Moth and Rust | Page 2

Mary Cholmondeley
the arena armed
with such beauty as Janet's.
There was a portrait of Janet in the Academy several years later, which
had made her beauty known to the world. We have all seen that
celebrated picture of the calm Madonna face, with the mark of
suffering so plainly stamped upon the white brow and in the
unfathomable eyes. But the young girl sitting in the Easthope pew
hardly resembled, except in feature, the portrait that, later on, took the
artistic world by storm. Janet was perhaps even more beautiful in this
her first youth than her picture proved her afterwards to be; but the
beauty was expressionless, opaque. The soul had not yet illumined the
fair face. She looked what she was--a little dull, without a grain of
imagination. Was it the dullness of want of ability, or only the dullness
of an uneducated mind, of powers unused, still dormant?
Without her transcendent beauty she would have appeared
uninteresting and commonplace.

"Lay not up for yourselves treasures upon earth."
The Vicar had a habit of repeating his text several times in the course
of his sermon. Janet heard it the third time, and it forced the entrance of
her mind.
Her treasure was certainly on earth. It consisted of the heavy,
sleek-haired young man with the sunburnt complexion and the reddish
moustache at the end of the pew--in short, "the Squire."
After a short and ardent courtship she had accepted him, and then she
herself had been accepted, not without groans, by his family. The
groans had not been audible, but she was vaguely aware that she was
not received with enthusiasm by the family of her hero, her wonderful
fairy prince who had ridden into her life on a golden chestnut. George
Trefusis was heavily built, but in Janet's eyes he was slender. His
taciturn dullness was in her eyes a most dignified and becoming reserve.
His inveterate unsociability proved to her--not that it needed
proving--his mental superiority. She could not be surprised at the
coldness of her reception as his betrothed, for she acutely felt her own
great unworthiness of being the consort of this resplendent personage,
who could have married any one. Why had he honoured her among all
women?
The answer was sufficiently obvious to every one except herself. The
fairy prince had fallen heavily in love with her beauty; so heavily that,
after a secret but stubborn resistance, he had been vanquished by it.
Marry her he must and would, whatever his mother might say. And she
had said a good deal. She had not kept silence.
And now Janet was staying for the first time at Easthope, which was
one day to be her home--the old Tudor house standing among its
terraced gardens, which had belonged to a Trefusis since a Trefusis
built it in Henry the Seventh's time.
Chapter 2
"On peut choisir ses amities, mais on subit l'amour.

--PRINCESS KARADJA.
After luncheon George offered to take Janet round the gardens. Janet
looked timidly at Mrs. Trefusis. She did not know whether she ought to
accept or not. There might be etiquettes connected with afternoon
walks of which she was not aware. For even since her arrival at
Easthope yesterday it had been borne in upon her that there were many
things of which she was not aware.
"Pray let my son show you the gal'-dens," said Mrs. Trefusis, with
impatient formality. "The roses are in great beauty just now."
Janet went to put on her hat, and Mrs. Trefusis lay down on the sofa in
the drawing-room with a little groan. Anne sat down by her. The eyes
of both women followed Janet's tall, magnificent figure as she joined
George on the terrace.
"She dresses like a shop-girl," said Mrs. Trefusis. "And what a hat!
Exactly what one sees on the top of omnibuses."
Anne did not defend the hat. It was beyond defence. She supposed,
with a tinge of compassion, what was indeed the case, that Janet had
made a special pilgrimage to Mudbury to acquire it, in order the better
to meet the eyes of her future mother-in-law.
All Anne said was, "Very respectable people go on the top of
omnibuses nowadays."
"I am not saying anything against her respectability," said poor Mrs.
Trefusis. "Heaven knows if there had been anything against it I should
have said so before now. It would have been my duty."
Anne smiled faintly. "A painful duty."
"I'm not so sure," said Mrs. Trefusis grimly. She never posed before
Anne, nor, for that matter, did any one else. "But from all I can make
out, this girl is a model of middle-class respectability. Yet she comes of
a bad stock. One can't tell how she will turn out. What is bred in the

bone will come out in
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