The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ground-Ash, by Mary Russell Mitford

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Title: The Ground-Ash

Author: Mary Russell Mitford

Release Date: October 2, 2007 [EBook #22846]
Last Updated: January 9, 2013

Language: English

Character set encoding: ASCII

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Produced by David Widger





 










THE GROUND-ASH  

By Mary Russell Mitford  







Amongst the many pleasant circumstances attendant on a love of flowersthat  sort of love which leads us into the woods for the earliest primrose, or  to the river side for the latest forget-me-not, and carries us to the  parching heath or the watery mere to procure for the cultivated, or, if I  may use the expression, the tame beauties of the parterre, the soil  that they love; amongst the many gratifications which such pursuits bring  with them, such as seeing in the seasons in which it shows best, the  prettiest, coyest, most unhackneyed scenery, and taking, with just motive  enough for stimulus and for reward, drives and walks which approach to  fatigue, without being fatiguing; amongst all the delights consequent on a  love of flowers, I know none greater than the half unconscious and wholly  unintended manner in which such expeditions make us acquainted with the  peasant children of remote and out-of-the-way regions, the inhabitants of  the wild woodlands and still wilder commons of the hilly part of the north  of Hampshire, which forms so strong a contrast with this sunny and  populous county of Berks, whose very fields are gay and neat as gardens,  and whose roads are as level and even as a gravel-walk.  

Two of the most interesting of these flower-formed acquaintances, were my  little friends Harry and Bessy Leigh.  

Every year I go to the Everley woods to gather wild lilies of the valley.  It is one of the delights that Maythe charming, ay, and the merry  month of May, which I love as fondly as ever that bright and joyous season  was loved by our older poetsregularly brings in her train; one of  those rational pleasures in which (and it is the great point of  superiority over pleasures that are artificial and worldly) there is no  disappointment. About four years ago, I made such a visit. The day was  glorious, and we had driven through lanes perfumed by the fresh green  birch, with its bark silvery and many-tinted, and over commons where the  very air was loaded with the heavy fragrance of the furze, an odour  resembling in richness its golden blossoms, just as the scent of the birch  is cool, refreshing, and penetrating, like the exquisite colour of its  young leaves, until we reached the top of the hill, where, on one side,  the enclosed wood, where the lilies grow, sank gradually, in an  amphitheatre of natural terraces, to a piece of water at the bottom;  whilst on the other, the wild open heath formed a sort of promontory  overhanging a steep ravine, through which a slow and sluggish stream crept  along amongst stunted alders, until it was lost in the deep recesses of  Lidhurst Forest, over the tall trees of which we literally looked down. We  had come without a servant; and on arriving at the gate of the wood with  neither human figure nor human habitation in sight, and a high-blooded and  high-spirited horse in the phaeton, we began to feel all the awkwardness  of our situation. My companion, however, at length espied a thin wreath of  smoke issuing from a small clay-built hut thatched with furze, built  against the steepest part of the hill, of which it seemed a mere  excrescence, about half way down the declivity; and, on calling aloud, two  children, who had been picking up dry stumps of heath and gorse, and  collecting them in a heap for fuel at the door of their hovel, first  carefully deposited their little load, and then came running to know what  we wanted.  

If we had wondered to see human beings living in a habitation, which, both  for space and appearance, would have been despised by a pig of any  pretension, as too small and too mean for his accommodation, so we were  again surprised at the strange union of poverty and content evinced by the  apparel and countenances of its young inmates. The children, bareheaded  and barefooted, and with little more clothing than one shabby-looking  garment, were yet as fine, sturdy, hardy, ruddy, sunburnt urchins, as one  should see on a summer day. They were clean, too: the stunted bit of  raiment was patched, but not ragged; and when the girl, (for, although it  was rather difficult to distinguish between the brother and sister, the  pair were of different sexes,) when the bright-eyed, square-made, upright  little damsel clasped her two brown hands together, on the top of her  head, pressed down her thick curls, looking at us and listening to us with  an air of the most intelligent attention that returned our curiosity with  interest; and when the boy, in answer to our inquiry if he could hold a  horse, clutched the reins with his small fingers, and planted himself  beside our high-mettled steed with an air of firm determination, that  seemed to say, "I'm your master! Run away if you dare!" we both of us felt  that they were subjects for a picture, and that, though Sir Joshua might  not have painted them, Gainsborough and our own Collins would.  

