Felix Holt: The Radical: By George Eliot ... In Three Volumes
"Upon the midlands now the industrious muse doth fall, The shires which we the heart of England well may call. · · · · · · · ·
My native country thou, which so brave spirits has bred, If there be virtues yet remaining in thy earth, Or any good of thine thou bred'st into my birth, Accept it as thine own, whilst now I sing of thee, Of all thy later brood the unworthiest though I be."
Drayton : Polyolbion.
Five-and-Thirty years ago the glory had not yet departed from the old coach-roads:
the great roadside inns were still brilliant with well-polished tankards, the smiling glances
of pretty barmaids and the repartees of jocose ostlers; the mail still announced itself by the
merry notes of the horn; the hedge-cutter or the rick-thatcher might still know the exact hour
by the unfailing yet otherwise meteoric apparition of the pea-green Tally-ho or the yellow
Independent; and elderly gentlemen in pony-chaises, quartering nervously to make way for the
rolling swinging swiftness, had not ceased
In those days there were pocket boroughs, a Birmingham unrepresented in Parliament and
compelled to make strong representations out of it, unrepealed corn-laws, three-and-sixpenny
letters, a brawny and many-breeding pauperism, and other departed evils; but there were some
pleasant things too, which have also departed. Non omnia grandior oetas quoe fugiamus
habet , says the wise goddess: you have not the best of it in all things, O youngsters!
the elderly man has his enviable memories, and not the least of them is the memory of a long
journey in mid-spring or autumn on the outside of a stage-coach. Posterity may be shot, like a
bullet through a tube, by atmospheric pressure from Winchester to Newcastle: that is a fine
result to have among our hopes; but the slow old-fashioned way of getting from one end of our
country to the other is the better thing to have in the memory. The tube-journey can never lend
much to picture and narrative; it is as barren as an exclamatory O! Whereas the happy outside
passenger seated on the box from the dawn to the gloaming gathered enough stories of English
life, enough of English
via media of indifference, and could have registered
themselves in the census by a big black mark as members of the Church of England.
But there were trim cheerful villages too, with a neat or handsome parsonage and grey church
set in the midst; there was the pleasant tinkle of the blacksmith's anvil, the patient
cart-horses waiting at his door; the basket-maker peeling his willow wands in the sunshine; the
wheelwright putting the last touch to a blue cart with red wheels; here and there a cottage
with bright transparent windows showing pots full of blooming balsams or geraniums, and little
gardens in front all double daisies or dark wallflowers; at the well, clean and comely women
carrying yoked buckets, and towards the free school small Britons dawdling on, and handling
their marbles in the pockets of unpatched corduroys adorned with brass buttons. The land around
was rich and marly, great corn-stacks stood in the rick-yards— for the rick-burners had not
found their way hither; the homesteads were those of rich farmers who paid no rent, or had the
rare advantage of a lease, and could afford to keep their corn till prices had risen. The coach
would be sure to overtake some of them on their way to their outlying fields or to the
market-town, sitting heavily on their well-groomed horses, or weighing down one side of an
olive-green gig. They probably thought of the coach with some contempt, as an accommodation for
people who had
The coachman was an excellent travelling companion and commentator on the landscape: he could
tell the names of sites and persons, and explain the meaning of groups, as well as the shade of
Virgil in a more memorable journey; he had as many stories about parishes, and the men and
women in them, as the Wanderer in the 'Excursion,' only his style was different. His view of
life had originally been genial, and such as became a man who was well warmed within and
without, and held a position of easy, undisputed authority; but the recent initiation of
Railways had embittered him: he now, as in a perpetual vision, saw the ruined country strewn
with shattered limbs, and regarded Mr Huskisson's death as a proof of God's anger against
Stephenson. "Why, every inn on the road would be shut up!" and at that word the coachman looked
before him with the blank gaze of one who had driven his coach to the outermost edge of the
universe, and saw his leaders plunging into the abyss. Still he would soon relapse from the
high
No such paradox troubled our coachman when, leaving the town of Treby Magna behind him, he
drove between the hedges for a mile or so, crossed the queer long bridge over the river Lapp,
and then put his horses to a swift gallop up the hill
How many times in the year, as the coach rolled past the neglected-looking lodges which
interrupted the screen of trees, and showed the river winding through a finely-timbered park,
had the coachman answered the same questions, or told the same things without being questioned!
That?—oh, that was Transome Court, a place there had been a fine sight of lawsuits about.
Generations back, the heir of the Transome name had somehow bargained away the estate, and it
fell to the Durfeys, very distant connections, who only called themselves Transomes because
they had got the estate. But the Durfeys' claim had been disputed over and over again; and the
coachman, if he had been asked, would have said, though he might have to fall down dead the
next minute, that property didn't always get into the right hands. However, the lawyers had
found their luck in it; and people who inherited estates that were lawed about often lived in
them as poorly as a mouse in a hollow cheese; and, by what he could make out, that had
she
was master, had come of a high family, and had a spirit—you might see it in her eye and the way
she sat her horse. Forty years ago, when she came into this country, they said she was a
picture; but her family was poor, and so she took up with a hatchet-faced fellow like this
Transome. And the eldest son had been just such another as his father, only worse—a wild sort
of half-natural, who got into bad company. They said his mother hated him and wished him dead;
for she'd got another son, quite of a different cut, who had gone to foreign parts when he was
a youngster, and she wanted her favourite to be heir. But heir or no heir, Lawyer Jermyn had
had his picking out of the estate. Not a door in his big house but what was the finest
polished oak, all got off the Transome estate. If anybody liked to believe he paid for it, they
were welcome. However, Lawyer Jermyn had sat on that box-seat many and many a time. He had made
the wills of most people thereabout. The coachman would not say that Lawyer Jermyn was not the
man he would choose to make his own will some day. It was not so well for a lawyer to
And such stories often come to be fine in a sense that is not ironical. For there is seldom
any wrong-doing which does not carry along with it some downfall of blindly-climbing hopes,
some hard entail of suffering, some quickly-satiated desire that survives, with the life in
death of old paralytic vice, to see itself cursed by its woeful progeny—some tragic mark of
kinship in the one brief life to the
The poets have told us of a dolorous enchanted forest in the under world. The thorn-bushes there, and the thick-barked stems, have human histories hidden in them; the power of unuttered cries dwells in the passionless-seeming branches, and the red warm blood is darkly feeding the quivering nerves of a sleepless memory that watches through all dreams. These things are a parable.
He left me when the down upon his lip Lay like the shadow of a hovering kiss. "Beautiful mother, do not grieve," he said; "I will be great, and build our fortunes high, And you shall wear the longest train at court, And look so queenly, all the lords shall say, 'She is a royal changeling: there's some crown Lacks the right head, since hers wears nought but braids.'" O, he is coming now—but I am grey: And he—
On the 1st of September, in the memorable year 1832, some one was expected at
Transome Court. As early as two o'clock in the afternoon the aged lodge-keeper had opened the
heavy gate, green as the tree trunks were green with nature's powdery paint, deposited year
after year. Already in the village of Little Treby, which lay on the side of a steep hill not
far off the lodge gates, the elder matrons sat in their best gowns at the few cottage doors
bordering the road, that they might be ready to get up and make their curtsy when a travelling
carriage should come in sight; and beyond the village
The old lodge-keeper had opened the gate and left it in the charge of his lame wife, because
he was wanted at the Court to sweep away the leaves, and perhaps to help in the stables. For
though Transome Court was a large mansion, built in the fashion of Queen Anne's time, with a
park and grounds as fine as any to be seen in Loamshire, there were very few servants about
it. Especially, it seemed, there must be a lack of gardeners; for, except on the terrace
surrounded with a stone parapet in front of the house, where there was a parterre kept with
some neatness, grass had spread itself over the gravel walks, and over all the low mounds once
carefully cut as black beds for the shrubs and larger plants. Many of the windows had the
shutters closed, and under the grand Scotch fir that stooped towards one corner, the brown
firneedles of many years lay in a small stone balcony in front of two such darkened windows.
All round, both near and far, there were grand trees, motionless in the still sunshine, and,
like all large motionless
But on the west side, where the carriage entrance was, the gates under the stone archway
were thrown open; and so was the double door of the entrance-hall, letting in the warm light
on the scagliola pillars, the marble statues, and the broad stone staircase, with its matting
worn into large holes. And, stronger sign of expectation than all, from one of the doors which
surrounded the entrance-hall, there came forth from time to time a lady, who walked lightly
over the polished stone floor, and stood on the door-steps and watched and listened. She
walked lightly, for her figure was
Many times Mrs Transome went to the door-steps, watching and listening in vain. Each time
she returned to the same room: it was a moderate-sized comfortable room, with low ebony
bookshelves round it, and it formed an anteroom to a large library, of which a glimpse could
be seen through an open doorway, partly obstructed by a heavy tapestry curtain drawn on one
side. There was a great deal of tarnished gilding and dinginess on the walls and furniture of
this smaller room, but the pictures above the bookcases were all of a cheerful kind: portraits
in pastel of pearly-skinned ladies with hair-powder, blue ribbons, and low boddices; a
splendid portrait in oils of a Transome in the gorgeous dress of the Restoration; another of a
Transome in his boyhood, with his hand on the
North Loamshire
Herald , and the cushion for her fat Blenheim, which was too old and sleepy to notice
its mistress's restlessness. For, just now, Mrs Transome could not abridge the sunny tedium of
the day by the feeble interest of her usual indoor occupations. Her consciousness was absorbed
by memories and prospects, and except when she walked to the entrance-door to look out, she
sat motionless with folded arms, involuntarily
At last, prompted by some sudden thought or by some sound, she rose and went hastily beyond
the tapestry curtain into the library. She paused near the door without speaking: apparently
she only wished to see that no harm was being done. A man nearer seventy than sixty was in the
act of ranging on a large library-table a series of shallow drawers, some of them containing
dried insects, others mineralogical specimens. His pale mild eyes, receding lower jaw, and
slight frame, could never have expressed much vigour, either bodily or mental; but he had now
the unevenness of gait and feebleness of gesture which tell of a past paralytic seizure. His
threadbare clothes were thoroughly brushed; his soft white hair was carefully parted and
arranged: he was not a neglected-looking old man; and at his side a fine black retriever, also
old, sat on its haunches, and watched him as he went to and fro. But when Mrs Transome
appeared within the doorway, her husband paused in his work and shrank like a timid animal
looked at in a cage where flight is impossible. He was conscious of a troublesome
After an interval, in which his wife stood perfectly still, observing him, he began to put back the drawers in their places in the row of cabinets which extended under the bookshelves at one end of the library. When they were all put back and closed, Mrs Transome turned away, and the frightened old man seated himself with Nimrod the retriever on an ottoman. Peeping at him again, a few minutes after, she saw that he had his arm round Nimrod's neck, and was uttering his thoughts to the dog in a loud whisper, as little children do to any object near them when they believe themselves unwatched.
At last the sound of the church-bell reached Mrs Transome's ear, and she knew that before
long the sound of wheels must be within hearing; but she did not at once start up and walk to
the entrance-door. She sat still, quivering and listening; her lips became pale, her hands
were cold and trembling. Was her son really coming? She was far beyond fifty; and since her
early gladness in this best-loved boy, the harvests of her life had been scanty. Could it be
that now—when her hair was grey, when sight had become one of the day's fatigues, when her
young
But the facts must be accepted as they stood, and, after all, the chief thing was to have
her son back again. Such pride, such affection, such hopes as she cherished in this
fifty-sixth year of her life, must
Already the sound of wheels was loud upon the gravel. The momentary surprise of seeing that
it was only a post-chaise, without a servant or much luggage, that was passing under the stone
archway and then wheeling round against the flight of stone steps, was at once merged in the
sense that there was a dark face under a red travelling-cap looking at her from the window.
She saw nothing else: she was not even conscious that the small group of her own servants had
mustered, or that old Hickes the butler had come forward to open the chaise door. She heard
herself called "Mother!" and felt a light kiss on each cheek; but stronger than all that
sensation was the consciousness which no previous thought could prepare her for, that this son
who had come back to her was a stranger. Three minutes before, she had fancied that, in spite
of all changes wrought by fifteen years of separation, she should clasp her son again as she
had done at their parting;
"You would not have known me, eh, mother?"
It was perhaps the truth. If she had seen him in a crowd, she might have looked at him without recognition—not, however, without startled wonder; for though the likeness to herself was no longer striking, the years had overlaid it with another likeness which would have arrested her. Before she answered him, his eyes, with a keen restlessness, as unlike as possible to the lingering gaze of the portrait, had travelled quickly over the room, alighting on her again as she said,
"Everything is changed, Harold. I am an old woman, you see."
"But straighter and more upright than some of the young ones!" said Harold; inwardly,
however, feeling that age had made his mother's face very anxious and eager. "The old women at
Smyrna are like sacks. You've not got clumsy and shapeless. How is it I have the trick of
getting fat?" (Here Harold lifted his arm and spread
Mrs Transome just pointed to the curtained doorway, and let her son pass through it alone.
She was not given to tears; but now, under the pressure of emotion that could find no other
vent, they burst forth. She took care that they should be silent tears, and before Harold came
out of the library again they were dried. Mrs Transome had not the feminine tendency to seek
influence through pathos; she had been used to rule in virtue of acknowledged superiority. The
consciousness that she had to make her son's acquaintance, and that her knowledge of the youth
of nineteen might help her little in interpreting the man of thirty-four, had fallen like lead
on her soul; but in this new acquaintance of theirs she cared especially that her son, who had
seen a strange world, should feel that he was come home to a mother who was to be consulted on
all things, and who could supply his lack of the local experience necessary to an English
landholder. Her part in life had been that of the clever sinner, and she was equipped with the
views, the reasons, and the habits which belonged to that character: life would have little
meaning for her if she were to be
North Loamshire
Herald , lying on the table near her, which he took up with his left hand, as he
said,
"Gad! what a wreck poor father is! Paralysis, eh? Terribly shrunk and shaken—crawls about among his books and beetles as usual, though. Well, it's a slow and easy death. But he's not much over sixty-five, is he?"
"Sixty-seven, counting by birthdays; but your father was born old, I think," said Mrs Transome, a little flushed with the determination not to show any unasked-for feeling.
Her son did not notice her. All the time he had been speaking his eyes had been running down the columns of the newspaper.
"But your little boy, Harold—where is he? How is it he has not come with you?"
"O, I left him behind, in town," said Harold, still looking at the paper. "My man Dominic
will bring him, with the rest of the luggage. Ah, I see it is
"Yes. You did not answer me when I wrote to you to London about your standing. There is no other Tory candidate spoken of, and you would have all the Debarry interest."
"I hardly think that," said Harold, significantly. "Why? Jermyn says a Tory candidate can never be got in without it."
"But I shall not be a Tory candidate."
Mrs Transome felt something like an electric shock.
"What then?" she said, almost sharply. "You will not call yourself a Whig?"
"God forbid! I'm a Radical."
Mrs Transome's limbs tottered; she sank into a chair. Here was a distinct confirmation of
the vague but strong feeling that her son was a stranger to her. Here was a revelation to
which it seemed almost as impossible to adjust her hopes and notions of a dignified life as if
her son had said that he had been converted to Mahometanism at Smyrna, and had four wives,
instead of one son, shortly to arrive under the care of Dominic. For the moment she had a
sickening feeling that it was all of no
"Will you go to your rooms, Harold, and see if there is anything you would like to have altered?"
"Yes, let us go," said Harold, throwing down the newspaper, in which he had been rapidly reading almost every advertisement while his mother had been going through her sharp inward struggle. "Uncle Lingon is on the bench still, I see," he went on, as he followed her across the hall; "is he at home—will he be here this evening?"
"He says you must go to the Rectory when you want to see him. You must remember you have come back to a family who have old-fashioned notions. Your uncle thought I ought to have you to myself in the first hour or two. He remembered that I had not seen my son for fifteen years."
"Ah, by Jove! fifteen years—so it is!" said
They walked up the broad stone steps together in silence. Under the shock of discovering her son's Radicalism, Mrs Transome had no impulse to say one thing rather than another; as in a man who had just been branded on the forehead all wonted motives would be uprooted. Harold, on his side, had no wish opposed to filial kindness, but his busy thoughts were imperiously determined by habits which had no reference to any woman's feeling; and even if he could have conceived what his mother's feeling was, his mind, after that momentary arrest, would have darted forward on its usual course.
"I have given you the south rooms, Harold," said Mrs Transome, as they passed along a corridor lit from above, and lined with old family pictures. "I thought they would suit you best, as they all open into each other, and this middle one will make a pleasant sitting-room for you."
"Gad! the furniture is in a bad state," said Harold, glancing round at the middle room which
"I had no choice except moths or tenants who would pay rent," said Mrs Transome. "We have been too poor to keep servants for uninhabited rooms."
"What! you've been rather pinched, eh?"
"You find us living as we have been living these twelve years."
"Ah, you've had Durfey's debts as well as the lawsuits—confound them! It will make a hole in sixty thousand pounds to pay off the mortgages. However, he's gone now, poor fellow; and I suppose I should have spent more in buying an English estate some time or other. I always meant to be an Englishman, and thrash a lord or two who thrashed me at Eton."
"I hardly thought you could have meant that, Harold, when I found you had married a foreign wife."
"Would you have had me wait for a consumptive lackadaisical Englishwoman, who would have hung all her relations round my neck? I hate English wives; they want to give their opinion about everything. They interfere with a man's life. I shall not marry again."
Mrs Transome bit her lip, and turned away to draw up a blind. She would not reply to words which showed how completely any conception of herself and her feelings was excluded from her son's inward world.
As she turned round again she said, "I suppose you have been used to great luxury; these rooms look miserable to you, but you can soon make any alteration you like."
"O, I must have a private sitting-room fitted up for myself down-stairs. And the rest are bedrooms, I suppose," he went on, opening a side-door. "Ah, I can sleep here a night or two. But there's a bedroom down-stairs, with an anteroom, I remember, that would do for my man Dominic and the little boy. I should like to have that."
"Your father has slept there for years. He will be like a distracted insect, and never know where to go, if you alter the track he has to walk in."
"That's a pity. I hate going up-stairs."
"There is the steward's room: it is not used, and might be turned into a bedroom. I can't offer you my room, for I sleep up-stairs." (Mrs Transome's tongue could be a whip upon occasion, but the lash had not fallen on a sensitive spot.)
"No; I'm determined not to sleep up-stairs. We'll see about the steward's room to-morrow, and I daresay I shall find a closet of some sort for Dominic. It's a nuisance he had to stay behind, for I shall have nobody to cook for me. Ah, there's the old river I used to fish in. I often thought, when I was at Smyrna, that I would buy a park with a river through it as much like the Lapp as possible. Gad, what fine oaks those are opposite! Some of them must come down, though."
"I've held every tree sacred on the demesne, as I told you, Harold. I trusted to your getting the estate some time, and releasing it; and I determined to keep it worth releasing. A park without fine timber is no better than a beauty without teeth and hair."
"Bravo, mother!" said Harold, putting his hand on her shoulder. "Ah, you've had to worry yourself about things that don't properly belong to a woman—my father being weakly. We'll set all that right. You shall have nothing to do now but to be grandmamma on satin cushions."
"You must excuse me from the satin cushions. That is a part of the old woman's duty I am not
prepared for. I am used to be chief bailiff, and to sit in the saddle two or three hours every
day.
"Phew-ew! Jermyn manages the estate badly then. That will not last under my reign,"
said Harold, turning on his heel and feeling in his pockets for the keys of his portmanteaus,
which had been brought up.
"Perhaps when you've been in England a little longer," said Mrs Transome, colouring as if she had been a girl, "you will understand better the difficulty there is in letting farms in these times."
"I understand the difficulty perfectly, mother. To let farms, a man must have the sense to see what will make them inviting to farmers, and to get sense supplied on demand is just the most difficult transaction I know of. I suppose if I ring there's some fellow who can act as valet and learn to attend to my hookah?"
"There is Hickes the butler, and there is Jabez the footman; those are all the men in the house. They were here when you left."
"O, I remember Jabez—he was a dolt. I'll have old Hickes. He was a neat little machine of a butler; his words used to come like the clicks of an engine. He must be an old machine now, though."
"You seem to remember some things about home wonderfully well, Harold."
"Never forget places and people—how they look and what can be done with them. All the country round here lies like a map in my brain. A deuced pretty country too; but the people were a stupid set of old Whigs and Tories. I suppose they are much as they were."
"I am, at least, Harold. You are the first of your family that ever talked of being a Radical. I did not think I was taking care of our old oaks for that. I always thought Radicals' houses stood staring above poor sticks of young trees and iron hurdles."
"Yes, but the Radical sticks are growing, mother, and half the Tory oaks are rotting," said Harold, with gay carelessness. "You've arranged for Jermyn to be early to-morrow?"
"He will be here to breakfast at nine. But I leave you to Hickes now; we dine in an hour."
Mrs Transome went away and shut herself in her own dressing-room. It had come to pass now
—this meeting with the son who had been the object of so much longing; whom she had longed for
before he was born, for whom she had sinned, from whom she had wrenched herself with pain at
their
She stood before a tall mirror, going close to it and looking at her face with hard scrutiny, as if it were unrelated to herself. No elderly face can be handsome, looked at in that way; every little detail is startlingly prominent, and the effect of the whole is lost. She saw the dried-up complexion, and the deep lines of bitter discontent about the mouth.
"I am a hag!" she said to herself (she was accustomed to give her thoughts a very sharp outline), "an ugly old woman who happens to be his mother. That is what he sees in me, as I see a stranger in him. I shall count for nothing. I was foolish to expect anything else."
She turned away from the mirror and walked up and down her room.
"What a likeness!" she said, in a loud whisper; "yet, perhaps, no one will see it besides me."
She threw herself into a chair, and sat with a fixed look, seeing nothing that was actually
present, but inwardly seeing with painful vividness what had been present with her a little
more than thirty years ago—the little round-limbed creature that had been leaning against her
knees, and stamping tiny feet, and looking up at her with gurgling laughter. She had thought
that the possession of this child would give unity to her life, and make some gladness through
the changing years that would grow as fruit out of these early maternal caresses. But nothing
had come just as she had wished. The mother's early raptures had lasted but a short time, and
even while they lasted there had grown up in the midst of them a hungry desire, like a black
poisonous plant feeding in the sunlight,—the desire that her first, rickety, ugly, imbecile
child should die, and leave room for her darling, of whom she could be proud. Such desires
make life a hideous lottery, where every day may turn up a blank; where men and women who have
the softest beds and the most delicate eating, who have a very large share of that sky and
earth which some are born to have no more of than the fraction to be got
Now Harold was heir to the estate; now the wealth he had gained could
release the land from its burthens; now he would think it worth while to return home. A change
had at last come over her life, and the sunlight breaking the clouds at evening was pleasant,
though the sun must sink before long. Hopes, affections, the sweeter part of her memories,
started from their wintry sleep, and it once more seemed a great good to have had a second son
who in some ways had cost her dearly. But again there were conditions she had not reckoned on.
When the good tidings had been sent to Harold, and he had announced that he would return so
soon as he could wind up his affairs, he had for the first time informed his mother that he
had been married, that his Greek wife was no longer living, but that he should bring home a
little boy, the finest and most desirable of heirs and grandsons. Harold, seated
Mrs Transome had torn up that letter in a rage. But in the months which had elapsed before Harold could actually arrive, she had prepared herself as well as she could to suppress all reproaches or queries which her son might resent, and to acquiesce in his evident wishes. The return was still looked for with longing; affection and satisfied pride would again warm her later years. She was ignorant what sort of man Harold had become now, and of course he must be changed in many ways; but though she told herself this, still the image that she knew, the image fondness clung to, necessarily prevailed over the negatives insisted on by her reason.
And so it was, that when she had moved to the door to meet him, she had been sure that she
should clasp her son again, and feel that he was the same who had been her boy, her little
one, the loved child of her passionate youth. An hour seemed to have
Under the cold weight of these thoughts Mrs Transome shivered. That physical reaction roused
her from her reverie, and she could now hear the gentle knocking at the door to which she had
been deaf before. Notwithstanding her activity and the fewness of her servants, she had never
dressed herself without aid; nor would that small, neat, exquisitely clean old woman who now
presented herself have wished that her labour should be saved at the
"The bell has rung, then, Denner, without my hearing it?" said Mrs Transome, rising.
"Yes, madam," said Denner, reaching from a wardrobe an old black velvet dress trimmed with muchmended point, in which Mrs Transome was wont to look queenly of an evening.
Denner had still strong eyes of that shortsighted kind which sees through the narrowest
chink between the eyelashes. The physical contrast between the tall, eagle-faced, dark-eyed
lady, and the little peering waiting-woman, who had been round-featured and of pale mealy
complexion from her youth up, had doubtless had a strong influence in determining Denner's
feeling towards her mistress, which was of that worshipful sort paid to a goddess in ages when
it was not thought necessary or likely that a goddess should be very moral. There were
different orders of beings—so ran Denner's creed—
Peering into Mrs Transome's face, she saw clearly that the meeting with the son had been a disappointment in some way. She spoke with a refined accent, in a low, quick, monotonous tone—
"Mr Harold is drest; he shook me by the hand in the corridor, and was very pleasant."
"What an alteration, Denner! No likeness to me now."
"Handsome, though, spite of his being so browned and stout. There's a fine presence about Mr Harold. I remember you used to say, madam, there were some people you would always know were in the room though they stood round a corner, and others you might never see till you ran against them. That's as true as truth. And as for likenesses, thirty-five and sixty are not much alike, only to people's memories."
Mrs Transome knew perfectly that Denner had divined her thoughts.
"I don't know how things will go on now; but it seems something too good to happen that they will go on well. I am afraid of ever expecting anything good again."
"That's weakness, madam. Things don't happen because they're bad or good, else all eggs would be addled or none at all, and at the most it is but six to the dozen. There's good chances and bad chances, and nobody's luck is pulled only by one string."
"What a woman you are, Denner! You talk like a French infidel. It seems to me you are afraid of nothing. I have been full of fears all my life— always seeing something for other hanging over me that I couldn't bear to happen."
"Well, madam, put a good face on it, and don't
"Nonsense! there's no pleasure for old women, unless they get it out of tormenting other people. What are your pleasures, Denner—besides being a slave to me?"
"Oh, there's pleasure in knowing one's not a fool, like half the people one sees about. And
managing one's husband is some pleasure; and doing all one's business well. Why, if I've only
got some orange flowers to candy, I shouldn't like to die till I see them all right. Then
there's the sunshine now and then; I like that, as the cats do. I look upon it, life is like
our game at whist, when Banks and his wife come to the still-room of an evening. I don't enjoy
the game much, but I like to play my cards well, and see what will be the end of it; and I
want to see you make the best of your hand, madam, for your luck has been mine these forty
years now. But
"No, Denner; I am going down immediately."
As Mrs Transome descended the stone staircase in her old black velvet and point, her
appearance justified Denner's personal compliment. She had that high-born imperious air which
would have marked her as an object of hatred and reviling by a revolutionary mob. Her person
was too typical of social distinctions to be passed by with indifference by any one: it would
have fitted an empress in her own right, who had had to rule in spite of faction, to dare the
violation of treaties and dread retributive invasions, to grasp after new territories, to be
defiant in desperate circumstances, and to feel a woman's hunger of the heart for ever
unsatisfied. Yet Mrs Transome's cares and occupations had not been at all of an imperial sort.
For thirty years she had led the monotonous narrowing life which used to be the lot of our
poorer gentry, who never went to town, and were probably not on speaking terms with two out of
the five families whose parks lay within the distance of a drive. When she was young she had
been thought wonderfully clever and accomplished, and had been rather ambitious of
intellectual superiority —had secretly picked out for private reading
A jolly parson of the good old stock, By birth a gentleman, yet homely too, Suiting his phrase to Hodge and Margery Whom he once christened, and has married since. A little lax in doctrine and in life, Not thinking God was captions in such things As what a man might drink on holidays, But holding true religion was to do As you'd be done by—which could never mean That he should preach three sermons in a week.
Harold Transome did not choose to spend the whole evening with his mother. It was
his habit to compress a great deal of effective conversation into a short space of time,
asking rapidly all the questions he wanted to get answered, and diluting no subject with
irrelevancies, paraphrase, or repetitions. He volunteered no information about himself and his
past life at Smyrna, but answered pleasantly enough, though briefly, whenever his mother asked
for any detail. He was evidently ill-satisfied as to his palate, trying red pepper to
everything, then asking if there were any relishing sauces in
"I shall just cross the park to the parsonage to see my uncle Lingon."
"Very well. He can answer more questions for you."
"Yes," said Harold, quite deaf to the innuendo, and accepting the words as a simple statement of the fact. "I want to hear all about the game and the North Loamshire hunt. I'm fond of sport; we had a great deal of it at Smyrna, and it keeps down my fat."
The Reverend John Lingon became very talkative over his second bottle of port, which was
opened on
"A fat-handed, glib-tongued fellow, with a scented cambric handkerchief; one of your
educated lowbred fellows; a foundling who got his Latin for nothing at Christ's Hospital; one
of your middle-class
But since Harold meant to stand for the county, Mr Lingon was equally emphatic as to the necessity of his not quarrelling with Jermyn till the election was over. Jermyn must be his agent; Harold must wink hard till he found himself safely returned; and even then it might be well to let Jermyn drop gently and raise no scandal. He himself had no quarrel with the fellow: a clergyman should have no quarrels, and he made it a point to be able to take wine with any man he met at table. And as to the estate, and his sister's going too much by Jermyn's advice, he never meddled with business: it was not his duty as a clergyman. That, he considered, was the meaning of Melchisedec and the tithe, a subject into which he had gone to some depth thirty years ago, when he preached the Visitation sermon.
The discovery that Harold meant to stand on the Liberal side—nay, that he boldly declared
himself a Radical—was rather startling; but to his uncle's good-humour, beatified by the
sipping of port-wine, nothing could seem highly objectionable, provided it did not disturb
that operation. In the course of
"If the mob can't be turned back, a man of
Harold did not feel sure that his uncle would thoroughly retain this satisfactory thread of
argument in the uninspired hours of the morning; but the old gentleman was sure to take the
facts easily
him . The blockheads must be forced to respect him. Hence, in proportion as he
foresaw that his equals in the neighbourhood would be indignant with him for his political
choice, he cared keenly about making a good figure before them in every other way. His conduct
as a landholder was to be judicious, his establishment was to be kept up generously, his
imbecile father treated with careful regard, his family relations entirely without scandal. He
knew that affairs had been unpleasant in his youth —that there had been ugly lawsuits—and that
his scapegrace brother Durfey had helped to lower still farther the depressed condition of the
family. All
Jermyn must be used for the election, and after that, if he must be got rid of, it would be well to shake him loose quietly: his uncle was probably right on both those points. But Harold's expectation that he should want to get rid of Jermyn was founded on other reasons than his scented handkerchief and his charity-school Latin.
If the lawyer had been presuming on Mrs Transome's ignorance as a woman, and on the stupid
rakishness of the original heir, the new heir would prove to him that he had calculated
rashly. Otherwise, Harold had no prejudice against him. In his boyhood and youth he had seen
Jermyn frequenting Transome Court, but had regarded him with that total indifference with
which youngsters are apt to view those who neither deny them pleasures nor give them any.
Jermyn used to smile at him, and speak to him affably; but Harold, half proud, half shy, got
away from such patronage as soon as possible: he knew Jermyn was a man of business; his
father, his uncle, and Sir Maximus Debarry did not regard him as a gentleman and their equal.
He had known no evil of the man; but he saw now that if he were really a covetous upstart,
there had
When Mr Jermyn was ushered into the breakfast-room the next morning, Harold found him surprisingly little altered by the fifteen years. He was grey, but still remarkably handsome; fat, but tall enough to bear that trial to man's dignity. There was as strong a suggestion of toilette about him as if he had been five-and-twenty instead of nearly sixty. He chose always to dress in black, and was especially addicted to black satin waistcoats, which carried out the general sleekness of his appearance; and this, together with his white, fat, but beautifully-shaped hands, which he was in the habit of rubbing gently on his entrance into a room, gave him very much the air of a lady's physician. Harold remembered with some amusement his uncle's dislike of those conspicuous hands; but as his own were soft and dimpled, and as he too was given to the innocent practice of rubbing those members, his suspicions were not yet deepened.
"I congratulate you, Mrs Transome," said Jermyn, with a soft and deferential smile, "all the
more," he added, turning towards Harold, "now I have the pleasure of actually seeing your son.
I
"No," said Harold, shaking Jermyn's hand carelessly, and speaking with more than his usual rapid brusqueness, "the question is, whether the English climate will agree with me. It's deuced shifting and damp; and as for food, it would be the finest thing in the world for this country if the southern cooks would change their religion, get persecuted, and fly to England, as the old silk-weavers did."
"There are plenty of foreign cooks for those who are rich enough to pay for them, I suppose," said Mrs Transome, "but they are unpleasant people to have about one's house."
"Gad! I don't think so," said Harold.
"The old servants are sure to quarrel with them."
"That's no concern of mine. The old servants will have to put up with my man Dominic, who will show them how to cook and do everything else, in a way that will rather astonish them."
"Old people are not so easily taught to change all their ways, Harold."
"Well, they can give up and watch the young ones," said Harold, thinking only at that moment
"You have a valuable servant, it seems," said Jermyn, who understood Mrs Transome better than her son did, and wished to smoothen the current of their dialogue.
