BEFORE twelve o'clock there had been some heavy storms of rain, and the water
lay in deep gutters on the sides of the gravel walks in the garden of Broxton
Parsonage; the great Provence roses had been cruelly tossed by the wind and
beaten by the rain, and all the delicate-stemmed border flowers had been dashed
down and stained with the wet soil. A melancholy morning--because it was nearly
time hay-harvest should begin, and instead of that the meadows were likely to be
flooded.
But people who have pleasant homes get indoor enjoyments that they would
never think of but for the rain. If it had not been a wet morning, Mr. Irwine
would not have been in the dining-room playing at chess with his mother, and he
loves both his mother and chess quite well enough to pass some cloudy hours very
easily by their help. Let me take you into that dining-room and show you the
Rev. Adolphus Irwine, Rector of Broxton, Vicar of Hayslope, and Vicar of Blythe,
a pluralist at whom the severest Church reformer would have found it difficult
to look sour. We will enter very softly and stand still in the open doorway,
without awaking the glossy- brown setter who is stretched across the hearth,
with her two puppies beside her; or the pug, who is dozing, with his black
muzzle aloft, like a sleepy president.
The room is a large and lofty one, with an ample mullioned oriel window at
one end; the walls, you see, are new, and not yet painted; but the furniture,
though originally of an expensive sort, is old and scanty, and there is no
drapery about the window. The crimson cloth over the large dining-table is very
threadbare, though it contrasts pleasantly enough with the dead hue of the
plaster on the walls; but on this cloth there is a massive silver waiter with a
decanter of water on it, of the same pattern as two larger ones that are propped
up on the sideboard with a coat of arms conspicuous in their centre. You suspect
at once that the inhabitants of this room have inherited more blood than wealth,
and would not be surprised to find that Mr. Irwine had a finely cut nostril and
upper lip; but at present we can only see that he has a broad flat back and an
abundance of powdered hair, all thrown backward and tied behind with a black
ribbon--a bit of conservatism in costume which tells you that he is not a young
man. He will perhaps turn round by and by, and in the meantime we can look at
that stately old lady, his mother, a beautiful aged brunette, whose rich-toned
complexion is well set off by the complex wrappings of pure white cambric and
lace about her head and neck. She is as erect in her comely embonpoint as a
statue of Ceres; and her dark face, with its delicate aquiline nose, firm proud
mouth, and small, intense, black eye, is so keen and sarcastic in its expression
that you instinctively substitute a pack of cards for the chess-men and imagine
her telling your fortune. The small brown hand with which she is lifting her
queen is laden with pearls, diamonds, and turquoises; and a large black veil is
very carefully adjusted over the crown of her cap, and falls in sharp contrast
on the white folds about her neck. It must take a long time to dress that old
lady in the morning! But it seems a law of nature that she should be dressed so:
she is clearly one of those children of royalty who have never doubted their
right divine and never met with any one so absurd as to question it.
"There, Dauphin, tell me what that is!" says this magnificent old lady, as
she deposits her queen very quietly and folds her arms. "I should be sorry to
utter a word disagreeable to your feelings."
"Ah, you witch-mother, you sorceress! How is a Christian man to win a game
off you? I should have sprinkled the board with holy water before we began.
You've not won that game by fair means, now, so don't pretend it."
"Yes, yes, that's what the beaten have always said of great conquerors. But
see, there's the sunshine falling on the board, to show you more clearly what a
foolish move you made with that pawn. Come, shall I give you another chance?"
"No, Mother, I shall leave you to your own conscience, now it's clearing up.
We must go and plash up the mud a little, mus'n't we, Juno?" This was addressed
to the brown setter, who had jumped up at the sound of the voices and laid her
nose in an insinuating way on her master's leg. "But I must go upstairs first
and see Anne. I was called away to Tholer's funeral just when I was going
before."
"It's of no use, child; she can't speak to you. Kate says she has one of her
worst headaches this morning."
"Oh, she likes me to go and see her just the same; she's never too ill to
care about that."
