PERFUMER'S
SONG
The
rule of the world is heavy and hard,
Taketh
of every
life a share,
Strive
as it may to cherish and guard
The
dawning
hope that was all so fair,
And
yet, so sure as the night-wind blows,
Memory
dwells
in her place apart,
And
the savor of rue or the breath of a rose
Brings
peace
out of trouble, dear
heart, dear heart!
There
was never a joy that the world can kill
So
long as there lives a dream of the past,
For
the alchemist in his fragrant still
Keeps
fresh the
dream to the very
last.
So
sure as the wind of the morning blows
To
heal the trouble, to cool the smart,
The
breath of lavender, thyme and rose
Will
bring to
thee comfort, dear
heart, dear heart!
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X
MARY
LAVENDER'S GARDEN
HOW
MARY LAVENDER CAME TO BE OF SERVICE TO AN EXILED QUEEN
MARY
LAVENDER lived in a garden. That seems really the best way to say it.
The house of Dame Annis Lavender was hardly more than four walls and
a roof, a green door and two small hooded windows. Instead of the
house having a garden the garden seemed rather to hold the cottage in
a blossomy lap.
A
long time ago there had been a castle on the low hill above the
cottage. It was a Saxon castle, roughly built of great half-hewn
stones, its double walls partly of tramped earth. Nearly a century
had passed since a Norman baron had received the "hundred"
in which the castle stood, as a reward for having helped Duke William
become William the Conqueror. His domain was large enough for a
hundred families to live on, getting their living from the land. The
original Saxon owner had fled to join Hereward at Ely, and he never
came back.
This
rude Saxon castle was not what the Norman needed, at all. He must
have, if he meant to be safe in this hostile land, a fortress much
harder to take. He chose a taller hill just beyond the village, made
it higher with most of the stone from the old castle, and built there
a great square frowning keep and some smaller towers, with a double
wall of stone, topped by battlements, round the brow of the hill, and
a ditch around all. No stream being convenient to fill the moat he
left it dry. Here, where the Saxon castle had been, was nothing but a
dimpled green mound, starred over in spring with pink and white baby
daisies, and besprinkled with dwarf buttercups and the little flower
that English children call Blue Eyes. Mary liked to take her distaff
there and spin. The old castle had been built to guard a ford. The
Normans had made a stone bridge at a narrower and deeper point in the
river, and Dame Annis and Mary washed linen in the pool above the
ford.
The
countryside had settled down to the rule of the Normans with hardly
more trouble than the dismantled mound. Travelers often came over the
new bridge and stayed at the inn on their way to or from London, and
there were more than twice as many houses as there had been when
Mary's mother was a girl. Older people complained that the country
could never endure so much progress. This was a rather remote region,
given over mainly to sheep-grazing. On the great extent of "common"
still unfenced, the sheep wandered as they liked, and they often came
nibbling about Mary's feet as she sat on the mound.
There
had been a garden about the ancient castle several, in fact: the
herb-garden, the vegetable garden, and a sort of out-door nursery for
fruits and berries. The last had been against a southward-facing wall
and was nearly destroyed; but herbs are tenacious things, and the old
roots had spread into the vegetable patch, and flowers had seeded
themselves, until Dame Annis moved into the little cottage and began
to make her living.
Most
of the old-fashioned cottage-garden flowers could be found there.
Thrift raised its rose-red spikes in crevices of a ruined wall.
Bluebells, the wild hyacinths, made heavenly patches of color among
the copses. Great beds of mustard and lavender, in early summer, were
like a purple-and-gold mantle flung down upon a field. Presently
violets bloomed in orderly rows in Dame Annis's new herb-garden, and
roses were pruned and trimmed and trained over old walls and trees.
It
may seem odd that violets and roses should be among herbs. The truth
is that very few flowers were cultivated in the early Middle Ages
simply for ornament. Violets were used to make perfume. Roses were
made into rose-water and also into rose conserve, a kind of sweetmeat
of rose-petals, sugar and spice packed in little jars. Marigolds were
brought from the East by returning Crusaders for use in broth.
Pennyroyal, feverfew, camomile, parsley, larkspur, and other flowers
used to be grown for making medicine. One of the few herbs which grow
in modern gardens, which the Conqueror found in England when he came,
is tansy. The name comes from a Greek word meaning immortality. Tansy
was used to preserve meat, and to flavor various dishes. There were
also sage, marjoram, thyme, and many other herbs of which Dame Annis
did not know the names. One of the most precious finds that she made
in her digging and transplanting was a root of woad. This plant was
used for blue dye, and was so much in demand that England did not
produce enough and had to import it. It was too valuable for her to
use it herself; she cherished it and fed the soil, planting every
seed, promising Mary that some day she should have a gown dyed
watchet blue, of linen from their own flax. Mary was thinking about
that gown as she sat spinning and listening to the hum of the bees.