"O! one of those wonderful southern fellows that make one's life easy. He's of no country in particular. I don't know whether he's most of a Jew, a Greek, an Italian, or a Spaniard. He speaks five or six languages, one as well as another. He's cook, valet, major-domo, and secretary all in one; and what's more, he's an affectionate fellow— I can trust to his attachment. That's a sort of human specimen that doesn't grow here in England, I fancy. I should have been badly off if I could not have brought Dominic."
They sat down to breakfast with such slight talk as this going on. Each of the party was
pre-occupied and uneasy. Harold's mind was busy constructing probabilities about what he
should discover of Jermyn's mismanagement or dubious application of funds, and the sort of
self-command he must in the worst case exercise in order to use the man as long as he wanted
him. Jermyn was closely observing Harold with an unpleasant
"Well, what are the prospects about the election?" said Harold, as the breakfast was advancing. "There are two Whigs and one Conservative likely to be in the field, I know. What is your opinion of the chances?"
Mr Jermyn had a copious supply of words, which often led him into periphrase, but he
cultivated a hesitating stammer, which, with a handsome impassiveness
Here Mr Jermyn hesitated for the third time, and Harold broke in.
"That will not be my line of action, so we need not discuss it. If I put up it will be as a Radical; and I fancy, in any county that would return Whigs there would be plenty of voters to be combed off by a Radical who offered himself with good pretensions."
There was the slightest possible quiver discernible across Jermyn's face. Otherwise he sat as he had done before, with his eyes fixed abstractedly on the frill of a ham before him, and his hand trifling with his fork. He did not answer immediately, but when he did, he looked round steadily at Harold.
"I'm delighted to perceive that you have kept yourself so thoroughly acquainted with English politics."
"O, of course," said Harold, impatiently. "I'm aware how things have been going on in England. I always meant to come back ultimately. I suppose I know the state of Europe as well as if I'd been stationary at Little Treby for the last fifteen years. If a man goes to the East, people seem to think he gets turned into something like the one-eyed calender in the 'Arabian Nights.'"
"Yet I should think there are some things which people who have been stationary at Little
Treby could tell you, Harold," said Mrs Transome. "It did not signify about your holding
Radical opinions at Smyrna; but you seem not to imagine how your putting up as a Radical will
affect your position here, and the position of your family. No one will visit you. And
then—the sort of people who will support you! You really have no idea what an
"Pooh!" said Harold, rising and walking along the room.
But Mrs Transome went on with growing anger in her voice—"It seems to me that a man owes something to his birth and station, and has no right to take up this notion or the other, just as it suits his fancy; still less to work at the overthrow of his class. That was what every one said of Lord Grey, and my family at least is as good as Lord Grey's. You have wealth now, and might distinguish yourself in the county; and if you had been true to your colours as a gentleman, you would have had all the greater opportunity because the times are so bad. The Debarrys and Lord Wyvern would have set all the more store by you. For my part, I can't conceive what good you propose to yourself. I only entreat you to think again before you take any decided step."
"Mother," said Harold, not angrily or with any raising of his voice, but in a quick,
impatient manner, as if the scene must be got through as quickly as possible; "it is natural
that you should think in this way. Women, very properly, don't change
"And you will put the crown to the mortifications of my life, Harold. I don't know who would be a mother if she could foresee what a slight thing she will be to her son when she is old."
Mrs Transome here walked out of the room by the nearest way—the glass door open towards the
terrance. Mr Jermyn had risen too, and his hands were on the back of his chair. He looked
quite impassive: it was not the first time he had seen Mrs Transome angry; but now, for the
first time, he thought the outburst of her temper would be useful to him. She, poor woman,
knew quite well that she had been unwise, and that she had been
"You smoke?"
"No, I always defer to the ladies. Mrs Jermyn is peculiarly sensitive in such matters, and doesn't like tobacco."
Harold, who, underneath all the tendencies which had made him a Liberal, had intense personal pride, thought, "Confound the fellow—with his Mrs Jermyn! Does he think we are on a footing for me to know anything about his wife?"
"Well, I took my hookah before breakfast," he said aloud; "so, if you like, we'll go into the library. My father never gets up till mid-day, I find."
"Sit down, sit down," said Harold, as they entered the handsome, spacious library. But he
himself continued to stand before a map of the county which he had opened from a series of
rollers occupying a compartment among the book-shelves. "The first question, Mr Jermyn, now
you know my intentions, is, whether you will undertake to be my agent in this election, and
help me through? There's no
"O—a—my dear sir—a man necessarily has his political convictions, but of what use is it for a professional man—a—of some education, to talk of them in a little country town? There really is no comprehension of public questions in such places. Party feeling, indeed, was quite asleep here before the agitation about the Catholic Relief Bill. It is true that I concurred with our incumbent in getting up a petition against the Reform Bill, but I did not state my reasons. The weak points in that Bill are—a—too palpable, and I fancy you and I should not differ much on that head. The fact is, when I knew that you were to come back to us, I kept myself in reserve, though I was much pressed by the friends of Sir James Clement, the Ministerial candidate, who is—"
"However, you will act for me—that's settled?" said Harold.
"Certainly," said Jermyn, inwardly irritated by Harold's rapid manner of cutting him short.
"Which of the Liberal candidates, as they call themselves, has the better chance, eh?"
"I was going to observe that Sir James Clement has not so good a chance as Mr Garstin, supposing that a third Liberal candidate presents himself. There are two senses in which a politician can be liberal"—here Mr Jermyn smiled—"Sir James Clement is a poor baronet, hoping for an appointment, and can't be expected to be liberal in that wider sense which commands majorities."
"I wish this man were not so much of a talker," thought Harold; "he'll bore me. We shall see," he said aloud, "what can be done in the way of combination. I'll come down to your office after one o'clock, if it will suit you?"
"Perfectly."
"Ah, and you'll have all the lists and papers and necessary information ready for me there. I must get up a dinner for the tenants, and we can invite whom we like besides the tenants. Just now, I'm going over one of the farms on hand with the bailiff. By the way, that's a desperately bad business, having three farms unlet—how comes that about, eh?"
"That is precisely what I wanted to say a few words about to you. You have observed already
"Yes, yes."
"She is a woman for whom I naturally entertain the highest respect, and she has had hardly any gratification for many years, except the sense of having affairs to a certain extent in her own hands. She objects to changes; she will not have a new style of tenants; she likes the old stock of farmers who milk their own cows, and send their younger daughters out to service: all this makes it difficult to do the best with the estate. I am aware things are not as they ought to be, for, in point of fact, an improved agricultural management is a matter in which I take considerable interest, and the farm which I myself hold on the estate you will see, I think, to be in a superior condition. But Mrs Transome is a woman of strong feeling, and I would urge you, my dear sir, to make the changes which you have, but which I had not, the right to insist on, as little painful to her as possible."
"I shall know what to do, sir, never fear," said Harold, much offended.
"You will pardon, I hope, a perhaps undue freedom of suggestion from a man of my age, who has been so long in a close connection with the family affairs—a—I have never considered that connection simply in the light of business—a—".
"Damn him, I'll soon let him know that I do," thought Harold. But in proportion as
he found Jermyn's manners annoying, he felt the necessity of controlling himself. He despised
all persons who defeated their own projects by the indulgence of momentary impulses.
"I understand, I understand," he said aloud. "You've had more awkward business on your hands than usually falls to the share of a family lawyer. We shall set everything right by degrees. But now as to the canvassing. I've made arrangements with a first-rate man in London, who understands these matters thoroughly—a solicitor of course—he has carried no end of men into Parliament. I'll engage him to meet us at Duffield— say when?"
The conversation after this was driven carefully clear of all angles, and ended with
determined amicableness. When Harold, in his ride an hour or two afterwards, encountered his
uncle shouldering a gun, and followed by one black and one
"Well, lad, how have you got on with Jermyn?"
"O, I don't think I shall like the fellow. He's a sort of amateur gentleman. But I must make use of him. I expect whatever I get out of him will only be something short of fair pay for what he has got out of us. But I shall see."
"Ay, ay, use his gun to bring down your game, and after that beat the thief with the butt-end. That's wisdom and justice and pleasure all in one —talking between ourselves, as uncle and nephew. But I say, Harold, I was going to tell you, now I come to think of it, this is rather a nasty business, your calling yourself a Radical. I've been turning it over in after-dinner speeches, but it looks awkward—it's not what people are used to— it wants a good deal of Latin to make it go down. I shall be worried about it at the sessions, and I can think of nothing neat enough to carry about in my pocket by way of answer."
"Nonsense, uncle; I remember what a good speechifier you always were: you'll never be at a loss. You only want a few more evenings to think of it."
"But you'll not be attacking the Church and the institutions of the country—you'll not be going those lengths; you'll keep up the bulwarks, and so on, eh?"
"No, I shan't attack the Church—only the incomes of the bishops, perhaps, to make them eke out the incomes of the poor clergy."
"Well, well, I have no objection to that. Nobody likes our Bishop: he's all Greek and greediness; too proud to dine with his own father. You may pepper the bishops a little. But you'll respect the constitution handed down, etc.—and you'll rally round the throne—and the King, God bless him, and the usual toasts, eh?"
"Of course, of course. I am a Radical only in rooting out abuses."
"That's the word I wanted, my lad!" said the Vicar, slapping Harold's knee. "That's a spool to wind a speech on. Abuses is the very word; and if anybody shows himself offended, he'll put the cap on for himself."
"I remove the rotten timbers," said Harold, inwardly amused, "and substitute fresh oak, that's all."
"Well done, my boy! By George, you'll be a speaker. But, I say, Harold, I hope you've got a
little Latin left. This young Debarry is a tremendous
"That won't do at the hustings," said Harold. "He'll get knocked off his stilts pretty quickly there."
"Bless me! it's astonishing how well you're up in the affairs of the country, my boy. But
rub up a few quotations—' Quod turpe bonis decebat Crispinum '—and that sort of
thing—just to show Debarry what you could do if you liked. But you want to ride on?"
"Yes; I have an appointment at Treby. Goodbye."
"He's a cleverish chap," muttered the Vicar, as Harold rode away. "When he's had plenty of English exercise, and brought out his knuckle a bit, he'll be a Lingon again as he used to be. I must go and see how Arabella takes his being a Radical. It's a little awkward; but a clergyman must keep peace in a family. Confound it! I'm not bound to love Toryism better than my own flesh and blood, and the manor I shoot over. That's a heathenish, Brutus-like sort of thing, as if Providence couldn't take care of the country without my quarrelling with my own sister's son!"
'Twas town, yet country too; you felt the warmth Of clustering houses in the wintry time; Supped with a friend, and went by lantern home. Yet from your chamber window you could hear The tiny bleat of new-yeaned lambs, or see The children bend beside the hedgerow banks To pluck the primroses.
Treby Magna, on which the Reform Bill had thrust the new honour of being a
polling-place, had been, at the beginning of the century, quite a typical old market-town,
lying in pleasant sleepiness among green pastures, with a rush-fringed river meandering
through them. Its principal street had various handsome and tall-windowed brick houses with
walled gardens behind them; and at the end, where it widened into the marketplace, there was
the cheerful rough-stuccoed front of that excellent inn, the Marquis of Granby, where the
farmers put up their gigs, not only on fair and market days, but on exceptional Sundays when
they came to church. And the church was one of those fine old English
Such was the old-fashioned, grazing, brewing, wool-packing, cheese-loading life of Treby
Magna, until there befell new conditions, complicating its relation with the rest of the
world, and gradually awakening in it that higher consciousness which is
But it was all in vain. The Spa, for some mysterious reason, did not succeed. Some attributed the failure to the coal-mines and the canal, others to the peace, which had had ruinous effects on the country, and others, who disliked Jermyn, to the original folly of the plan. Among these last was Sir Maximus himself, who never forgave the too persuasive attorney: it was Jermyn's fault not only that a useless hotel had been built, but that he, Sir Maximus, being straitened for money, had at last let the building, with the adjacent land lying on the river, on a long lease, on the supposition that it was to be turned into a benevolent college, and had seen himself subsequently powerless to prevent its being turned into a tape manufactory—a bitter thing to any gentleman, and especially to the representative of one of the oldest families in England.
In this way it happened that Treby Magna gradually
The Reformers had triumphed: it was clear that the wheels were going whither they were
pulling, and they were in fine spirits for exertion. But if they were pulling towards the
country's ruin, there was the more need for others to hang on behind and get the wheels to
stick if possible. In Treby, as elsewhere, people were told they must "rally" at the coming
election; but there was now a large number of waverers—men of flexible, practical
These social changes in Treby parish are comparatively public matters, and this history is
chiefly concerned with the private lot of a few men and women; but there is no private life
which has not been determined by a wider public life, from the time when the primeval milkmaid
had to wander with the wanderings of her clan, because the cow she milked was one of a herd
which had made the pastures bare. Even in that conservatory existence where the fair Camelia
is sighed for by the noble young Pine-apple, neither of them needing to care about the frost
or rain outside, there is a nether apparatus of hot-water pipes liable to cool down on a
strike of the gardeners or a scarcity of coal. And the lives we are about to look back upon do
not belong to those conservatory species; they are rooted in the common earth, having to
endure all the ordinary chances of past and present weather. As to the weather of 1832, the
Zadkiel of that time
For example, it was through these conditions that a young man named Felix Holt made a
considerable difference in the life of Harold Transome, though nature and fortune seemed to
have done what they could to keep the lots of the two men quite aloof from each other. Felix
was heir to nothing better than a quack medicine; his mother
But Mrs Holt, unlike Mrs Transome, was much disposed to reveal her troubles, and was not without a counsellor into whose ear she could pour them. On this 2d of September, when Mr Harold Transome had had his first interview with Jermyn, and when the attorney went back to his office with new views of canvassing in his mind, Mrs Holt had put on her bonnet as early as nine o'clock in the morning, and had gone to see the Rev. Rufus Lyon, minister of the Independent Chapel usually spoken of as "Malthouse Yard."
"A pious and painful preacher."
— Fuller.
Mr Lyon lived in a small house, not quite so good as the parish clerk's, adjoining
the entry which led to the Chapel Yard. The new prosperity of Dissent at Treby had led to an
enlargement of the chapel, which absorbed all extra funds and left none for the enlargement of
the minister's income. He sat this morning, as usual, in a low up-stairs room, called his
study, which, by means of a closet capable of holding his bed, served also as a sleeping-room.
The book-shelves did not suffice for his store of old books, which lay about him in piles so
arranged as to leave narrow lanes between them; for the minister was much given to walking
about during his hours of meditation, and very narrow passages would serve for his small legs,
unencumbered by any other drapery than his black silk stockings and the flexible, though
prominent, bows of black
He was meditating on the text for his Sunday morning sermon: "And all the people said,
Amen"— a mere mustard-seed of a text, which had split at first only into two divisions, "What
was said," and "Who said it;" but these were growing into a many-branched discourse, and the
preacher's eyes dilated, and a smile played about his mouth till, as his manner was, when he
felt happily inspired, he had begun to utter his thoughts aloud in the varied measure and
cadence habitual to him, changing from a rapid but distinct undertone to a loud emphatic
rallentando.
"My brethren, do you think that great shout was raised in Israel by each man's waiting to
say 'amen' till his neighbours had said amen? Do you think there will ever be a great shout
for the right—the shout of a nation as of one man,
Here the door was opened, and old Lyddy, the minister's servant, put in her head to say, in a tone of despondency, finishing with a groan, "Here is Mrs Holt wanting to speak to you; she says she comes out of season, but she's in trouble."
"Lyddy," said Mr Lyon, falling at once into a quiet conversational tone, "if you are
wrestling with the enemy, let me refer you to Ezekiel the thirteenth and twenty-second, and
beg of you not to groan. It is a stumbling-block and offence to my daughter; she would take no
broth yesterday, because she said you had cried into it. Thus you cause the truth to
"If I thought my drinking warm ale would hinder poor dear Miss Esther from speaking light— but she hates the smell of it."
"Answer not again, Lyddy, but send up Mistress Holt to me."
Lyddy closed the door immediately.
"I lack grace to deal with these weak sisters," said the minister, again thinking aloud, and walking. "Their needs lie too much out of the track of my meditations, and take me often unawares. Mistress Holt is another who darkens counsel by words without knowledge, and angers the reason of the natural man. Lord, give me patience. My sins were heavier to bear than this woman's folly. Come in, Mistress Holt, come in."
He hastened to disencumber a chair of Matthew Henry's Commentary, and begged his visitor to
be seated. She was a tall elderly woman, dressed in black, with a light-brown front and a
black band over her forehead. She moved the chair a little and seated herself in it with some
emphasis, looking fixedly at the opposite wall with a hurt and argumentative
"You have something on your mind, Mistress Holt?" he said, at last.
"Indeed I have, sir, else I shouldn't be here."
"Speak freely."
"It's well known to you, Mr Lyon, that my husband, Mr Holt, came from the north, and was a
member in Malthouse Yard long before you began to be pastor of it, which was seven
year ago last Michaelmas. It's the truth, Mr Lyon, and I'm not that woman to sit here and say
it if it wasn't true."
"Certainly, it is true."
"And if my husband had been alive when you'd come to preach upon trial, he'd have been as good a judge of your gifts as Mr Nuttwood or Mr Muscat, though whether he'd have agreed with some that your doctrine wasn't high enough, I can't say. For myself, I've my opinion about high doctrine."
"Was it my preaching you came to speak about?" said the minister, hurrying in the question.
"No, Mr Lyon, I'm not that woman. But this I will say, for my husband died before
your time,
Mrs Holt paused, appearing to think that Mr Lyon had been successfully confuted, and should show himself convinced.
"Has any one been aspersing your husband's character?" said Mr Lyon, with a slight initiative towards that relief of groaning for which he had reproved Lyddy.
"Sir, they daredn't. For though he was a man of prayer, he didn't want skill and knowledge
to find things out for himself; and that was what I used to say to my friends when
they wondered at my marrying a man from Lancashire, with no trade nor fortune but what he'd
got in his head. But my husband's tongue 'ud have been a fortune to anybody, and there was
many a one said it was as good as a dose of physic to hear him talk; not but what that got him
into trouble in Lancashire, but he
will say,
that for age, and conduct, and managing—"
"Mistress Holt," interrupted the minister, "these are not the things whereby we may edify one another. Let me beg of you to be as brief as you can. My time is not my own."
"Well, Mr Lyon, I've a right to speak to my own character; and I'm one of your congregation,
though I'm not a church member, for I was born in the general Baptist connection: and as for
being saved without works, there's a many, I daresay, can't do without that doctrine; but I
thank the Lord I never needed to put my self on a level with the thief on the cross.
I've done my duty, and more, if anybody comes to that; for I've gone without my bit
of meat to make broth for a sick neighbour: and if there's any of the church members say
they've done the same, I'd ask them if they had the sinking at the stomach as I have; for I've
ever strove to do the right thing, and more, for good-natured I always was; and I little
thought, after being respected by everybody, I should come to be reproached by my own son. And
my husband said, when he was
Mrs Holt was not given to tears; she was much sustained by conscious unimpeachableness, and by an argumentative tendency which usually checks the too great activity of the lachrymal gland; nevertheless her eyes had become moist, her fingers played on her knee in an agitated manner, and she finally plucked a bit of her gown and held it with great nicety between her thumb and finger. Mr Lyon, however, by listening attentively, had begun partly to divine the source of her trouble.
"Am I wrong in gathering from what you say, Mistress Holt, that your son has objected in some way to your sale of your late husband's medicines?"
"Mr Lyon, he's masterful beyond everything, and
that . For I suppose a Christian can understand
the word o' God without going to Glasgow, and there's texts upon texts about ointment and
medicine, and there's one as might have been made for a receipt of my husband's—it's just as
if it was a riddle, and Holt's Elixir was the answer."
"Your son uses rash words, Mistress Holt," said the minister, "but it is quite true that we
may err in giving a too private interpretation to the Scripture. The word of God has to
satisfy the larger needs of His people, like the rain and the sunshine— which no man must
think to be meant for his own patch of seed-ground solely. Will it not be well that I should
see your son, and talk with him
"That was what I wanted to ask you, Mr Lyon. For perhaps he'll listen to you, and not talk
you down as he does his poor mother. For after we'd been to chapel, he spoke better of you
than he does of most: he said you was a fine old fellow, and an old-fashioned Puritan—he uses
dreadful language, Mr Lyon; but I saw he didn't mean you ill, for all that. He calls most
folks' religion rottenness; and yet another time he'll tell me I ought to feel myself a
sinner, and do God's will and not my own. But it's my belief he says first one thing and then
another only to abuse his mother. Or else he's going off his head, and must be sent to a
'sylum. But if he writes to the North Loamshire Herald first, to tell everybody the
medicines are good for nothing, how can I ever keep him and myself?"
"Tell him I shall feel favoured if he will come and see me this evening," said Mr Lyon, not
without a little prejudice in favour of the young man, whose language about the preacher in
Malthouse Yard did not seem to him to be altogether dreadful. "Meanwhile, my friend, I counsel
you to send up a supplication, which I shall not fail to offer also, that you may receive a
spirit of humility and submission,
"I'm not proud or obstinate, Mr Lyon. I never did say I was everything that was bad, and I never will. And why this trouble should be sent on me above everybody else—for I haven't told you all. He's made himself a journeyman to Mr Prowd the watchmaker—after all this learning—and he says he'll go with patches on his knees, and he shall like himself the better. And as for his having little boys to teach, they'll come in all weathers with dirty shoes. If it's madness, Mr Lyon, it's no use your talking to him."
"We shall see. Perhaps it may even be the disguised working of grace within him. We must not judge rashly. Many eminent servants of God have been led by ways as strange."
"Then I'm sorry for their mothers, that's all, Mr Lyon; and all the more if they'd been
well-spoken-on women. For not my biggest enemy, whether it's he or she, if they'll speak the
truth, can turn round and say I've deserved this trouble. And when everybody gets their due,
and people's doing are spoke of on the house-tops, as the Bible says
"Farewell, Mistress Holt, farewell. I pray that a more powerful teacher than I am may instruct you."
The door was closed, and the much-tried Rufus walked about again, saying aloud, groaningly,
"This woman has sat under the Gospel all her life, and she is as blind as a heathen, and as
proud and stiff-necked as a Pharisee; yet she is one of the souls I watch for. 'Tis true that
even Sara, the
Sir, there's a hurry in the veins of youth That makes a vice of virtue by excess.
What if the coolness of our tardier veins Be loss of virtue?
All things cool with time— The sun itself, they say, till heat shall find A general level, nowhere in excess.
'Tis a poor climax, to my weaker thought, That future middlingness.
In the evening, when Mr Lyon was expecting the knock at the door that would
announce Felix Holt, he occupied his cushionless arm-chair in the sitting-room, and was
skimming rapidly, in his short-sighted way, by the light of one candle, the pages of a
missionary report, emitting occasionally a slight "Hm-m" that appeared to be expressive of
criticism rather than of approbation. The room was dismally furnished, the only objects
indicating an intention of ornament being a bookcase, a map of the Holy Land, an engraved
portrait of Dr Doddridge, and a black bust with a coloured face, which for some reason or
other was covered with green gauze. Yet
Felix Holt, when he entered, was not in an observant mood; and when, after seating himself, at the minister's invitation, near the little table which held the work-basket, he stared at the wax-candle opposite to him, he did so without any wonder or consciousness that the candle was not of tallow. But the minister's sensitiveness gave another interpretation to the gaze which he divined rather than saw; and in alarm lest this inconsistent extravagance should obstruct his usefulness, he hastened to say—
"You are doubtless amazed to see me with a wax-light, my young friend; but this undue luxury is paid for with the earnings of my daughter, who is so delicately framed that the smell of tallow is loathsome to her."
"I heeded not the candle, sir. I thank Heaven I
The loud abrupt tones made the old man vibrate a little. He had been stroking his chin gently before, with a sense that he must be very quiet and deliberate in his treatment of the eccentric young man; but now, quite unreflectingly, he drew forth a pair of spectacles, which he was in the habit of using when he wanted to observe his interlocutor more closely than usual.
"And I myself, in fact, am equally indifferent," he said, as he opened and adjusted his glasses, "so that I have a sufficient light on my book." Here his large eyes looked discerningly through the spectacles.
" 'Tis the quality of the page you care about, not of the candle," said Felix, smiling pleasantly enough at his inspector. "You're thinking that you have a roughly-written page before you now."
That was true. The minister, accustomed to the respectable air of provincial townsmen, and
especially to the sleek well-clipped gravity of his own male congregation, felt a slight shock
as his glasses made perfectly clear to him the shaggy-headed, large-eyed, strong-limbed person
of this questionable young man, without waistcoat or cravat. But
"I abstain from judging by the outward appearance only," he answered, with his usual simplicity. "I myself have experienced that when the spirit is much exercised it is difficult to remember neckbands and strings and such small accidents of our vesture, which are nevertheless decent and needful so long as we sojourn in the flesh. And you too, my young friend, as I gather from your mother's troubled and confused report, are undergoing some travail of mind. You will not, I trust, object to open yourself fully to me, as to an aged pastor who has himself had much inward wrestling, and has especially known much temptation from doubt."
"As to doubt," said Felix, loudly and brusquely as before, "if it is those absurd medicines
and gulling advertisements that my mother has been talking of to you—and I suppose it is—I've
no more doubt about them than I have about pocket-picking. I know there's a stage of
speculation in which a man may doubt whether a pickpocket is blameworthy—but I'm not one of
your subtle fellows who keep looking at the world through their own
"I would fain inquire more particularly into your objection to these medicines," said Mr Lyon, gravely. Notwithstanding his conscientiousness and a certain originality in his own mental disposition, he was too little used to high principle quite dissociated from sectarian phraseology to be as immediately in sympathy with it as he would otherwise have been. "I know they have been well reported of, and many wise persons have tried remedies providentially discovered by those who are not regular physicians, and have found a blessing in the use of them. I may mention the eminent Mr Wesley, who, though I hold not altogether with his Arminian doctrine, nor with the usages of his institution, was nevertheless a man of God; and the journals of various Christians whose names have left a sweet savour might be cited in the same sense. Moreover, your father, who originally concocted these medicines and left them as a provision for your mother, was, as I understand, a man whose walk was not unfaithful."
"My father was ignorant," said Felix, bluntly. "He knew neither the complication of the human system, nor the way in which drugs counteract each other. Ignorance is not so damnable as humbug, but when it prescribes pills it may happen to do more harm. I know something about these things. I was 'prentice for five miserable years to a stupid brute of a country apothecary—my poor father left money for that—he thought nothing could be finer for me. No matter: I know that the Cathartic Pills are a drastic compound which may be as bad as poison to half the people who swallow them; that the Elixir is an absurd farrago of a dozen incompatible things; and that the Cancer Cure might as well be bottled ditch-water."
Mr Lyon rose and walked up and down the room. His simplicity was strongly mixed with sagacity as well as sectarian prejudice, and he did not rely at once on a loud-spoken integrity—Satan might have flavoured it with ostentation. Presently he asked in a rapid low tone, "How long have you known this, young man?"
"Well put, sir," said Felix. "I've known it a good deal longer than I've acted on it, like plenty of other things. But you believe in conversion?"
"Yea, verily."
"So do I. I was converted by six weeks' debauchery."
The minister started. "Young man," he said, solemnly, going up close to Felix and laying a hand on his shoulder, "speak not lightly of the Divine operations, and restrain unseemly words."
"I'm not speaking lightly," said Felix. "If I had not seen that I was making a hog of myself
very fast, and that pig-wash, even if I could have got plenty of it, was a poor sort of thing,
I should never have looked life fairly in the face to see what was to be done with it. I
laughed out loud at last to think of a poor devil like me, in a Scotch garret, with my
stockings out at heel and a shilling or two to be dissipated upon, with a smell of raw haggis
mounting from below, and old women breathing gin as they passed me on the stairs—wanting to
turn my life into easy pleasure. Then I began to see what else it could be turned into. Not
much, perhaps. This world is not a very fine place for a good many of the people in it. But
I've made up my mind it shan't be the worse for me, if I can help it. They may tell me I can't
alter the world—that there must be a certain number of sneaks and robbers in it, and if I
don't lie and filch somebody else will. Well, then, somebody else shall, for I
Mr Lyon removed his hand from Felix's shoulder and walked about again. "Did you sit under any preacher at Glasgow, young man?"
"No: I heard most of the preachers once, but I never wanted to hear them twice."
The good Rufus was not without a slight rising of resentment at this young man's want of reverence. It was not yet plain whether he wanted to hear twice the preacher in Malthouse Yard. But the resentful feeling was carefully repressed: a soul in so peculiar a condition must be dealt with delicately.
"And now, may I ask," he said, "what course you mean to take, after hindering your mother
from making and selling these drugs? I speak no more in their favour after what you have said.
God forbid that I should strive to hinder you from seeking whatsoever things are honest and
honourable. But your mother is advanced in years; she needs comfortable sustenance; you have
doubtless considered how you may make her amends? 'He that provideth not for his own—' I trust
you respect the authority that so speaks. And I will not suppose that, after being tender of
conscience towards strangers, you will be careless towards your mother.
"I shall keep my mother as well—nay, better— than she has kept herself. She has always been frugal. With my watch and clock cleaning, and teaching one or two little chaps that I've got to come to me, I can earn enough. As for me, I can live on bran porridge. I have the stomach of a rhinoceros."
"But for a young man so well furnished as you, who can questionless write a good hand and keep books, were it not well to seek some higher situation as clerk or assistant? I could speak to Brother Muscat, who is well acquainted with all such openings. Any place in Pendrell's Bank, I fear, is now closed against such as are not Churchmen. It used not to be so, but a year ago he discharged Brother Bodkin, although he was a valuable servant. Still, something might be found. There are ranks and degrees—and those who can serve in the higher must not unadvisedly change what seems to be a providential appointment. Your poor mother is not altogether—"
"Excuse me, Mr Lyon; I've had all that out with
Mr Lyon was silent a few moments. This dialogue was far from plain sailing; he was not certain of his latitude and longitude. If the despiser of Glasgow preachers had been arguing in favour of gin and Sabbath-breaking, Mr Lyon's course would have been clearer. "Well, well," he said, deliberately, "it is true that St Paul exercised the trade of tent-making, though he was learned in all the wisdom of the Rabbis."
"St Paul was a wise man," said Felix. "Why should I want to get into the middle class
because I
Mr Lyon stroked his mouth and chin, perhaps because he felt some disposition to smile; and it would not be well to smile too readily at what seemed but a weedy resemblance of Christian unworldliness. On the contrary, there might be a dangerous snare in an unsanctified outstepping of average Christian practice.
"Nevertheless," he observed, gravely, "it is by such self-advancement that many have been enabled to do good service to the cause of liberty and to the public wellbeing. The ring and the robe of Joseph were no objects for a good man's ambition, but they were the signs of that credit which he won by his divinely-inspired skil, and which enabled him to act as a saviour to his brethren."
"O yes, your ringed and scented men of the people!—I won't be one of them. Let a man once
throttle himself with a satin stock, and he'll get new
"Then you have a strong interest in the great political movements of these times?" said Mr Lyon, with a perceptible flashing of the eyes.
"I should think so. I despise every man who has not—or, having it, doesn't try to rouse it in other men."
"Right, my young friend, right," said the minister, in a deep cordial tone. Inevitably his
mind was drawn aside from the immediate consideration of Felix Holt's spiritual interest by
the prospect of political sympathy. In those days so many instruments of God's cause in the
fight for religious and political liberty held creeds that were painfully wrong, and, indeed,
irreconcilable with salvation!
"Well, they're right enough there," said Felix, with his usual unceremoniousness.
"What! you are of those who hold that a Christian minister should not meddle with public matters in the pulpit?" said Mr Lyon, colouring. "I am ready to join issue on that point."
"Not I, sir," said Felix; "I should say, teach any truth you can, whether it's in the Testament or out of it. It's little enough anybody can get hold of, and still less what he can drive into the skulls of a pence-counting, parcel-tying generation, such as mostly fill your chapels."
"Young man," said Mr Lyon, pausing in front of Felix. He spoke rapidly, as he always did,
except when his words were specially weighted with emotion: he overflowed with matter, and in
his mind matter was always completely organised into words. "I speak not on my own behalf, for
not only have I no desire that any man should think of me above that which he seeth me to be,
but I am aware of much that should make me patient under a disesteem resting even on too hasty
a construction. I speak not as claiming reverence for my own age and office— not to shame you,
but to warn you. It is good that you should use plainness of speech, and I am not of those who
would enforce a submissive silence on the young, that they themselves, being elders, may be
heard at large; for Elihu was the youngest of Job's friends, yet was there a wise rebuke in
his words; and the aged Eli was taught by a revelation to the boy Samuel. I have to keep a
special watch over myself in this matter, inasmuch as I have a need of utterance which makes
the thought within me seem as a pent-up fire, until I have shot it forth, as it were, in
arrowy words, each one hitting its mark. Therefore I pray for a listening spirit, which is a
great mark of grace. Nevertheless, my young friend, I am bound, as I said, to warn you. The
temptations
Here the door opened, and Mr Lyon paused to look round, but seeing only Lyddy with the tea-tray, he went on:—
"Is, I may say, as a clenched fist that can give blows, but is shut up from receiving and holding ought that is precious—though it were heavensent manna."