If you know how much of human speech is mere purposeless impulse or habit,
you will not wonder when I tell you that this identical objection had been made,
and had received the same kind of answer, many hundred times in the course of
the fifteen years that Mr. Irwine's sister Anne had been an invalid. Splendid
old ladies, who take a long time to dress in the morning, have often slight
sympathy with sickly daughters.
But while Mr. Irwine was still seated, leaning back in his chair and stroking
Juno's head, the servant came to the door and said, "If you please, sir, Joshua
Rann wishes to speak with you, if you are at liberty."
"Let him be shown in here," said Mrs. Irwine, taking up her knitting. "I
always like to hear what Mr. Rann has got to say. His shoes will be dirty, but
see that he wipes them Carroll."
In two minutes Mr. Rann appeared at the door with very deferential bows,
which, however, were far from conciliating Pug, who gave a sharp bark and ran
across the room to reconnoitre the stranger's legs; while the two puppies,
regarding Mr. Rann's prominent calf and ribbed worsted stockings from a more
sensuous point of view, plunged and growled over them in great enjoyment.
Meantime, Mr. Irwine turned round his chair and said, "Well, Joshua, anything
the matter at Hayslope, that you've come over this damp morning? Sit down, sit
down. Never mind the dogs; give them a friendly kick. Here, Pug, you rascal!"
It is very pleasant to see some men turn round; pleasant as a sudden rush of
warm air in winter, or the flash of firelight in the chill dusk. Mr. Irwine was
one of those men. He bore the same sort of resemblance to his mother that our
loving memory of a friend's face often bears to the face itself: the lines were
all more generous, the smile brighter, the expression heartier. If the outline
had been less finely cut, his face might have been called jolly; but that was
not the right word for its mixture of bonhomie and distinction.
"Thank Your Reverence," answered Mr. Rann, endeavouring to look unconcerned
about his legs, but shaking them alternately to keep off the puppies; "I'll
stand, if you please, as more becoming. I hope I see you an' Mrs. Irwine well,
an' Miss Irwine--an' Miss Anne, I hope's as well as usual."
"Yes, Joshua, thank you. You see how blooming my mother looks. She beats us
younger people hollow. But what's the matter?"
"Why, sir, I had to come to Brox'on to deliver some work, and I thought it
but right to call and let you know the goins-on as there's been i' the village,
such as I hanna seen i' my time, and I've lived in it man and boy sixty year
come St. Thomas, and collected th' Easter dues for Mr. Blick before Your
Reverence come into the parish, and been at the ringin' o' every bell, and the
diggin' o' every grave, and sung i' the choir long afore Bartle Massey come from
nobody knows where, wi' his counter-singin' and fine anthems, as puts everybody
out but himself--one takin' it up after another like sheep a-bleatin' i' th'
fold. I know what belongs to bein' a parish clerk, and I know as I should be
wantin' i' respect to Your Reverence, an' church, an' king, if I was t' allow
such goins-on wi'out speakin'. I was took by surprise, an' knowed nothin' on it
beforehand, an' I was so flustered, I was clean as if I'd lost my tools. I hanna
slep' more nor four hour this night as is past an' gone; an' then it was nothin'
but nightmare, as tired me worse nor wakin'."
"Why, what in the world is the matter, Joshua? Have the thieves been at the
church lead again?"
"Thieves! No, sir--an' yet, as I may say, it is thieves, an' a- thievin' the
church, too. It's the Methodisses as is like to get th' upper hand i' th'
parish, if Your Reverence an' His Honour, Squire Donnithorne, doesna think well
to say the word an' forbid it. Not as I'm a-dictatin' to you, sir; I'm not
forgettin' myself so far as to be wise above my betters. Howiver, whether I'm
wise or no, that's neither here nor there, but what I've got to say I say--as
the young Methodis woman as is at Mester Poyser's was a- preachin' an' a-prayin'
on the Green last night, as sure as I'm a- stannin' afore Your Reverence now."
"Preaching on the Green!" said Mr. Irwine, looking surprised but quite
serene. "What, that pale pretty young woman I've seen at Poyser's? I saw she was
a Methodist, or Quaker, or something of that sort, by her dress, but I didn't
know she was a preacher."
