Miss Strang Chapter 91
By Governess
liviaarbuthnot1@gmail.com
Copyright 2013 by Governess,
all rights reserved
*
* * * *
This
story is intended for adults only. It contains depictions of forced
nudity,
spanking, and sexual activity of preteen and young teen children for
the
purpose of punishment. None of the behaviors in this story should be
attempted
in real life. If you are not of legal age in your community to read or
view
such material, please leave now.
* * * * *
Chapter 91
“I
am most interested in your talk to the
Mothers’ Union, Mrs Innes. And curious as to how you applied the
Scripture passage
you chose. Can you tell me more?”
“Certainly,
Miss Strang. It was the third in a
series of talks I’ve been giving on Raising Children in the Lord. I was
shocked, Miss Strang, when I first came into this parish over ten years
ago. I
found there were members of the Mothers’ Union who were failing to obey
the
Biblical injunction to chastise their children. Happily, that is no
longer the
case. But it’s still necessary to remind mothers, and particularly new
mothers,
of the need for proper and effective discipline. And of the benefits
that flow
from that.
“The
talk I gave this month was to show how the
rod of correction is a means to the child’s acquiring a meekness of
spirit and
true humility. And, of course, I had first to make very clear that
meekness of
spirit and true humility are not
the
natural birth right of any child. As Saint Augustine said even babies
scream
with rage, and envy another child at the breast. Some will excuse that
because
the child doesn’t yet understand that such behaviour is wrong. But it
is wrong.
And it is sinful. For a child is conceived in sin and shapen in
iniquity.”
“Indeed,
Mrs Innes. Envy and screaming are not
suddenly wrong because the child has reached a certain age. And before
that
were perfectly acceptable.”
“No,
they are always wrong. And it is the role
of parents to teach the child they are wrong and to do that through
correction
and punishment.
“And
I explained that when it comes to rearing
our children we are given an authority over them akin to the authority
God has over
the world. And that in the small world of the family we are as God to
our
children, and have a complete and unfettered rule over them. And that
God-given
authority is conferred equally on both father and mother.”
“Equally,
Mrs Innes? There are many who believe a
mother’s authority over her children derives from the father and that
she
exercises that under a delegation from him.”
“I
know, Miss Strang. But I believe they are
wrong. God has conferred on men and women different gifts and different
responsibilities. And each needs to respect the God given gifts of the
other. The
mother has a unique role in raising and disciplining her children from
the
earliest years. And that continues until girls fully mature into young
women,
and until boys’ voices break. After that a boy should expect to be
disciplined,
and disciplined severely, by his father. But even then, if the father
is
absent, the mother retains her authority to administer the rod if
necessary.”
She
smiled.
“An
anxious mother recently questioned me on how
that was possible with a big vigorous boy.”
“And
how did you reply, Mrs Innes?”
“I
said that if a boy has been whipped by his
mother from his earliest years he should be schooled in presenting
himself for
the rod without resistance. However, should he withdraw his
co-operation, he
should be told he can either comply immediately or his punishment will
be doubled
in severity and deferred to a time of her choosing. And then, like
Napoleon’s
mother, she should seize an opportunity when the boy is vulnerable and
easily
shamed and mastered.”
“Like
Napoleon’s mother, Mrs Innes?”
“Yes.
She was a formidable Corsican mother and
was determined to correct her son even though big and strong. She
waited until
she knew he was in a state of undress and then entered his room with a
birch. In
the face of her determination he soon submitted. And she flogged him
within an
inch of his life. What mothers need to understand, Miss Strang, is that
when a
boy has been consistently and severely chastised from his earliest
years, he
continues to see himself as that small child whose transgressions are
punished
over a mother’s knee. His impudence is little more than a thin veneer
that may
be stripped away with implacable resolve and harsh reprimand.”
Although
face to the wall, I knew that there was
a smile on her lips as she added,
“Particularly
if like Madame Bonaparte you
choose your moment.”
She
tapped the Bible open on her lap.
“So
the first thing we read in this scripture
from St Peter is that we should expect all those who are subject to our
God-given rule to be submissive. And not only to us, but also to one
another. The
Apostle says, All of
you be submissive to one another, and be clothed with humility. So
we should insist that children respect each other; that they don’t
quarrel and that
don’t abuse one another. But what we must insist upon above all else,
Miss
Strang, is an unquestioning submission to those set in authority over
them.”
She
cleared her throat.
“Then,
we considered the nature of humility. And
that is quite simple. It is the same for children as for adults. It is
not
asserting your will against others; not claiming rights and privileges
at the
expense of others.”
There
was a pause.