"I understand you, sir," said Felix, good-humouredly, putting out his hand to the little man, who had come close to him as he delivered the last sentence with sudden emphasis and slowness. "But I'm not inclined to clench my fist at you."
"Well, well," said Mr Lyon, shaking the proffered hand, "we shall see more of each other,
and I trust shall have much profitable communing. You will stay and have a dish of tea with
us: we take the meal late on Thursdays, because my daughter is detained by giving a lesson in
the French tongue.
"Thank you; I'll stay," said Felix, not from any curiosity to see the minister's daughter, but from a liking for the society of the minister himself—for his quaint looks and ways, and the transparency of his talk, which gave a charm even to his weaknesses. The daughter was probably some prim Miss, neat, sensible, pious, but all in a small feminine way, in which Felix was no more interested than in Dorcas meetings, biographies of devout women, and that amount of ornamental knitting which was not inconsistent with Nonconforming seriousness.
"I'm perhaps a little too fond of banging and smashing," he went on; "a phrenologist at Glasgow told me I had large veneration; another man there, who knew me, laughed out and said I was the most blasphemous iconoclast living. 'That,' says my phrenologist, 'is because of his large Ideality, which prevents him from finding anything perfect enough to be venerated.' Of course I put my ears down and wagged my tail at that stroking."
"Yes, yes; I have had my own head explored with somewhat similar results. It is, I fear, but
a vain show of fulfilling the heathen precept, 'Know
Esther bowed slightly as she walked across the room to fetch the candle and place it near
her tray. Felix rose and bowed, also with an air of indifference, which was perhaps
exaggerated by the fact that he was inwardly surprised. The minister's daughter was not the
sort of person he expected. She was quite incongruous with his notion of ministers' daughters
in general; and though he had expected something nowise delightful, the incongruity repelled
him. A very delicate scent, the faint suggestion of a garden, was wafted as she went. He would
not observe her, but he had a sense of an elastic walk, the tread of small feet, a long neck
and a high crown of shining brown plaits with curls that floated backward—things, in short,
that suggested a fine lady to him, and determined him to notice her as little as possible. A
fine lady was always a sort of spun-glass affair—not natural, and with no beauty for him as
art; but a fine lady
"Nevertheless," continued Mr Lyon, who rarely let drop any thread of discourse, "that phrenological science is not irreconcilable with the revealed dispensations. And it is undeniable that we have our varying native dispositions which even grace will not obliterate. I myself, from my youth up, have been given to question too curiously concerning the truth—to examine and sift the medicine of the soul rather than to apply it."
"If your truth happens to be such medicine as Holt's Pills and Elixir, the less you swallow of it the better," said Felix. "But truth-vendors and medicine-vendors usually recommend swallowing. When a man sees his livelihood in a pill or a proposition, he likes to have orders for the dose, and not curious inquiries."
This speech verged on rudeness, but it was delivered with a brusque openness that implied the absence of any personal intention. The minister's daughter was now for the first time startled into looking at Felix. But her survey of this unusual speaker was soon made, and she relieved her father from the need to reply by saying,
"The tea is poured out, father."
That was the signal for Mr Lyon to advance towards the table, raise his right hand, and ask a blessing at sufficient length for Esther to glance at the visitor again. There seemed to be no danger of his looking at her: he was observing her father. She had time to remark that he was a peculiar-looking person, but not insignificant, which was the quality that most hopelessly consigned a man to perdition. He was massively built. The striking points in his face were large clear grey eyes and full lips.
"Will you draw up to the table, Mr Holt?" said the minister.
In the act of rising, Felix pushed back his chair too suddenly against the rickety table close by him, and down went the blue-frilled work-basket, flying open, and dispersing on the floor reels, thimble, muslin work, a small sealed bottle of atta of rose, and something heavier than these—a duodecimo volume which fell close to him between the table and the fender.
"O my stars!" said Felix, "I beg your pardon." Esther had already started up, and with
wonderful quickness had picked up half the small rolling things while Felix was lifting the
basket and the book. This last had opened, and had its leaves
"Byron's Poems!" he said, in a tone of disgust, while Esther was recovering all the other articles. "'The Dream'—he'd better have been asleep and snoring. What! do you stuff your memory with Byron, Miss Lyon?"
Felix, on his side, was led at last to look straight at Esther, but it was with a strong denunciatory and pedagogic intention. Of course he saw more clearly than ever that she was a fine lady.
She reddened, drew up her long neck, and said, as she retreated to her chair again,
"I have a great admiration for Byron."
Mr Lyon had paused in the act of drawing his chair to the tea-table, and was looking on at this scene, wrinkling the corners of his eyes with a perplexed smile. Esther would not have wished him to know anything about the volume of Byron, but she was too proud to show any concern.
"He is a worldly and vain writer, I fear," said Mr Lyon. He knew scarcely anything of the poet, whose books embodied the faith and ritual of many young ladies and gentlemen.
"A misanthropic debauchee," said Felix, lifting a chair with one hand, and holding the book open in the other, "whose notion of a hero was that he should disorder his stomach and despise mankind. His corsairs and renegades, his Alps and Manfreds, are the most paltry puppets that were ever pulled by the strings of lust and pride."
"Hand the book to me," said Mr Lyon.
"Let me beg of you to put it aside till after tea, father," said Esther. "However objectionable Mr Holt may find its pages, they would certainly be made worse by being greased with bread-and-butter."
"That is true, my dear," said Mr Lyon, laying down the book on the small table behind him. He saw that his daughter was angry.
"Ho, ho!" thought Felix, "her father is frightened at her. How came he to have such a nice-stepping, long-necked peacock for his daughter? but she shall see that I am not frightened." Then he said aloud, "I should like to know how you will justify your admiration for such a writer, Miss Lyon."
"I should not attempt it with you, Mr Holt," said Esther. "You have such strong words at
command, that they make the smallest argument
Esther had that excellent thing in woman, a soft voice with a clear fluent utterance. Her sauciness was always charming, because it was without emphasis, and was accompanied with graceful little turns of the head.
Felix laughed at her thrust with young heartiness.
"My daughter is a critic of words, Mr Holt," said the minister, smiling complacently, "and often corrects mine on the ground of niceties, which I profess are as dark to me as if they were the reports of a sixth sense which I possess not. I am an eager seeker for precision, and would fain find language subtle enough to follow the utmost intricacies of the soul's pathways, but I see not why a round word that means some object, made and blessed by the Creator, should be branded and banished as a malefactor."
"O, your niceties—I know what they are," said Felix, in his usual fortissimo .
"They all go on your system of make-believe. 'Rottenness' may suggest what is unpleasant, so
you'd better say 'sugar-plums,' or something else such a long way off the fact that nobody is
obliged to think of it.
"Then you would not like Mr Jermyn, I think," said Esther. "That reminds me, father, that to-day, when I was giving Miss Louisa Jermyn her lesson, Mr Jermyn came in and spoke to me with grand politeness, and asked me at what times you were likely to be disengaged, because he wished to make your better acquaintance, and consult you on matters of importance. He never took the least notice of me before. Can you guess the reason of his sudden ceremoniousness?"
"Nay, child," said the minister, ponderingly.
"Politics, of course," said Felix. "He's on some committee. An election is coming. Universal peace is declared, and the foxes have a sincere interest in prolonging the lives of the poultry. Eh, Mr Lyon? Isn't that it?"
"Nay, not so. He is the close ally of the Transome family, who are blind hereditary Tories
like the Debarrys, and will drive their tenants to the poll as if they were sheep. And it has
even been hinted that the heir who is coming from the East may be another Tory candidate, and
coalesce
"He is come," said Esther. "I heard Miss Jermyn tell her sister that she had seen him going out of her father's room."
"'Tis strange," said Mr Lyon.
"Something extraordinary must have happened," said Esther, "for Mr Jermyn to intend courting us. Miss Jermyn said to me only the other day that she could not think how I came to be so well educated and ladylike. She always thought Dissenters were ignorant, vulgar people. I said, so they were, usually, and Church people also in small towns. She considers herself a judge of what is ladylike, and she is vulgarity personified—with large feet, and the most odious scent on her handkerchief, and a bonnet that looks like 'The Fashion' printed in capital letters."
"One sort of fine-ladyism is as good as another," said Felix.
"No, indeed. Pardon me," said Esther. "A real fine-lady does not wear clothes that flare in people's eyes, or use importunate scents, or make a noise as she moves: she is something refined, and graceful, and charming, and never obtrusive."
"O yes," said Felix, contemptuously. "And she reads Byron also, and admires Childe Harold— gentlemen of unspeakable woes, who employ a hairdresser, and look seriously at themselves in the glass."
Esther reddened, and gave a little toss. Felix went on triumphantly. "A fine lady is a squirrel-headed thing, with small airs and small notions, about as applicable to the business of life as a pair of tweezers to the clearing of a forest. Ask your father what those old persecuted emigrant Puritans would have done with fine-lady wives and daughters."
"O there is no danger of such misalliances," said Esther. "Men who are unpleasant companions and make frights of themselves, are sure to get wives tasteless enough to suit them."
"Esther, my dear," said Mr Lyon, "let not your playfulness betray you into disrespect towards those venerable pilgrims. They struggled and endured in order to cherish and plant anew the seeds of scriptural doctrine and of a pure discipline."
"Yes, I know," said Esther, hastily, dreading a discourse on the pilgrim fathers.
"O they were an ugly lot!" Felix burst in, making Mr Lyon start. "Miss Medora wouldn't
"No," said Mr Lyon; "that is the eminent George Whitfield, who, you well know, had a gift of oratory as of one on whom the tongue of flame had rested visibly. But Providence—doubtless for wise ends in relation to the inner man, for I would not inquire too closely into minutiæ which carry too many plausible interpretations for any one of them to be stable—Providence, I say, ordained that the good man should squint; and my daughter has not yet learned to bear with this infirmity."
"So she has put a veil over it. Suppose you had squinted yourself?" said Felix, looking at Esther.
"Then, doubtless, you could have been more polite to me, Mr Holt," said Esther, rising and placing herself at her work-table. "You seem to prefer what is unusual and ugly."
"A peacock!" thought Felix. "I should like to come and scold her every day, and make her cry and cut her fine hair off."
Felix rose to go, and said, "I will not take up more of your valuable time, Mr Lyon. I know that you have not many spare evenings."
"That is true, my young friend; for I now go to Sproxton one evening in the week. I do not despair that we may some day need a chapel there, though the hearers do not multiply save among the women, and there is no work as yet begun among the miners themselves. I shall be glad of your company in my walk thither to-morrow at five o'clock, if you would like to see how that population has grown of late years."
"O, I've been to Sproxton already several times. I had a congregation of my own there last Sunday evening."
"What! do you preach?" said Mr Lyon, with a brightened glance.
"Not exactly. I went to the ale-house."
Mr Lyon started. "I trust you are putting a riddle to me, young man, even as Samson did to his companions. From what you said but lately, it cannot be that you are given to tippling and to taverns."
"O, I don't drink much. I order a pint of beer, and I get into talk with the fellows over
their pots and pipes. Somebody must take a little knowledge
"Do so, do so," said Mr Lyon, shaking hands with his odd acquaintance. "We shall understand each other better by-and-by, I doubt not."
"I wish you good-evening, Miss Lyon."
Esther bowed very slightly, without speaking.
"That is a singular young man, Esther," said the minister, walking about after Felix was
gone. "I discern in him a love for whatsoever things are honest and true, which I would fain
believe to be an earnest of further endowment with the wisdom that is from on high. It is true
that, as the traveller in the desert is often lured, by a false vision of water and freshness,
to turn aside from the track which leads to the tried and established fountains, so the Evil
One will take advantage of a natural yearning towards the better, to delude the soul with a
self-flattering belief in a visionary virtue, higher than the ordinary fruits of the Spirit.
But I trust it is not so here. I feel a great enlargement in this young man's presence,
notwithstanding a certain
"I think he is very coarse and rude," said Esther, with a touch of temper in her voice. "But he speaks better English than most of our visitors. What is his occupation?"
"Watch and clock making, by which, together with a little teaching, as I understand, he hopes to maintain his mother, not thinking it right that she should live by the sale of medicines whose virtues he distrusts. It is no common scruple."
"Dear me," said Esther, "I thought he was something higher than that." She was disappointed.
Felix, on his side, as he strolled out in the evening air, said to himself: "Now by what
fine meshes of circumstance did that queer devout old man, with his awful creed, which makes
this world a vestibule with double doors to hell, and a narrow stair on one side whereby the
thinner sort may mount to heaven—by what subtle play of flesh and spirit did he come to have a
daughter so little in his own likeness? Married foolishly, I suppose. I'll never marry, though
I should have to live on raw turnips to subdue my flesh. I'll never look back and say, 'I had
a fine purpose once—I meant to keep my hands clean, and my soul upright, and to look truth
"Though she be dead, yet let me think she lives, And feed my mind, that dies for want of her."
Marlowe: Tamburlaine the Great.
Hardly any one in Treby who thought at all of Mr Lyon and his daughter had not felt
the same sort of wonder about Esther as Felix felt. She was not much liked by her father's
church and congregation. The less serious observed that she had too many airs and graces, and
held her head much too high; the stricter sort feared greatly that Mr Lyon had not been
sufficiently careful in placing his daughter among God-fearing people, and that, being led
astray by the melancholy vanity of giving her exceptional accomplishments, he had sent her to
a French school, and allowed her to take situations where she had contracted notions not only
above her own rank, but of too worldly a kind to be safe in any rank. But no one knew what
sort of a woman her mother had been, for Mr Lyon never
modus . His gifts were admired, and tears were shed under best bonnets at his
sermons; but the weaker tea was thought good enough for him; and even when he went to preach a
charity sermon in a strange town, he was treated with home-made wine and the smaller bedroom.
As the good Churchman's reverence was often mixed with growling, and was apt to be given
chiefly to an abstract parson who was what a parson ought to be, so the good Dissenter
sometimes mixed his approval of ministerial gifts with considerable criticism and cheapening
of the human vessel which contained those treasures. Mrs Muscat and Mrs Nuttwood applied the
principle of Christian equality by remarking that Mr Lyon had his oddities, and that he ought
not to allow his daughter to indulge in such unbecoming expenditure on her gloves, shoes, and
hosiery, even if she did pay for them out of her earnings. As for the Church people who
engaged Miss Lyon to give lessons in their families, their imaginations were
As for little Mr Lyon, he loved and admired this unregenerate child more, he feared, than
was consistent with the due preponderance of impersonal and ministerial regards: he prayed and
pleaded for her with tears, humbling himself for her spiritual deficiencies in the privacy of
his study; and then came down-stairs to find himself in timorous subjection to her wishes,
lest, as he inwardly said, he
The stronger will always rule, say some, with an air of confidence which is like a lawyer's flourish, forbidding exceptions or additions. But what is strength? Is it blind wilfulness that sees no terrors, no many-linked consequences, no bruises and wounds of those whose cords it tightens? Is it the narrowness of a brain that conceives no needs differing from its own, and looks to no results beyond the bargains of to-day; that tugs with emphasis for every small purpose, and thinks it weakness to exercise the sublime power of resolved renunciation? There is a sort of subjection which is the peculiar heritage of largeness and of love; and strength is often only another name for willing bondage to irremediable weakness.
Esther had affection for her father: she recognised the purity of his character, and a
quickness of intellect in him which responded to her own liveliness, in spite of what seemed a
dreary piety, which selected everything that was least interesting and
But she had no more than a broken vision of the time before she was five years old—the time
when the word oftenest on her lips was "Mamma;" when a low voice spoke caressing French words
to her, and she in her turn repeated the words to her ragdoll; when a very small white hand,
different from any that came after, used to pat her, and stroke her, and tie on her frock and
pinafore, and when at last there was nothing but sitting with a doll on a bed where mamma was
lying, till her father once carried her away. Where distinct memory began, there was no longer
the low caressing voice and the small
His inability to speak of that past to her depended on manifold causes. Partly it came from
an initial concealment. He had not the courage to tell Esther that he was not really her
father: he had not the courage to renounce that hold on her tenderness which the belief in his
natural fatherhood must help to give him, or to incur any resentment that her quick spirit
might feel at having been brought up under a false supposition. But there were other things
yet more difficult for him to be quite open
Twenty-two years before, when Rufus Lyon was no more than thirty-six years old, he was the
admired pastor of a large Independent congregation in one of our southern seaport towns. He
was unmarried, and had met all exhortations of friends who represented to him that a bishop—
i.e. , the overseer of an Independent church and congregation —should be the husband
of one wife, by saying that St Paul meant this particular as a limitation, and not as an
injunction; that a minister was permitted to have one wife, but that he, Rufus Lyon, did not
wish to avail himself of that permission, finding his studies and other labours of his
vocation all-absorbing, and seeing that mothers in Israel were sufficiently provided by those
who had not been set apart for a more special work. His church and congregation were proud of
him: he was put forward on platforms, was made a "deputation," and was requested to preach
anniversary sermons in far-off towns. Wherever noteworthy preachers were discussed. Rufus Lyon
was almost sure to be mentioned as one who did honour to the Independent body; his sermons
were said to be full of study yet full of fire; and while he had more of human knowledge
A terrible crisis had come upon him; a moment in which religious doubt and newly-awakened
passion had rushed together in a common flood, and had paralysed his ministerial gifts. His
life of thirty-six years had been a story of purely religious and studious fervour; his
passion had been for doctrines, for argumentative conquest on the side of right; the sins he
had had chiefly to pray against had been those of personal ambition (under such forms as
ambition takes in the mind of a man who has chosen the career of an Independent preacher), and
those of a too restless intellect, ceaselessly urging questions concerning the mystery of that
which was assuredly revealed, and thus hindering the due nourishment of the soul on the
substance of the truth delivered. Even at that time of comparative youth, his unworldliness
and simplicity in small matters (for he was keenly awake to the larger affairs of this world)
gave a certain oddity to his manners and appearance;
One winter's evening in 1812, Mr Lyon was returning from a village preaching. He walked at
his usual rapid rate, with busy thoughts undistracted by any sight more distinct than the
bushes and hedgerow trees, black beneath a faint moonlight, until something suggested to him
that he had perhaps omitted to bring away with him a thin account-book in which he recorded
certain subscriptions. He paused, unfastened his outer coat and felt in all his pockets, then
he took off his hat and looked inside it. The book was not to be found, and he was about to
walk on,
"Have pity on me, sir."
Searching with his shortsighted eyes, he perceived some one on a side-bank; and approaching, he found a young woman with a baby on her lap. She spoke again, more faintly than before:
"Sir, I die with hunger; in the name of God take the little one."
There was no distrusting the pale face and the sweet low voice. Without pause, Mr Lyon took the baby in his arms and said, "Can you walk by my side, young woman?"
She rose, but seemed tottering. "Lean on me," said Mr Lyon. And so they walked slowly on, the minister for the first time in his life carrying a baby.
Nothing better occurred to him than to take his charge to his own house; it was the simplest
way of relieving the woman's wants, and finding out how she could be helped further; and he
thought of no other possibilities. She was too feeble for more words to be spoken between them
till she was seated by his fireside. His elderly servant was not easily amazed at anything her
master did in the way of charity, and at once
"I knew you had a good heart when you took your hat off. You seemed to me as the image of
the bien-aimé Saint Jean ."
The grateful glance of those blue-grey eyes, with their long shadow-making eyelashes, was a
new kind of good to Rufus Lyon; it seemed to him as if a woman had never really looked at him
before. Yet this poor thing was apparently a blind French Catholic—of delicate nurture,
surely,
marmot? "
The evening passed; a bed was made up for the strange woman, and Mr Lyon had not asked her
so much as her name. He never went to bed himself that night. He spent it in misery, enduring
a horrible assault of Satan. He thought a frenzy had seized him. Wild visions of an impossible
future thrust themselves upon him. He dreaded lest the woman had a husband; he wished that he
might call her his own, that he might worship her beauty, that she might love and caress him.
And what to the mass of men would have been only one of many allowable follies—a transient
fascination, to be dispelled by daylight and contact with those common facts of which
common-sense is the reflex—was to him a spiritual convulsion. He was as one who raved, and
knew that he raved. These mad wishes were
The struggle of that night was an abridgment of all the struggles that came after. Quick souls have their intensest life in the first anticipatory sketch of what may or will be, and the pursuit of their wish is the pursuit of that paradisaic vision which only impelled them, and is left farther and farther behind, vanishing for ever even out of hope in the moment which is called success.
The next morning Mr Lyon heard his guest's
The only guarantee of this story, besides the exquisite candour of her face, was a small packet of papers which she carried in her pocket, consisting of her husband's few letters, the letter which announced his death, and her marriage certificate. It was not so probable a story as that of many an inventive vagrant; but Mr Lyon did not doubt it for a moment. It was impossible to him to suspect this angelic-faced woman, but he had strong suspicions concerning her husband. He could not help being glad that she had not retained the address he had desired her to send to in London, as that removed any obvious means of learning particulars about him. But inquiries might have been made at Vesoul by letter, and her friends there might have been appealed to. A consciousness, not to be quite silenced, told Mr Lyon that this was the course he ought to take, but it would have required an energetic self-conquest, and he was excused from it by Annette's own disinclination to return to her relatives if any other acceptable possibility could be found.
He dreaded, with a violence of feeling which surmounted all struggles, lest anything should
take her away, and place such barriers between them as would make it unlikely or impossible
that she should ever love him well enough to become his wife. Yet he saw with perfect
clearness that unless he tore up this mad passion by the roots, his ministerial usefulness
would be frustrated, and the repose of his soul would be destroyed. This woman was an
unregenerate Catholic; ten minutes listening to her artless talk made that plain to him: even
if her position had been less equivocal, to unite himself to such a woman was nothing less
than a spiritual fall. It was already a fall that he had wished there was no high purpose to
which he owed an allegiance—that he had longed to fly to some backwoods where there was no
church to reproach him, and where he might have this sweet woman to wife, and know the joys of
tenderness. Those sensibilities which in most lives are diffused equally through the youthful
years, were aroused suddenly in Mr Lyon, as some men have their special genius revealed to
them by a tardy concurrence of conditions. His love was the first love of a fresh young heart
full of wonder and worship. But what to one man is the virtue which he has
The end was, that Annette remained in his house. He had striven against himself so far as to
represent her position to some chief matrons in his congregation, praying and yet dreading
that they would so take her by the hand as to impose on him that denial of his own longing not
to let her go out of his sight, which he found it too hard to impose on himself. But they
regarded the case coldly: the woman was, after all, a vagrant. Mr Lyon was observed to be
surprisingly weak on the subject—his eagerness seemed disproportionate and unbecoming; and
this young Frenchwoman, unable to express herself very clearly, was no more interesting to
those matrons and their husbands than other pretty young women suspiciously circumstanced.
They were willing to subscribe something to carry her on her way, or if she took some lodgings
they would give her a little sewing, and endeavour to convert her from Papistry. If, however,
she was a respectable person, as she said, the only proper thing for her was to go back to her
own country and friends. In spite of himself, Mr Lyon exulted. There seemed a reason now that
But this course of his was severely disapproved by his chruch. There were various signs that
the minister was under some evil influence: his preaching wanted its old fervour, he seemed to
shun the intercourse of his brethern, and very mournful suspicions were entertained. A formal
remonstrance was presented to him, but he met it as if he had already determined to act in
anticipation of it. He admitted that external circumstances, conjoined with a peculiar state
of mind, were likely to hinder the fruitful exercise of his ministry, and he resigned it.
There was much sorrowing, much expostulation, but he declared that for the present he was
unable to unfold himself more fully; he only wished to state solemnly that Annette Ledru,
though blind in spiritual things, was in a worldly sense a pure and virtuous woman. No more
was to be said, and he departed to a distant town. Here he maintained himself, Annette, and
the child,
One day, however, Annette learned Mr Lyon's secret. The baby had a tooth coming, and being
large and strong now, was noisily fretful. Mr Lyon, though he had been working extra hours and
was much in need of repose, took the child from its
"You do nurse baby well," said Annette, approvingly. "Yet you never nursed before I came?"
"No," said Mr Lyon. "I had no brothers and sisters."
"Why were you not married?" Annette had never thought of asking that question before.
"Because I never loved any woman—till now. I thought I should never marry. Now I wish to marry."
Annette started. She did not see at once that she was the woman he wanted to marry; what had flashed on her mind was, that there might be a great change in Mr Lyon's life. It was as if the lightning had entered into her dream and half awaked her.
"Do you think it foolish, Annette, that I should wish to marry?"
"I did not expect it," she said, doubtfully. "I did not know you thought about it."
"You know the woman I should like to marry?"
"I know her?" she said, interrogatively, blushing deeply.
"It is you, Annette—you whom I have loved better than my duty. I forsook everything for you."
Mr Lyon paused: he was about to do what he felt would be ignoble—to urge what seemed like a claim.
"Can you love me, Annette? Will you be my wife?" Annette trembled and looked miserable.
"Do not speak—forget it," said Mr Lyon, rising suddenly and speaking with loud energy. "No, no—I do not want it—I do not wish it."
The baby awoke as he started up; he gave the child into Annette's arms, and left her.
His work took him away early the next morning and the next again. They did not need to speak
much to each other. The third day Mr Lyon was too ill to go to work. His frame had been
over-wrought; he had been too poor to have sufficiently nourishing food, and under the
shattering of his long-deferred hope his health had given way. They had no regular
servant—only occasional help from an old woman, who lit the fires and put on the kettles.
Annette was forced to be the sick-nurse,
"No—no relation," said Annette, shaking her head. "He has been good to me."
"How long have you lived with him?"
"More than a year."
"Was he a preacher once?"
"Yes."
"When did he leave off being a preacher?"
"Soon after he took care of me."
"Is that his child?"
"Sir," said Annette, colouring indignantly. "I am a widow."
The doctor, she thought, looked at her oddly, but he asked no more questions.
When the sick man was getting better, and able to enjoy invalid's food, he observed one day,
while he was taking some broth, that Annette was looking at him; he paused to look at her in
return, and was struck with a new expression in her face, quite distinct from the merely
passive sweetness which
la
petite (the baby had never been named anything else) shall call you Papa—and then we
shall never part."
Mr Lyon trembled. This illness—something else, perhaps—had made a great change in Annette. A
fortnight after that they were married. The day before, he had ventured to ask her if she felt
any difficulty about her religion, and if she would consent to have la petite
baptised and brought up as a Protestant. She shook her head and said very simply:—
"No: in France, in other days, I would have minded; but all is changed. I never was fond of
religion, but I knew it was right. J'aimais les fleurs, les bals, la musique, et mon mari
qui était beau . But all that is gone away. There is nothing of my religion in this
country. But the good God
It was clear that Annette regarded her present life as a sort of death to the world—an
existence on a remote island where she had been saved from wreck. She was too indolent
mentally, too little interested, to acquaint herself with any secrets of the isle. The
transient energy, the more vivid consciousness and sympathy which had been stirred in her
during Mr Lyon's illness, had soon subsided into the old apathy to everything except her
child. She withered like a plant in strange air, and the three years of life that remained
were but a slow and gentle death. Those three years were to Mr Lyon a period of such
self-suppression and life in another as few men know. Strange! that the passion for this
woman, which he felt to have drawn him aside from the right as much as if he had broken the
most solemn vows—for that only was right to him which he held the best and highest—the passion
for a being who had no glimpse of his thoughts induced a more thorough renunciation than he
had ever known in the time of his complete devotion to his ministerial career. He had no
flattery now, either from himself or the world; he knew that he had fallen, and his
The day of parting came, and he was left with little Esther as the one visible sign of that four years' break in his life. A year afterwards he entered the ministry again, and lived with the utmost sparingness that Esther might be so educated as to be able to get her own bread in case of his death. Her probable facility in acquiring French naturally suggested his sending her to a French school, which would give her a special advantage as a teacher. It was a Protestant school, and French Protestatism had the high recommendation of being non-Prelatical. It was understood that Esther would contract on Papistical superstitions; and this was perfectly true; but she contracted, as we see, a good deal of non-Papistical vanity.
Mr Lyon's reputation as a preacher and devoted pastor had revived; but some dissatisfaction
beginning to be felt by his congregation at a certain laxity detected by them in his views as
to the limits of salvation, which he had in one sermon
This was Rufus Lyon's history, at that time unknown in its fulness to any human being besides himself. We can perhaps guess what memories they were that relaxed the stringency of his doctrine on the point of salvation. In the deepest of all sense his heart said, "Though she be dead, yet let me think she lives, And feed my mind, that dies for want of her."
It was but yesterday you spoke him well— You've changed your mind so soon?
Not I—'tis he That, changing to my thought, has changed my mind. No man puts rotten apples in his pouch Because their upper side looked fair to him. Constancy in mistake is constant folly.
The news that the rich heir of the Transomes was actually come back, and had been
seen at Treby, was carried to some one else who had more reasons for being interested in it
than the Reverend Rufus Lyon was yet conscious of having. It was owing to this that at three
o'clock, two days afterwards, a carriage and pair, with coachman and footman in crimson and
drab, passed through the lodge-gates of Transome Court. Inside there was a hale
good-natured-looking man of sixty, whose hands rested on a knotted stick held between his
knees; and a blue-eyed, well-featured lady, fat and middle-aged— a mountain of satin, lace,
and exquisite muslin embroidery. They were not persons of highly
"We shall find her greatly elated, doubtless," Lady Debarry was saying. "She has been in the shade so long."
"Ah, poor thing!" said Sir Maximus. "A fine woman she was in her bloom. I remember the first county ball she attended we were all ready to fight for the sake of dancing with her. I always liked her from that time—I never swallowed the scandal about her myself."
"If we are to be intimate with her," said Lady Debarry, "I wish you would avoid making such allusions, Sir Maximus. I should not like Selina and Harriet to hear them."
"My dear, I should have forgotten all about the scandal, only you remind me of it sometimes," retorted the Baronet, smiling and taking out his snuff-box.
"These sudden turns of fortune are often dangerous to an excitable constitution," said Lady
Debarry, not choosing to notice her husband's epigram. "Poor Lady Alicia Methurst got
heart-disease from
"She's a healthy woman enough, surely: see how upright she is, and she rides about like a girl of twenty."
"She is so thin that she makes me shudder."
"Pooh! she's slim and active; women are not bid for by the pound."
"Pray don't be so coarse."
Sir Maximus laughed and showed his good teeth, which made his laughter very becoming. The carriage stopped, and they were soon ushered into Mrs Transome's sitting-room, where she was working at her worsted embroidery. A little daily embroidery had been a constant element in Mrs Transome's life; that soothing occupation of taking stitches to produce what neither she nor any one else wanted, was then the resource of many a well-born and unhappy woman.
She received much warm congratulation and
"Well, our lucky youngster is come in the nick of time," said Sir Maximus: "if he'll stand, he and Philip can run in harness together and keep out both the Whigs."
"It is really quite a providential thing—his returning just now," said Lady Debarry. "I couldn't help thinking that something would occur to prevent Philip from having such a man as Peter Garstin for his colleague."
"I call my friend Harold a youngster," said Sir Maximus, "for, you know, I remember him only as he was when that portrait was taken."
"That is a long while ago," said Mrs Transome. "My son is much altered, as you may imagine."
There was a confused sound of voices in the library while this talk was going on. Mrs Transome chose to ignore that noise, but her face, from being pale, began to flush a little.
"Yes, yes, on the outside, I daresay. But he was a fine fellow—I always liked him. And if
anybody had asked me what I should choose for the good of the country, I couldn't have thought
of anything
The need for an answer to this embarrassing question was deferred by the increase of inarticulate sounds accompanied by a bark from the library, and the sudden appearance at the tapestry-hung doorway of old Mr Transome with a cord round his waist, playing a very poor-paced horse for a black-maned little boy about three years old, who was urging him on with loud encouraging noises and occasional thumps from a stick which he wielded with some difficulty. The old man paused with a vague gentle smile at the doorway, while the Baronet got up to speak to him. Nimrod snuffed at his master's legs to ascertain that he was not hurt, and the little boy, finding something new to be looked at, let go the cord and came round in front of the company, dragging his stick, and standing at a safe war-dancing distance as he fixed his great black eyes on Lady Debarry.
"Dear me, what a splendid little boy, Mrs Transome! why—it cannot be—can it be—that you have the happiness to be a grandmamma?"
"Yes' that is my son's little boy."
"Indeed!" said Lady Debarry, really amazed. "I never heard you speak of his marriage. He has brought you home a daughter-in-law, then?"
"No," said Mrs Transome, coldly; "she is dead."
"O—o—oh!" said Lady Debarry, in a tone ludicrously undecided between condolence, satisfaction, and general mistiness. "How very singular— I mean that we should not have heard of Mr Harold's marriage. But he's a charming little fellow: come to me, you round-cheeked cherub."
The black eyes continued fixed as if by a sort of fascination on Lady Debarry's face, and her affable invitation was unheeded. At last, putting his head forward and pouting his lips, the cherub gave forth with marked intention the sounds, "Nau-o-oom," many times repeated: apparently they summed up his opinion of Lady Debarry, and may perhaps have meant "naughty old woman," but his speech was a broken lisping polyglot of hazardous interpretation. Then he turned to pull at the Blenheim spaniel, which, being old and peevish, gave a little snap.
"Go, go, Harry; let poor Puff alone—he'll bite you," said Mrs Transome, stooping to release her aged pet.