"It's a true word as I say, sir," rejoined Mr. Rann, compressing his mouth
into a semicircular form and pausing long enough to indicate three notes of
exclamation. "She preached on the Green last night; an' she's laid hold of
Chad's Bess, as the girl's been i' fits welly iver sin'."
"Well, Bessy Cranage is a hearty-looking lass; I daresay she'll come round
again, Joshua. Did anybody else go into fits?"
"No, sir, I canna say as they did. But there's no knowin' what'll come, if
we're t' have such preachin's as that a-goin' on ivery week--there'll be no
livin' i' th' village. For them Methodisses make folks believe as if they take a
mug o' drink extry, an' make theirselves a bit comfortable, they'll have to go
to hell for't as sure as they're born. I'm not a tipplin' man nor a drunkard--
nobody can say it on me--but I like a extry quart at Easter or Christmas time,
as is nat'ral when we're goin' the rounds a- singin', an' folks offer't you for
nothin'; or when I'm a- collectin' the dues; an' I like a pint wi' my pipe, an'
a neighbourly chat at Mester Casson's now an' then, for I was brought up i' the
Church, thank God, an' ha' been a parish clerk this two-an'-thirty year: I
should know what the church religion is."
"Well, what's your advice, Joshua? What do you think should be done?"
"Well, Your Reverence, I'm not for takin' any measures again' the young
woman. She's well enough if she'd let alone preachin'; an' I hear as she's
a-goin' away back to her own country soon. She's Mr. Poyser's own niece, an' I
donna wish to say what's anyways disrespectful o' th' family at th' Hall Farm,
as I've measured for shoes, little an' big, welly iver sin' I've been a
shoemaker. But there's that Will Maskery, sir as is the rampageousest Methodis
as can be, an' I make no doubt it was him as stirred up th' young woman to
preach last night, an' he'll be a-bringin' other folks to preach from
Treddles'on, if his comb isn't cut a bit; an' I think as he should be let know
as he isna t' have the makin' an' mendin' o' church carts an' implemen's, let
alone stayin' i' that house an' yard as is Squire Donnithorne's."
"Well, but you say yourself, Joshua, that you never knew any one come to
preach on the Green before; why should you think they'll come again? The
Methodists don't come to preach in little villages like Hayslope, where there's
only a handful of labourers, too tired to listen to them. They might almost as
well go and preach on the Binton Hills. Will Maskery is no preacher himself, I
think."
"Nay, sir, he's no gift at stringin' the words together wi'out book; he'd be
stuck fast like a cow i' wet clay. But he's got tongue enough to speak
disrespectful about's neebors, for he said as I was a blind Pharisee--a-usin'
the Bible i' that way to find nick-names for folks as are his elders an'
betters!--and what's worse, he's been heard to say very unbecomin' words about
Your Reverence; for I could bring them as 'ud swear as he called you a 'dumb
dog,' an' a 'idle shepherd.' You'll forgi'e me for sayin' such things over
again."
"Better not, better not, Joshua. Let evil words die as soon as they're
spoken. Will Maskery might be a great deal worse fellow than he is. He used to
be a wild drunken rascal, neglecting his work and beating his wife, they told
me; now he's thrifty and decent, and he and his wife look comfortable together.
If you can bring me any proof that he interferes with his neighbours and creates
any disturbance, I shall think it my duty as a clergyman and a magistrate to
interfere. But it wouldn't become wise people like you and me to be making a
fuss about trifles, as if we thought the Church was in danger because Will
Maskery lets his tongue wag rather foolishly, or a young woman talks in a
serious way to a handful of people on the Green. We must 'live and let live,'
Joshua, in religion as well as in other things. You go on doing your duty, as
parish clerk and sexton, as well as you've always done it, and making those
capital thick boots for your neighbours, and things won't go far wrong in
Hayslope, depend upon it."
"Your Reverence is very good to say so; an' I'm sensable as, you not livin'
i' the parish, there's more upo' my shoulders."