She knew exactly how it would be made from beginning to end.
The
flax would be soaked in the brook until the strong stem-fibers were
all that were left; it would be hackled and washed and spun and
finally woven by their neighbor, Dame Garland, for Mary's mother had
no loom. This neighbor was as poor as themselves, but they would pay
her in herbs and dyestuffs. The leaves not the flowers, which were
yellow from the woad, would be crushed into a paste and allowed to
ferment, and finally made into little balls that would keep until
needed.
Neither
perfume, nor dye could be bought in shops thereabouts, and there were
no factories anywhere for making either. Dame Lavender had been,
before she was married, maid to a great lady who had taught her women
how to make such things out of the plants in the castle garden. Now,
when her husband failed to come back from the wars in France, she
turned to the perfumer's trade as the one which she knew best.
There
are a great many ways of making perfume at home. If she had had a
still, Dame Lavender could have made almost any sort of ordinary
perfume, flavor or medicine. In this process, a mixture of blossoms,
spices and drugs, or the blossoms alone, or the leaves, is cooked in
a glass bottle called a retort, with a long glass tube fitted to it
so that the steam must pass through the tube and cool in little
drops. These drops run out into a glass flask and are the perfume.
Another way was to gather flowers when perfectly fresh and put them
into a kettle of alcohol, which would take up the scent and keep it
after the flowers are taken out. Strong-scented flowers or leaves
were put with salve in a jar and covered, to perfume the salve. Dried
plants of pleasant fragrance, mixed with salve, could be left until
the scent had been taken up, then the whole could be melted and
strained to remove the herbs. Each herb and flower had to be gathered
at the proper time, and dried in the little attic. With this
business, and the honey which the bees made, and the spinning done by
both mother and daughter, they managed to make a living.
One
day when they were at their busiest an old man came to the door and
asked for a night's lodging. He had a gentle way of speaking,
although his cloak was threadbare, and he seemed much interested in
their work. He knew some of the plants which they had never been able
to name, and told what they were good for. He seemed so old, poor and
feeble, that although she really needed all the money she could earn,
Dame Lavender refused the coin he offered her. She felt that if he
fell ill somewhere, he might need it.
The
Norman castle on the hill had not been really lived in for some ten
years. There was a company of soldiers in it, with two or three
knights who came and went, but that was all. It had been built as a
fortress, and was one; and the situation was such that it could not
easily be made into anything else. The baron who owned it was in
attendance upon the King.
Then,
one day, a rumor went floating about the village, like the scent of
growing hedges in spring. It was said that the castle was to be set
in order for some great lady; and that she would bring with her two
or three maids perhaps, but most of the work was to be done by the
people of the village. This was rather mystifying. Mary wondered why
a great lady should not rather choose to stay at the nunnery, where
the Lady Abbess had all things seemly and well-planned. It was an old
Saxon religious house and not at all rich; but Mary always liked to
have an errand up Minchen Lane. The lane had got its name from the
nuns, who were called "minchens" a long while ago.
Sometimes they sent to get some roots or plants from the garden of
Dame Lavender. She had some kinds that they had not.
It
was nearly certain, at any rate, that the housekeeper at the castle
would want lavender and violets, and Dame Annis told Mary to get the
besom and sweep out the stillroom. This was a shed with a stone
floor, the only room they had which was not used for living or
sleeping. The room they had given their strange guest, Tomaso of
Padua as he called himself, was the one where Mary and her mother
usually slept, and they had made up a pallet in the attic.
Mary
worked briskly with her besom. It was just such a broom as English
people still use to sweep garden walks, a bundle of twigs tied on a
stick handle with a pliant osier. While she was at work she heard the
gate shut, and saw old Tomaso coming in.
It
cannot be said that she was exactly glad to see him. She felt that
they might have all that they could do without a lodger just then.
She spoke to him courteously, however, and he smiled as if he read
her thoughts.
"I
have not come to ask for your hospitality this time," he said,
"but to bring your good mother something in return for her
kindness." Beckoning to a boy who stood outside, he opened the
gate, and the boy led in a little donkey laden with the basket-work
saddle-bags called paniers. From these Tomaso took all the parts of a
still, some fine earthen and glass jars, flasks and bowls, and
bundles of spice which were like a whole garden packed into a basket.
"These,"
he said, "will be of assistance to your mother in her work. I
see her coming now, and I will talk with her awhile."