Her words were too suggestive, for Harry immediately
"I fear you are hurt," said Lady Debarry, with sincere concern. "What a little savage! Do have your arm attended to, my dear—I recommend fomentation—don't think of me."
"O thank you, it is nothing," said Mrs Transome, biting her lip and smiling alternately; "it will soon go off. The pleasures of being a grandmamma, you perceive. The child has taken a dislike to me; but he makes quite a new life for Mr Transome; they were playfellows at once."
"Bless my heart!" said Sir Maximus, "it is odd to think of Harold having been a family man so long. I made up my mind he was a young bachelor. What an old stager I am, to be sure! And whom has he married? I hope we shall soon have the pleasure of seeing Mrs Harold Transome." Sir Maximus, occupied with old Mr Transome, had not overheard the previous conversation on that subject.
"She is no longer living," Lady Debarry hastily interposed; "but now, my dear Sir Maximus, we must not hinder Mrs Transome from attending to her arm. I am sure she is in pain. Don't say another word, my dear—we shall see you again—you and Mr Harold will come and dine with us on Thursday—say yes, only yes. Sir Maximus is longing to see him; and Philip will be down."
"Yes, yes!" said Sir Maximus; "he must lose no time in making Philip's acquaintance. Tell him Philip is a fine fellow—carried everything before him at Oxford. And your son must be returned along with him for North Loamshire. You said he meant to stand?"
"I will write and let you know if Harold has any engagement for Thursday; he would of course be happy otherwise," said Mrs Transome, evading the question.
"If not Thursday, the next day—the very first day he can."
The visitors left, and Mrs Transome was almost glad of the painful bite which had saved her from being questioned further about Harold's politics. "This is the last visit I shall receive from them," she said to herself as the door closed behind them, and she rang for Denner.
"That poor creature is not happy, Sir Maximus," said Lady Debarry as they drove along. "Something annoys her about her son. I hope there is nothing unpleasant in his character. Either he kept his marriage a secret from her, or she was ashamed of it. He is thirty-four at least by this time. After living in the East so long he may have become a sort of person one would not care to be intimate with; and that savage boy—he doesn't look like a lady's child."
"Pooh, my dear," said Sir Maximus, "women think so much of those minutiæ. In the present
state of the country it is our duty to look at man's position and politics. Philip and my
brother are both of that opinion, and I think they know what's right, if any man does. We are
bound to regard every man of our party as a public instrument, and to pull all together. The
Transomes have always been a good Tory family, but it has been a cipher of late years. This
young fellow coming back with a fortune to give the family a head and a position is a clear
gain to the county; and with Philip he'll get into the right hands—of course he wants guiding,
having been out of the country so long. All we have to ask is, whether a man's a Tory, and
will make a stand for the good of the country?—that's
Here Sir Maximus gave a deep cough, took out his snuff-box, and tapped it: he had made a
serious marital speech, an exertion to which he was rarely urged by anything smaller than a
matter of conscience. And this outline of the whole duty of a Tory was matter of conscience
with him; though the Duffield Watchman had pointed expressly to Sir Maximus Debarry
amongst others, in branding the co-operation of the Tories as a conscious selfishness and
reckless immorality, which, however, would be defeated by the co-operation of all the friends
of truth and liberty, who, the Watchman trusted, would subordinate all non-political
differences in order to return representatives pledged to support the present Government.
"I am sure, Sir Maximus," Lady Debarry answered, "you could not have observed that anything was wanting in my manners of Mrs Transome."
"No, no, my dear; but I say this by way of caution. Never mind what was done at Smyrna, or
whether Transome, likes to sit with his heels
Good Sir Maximus gave a deep cough and tapped his box again, inwardly remarking, that if he had not been such a lazy fellow he might have made as good a figure as his son Philip.
But at this point the carriage, which was rolling by a turn towards Treby Magna, passed a well-dressed man, who raised his hat to Sir Maximus, and called to the coachman to stop.
"Excuse me, Sir Maximus," said this personage, standing uncovered at the carriage-door, "but I have just learned something of importance at Treby which I thought you would like to know as soon as possible."
"Ah! what's that? Something about Garstin or Clement?" said Sir Maximus, seeing the other draw a poster from his pocket.
"No; rather worse, I fear you will think. A new Radical candidate. I got this by a stratagem from the printer's boy. They're not posted yet."
"A Radical!" said Sir Maximus, in a tone of incredulous disgust, as he took the folded bill. "What fool is he?—he'll have no chance."
"They say he's richer than Garstin."
"Harold Transome!" shouted Sir Maximus, as he read the name in three-inch letters. "I don't believe it—it's a trick—it's a squib: why—why—we've just been to his place—eh? do you know any more? Speak, sir—speak; don't deal out your story like a damned mountebank, who wants to keep people gaping."
"Sir Maximus, pray don't give way so," said Lady Debarry.
"I'm afraid there's no doubt about it, sir," said Christian. "After getting the bill, I met Mr Labron's clerk, and he said he had just had the whole story from Jermyn's clerk. The Ram Inn is engaged already, and a committee is being made up. He says Jermyn goes like a steam-engine, when he has a mind, although he makes such long-winded speeches."
"Jermyn be hanged for a two-faced rascal! Tell Mitchell to drive on. It's of no use to stay chattering here. Jump up on the box and go home with us. I may want you."
"You see I was right, Sir Maximus," said the
"Fudge! if you had such a fine instinct, why did you let us go to Transome Court and make fools of ourselves?"
"Would you have listened to me? But of course you will not have him to dine with you?"
"Dine with me? I should think not. I'd sooner he should dine off me. I see how it is clearly enough. He has become a regular beast among those Mahometans—he's got neither religion nor morals left. He can't know anything about English politics. He'll go and cut his own nose off as a landholder, and never know. However, he won't get in—he'll spend his money for nothing."
"I fear he is a very licentious man," said Lady Debarry. "We know now why his mother seemed so uneasy. I should think she reflects a little, poor creature."
"It's a confounded nuisance we didn't meet Christian on our way, instead of coming back; but better now than later. He's an uncommonly adroit, useful fellow, that factotum of Philip's. I wish Phil would take my man and give me Christian. I'd make him house-steward; he might reduce the accounts a little."
Perhaps Sir Maximus would not have been so sanguine as to Mr Christian's economical virtues
if he had seen that gentleman relaxing himself the same evening among the other distinguished
dependants of the family and frequenters of the steward's room. But a man of Sir Maximus's
rank is like those antediluvian animals whom the system of things condemned to carry such a
huge bulk that they really could not inspect their bodily appurtenance, and had no conception
of their own tails: their parasites doubtless had a merry time of it, and often did extremely
well when the high-bred saurian himself was ill at ease. Treby Manor, measured from the front
saloon to the remotest shed, was as large as a moderate-sized village, and there were
certainly more lights burning in it every evening, more wine, spirits, and ale drunk, more
waste and more folly, than could be found in some large villages. There was fast revelry in
the steward's room, and slow revelry in the Scotch bailiff's room; short whist, costume, and
flirtation in the house-keeper's room, and the same at a lower price in the servants' hall; a
select Olympian feast in the private apartment of the cook, who was a much grander person than
her ladyship, and wore gold and jewellery to a vast amount of suet; a gambling
The focus of brilliancy at Treby Manor that evening was in no way the dining-room, where Sir
Maximus sipped his port under some mental depression, as he discussed with his brother, the
Reverend Augustus, the sad fact, that one of the oldest names in the county was to be on the
wrong side—not in the drawing-room, where Miss Debarry and Miss Selina, quietly elegant in
their dress and manners, were feeling rather dull than otherwise, having finished Mr Bulwer's
'Eugene Aram,' and being thrown back on the last great prose work of
The chief part in this scene was undoubtedly Mr Christian's, although he had hitherto been comparatively silent; but he occupied two chairs with so much grace, throwing his right leg over the seat of the second, and resting his right hand on the back; he held his cigar and displayed a splendid seal-ring with such becoming nonchalance, and had his grey hair arranged with so much taste, that experienced eyes would at once have seen even the great Scales himself to be but a secondary character.
"Why," said Mr Crowder, an old respectable tenant, though much in arrear as to his rent, who
"A hundred thousand, my dear sir! fiddle-stick's end of a hundred thousand," said Mr Scales, with a contempt very painful to be borne by a modest man.
"Well," said Mr Crowder, giving way under torture, as the all-knowing butler puffed and stared at him, "perhaps not so much as that."
"Not so much, sir! I tell you that a hundred thousand pounds is a bagatelle."
"Well, I know it's a big sum," said Mr Crowder, deprecatingly.
Here there was a general laugh. All the other intellects present were more cultivated than Mr Crowder's.
"Bagatelle is the French for trifle, my friend," said Mr Christian. "Don't talk over people's heads so, Scales. I shall have hard work to understand you myself soon."
"Come, that's good one," said the head-gardener, who was a ready admirer' "I should like to hear the thing you don't understand, Christian."
"He's a first-rate hand at sneering," said Mr Scales, rather nettled.
"Don't be waspish, man. I'll ring the bell for lemons, and make some punch. That's the thing for putting people up to the unknown tongues," said Mr Christian, starting up, and slapping Scales's shoulder as he passed him.
"What I mean, Mr Crowder, is this." Here Mr Scales paused to puff, and pull down his waistcoat in a gentlemanly manner, and drink. He was wont in this way to give his hearers time for meditation.
"Come, then, speak English; I'm not against being taught," said the reasonable Crowder.
"What I mean is, that in a large way of trade a man turns his capital over almost as soon as he can turn himself. Bless your soul! I know something about these matters, eh, Brent?"
"To be sure you do—few men more," said the gardener, who was the person appealed to.
"Not that I've had anything to do with commercial families myself. I've those feelings that
I look to other things besides lucre. But I can't say that I've not been intimate with parties
who have been less nice than I am myself; and knowing what I know, I shouldn't wonder if
Transome had as much
"That's a wicked thing, though," said Mr Crowder, mediatatively. "However," he went on, retreating from this difficult ground, "trade or no trade, the Transomes have been poor enough this many a long year. I've a brother a tenant on their estate— I ought to know a little bit about that."
"They've kept up no establishment at all," said Mr Scales, with disgust. "They've even let their kitchen gardens. I suppose it was the eldest son's gambling. I've seen something of that. A man who has always lived in first-rate families is likely to know a thing or two on that subject."
"Ah, but it wasn't gambling did the first mischief," said Mr Crowder, with a slight smile, feeling that it was his turn to have some superiority. "New-comers don't know what happened in this country twenty and thirty year ago. I'm turned fifty myself, and my father lived under Sir Maxum's father. But if anybody from London can tell me more than I know about this country-side, I'm willing to listen."
"What was it, then, if it wasn't gambling?" said
I don't pretend to know."
"It was law—law—that's what it was. Not but what the Transomes always won."
"And always lost," said the too-ready Scales. "Yes, yes; I think we all know the nature of law."
"There was the last suit of all made the most noise, as I understood," continued Mr Crowder;
"but it wasn't tried hereabout. They said there was a deal o'false swearing. Some young man
pretended to be the true heir—let me see—I can't justly remember the names—he'd got two.
He swore he was one man, and they swore he was another. However, Lawyer
Jermyn won it—they say he'd win a game against the Old One himself—and the young fellow turned
out to be a scamp. Stop a bit—his name was Scaddon—Henry Scaddon."
Mr Christian here let a lemon slip from his hand into the punch-bowl with a plash which sent some of the nectar into the company's faces.
"Hallo! What a bungler I am!" he said, looking as if he were quite jarred by this unusual awkwardness of his. "Go on with your tale, Mr Crowder—a scamp named Harry Scaddon."
"Well, that's the tale," said Mr Crowder. "He
Here Mr Crowder relapsed into smoking and silence, a little discomfited that the knowledge of which he had been delivered, had turned out rather a shapeless and insignificant birth.
"Well, well, bygones should be bygones; there are secrets in most good families," said Mr Scales, winking, "and this young Transome, coming back with a fortune to keep up the establishment, and have things done in a decent and gentlemanly way—it would all have been right if he'd not been this sort of Radical madman. But now he's done for himself. I heard Sir Maximus say at dinner that he would be excommunicated; and that's a pretty strong word, I take it."
"What does it mean, Scales?" said Mr Christian, who loved tormenting.
"Ay, what's the meaning?" insisted Mr Crowder,
"Well, it's a law term—speaking in a figurative sort of way—meaning that a Radical was no gentleman."
"Perhaps it's partly accounted for by his getting his money so fast, and in foreign countries," said Mr Crowder, tentatively. "It's reasonable to think he'd be against the land and this country—eh, Sircome?"
Sircome was an eminent miller who had considerable business transactions at the manor, and appreciated Mr Scales's merits at a handsome percentage of the yearly account. He was a highly honourable tradesman, but in this and in other matters submitted to the institutions of his country; for great houses, as he observed, must have great butlers. He replied to his friend Crowder sententiously.
"I say nothing. Before I bring words to market, I should like to see 'em a bit scarcer. There's the land and there's trade—I hold with both. I swim with the stream."
"Hey-day, Mr Sircome! that's a Radical maxim," said Mr Christian, who knew that Mr Sircome's
last sentence was his favourite formula. "I advise you
"A Radical maxim!" said Mr Sircome, in a tone of angry astonishment. "I should like to hear you prove that. It's as old as my grandfather, anyhow."
"I'll prove it in one minute," said the glib Christian. "Reform has set in by the will of the majority—that's the rabble, you know; and the respectability and good sense of the country, which are in the minority, are afraid of Reform running on too fast. So the stream must be running towards Reform and Radicalism; and if you swim with it, Mr Sircome, you're a Reformer and a Radical, and your flour is objectionable, and not full weight— and being tried by Scales, will be found wanting."
There was a roar of laughter. This pun upon Scales was highly appreciated by every one except the miller and the butler. The latter pulled down his waistcoat, and puffed and stared in rather an excited manner. Mr Christian's wit, in general, seemed to him a poor kind of quibbling.
"What a fellow your are for fence, Christian," said the gardener. "Hang me, if I don't think you're up to everything."
"That's a compliment you might pay Old Nick, if you come to that," said Mr Sircome, who was
"Yes, yes," said Mr Scales; I'm no fool myself, and could parry a thrust if I liked, but I shouldn't like it to be said of me that I was up to everything. I'll keep a little principle if you please."
"To be sure," said Christian, ladling out the punch. "What would justice be without Scales?"
The laughter was not quite so full-throated as before. Such excessive cleverness
was a little Satanic.
"A joke's a joke among gentlemen," said the butler, getting exasperated; "I think there has
been quite liberties enough taken with my name. But if you must talk about names, I've heard
of a party before now calling himself a Christian, and being anything but it."
"Come, that's beyond a joke," said the surgeon's assistant, a fast man, whose chief scene of dissipation was the Manor. "Let it drop, Scales."
"Yes, I daresay it's beyond a joke. I'm not a harlequin to talk nothing but jokes. I leave
that to other Christians, who are up to everything, and have been everywhere—to the hulks, for
what I know; and more than that, they come from nobody knows where, and try to worm themselves
into
There was a stricter sequence in Mr Scales's angry eloquence than was apparent—some chief links being confined to his own breast, as is often the case in energetic discourse. The company were in a state of expectation. There was something behind worth knowing, and something before them worth seeing. In the general decay of other fine British pugnacious sports, a quarrel between gentlemen was all the more exciting, and though no one would himself have liked to turn on Scales, no one was sorry for the chance of seeing him put down. But the amazing Christian was unmoved. He had taken out his handkerchief and was rubbing his lips carefully. After a slight pause, he spoke with perfect coolness.
"I don't intent to quarrel with you, Scales. Such talk as this is not profitable to either
of us. It makes you purple in the face—you are apoplectic, you know—and it spoils
good company. Better tell a few fibs about me behind my back—it will heat you less, and do me
more harm. I'll leave you to it; I shall go and have a game at whist with the ladies."
As the door closed behind the questionable
"That's a most uncommon sort o' fellow," said Mr Crowder, in an under-tone, to his next neighbour, the gardener. "Why, Mr Philip picked him up in foreign parts, didn't he?"
"He was a courier," said the gardener. "He's had a deal of experience. And I believe, by what I can make out—for he's been pretty free with me sometimes—there was a time when he was in that rank of life that he fought a duel."
"Ah! that makes him such a cool chap," said Mr Crowder.
"He's what I call an overbearing fellow," said Mr Sircome, also sotto voce , to his
next neighbour, Mr Filmore, the surgeon's assistant. "He runs you down with a sort of talk
that's neither here nor there. He's got a deal too many samples in his pocket for me."
"All I know is, he's a wonderful hand at cards," said Mr Filmore, whose whiskers and
shirt-pin were quite above the average. "I wish I could play écarté as he does; it's
beautiful to see him; he can make a man look pretty blue—he'll empty his pocket for him in no
time."
"That's none to his credit," said Mr Sircome.
The conversation had in this way broken up into tête-à-tête , and the hilarity of
the evening might be considered a failure. Still the punch was drunk, the accounts were duly
swelled, and, notwithstanding the innovating spirit of the time, Sir Maximus Debarry's
establishment was kept up in a sound hereditary British manner.
"Rumour doth double like the voice and echo."
Shakespeare.
The mind of a man is as a country which was once open to squatters, who have bred and multiplied and become masters of the land. But then happeneth a time when new and hungry comers dispute the land; and there is trial of strength, and the stronger wins. Nevertheless the first squatters be they who have prepared the ground, and the crops to the end will be sequent (though chiefly on the nature of the soil, as of light sand, mixed loam, or heavy clay, yet) somewhat on the primal labour and sowing.
That talkative maiden, Rumour, though in the interest of art she is figured as a
youthful winged beauty with flowing garments, soaring above the heads of men, and breathing
world-thrilling news through a gracefully-curved trumpet, is in fact a very old maid, who
puckers her silly face by the fireside, and really does no more than chirp a wrong guess or a
lame story into the ear of a fellow-gossip; all the rest of the work attributed to her is done
by the ordinary working of those passions against which men pray in the Litany, with the help
of a plentiful stuipidity against which
When Mr Scales's strong need to make an impressive figure in conversation, together with his
very slight need of any other premise than his own sense of his wide general knowledge and
probable infallibility, led him to specify five hundred thousand as the lowest admissible
amount of Harold Transome's commercially-acquired fortune, it was not fair to put this down to
poor old Miss Rumour, who had only told Scales that the fortune was considerable. And again,
when the curt Mr Sircome found occasion at Treby to mention the five hundred thousand as a
fact that folks seemed pretty sure about, this expansion of the butler into "folks" was
entirely due to Mr Sircome's habitual preference for words which could not be laid hold of or
give people a handle over him. It was in this simple way that the report of Harold Transome's
fortune spread and was manified, adding much lustre to his opinions in the eyes of Liberals,
and compelling even men of the opposite party to admit that it increased his eligibility as a
member for North Loamshire. It was observed by a sound thinker in these parts that property
was ballast; and when once the aptness of that metaphor had
Meanwhile the fortune that was getting larger in the imagination of constituents was
shrinking a little in the imagination of its owner. It was hardly more than a hundred and
fifty thousand; and there were not only the heavy mortgages to be paid off, but also a large
amount of capital was needed in order to repair the farm-buildings all over the estate, to
carry out extensive draining, and make allowances to incoming tenants, which might remove the
difficulty of newly letting the farms in a time of agricultural depression. The farms actually
tenanted were held by men who had begged hard to succeed their fathers in getting a little
poorer every year, on land which was also getting poorer, where the highest rate of increase
was in the arrears of rent, and where the master, in crushed hat and corduroys, looked
pitiably lean and care-worn by the side of pauper labourers, who showed that superior
assimilating power often observed to attend nourishment by the public money. Mr Goffe, of
It took no long time for Harold Transome to discover this state of things, and to see,
moreover, that, except on the demesne immediately around the house, the timber had been
mismanaged. The woods had been recklessly thinned, and there had been insufficient planting.
He had not yet thoroughly investigated the various accounts kept by his mother, by Jermyn, and
by Banks the bailiff; but what had been done with the large sums which had been received for
timber was a suspicious mystery to him. He observed that the farm held by Jermyn was in
first-rate order, that a good deal had been spent on the buildings, and that the rent had
stood
Mrs Transome did understand this; and it was very little that she dared to say on business,
though there was a fierce struggle of her anger and
"I was really capable of calculating, Harold," she ended, with a touch of bitterness. "It seems easy to deal with farmers and their affairs when you only see them in print, I daresay; but it's not quite so easy when you live among them. You have only to look at Sir Maximus's estate: you will see plenty of the same thing. The times have been dreadful, and old families like to keep their old tenants. But I daresay that is Toryism."
"It's a hash of odds and ends, if that is Toryism, my dear mother. However, I wish you had
kept three more old tenants; for then I should have had three more fifty-pound voters. And, in
a hard run, one may be beaten by a head. But," Harold added, smiling and handing her a ball of
worsted which had fallen, "a woman ought to be a Tory, and graceful, and handsome, like you. I
should hate a woman who took up my opinions, and talked for me. I'm an Oriental, you know. I
say, mother,
Harold thought it was only natural that his mother should have been in a sort of subjection to Jermyn throughout the awkward circumstances of the family. It was the way of women, and all weak minds, to think that what they had been used to was inalterable, and any quarrel with a man who managed private affairs was necessarily a formidable thing. He himself was proceeding very cautiously, and preferred not even to know too much just at present, lest a certain personal antipathy he was conscious of towards Jermyn, and an occasional liability to exasperation, should get the better of a calm and clear-sighted resolve not to quarrel with the man while he could be of use. Harold would have been disgusted with himself if he had helped to frustrate his own purpose. And his strongest purpose now was to get returned for Parliament, to make a figure there as a Liberal member, and to become on all grounds a personage of weight in North Loamshire.
How Harold Transome came to be a Liberal in opposition to all the traditions of his family,
was a more subtle inquiry than he had ever cared to follow out. The newspapers undertook
North Loamshire Herald witnessed with a grief and
disgust certain to be shared by all persons who were actuated by whole-some British feeling,
an example of defection in the inheritor of a family name which in times past had been
associated with attachment to right principle, and with the maintenance of our constitution in
Church and State; and pointed to it as an additional proof that men who had passed any large
portion of their lives beyond the limits of our favoured country, usually contracted not only
a laxity of feeling towards Protestantism, nay, towards religion itself—a latitudinarian
spirit hardly distinguishable from atheism—but also a levity of disposition, inducing them to
tamper with those institutions by which alone Great Britain had risen to her pre-eminence
among the nations. Such men, infected with outlandish habits, intoxicated with vanity,
grasping at momentary power by flattery of the multitude, fearless because godless, liberal
because un-English, were ready to pull one stone from under another in the national edifice,
till the great structure tottered to its fall. On the other hand, the Duffield
Watchman saw in this signal instance of self-liberation from the trammels of prejudice,
a
But these large-minded guides of public opinion argued from wider data than could be
furnished by any knowledge of the particular case concerned. Harold Transome was neither the
dissolute cosmopolitan so vigorously sketched by the Tory Herald , nor the
intellectual giant and moral lobster suggested by the liberal imagination of the
Watchman . Twenty years ago he had been a bright, active, good-tempered lad, with
sharp eyes and a good aim; he delighted in success and in predominance; but he did not long
for an impossible predominance, and become sour and sulky because it was impossible. He played
at the games he was clever in, and usually won; all other games he let alone, and thought them
of little worth. At home and at Eton he had been side by side with his stupid elder brother
Durfey, whom he despised; and he very early began to reflect that since this Caliban in
miniature was older than himself, he must carve out his own fortune.
Since then his character had been ripened by a various experience, and also by much
knowledge which he had set himself deliberately to gain.
In fact Harold Transome was a clever, frank, good-natured egoist; not stringently
consistent, but without any disposition to falsity; proud, but with a pride that was moulded
in an individual rather than an hereditary form; unspeculative, unsentimental, unsympathetic;
fond of sensual pleasures, but disinclined to all vice, and attached as a healthy,
clear-sighted person, to all conventional morality, construed with a certain freedom, like
doctrinal articles to which the public order may require subscription. A character is apt to
look but indifferently, written out in this way. Reduced to a map, our premises seem
insignificant, but they make, nevertheless, a very pretty freehold to live in and walk over;
and so, if Harold Transome had been among your acquaintances, and you had observed his
qualities through the medium of his agreeable person, bright smile, and a certain easy charm
which accompanies sensuousness when unsullied by coarseness—through the medium also of the
many opportunities in which he would have made himself useful or pleasant to you—you would
have thought him a good fellow,
It is a fact perhaps kept a little too much in the background, that mothers have a self
larger than their maternity, and that when their sons have become taller than themselves, and
are gone from them to college or into the world, there are wide spaces of their time which are
not filled with praying for their boys, reading old letters, and envying yet blessing those
who are attending to their shirtbuttons. Mrs Transome was certainly not one of those bland,
adoring, and gently tearful women. After sharing the common dream that when a beautiful
man-child was born to her, her cup of happiness would be full, she had travelled through long
years apart from that child to find herself at last in the presence of a son of whom she was
afraid, who was utterly unmanageable by her, and to whose sentiments in any given case she
possessed no key. Yet Harold was a kind son: he kissed his mother's brow, offered her his arm,
let her choose what she liked for the house and garden, asked her whether she would have bays
or greys for her new carriage, and was bent on seeing her make as good a figure in the
neighbourhood as any other woman of her rank.
ifs that were all impossible—she would have tasted some joy; but now
she began to look back with regret to the days when she sat in loneliness among the old
drapery, and still longed for something that might happen. Yet, save in a
She was standing on the broad gravel in the afternoon; the long shadows lay on the grass;
the light seemed the more glorious because of the reddened and golden trees. The gardeners
were busy at their pleasant work; the newly-turned soil gave out an agreeable fragrance; and
little Harry was playing with Nimrod round old Mr Transome, who sat placidly on a low
garden-chair. The scene would have made a charming picture of English domestic life, and the
handsome, majestic, grey-haired woman (obviously grandmamma) would have been especially
admired. But the artist would have felt it requisite to turn her face towards her husband and
little grandson, and to have given her an elderly amiability of expression which would have
divided remark with his exquisite rendering of her Indian shawl. Mrs Transome's face was
turned
"A woman, naturally born to fears." King John.
"Methinks Some unborn sorrow, ripe in fortune's womb, Is coming towards me; and my inward soul With nothing trembles." King Richard II
Matthew Jermyn approached Mrs Transome taking off his hat and smiling. She did not smile, but said,
"You knew Harold was not at home?"
"Yes; I came to see you, to know if you had any wishes that I could further, since I have not had an opportunity of consulting you since he came home."
"Let us walk towards the Rookery, then."
They turned together, Mr Jermyn still keeping his hat off and holding it behind him; the air was so soft and agreeable that Mrs Transome herself had nothing but a large veil over her head.
They walked for a little while in silence till they
"Harold is remarkably acute and clever," he began at last, since Mrs Transome did not speak. "If he gets into Parliament, I have no doubt he will distinguish himself. He has a quick eye for business of all kinds."
"That is no comfort to me," said Mrs Transome. To-day she was more conscious than usual of
that bitterness which was always in her mind in Jermyn's presence, but which was carefully
suppressed:— suppressed because she could not endure
"I trust he is not unkind to you in any way. I know his opinions pain you; but I trust you find him in everything else disposed to be a good son."
"O, to be sure—good as men are disposed to be to women, giving them cushions and carriages, and recommending them to enjoy themselves, and then expecting them to be contented under contempt and neglect. I have no power over him—remember that—none."
Jermyn turned to look in Mrs Transome's face: it was long since he had heard her speak to him as if she were losing her self-command.
"Has he shown any unpleasant feeling about your management of the affairs?"
" My management of the affairs!" Mrs Transome said, with concentrated rage,
flashing a fierce look at Jermyn. She checked herself: she felt as if she were lighting a
torch to flare on her own past folly and misery. It was a resolve which had become
Jermyn felt annoyed—nothing more. There was nothing in his mind corresponding to the intricate meshes of sensitiveness in Mrs Transome's. He was anything but stupid; yet he always blundered when he wanted to be delicate or magnanimous; he constantly sought to soothe others by praising himself. Moral vulgarity cleaved to him like an hereditary odour. He blundered now.
"My dear Mrs Transome," he said, in a tone of bland kindness, "You are agitated—you appear angry with me. Yet I think, if you consider, you will see that you have nothing to complain of in me, unless you will complain of the inevitable course of man's life. I have always met your wishes both in happy circumstances and in unhappy ones. I should be ready to do so now, if it were possible."
Every sentence was as pleasant to her as if it had been cut in her bared arm. Some men's
kindness and love-making are more exasperating, more
"Let me take your arm."
He gave it immediately, putting on his hat and wondering. For more than twenty years Mrs Transome had never chosen to take his arm.
"I have but one thing to ask you. Make me a promise."
"What is it?"
"That you will never quarrel with Harold."
"You must know that it is my wish not to quarrel with him."
"But make a vow—fix it in your mind as a thing not to be done. Bear anything from him rather than quarrel with him."
"A man can't make a vow not to quarrel," said Jermyn, who was already a little irritated by
the implication that Harold might be disposed to use him roughly. "A man's temper may get the
better of him at any moment. I am not prepared to bear anything ."
"Good God!" said Mrs Transome, taking her hand from his arm, "is it possible you don't feel how horrible it would be?"
As she took away her hand, Jermyn let his arm fall, put both his hands in his pockets, and shrugging his shoulders said, "I shall use him as he uses me."
Jermyn had turned round his savage side, and the blandness was out of sight. It was this that had always frightened Mrs Transome: there was a possibility of fierce insolence in this man who was to pass with those nearest to her as her indebted servant, but whose brand she secretly bore. She was as powerless with him as she was with her son.
This woman, who loved rule, dared not speak another word of attempted persuasion. They were both silent, taking the nearest way into the sunshine again. There was a half-formed wish in both their minds—even in the mother's—that Harold Transome had never been born.
"We are working hard for the election," said Jermyn, recovering himself, as they turned into
the sunshine again. "I think we shall get him returned, and in that case he will be in high
good-humour. Everything will be more propitious than
"Never," said Mrs Transome. "I am too old to learn to call bitter sweet and sweet bitter. But what I may think or feel is of no consequence now. I am as unnecessary as a chimney ornament."
And in this way they parted on the gravel, in that pretty scene where they had met. Mrs Transome shivered as she stood alone: all around her, where there had once been brightness and warmth, there were white ashes, and the sunshine looked dreary as it fell on them.
Mr Jermyn's heaviest reflections in riding homeward turned on the possibility of incidents
between himself and Harold Transome which would have disagreeable results, requiring him to
raise money, and perhaps causing scandal, which in its way might also help to create a
monetary deficit. A man of sixty, with a wife whose Duffield connections were of the highest
respectability, with a family of tall daughters, an expensive establishment, and a large
professional business, owed a great deal more to himself as the mainstay of all those
solidities, than to feelings and ideas which were quite unsubstantial.
A German poet was intrusted with a particularly fine sausage, which he was to convey to the donor's friend at Paris. In the course of a long journey he smelt the sausage; he got hungry, and desired to taste it; he pared a morsel off, then another, and another, in successive moments of temptation, till at last the sausage was, humanly speaking, at an end. The offence had not been premeditated. The poet had never loved meanness, but he loved sausage; and the result was undeniably awkward.
So it was with Matthew Jermyn. He was far from liking that ugly abstraction rascality, but
he had liked other things which had suggested nibbling. He had had to do many things in law
and in daily life which, in the abstract, he would have condemned; and indeed he had never
been
But he was a man of resolution, who, having made out what was the best course to take under a difficulty, went straight to his work. The election must be won: that would put Harold in good-humour, give him something to do, and leave himself more time to prepare for any crisis.
He was in anything but low spirits that evening. It was his eldest daughter's birthday, and the young people had a dance. Papa was delightful—stood up for a quadrille and a country-dance, told stories at supper, and made humorous quotations from his early readings: if these were Latin, he apologised, and translated to the ladies; so that a deaf lady-visitor from Duffield kept her trumpet up continually, lest she should lose any of Mr Jermyn's conversation, and wished that her niece Maria had been present, who was young and had a good memory.
Still the party was smaller than usual, for some families in Treby refused to visit Jermyn, now that he was concerned for a Radical candidate.
"He made love neither with roses, nor with apples, nor with locks of hair."
—Theocritus.
One Sunday afternoon Felix Holt rapped at the door of Mr Lyon's house, although he
could hear the voice of the minister preaching in the chapel. He stood with a book under his
arm, apparently confident that there was some one in the house to open the door for him. In
fact, Esther never went to chapel in the afternoon: that "exercise" made her head ache.
In these September weeks Felix had got rather intimate with Mr Lyon. They shared the same
political sympathies; and though, to Liberals who had neither freehold nor copyhold, nor
leasehold the share in a county election consisted chiefly of that prescriptive amusement of
the majority known as "looking on," there was still something to be said on the occasion, if
not to be done. Perhaps the most
Esther had not seen so much of their new acquaintance as her father had. But she had begun
to find him amusing, and also rather irritating to her woman's love of conquest. He always
opposed and criticised her; and besides that, he looked at her as if he never saw a single
detail about her person— quite as if she were a middle-aged woman in a cap. She did not
believe that he had ever admired her hands, or her long neck, or her graceful movements, which
had made all the girls at school call her Calypso (doubtless from their familiarity with
'Telémaque').
