Yarmouth is not a happy place for a picnic. A picnic should be held among
green things. Green turf is absolutely an essential. There should be trees,
broken ground, small paths, thickets, and hidden recesses. There should, if
possible, be rocks, old timber, moss, and brambles. There should certainly be
hills and dales — on a small scale, and, above all, there should be running
water. There should be no expanse. Jones should not be able to see all Greene’s
movements, nor should Augusta always have her eye upon her sister Jane. But the
spot chosen for Mr Cheesacre’s picnic at Yarmouth had none of the virtues above
described. It was on the sea-shore. Nothing was visible from the site but sand
and sea. There were no trees there and nothing green — neither was there any
running water. But there was a long, dry, flat strand; there was an old boat
half turned over, under which it was proposed to dine; and in addition to this,
benches, boards, and some amount of canvas for shelter were provided by the
liberality of Mr Cheesacre. Therefore it was called Mr Cheesacre’s picnic.
But it was to be a marine picnic, and therefore the essential attributes of
other picnics were not required. The idea had come from some boating
expeditions, in which mackerel had been caught, and during which food had been
eaten, not altogether comfortably, in the boats. Then a thought had suggested
itself to Captain Bellfield that they might land and eat their food, and his
friend Mr Cheesacre had promised his substantial aid. A lady had surmised that
Ormesby sands would be the very place for dancing in the cool of the evening.
They might “dance on the sand,” she said, “and yet no footing seen.” And so the
thing had progressed, and the picnic been inaugurated.
It was Mr Cheesacre’s picnic undoubtedly. Mr Cheesacre was to supply the
boats, the wine, the cigars, the music, and the carpenter’s work necessary for
the turning of the old boat into a banqueting saloon. But Mrs Greenow had
promised to provide the eatables, and enjoyed as much of the éclat as the master
of the festival. She had known Mr Cheesacre now for ten days and was quite
intimate with him. He was a stout, florid man, of about forty-five, a bachelor,
apparently much attached to ladies’ society, bearing no sign of age except that
he was rather bald, and that grey hairs had mixed themselves with his whiskers,
very fond of his farming, and yet somewhat ashamed of it when he found himself
in what he considered to be polite circles. And he was, moreover, a little
inclined to seek the honour which comes from a well-filled and liberally-opened
purse. He liked to give a man a dinner and then to boast of the dinner he had
given. He was very proud when he could talk of having mounted, for a day’s
hunting, any man who might be supposed to be of higher rank than himself. “I had
Grimsby with me the other day — the son of old Grimsby of Hatherwick, you know.
Blessed if he didn’t stake my bay mare. But what matters? I mounted him again
the next day just the same.” Some people thought he was soft, for it was very
well known throughout Norfolk that young Grimsby would take a mount wherever he
could get it. In these days Mrs Greenow had become intimate with Mr Cheesacre,
and had already learned that he was the undoubted owner of his own acres.
“It wouldn’t do for me,” she had said to him, “to be putting myself forward,
as if I were giving a party myself, or anything of that sort — would it
now?”
“Well, perhaps not. But you might come with us.”
“So I will, Mr Cheesacre, for that dear girl’s sake. I should never forgive
myself if I debarred her from all the pleasures of youth, because of my sorrows.
I need hardly say that at such a time as this nothing of that sort can give me
any pleasure.”
“I suppose not,” said Mr Cheesacre, with a solemn look.
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