“But,
of course, that is what children, borne as
they are in sin, do all the time. They refuse to share; they demand
their
mother’s attention, especially when she is tending to another child;
and they complain
and sulk when they cannot get it. They will even tell untruths to get
another
child into trouble. And why? Because children are small proud
creatures, Miss
Strang. Small proud creatures who value themselves more highly than
others. And
what do we read in this scripture from St Peter? That God resists the proud. And
so should a mother resist pride in her children. For pride is the enemy
of
humility. And whenever a child pushes himself to the fore, whenever he
claims
something exclusively for himself, that is pride.”
“Indeed,
Mrs Innes, as the Scripture makes clear
most, if not all, sin is rooted in pride.”
“Yes,
Miss Strang. Disobedience itself is a form
of pride. When a child disobeys, he is elevating his judgement over
yours. He
is proudly asserting himself against your rule. And if we are faithful
to the
authority God has bestowed upon us, then we will resist that. Resist it
in
faithfulness to His command. For we ourselves, as this scripture tells
us, are to
humble
ourselves under the mighty hand of God.
“And
if God resists pride with a mighty hand, so should we, Miss Strang. We
read in St Paul’s Epistle to the Hebrews that it is a terrible thing to fall
into the hands of the living God. And for a
disobedient child it should
be a terrible thing to fall into the hands of his mother. We are told
by the
Psalmist that the
fear of God is the beginning of wisdom. And in the
family,
wisdom is rooted in a child’s fear of his mother. Not a craven fear,
but a
healthy fear that respects her right to discipline him and punish
wrongdoing. And
he fears it because it is inevitable and because it is severely
painful.”
“I
cannot agree more, Mrs Innes. And I firmly
believe such God-given authority is also conferred on a governess when
she is
appointed to a Christian family. But in your talk how did you develop
the theme
of humiliation leading to true humility? Some might question that.”
“Yes,
I am sure they might, Miss Strang. But they
would be wrong. A child needs to understand that disobedient behaviour
is
utterly shameful. And the way to do that is to ensure it has deeply
shameful
consequences. When a disobedient child stands before me, he knows more
is to be
stripped from him than his nether garments. And as the birch wears away
the
skin of his bottom, I am also wearing away the much harder skin of his
pride
and his determination to outlast me. Some may think that degrading. And
so it
is. And rightly so. It lowers him in his own eyes and in the eyes of
others. In
his pride, he considers himself an independent being who has the right
to
determine his own life and make his own choices. But in truth he is
subject to
the will and determination of his mother in all things. And it is this
unpalatable fact that a good birching brings home to him.”
“Yes,
Mrs Innes. But in my experience, it is a
long and demanding process. A boy’s self-will has the tenacity and
vigour of a
bramble patch. It needs to be beaten and cut back again and again. A
boy needs
to be routinely whipped, shamed and humiliated, until at long last he
begins to
accept the need to rest humbly in the will of the one whom God has set
in authority
over him.”
“Yes,
Miss Strang. The hard skin of self-will
may be flayed off, but like the skin of his bottom it renews itself. It
needs
to be regularly flayed and stripped away. The process of lowering a
child’s
false estimation of his own worth is, as you say, time-consuming, but
it’s
essential and must not be shirked. Eventually it bears fruit.”
There
was a pause, and I sensed a smile.
“Without
wishing to be proud myself, I think I
can safely say that my children are testimony to that. Just look at
Rachel. A
most wilful child. But over the years, she has developed into the
selfless
woman she now is. Assisting at the Reformatory. And making sure that
there,
too, the humiliation of the rod is never withheld.
“Do
you know, Miss Strang, in the early days of
the Mothers’ Union here, there were mothers who sought to avoid
humiliating
their children? They would refuse to bare a child’s buttocks; they
would
refrain from displaying the implement of correction where others might
see it; they
would refuse to speak in the child’s presence about the whippings he
had received.
But no longer, Miss Strang. They all now accept that humiliation is as
essential
part of a child’s discipline, and that from it, with steady
perseverance on
their part, true humility will grow.”
“I
cannot tell you, Mrs Innes, how that delights
me. And how it strengthens my resolve to deal faithfully with the boys
I will
be tutoring from the Orphanage.”
“Well,
thank you, Miss Strang. You are most
generous. But we cannot leave Arbuthnot, there, cooling her bottom.
There is
work for her to do.”
I
sensed her eyes upon me.
“Turn
round Arbuthnot. And down on your knees.”
I
turned and knelt with my head inclined. Not so
much from shame as from a disinclination to look at my tormentress.
“Were
you listening to my conversation with Miss
Strang, Arbuthnot?”
I
hesitated uncertain whether it had been wrong
to listen. But to deny doing so seemed foolish.
“Yes,
Mrs . . . Ma’am.”
“And
what did you learn from it?”
“That
. . . that a girl needs to be humble.”
“Yes.
A girl needs to be humble at all times. But
that was not the burden of our conversation was it? What Miss Strang
and I were
discussing was how a child is best taught to be humble. And how is that
best
done? ”
“By
. . . by shaming her . . . Ma’am.”