But besides their exceeding picturesqueness, the evident content, and  helpfulness, and industry of these little creatures, was delightful to  look at and to think of. In conversation they were at once very civil and  respectful (Bessy dropping her little curtsy, and Harry putting his hand  to the lock of hair where the hat should have been, at every sentence they  uttered) and perfectly frank and unfearing. In answer to our questions,  they told us that "Father was a broom-maker, from the low country; that he  had come to these parts and married mother, and built their cottage,  because houses were so scarce hereabouts, and because of its convenience  to the heath; that they had done very well till the last winter, when poor  father had had the fever for five months, and they had had much ado to get  on; but that father was brave again now, and was building another house  (house!!) larger and finer, upon Squire Benson's lands: the squire had  promised them a garden from the waste, and mother hoped to keep a pig.  They were trying to get all the money they could to buy the pig; and what  his honour had promised them for holding the horse, was all to be given to  mother for that purpose."  

It was impossible not to be charmed with these children. We went again and  again to the Everley wood, partly to gather lilies, partly to rejoice in  the trees with their young leaves so beautiful in texture as well as in  colour, but chiefly to indulge ourselves in the pleasure of talking to the  children, of adding something to their scanty stock of clothing, (Bessy  ran as fast as her feet could carry her to the clear pool at the bottom of  the wood, to look at herself in her new bonnet,) and of assisting in the  accumulations of the Grand Pig Savings' Bank, by engaging Harry to hold  the horse, and Bessy to help fill the lily basket.  

This employment, by showing that the lilies had a money value, put a new  branch of traffic into the heads of these thoughtful children, already  accustomed to gather heath for their father's brooms, and to collect the  dead furze which served as fuel to the family. After gaining permission of  the farmer who rented the wood, and ascertaining that we had no objection,  they set about making nosegays of the flowers, and collecting the roots  for sale, and actually stood two Saturdays in Belford market (the smallest  merchants of a surety that ever appeared in that rural Exchange) to  dispose of their wares; having obtained a cast in a waggon there and back,  and carrying home faithfully every penny of their gainings, to deposit in  the common stock.  

The next year we lost sight of them. No smoke issued from the small  chimney by the hill-side. The hut itself was half demolished by wind and  weather; its tenants had emigrated to the new house on Squire Benson's  land; and after two or three attempts to understand and to follow the  directions as to the spot given us by the good farmer at Everley, we were  forced to give up the search.  

Accident, the great discoverer and recoverer of lost goods, at last  restored to us these good little children. It happened as follows:  

In new potting some large hydrangeas, we were seized with a desire to give  the blue tinge to the petals, which so greatly improves the beauty of that  fine bold flower, and which is so desirable when they are placed, as these  were destined to be, in the midst of red and pink blossoms, fuchsias,  salvias, and geraniums. Accordingly, we sallied forth to a place called  the Moss, a wild tract of moorland lying about a mile to the right of the  road to Everley, and famous for the red bog, produced, I presume, by  chalybeate springs, which, when mixed with the fine Bagshot silver sand,  is so effectual in changing the colour of flowers.  

It was a bleak gusty day in February, raining by fits, but not with  sufficient violence to deter me from an expedition to which I had taken a  fancy. Putting up, therefore, the head and apron of the phaeton, and  followed by one lad (the shrewd boy Dick) on horseback, and another (John,  the steady gardening youth) in a cart laden with tubs and sacks, spades  and watering-pots, to procure and contain the bog mould, (for we were  prudently determined to provide for all emergencies, and to carry with us  fit receptacles to receive our treasure, whether it presented itself in  the form of red earth or of red mud,) our little procession set forth  early in the afternoon, towards the wildest and most dreary piece of  scenery that I have ever met with in this part of the country.  

Wild and dreary of a truth was the Moss, and the stormy sky, the moaning  wind, and the occasional gushes of driving rain, suited well with the dark  and cheerless region into which we had entered by a road, if a rude  cart-track may be so called, such as shall seldom be encountered in this  land of Macadamisation. And yet, partly perhaps from their novelty, the  wild day and the wild scenery had for me a strange and thrilling charm.  The ground, covered with the sea-green moss, whence it derived its name,  mingled in the higher parts with brown patches of heather, and dark bushes  of stunted furze, was broken with deep hollows full of stagnant water;  some almost black, others covered with the rusty scum which denoted the  presence of the powerful mineral, upon whose agency we relied for  performing that strange piece of natural magic which may almost be called  the transmutation of flowers.  

Towards the ruddiest of these pools, situated in a deep glen, our active  coadjutors, leaving phaeton, cart, and horses, on the brow of the hill,  began rolling and tossing the several tubs, buckets, watering-pots, sacks,  and spades, which were destined for the removal and conveyance of the much  coveted-bog; we followed, amused and pleased, as, in certain moods,  physical and mental, people are pleased and amused at self-imposed  difficulties, down the abrupt and broken descent; and for some time the  process of digging among the mould at the edge of the bank went steadily  on.  