"To be sure; and you must mind and not lower the Church in people's eyes by
seeming to be frightened about it for a little thing, Joshua. I shall trust to
your good sense, now to take no notice at all of what Will Maskery says, either
about you or me. You and your neighbours can go on taking your pot of beer
soberly, when you've done your day's work, like good churchmen; and if Will
Maskery doesn't like to join you, but to go to a prayermeeting at Treddleston
instead, let him; that's no business of yours, so long as he doesn't hinder you
from doing what you like. And as to people saying a few idle words about us, we
must not mind that, any more than the old church-steeple minds the rooks cawing
about it. Will Maskery comes to church every Sunday afternoon, and does his
wheelwright's business steadily in the weekdays, and as long as he does that he
must be let alone."
"Ah, sir, but when he comes to church, he sits an' shakes his head, an' looks
as sour an' as coxy when we're a-singin' as I should like to fetch him a rap
across the jowl--God forgi'e me-- an' Mrs. Irwine, an' Your Reverence too, for
speakin' so afore you. An' he said as our Christmas singin' was no better nor
the cracklin' o' thorns under a pot."
"Well, he's got a bad ear for music, Joshua. When people have wooden heads,
you know, it can't be helped. He won't bring the other people in Hayslope round
to his opinion, while you go on singing as well as you do."
"Yes, sir, but it turns a man's stomach t' hear the Scripture misused i' that
way. I know as much o' the words o' the Bible as he does, an' could say the
Psalms right through i' my sleep if you was to pinch me; but I know better nor
to take 'em to say my own say wi'. I might as well take the Sacriment-cup home
and use it at meals."
"That's a very sensible remark of yours, Joshua; but, as I said before----"
While Mr. Irwine was speaking, the sound of a booted step and the clink of a
spur were heard on the stone floor of the entrance- hall, and Joshua Rann moved
hastily aside from the doorway to make room for some one who paused there, and
said, in a ringing tenor voice,
"Godson Arthur--may he come in?"
"Come in, come in, godson!" Mrs. Irwine answered, in the deep half-masculine
tone which belongs to the vigorous old woman, and there entered a young
gentleman in a riding-dress, with his right arm in a sling; whereupon followed
that pleasant confusion of laughing interjections, and hand-shakings, and "How
are you's?" mingled with joyous short barks and wagging of tails on the part of
the canine members of the family, which tells that the visitor is on the best
terms with the visited. The young gentleman was Arthur Donnithorne, known in
Hayslope, variously, as "the young squire," "the heir," and "the captain." He
was only a captain in the Loamshire Militia, but to the Hayslope tenants he was
more intensely a captain than all the young gentlemen of the same rank in his
Majesty's regulars--he outshone them as the planet Jupiter outshines the Milky
Way. If you want to know more particularly how he looked, call to your
remembrance some tawny-whiskered, brown-locked, clear-complexioned young
Englishman whom you have met with in a foreign town, and been proud of as a
fellow- countryman--well-washed, high-bred, white-handed, yet looking as if he
could deliver well from 'the left shoulder and floor his man: I will not be so
much of a tailor as to trouble your imagination with the difference of costume,
and insist on the striped waistcoat, long-tailed coat, and low top-boots.
Turning round to take a chair, Captain Donnithorne said, "But don't let me
interrupt Joshua's business--he has something to say."
"Humbly begging Your Honour's pardon," said Joshua, bowing low, "there was
one thing I had to say to His Reverence as other things had drove out o' my
head."
"Out with it, Joshua, quickly!" said Mr. Irwine.
"Belike, sir, you havena heared as Thias Bede's dead--drownded this morning,
or more like overnight, i' the Willow Brook, again' the bridge right i' front o'
the house."
"Ah!" exclaimed both the gentlemen at once, as if they were a good deal
interested in the information.
"An' Seth Bede's been to me this morning to say he wished me to tell Your
Reverence as his brother Adam begged of you particular t' allow his father's
grave to be dug by the White Thorn, because his mother's set her heart on it, on
account of a dream as she had; an' they'd ha' come theirselves to ask you, but
they've so much to see after with the crowner, an' that; an' their mother's took
on so, an' wants 'em to make sure o' the spot for fear somebody else should take
it. An' if Your Reverence sees well and good, I'll send my boy to tell 'em as
soon as I get home; an' that's why I make bold to trouble you wi' it, His Honour
being present."