“Yes,
Arbuthnot. By shaming her. And what did I
say would happen to you, if you didn’t mend your ways? Well?”
“I
. . . I . . . can’t quite remember, Ma’am.”
“I
have to say, Arbuthnot, that a girl with a
memory as poor as that isn’t going to fare very well in this household.
What I
said was that like Benson you would soon be going without your
knickers. Do you
remember that?”
I
bit my lip.
“Yes
. . . Ma’am.”
“And
why is Benson denied knickers?”
“So,
you can spank her when she needs it . . .
Ma’am.”
“No,
Arbuthnot. Spank her when I choose to do
so, whether there is cause or not. Just remember that.”
She
walked over to the bell and rang it. In a
moment, there was a knock at the door and the girl Hankey entered.
“Hankey,
hand Arbuthnot her knickers and
rearrange her dress. And then take her to the kitchen and see if Cook
has some
simple repetitive task for her to perform. Peeling potatoes and
vegetables for
dinner would be ideal. And if the scullery needs scrubbing she can do
that,
too. And tell Cook that I want her to be knocking at my dressing room
door at
five o’clock. Not a minute before or a minute after.”
Hankey
curtsied.
“Yes,
Ma’am.”
And
you will curtsey before you go, Arbuthnot. And
give thanks.”
“Thank
you Ma’am.”
I
was led through a series of passages to the
kitchen, and as we did so, we passed the girl Benson on her knees
scrubbing the
stone flagged floor. And it was obvious from the way the material of
her dress clung
to her bottom cheeks that she was bare beneath. The girl Hankey said
nothing to
her, and as we passed a door she opened it and ushered me into a small
closet. It
was lit from a small window high up on the wall.
“That
girl Benson is so stupid. If she goes on
like she does, she’ll soon have no skin left on her bottom. But look, I
just
wanted to say, I’ve rescued your doll. I could see you were attached to
her.
But keep her hidden or we’ll both be in terrible trouble. I’m Emily by
the way.
I’m not from the Orphanage. My father died when I was ten and then my
mother a
year ago. I’m from the village. They were sending me to the Orphanage,
but Mr
Innes insisted I came here as a parlour maid.”
“Yes,
I heard Mr Innes call you Emily when we
arrived. And thank you so much for saving Amanda. But I’ll be sleeping
in a
room next to Mrs Innes so I’m not sure where I can put her so she’s
safe.”
“Don’t
worry. I’ll slip into you room and put
her under your pillow. You’ll have to make your own bed and change it,
so
nobody’s going to find her. But she does look rather old.”
“She
is old. I had her when I was four. But
thank you for rescuing her. I do hope you don’t get into trouble over
it.”
Emily
gave a wry smile.
“I
hope so, too. But at the moment, the
Mistress’s taken up with Benson. So I hope it’ll be all right. And I
hope you
don’t hold it against me for helping the Mistress to cane you. You’ll
soon see
you don’t argue with the Mistress if you know what’s good for you. But
we’d
better get to the kitchen or Mrs Albright will ask questions. The
mistress
calls her the cook, but she manages the whole household under her
direction.”
The
kitchen was large and full of the usual
cupboards and utensil racks and with several sinks. At one end was a
large
range beside which sat a coal scuttle.
“So
you’re the new girl, are you? What’s your
name?
“Arbuthnot,
Ma’am.”
She
gave a smirking laugh.
“Ma’am
is what you call the Mistress, girl. I’m
Mrs Albright to you. And we’ll use your Christian name down here. You
do have a
Christian name, I suppose?”
“Yes,
Mrs Albright. It’s Livia.”
“And
what sort of name’s that for an Orphanage
girl?”
“Please,
Mrs Albright, I’m not from the
Orphanage.”
“What
another of the Master’s hand-picked girls?
Is that it?”
“No,
Mrs Albright. I was sent her by . . . by my
father. As . . . as a punishment.”
“Well
my girl, count yourself lucky you’re not a
boy or he might have sent you to the Reformatory. Not that you’ll have
an easy
time here. Not with Miss Rachel. She works at the Reformatory and if
you’re here
to be punished, I’ll wager she’ll have a hand in it.”
She
looked at Emily.
“So
what do you know about it, Emily Hankey? You
seem to be her bosom companion.”
“Please,
Mrs Albright, the Mistress said she was
to prepare vegetables and then do some scrubbing. But she’s to go to
the Mistress’s
dressing room at five o’clock sharp.”
And
with that I was set to work on the potatoes,
carrots and parsnips for dinner that evening. And then made to scrub
the
scullery. It was called the scullery but in fact it was a large
stone-flagged
store with shelves around it and a large cupboard at one end. I
recalled Mr and
Mrs Innes’s discussion about the birching table and guessed that this
was the
place where it was to be located.