In a few minutes, however, Dick, whose quick and restless eye was never  long bent on any single object, most of all when that object presented  itself in the form of work, exclaimed to his comrade,Look at those  children wandering about amongst the firs, like the babes in the wood in  the old ballad. What can they be about?And looking in the direction to  which he pointed, we saw, amidst the gloomy fir plantations, which formed  a dark and massive border nearly round the Moss, our old friends Harry and  Bessy Leigh, collecting, as it seemed, the fir cones with which the ground  was strewed, and depositing them carefully in a large basket.  

A manful shout from my companion soon brought the children to our sidegood,  busy, cheerful, and healthy-looking as ever, and marvellously improved in  the matter of equipment. Harry had been promoted to a cap, which added the  grace of a flourish to his bow; Bessy had added the luxury of a pinafore  to her nondescript garments; and both pairs of little feet were advanced  to the certain dignity, although somewhat equivocal comfort, of shoes and  stockings.  

The world had gone well with them, and with their parents. The house was  built. Upon remounting the hill, and advancing a little farther into the  centre of the Moss, we saw the comfortable low-browed cottage, full of  light and shadow, of juttings out, and corners and angles of every sort  and description, with a garden stretching along the side, backed and  sheltered by the tall impenetrable plantation, a wall of trees, against  whose dark masses a wreath of light smoke was curling, whose fragrance  seemed really to perfume the winter air. The pig had been bought, fatted,  and killed; but other pigs were inhabiting the sty, almost as large as  their former dwelling, which stood at the end of their garden; and the  children told with honest joy how all this prosperity had come about.  Their father, taking some brooms to my kind friend Lady Denys, had seen  some of the ornamental baskets used for flowers upon a lawn, and had been  struck with the fancy of trying to make some, decorated with fir cones;  and he had been so successful in this profitable manufacture, that he had  more orders than he could execute. Lady Denys had also, with  characteristic benevolence, put the children to her Sunday-school. One  misfortune had a little overshadowed the sunshine. Squire Benson had died,  and the consent to the erection of the cottage being only verbal, the  attorney who managed for the infant heir, a ward in Chancery, had claimed  the property. But the matter had been compromised upon the payment of such  a rent as the present prospects of the family would fairly allow. Besides  collecting fir cones for the baskets, they picked up all they could in  that pine forest, (for it was little less,) and sold such as were  discoloured, or otherwise unfit for working up, to Lady Denys and other  persons who liked the fine aromatic odour of these the pleasantest of  pastilles, in their dressing-room or drawing-room fires.Did I like the  smell? We had a cart theremight they bring us a hamper-ful?And it  was with great difficulty that a trifling present (for we did not think of  offering money as payment) could be forced upon the grateful  children. "We," they said, "had been their first friends." For what very  small assistance the poor are often deeply, permanently thankful! Well  says the great poet  
     "I've heard of hearts unkind, good deeds
     With ill deeds still returning;
     Alas, the gratitude of man
     Hath oftener left me mourning!"
               Wordsworth.

Again for above a year we lost sight of our little favourites, for such  they were with both of us; though absence, indisposition, business,  companyengagements, in short, of many sortscombined to keep  us from the Moss for upwards of a twelvemonth. Early in the succeeding  April, however, it happened that, discussing with some morning visiters  the course of a beautiful winding brook, (one of the tributaries to the  Loddon, which bright and brimming river has nearly as many sources as the  Nile,) one of them observed that the well-head was in Lanton Wood, and  that it was a bit of scenery more like the burns of the North Countrie (my  visiter was a Northumbrian) than anything he had seen in the south. Surely  I had seen it? I was half ashamed to confess that I had not(how  often are we obliged to confess that we have not seen the beauties which  lie close to our doors, too near for observation!)and the next day  proving fine, I determined to repair my omission.  

It was a soft and balmy April morning, just at that point of the flowery  spring when violets and primroses are lingering under the northern  hedgerows, and cowslips and orchises peeping out upon the sunny banks. My  driver was the clever, shrewd, arch boy Dick; and the first part of our  way lay along the green winding lanes which lead to Everley; we then  turned to the left, and putting up our phaeton at a small farmhouse, where  my attendant (who found acquaintances everywhere) was intimate, we  proceeded to the wood; Dick accompanying me, carrying my flower-basket,  opening the gates, and taking care of my dog Dash, a very beautiful  thorough-bred Old English spaniel, who was a little apt, when he got into  a wood, to run after the game, and forget to come out again.  

