The Heart - Page 27/151

The night after I returned, there was a ball at Cavendish Court, the

first since the death of Madam Rosamond, and my brother and I went,

and my stepfather and my mother, though she loved not Madam

Cavendish.

And Mary Cavendish, at that time ten years old, was standing, when I

first entered, with a piece of blue-green tapestry work at her back,

clad in a little straight white gown and little satin shoes, and a

wreath of roses on her head, from whence the golden locks flowed

over her gentle cheeks, delicately rounded between the baby and

maiden curves, with her little hands clasped before her; and her

blue eyes, now downcast, now uplifted with utmost confidence in the

love of all who saw her. And close by her stood her sister

Catherine, coldly sweet in a splendid spread of glittering brocade,

holding her head, crowned with flowers and plumes, as still and

stately as if there were for her in all the world no wind of

passion; and my brother John looked at her, and I knew he loved her,

and marvelled what would come of it, though they danced often

together.

The ball went on till the east was red, and the cocks crew, and all

the birds woke in a tumult, and then that happened which changed my

whole life.

Three weeks from that day I set sail for the New World--a

convict. I will not now say how nor why; and on the same ship sailed

Capt. Geoffry Cavendish, his mother Madam Judith Cavendish, his

daughter Catherine, and the little maid Mary.

And on the long voyage Captain Cavendish's old wound broke out anew,

and he died and was buried at sea, and I, when I arrived in this

kingdom of Virginia, with the dire uncertainty and hardship of the

convict before me, yet with strength and readiness to bear it, was

taken as a tutor by Madam Judith Cavendish for her granddaughter

Mary, being by education well fitted for such a post, and she

herself knowing her other reasons for so doing. And so it happened

that Mistress Mary Cavendish and I rode to meeting in Jamestown that

Sabbath in April of 1682.