On this particular Sunday afternoon, when she heard the knock at the door, she was seated in the kitchen corner between the fire and the window reading 'Réné.' Certainly, in her well-fitting light-blue dress—she almost always wore some shade of blue—with her delicate sandalled slipper stretched towards the fire, her little gold watch, which had cost her nearly a quarter's earnings, visible at her side, her slender fingers playing with a shower of brown curls, and a coronet of shining plaits at the summit of her head, she was a remarkable Cinderella. When the rap came, she coloured, and was going to shut her book and put it out of the way on the window-ledge behind her; but she desisted with a little toss, laid it open on the table beside her, and walked to the outer door, which opened into the kitchen. There was rather a mischievous gleam in her face: the rap was not a small one; it came probably from a large personage with a vigorous arm.
"Good afternoon, Miss Lyon," said Felix, taking off his cloth cap: he resolutely declined
the expensive
"Dear me, it is you, Mr Holt! I fear you will have to wait some time before you can see my father. The sermon is not ended yet, and there will be the hymn and the prayer, and perhaps other things to detain him."
"Well, will you let me sit down in the kitchen? I don't want to be a bore."
"O no," said Esther, with her pretty light laugh, "I always give you credit for not meaning it. Pray come in, if you don't mind waiting. I was sitting in the kitchen: the kettle is singing quite prettily. It is much nicer than the parlour—not half so ugly."
"There I agree with you."
"How very extraordinary! But if you prefer the kitchen, and don't want to sit with me, I can go into the parlour."
"I came on purpose to sit with you," said Felix, in his blunt way, "but I thought it likely
you might be vexed at seeing me. I wanted to talk to you, but I've got nothing pleasant to
say. As your
"I understand," said Esther, sitting down. "Pray be seated. You thought I had no afternoon sermon, so you came to give me one."
"Yes," said Felix, seating himself sideways in a chair not far off her, and leaning over the back to look at her with his large clear grey eyes, "and my text is something you said the other day. You said you didn't mind about people having right opinions so that they had good taste. Now I want you to see what shallow stuff that is."
"Oh, I don't doubt it if you say so. I know you are a person of right opinions."
"But by opinions you mean men's thoughts about great subjects, and by taste you mean their. thoughts about small ones: dress, behaviour, amusements, ornaments."
"Well—yes—or rather, their sensibilities about those things."
"It comes to the same thing; thoughts, opinions, knowledge, are only a sensibility to facts
and ideas. If I understand a geometrical problem, it is because I have a sensibility to the
way in which lines and figures are related to each other; and I want you to see that the
creature who has the sensibilities that
"Very well, I am an insect; yet I notice that you are thundering at me."
"No, you are not an insect. That is what exasperates me at your making a boast of littleness. You have enough understanding to maké it wicked that you should add one more to the women who hinder men's lives from having any nobleness in them."
Esther coloured deeply: she resented this speech, yet she disliked it less than many Felix had addressed to her.
"What is my horrible guilt?" she said, rising and standing, as she was wont, with one foot on the fender, and looking at the fire. If it had been any one but Felix who was near her, it might have occurred to her that this attitude showed her to advantage; but she had only a mortified sense that he was quite indifferent to what others praised her for.
"Why do you read this mawkish stuff on a Sunday, for example?" he said, snatching up 'Réné,' and running his eye over the pages.
"Why don't you always go to chapel, Mr Holt, and read Howe's 'Living Temple,' and join the Church?"
"There's just the difference between us—I know why I don't do those things. I distinctly see that I can do something better. I have other principles, and should sink myself by doing what I don't recognise as the best."
"I understand," said Esther, as lightly as she could, to conceal her bitterness. "I am a lower kind of being, and could not so easily sink myself."
"Not by entering into your father's ideas. If a woman really believes herself to be a lower kind of being, she should place herself in subjection: she should be ruled by the thoughts of her father or husband. If not, let her show her power of choosing something better. You must know that your father's principles are greater and worthier than what guides your life. You have no reason but idle fancy and selfish inclination for shirking his teaching and giving your soul up to trifles."
"You are kind enough to say so. But I am not aware that I have ever confided my reasons to you."
"Why, what worth calling a reason could make any mortal hang over this trash?—idiotic
immorality
"O pray, Mr Holt, don't go on reading with that dreadful accent; it sets one's teeth on edge." Esther, smarting helplessly under the previous lashes, was relieved by this diversion of criticism.
"There it is!" said Felix, throwing the book on the table, and getting up to walk about. "You are only happy when you can spy a tag or a tassel loose to turn the talk, and get rid of any judgment that must carry grave action after it."
"I think I have borne a great deal of talk without turning it."
"Not enough, Miss Lyon—not all that I came to say. I want you to change. Of course I am a
brute to say so. I ought to say you are perfect.
"How am I to oblige you? By joining the Church?"
"No; but by asking yourself whether life is not as solemn a thing as your father takes it to be—in which you may be either a blessing or a curse to many. You know you have never done that. You don't care to be better than a bird trimming its feathers, and pecking about after what pleases it. You are discontented with the world because you can't get just the small things that suit your pleasure, not because it's a world where myriads of men and women are ground by wrong and misery, and tainted with pollution."
Esther felt her heart swelling with mingled indignation at this liberty, wounded pride at
this depreciation, and acute consciousness that she could not contradict what Felix said. He
was outrageously ill-bred; but she felt that she should be lowering herself by telling him so,
and manifesting her anger: in that way she would be confirming his accusation of a littleness
that shrank from severe truth; and, besides, through all her mortification there pierced a
sense that this exasperation of Felix against her was more complimentary than anything in his
previous
"Pray go on, Mr Holt. Relieve yourself of these burning truths. I am sure they must be troublesome to carry unuttered."
"Yes, they are," said Felix, pausing, and standing not far off her. "I can't bear to see you going the way of the foolish women who spoil men's lives. Men can't help loving them, and so they make themselves slaves to the petty desires of petty creatures. That's the way those who might do better spend their lives for nought—get checked in every great effort—toil with brain and limb for things that have no more to do with a manly life than tarts and confectionery. That's what makes women a curse; all life is stunted to suit their littleness. That's why I'll never love, if I can help it; and if I love, I'll bear it, and never marry."
The tumult of feeling in Esther's mind—mortification, anger, the sense of a terrible power
over her that Felix seemed to have as his angry words vibrated through her—was getting almost
too much for her self-control. She felt her lips quivering; but her pride, which feared
nothing so much as the betrayal of her emotion, helped her to a desperate effort. She
"I ought to be very much obliged to you for giving me your confidence so freely."
"Ah! now you are offended with me, and disgusted with me. I expected it would be so. A woman doesn't like a man who tells her the truth."
"I think you boast a little too much of your truth-telling, Mr Holt," said Esther, flashing out at last. "That virtue is apt to be easy to people when they only wound others and not themselves. Telling the truth often means no more than taking a liberty."
"Yes, I suppose I should have been taking a liberty if I had tried to drag you back by the skirt when I saw you running into a pit."
"You should really found a sect. Preaching is your vocation. It is a pity you should ever have an audience of only one."
"I see; I have made a fool of myself. I thought you had a more generous mind—that you might be kindled to a better ambition. But I've set your vanity aflame—nothing else. I'm going. Good-bye."
"Good-bye," said Esther, not looking at him. He did not open the door immediately. He seemed
to be adjusting his cap and pulling it down. Esther
She heard her father coming into the house. She dried her tears, tried to recover herself hurriedly, and went down to him.
"You want your tea, father; how your forehead burns!" she said gently, kissing his brow, and then putting her cool hand on it.
Mr Lyon felt a little surprise; such spontaneous tenderness was not quite common with her; it reminded him of her mother.
"My sweet child," he said gratefully, thinking with wonder of the treasures still left in our fallen nature.
Truth is the precious harvest of the earth. But once, when harvest waved upon a land. The noisome cankerworm and caterpillar, Locusts, and all the swarming foul-born broods, Fastened upon it with swift, greedy jaws, And turned the harvest into pestilence, Until men said, What profits it to sow?
Felix was going to Sproxton that Sunday afternoon. He always enjoyed his walk to
that outlying hamlet; it took him (by a short cut) through a corner of Sir Maximus Debarry's
park; then across a piece of common, broken here and there into red ridges below dark masses
of furze; and for the rest of the way alongside the canal, where the Sunday peacefulness that
seemed to rest on the bordering meadows and pastures was hardly broken if a horse pulled into
sight along the towing-path, and a boat, with a little curl of blue smoke issuing from its tin
chimney, came slowly gliding behind. Felix retained something of his boyish impression that
the days in a canal-boat were all like Sundays;
This canal was only a branch of the grand trunk, and ended among the coal-pits, where Felix, crossing a network of black tram-roads, soon came to his destination—that public institute of Sproxton, known to its frequenters chiefly as Chubb's, but less familiarly as the Sugar Loaf, or the New Pits; this last being the name for the more modern and lively nucleus of the Sproxton hamlet. The other nucleus, known as the Old Pits, also supported its "public," but it had something of the forlorn air of an abandoned capital; and the company at the Blue Cow was of an inferior kind—equal, of course, in the fundamental attributes of humanity, such as desire for beer, but not equal in ability to pay for it.
When Felix arrived, the great Chubb was standing at the door. Mr Chubb was a remarkable
publican; none of your stock Bonifaces, red, bloated, jolly, and joking. He was thin and
sallow, and was never, as his constant guests observed, seen to be the worse (or the better)
for liquor; indeed, as among soldiers an eminent general was held to have a
When Felix approached, Mr Chubb was standing, as usual, with his hands nervously busy in his pockets, his eyes glancing round with a detective expression at the black landscape, and his lipless mouth compressed yet in constant movement. On a superficial view it might be supposed that so eager-seeming a personality was unsuited to the publican's business; but in fact it was a great provocative to drinking. Like the shrill biting talk of a vixenish wife, it would have compelled you to "take a little something" by way of dulling your sensibility.
Hitherto, notwithstanding Felix drank so little ale, the publican had treated him with high
civility. The coming election was a great opportunity for applying his political "idee," which
was, that society existed for the sake of the individual, and that the name of that individual
was Chubb. Now, from a conjunction of absurd circumstances inconsistent with that idea, it
happened that Sproxton had been hitherto somewhat neglected in the canvass.
He had a cousin in another county, also a publican, but in a larger way, and resident in a borough, and from him Mr Chubb had gathered more detailed political information than he could find in the Loamshire newspapers. He was now enlightened enough to know that there was a way of using voteless miners and navvies at Nominations and Elections. He approved of that; it entered into his political "idee;" and indeed he would have been for extending the franchise to this class—at least in Sproxton. If any one had observed that you must draw a line somewhere, Mr Chubb would have concurred at once, and would have given permission to draw it at a radius of two miles from his own tap.
From the first Sunday evening when Felix had appeared at the Sugar Loaf, Mr Chubb had made
up his mind that this 'cute man who kept himself sober was an electioneering agent. That he
was hired for some purpose or other there was not a doubt; a man didn't come and drink nothing
without a good reason. In proportion as Felix's purpose
"I'll lay hold of them by their fatherhood," said Felix; "I'll take one of their little fellows and set him in the midst. Till they can show there's something they love better than swilling themselves with ale, extension of the suffrage can never mean anything for them but extension of boozing. One must begin somewhere: I'll begin at what is under my nose. I'll begin at Sproxton. That's what a man would do if he had a red-hot superstition. Can't one work for sober truth as hard as for megrims?"
Felix Holt had his illusions, like other young men, though they were not of a fashionable
sort; referring neither to the impression his costume and horsemanship might make on
beholders, nor to the ease with which he would pay the Jews when he gave a loose to his
talents and applied himself to work. He had fixed his choice on a certain Mike Brindle (not
that Brindle was his real name—each collier had his sobriquet ) as the man whom he
would induce to walk part of the way home with him this
Mr Chubb, who had also his illusions, smiled graciously as the enigmatic customer came up to the door-step.
"Well, sir, Sunday seems to be your day: I begin to look for you on a Sunday now."
"Yes, I'm a working man; Sunday is my holiday," said Felix, pausing at the door since the host seemed to expect this.
"Ah, sir, there's many ways of working. I look at it you're one of those as work with your brains. That's what I do myself."
"One may do a good deal of that and work with one's hands too."
"Ah, sir," said Mr Chubb, with a certain bitterness in his smile, "I've that sort of head
that I've often wished I was stupider. I use things up, sir; I see into things a deal too
quick. I eat my dinner, as you may say, at breakfast-time. That's why I hardly ever smoke a
pipe. No sooner do I stick a pipe in my mouth than I puff and puff till it's gone before other
folks are well lit; and then, where am
"Not I," said Felix, rubbing the back of his head, with a grimace. "I generally feel myself rather a blockhead. The world's a largish place, and I haven't turned everything inside out yet."
"Ah, that's your deepness. I think we understand one another. And about this here election, I lay two to one we should agree if we was to come to talk about it."
"Ah!" said Felix, with an air of caution,
"You're none of a Tory, eh, sir? You won't go to vote for Debarry? That was what I said at the very first go-off. Says I, he's no Tory. I think I was right, sir—eh?"
"Certainly; I'm no Tory."
"No, no, you don't catch me wrong in a hurry. Well, between you and me, I care no more for
the Debarrys than I care for Johnny Groats. I live on none o'their land, and not a pot's-worth
did they ever send to the Sugar Loaf. I'm not frightened at the Debarrys: there's no man more
independent than me. I'll plump or I'll split for them as treat me the handsomest and are the
most of what I call gentlemen; that's my idee. And in the way of
We mortals sometimes cut a pitiable figure in our attempts at display. We may be sure of our own merits, yet fatally ignorant of the point of view from which we are regarded by our neighbour. Our fine patterns in tattooing may be far from throwing him into a swoon of admiration, though we turn ourselves all round to show them. Thus it was with Mr Chubb.
"Yes," said Felix, dryly; "I should think there are some sorts of work for which you are just fitted."
"Ah, you see that? Well, we understand one another. You're no Tory; no more am I. And if I'd got four hands to show at a nomination, the Debarrys shouldn't have one of 'em. My idee is, there's a deal too much of their scutchins and their moniments in Treby Church. What's their scutchins mean? They're a sign with little liquor behind 'em; that's how I take it. There's nobody can give account of 'em as I ever heard."
Mr Chubb was hindered from further explaining his views as to the historical element in
society by the arrival of new guests, who approached in two groups. The foremost group
consisted of well-known colliers, in their good Sunday beavers and
First came a smartly-dressed personage on horseback, with a conspicuous expansive shirt-front and figured satin stock. He was a stout man, and gave a strong sense of broadcloth. A wild idea shot through Mr Chubb's brain: could this grand visitor be Harold Transome? Excuse him: he had been given to understand by his cousin from the distant borough that a Radical candidate in the condescension of canvassing had even gone the length of eating bread-and-treacle with the children of an honest freeman, and declaring his preference for that simple fare. Mr Chubb's notion of a Radical was that he was a new and agreeable kind of lick-spittle who fawned on the poor instead of on the rich, and so was likely to send customers to a "public;" so that he argued well enough from the premises at his command.
The mounted man of broadcloth had followers: several shabby-looking men, and Sproxton boys
of all sizes, whose curiosity had been stimulated by unexpected largesse. A stranger on
horseback
Every one waited outside for the stranger to dismount, and Mr Chubb advanced to take the bridle.
"Well, Mr Chubb," were the first words when the great man was safely out of the saddle, "I've often heard of your fine tap, and I'm come to taste it."
"Walk in, sir—pray walk in," said Mr Chubb, giving the horse to the stable-boy. "I shall be proud to draw for you. If anybody's been praising me, I think my ale will back him."
All entered in the rear of the stranger except the boys, who peeped in at the window.
"Won't you please to walk into the parlour, sir?" said Chubb, obsequiously.
"No, no, I'll sit down here. This is what I like to see," said the stranger, looking round at the colliers, who eyed him rather shyly—"a bright hearth where working men can enjoy themselves. However, I'll step into the other room for three minutes, just to speak half-a-dozen words with you."
Mr Chubb threw open the parlour door, and then stepping back, took the opportunity of saying, in a low tone, to Felix, "Do you know this gentleman?"
"Not I; no."
Mr Chubb's opinion of Felix Holt sank from that moment. The parlour door was closed, but no one sat down or ordered beer.
"I say, master," said Mike Brindle, going up to Felix, "don't you think that's one o' the 'lection men?"
"Very likely."
"I heared a chap say they're up and down everywhere," said Brindle; "and now's the time, they say, when a man can get beer for nothing."
"Ay, that's sin' the Reform," said a big, red-whiskered man, called Dredge. "That's brought the 'lections and the drink into these parts; for afore that, it was all kep up the Lord knows wheer."
"Well, but the Reform's niver come anigh Sprox'on," said a grey-haired but stalwart man called Old Sleck. "I don't believe nothing about'n, I don't."
"Don't you?" said Brindle, with some contempt. "Well, I do. There's folks won't believe
beyond the end o' their own pickaxes. You can't drive nothing into 'em, not if you split their
skulls. I
you say?" Brindle ended, turning
with some deference to Felix.
"Should you like to know all about the Reform?" said Felix, using his opportunity. "If you would, I can tell you."
"Ay, ay—tell's; you know, I'll be bound," said several voices at once.
"Ah, but it will take some little time. And we must be quiet. The cleverest of you—those who are looked up to in the Club—must come and meet me at Peggy Button's cottage next Saturday, at seven o'clock, after dark. And, Brindle, you must bring that little yellow-haired lad of yours. And anybody that's got a little boy—a very little fellow, who won't understand what is said—may bring him. But you must keep it close, you know. We don't want fools there. But everybody who hears me may come. I shall be at Peggy Button's."
"Why, that's where the Wednesday preachin' is," said Dredge. "I've been aforced to give my wife a black eye to hinder her from going to the preachin.' Lors-a-massy, she thinks she knows better nor me, and I can't make head nor tail of her talk."
"Why can't you let the woman alone?" said
"No more I did beat her afore, not if she scrat' me," said Dredge, in vindication; "but if she jabbers at me, I can't abide it. Howsomever, I'll bring my Jack to Peggy's o' Saturday. His mother shall wash him. He is but four year old, and he'll swear and square at me a good un, if I set him on."
"There you go blatherin'", said Brindle, intending a mild rebuke.
This dialogue, which was in danger of becoming too personal, was interrupted by the reopening of the parlour door, and the reappearance of the impressive stranger with Mr Chubb, whose countenance seemed unusually radiant.
"Sit you down here, Mr Johnson," said Chubb, moving an arm-chair. "This gentleman is kind enough to treat the company," he added, looking round, "and what's more, he'll take a cup with 'em; and I think there's no man but what'll say that's a honour."
The company had nothing equivalent to a "hear, hear," at command, but they perhaps felt the
more, as they seated themselves with an expectation unvented by utterance. There was a general
satisfactory
"Capital ale, capital ale," said Mr Johnson, as he set down his glass, speaking in a quick, smooth treble. "Now," he went on, with a certain pathos in his voice, looking at Mr Chubb, who sat opposite, "there's some satisfaction to me in finding an establishment like this at the Pits. For what would higher wages do for the working man if he couldn't get a good article for his money? Why, gentlemen"— here he looked round—"I've been into ale-houses where I've seen a fine fellow of a miner or a stone-cutter come in and have to lay down money for beer that I should be sorry to give to my pigs!" Here Mr Johnson leaned forward with squared elbows, hands placed on his knees, and a defiant shake of the head.
"Aw, like at the Blue Cow," fell in the irrepressible Dredge, in a deep bass; but he was rebuked by a severe nudge from Brindle
"Yes, yes, you know what it is, my friend," said Mr Johnson, looking at Dredge, and
restoring his self-satisfaction. "But it won't last much longer,
A brief loud "Haw, haw," showed that this fact was appreciated.
"Nor freeston' nayther," said a wide-mouthed wiry man called Gills, who wished for an exhaustive treatment of the subject, being a stone-cutter.
"Nor freestone, as you say; else, I think, if coal could be made aboveground, honest fellows
who are the pith of our population would not have to bend their backs and sweat in a pit six
days out of the seven. No, no: I say, as this country prospers it has more and more need of
you, sirs. It can do without a pack of lazy lords and ladies, but it can never do without
brave colliers. And the country will prosper. I pledge you my word, sirs, this
country will rise to the tip-top of everything, and there isn't a man in it but what shall
have his joint in the pot, and his spare money jingling in his pocket, if we only exert
ourselves to send the right men to Parliament—men who will speak up for the collier, and the
stone-cutter, and
Mr Johnson threw himself back as if from the concussion of that great noun. He did not suppose that one of his audience knew what a crisis meant; but he had large experience in the effect of uncomprehended words; and in this case the colliers were thrown into a state of conviction concerning they did not know what, which was a fine preparation for "hitting out," or any other act carrying a due sequence to such a conviction.
Felix felt himself in danger of getting into a rage. There is hardly any mental misery worse than that of having our own serious phrases, our own rooted beliefs, caricatured by a charlatan or a hireling. He began to feel the sharp lower edge of his tin pint-measure, and to think it a tempting missile.
Mr Johnson certainly had some qualifications as an orator. After this impressive pause he leaned forward again, and said, in a lowered tone, looking round,
"I think you all know the good news."
There was a movement of shoe-soles on the quarried
"The good news I mean is, that a first-rate man, Mr Transome of Transome Court, has offered himself to represent you in Parliament, sirs. I say you in particular, for what he has at heart is the welfare of the working man—of the brave fellows that wield the pickaxe, and the saw, and the hammer. He's rich—has more money than Garstin—but he doesn't want to keep it to himself. What he wants is, to make a good use of it, gentlemen. He's come back from foreign parts with his pockets full of gold. He could buy up the Debarrys if they were worth buying, but he's got something better to do with his money. He means to use it for the good of the working men in these parts. I know there are some men who put up for Parliament and talk a little too big. They may say they want to befriend the colliers, for example. But I should like to put a question to them. I should like to ask them, 'What colliers?' There are colliers up at Newcastle, and there are colliers down in Wales. Will it do any good to honest Tom, who is hungry in Sproxton, to hear that Jack at Newcastle has his bellyful of beef and pudding?"
"It ought to do him good," Felix burst in, with
Every one was startled. The audience was much impressed with the grandeur, the knowledge, and the power of Mr Johnson. His brilliant promises confirmed the impression that Reform had at length reached the New Pits; and Reform, if it were good for anything, must at last resolve itself into spare money—meaning "sport" and drink, and keeping away from work for several days in the week. These "brave" men of Sproxton liked Felix as one of themselves, only much more knowing—as a working man who had seen many distant parts, but who must be very poor, since he never drank more than a pint or so. They were quite inclined to hear what he had got to say on another occasion, but they were rather irritated by his interruption at the present moment. Mr Johnson was annoyed, but he spoke with the same glib quietness as before, though with an expression of contempt.
"I call it a poor-spirited thing to take up a man's straightforward words and twist them.
What I meant to say was plain enough—that
There was again an approving "Haw, haw." To hear anything said, and understand it, was a stimulus that had the effect of wit. Mr Chubb cast a suspicious and viperous glance at Felix, who felt that he had been a simpleton for his pains.
"Well, then," continued Mr Johnson, "I suppose I may go on. But if there is any one here better able to inform the company than I am, I give way —I give way."
"Sir," said Mr Chubb, magisterially, "no man shall take the words out of your mouth
in this house. And," he added, looking pointedly at Felix, "Company that's got no more orders
to give, and wants to turn up rusty to them that has, had better be making room than filling
it. Love an' 'armony's the word on our Club's flag, an' love an' 'armony's the meaning of 'The
Sugar Loaf, William Chubb.' Folks of a different mind had better seek another house of
call."
"Very good," said Felix, laying down his money and taking his cap, "I'm going." He saw clearly enough that if he said more, there would be a disturbance which could have no desirable end.
When the door had closed behind him, Mr Johnson said, "What is that person's name?"
"Does anybody know it?" said Mr Chubb.
A few noes were heard.
"I've heard him speak like a downright Reformer, else I should have looked a little sharper after him. But you may see he's nothing partic'lar."
"It looks rather bad that no one knows his name," said Mr Johnson. "He's most likely a Tory in disguise—a Tory spy. You must be careful, sirs, of men who come to you and say they're Radicals, and yet do nothing for you. They'll stuff you with words—no lack of words—but words are wind. Now, a man like Transome comes forward and says to the working men of this country: 'Here I am, ready to serve you and to speak for you in Parliament, and to get the laws made all right for you; and in the meanwhile, if there's any of you who are my neighbours who want a day's holiday, or a cup to drink with friends, or a copy of the King's likeness—why, I'm your man. I'm not a paper handbill—all words and no substance—nor a man with land and nothing else; I've got bags of gold as well as land'. I think you know what I mean by the King's likeness?"
Here Mr Johnson took a half-crown out of
"Well, sirs, there are some men who like to keep this pretty picture a great deal too much to themselves. I don't know whether I'm right, but I think I've heard of such a one not a hundred miles from here. I think his name was Spratt, and he managed some company's coal-pits."
"Haw, haw! Spratt—Spratt's his name," was rolled forth to an accompaniment of scraping shoe-soles.
"A screwing fellow, by what I understand—a domineering fellow—who would expect men to do as he liked without paying them for it. I think there's not an honest man who wouldn't like to disappoint such an upstart."
There was a murmur which was interpreted by Mr Chubb. "I'll answer for 'em, sir."
"Now, listen to me. Here's Garstin: he's one of the Company you work under. What's Garstin
to you? who sees him? and when they do see him they see a thin miserly fellow who keeps his
pockets buttoned. He calls himself a Whig, yet he'll split votes with a Tory—he'll drive with
the Debarrys. Now, gentlemen, if I said I'd got a vote, and anybody asked me what I should do
with it, I should say, 'I'll plump for Transome.' You've
will have some day, if such
men as Transome are returned; and then you'll be on a level with the first gentleman in the
land, and if he wants to sit in Parliament, he must take off his hat and ask your leave. But
though you haven't got a vote you can give a cheer for the right man, and Transome's not a man
like Garstin; if you lost a day's wages by giving a cheer for Transome, he'll make you amends.
That's the way a man who has no vote can yet serve himself and his country: he can lift up his
hand and shout 'Transome for ever'—'hurray for Transome.' Let the working men—let colliers and
navvies and stone-cutters, who between you and me have a good deal too much the worst of it,
as things are now— let them join together and give their hands and voices for the right man,
and they'll make the great people shake in their shoes a little; and when you shout for
Transome, remember you shout for more wages, and more of your rights, and you shout to get rid
of rats and sprats and such small animals, who are the tools the rich make use of to
squeeze the blood out of the poor man."
"I wish there'd be a row—I'd pommel him," said Dredge, who was generally felt to be speaking to the question.
"No, no, my friend—there you're a little wrong. No pommelling—no striking first. There you have the law and the constable against you. A little rolling in the dust and knocking hats off, a little pelting with soft things that'll stick and not bruise —all that doesn't spoil the fun. If a man is to speak when you don't like to hear him, it is but fair you should give him something he doesn't like in return. And the same if he's got a vote and doesn't use it for the good of the country; I see no harm in splitting his coat in a quiet way. A man must be taught what's right if he doesn't know it. But no kicks, no knocking down, no pommelling."
"It 'ud be good fun, though, if so- be ," said Old Sleck, allowing himself an
imaginative pleasure.
"Well, well, if a Spratt wants you to say Garstin, it's some pleasure to think you can say
Transome. Now, my notion is this. You are men who can put two and two together—I don't know a
more solid lot of fellows than you are; and what I say is, let the honest men in this country
who've got no vote show themselves in a body when they have the chance. Why, sirs, for every
Tory sneak that's got a vote, there's fifty-five fellows who must stand by and be expected
to-hold their tongues. But I say, let 'em hiss the sneaks, let 'em groan at
them . You know what a Tory is—one who wants to drive the working
men as he'd drive cattle. That's what a Tory is; and a Whig is no better, if he's like
Garstin. A Whig wants to knock the Tory down and get the whip, that's all. But Transome's
neither Whig nor Tory; he's the working man's friend, the collier's friend, the friend of the
honest navvy. And if he gets into Parliament, let me tell you, it will be the better for you.
I don't say it will be the better for overlookers and screws, and rats and sprats ;
but it will be the better for every good fellow who takes his pot at the Sugar Loaf."
Mr Johnson's exertions for the political education of the Sproxton men did not stop here,
which
"That's a right down genelman," said Pack, as he took the seat vacated by the orator, who had ridden away.
"What's his trade, think you?" said Gills, the wiry stone-cutter.
"Trade?" said Mr Chubb. "He's one of the top-sawyers of the country. He works with his head, you may see that."
"Let's have our pipes, then," said Old Sleck; "I'm pretty well tired o'jaw."
"So am I," said Dredge. "It's wriggling work— like follering a stoat. It makes a man dry. I'd as lief hear preaching, on'y there's nought to be got by't. I shouldn't know which end I stood on if it wasn't for the tickets and the treatin'."
"Oh, sir, 'twas that mixture of spite and over-fed merriment which passes for humour with the vulgar. In their fun they have much resemblance to a turkey-cock. It has a cruel beak, and a silly iteration of ugly sounds; it spreads its tail in self-glorification, but shows you the wrong side of that ornament—liking admiration, but knowing not what is admirable."
This Sunday evening, which promised to be so memorable in the experience of the
Sproxton miners, had its drama also for those unsatisfactory objects to Mr Johnson's moral
sense, the Debarrys. Certain incidents occurring at Treby Manor caused an excitement there
which spread from the dining-room to the stables; but no one underwent such agitating
transitions of feeling as Mr Scales. At six o'clock that superior butler was chuckling in
triumph at having played a fine and original practical joke on his rival Mr Christian. Some
two hours after that time, he was frightened, sorry, and even meek; he was on the brink of a
humiliating confession; his cheeks were almost livid; his hair was flatteued for want of due
attention from his fingers;
After service on that Sunday morning, Mr Philip Debarry had left the rest of the family to
go home in the carriage, and had remained at the Rectory to lunch with his uncle Augustus,
that he might consult him touching some letters of importance. He had returned the letters to
his pocket-book but had not returned the book to his pocket, and he finally walked away
leaving the enclosure of private papers and bank-notes on his uncle's escritoire. After his
arrival at home he was reminded of his omission, and immediately despatched Christian with a
note begging his uncle to seal up the pocket-book and send it by the bearer. This commission,
which was given between three and four o'clock, happened to be very unwelcome to the courier.
The fact was that Mr Christian, who had been remarkable through life for that power of
adapting himself to circumstances which enables a man to fall safely on all-fours in the most
hurried expulsions and escapes, was not exempt from bodily suffering—a circumstance to which
there is no known way of adapting one's self so as to be perfectly comfortable under it, or to
push
He had felt it expedient to take a slight dose this afternoon, and still he was not
altogether relieved at the time he set off to the Rectory. On returning with the valuable case
safely deposited in his hind pocket he felt increasing bodily uneasiness, and took another
dose. Thinking it likely that he looked rather pitiable, he chose not to proceed to the house
by the carriage-road. The servants often walked in the park on a Sunday, and he wished to
avoid any meeting. He would make a circuit, get
As he had expected, there were servants strolling in the park, but they did not all choose
the most frequented part. Mr Scales, in pursuit of a slight flirtation with the younger
lady's-maid, had preferred a more sequestered walk in the company of that aggreable nymph. And
it happened to be this pair, of all others, who alighted on the sleeping Christian—a sight
which at the very first moment caused Mr Scales a vague pleasure as at an incident that must
lead to something clever on his part. To play a trick, and make some one or other look
foolish, was held the most pointed form of wit throughout the back regions of the Manor, and
served as a constant substitute for theatrical entertainment: what
When Christian awoke, he was shocked to find himself in the twilight. He started up, shook
himself, missed something, and soon became aware what it was he missed. He did not doubt that
he had been robbed, and he at once foresaw that the consequences would be highly unpleasant.
In no way could the cause of the accident be so represented to Mr Philip Debarry as to prevent
him from viewing his hitherto unimpeachable factotum in a new and unfavourable light. And
though
"Give sorrow leave awhile, to tutor me To this submission."
Richard II.
Meanwhile Felix Holt had been making his way back from Sproxton to Treby in some
irritation and bitterness of spirit. For a little while he walked slowly along the direct
road, hoping that Mr Johnson would overtake him, in which case he would have the pleasure of
quarrelling with him, and telling him what he thought of his intentions in coming to cant at
the Sugar Loaf. But he presently checked himself in this folly and turned off again towards
the canal, that he might avoid the temptation of getting into a passion to no purpose.
"Where's the good," he thought, "of pulling at such a tangled skein as this electioneering
trickery? As long as three-fourths of the men in this country see nothing in an election but
self-interest, and nothing in self-interest but some form of greed, one might as well try to
purify the proceedings of the
Felix went along in the twilight struggling in this way with the intricacies of life, which
would certainly be greatly simplified if corrupt practices were the invariable mark of wrong
opinions. When he had crossed the common and had entered the
But Mr Lyon was not alone when Felix entered. Mr Nuttwood, the grocer, who was one of the
deacons, was complaining to him about the obstinate demeanour of the singers, who had declined
to change the tunes in accordance with a change in the selection of hymns, and had stretched
short
"Come in, my friend," said Mr Lyon, smiling at Felix, and then continuing in a faint voice, while he wiped the perspiration from his brow and bald crown, "Brother Nuttwood, we must be content to carry a thorn in our sides while the necessities of our imperfect state demand that there should be a body set apart and called a choir, whose special office it is to lead the singing, not because they are more disposed to the devout uplifting of praise, but because they are endowed with better vocal organs, and have attained more of the musician's art. For all office, unless it be accompanied by peculiar grace, becomes, as it were, a diseased organ, seeking to make itself too much of a centre. Singers, specially so called, are, it must be confessed, an anomaly among us who seek to reduce the Church to its primitive simplicity, and to cast away all that may obstruct the direct communion of spirit with spirit."
