since the Manor House possessed a mistress took place there under Mrs Ffolliot's somewhat timid presidency. It coincided with Mrs Grantly's first visit since her daughter's marriage, and she expressed her willingness to help.
At Mrs Ffolliot's suggestion it had already been arranged that a blouse instead of a flannel petticoat should this year be given to the younger women. The other ladies had fallen in graciously with the idea (they were inclined to enthuse over the ”sweet young bride”), and according to custom one Miss Tibbits, a spinster of large leisure and masterful ways, had undertaken to procure the necessary material. For years donors and recipients alike had meekly suffered her domination. She chose the material, settled what garments should be made and in what style, and who should receive them when made.
On the afternoon in question Miss Tibbits duly descended from her brougham, bearing a parcel containing the material for the blouses which Mrs Grantly volunteered to cut out. Miss Tibbits undid the parcel and displayed the contents to the nine ladies a.s.sembled round the dining-room table.
Mrs Grantly was seen to regard it with marked disapproval, and hers was an expressive countenance.
”May I ask,” she began in the honeyed, ”society” tone that in her own family was recognised as the sure precursor of battle, ”why the poor should be dressed in dusters?”
The eight ladies concentrated their gaze upon the roll of material which certainly did bear a strong resemblance to the bundles offered by drapers at sale times as ”strong, useful, and much reduced.”
”It is the usual thing,” Miss Tibbits replied shortly, ”we have to consider utility, not ornament.”
Mrs Grantly stretched across the table, swiftly seized the material, gathered it up under her chin, and with a dramatic gesture stood up so that it fell draped about her.
”Look at me!” she exclaimed. ”If I had to wear clothes made of stuff like this, I should go straight to the Devil!”
And at that very moment, just as she proclaimed in a loud voice the downward path she would tread if clad in the material Miss Tibbits had selected, the door was opened, and Mr Molyneux was announced.
The ladies gasped (except Marjory Ffolliot, who had dissolved into helpless laughter at the sight of her large and portly parent draped in yards of double-width red and brown check), but Mrs Grantly was no whit abashed.
”Look at me, Mr Molyneux,” she cried. ”Can you conceive any self-respecting young woman ever taking any pleasure in a garment made of _this_?”
”A garment,” the vicar repeated in wonderment, ”is it for a garment?”
”Yes, and not an undergarment either,” Mrs Grantly retorted. ”Now you are here, you shall tell us plainly . . . are the things we are to make supposed to give any pleasure to the poor creatures or not.”
”I should say so most a.s.suredly,” the vicar replied, his eyes twinkling with fun. ”What other purpose could you have?”
Miss Tibbits cleared her throat. ”I have always understood,” she said primly, ”that the sewing club was inst.i.tuted to make useful garments for deserving persons, who were, perhaps, so much occupied by family cares that they had little time available for needle-work.”
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