"To be sure, Joshua, to be sure, they shall have it. I'll ride round to Adam
myself, and see him. Send your boy, however, to say they shall have the grave,
lest anything should happen to detain me. And now, good morning, Joshua; go into
the kitchen and have some ale."
"Poor old Thias!" said Mr. Irwine, when Joshua was gone. "I'm afraid the
drink helped the brook to drown him. I should have been glad for the load to
have been taken off my friend Adam's shoulders in a less painful way. That fine
fellow has been propping up his father from ruin for the last five or six
years."
"He's a regular trump, is Adam," said Captain Donnithorne. "When I was a
little fellow, and Adam was a strapping lad of fifteen, and taught me
carpentering, I used to think if ever I was a rich sultan, I would make Adam my
grand-vizier. And I believe now he would bear the exaltation as well as any poor
wise man in an Eastern story. If ever I live to be a large-acred man instead of
a poor devil with a mortgaged allowance of pocket-money, I'll have Adam for my
right hand. He shall manage my woods for me, for he seems to have a better
notion of those things than any man I ever met with; and I know he would make
twice the money of them that my grandfather does, with that miserable old
Satchell to manage, who understands no more about timber than an old carp. I've
mentioned the subject to my grandfather once or twice, but for some reason or
other he has a dislike to Adam, and I can do nothing. But come, Your Reverence,
are you for a ride with me? It's splendid out of doors now. We can go to Adam's
together, if you like; but I want to call at the Hall Farm on my way, to look at
the whelps Poyser is keeping for me."
"You must stay and have lunch first, Arthur," said Mrs. Irwine. "It's nearly
two. Carroll will bring it in directly."
"I want to go to the Hall Farm too," said Mr. Irwine, "to have another look
at the little Methodist who is staying there. Joshua tells me she was preaching
on the Green last night."
"Oh, by Jove!" said Captain Donnithorne, laughing. "Why, she looks as quiet
as a mouse. There's something rather striking about her, though. I positively
felt quite bashful the first time I saw her--she was sitting stooping over her
sewing in the sunshine outside the house, when I rode up and called out, without
noticing that she was a stranger, 'Is Martin Poyser at home?' I declare, when
she got up and looked at me and just said, 'He's in the house, I believe: I'll
go and call him,' I felt quite ashamed of having spoken so abruptly to her. She
looked like St. Catherine in a Quaker dress. It's a type of face one rarely sees
among our common people."
"I should like to see the young woman, Dauphin," said Mrs. Irwine. "Make her
come here on some pretext or other."
"I don't know how I can manage that, Mother; it will hardly do for me to
patronize a Methodist preacher, even if she would consent to be patronized by an
idle shepherd, as Will Maskery calls me. You should have come in a little
sooner, Arthur, to hear Joshua's denunciation of his neighbour Will Maskery. The
old fellow wants me to excommunicate the wheelwright, and then deliver him over
to the civil arm--that is to say, to your grandfather--to be turned out of house
and yard. If I chose to interfere in this business, now, I might get up as
pretty a story of hatred and persecution as the Methodists need desire to
publish in the next number of their magazine. It wouldn't take me much trouble
to persuade Chad Cranage and half a dozen other bull-headed fellows that they
would be doing an acceptable service to the Church by hunting Will Maskery out
of the village with rope-ends and pitchforks; and then, when I had furnished
them with half a sovereign to get gloriously drunk after their exertions, I
should have put the climax to as pretty a farce as any of my brother clergy have
set going in their parishes for the last thirty years."
"It is really insolent of the man, though, to call you an 'idle shepherd' and
a 'dumb dog,'" said Mrs. Irwine. "I should be inclined to check him a little
there. You are too easy-tempered, Dauphin."
"Why, Mother, you don't think it would be a good way of sustaining my dignity
to set about vindicating myself from the aspersions of Will Maskery? Besides,
I'm not so sure that they ARE aspersions. I AM a lazy fellow, and get terribly
heavy in my saddle; not to mention that I'm always spending more than I can
afford in bricks and mortar, so that I get savage at a lame beggar when he asks
me for sixpence. Those poor lean cobblers, who think they can help to regenerate
mankind by setting out to preach in the morning twilight before they begin their
day's work, may well have a poor opinion of me. But come, let us have our
luncheon. Isn't Kate coming to lunch?"