"They are so headstrong," said Mr Nuttwood, in a tone of sad perplexity, "that if we dealt
not
"Do you think it any better vanity to flatter yourself that God likes to hear you, though men don't?" said Felix, with unwarrantable bluntness.
The civil grocer was prepared to be scandalised by anything that came from Felix. In common
with many hearers in Malthouse Yard, he already felt an objection to a young man who was
notorious for having interfered in a question of wholesale and retail, which should have been
left to Providence. Old Mr Holt, being a church member, had probably had "leadings" which were
more to be relied on than his son's boasted knowledge. In any case, a little visceral
disturbance and inward chastisement to the consumers of questionable medicines would tend less
to obscure the divine glory than a show of punctilious morality in one who was not a
"professor." Besides, how was it to be known that the
"Mr Lyon may understand you, sir," he replied. "He seems to be fond of your conversation. But you have too much of the pride of human learning for me. I follow no new lights."
"Then follow an old one," said Felix, mischievously disposed towards a sleek tradesman. "Follow the light of the old-fashioned Presbyterians that I've heard sing at Glasgow. The preacher gives out the psalm, and then everybody sings a different tune, as it happens to turn up in their throats. It's a domineering thing to set a tune and expect everybody else to follow it. It's a denial of private judgment."
"Hush, hush, my young friend," said Mr Lyon, hurt by this levity, which glanced at himself
as well as at the deacon. "Play not with paradoxes.
Tired, even exhausted, as the minister had been when Felix Holt entered, the gathering excitement of speech gave more and more energy to his voice and manner; he walked away from the vestry table, he paused, and came back to it; he walked away again, then came back, and ended with his deepesttoned largo, keeping his hands clasped behind him, while his brown eyes were bright with the lasting youthfulness of enthusiastic thought and love. But to any one who had no share in the energies that were thrilling his little body, he would have looked queer enough. No sooner had he finished his eager speech, than he held out his hand to the deacon, and said, in his former faint tone of fatigue,
"God be with you, brother. We shall meet tomorrow, and we will see what can be done to subdue these refractory spirits."
When the deacon was gone, Felix said, "Forgive me, Mr Lyon; I was wrong, and you are right."
"Yes, yes, my friend; you have that mark of grace within you, that you are ready to acknowledge the justice of a rebuke. Sit down; you have something to say—some packet there."
They sat down at a corner of the small table, and Felix drew the note-book from his pocket to lay it down with the pocket-book, saying,
"I've had the ill-luck to be the finder of these things in the Debarrys' Park. Most likely they belong to one of the family at the Manor, or to some grandee who is staying there. I hate having anything to do with such people. They'll think me a poor rascal, and offer me money. You are a known man, and I thought you would be kind enough to relieve me by taking charge of these things, and writing to Debarry, not mentioning me, and asking him to send some one for them. I found them on the grass in the park this evening about half-past seven, in the corner we cross going to Sproxton."
"Stay," said Mr Lyon, "this little book is open; we may venture to look in it for some sign of ownership. There be others who possess property, and might be crossing that end of the park, besides the Debarrys."
As he lifted the note-book close to his eyes, the chain again slipped out. He arrested it
and held it
Felix observed his agitation, and was much surprised; but with a delicacy of which he was capable under all his abruptness, he said, "You are overcome with fatigue, sir. I was thoughtless to tease you with these matters at the end of Sunday, when you have been preaching three sermons."
Mr Lyon did not speak for a few moments, but at last he said,
"It is true. I am overcome. It was a name I saw—a name that called up a past sorrow. Fear not; I will do what is needful with these things. You may trust them to me."
With trembling fingers he replaced the chain, and tied both the large pocket-book and the
note-book
"Give me your arm to the door, my friend. I feel ill. Doubtless I am over-wearied."
The door was already open, and Lyddy was watching for her master's return. Felix therefore said Good-night and passed on, sure that this was what Mr Lyon would prefer. The minister's supper of warm porridge was ready by the kitchen-fire, where he always took it on a Sunday evening, and afterwards smoked his weekly pipe up the broad chimney—the one great relaxation he allowed himself. Smoking, he considered, was a recreation of the travailed spirit, which, if indulged in, might endear this world to us by the ignoble bonds of mere sensuous ease. Daily smoking might be lawful, but it was not expedient. And in this Esther concurred with a doctrinal eagerness that was unusual in her. It was her habit to go to her own room, professedly to bed, very early on Sundays— immediately on her return from chapel—that she might avoid her father's pipe. But this evening she had remained at home, under a true plea of not feeling well; and when she heard him enter, she ran out of the parlour to meet him.
"Father, you are ill," she said, as he tottered to the wicker-bottomed arm-chair, while Lyddy stood by, shaking her head.
"No, my dear," he answered feebly, as she took off his hat and looked in his face inquiringly; "I am weary."
"Let me lay these things down for you," said Esther, touching the bundle in the handkerchief.
"No; they are matters which I have to examine," he said, laying them on the table, and putting his arm across them. "Go you to bed, Lyddy."
"Not me, sir. If ever a man looked as if he was struck with death, it's you, this very night as here is."
"Nonsense, Lyddy," said Esther, angrily. "Go to bed when my father desires it. I will stay with him."
Lyddy was electrified by surprise at this new behaviour of Miss Esther's. She took her candle silently and went.
"Go you too, my dear," said Mr Lyon, tenderly, giving his hand to Esther, when Lyddy was gone. "It is your wont to go early. Why are you up?"
"Let me lift your porridge from before the fire, and stay with you, father. You think I'm so
"Child, what has happened? you have become the image of your mother to-night," said the minister, in a loud whisper. The tears came and relieved him, while Esther, who had stooped to lift the porridge from the fender, paused on one knee and looked up at him.
"She was very good to you?" asked Esther, softly.
"Yes, dear. She did not reject my affection. She thought not scorn of my love. She would have forgiven me, if I had erred against her, from very tenderness. Could you forgive me, child?"
"Father, I have not been good to you; but I will be, I will be," said Esther, laying her head on his knee.
He kissed her head. "Go to bed, my dear; I would be alone."
When Esther was lying down that night, she felt as if the little incidents between herself
and her father on this Sunday had made it an epoch. Very slight words and deeds may have a
sacramental efficacy, if we can cast our self-love behind us, in order to say or do them. And
it has been well believed through many ages that the beginning of compunction is the beginning
of a new life; that
But Esther persisted in assuring herself that she was not bending to any criticism from Felix. She was full of resentment against his rudeness, and yet more against his too harsh conception of her character. She was determined to keep as much at a distance from him as possible.
This man's metallic; at a sudden blow His soul rings hard. I cannot lay my palm, Trembling with life, upon that jointed brass. I shudder at the cold unanswering touch; But if it press me in response, I'm bruised.
The next morning, when the Debarrys, including the Rector, who had ridden over to the Manor early, were still seated at breakfast, Christian came in with a letter, saying that it had been brought by a man employed at the chapel in Malthouse Yard, who had been ordered by the minister to use all speed and care in the delivery.
The letter was addressed to Sir Maximus.
"Stay, Christian, it may possibly refer to the lost pocket-book," said Philip Debarry, who was beginning to feel rather sorry for his factotum, as a reaction from previous suspicions and indignation.
Sir Maximus opened the letter and felt for his glasses, but then said, "Here, you read it, Phil: the man writes a hand like small print."
Philip cast his eyes over it, and then read aloud in a tone of satisfaction:—
Sir,—I send this letter to apprise you that I have now in my possession certain articles, which, last evening, at about half-past seven o'clock, were found lying on the grass at the western extremity of your park. The articles are —1°, a well-filled pocket-book, of brown leather, fastened with a black ribbon and with a seal of red wax ; 2°, a small note-book, covered with gilded vellum, whereof the clasp was burst, and from out whereof had partly escaped a small gold chain, with seals and a locket attached, the locket bearing on the back a device, and round the face a female name.
Wherefore I request that you will further my effort to place these articles in the right hands, by ascertaining whether any person within your walls claims them as his property, and by sending that person to me (if such be found); for I will on no account let them pass from my care save into that of one who, declaring himself to be the owner, can state to me what is the impression on the seal, and what the device and name upon the locket.
I am, Sir,
Yours to command in all right dealing,
RUFUS LYON.
Malthouse Yard, Oct.3, 1832.
"Well done, old Lyon," said the Rector; "I didn't think that any composition of his would ever give me so much pleasure."
"What an old fox it is!" said Sir Maximus. "Why couldn't he send the things to me at once along with the letter?"
"No, no, Max; he uses a justifiable caution," said the Rector, a refined and rather severe likeness of his brother, with a ring of fearlessness and decision in his voice which startled all flaccid men and unruly boys. "What are you going to do, Phil?" he added, seeing his nephew rise.
"To write, of course. Those other matters are yours, I suppose?" said Mr Debarry, looking at Christian.
"Yes, sir."
"I shall send you with a letter to the preacher. You can describe your own property. And the seal, uncle—was it your coat-of-arms?"
"No, it was this head of Achilles. Here, I can take it off the ring, and you can carry it,
Christian. But don't lose that, for I've had it ever since eighteen hundred. I should like to
send my compliments with it," the Rector went on, looking at his brother, "and beg that since
he has so much wise caution at command, he would exercise a little in
"How did Dissenters, and Methodists, and Quakers, and people of that sort first come up, uncle?" said Miss Selina, a radiant girl of twenty, who had given much time to the harp.
"Dear me, Selina," said her elder sister, Harriet, whose forte was general knowledge, "don't you remember 'Woodstock'? They were in Cromwell's time."
"O! Holdenough, and those people? Yes; but they preached in the churches; they had no chapels. Tell me, uncle Gus; I like to be wise," said Selina, looking up at the face which was smiling down on her with a sort of severe benignity. "Phil says I'm an ignorant puss."
"The seeds of Nonconformity were sown at the Reformation, my dear, when some obstinate men made scruples about surplices and the place of the communion-table, and other trifles of that sort. But the Quakers came up about Cromwell's time, and the Methodists only in the last century. The first Methodists were regular clergymen, the more's the pity."
"But all those wrong things—why didn't government put them down?"
"Ah, to be sure," fell in Sir Maximus, in a cordial tone of corroboration.
"Because error is often strong, and government is often weak, my dear. Well, Phil, have you finished your letter?"
"Yes, I will read it to you," said Philip, turning and leaning over the back of his chair with the letter in his hand.
There is a portrait of Mr Philip Debarry still to be seen at Treby Manor, and a very fine bust of him at Rome, where he died fifteen years later, a convert to Catholicism. His face would have been plain but for the exquisite setting of his hazel eyes, which fascinated even the dogs of the household. The other features, though slight and irregular, were redeemed from triviality by the stamp of gravity and intellectual preoccupation in his face and bearing. As he read aloud, his voice was what his uncle's might have been if it had been modulated by delicate health and a visitation of self-doubt.
Sir,—In reply to the letter with which you have favoured me this morning, I beg to state
that the articles you describe were lost from the pocket of my
servant, who is the bearer of this letter to you, and is the claimant of the vellum
note-book and the gold chain. The large leathern pocket-book is my own property, and the
impression on the wax, a helmeted head of Achilles, was made by my uncle, the Rev. Augustus
Debarry, who allows me to forward his seal to you in proof that I am not making a mistaken
claim.
I feel myself under deep obligation to you, sir, for the care and trouble you have taken
in order to restore to its right owner a piece of property which happens to be of particular
importance to me. And I shall consider myself doubly fortunate if at any time you can point
out to me some method by which I may procure you as lively a satisfaction as I am now
feeling, in that full and speedy relief from anxiety which I owe to your considerate
conduct.
I remain, Sir, your obliged and faithful servant,
PHILIP DEBARRY.
"You know best, Phil, of course," said Sir Maximus, pushing his plate from him, by way of
interjection. "But it seems to me you exaggerate preposterously every little service a man
happens to do for you. Why should you make a general offer of that sort? How do you know
"You are afraid of my committing myself to 'the bottomless perjury of an et cetera,'" said Philip, smiling, as he turned to fold his letter. "But I think I am not doing any mischief; at all events I could not be content to say less. And I have a notion that he would regard a present of game just now as an insult. I should, in his place."
"Yes, yes, you; but you don't make yourself a measure of Dissenting preachers, I hope," said
Sir Maximus, rather wrathfully. "What do you say, Gus?"
"Phil is right," said the Rector, in an absolute tone. "I would not deal with a Dissenter, or put profits into the pocket of a Radical which I might put into the pocket of a good Churchman and a quiet subject. But if the greatest scoundrel in the world made way for me, or picked my hat up, I would thank him. So would you, Max."
"Pooh! I didn't mean that one shouldn't behave like a gentleman," said Sir Maximus, in some
Meanwhile, in that somewhat dim locality the possible claimant of the note-book and the
chain was thought of and expected with palpitating agitation. Mr Lyon was seated in his study,
looking haggard and already aged from a sleepless night. He was so afraid lest his emotion
should deprive him of the presence of mind necessary to the due attention to particulars in
the coming interview, that he continued to occupy his sight and touch with the objects which
had stirred the depths, not only of memory, but of dread. Once again he unlocked a small box
which stood beside his desk, and took from it a little oval locket, and compared this with one
which hung with the seals on the stray gold chain. There was the same device in enamel on the
back of both: clasped hands surrounded with blue flowers. Both
Maurice ; the name on the locket which hung with the
seals was Annette , and within the circle of this name there was a lover's knot of
light-brown hair, which matched a curl that lay in the box. The hair in the locket which bore
the name of Maurice was of a very dark brown, and before returning it to the drawer Mr Lyon
noted the colour and quality of this hair more carefully than ever. Then he recurred to the
note-book: undoubtedly there had been something, probably a third name, beyond the names
Maurice Christian , which had themselves been rubbed and slightly smeared as if by
accident; and from the very first examination in the vestry, Mr Lyon could not prevent himself
from transferring the mental image of the third name in faint lines to the rubbed leather. The
leaves of the note-book seemed to have been recently inserted; they were of fresh white paper,
and only bore some abbreviations in pencil with a notation of small sums. Nothing could be
gathered from the comparison of the writing in the book with that of the yellow letters which
lay in the box: the
All these possibilities, which would remove the pressing need for difficult action, Mr Lyon
represented to himself, but he had no effective belief in them; his belief went with his
strongest feeling, and in these moments his strongest feeling was dread. He trembled under the
weight that seemed already added to his own sin; he felt himself already confronted by
Annette's husband and Esther's father. Perhaps the father was a gentleman
"The child will not be sorry to leave this poor home, and I shall be guilty in her sight."
He was walking about among the rows of books when there came a loud rap at the outer door. The rap shook him so that he sank into his chair, feeling almost powerless. Lyddy presented herself.
"Here's ever such a fine man from the Manor wants to see you, sir. Dear heart, dear heart! shall I tell him you're too bad to see him?"
"Show him up," said Mr Lyon, making an effort to rally. When Christian appeared, the minister half rose, leaning on an arm of his chair, and said, "Be seated, sir," seeing nothing but that a tall man was entering.
"I've brought you a letter from Mr Debarry," said Christian, in an off-hand manner. This
rusty little man, in his dismal chamber, seemed to the Ulysses of the steward's room a
pitiable sort of human curiosity, to whom a man of the world would speak rather loudly, in
accommodation to an eccentricity which was likely to be accompanied with deafness. One cannot
be eminent in everything;
écarté , or at betting, or in any other contest
suitable to a person of figure.
As he seated himself, Mr Lyon opened the letter, and held it close to his eyes, so that his face was hidden. But at the word "servant" he could not avoid starting, and looking off the letter towards the bearer. Christian, knowing what was in the letter, conjectured that the old man was amazed to learn that so distinguished-looking a personage was a servant; he leaned forward with his elbows on his knees, balanced his cane on his fingers, and began a whispering whistle. The minister checked himself, finished the reading of the letter, and then slowly and nervously put on his spectacles to survey this man, between whose fate and his own there might be a terrible collision. The word "servant" had been a fresh caution to him. He must do nothing rashly. Esther's lot was deeply concerned.
"Here is the seal mentioned in the letter," said Christian.
Mr Lyon drew the pocket-book from his desk,
He held it out with the seal, and Christian rose to take them, saying, carelessly, "The other things— the chain and the little book—are mine."
"Your name then is—"
"Maurice Christian."
A spasm shot through Mr Lyon. It had seemed possible that he might hear another name, and be freed from the worse half of his anxiety. His next words were not wisely chosen, but escaped him impulsively.
"And you have no other name?"
"What do you mean?" said Christian, sharply.
"Be so good as to reseat yourself."
Christian did not comply. "I'm rather in a hurry, sir," he said, recovering his coolness.
"If it suits you to restore to me those small articles of mine, I shall be glad; but I would
rather leave them behind than be detained." He had reflected that the minister was simply a
punctilious old bore. The question meant nothing else. But Mr Lyon had wrought himself up to
the task of finding out, then and there, if possible, whether or not this were Annette's
husband.
"Nay, sir, I will not detain you unreasonably," he said, in a firmer tone than before. "How long have these articles been your property?"
"Oh, for more than twenty years," said Christian, carelessly. He was not altogether easy under the minister's persistence, but for that very reason he showed no more impatience.
"You have been in France and in Germany?"
"I have been in most countries on the Continent."
"Be so good as to write me your name," said Mr Lyon, dipping a pen in the ink, and holding it out with a piece of paper.
Christian was much surprised, but not now greatly alarmed. In his rapid conjectures as to the explanation of the minister's curiosity, he had alighted on one which might carry advantage rather than inconvenience. But he was not going to commit himself.
"Before I oblige you there, sir," he said, laying down the pen, and looking straight at Mr
Lyon, "I must know exactly the reasons you have for putting these questions to me. You are a
stranger to me— an excellent person, I daresay—but I have no concern
The cool stare, the hard challenging voice, with which these words were uttered, made them
fall like the beating cutting chill of heavy hail on Mr Lyon. He sank back in his chair in
utter irresolution and helplessness. How was it possible to lay bare the sad and sacred past
in answer to such a call as this? The dread with which he had thought of this man's coming,
the strongly-confirmed suspicion that he was really Annette's husband, intensified the
antipathy created by his gestures and glances. The sensitive little minister knew
instinctively that words which would cost him efforts as painful as the obedient footsteps of
a wounded bleeding hound that wills a foreseen throe, would fall on this man as the pressure
of tender fingers falls on a brazen glove. And Esther
"It is true, sir; you have told me all I can demand. I have no sufficient reason for detaining your property further."
He handed the note-book and chain to Christian, who had been observing him narrowly, and now said, in a tone of indifference, as he pocketed the articles,
"Very good, sir. I wish you a good-morning."
"Good-morning," said Mr Lyon, feeling, while the door closed behind his guest, that mixture
of uneasiness and relief which all procrastination of difficulty produces in minds capable of
strong forecast. The work was still to be done. He had still before him the task of learning
everything that
Christian, as he made his way back along Malthouse Lane, was thinking, "This old fellow has got some secret in his head. It's not likely he can know anything about me; it must be about Bycliffe. But Bycliffe was a gentleman: how should he ever have had anything to do with such a seedy old ranter as that?"
And doubt shall be as lead upon the feet Of thy most anxious will.
Mr Lyon was careful to look in at Felix as soon as possible after Christian's
departure, to tell him that his trust was discharged. During the rest of the day he was
somewhat relieved from agitating reflections by the necessity of attending to his ministerial
duties, the rebuke of rebellious singers being one of them; and on his return from the Monday
evening prayer-meeting he was so overcome with weariness that he went to bed without taking
note of any objects in his study. But when he rose the
I shall consider myself doubly fortunate if at any time
you can point out to me some method by which I may procure you as lively a satisfaction as I
am now feeling, in that full and speedy relief from anxiety which I owe to your considerate
conduct ."
To understand how these words could carry the suggestion they actually had for the minister
in a crisis of peculiar personal anxiety and struggle, we must bear in mind that for many
years he had walked through life with the sense of having for a space been unfaithful to what
he esteemed the highest trust ever committed to man—the ministerial vocation. In a mind of any
nobleness, a lapse into transgression against an object still regarded as supreme, issues in a
new and purer devotedness, chastised by humility and watched over by a passionate regret. So
it was with that ardent spirit which animated the little body of Rufus Lyon. Once in his life
he had been blinded, deafened, hurried along by rebellious impulse; he had gone astray after
his own desires, and had let the fire die
Now here was an opportunity brought by a combination of that unexpected incalculable kind
which might be regarded as the Divine emphasis invoking especial attention to trivial
events—an opportunity of securing what Rufus Lyon had often wished for as a means of honouring
truth, and exhibiting error in the character of a stammering, halting, short-breathed usurper
of office and dignity. What was more exasperating to a zealous preacher, with whom copious
speech was not a difficulty but a relief—who never lacked argument, but only combatants and
listeners—than to reflect that there were thousands on thousands of pulpits in this kingdom,
supplied with handsome sounding-boards, and occupying an advantageous position in buildings
far larger than the chapel in Malthouse Yard—buildings sure to be places of resort, even as
the markets were, if only from habit and interest; and that these pulpits were filled, or
Here, then, was the longed-for opportunity. Here was an engagement—an expression of a strong
wish—on the part of Philip Debarry, if it were in his power, to procure a satisfaction to
Rufus Lyon. How had that man of God and exemplary Independent minister, Mr Ainsworth, of
persecuted sanctity, conducted himself when a similar occasion had befallen
What if he were inwardly torn by doubt and anxiety concerning his own private relations and the facts of his past life? That danger of absorption within the narrow bounds of self only urged him the more towards action which had a wider bearing, and might tell on the welfare of England at large. It was decided. Before the minister went down to his breakfast that morning he had written the following letter to Mr Philip Debarry:—
Sir,—Referring to your letter of yesterday, I find the following words: "I shall
consider myself doubly fortunate if at any time you can point out to me some method by which
I may procure you as lively a satisfaction as I am now feeling, in that full and speedy
relief from anxiety which I owe to your considerate conduct ."
I am not unaware, sir, that, in the usage of the
world, there are words of courtesy (so called) which are understood, by those amongst whom
they are current, to have no precise meaning, and to constitute no bond or obligation. I will
not now insist that this is an abuse of language, wherein our fallible nature requires the
strictest safeguards against laxity and misapplication, for I do not apprehend that in
writing the words I have above quoted, you were open to the reproach of using phrases which,
while seeming to carry a specific meaning, were really no more than what is called a polite
form. I believe, sir, that you used these words advisedly, sincerely, and with an honourable
intention of acting on them as a pledge, should such action be demanded. No other supposition
on my part would correspond to the character you bear as a young man who aspires (albeit
mistakenly) to engraft the finest fruits of public virtue on a creed and institutions,
whereof the sap is composed rather of human self-seeking than of everlasting truth.
Wherefore I act on this my belief in the integrity of your written word; and I beg you
to procure for me (as it is doubtless in your power) that I may be allowed a public
discussion with your near relative, the Rector of this parish, the Reverned Augustus Debarry,
to be held in the large room of the Free School,
or in the Assembly Room of the Marquis of Granby, these being the largest covered spaces
at our command. For I presume he would neither allow me to speak within his church, nor would
consent himself to speak within my chapel; and the probable inclemency of the approaching
season forbids an assured expectation that we could discourse in the open air. The subjects I
desire to discuss are,—first, the Constitution of the true Church; and, secondly, the bearing
thereupon of the English Reformation. Confidently expecting that you will comply with this
request, which is the sequence of your expressed desire, I remain, sir, yours, with the
respect offered to a sincere withstander,
RUFUS LYON.
Malthouse Yard.
After writing this letter, the good Rufus felt that serenity and elevation of mind which is
infallibly brought by a preoccupation with the wider relations of things. Already he was
beginning to sketch the course his argument might most judiciously take in the coming debate;
his thoughts were running into sentences, and marking off careful exceptions in parentheses;
and he had come down and seated himself at the breakfast-table quite automatically, without
expectation of toast
Esther noticed that her father was in a fit of abstraction, that he seemed to swallow his coffee and toast quite unconsciously, and that he vented from time to time a low guttural interjection, which was habitual with him when he was absorbed by an inward discussion. She did not disturb him by remarks, and only wondered whether anything unusual had occurred on Sunday evening. But at last she thought it needful to say, "You recollect what I told you yesterday, father?"
"Nay, child; what?" said Mr Lyon, rousing himself.
"That Mr Jermyn asked me if you would probably be at home this morning before one o'clock."
Esther was surprised to see her father start and change colour as if he had been shaken by some sudden collision before he answered,
"Assuredly; I do not intend to move from my study after I have once been out to give this letter to Zachary."
"Shall I tell Lyddy to take him up at once to your study if he comes? If not, I shall have to stay in my own room, because I shall be at home all this morning, and it is rather cold now to sit without a fire."
"Yes, my dear, let him come up to me; unless, indeed, he should bring a second person, which might happen, seeing that in all likelihood he is coming, as hitherto, on electioneering business. And I could not well accommodate two visitors up-stairs."
While Mr Lyon went out to Zachary, the pewopener, to give him a second time the commission
of carrying a letter to Treby Manor, Esther gave her injunction to Lyddy that if one gentleman
came he was to be shown up-stairs—if two, they were to be shown into the parlour. But she had
to resolve various questions before Lyddy clearly saw what was expected of her,—as that, "if
it was
Esther always avoided asking questions of Lyddy, who found an answer as she found a key, by pouring out a pocketful of miscellanies. But she had remarked so many indications that something had happened to cause her father unusual excitement and mental preoccupation, that she could not help connecting with them the fact of this visit from the Manor, which he had not mentioned to her.
She sat down in the dull parlour and took up her netting; for since Sunday she had felt
unable to read when she was alone, being obliged, in spite of herself, to think of Felix
Holt—to imagine what he would like her to be, and what sort of views he took of life so as to
make it seem valuable in the absence of all elegance, luxury, gaiety, or romance. Had he yet
reflected that he had behaved very
In this way Esther strove to see that Felix was thoroughly in the wrong—at least, if he did not come again expressly to show that he was sorry.
These men have no votes. Why should I court them? No votes, but power. What! over charities? No, over brains; which disturbs the canvass. In a natural state of things the average price of a vote at paddlebrook is nine-and-sixpence, throwing the fifty-pound tenants, who cost nothing, into the divisor. But these talking men cause an artificial rise of prices.
The expected important knock at the door came about twelve o'clock, and Esther
could hear that there were two visitors. Immediately the parlour door was opened and the
shaggy-haired, cravatless image of Felix Holt, which was just then full in the mirror of
Esther's mind, was displaced by the highly-contrasted appearance of a personage whose name she
guessed before Mr Jermyn had announced it. The perfect morning costume of that day differed
much from our present ideal: it was essential that a gentleman's chin should be well propped,
that his collar should have a voluminous roll, that his waistcoat should imply much
discrimination, and that his buttons should be arranged in a
But we have some notions of beauty and fitness which withstand the centuries; and quite irrespective of dates, it would be pronounced that at the age of thirty-four Harold Transome was a striking and handsome man. He was one of those people, as Denner had remarked, to whose presence in the room you could not be indifferent: if you do not hate or dread them, you must find the touch of their hands, nay, their very shadows, agreeable.
Esther felt a pleasure quite new to her as she saw his finely-embrowned face and full bright
eyes turned towards her with an air of deference by which gallantry must commend itself to a
refined woman who is not absolutely free from vanity. Harold Transome regarded women as slight
things, but he was fond of slight things in the intervals of business; and he held it among
the chief arts of life to keep these pleasant diversions within such bounds that they should
never interfere with the course of his serious ambition.
"My father expected you," she said to Mr Jermyn. "I delivered your letter to him yesterday. He will be down immediately."
She disentangled her foot from her netting and wound it up.
"I hope you are not going to let us disturb you," said Harold, noticing her action. "We come to discuss election affairs, and we particularly desire to interest the ladies."
"I have no interest with any one who is not already on the right side," said Esther, smiling.
"I am happy to see at least that you wear the Liberal colours."
"I fear I must confess that it is more from love of blue than from love of Liberalism. Yellow opinions could only have brunettes on their side." Esther spoke with her usual pretty fluency, but she had no sooner uttered the words than she thought how angry they would have made Felix.
"If my cause is to be recommended by the becomingness of my colours, then I am sure you are acting in my interest by wearing them."
Esther rose to leave the room.
"Must you really go?" said Harold, preparing to open the door for her.
"Yes; I have an engagement—a lesson at halfpast twelve," said Esther, bowing and floating out like a blue-robed Naïad, but not without a suffused blush as she passed through the doorway.
It was a pity the room was so small, Harold Transome thought: this girl ought to walk in a
house where there were halls and corridors. But he had soon dismissed this chance
preoccupation with Esther; for before the door was closed again Mr Lyon had entered, and
Harold was entirely bent on what had been the object of his visit. The minister, thought no
elector himself, had considerable influence over Liberal electors, and it was the part of
wisdom in a candidate to cement all political adhesion by a little personal regard, if
possible. Garstin was a harsh and wiry fellow; he seemed to suggest that sour whey, which some
say was the original meaning of Whig in the Scottish, and it might assist the theoretic
advantages of Radicalism if it could be associated with a more generous presence.
"I am very glad to have secured this opportunity of making your personal acquaintance, Mr Lyon," said Harold, putting out his hand to the minister when Jermyn had mentioned his name. "I am to address the electors here, in the Market-Place, tomorrow; and I should have been sorry to do so without first paying my respects privately to my chief friends, as there may be points on which they particularly wish me to explain myself."
"You speak civilly, sir, and reasonably," said Mr Lyon, with a vague shortsighted gaze, in which a candidate's appearance evidently went for nothing. "Pray be seated, gentlemen. It is my habit to stand."
He placed himself at a right angle with his visitors, his worn look of intellectual
eagerness, slight frame, and rusty attire, making an odd contrast with their flourishing
persons, unblemished costume,
"I am aware—Mr Jermyn has told me," said Harold, "what good service you have done me already, Mr Lyon. The fact is, a man of intellect like you was especially needed in my case. The race I am running is really against Garstin only, who calls himself a Liberal, though he cares for nothing, and understands nothing, except the interests of the wealthy traders. And you have been able to explain the difference between Liberal and Liberal, which, as you and I know, is something like the difference between fish and fish."
"Your comparison is not unapt, sir," said Mr Lyon, still holding his spectacles in his hand,
"at this epoch, when the mind of the nation has been strained on the passing of one measure.
Where a great weight has to be moved, we require not so
"Just so," said Harold, who was quick at new languages, and still quicker at translating
other men's generalities into his own special and immediate purposes, "men who will be
satisfied if they can only bring in a plutocracy, buy up the land, and stick the old crests on
their new gateways. Now the practical point to secure against these false Liberals at present
is, that our electors should not
"I hope not, sir—I hope not," said Mr Lyon, gravely; finally putting on his spectacles and
examining the face of the candidate, whom he was preparing to turn into a catechumen. For the
good Rufus, conscious of his political importance as an organ of persuasion, felt it his duty
to catechise a little, and also to do his part towards impressing a
Comprehensive talkers are apt to be tiresome when we are not athirst for information, but, to be quite fair, we must admit that superior reticence is a good deal due to the lack of matter. Speech is often barren; but silence also does not necessarily brood over a full nest. Your still fowl, blinking at you without remark, may all the while be sitting on one addled nest-egg; and when it takes to cackling, will have nothing to announce but that addled delusion.
Harold Transome was not at all a patient man, but in matters of business he was quite awake
to his cue, and in this case it was perhaps easier to
"I must really be at the office in five minutes. You will find me there, Mr Transome; you have probably still many things to say to Mr Lyon."
"I beseech you, sir," said the minister, changing colour, and by a quick movement laying his hand on Jermyn's arm—"I beseech you to favour me with an interview on some private business—this evening, if it were possible."
Mr Lyon, like others who are habitually occupied with impersonal subjects, was liable to this impulsive sort of action. He snatched at the details of life as if they were darting past him—as if they were like the ribbons at his knees, which would never be tied all day if they were not tied on the instant. Through these spasmodic leaps out of his abstractions into real life, it constantly happened that he suddenly took a course which had been the subject of too much doubt with him ever to have been determined on by continuous thought. And if Jermyn had not startled him by threatening to vanish just when he was plunged in politics, he might never have made up his mind to confide in a worldly attorney.
("An odd man," as Mrs Muscat observed, "to have such a gift in the pulpit. But there's One knows better than we do—" which, in a lady who rarely felt her judgment at a loss, was a concession that showed much piety.)
Jermyn was surprised at the little man's eagerness. "By all means," he answered, quite cordially. "Could you come to my office at eight o'clock?"
"For several reasons, I must beg you to come to me."
"O, very good. I'll walk out and see you this evening, if possible. I shall have much pleasure in being of any use to you." Jermyn felt that in the eyes of Harold he was appearing all the more valuable when his services were thus in request. He went out, and Mr Lyon easily relapsed into politics, for he had been on the brink of a favourite subject on which he was at issue with his fellow-Liberals.