I have seldom seen anything in woodland scenery more picturesque and  attractive than the old coppice of Lanton, on that soft and balmy April  morning. The underwood was nearly cut, and bundles of long split poles for  hooping barrels were piled together against the tall oak trees, bursting  with their sap; whilst piles of faggots were built up in other parts of  the copse, and one or two saw-pits, with light open sheds erected over  them, whence issued the measured sound of the saw and the occasional  voices of the workmen, almost concealed by their subterranean position,  were placed in the hollows. At the far side of the coppice, the operation  of hewing down the underwood was still proceeding, and the sharp strokes  of the axe and the bill, softened by distance, came across the monotonous  jar of the never-ceasing saw. The surface of the ground was prettily  tumbled about, comprehending as pleasant a variety of hill and dale as  could well be comprised in some thirty acres. It declined, however,  generally speaking, towards the centre of the coppice, along which a  small, very small rivulet, scarcely more than a runlet, wound its way in a  thousand graceful meanders. Tracking upward the course of the little  stream, we soon arrived at that which had been the ostensible object of  our drivethe spot whence it sprung.  

It was a steep irregular acclivity on the highest side of the wood, a  mound, I had almost said a rock, of earth, cloven in two about the middle,  but with so narrow a fissure that the brushwood which grew on either side  nearly filled up the opening, so that the source of the spring still  remained concealed, although the rapid gushing of the water made a  pleasant music in that pleasant place; and here and there a sunbeam,  striking upon the sparkling stream, shone with a bright and glancing light  amidst the dark ivies, and brambles, and mossy stumps of trees, that grew  around.  

This mound had apparently been cut a year or two ago, so that it presented  an appearance of mingled wildness and gaiety, that contrasted very  agreeably with the rest of the coppice; whose trodden-down flowers I had  grieved over, even whilst admiring the picturesque effect of the  woodcutters and their several operations. Here, however, reigned the  flowery spring in all her glory. Violets, pansies, orchises, oxslips, the  elegant woodsorrel, the delicate wood anemone, and the enamelled wild  hyacinth, were sprinkled profusely amongst the mosses, and lichens, and  dead leaves, which formed so rich a carpet beneath our feet. Primroses,  above all, were there of almost every hue, from the rare and pearly white,  to the deepest pinkish purple, coloured by some diversity of soil, the  pretty freak of nature's gardening; whilst the common yellow blossomcommonest  and prettiest of allpeeped out from amongst the boughs in the stump  of an old willow, like (to borrow the simile of a dear friend, now no  more) a canary bird from its cage. The wild geranium was already showing  its pink stem and scarlet-edged leaves, themselves almost gorgeous enough  to pass for flowers; the periwinkle, with its wreaths of shining foliage,  was hanging in garlands over the precipitous descent; and the lily of the  valley, the fragrant woodroof, and the silvery wild garlick, were just  peeping from the earth in the most sheltered nooks. Charmed to find myself  surrounded by so much beauty, I had scrambled, with much ado, to the top  of the woody cliff, (no other word can convey an idea of its precipitous  abruptness,) and was vainly attempting to trace by my eye the actual  course of the spring, which was, by the clearest evidence of sound,  gushing from the fount many feet below me; when a peculiar whistle of  delight, (for whistling was to Dick, although no ordinary proficient in  our common tongue, another language,) and a tremendous scrambling amongst  the bushes, gave token that my faithful attendant had met with something  as agreeable to his fancy, as the primroses and orchises had proved to  mine.  

Guided by a repetition of the whistle, I soon saw my trusty adherent  spanning the chasm like a Colossus, one foot on one bank, the other on the  oppositeeach of which appeared to me to be resting, so to say, on  nothingtugging away at a long twig that grew on the brink of the  precipice, and exceedingly likely to resolve the inquiry as to the source  of the Loddon, by plumping souse into the fountain-head. I, of course,  called out to warn him; and he equally, of course, went on with his  labour, without paying the slightest attention to my caution. On the  contrary, having possessed himself of one straight slender twig, which, to  my great astonishment, he wound round his fingers, and deposited in his  pocket, as one should do by a bit of pack-thread, he apparently, during  the operation, caught sight of another. Testifying his delight by a second  whistle, which, having his knife in his mouth, one wonders how he could  accomplish; and scrambling with the fearless daring of a monkey up the  perpendicular bank, supported by strings of ivy, or ledges of roots, and  clinging by hand and foot to the frail bramble or the slippery moss,  leaping like a squirrel from bough to bough, and yet, by happy boldness,  escaping all danger, he attained his object as easily as if he had been  upon level ground. Three, four, five times was the knowing, joyous,  triumphant whistle sounded, and every time with a fresh peril and a fresh  escape. At last, the young gentleman, panting and breathless, stood at my  side, and I began to question him as to the treasure he had been pursuing.  