It
was half past four o’clock when I had
finished the scrubbing and my knees were sore from kneeling. I rose
like an old
woman and stretched my legs.
“So
you’ve finished, have you? Let me see.”
Mrs
Albright pushed me toward the scullery and
followed after me. She bent down and wiped a finger over the floor and
examined
it.
“Mmm,
not bad for a start. But just look between
some of those flags. There’s dirt there. If the Mistress had set you to
do
that, she’s be far from pleased. And so would you, when she’d finished
with
you.”
She
led me back into the kitchen. Well you’ve a
few minutes before you have to go upstairs. When you do, I’ll get Emily
to show
you the way. It won’t do to be late on your first day. Or any day come
to that.
The Mistress is a great stickler for punctuality. You see what’s on the
back on
the door?”
“Yes,
Mrs Albright.”
“And
you know what that is?”
“Yes,
Mrs Albright. It’s a cane.”
“Yes.
And it’s not there for decoration. It’s
there as a warning of what happens to girls who are disobedient and
slipshod or
who displease the Mistress. And believe me, the Mistress is easily
displeased.”
“D
. . . do you use it, Mrs Albright.”
“Yes,
my girl. I do. Don’t I Violet? ”
“Yes,
Mrs Albright.”
“Violet’s
my kitchen maid. But all punishments here
are under the Mistress’s direction. As you’d expect in a well regulated
household. You see that book there. I keep a record of misbehaviour in
that
book. Not just Violet’s but of all the domestics. And on a Friday the
Mistress sits
down with me and goes through the entries for the week. If there’s an
entry for
Violet she will question me how I dealt with it and if there have been
two
entries in as many weeks, she’ll probably insist on an additional
punishment. Last
week she had Violet kneeling for two hours on the stone flags with a
straight
back and no supper to follow. The parlour maids are punished by the
Mistress
and no one else. Usually it’s four o’clock on a Friday when the slate’s
wiped
clean. Of course, anything that comes to the Mistress’s attention
during the
week is dealt with there and then. And I understand she’s a nice little
routine
in place for Amy Benson. And so she should. If ever a girl needed
discipline
it’s that girl. But look at the time.”
She
put her head around the door and called for
Emily.
“Take
Livia up to the Mistress’s dressing room,
Emily. I don’t want her being late on her first day.”
I
knocked at the door, and on a curt ‘enter’, stepped
over the threshold. Mrs Innes was seated on a stool in front of her
dressing
table, on which could be seen the usual items of a lady’s toilet.
“Stand
over there, Arbuthnot.”
I
watched as she inserted into her ears the
marcasite earrings that she had worn on her visit to my father’s house.
“Well,
Arbuthnot, are you familiar with the
duties of a lady’s maid?”
“No,
Ma’am.”
She
shook her head.
“A
lady’s maid removes her mistress’s clothing
at the end of the day and brushes and cleans it. If anything needs
mending, she
attends to that. She will be told by her mistress what clothes she
proposes to
wear the following day and she lays them out the following morning. Can
you do
that?”
“I
. . . I think so, Ma’am.”
“Thinking
is not enough, Arbuthnot. That is what
I expect of you and that is what you will do. And to a high standard.”
She
adjusted one of her earrings.
“And
a traditional lady’s maid holds herself
ready to do whatever her mistress demands. So please remember that.”
She
paused.
“And
should you fall short in any of the tasks
you are set, you will be punished. Sometimes a girl falls short for
reasons
that are acceptable and she is without blame. But that is rare. Most
girls fall
short because of a moral failure. A lack of effort. Laziness. And above
all,
pride. But those can be beaten out of a girl. As dust and grime are
beaten out
of a carpet.”
She
looked at me and I held her gaze.
“And
do you know why beating is such an
effective remedy, Arbuthnot?”
”No,
Ma’am. I’ve no idea.”
She
tilted her head back and said nothing for a
moment, narrowing her eyes.
“Then
let me enlighten you, Miss. A girl fails
because she is absorbed in her own little world of fripperies and
vanity. And
only the rod drives her out of that world to face the harsh realities
of life. It
cuts into her flesh, and forces her to bend her stubborn neck and to
submit to
an authority outside herself. And don’t forget you have been sent here
by your
father as an alternative to the Reformatory. And your treatment will
reflect
that.”
She
paused.
“However,
your qualifications for a lady’s maid
are sadly lacking. At the moment you will do whatever I tell you
however menial
it may be. And for a start, you will keep this room and your room not
only
clean and tidy but utterly immaculate. And you will keep both rooms
like that
all the time. And if on inspection, I find a speck of dust or a small
cobweb
anywhere you will be whipped. Do you understand, Arbuthnot?”
“Yes,
Ma’am.”
And
I curtsied.
(to
be continued)
(The End)