At that time, when faith in the efficacy of political change was at fever-heat in ardent
Reformers, many measures which men are still discussing with little confidence on either side,
were then talked about and disposed of like property in near reversion. Crying abuses—"bloated
paupers," "bloated pluralists," and other corruptions hindering men from being wise and
happy—had to be fought against and slain. Such
Now on this question of the ballot the minister strongly took the negative side. Our pet
opinions are usually those which place us in a minority of a minority amongst our own
party:—very happily, else those poor opinions, born with no silver spoon in their mouths—how
would they get nourished and fed? So it was with Mr Lyon and his objection to
"I have no objection to the ballot," said Harold, "but I think that is not the sort of thing we have to work at just now. We shouldn't get it. And other questions are imminent."
"Then, sir, you would vote for the ballot?" said Mr Lyon, stroking his chin.
"Certainly, if the point came up. I have too much respect for the freedom of the voter to oppose anything which offers a chance of making that freedom more complete."
Mr Lyon looked at the speaker with a pitying smile and a subdued "h'm—m—m," which Harold took for a sign of satisfaction. He was soon undeceived.
"You grieve me, sir; you grieve me much. And I pray you to reconsider this question, for it
will take you to the root, as I think, of poltical morality. I engage to show to any impartial
mind, duly furnished with the principles of public and private rectitude, that the ballot
would be pernicious, and that if it were not pernicious it would still be futile. I will show,
first, that it would be futile as a preservative
"Confound this old man," thought Harold. "I'll never make a canvassing call on a preacher again, unless he has lost his voice from a cold." He was going to excuse himself as prudently as he could, by deferring the subject till the morrow, and inviting Mr Lyon to come to him in the committeeroom before the time appointed for his public speech; but he was relieved by the opening of the door. Lyddy put in her head to say,
"If you please, sir, here's Mr Holt wants to know if he may come in and speak to the gentleman. He begs your pardon, but you're to say 'no' if you don't like him to come."
"Nay, show him in at once, Lyddy. A young man," Mr Lyon went on, speaking to Harold, "whom a representative ought to know—no voter, but a man of ideas and study."
"He is thoroughly welcome," said Harold, truthfully enough, though he felt little interest
in the
"Mr Holt, sir," said the minister, as Felix entered, "is a young friend of mine, whose opinions on some points I hope to see altered, but who has a zeal for public justice which I trust he will never lose."
"I am glad to see Mr Holt," said Harold, bowing. He perceived from the way in which Felix bowed to him and turned to the most distant spot in the room, that the candidate's shake of the hand would not be welcome here. "A formidable fellow," he thought, "capable of mounting a cart in the marketplace to-morrow and cross-examining me, if I say anything that doesn't please him."
"Mr Lyon," said Felix, "I have taken a liberty with you in asking to see Mr Transome when he
is engaged with you. But I have to speak to him on a matter which I shouldn't care to make
public at present, and it is one on which I am sure you will back me. I heard that Mr Transome
was here, so I ventured to come. I hope you will both excuse me, as my business refers to some
electioneering
"Pray go on," said Harold, expecting something unpleasant.
"I'm not going to speak against treating voters," said Felix; "I suppose buttered ale, and grease of that sort to make the wheels go, belong to the necessary humbug of Representation. But I wish to ask you, Mr Transome, whether it is with your knowledge that agents of yours are bribing rough fellows who are no voters—the colliers and navvies at Sproxton—with the chance of extra drunkenness, that they may make a posse on your side at the nomination and polling?"
"Certainly not," said Harold. "You are aware, my dear sir, that a candidate is very much at the mercy of his agents as to the means by which he is returned, especially when many years' absence has made him a stranger to the men actually conducting business. But are you sure of your facts?"
"As sure as my senses can make me," said Felix, who then briefly described what had happened
on Sunday. "I believed that you were ignorant of all this, Mr Transome," he ended, "and that
was why I thought some good might be done by speaking to you. If not, I should be tempted to
expose
"Your energetic protest is needless here, sir," said Harold, offended at what sounded like a threat, and was certainly premature enough to be in bad taste. In fact, this error of behaviour in Felix proceeded from a repulsion which was mutual. It was a constant source of irritation to him that the public men on his side were, on the whole, not conspicuously better than the public men on the other side; that the spirit of innovation, which with him was a part of religion, was in many of its mouthpieces no more of a religion than the faith in rotten boroughs; and he was thus predisposed to distrust Harold Transome. Harold, in his turn, disliked impracticable notions of loftiness and purity—disliked all enthusiasm; and he thought he saw a very troublesome, vigorous incorporation of that nonsense in Felix. But it would be foolish to exasperate him in any way.
"If you choose to accompany me to Jermyn's
"Doubtless," said the minister, who liked the candidate very well, and believed that he would be amenable to argument; "and I would caution my young friend against a too great hastiness of words and action. David's cause against Saul was a righteous one; nevertheless not all who clave unto David were righteous men."
"The more was the pity, sir," said Felix. "Especially if he winked at their malpractices."
Mr Lyon smiled, shook his head, and stroked his favourite's arm deprecatingly.
"It is rather too much for any man to keep the consciences of all his party," said Harold. "If you had lived in the East, as I have, you would be more tolerant. More tolerant, for example, of an active industrious selfishness, such as we have here, though it may not always be quite scrupulous: you would see how much better it is than an idle selfishness. I have heard it said, a bridge is a good thing—worth helping to make, though half the men who worked at it were rogues."
"O yes!" said Felix, scornfully, "give me a
"Then we had better cut the matter short, as I propose, by going at once to Jermyn's," said Harold. "In that case, I must bid you good-morning, Mr Lyon."
"I would fain," said the minister, looking uneasy—"I would fain have had a further opportunity of considering that question of the ballot with you. The reasons against it need not be urged lengthily; they only require complete enumeration to prevent any seeming hiatus, where an opposing fallacy might thrust itself in."
"Never fear, sir," said Harold, shaking Mr Lyon's hand cordially, "there will be opportunities. Shall I not see you in the committee-room to-morrow?"
"I think not," said Mr Lyon, rubbing his brow, with a sad remembrance of his personal anxieties.
"But I will send you, if you will permit me, a brief writing, on which you can mediate at your leisure."
"I shall be delighted. Good-bye."
Harold and Felix went out together; and the minister, going up to his dull study, asked himself whether, under the pressure of conflicting experience, he had faithfully discharged the duties of the past interview?
If a cynical sprite were present, riding on one of the motes in that dusty room, he may have
made himself merry at the illusions of the little minister who brought so much conscience to
bear on the production of so slight an effect. In confess to smiling myself, being sceptical
as to the effect of ardent appeals and nice distinctions on gentlemen who are got up, both
inside and out, as candidates in the style of the period; but I never smiled at Mr Lyon's
trustful energy without falling to penitence and veneration immediately after. For what we
call illusions are often, in truth, a wider vision of past and present realities—a willing
movement of a man's soul with the larger sweep of the world's forces—a movement towards a more
assured end than the chances of a single life. We see human heroism broken into units and say,
this unit did little—might as well not have been. But in this way we might break up a great
army into units; in this way we might break the sunlight into fragments, and think that this
and the other might be cheaply parted
At present, looking back on that day at Treby, it seems to me that the sadder illusion lay with Harold Transome, who was trusting in his own skill to shape the success of his own morrows, ignorant of what many yesterdays had determined for him beforehand.
It is a good and soothfast saw; Half-roasted never will be raw; No dough is dried once more to meal, No crock new-shapen by the wheel; You can't turn curds to milk again, Nor Now, by wishing, back to Then; And having tasted stolen honey, You can't buy innoceuce for money.
Jermyn was not particularly pleased that some chance had apparently hindered Harold Transome from making other canvassing visits immediately after leaving Mr Lyon, and so had sent him back to the office earlier than he had been expected to come. The inconvenient chance he guessed at once to be represented by Felix Holt, whom he knew very well by Trebian report to be a young man with so little of the ordinary Christian motives as to making an appearance and getting on in the world, that he presented no handle to any judicious and respectable person who might be willing to make use of him.
Harold Transome, on his side, was a good deal
"A question about the electioneering at Sproxton. Can you give your attention to it at once? Here is Mr Holt, who has come to me about the business."
"A—yes—a—certainly," said Jermyn, who, as usual, was the more cool and deliberate because he
'I have simply to complain,' said Felix, "that one of your agents has been sent on a bribing expedition to Sproxton—with what purpose you, sir, may know better than I do. Mr Transome, it appears, was ignorant of the affair, and does not approve it."
Jermyn, looking gravely and steadily at Felix while he was speaking, at the same time drew forth a small sheaf of papers from his side-pocket, and then, as he turned his eyes slowly on Harold, felt in his waistcoat-pocket for his pencil-case.
"I don't approve it at all," said Harold, who hated Jermyn's calculated slowness and conceit in his own impenetrability. "Be good enough to put a stop to it, will you?"
"Mr Holt, I know, is an excellent Liberal," said Jermyn, just inclining his head to Harold,
and then alternately looking at Felix and docketing his bills; "but he is perhaps too
inexperienced to be aware
"I know very little about holding ribbons," said Felix; "but I saw clearly enough at once that more mischief had been done than could be well mended. Though I believe, if it were heartily tried, the treating might be reduced, and something might be done to hinder the men from turning out in a body to make a noise, which might end in worse."
"They might be hindered from making a noise on our side," said Jermyn, smiling. "That is perfectly true. But if they made a noise on the other—would your purpose be answered better, sir?"
Harold was moving about in an irritated manner while Felix and Jermyn were speaking. He preferred leaving the talk to the attorney, of whose talk he himself liked to keep as clear as possible.
"I can only say," answered Felix, "that if you make use of those heavy fellows when the
drink is in them, I shouldn't like your responsibility. You
"A lawyer may well envy your command of language, Mr Holt," said Jermyn, pocketing his bills
again, and shutting up his pencil; "but he would not be satisfied with the accuracy—a—of your
terms. You must permit me to check your use of the word 'bribery.' The essence of bribery is,
that it should be legally proved; there is not such a thing—a— in rerum natura —a—as
unproved bribery. There has been no such thing as bribery at Sproxton, I'll answer for it. The
presence of a body of stalwart fellows on—a—the Liberal side will tend to preserve order; for
we know that the benefit clubs from the Pitchley district will show for Debarry. Indeed, the
gentleman who has conducted the canvass at Sproxton is experienced in Parliamentary affairs,
and would not exceed—a—the necessary measures that a rational judgment would dictate."
"What! you mean the man who calls himself Johnson?" said Felix, in a tone of disgust.
Before Jermyn chose to answer, Harold broke in, saying, quickly and peremptorily, "The long
and the short of it is this, Mr Holt: I shall desire and
"I suppose I must be content," said Felix, not thoroughly propitiated. "I bid you good-morning, gentlemen."
When he was gone out, and had closed the door behind him, Harold, turning round and flashing, in spite of himself, an angry look at Jermyn, said,
"And who is Johnson? an alias , I suppose. It seems you are fond of the name."
Jermyn turned perceptibly paler, but disagreeables of this sort between himself and Harold had been too much in his anticipations of late for him to be taken by surprise. He turned quietly round and just touched the shoulder of the person seated at the bureau, who now rose.
"On the contrary," Jermyn answered, "the Johnson in question is this gentleman, whom I have
the pleasure of introducing to you as one of my most active helpmates in electioneering
business—Mr Johnson, of Bedford Row, London. I am comparatively a novice—a—in these matters.
But he was engaged with James Putty in two hardly-contested
haud consimili
ingenio —a—in tactics—a—and in experience?"
"Makepiece is a wonderful man, and so is Putty," said the glib Johnson, too vain not to be
pleased with an opportunity of speaking, even when the situation was rather awkward.
"Makepiece for scheming, but Putty for management. Putty knows men, sir," he went on, turning
to Harold; "it's a thousand pities that you have not had his talents employed in your service.
He's beyond any man for saving a candidate's money—does half the work with his tongue. He'll
talk of anything, from the Areopagus, and that sort of thing, down to the joke about 'Where
are you going, Paddy?'—you know what I mean, sir! 'Back again, says Paddy'—an excellent
electioneering joke. Putty understands these things. He has said to me, 'Johnson, bear in mind
there are two ways of speaking an audience will always like: one is, to tell them what they
don't understand; and the other is, to tell them what they're
It had been impossible to interrupt Johnson before, without the most impolitic rudeness.
Jermyn was not sorry that he should talk, even if he made a fool of himself; for in that solid
shape, exhibiting the average amount of human foibles, he seemed less of the alias
which Harold had insinuated him to be, and had all the additional plausibility of a lie with a
circumstance.
Harold had thrown himself with contemptuous resignation into a chair, had drawn off one of his buff gloves, and was looking at his hand. But when Johnson gave his iteration with a slightly slackened pace, Harold looked up at him and broke in,
"Well then, Mr Johnson, I shall be glad if you will use your care and judgment in putting an end as well as you can to this Sproxton affair; else it may turn out an ugly business."
"Excuse me, sir, I must beg you to look at the matter a little more closely. You will see
that it is impossible to take a single step backward at Sproxton. It was a matter of necessity
to get the Sproxton men; else I know to a certainty
Mr Johnson's argument was not the less stringent because his idioms were vulgar. It requires a conviction and resolution amounting to heroism not to wince at phrases that class our foreshadowed endurance among those common and ignominious troubles which the world is more likely to sneer at than to pity. Harold remained a few moments in angry silence looking at the floor, with one hand on his knee, and the other on his hat, as if he were preparing to start up.
"As to undoing anything that's been done down there," said Johnson, throwing in this
observation as something into the bargain, "I must wash my hands of it, sir. I couldn't work
knowingly against your interest. And that young man who is just gone out,—you don't believe
that he need be listened to, I hope? Chubb, the publican, hates him. Chubb would guess he was
at the bottom of your having the treating stopped, and he'd set half—a—dozen of the colliers
to duck him in the canal, or break his head by mistake. I'm
"Certainly, the exposition befits the subject," said Harold, scornfully, his dislike of the man Johnson's personality being stimulated by causes which Jermyn more than conjectured. "It's a dammed, unpleasant, ravelled business that you and Mr Jermyn have knit up between you. I've no more to say."
"Then, sir, if you've no more commands, I don't wish to intrude. I shall wish you good-morning sir," said Johnson, passing out quickly.
Harold knew that he was indulging his temper, and he would probably have restrained it as a
foolish move if he had thought there was great danger in it. But he was beginning to drop much
of his caution and self-mastery where Jermyn was concerned, under the growing conviction that
the attorney had very strong reasons for being afraid of him; reasons which would only be
reinforced by any action hostile to the Transome interest. As for a sneak like this Johnson, a
gentleman had to pay him, not to please him. Harold had smiles at command in the right place,
but he was not going to smile when it was neither necessary nor agreeable. He was one of those
"A—pardon me, Mr Harold," said Jermyn, speaking as soon as Johnson went out, "but I am
sorry—a—you should behave disobligingly to a man who has it in his power to do much
service—who, in fact, holds many threads in his hands. I admit that—a— nemo mortalium
omnibus horis sapit , as we say—a—"
"Speak for yourself," said Harold. "I don't talk in tags of Latin, which might be learned by a schoolmaster's footboy. I find the King's English express my meaning better."
"In the King's English, then," said Jermyn, who could be idiomatic enough when he was stung, "a candidate should keep his kicks till he's a member."
"O, I suppose Johnson will bear a kick if you bid him. You're his principal, I believe."
"Certainly, thus far—a—he is my London agent. But he is a man of substance, and—"
"I shall know that he is if it's necessary, I daresay. But I must jump into the carriage
again.
When Harold was gone, Jermyn's handsome face gathered blackness. He hardly ever wore his worst expression in the presence of others, and but seldom when he was alone, for he was not given to believe that any game would ultimately go against him. His luck had been good. New conditions might always turn up to give him new chances; and if affairs threatened to come to an extremity between Harold and himself, he trusted to finding some sure resource.
"He means to see to the bottom of everything if he can, that's quite plain," said Jermyn to himself. "I believe he has been getting another opinion; he has some new light about those annuities on the estate that are held in Johnson's name. He has inherited a deuced faculty for business—there's no denying that. But I shall beg leave to tell him that I've propped up the family. I don't know where they would have been without me; and if it comes to balancing, I know into which scale the gratitude ought to go. Not that he's likely to feel any—but he can feel something else; and if he makes signs of setting the dogs on me, I shall make him feel it. The people named Transome owe me a good deal more than I owe them."
In this way Mr Jermyn inwardly appealed against an unjust construction which he foresaw that his old acquaintance the Law might put on certain items in his history.
I have known persons who have been suspected of undervaluing gratitude, and excluding it from the list of virtues; but on closer observation it has been seen that, if they have never felt grateful, it has been for want of an opportunity; and that, far from despising gratitude, they regard it as the virtue most of all incumbent—on others towards them.
The little, nameless, unremembered acts Of kindness and of love.
Wordsworth : Tintern Abbey.
Jermyn did not forget to pay his visit to the minister in Malthouse Yard that evening. The mingled irritation, dread, and defiance which he was feeling towards Harold Transome in the middle of the day, depended on too many and far-stretching causes to be dissipated by eight o'clock; but when he left Mr Lyon's house he was in a state of comparative triumph in the beleif that he, and he alone, was now in possession of facts which, once grouped together, made a secret that gave him new power over Harold.
Mr Lyon, in his need for help from one who had that wisdom of the serpent which, he argued,
is not forbidden, but is only of hard acquirement to dove-like innocence, had been gradually
led to pour out to the attorney all the reasons which made him
Jermyn was not rash in making this promise, since he had excellent reasons for believing that he had already come to a true conclusion on the subject. But he wished both to know a little more of this man himself, and to keep Mr Lyon in ignorance—not a difficult precaution—in an affair which it cost the minister so much pain to speak of. An easy opportunity of getting an interview with Christian was sure to offer itself before long—might even offer itself to-morrow. Jermyn had seen him more than once, though hitherto without any reason for observing him with interest; he had heard that Philip Debarry's courier was often busy in the town, and it seemed especially likely that he would be seen there when the Market was to be agitated by politics, and the new candidate was to show his paces.
The world of which Treby Magna was the centre
Esther, however, had heard some of her feminine acquaintances say that they intended to sit
at the druggist's upper window, and she was inclined to ask her father if he could think of a
suitable place where she also might see and hear. Two inconsistent motives urged her. She knew
that Felix cared earnestly for all public questions, and she supposed that he held it one of
her deficiencies not to care about them: well, she would try to learn the secret of this
ardour, which was so strong in him that it animated what she thought the dullest form of life.
She was not too stupid to find it out. But this self-correcting motive was presently displaced
by a motive of a different sort. It had been a pleasant variety in her monotonous days to see
a man like Harold Transome, with a distinguished appearance and polished manners, and she
would like to see him again: he suggested to her that brighter and more luxurious life on
which her imagination dwelt without the painful effort it required to conceive the mental
condition which would place her in complete sympathy with Felix Holt. It was this less
unaccustomed prompting of which she was chiefly
Mr Lyon, more serene now that he had unbosomed his anxieties and obtained a promise of help, was already swimming so happily in the deep water of polemics in expectation of Philip Debarry's answer to his challenge, that, in the occupation of making a few notes lest certain felicitous inspirations should be wasted, he had forgotten to come down to breakfast. Esther, suspecting his abstraction, went up to his study, and found him at his desk looking up with wonder at her interruption.
"Come, father, you have forgotten your breakfast."
"It is true, child; I will come," he said, lingering to make some final strokes.
"O you naughty father!" said Esther, as he got up from his chair, "your coat-collar is twisted, your waistcoat is buttoned all wrong, and you have not brushed your hair. Sit down and let me brush it again as I did yesterday."
He sat down obediently, while Esther took a towel, which she threw over his shoulders, and
then brushed the thick long fringe of soft auburn hair. This very trifling act, which she had
brought herself
"Father, I shall make a petit maître of you by-and-by; your hair looks so pretty
and silken when it is well brushed."
"Nay, child, I trust that while I would willingly depart from my evil habit of a somewhat
slovenly forgetfulness in my attire, I shall never arrive at the opposite extreme. For though
there is that in apparel which pleases the eye, and I deny not that your neat gown and the
colour thereof—which is that of certain little flowers that spread themselves
"You have not seen Mr Holt since Sunday, have you, father?"
"Yes; he was here yesterday. He sought Mr Transome, having a matter of some importance to speak upon with him. And I saw him afterward in the street, when he agreed that I should call for him this morning before I go into the market-place. He will have it," Mr Lyon went on, smiling, "that I must not walk about in the crowd without him to act as my special constable."
Esther felt vexed with herself that her heart was suddently beating with unusual quickness,
and that her last resolution not to trouble herself about what Felix thought, had transformed
itself with magic
"I should have liked to hear Mr Transome speak, but I suppose it is too late to get a place now."
"I am not sure; I would fain have you go if you desire it, my dear," said Mr Lyon, who could not bear to deny Esther any lawful wish. "Walk with me to Mistress Holt's, and we will learn from Felix, who will doubtless already have been out, whether he could lead you in safety to Friend Lambert's."
Esther was glad of the proposal, because, if it answered no other purpose, it would be an
easy way of obliging Felix to see her, and of showing him that it was not she who cherished
offence. But when, later in the morning, she was walking
Consistency?—I never changed my mind, Which is, and always was, to live at ease.
It was only in the time of the summer fairs that the market-place had ever looked more animated than it did under that autumn mid-day sun. There were plenty of blue cockades and streamers, faces at all the windows, and a crushing buzzing crowd, urging each other backwards and forwards round the small hustings in front of the Ram Inn, which showed its more plebeian sign at right angles with the venerable Marquis of Granby. Sometimes there were scornful shouts, sometimes a rolling cascade of cheers, sometimes the shriek of a penny whistle; but above all these fitful and feeble sounds, the fine old church-tower, which looked down from above the trees on the other side of the narrow stream, sent vibrating, at every quarter, the sonorous tones of its great bell, the Good Queen Bess.
Two carriages, with blue ribbons on the harness, were conspicuous near the hustings. One was Jermyn's, filled with the brilliantly-attired daughters, accompanied by Esther, whose quieter dress helped to mark her out for attention as the most striking of the group. The other was Harold Transome's; but in this there was no lady—only the olive-skinned Dominic, whose acute yet mild face was brightened by the occupation of amusing little Harry and rescuing from his tyrannies a King Charles puppy, with big eyes, much after the pattern of the boy's.
This Trebian crowd did not count for much in the political force of the nation, but it was
not the less determined as to lending or not lending its ears. No man was permitted to speak
from the platform except Harold and his uncle Lingon, though, in the interval of expectation,
several Liberals had come forward. Among these ill-advised persons the one whose attempt met
the most emphatic resistance was Rufus Lyon. This might have been taken for resentment at the
unreasonableness of the cloth, that, not content with pulpits, from whence to tyrannise over
the ears of men, wishes to have the larger share of the platforms; but it was not so, for Mr
Lingon
The Rector of Little Treby had been a favourite in the neighbourhood since the beginning of
the century. A clergyman thoroughly unclerical in his habits had a piquancy about him which
made him a sort of practical joke. He had always been called Jack Lingon, or Parson
Jack—sometimes, in older and less serious days, even "Cock-fighting Jack." He swore a little
when the point of a joke seemed to demand it, and was fond of wearing a coloured bandana tied
loosely over his cravat, together with large brown leather leggings; he spoke in a pithy
familiar way that people could understand, and had none of that frigid mincingness called
dignity, which some have thought a peculiar clerical disease. In fact, he was "a
charicter"—something cheerful to think of, not entirely out of connection with Sunday and
sermons. And it seemed in keeping that he should have turned sharp round in politics, his
opinions being only part of the excellent joke called Parson Jack. When his red eagle face and
white hair were seen on the platform, the Dissenters hardly cheered this questionable Radical;
but to make amends, all the Tory farmers gave him a friendly "hurray." "Let's hear what old
Jack will
It was only Lawyer Labron's young clerks and their hangers-on who were sufficiently dead to Trebian traditions to assail the parson with various sharp-edged interjections, such as broken shells, and cries of "Cock—a—doodle-doo."
"Come now, my lads," he began, in his full, pompous, yet jovial tones, thrusting his hands into the stuffed-out pockets of his greatcoat, "I'll tell you what; I'm a parson, you know; I ought to return good for evil. So here are some good nuts for you to crack in return for your shells."
There was a roar of laughter and cheering as he threw handfuls of nuts and filberts among the crowd.
"Come, now, you'll say I used to be a Tory; and some of you, whose faces I know as well as I
know the head of my own crab-stick, will say that's why I'm a good fellow. But now I'll tell
you something else. It's for that very reason—that I used to be a Tory, and am a good
fellow—that I go along with my nephew here, who is a thoroughgoing Liberal. For will anybody
here come forward and say, 'A good fellow has no need to tack about and change
"And my nephew here—he comes of a Tory breed, you know—I'll answer for the Lingons. In the
old Tory times there was never a pup belonging to a Lingon but would howl if a Whig came near
him. The Lingon blood is good, rich, old Tory blood—like good rich milk—and that's why, when
the right time comes, it throws up a Liberal cream. The best sort of Tory turns to the best
sort of Radical. There's plenty of Radical scum—I say, beware of the scum, and look out for
the cream. And here's my nephew—some of the cream, if there is any: none of your Whigs, none
of your painted water that looks as if it ran, and it's standing still all the while; none of
your spinning-jenny fellows. A gentleman; but up to all sorts
Harold had not been quite confident beforehand as to the good effect of his uncle's
introduction; but he was soon reassured. There was no acrid partisanship among the
old-fashioned Tories who mustered strong about the Marquis of Granby, and Parson Jack had put
them in a good humour. Harold's only interruption came from his own party. The oratorical
clerk at the Factory, acting as the tribune of the Dissenting interest, and feeling bound to
put questions, might have been troublesome; but his voice being unpleasantly sharp, while
Harold's was full and penetrating, the questioning was cried down. Harold's speech "did:" it
was not of the glib-nonsensical sort, not ponderous, not hesitating—which is as much to say,
that it was remarkable among British speeches. Read in print the next day, perhaps it would
But, perhaps, the moment of most diffusive pleasure from public speaking is that in which the speech ceases and the audience can turn to commenting on it. The one speech, sometimes uttered under great responsibility as to missiles and other consequences, has given a text to twenty speakers who are under no responsibility. Even in the days of duelling a man was not challenged for being a bore, nor does this quality apparently hinder him from being much invited to dinner, which is the great index of social responsibility in a less barbarous age.
Certainly the crowd in the market-place seemed to experience this culminating enjoyment when
the speaking on the platform in front of the Ram had ceased, and there were no less than three
orators holding forth from the elevation of chance vehicles, not at all to the prejudice of
the talking among those who were on a level with their neighbours. There was little ill-humour
among the listeners, for Queen Bess was striking the last quarter before two,
Two or three of Harold's committee had lingered talking to each other on the platform, instead of re-entering; and Jermyn, after coming out to speak to one of them, had turned to the corner near which the carriages were standing, that he might tell the Transomes' coachman to drive round to the side door, and signal to his own coachman to follow. But a dialogue which was going on below induced him to pause, and, instead of giving the order, to assume the air of a careless gazer. Christian, whom the attorney had already observed looking out of a window at the Marquis of Granby, was talking to Dominic. The meeting appeared to be one of new recognition, for Christian was saying—
"You've not got grey as I have, Mr Lenoni; you're not a day older for the sixteen years. But no wonder you didn't know me; I'm bleached like a dried bone."
"Not so. It is true I was confused a meenute—I could put your face nowhere; but after that,
Naples came behind it, and I said, Mr Creestian. And so
"Ah! it's a thousand pities you're not on our side, else we might have dined together at the Marquis," said Christian. "Eh, could you manage it?" he added, languidly, knowing there was no chance of a yes.
"No—much obliged—couldn't leave the leetle boy. Ahi! Arry, Arry, pinch not poor Moro."
While Dominic was answering, Christian had stared about him, as his manner was when he was being spoken to, and had had his eyes arrested by Esther, who was leaning forward to look at Mr Harold Transome's extraordinary little gipsy of a son. But happening to meet Christian's stare, she felt annoyed, drew back, and turned away her head, colouring.
"Who are those ladies?" said Christian, in a low tone, to Dominic, as if he had been startled into a sudden wish for this information.
"They are Meester Jermyn's daughters," said Dominic, who knew nothing either of the lawyer's family or of Esther.
Christian looked puzzled a moment or two, and was silent.
"O, well— au revoir ," he said, kissing the tips of his fingers, as the coachman,
having had Jermyn's order, began to urge on the horses.
"Does he see some likeness in the girl?" thought Jermyn, as he turned away. "I wish I hadn't invited her to come in the carriage, as it happens."
"Good earthenware pitchers, sir!—of an excellent quaint pattern and sober colour."
The market dinner at "the Marquis" was in high repute in Treby and its
neighbourhood. The frequenters of this three-and-sixpenny ordinary liked to allude to it, as
men allude to anything which implies that they move in good society, and habitually converse
with those who are in the secret of the highest affairs. The guests were not only such rural
residents as had driven to market, but some of the most substantial townsmen, who had always
assured their wives that business required this weekly sacrifice of domestic pleasure. The
poorer farmers, who put up at the Ram or the Seven Stars, where there was no fish, felt their
disadvantage, bearing it modestly or bitterly, as the case might be; and although the Marquis
was a Tory house, devoted to Debarry, it was too much to expect that
To-day there was an extra table spread for expected supernumeraries, and it was at this that
Christian took his place with some of the younger farmers, who had almost a sense of
dissipation in talking to a man of his questionable station and unknown experience. The
provision was especially liberal, and on the whole the presence of a minority destined to vote
for Transome was a ground for joking, which added to the good-humour of the chief talkers. A
respectable old acquaintance turned Radical rather against his will, was rallied with even
greater gusto than if his wife had had twins twice over. The best Trebian Tories were far
Among the frequent though not regular guests, whom every one was glad to see, was Mr Nolan,
the retired London hosier, a wiry old gentleman past seventy, whose square tight forehead,
with its rigid hedge of grey hair, whose bushy eyebrows, sharp dark eyes, and remarkable
hooked nose, gave a handsome distinction to his face in the midst of rural physiognomies. He
had married a Miss Pendrell early in life, when he was a poor young Londoner, and the match
had been thought as bad as ruin by her family; but fifteen years ago he had had the
satisfaction of bringing his wife to settle amongst her own friends, and of being received
with pride as a brother-in-law, retired from business, possessed of unknown thousands, and of
a most agreeable talent for anecdote and conversation generally. No question had ever been
raised as to
"My good sir," he said to Mr Wace, as he crossed his knees and spread his silk handkerchief over them, "Transome may be returned, or he may not be returned—that's a question for North Loamshire; but it makes little difference to the kingdom. I don't want to say things which may put younger men out of spirits, but I believe this country has seen its best days—I do indeed."
"I am sorry to hear it from one of your experience, Mr Nolan," said the brewer, a large
happy-looking man. "I'd make a good fight myself before I'd leave a worse world for my boys
than I've found for myself. There isn't a greater pleasure than doing a bit of planting and
improving one's buildings, and investing one's money in some pretty acres of land, when it
turns up here and there—land you've known from a boy. It's a nasty thought that these Radicals
are to turn things round so as one can calculate no nothing. One doesn't like it for one's
self, and one doesn't like it for one's neighbours.
"It won't do, my dear sir," said Mr Nolan—"it won't do. When Peel and the Duke turned round about the Catholics in '29, I saw it was all over with us. We could never trust ministers any more. It was to keep off a rebellion, they said; but I say it was to keep their places. They're monstrously fond of place, both of them—that I know." Here Mr Nolan changed the crossing of his legs, and gave a deep cough, conscious of having made a point. Then he went on—"What we want is a king with a good will of his own. If we'd had that, we shouldn't have heard what we've heard to-day; Reform would never have come to this pass. When our good old King George the Third heard his ministers talking about Catholic Emancipation, he boxed their ears all round. Ah, poor soul! he did indeed, gentlemen," ended Mr Nolan, shaken by a deep laugh of admiration.
"Well, now, that's something like a king," said Mr Crowder, who was an eager listener.
"It was uncivil, though. How did they take it?" said Mr Timothy Rose, a "gentleman farmer" from Leek Malton, against whose independent position nature had provided the safeguard of a spontaneous servility. His large porcine cheeks, round twinkling eyes, and thumbs habitually twirling, expressed a concentrated effort not to get into trouble, and to speak everybody fair except when they were safely out of hearing.
"Take it! they'd be obliged to take it," said the impetuous young Joyce, a farmer of superior information. "Have you ever heard of the king's prerogative?"
"I don't say but what I have," said Rose, retreating. "I've nothing against it—nothing at all."
"No, but the Radicals have," said young Joyce, winking. "The prerogative is what they want to clip close. They want us to be governed by delegates from the trades-unions, who are to dictate to everybody, and make everything square to their mastery."
"They're a pretty set, now, those delegates," said Mr Wace, with disgust. "I once heard two
of 'em spouting away. They're a sort of fellow I'd never
"Ay, ay," said young Joyce, cordially. "I should just have liked all the delegates in the country mustered for our yeomanry to go into—that's all. They'd see where the strength of Old England lay then. You may tell what it is for a country to trust to trade when it breeds such spindling fellows as those."