"Miss Irwine told Bridget to take her lunch upstairs," said Carroll; "she
can't leave Miss Anne."
"Oh, very well. Tell Bridget to say I'll go up and see Miss Anne presently.
You can use your right arm quite well now, Arthur," Mr. Irwine continued,
observing that Captain Donnithorne had taken his arm out of the sling.
"Yes, pretty well; but Godwin insists on my keeping it up constantly for some
time to come. I hope I shall be able to get away to the regiment, though, in the
beginning of August. It's a desperately dull business being shut up at the Chase
in the summer months, when one can neither hunt nor shoot, so as to make one's
self pleasantly sleepy in the evening. However, we are to astonish the echoes on
the 30th of July. My grandfather has given me carte blanche for once, and I
promise you the entertainment shall be worthy of the occasion. The world will
not see the grand epoch of my majority twice. I think I shall have a lofty
throne for you, Godmamma, or rather two, one on the lawn and another in the
ballroom, that you may sit and look down upon us like an Olympian goddess."
"I mean to bring out my best brocade, that I wore at your christening twenty
years ago," said Mrs. Irwine. "Ah, I think I shall see your poor mother flitting
about in her white dress, which looked to me almost like a shroud that very day;
and it WAS her shroud only three months after; and your little cap and
christening dress were buried with her too. She had set her heart on that, sweet
soul! Thank God you take after your mother's family, Arthur. If you had been a
puny, wiry, yellow baby, I wouldn't have stood godmother to you. I should have
been sure you would turn out a Donnithorne. But you were such a broad-faced,
broad-chested, loud-screaming rascal, I knew you were every inch of you a
Tradgett."
"But you might have been a little too hasty there, Mother," said Mr. Irwine,
smiling. "Don't you remember how it was with Juno's last pups? One of them was
the very image of its mother, but it had two or three of its father's tricks
notwithstanding. Nature is clever enough to cheat even you, Mother."
"Nonsense, child! Nature never makes a ferret in the shape of a mastiff.
You'll never persuade me that I can't tell what men are by their outsides. If I
don't like a man's looks, depend upon it I shall never like HIM. I don't want to
know people that look ugly and disagreeable, any more than I want to taste
dishes that look disagreeable. If they make me shudder at the first glance, I
say, take them away. An ugly, piggish, or fishy eye, now, makes me feel quite
ill; it's like a bad smell."
"Talking of eyes," said Captain Donnithorne, "that reminds me that I've got a
book I meant to bring you, Godmamma. It came down in a parcel from London the
other day. I know you are fond of queer, wizardlike stories. It's a volume of
poems, 'Lyrical Ballads.' Most of them seem to be twaddling stuff, but the first
is in a different style--'The Ancient Mariner' is the title. I can hardly make
head or tail of it as a story, but it's a strange, striking thing. I'll send it
over to you; and there are some other books that you may like to see,
Irwine--pamphlets about Antinomianism and Evangelicalism, whatever they may be.
I can't think what the fellow means by sending such things to me. I've written
to him to desire that from henceforth he will send me no book or pamphlet on
anything that ends in ISM."
"Well, I don't know that I'm very fond of isms myself; but I may as well look
at the pamphlets; they let one see what is going on. I've a little matter to
attend to, Arthur," continued Mr. Irwine, rising to leave the room, "and then I
shall be ready to set out with you."
The little matter that Mr. Irwine had to attend to took him up the old stone
staircase (part of the house was very old) and made him pause before a door at
which he knocked gently. "Come in," said a woman's voice, and he entered a room
so darkened by blinds and curtains that Miss Kate, the thin middle-aged lady
standing by the bedside, would not have had light enough for any other sort of
work than the knitting which lay on the little table near her. But at present
she was doing what required only the dimmest light-- sponging the aching head
that lay on the pillow with fresh vinegar. It was a small face, that of the poor
sufferer; perhaps it had once been pretty, but now it was worn and sallow. Miss
Kate came towards her brother and whispered, "Don't speak to her; she can't bear
to be spoken to to-day." Anne's eyes were closed, and her brow contracted as if
from intense pain. Mr. Irwine went to the bedside and took up one of the
delicate hands and kissed it, a slight pressure from the small fingers told him
that it was worth-while to have come upstairs for the sake of doing that. He
lingered a moment, looking at her, and then turned away and left the room,
treading very gently--he had taken off his boots and put on slippers before he
came upstairs. Whoever remembers how many things he has declined to do even for
himself, rather than have the trouble of putting on or taking off his boots,
will not think this last detail insignificant.