"It's the ground-ash, ma'am," responded master Dick, taking one of the  coils from his pocket;the best riding-switch in the world. All the whips  that ever were made are nothing to it. Only see how strong it is, how  light, and how supple! You may twist it a thousand ways without breaking.  It won't break, do what you will. Each of these, now, is worth  half-a-crown or three shillings, for they are the scarcest things  possible. They grow up at a little distance from the root of an old tree,  like a sucker from a rose-bush. Great luck, indeed!continued Dick,  putting up his treasure with another joyful whistle;it was but t'other  day that Jack Barlow offered me half-a-guinea for four, if I could but  come by them. I shall certainly keep the best, though, for myselfunless,  ma'am, you would be pleased to accept it for the purpose of whipping  Dash.Whipping Dash!!! Well have I said that Dick was as saucy as a  lady's page or a king's jester. Talk of whipping Dash! Why, the young  gentleman knew perfectly well that I had rather be whipt myself twenty  times over. The very sound seemed a profanation. Whip my Dash! Of course I  read master Dick a lecture for this irreverent mention of my pet, who,  poor fellow, hearing his name called in question, came up in all innocence  to fondle me; to which grave remonstrance the hopeful youth replied by  another whistle, half of penitence, half of amusement.  

These discourses brought us to the bottom of the mound, and turning round  a clump of hawthorn and holly, we espied a little damsel with a basket at  her side, and a large knife in her hand, carefully digging up a large root  of white primroses, and immediately recognised my old acquaintance, Bessy  Leigh.  

She was, as before, clean, and healthy, and tidy, and unaffectedly glad to  see me; but the joyousness and buoyancy which had made so much of her  original charm, were greatly diminished. It was clear that poor Bessy had  suffered worse griefs than those of cold and hunger; and upon questioning  her, so it turned out.  

Her father had died, and her mother had been ill, and the long hard winter  had been hard to get through; and then the rent had come upon her, and the  steward (for the young gentleman himself was a minor) had threatened to  turn them out if it were not paid to a daythe very next day after  that on which we were speaking; and her mother had been afraid they must  go to the workhouse, which would have been a sad thing, because now she  had got so much washing to do, and Harry was so clever at basket-making,  that there was every chance, this rent once paid, of their getting on  comfortably. "And the rent will be paid now, ma'am, thank Ood!" added  Bessy, her sweet face brightening; "for we want only a guinea of the whole  sum, and Lady Denys has employed me to get scarce wild-flowers for her  wood, and has promised me half-a-guinea for what I have carried her, and  this last parcel, which I am to take to the lodge to-night; and Mr. John  Barlow, her groom, has offered Harry twelve and sixpence for five  ground-ashes that Harry has been so lucky as to find by the spring, and  Harry is gone to cut them: so that now we shall get on bravely, and mother  need not fret any longer. I hope no harm will befal Harry in getting the  ground-ash, though, for it's a noted dangerous place. But he's a careful  boy."  

Just at this point of her little speech, poor Bessy was interrupted by her  brother, who ran down the declivity exclaiming, "They're gone, Bessy!they're  gone! somebody has taken them! the ground-ashes are gone!"  

Dick put his hand irresolutely to his pocket, and then, uttering a dismal  whistle, pulled it resolutely out again, with a hardness, or an  affectation of hardness, common to all lads, from the prince to the  stable-boy.  

I also put my hand into my pocket, and found, with the deep disappointment  which often punishes such carelessness, that I had left my purse at home.  All that I could do, therefore, was to bid the poor children be comforted,  and ascertain at what time Bessy intended to take her roots, which in the  midst of her distress she continued to dig up, to my excellent friend Lady  Denys. I then, exhorting them to hope the best, made my way quickly out of  the wood.  

Arriving at the gate, I missed my attendant. Before, however, I had reached  the farm at which we had left our phaeton, I heard his gayest and most  triumphant whistle behind me. Thinking of the poor children, it jarred  upon my feelings. "Where have you been loitering, Sir?" I asked, in a  sterner voice than he had probably ever heard from me before.  

"Where have I been?" replied he; "giving little Harry the ground-ashes, to  be sure: I felt just as if I had stolen them. And now, I do believe,"  continued he, with a prodigious burst of whistling, which seemed to me as  melodious as the song of the nightingale, "I do believe," quoth Dick,  "that I am happier than they are. I would not have kept those  ground-ashes, no, not for fifty pounds!"  













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