Mary
felt as if the earth had turned inside out when she heard the outcome
of that conversation. The lady who was coming to the castle was
Eleanor of Aquitaine, Queen of England, and her coming was a
considerable responsibility to every one concerned. She had been
found just ready to join her sons, Richard and Geoffrey, in
Aquitaine, where they were fighting against their father, and she was
to be shut up in this remote fortress, in charge of one of the King's
most trusted knights, until he had disposed of the rebellion and had
time to consider the case. She would not, she declared, spend her
days in a nunnery, and the nuns of Minchen Lane were anything but
anxious to have her. There was a room in the Norman castle which
could be fitted up as a still-room, and it was desirable to have
whatever was needed made within the walls if possible. Would Mary
undertake to go there and make herself useful, either in ways that
might aid the cook, or in any other duties that she saw? The cook was
an Italian. The maids of honor were daughters of Norman-French
families. Barbara Edrupt, the wife of the wool-merchant who owned
Longley Farm, was also, it appeared, going to lend a hand with the
spinning and train one or two country girls for the rough work. It
was no small task to maintain a royal lady in fitting state, even
though she was a prisoner. It was more difficult here because there
was little or nothing to do it with, and peddlers, merchants and
other purveyors from distant London or Paris might be a source of
danger.
Dame
Annis Lavender was rather doubtful, but she had confidence in Mary,
and it was settled that Mary should go. She was to have the gown of
blue sooner than she thought. The flax was already spun, Dame Garland
did the weaving, and she and Mary's mother dipped and dipped again
until the web was a deep exquisite blue like a summer sky. Barbara
made Mary a gift of a fair white linen cap and kerchief. The two
girls, Barbara with her black eyes and hair, Mary with her gold-brown
braids and calm blue eyes and wild-rose coloring, made a pretty
picture together.
So
at least thought the troubadour who came riding by and saw them. He
was in attendance upon the castellan, Thibaut of Toulouse, and a
little group of maids and pages coming to make ready for the Queen,
who was expected to arrive the next day. Thibaut's wife had been a
Provencal lady, and his daughter Philippa, by whose side the
troubadour was riding, was a trifle homesick for her childhood
speech. She was very glad of Ranulph's company.
As
they came past the garden she bent sidewise in her saddle and looked
eagerly toward the gate. "Do you see there?" she cried.
"That is a Provence rose."
"I
will bring you some," the troubadour answered, and a moment
later he was striding toward the two girls among the flowers. They
had never seen any one like him, so gay, so courteous and so
straightforward.
"I
come to beg a rose," he said. "Are not these the red roses
of Provence?"
"Surely,"
answered Barbara. "I brought the bush from my own home, and gave
Mary a cutting. There never was such a rose for bloom and sweetness,
we think. My husband he says so too."
Barbara
blushed and smiled a little when she spoke of Robert, and she and
Mary quickly filled a basket with the roses. The next morning Ranulph
came again with the Provencal maid of honor to get more flowers, and
"strewing herbs," sweet-scented plants that gave out their
fragrance when trodden upon. The rushes used for floor-covering were
often mixed with these on festival days, and when new rushes were to
be put down the whole might be swept into the fire and burned. The
maids of honor made garlands for the wall, and thus the first breath
of air the Queen drew in her grim, small stone rooms high in the
castle keep, was laden with the scent of the blossoms of the South.
It
was a cheerless abode, Mary and Barbara thought. There were no
hangings, no costly dishes nor candlesticks, no weapons or anything
that could be made into a weapon, nor any jewels or rich clothing.
Mary
wondered a little that certain richly embroidered tapestries which
belonged to the nuns had not been borrowed, for she knew that the
Lady Abbess had lent them now and then. Philippa could have told her.
"It
is well," said the Queen haughtily when she had seen her
apartments, "that they have given me no gold-woven arras for my
prison. I think I would bum it for the gold if any of these jailers
of mine could be bought perchance."
The
captivity of the royal prisoner was not, however, very severe. She
sometimes rode out under guard, she was allowed to walk upon the
terrace and in the walled garden, and she talked sometimes with the
troubadour and with old Tomaso. In one of the older towers of the
castle the physician had his rooms, and here he read in ancient
books, or brewed odd mixtures in his retorts and crucibles. He taught
Mary more about the management of a still, the use of herbs and the
making of essences than she had ever dreamed there was to learn.
Physicians in those days might be quacks or alchemists. Here and
there one was what we call an experimental chemist. Nearly a hundred
years later some of Tomaso's papers proved most valuable to the
University of Padua.
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