And Mr. Irwine's sisters, as any person of family within ten miles of Broxton
could have testified, were such stupid, uninteresting women! It was quite a pity
handsome, clever Mrs. Irwine should have had such commonplace daughters. That
fine old lady herself was worth driving ten miles to see, any day; her beauty,
her well- preserved faculties, and her old-fashioned dignity made her a graceful
subject for conversation in turn with the King's health, the sweet new patterns
in cotton dresses, the news from Egypt, and Lord Dacey's lawsuit, which was
fretting poor Lady Dacey to death. But no one ever thought of mentioning the
Miss Irwines, except the poor people in Broxton village, who regarded them as
deep in the science of medicine, and spoke of them vaguely as "the gentlefolks."
If any one had asked old Job Dummilow who gave him his flannel jacket, he would
have answered, "the gentlefolks, last winter"; and widow Steene dwelt much on
the virtues of the "stuff" the gentlefolks gave her for her cough. Under this
name too, they were used with great effect as a means of taming refractory
children, so that at the sight of poor Miss Anne's sallow face, several small
urchins had a terrified sense that she was cognizant of all their worst
misdemeanours, and knew the precise number of stones with which they had
intended to hit Farmer Britton's ducks. But for all who saw them through a less
mythical medium, the Miss Irwines were quite superfluous existences--inartistic
figures crowding the canvas of life without adequate effect. Miss Anne, indeed,
if her chronic headaches could have been accounted for by a pathetic story of
disappointed love, might have had some romantic interest attached to her: but no
such story had either been known or invented concerning her, and the general
impression was quite in accordance with the fact, that both the sisters were old
maids for the prosaic reason that they had never received an eligible offer.
Nevertheless, to speak paradoxically, the existence of insignificant people
has very important consequences in the world. It can be shown to affect the
price of bread and the rate of wages, to call forth many evil tempers from the
selfish and many heroisms from the sympathetic, and, in other ways, to play no
small part in the tragedy of life. And if that handsome, generous-blooded
clergyman, the Rev. Adolphus Irwine, had not had these two hopelessly maiden
sisters, his lot would have been shaped quite differently: he would very likely
have taken a comely wife in his youth, and now, when his hair was getting grey
under the powder, would have had tall sons and blooming daughters--such
possessions, in short, as men commonly think will repay them for all the labour
they take under the sun. As it was--having with all his three livings no more
than seven hundred a-year, and seeing no way of keeping his splendid mother and
his sickly sister, not to reckon a second sister, who was usually spoken of
without any adjective, in such ladylike ease as became their birth and habits,
and at the same time providing for a family of his own--he remained, you see, at
the age of eight-and-forty, a bachelor, not making any merit of that
renunciation, but saying laughingly, if any one alluded to it, that he made it
an excuse for many indulgences which a wife would never have allowed him. And
perhaps he was the only person in the world who did not think his sisters
uninteresting and superfluous; for his was one of those large-hearted,
sweet-blooded natures that never know a narrow or a grudging thought; Epicurean,
if you will, with no enthusiasm, no self-scourging sense of duty; but yet, as
you have seen, of a sufficiently subtle moral fibre to have an unwearying
tenderness for obscure and monotonous suffering. It was his large-hearted
indulgence that made him ignore his mother's hardness towards her daughters,
which was the more striking from its contrast with her doting fondness towards
himself; he held it no virtue to frown at irremediable faults.
See the difference between the impression a man makes on you when you walk by
his side in familiar talk, or look at him in his home, and the figure he makes
when seen from a lofty historical level, or even in the eyes of a critical
neighbour who thinks of him as an embodied system or opinion rather than as a
man. Mr. Roe, the "travelling preacher" stationed at Treddleston, had included
Mr. Irwine in a general statement concerning the Church clergy in the
surrounding district, whom he described as men given up to the lusts of the
flesh and the pride of life; hunting and shooting, and adorning their own
houses; asking what shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall
we be clothed?--careless of dispensing the bread of life to their flocks,
preaching at best but a carnal and soul-benumbing morality, and trafficking in
the souls of men by receiving money for discharging the pastoral office in
parishes where they did not so much as look on the faces of the people more than
once a-year. The ecclesiastical historian, too, looking into parliamentary
reports of that period, finds honourable members zealous for the Church, and
untainted with any sympathy for the "tribe of canting Methodists," making
statements scarcely less melancholy than that of Mr. Roe. And it is impossible
for me to say that Mr. Irwine was altogether belied by the generic
classification assigned him. He really had no very lofty aims, no theological
enthusiasm: if I were closely questioned, I should be obliged to confess that he
felt no serious alarms about the souls of his parishioners, and would have
thought it a mere loss of time to talk in a doctrinal and awakening manner to
old "Feyther Taft," or even to Chad Cranage the blacksmith. If he had been in
the habit of speaking theoretically, he would perhaps have said that the only
healthy form religion could take in such minds was that of certain dim but
strong emotions, suffusing themselves as a hallowing influence over the family
affections and neighbourly duties. He thought the custom of baptism more
important than its doctrine, and that the religious benefits the peasant drew
from the church where his fathers worshipped and the sacred piece of turf where
they lay buried were but slightly dependent on a clear understanding of the
Liturgy or the sermon. Clearly the rector was not what is called in these days
an "earnest" man: he was fonder of church history than of divinity, and had much
more insight into men's characters than interest in their opinions; he was
neither laborious, nor obviously self-denying, nor very copious in alms-giving,
and his theology, you perceive, was lax. His mental palate, indeed, was rather
pagan, and found a savouriness in a quotation from Sophocles or Theocritus that
was quite absent from any text in Isaiah or Amos. But if you feed your young
setter on raw flesh, how can you wonder at its retaining a relish for uncooked
partridge in after-life? And Mr. Irwine's recollections of young enthusiasm and
ambition were all associated with poetry and ethics that lay aloof from the
Bible.
On the other hand, I must plead, for I have an affectionate partiality
towards the rector's memory, that he was not vindictive--and some
philanthropists have been so; that he was not intolerant--and there is a rumour
that some zealous theologians have not been altogether free from that blemish;
that although he would probably have declined to give his body to be burned in
any public cause, and was far from bestowing all his goods to feed the poor, he
had that charity which has sometimes been lacking to very illustrious virtue--he
was tender to other men's failings, and unwilling to impute evil. He was one of
those men, and they are not the commonest, of whom we can know the best only by
following them away from the marketplace, the platform, and the pulpit, entering
with them into their own homes, hearing the voice with which they speak to the
young and aged about their own hearthstone, and witnessing their thoughtful care
for the everyday wants of everyday companions, who take all their kindness as a
matter of course, and not as a subject for panegyric.
Such men, happily, have lived in times when great abuses flourished, and have
sometimes even been the living representatives of the abuses. That is a thought
which might comfort us a little under the opposite fact--that it is better
sometimes NOT to follow great reformers of abuses beyond the threshold of their
homes.
But whatever you may think of Mr. Irwine now, if you had met him that June
afternoon riding on his grey cob, with his dogs running beside him--portly,
upright, manly, with a good-natured smile on his finely turned lips as he talked
to his dashing young companion on the bay mare, you must have felt that, however
ill he harmonized with sound theories of the clerical office, he somehow
harmonized extremely well with that peaceful landscape.
See them in the bright sunlight, interrupted every now and then by rolling
masses of cloud, ascending the slope from the Broxton side, where the tall
gables and elms of the rectory predominate over the tiny whitewashed church.
They will soon be in the parish of Hayslope; the grey church-tower and village
roofs lie before them to the left, and farther on, to the right, they can just
see the chimneys of the Hall Farm.
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