"That isn't the fault of trade, my good sir," said Mr Nolan, who was often a little pained
by the defects of provincial culture. "Trade, properly conducted, is good for a man's
constitution. I could have shown you, in my time, weavers past seventy, with all their
faculties as sharp as a penknife, doing without spectacles. It's the new system of trade
that's to blame: a country can't have too much trade, if it's properly managed. Plenty of
sound Tories have made their fortune by trade.
Mr Nolan paused, and then his face glowed with triumph as he answered his own question. "Why, gentlemen, not less than two thousand pounds of butter during the few months the family is in town! Trade makes property, my good sir, and property is Conservative, as they say now. Calibut's son-in-law is Lord Fortinbras. He paid me a large debt on his marriage. It's all one web, sir. The prosperity of the country is one web."
"To be sure," said Christian, who, smoking his cigar with his chair turned away from the table, was willing to make himself agreeable in the conversation. "We can't do without nobility. Look at France. When they got rid of the old nobles they were obliged to make new."
"True, very true," said Mr Nolan, who thought
"No, no, very right," said Mr Wace, cordially. "But you never said a truer word than that
about property. If a man's got a bit of property, a stake in the country, he'll want to keep
things square. Where Jack isn't safe, Tom's in danger. But that's what makes it such an
uncommonly nasty thing that a man like Transome should take up with these Radicals. It's my
belief he does it only to get into Parliament; he'll turn round when he gets there. Come,
Dibbs, there's something to put you in
"I don't care two straws who I vote for," said Dibbs, sturdily. "I'm not going to make a wry face. It stands to reason a man should vote for his landlord. My farm's in good condition, and I've got the best pasture on the estate. The rot's never come nigh me. Let them grumble as are on the wrong side of the hedge."
"I wonder if Jermyn'll bring him in, though," said Mr Sircome, the great miller. "He's an uncommon fellow for carrying things through. I know he brought me through that suit about my weir; it cost a pretty penny, but he brought me through."
"It's a bit of a pill for him, too, having to turn Radical," said Mr Wace. "They say he counted on making friends with Sir Maximus, by this young one coming home and joining with Mr Philip."
"But I'll bet a penny he brings Transome in," said Mr Sircome. "Folks say he hasn't got many
votes hereabout; but towards Duffield, and all there,
When general attention was called to Christian, young Joyce looked down at his own legs and touched the curves of his own hair, as if measuring his own approximation to that correct copy of a gentleman. Mr Wace turned his head to listen for Christian's answer with that tolerance of inferiority which becomes men in places of public resort.
"They think it will be a hard run between Transome and Garstin," said Christian. "It depends on Transome's getting plumpers."
"Well, I know I shall not split for Garstin," said Mr Wace. "It's nonsense for Debarry's voters to split for a Whig. A man's either a Tory or not a Tory."
"It seems reasonable there should be one of each side," said Mr Timothy Rose. "I don't like showing favour either way. If one side can't lower the Poor's rates and take off the Tithe, let the other try."
"But there's this in it, Wace," said Mr Sircome. "I'm not altogether against the Whigs. For
they don't want to go so far as the Radicals do, and when they find they've slipped a bit too
far, they'll hold on all the tighter. And the Whigs have got
Mr Sircome checked himself, looked furtively at Christian, and, to divert criticism, ended with—"eh, Mr Nolan?"
"There have been eminent Whigs, sir. Mr Fox was a Whig," said Mr Nolan. "Mr Fox was a great orator. He gambled a good deal. He was very intimate with the Prince of Wales. I've seen him, and the Duke of York too, go home by daylight with their hats crushed. Mr Fox was a great leader of Opposition: Government requires an Opposition. The Whigs should always be in opposition, and the Tories on the ministerial side. That's what the country used to like. 'The Whigs for salt and mustard, the Tories for meat,' Mr Gottlib the banker used to say to me. Mr Gottlib was a worthy man. When there was a great run on Gottlib's bank in '16, I saw a gentleman come in with bags of gold, and say, 'Tell Mr Gottlib there's plenty more where that came from.' It stopped the run, gentlemen—it did indeed."
This anecdote was received with great admiration, but Mr Sircome returned to the previous question.
"There now, you see, Wace—it's right there
"Well, I don't like Garstin," said the brewer. "I didn't like his conduct about the Canal Company. Of the two, I like Transome best. If a nag is to throw me, I say, let him have some blood."
"As for blood, Wace," said Mr Salt, the woolfactor, a bilious man, who only spoke when there was a good opportunity of contradicting, "ask my brother-in-law Labron a little about that. These Transomes are not the old blood."
"Well, they're the oldest that's forthcoming, I suppose," said Mr Wace, laughing. "Unless you believe in mad old Tommy Trounsem. I wonder where that old poaching fellow is now."
"I saw him half-drunk the other day," said young Joyce. "He'd got a flag-basket with hand-bills in it over his shoulder."
"I thought the old fellow was dead," said Mr Wace. "Hey! why, Jermyn," he went on merrily, as he turned round and saw the attorney entering; "you Radical! how dare you show yourself in this Tory house? Come, this is going a bit too far. We don't mind Old Harry managing our law for us—that's his proper business from time immemorial; but—"
"But—a—" said Jermyn, smiling, always ready to carry on a joke, to which his slow manner gave the piquancy of surprise, "if he meddles with politics he must be a Tory."
Jermyn was not afraid to show himself anywhere in Treby. He knew many people were not exactly fond of him, but a man can do without that, if he is prosperous. A provincial lawyer in those oldfashioned days was as independent of personal esteem as if he had been a Lord Chancellor.
There was a good-humoured laugh at this upper end of the room as Jermyn seated himself at about an equal angle between Mr Wace and Christian.
"We were talking about old Tommy Trounsem; you remember him? They say he's turned up again," said Mr Wace.
"Ah?" said Jermyn, indifferently. "But—a—Wace—I'm very busy to-day—but I wanted to see you about that bit of land of yours at the corner of Pod's End. I've had a handsome offer for you—I'm not at liberty to say from whom—but an offer that ought to tempt you."
"It won't tempt me," said Mr Wace, peremptorily; "if I've got a bit of land, I'll keep it. It's hard enought to get hereabouts."
"Then I'm to understand that you refuse all
"Unless one of the confounded railways should come. But then I'll stand out and make 'em bleed for it."
There was a murmur of approbation; the railways were a public wrong much denunciated in Treby.
"A—Mr Philip Debarry at the Manor now?" said Jermyn, suddenly questioning Christian, in a haughty tone of superiority which he often chose to use.
"No," said Christian, "he is expected to-morrow morning."
"Ah!—" Jermyn paused a moment or two, and then said, "You are sufficiently in his confidence, I think, to carry a message to him with a small document?"
"Mr Debarry has often trusted me so far," said Christian, with much coolness; "but if the business is yours, you can probably find some one you know better."
There was a little winking and grimacing among those of the company who heard this answer.
"A—true—a," said Jermyn, not showing any offence; "if you decline. But I think, if you will do me the favour to step round to my residence on your way back, and learn the business, you will prefer carrying it yourself. At my residence, if you please—not my office."
"O very well," said Christian. "I shall be very happy." Christian never allowed himself to be treated as a servant by any one but his master, and his master treated a servant more deferentially than an equal.
"Will it be five o'clock? what hour shall we say?" said Jermyn.
Christian looked at his watch and said, "About five I can be there."
"Very good," said Jermyn, finishing his sherry.
"Well—a—Wace—a—so you will hear nothing about Pod's End?"
"Not I."
"A mere pocket-handkerchief, not enough to swear by—a—" here Jermyn's face broke into a smile—"without a magnifying-glass."
"Never mind. It's mine into the bowels of the earth and up to the sky. I can build the Tower of Babel on it if I like—eh, Mr Nolan?"
"A bad investment, my good sir," said Mr Nolan,
"See now, how blind you Tories are," said Jermyn, rising; "if I had been you lawyer, I'd
have had you make another forty-shilling freeholder with that land, and all in time for this
election. But—a—the verbum sapientibus comes a little too late now."
Jermyn was moving away as he finished speaking, but Mr Wace called out after him, "We're not so badly off for votes as you are—good sound votes, that'll stand the Revising Barrister. Debarry at the top of the poll!"
The lawyer was already out of the doorway.
'Tis grievous, that with all amplification of travel both by sea and land, a man can never separate himself from his past history.
Mr Jermyn's handsome house stood a little way out of the town, surrounded by garden
and lawn and plantations of hopeful trees. As Christian approached it he was in a perfectly
easy state of mind: the business he was going on was none of his, otherwise than as he was
well satisfied with any opportunity of making himself valuable to Mr Philip Debarry. As he
looked at Jermyn's length of wall and iron railing, he said to himself, "These lawyers are the
fellows for getting on in the world with the least expense of civility. With this cursed
conjuring secret of theirs called Law, they think everybody's frightened at them. My Lord
Jermyn seems to have his insolence as ready as his soft sawder. He's as sleek as a rat, and
has as vicious a tooth. I know the sort of vermin well enough. I've helped to fatten one or
two."
In this mood of conscious, contemptuous penetration, Christian was shown by the footman into Jermyn's private room, where the attorney sat surrounded with massive oaken bookcases, and other furniture to correspond, from the thickest-legged library-table to the calendar frame and card-rack. It was the sort of room a man prepares for himself when he feels sure of a long and respectable future. He was leaning back in his leather chair, against the broad window opening on the lawn, and had just taken off his spectacles and let the newspaper fall on his knees, in despair of reading by the fading light.
When the footman opened the door and said, "Mr Christian," Jermyn said, "Good evening, Mr Christian. Be seated," pointing to a chair opposite himself and the window. "Light the candles on the shelf, John, but leave the blinds alone."
He did not speak again till the man was gone out, but appeared to be referring to a document which lay on the bureau before him. When the door was closed he drew himself up again, began to rub his hands, and turned towards his visitor, who seemed perfectly indifferent to the fact that the attorney was in shadow, and that the light fell on himself.
"A—your name—a—is Henry Scaddon."
There was a start through Christian's frame which he was quick enough, almost simultaneously, to try and disguise as a change of position. He uncrossed his legs and unbuttoned his coat. But before he had time to say anything, Jermyn went on with slow emphasis.
"You were born on the 16th of December 1782, at Blackheath. Your father was a cloth-merchant in London: he died when you were barely of age, leaving an extensive business; before you were five-and-twenty you had run through the greater part of the property, and had compromised your safety by an attempt to defraud your creditors. Subsequently you forged a cheque on your father's elder brother, who had intended to make you his heir"
Here Jermyn paused a moment and referred to the document. Christian was silent.
"In 1808 you found it expedient to leave this country in a military disguise, and were taken
prisoner by the French. On the occasion of an exchange of prisoners you had the opportunity of
returning to your own country, and to the bosom of your own family. You were generous enough
to sacrifice that prospect in favour
Jermyn paused so long that he was evidently awaiting some answer. At last Christian replied, in a dogged tone,
"Well, sir, I've heard much longer stories than that told quite as solemnly, when there was not a word of truth in them. Suppose I deny the very peg you hang your statement on. Suppose I say I am not Henry Scaddon."
"A—in that case—a," said Jermyn, with wooden
"Well, sir, suppose we admit, for the sake of the conversation, that your account of the matter is the true one: what advantage have you to offer the man named Henry Scaddon?"
"The advantage—a—is problematical; but it may be considerable. It might, in fact, release you from the necessity of acting as courier, or—a—valet, or whatever other office you may occupy which prevents you from being your own master. On the other hand, my acquaintance with your secret is not necessarily a disadvantage to you. To put the matter in a nutshell, I am not inclined—a—gratuitously—to do you any harm, and I may be able to do you a considerable service."
"Which you want me to earn somehow?" said Christian. "You offer me a turn in a lottery?"
"Precisely. The matter in question is of no earthly interest to you, except—a—as it may yield you a prize. We lawyers have to do with complicated questions, and—a—legal subtleties, which are never—a—fully known even to the parties immediately interested, still less to the witnesses. Shall we agree, then, that you continue to retain two-thirds of the name which you gained by exchange, and that you oblige me by answering certain questions as to the experience of Henry Scaddon?"
"Very good. Go on."
"What articles of property, once belonging to your fellow-prisoner, Maurice Christian Bycliffe, do you still retain?"
"This ring," said Christian, twirling round the fine seal-ring on his finger, "his watch,
and the little matters that hung with it, and a case of papers. I got rid of a gold snuff-box
once when I was hard-up. The clothes are all gone, of course. We exchanged everything; it was
all done in a hurry. Bycliffe thought we should meet again in England before long, and he was
mad to get there. But that was impossible—I mean that we should meet soon after. I don't know
what's become of him, else I would give him up his papers and the
him the service, and
he felt that."
"You were at Vesoul together before being moved to Verdun?"
"Yes."
"What else do you know about Bycliffe?"
"O, nothing very particular," said Christian, pausing, and rapping his boot with his cane. "He'd been in the Hanoverian army—a high-spirited fellow, took nothing easily; not overstrong in health. He made a fool of himself with marrying at Vesoul; and there was the devil to pay with the girl's relations; and then, when the prisoners were ordered off, they had to part. Whether they ever got together again I don't know."
"Was the marriage all right, then?"
"O, all on the square—civil marriage, church—everything. Bycliffe was a fool—a good-natured, proud, headstrong fellow."
"How long did the marriage take place before you left Vesoul?"
"About three months. I was a witness to the marriage."
"And you know no more about the wife?"
"Not afterwards. I knew her very well before— pretty Annette—Annette Ledru was her name.
"Bycliffe was not open to you about his other affairs?"
"O no—a fellow you wouldn't dare to ask a question of. People told him everything, but he told nothing in return. If Madame Annette ever found him again, she found her lord and master with a vengeance; but she was a regular lapdog. However, her family shut her up—made a prisoner of her—to prevent her running away."
"Ah—good. Much of what you have been so obliging as to say is irrelevant to any possible purpose of mine, which, in fact, has to do only with a mouldy law-case that might be aired some day. You will doubtless, on your own account, maintain perfect silence on what has passed between us, and with that condition duly preserved—a—it is possible that—a—the lottery you have put into—as you observe—may turn up a prize."
"This, then, is all the business you have with me?" said Christian, rising.
"All. You will, of course, preserve carefully all
"O yes. If there's any chance of Bycliffe turning up again, I shall be sorry to have parted with the snuff-box; but I was hard-up at Naples. In fact, as you see, I was obliged at last to turn courier."
"An exceedingly agreeable life for a man of some—a—accomplishments and—a—no income," said Jermyn, rising, and reaching a candle, which he placed against his desk.
Christian knew this was a sign that he was expected to go, but he lingered standing, with one hand on the back of his chair. At last he said, rather sulkily,
"I think you're too clever, Mr Jermyn, not to perceive that I'm not a man to be made a fool of."
"Well—a—it may perhaps be a still better guarantee for you," said Jermyn, smiling, "that I see no use in attempting that—a—metamorphosis."
"The old gentleman, who ought never to have felt himself injured, is dead now, and I'm not afraid of creditors after more than twenty years."
"Certainly not;—a—there may indeed be claims which can't assert themselves—a—legally, which
Jermyn drew round his chair towards the bureau, and Christian, too acute to persevere uselessly, said, "Good-day," and left the room.
After leaning back in his chair to reflect a few minutes, Jermyn wrote the following letter:—
Dear Johnson,—I learn from your letter, received this morning, that you intend returning
to town on Saturday.
While you are there, be so good as to see Medwin, who used to be with Batt & Cowley,
and ascertain from him indirectly, and in the course of conversation on other topics, whether
in that old business in 1810-11, Scaddon alias Bycliffe, or Bycliffe
alias Scaddon, before his imprisonment, gave Batt & Cowley any reason to believe that
he was married and expected to have a child. The question, as you know, is of no practical
importance; but I wish to draw up an abstract of the Bycliffe case, and the exact position in
which it stood before the suit was closed by the death of the plaintiff, in order that, if Mr
Harold Transome desires it, he may see how the failure of the last claim has secured the
Durfey-Transome title,
and whether there is a hair's-breadth of chance that another claim should be set
up.
Of course there is not a shadow of such a chance. For even if Batt & Cowley were to
suppose that they had alighted on a surviving representative of the Bycliffes, it would not
enter into their heads to set up a new claim, since they brought evidence that the last life
which suspended the Bycliffe remainder was extinct before the case was closed, a good twenty
years ago.
Still, I want to show the present heir of the Durfey-Transomes the exact condition of
the family title to the estates. So get me an answer from Medwin on the above-mentioned
point.
I shall meet you at Duffield next week. We must get Transome returned. Never mind his
having been a little rough the other day, but go on doing what you know is necessary for his
interest. His interest is mine, which I need not say is John Johnson's.
Yours faithfully,
MATTHEW JERMYN.
When the attorney had sealed this letter and leaned back in his chair again, he was inwardly saying,
"Now, Mr Harold, I shall shut up this affair in
"And so, if Mr Harold pushes me to extremity, and threatens me with Chancery and ruin, I have an opposing threat, which will either save me or turn into a punishment for him."
He rose, put out his candles, and stood with his back to the fire, looking out on the dim
lawn, with its black twilight fringe of shrubs, still meditating. Quick thought was gleaming
over five-and-thirty years filled with devices more or less clever, more or less desirable to
be avowed. Those which might be avowed with impunity were not always to be distinguished as
innocent by comparison with those
With regard to the Transome affairs, the family had been in pressing need of money, and it had lain with him to get it for them: was it to be expected that he would not consider his own advantage where he had rendered services such as are never fully paid? If it came to a question of right and wrong instead of law, the least justifiable things he had ever done had been done on behalf of the Transomes. It had been a deucedly unpleasant thing for him to get Bycliffe arrested and thrown into prison as Henry Scaddon—perhaps hastening the man's death in that way. But if it had not been done by dint of his (Jermyn's) exertions and tact, he would like to know where the Durfey-Transomes might have been by this time. As for right or wrong, if the truth were known, the very possession of the estate by the Durfey-Transomes was owing to law-tricks that took place nearly a century ago, when the original old Durfey got his base fee.
But inward argument of this sort now, as always, was merged in anger, in exasperation, that Harold, precisely Harold Transome, should have turned out to be the probable instrument of a visitation which would be bad luck, not justice; for is there any justice where ninety-nine out of a hundred escape? He felt himself beginning to hate Harold as he had never—
Just then Jermyn's third daughter, a tall slim girl wrapped in a white woollen shawl, which
she had hung over her blanketwise, skipped across the lawn towards the greenhouse to get a
flower. Jermyn was startled, and did not identify the figure, or rather he identified it
falsely with another tall white-wrapped figure which had sometimes set his heart beating
quickly more than thirty years before. For a moment he was fully back in those distant years
when he and another bright-eyed person had seen no reason why they should not indulge their
passion and their vanity, and determine for themselves how their lives should be made
delightful in spite of unalterable external conditions. The reasons had been unfolding
themselves gradually ever since through all the years which had converted the handsome,
soft-eyed, slim young Jermyn (with a touch of sentiment) into a portly lawyer of sixty,
Her gentle looks shot arrows, piercing him As gods are pierced, with poison of sweet pity.
The evening of the market-day had passed, and Felix had not looked in at Malthouse
Yard to talk over the public events with Mr Lyon. When Esther was dressing the next morning,
she had reached a point of irritated anxiety to see Felix, at which she found herself devising
little schemes for attaining that end in some way that would be so elaborate as to seem
perfectly natural. Her watch had a long-standing ailment of losing; possibly it wanted
cleaning; Felix would tell her if it merely wanted regulating, whereas Mr Prowd might detain
it unnecessarily, and cause her useless inconvenience. Or could she not get a valuable hint
from Mrs Holt about the home-made bread, which was something as "sad" as Lyddy herself? Or, if
she came home that way at twelve o'clock, Felix
It followed that up to a few minutes past twelve, when she reached the turning towards Mrs Holt's, she believed that she should go home the other way; but at the last moment there is always a reason not existing before—namely, the impossibility of further vacillation. Esther turned the corner without any visible pause, and in another minute was knocking at Mrs Holt's door, not without an inward flutter, which she was bent on disguising.
"It's never you, Miss Lyon! who'd have thought of seeing you at this time? Is the minister
ill? I
"Don't keep Miss Lyon at the door, mother; ask her to come in," said the ringing voice of Felix, surmounting various small shufflings and babbling voices within.
"It's my wish for her to come in, I'm sure," said Mrs Holt, making way; "but what is there for her to come in to? a floor worse than any public. But step in, pray, if you're so inclined. When I've been forced to take my bit of carpet up, and have benches, I don't see why I need mind nothing no more."
"I only came to ask Mr Holt if he would look at my watch for me," said Esther, entering, and blushing a general rose-colour.
"He'll do that fast enough," said Mrs Holt, with emphasis; "that's one of the things he
will do."
"Excuse my rising, Miss Lyon," said Felix; "I'm binding up Job's finger."
Job was a small fellow about five, with a gernminal nose, large round blue eyes, and red
hair that curled close to his head like the wool on the back of an infantine lamb. He had
evidently been crying, and the corners of his mouth were still dolorous. Felix held him on his
knee as he bound and
"This is a hero, Miss Lyon. This is Job Tudge, a bold Briton whose finger hurts him, but who doesn't mean to cry. Good morning, boys. Don't lose your time. Get out into the air."
Esther seated herself on the end of the bench near Felix, much relieved that Job was the immediate object of attention; and the other boys rushed out behind her with a brief chant of "Good morning!"
"Did you ever see," said Mrs Holt, standing to look on, "how wonderful Felix is at that small work with his large fingers? And that's because he learnt doctoring. It isn't for want of cleverness he looks like a poor man, Miss Lyon. I've left off speaking, else I should say it's a sin and a shame."
"Mother," said Felix, who often amused himself
Esther had taken off her watch and was holding it in her hand. But he looked at her face, or rather at her eyes, as he said, "You want me to doctor your watch?"
Esther's expression was appealing and timid, as it had never been before in Felix's presence; but when she saw the perfect calmness, which to her seemed coldness, of his clear grey eyes, as if he saw no reason for attaching any emphasis to this first meeting, a pang swift as an electric shock darted through her. She had been very foolish to think so much of it. It seemed to her as if her inferiority to Felix made a great gulf between them. She could not at once rally her pride and self-command, but let her glance fall on her watch, and said, rather tremulously, "It loses. It is very troublesome. It has been losing a long while."
Felix took the watch from her hand; then, looking round and seeing that his mother was gone out of the room, he said, very gently,
"You look distressed, Miss Lyon. I hope there is no trouble at home" (Felix was thinking of the minister's agitation on the previous Sunday). "But I ought perhaps to beg your pardon for saying so much."
Poor Esther was quite helpless. The mortification which had come like a bruise to all the sensibilities that had been in keen activity, insisted on some relief. Her eyes filled instantly, and a great tear rolled down while she said in a loud sort of whisper, as involuntary as her tears,
"I wanted to tell you that I was not offended—that I am not ungenerous—I thought you might think—but you have not thought of it."
Was there ever more awkward speaking?—or any behaviour less like that of the graceful, self-possessed Miss Lyon, whose phrases were usually so well turned, and whose repartees were so ready?
For a moment there was silence. Esther had her two little delicately-gloved hands clasped on
the table. The next moment she felt one hand of Felix covering them both and pressing them
firmly; but he did not speak. The tears were both on her cheeks now, and she could look up at
him. His eyes had an expression of sadness in them, quite new to her. Suddenly little Job, who
had his
"She's tut her finger!"
Felix and Esther laughed, and drew their hands away; and as Esther took her handkerchief to wipe the tears from her cheeks, she said,
"You see, Job, I am a naughty coward. I can't help crying when I've hurt myself."
"Zoo soodn't kuy," said Job, energetically, being much impressed with a moral doctrine which had come to him after a sufficient transgression of it.
"Job is like me," said Felix, "fonder of preaching than of practice. But let us look at this same watch," he went on, opening and examining it. "These little Geneva toys are cleverly constructed to go always a little wrong. But if you wind them up and set them regularly every night, you may know at least that it's not noon when the hand points there."
Felix chatted, that Esther might recover herself; but now Mrs Holt came back and apologised.
"You'll excuse my going away, I know, Miss Lyon. But there were the dumplings to see to, and
what little I've got left on my hands now, I like to do well. Not but what I've more cleaning
to do than ever I had in my life before, as you may tell
"That's a great image, mother," said Felix, as he snapped the watch together, and handed it to Esther: "I never heard you use such an image before."
"Yes, I know you've always some fault to find with what your mother says. But if ever there
was a woman could talk with the open Bible before her, and not be afraid, it's me. I never did
tell stories, and I never will—though I know it's done, Miss Lyon, and by church members too,
when they have candles to sell, as I could bring you the proof. But I never was one of 'em,
let Felix say what he will about the printing on the tickets. His father believed it was
gospel truth, and it's presumptious to say it wasn't. For as for curing, how can anybody know?
There's no physic'll cure without a blessing, and with a blessing I know I've seen a
mustard plaister work when there was no more smell nor strength in the mustard than so much
flour. And reason good—for the mustard had lain in paper nobody knows how long—so I'll leave
you to guess."
Mrs Holt looked hard out of the window and gave a slight inarticulate sound of scorn.
Felix had leaned back in his chair with a resigned smile, and was pinching Job's ears.
Esther said, "I think I had better go now," not knowing what else to say, yet not wishing to go immediately, lest she should seem to be running away from Mrs Holt. She felt keenly how much endurance there must be for Felix. And she had often been discontented with her father, and called him tiresome!
"Where does Job Tudge live?" she said, still sitting, and looking at the droll little figure, set off by a ragged jacket with a tail about two inches deep sticking out above the funniest of corduroys.
"Job has two mansions," said Felix. "He lives here chiefly; but he has another home, where his grandfather, Mr Tudge the stone-breaker, lives. My mother is very good to Job, Miss Lyon. She has made him a little bed in a cupboard, and she gives him sweetened porridge."
The exquisite goodness implied in these words of Felix impressed Esther the more, because in
her hearing his talk had usually been pungent and denunciatory. Looking at Mrs Holt, she saw
that her eyes had lost their bleak north-easterly expression,
"Well, why shouldn't I be motherly to the child, Miss Lyon?" said Mrs Holt, whose strong
powers of argument required the file of an imagined contradiction, if there were no real one
at hand. "I never was heard-hearted, and I never will be. It was Felix picked the child up and
took to him, you may be sure, for there's nobody else master where he is; but I wasn't going
to beat the orphin child and abuse him because of that, and him as straight as an arrow when
he's stript, and me so fond of children, and only had one of my own to live. I'd three babies,
Miss Lyon, but the blessed Lord only spared Felix, and him the masterfullest and the brownest
of 'em all. But I did my duty by him, and I said, he'll have more schooling than his father,
and he'll grow up a doctor, and marry a woman with money to furnish—as I was myself, spoons
and everything—and I shall have the grandchildren to look up to me, and be drove out in the
gig sometimes, like old Mrs Lukyn. And you see what it's all come to, Miss Lyon: here's Felix
made a common man of himself, and says he'll never be married—which is the most unreasonable
thing, and him never easy
"Stop, stop, mother," Felix burst in; "pray don't use that limping argument again—that a man should marry because he's fond of children. That's a reason for not marrying. A bachelor's children are always young: they're immortal children—always lisping, waddling, helpless, and with a chance of turning out good."
"The Lord above may know what you mean! And haven't other folk's children a chance of turning out good?"
"O, they grow out of it very fast. Here's Job Tudge now," said Felix, turning the little one
round on his knee, and holding his head by the back—"Job's limbs will get lanky; this little
fist, that looks like a puff-ball and can hide nothing bigger than a gooseberry, will get
large and bony, and perhaps want to clutch more than its share; these wide blue eyes that tell
me more truth than Job knows, will narrow and narrow and try to hide truth that Job would be
better without knowing; this little negative nose will become long and self-asserting; and
this little tongue—put out thy tongue, Job"—Job, awe-struck under this ceremony, put out a
little red tongue very timidly—"this tongue,
"See there," said Mrs Holt, "you're frightening the innicent child with such talk—and it's enough to frighten them that think themselves the safest."
"Look here, Job, my man," said Felix, setting the boy down and turning him towards Esther; "go to Miss Lyon, ask her to smile at you, and that will dry up your tears like the sunshine."
Job put his two brown fists on Esther's lap, and she stooped to kiss him. Then holding his face between her hands, she said, "Tell Mr Holt we don't mean to be naughty, Job. He should believe in us more. But now I must really go home."
Esther rose and held out her hand to Mrs Holt, who kept it while she said, a little to Esther's confusion,
"I'm very glad it's took your fancy to come here sometimes, Miss Lyon. I know you're thought
to
Felix had risen and moved towards the door that he might open it and shield Esther from more last words on his mother's part.
"Good-bye, Mr Holt."
"Will Mr Lyon like me to sit with him an hour this evening, do you think?"
"Why not? He always likes to see you."
"Then I will come. Good-bye."
"She's a very straight figure," said Mrs Holt. "How she carries herself! But I doubt there's
some truth in what our people say. If she won't look at young Muscat, it's the better for
him . He'd need have a big fortune that marries her."
"That's true, mother," said Felix, sitting down, snatching up little Job, and finding a vent for some unspeakable feeling in the pretence of worrying him.
Esther was rather melancholy as she went home, yet happier withal than she had been for many
days
Esther felt that she had prefixed an impossible "if" to that result. But now she had known
Felix, her conception of what a happy love must be had become like a dissolving view, in which
the once-clear images were gradually melting into new forms and new colours. The favourite
Byronic heroes were beginning to look something like last night's decorations seen in the
sober dawn. So fast does a little leaven spread within us—so incalculable is the effect of one
personality on another. Behind all Esther's thoughts, like an unacknowledged yet constraining
presence, there was the sense, that if Felix
It was quite true that Felix had not thought the more of Esther because of that Sunday
afternoon's interview which had shaken her mind to the very roots. He had avoided intruding on
Mr Lyon without special reason, because he believed the minister to be preoccupied with some
private care. He had thought a great deal of Esther with a mixture of strong disapproval and
strong liking, which both together made a feeling the reverse of indifference; but he was not
going to let her have any influence on his life. Even if his determination had not been fixed,
he would have believed that she would utterly scorn him in any other light than that of an
acquaintance, and the emotion she had shown to-day did not change that belief. But he was
deeply touched by this manifestation of her better qualities, and felt that there was a new
tie of friendship between them. That was the brief history Felix would have given of his
relation to Esther. And he was accustomed to observe himself. But very close and diligent
looking at living creatures, even
Felix found Mr Lyon particularly glad to talk to him. The minister had never yet disburthened himself about his letter to Mr Philip Debarry concerning the public confernce; and as by this time he had all the heads of his discussion thoroughly in his mind, it was agreeable to recite them, as well as to express his regret that time had been lost by Mr Debarry's absence from the Manor, which had prevented the immediate fulfilment of his pledge.
"I don't see how he can fulfil it if the Rector refuses," said Felix, thinking it well to moderate the little man's confidence.
"The Rector is of a spirit that will not incur earthly impeachment, and he cannot refuse what is necessary to his nephew's honourable discharge of an obligation," said Mr Lyon. "My young friend, it is a case wherein the prearranged conditions tend by such a beautiful fitness to the issue I have sought, that I should have for ever held myself a traitor to my charge had I neglected the indication."
"I will not excuse you; you shall not be excused; excuses shall not be admitted; there's no excuse shall serve; you shall not be excused."—
Henry IV.
When Philip Debarry had come home that morning and read the letters which had not
been forwarded to him, he laughed so heartily at Mr Lyon's that he congratulated himself on
being in his private room. Otherwise his laughter would have awakened the curiosity of Sir
Maximus, and Philip did not wish to tell any one the contents of the letter until he had shown
them to his uncle. He determined to ride over to the Rectory to lunch; for as Lady Mary was
away, he and his uncle might be tête-à-tête.
The Rectory was on the other side of the river, close to the church of which it was the
fitting companion: a fine old brick-and-stone house, with a great bow-window opening from the
library on to the deep-turfed lawn, one fat dog sleeping on the
"What makes you look so merry, Phil?" said the Rector, as his nephew entered the pleasant library.
"Something that concerns you," said Philip, taking out the letter. "A clerical challenge. Here's an opportunity for you to emulate the divines of the sixteenth century and have a theological duel. Read this letter."
"What answer have you sent the crazy little fellow?" said the Rector, keeping the letter in his hand and running over it again and again, with brow knit, but eyes gleaming without any malignity.
"O, I sent no answer. I awaited yours."
"Mine!" said the Rector, throwing down the
"But you see how he puts it," said Philip. With all his gravity of nature he could not resist a slightly mischievous prompting, though he had a serious feeling that he should not like to be regarded as failing to fulfil his pledge. "I think if you refuse, I shall be obliged to offer myself."
"Nonsense! Tell him he is himself acting a dishonourable part in interpreting your words as a pledge to do any preposterous thing that suits his fancy. Suppose he had asked you to give him land to build a chapel on; doubtless that would have given him a 'lively satisfaction.' A man who puts a non-natural strained sense on a promise is no better than a robber."
"But he has not asked for land. I daresay he thinks you won't object to his proposal. I confess there's a simplicity and quaintness about the letter that rather pleases me."
"Let me tell you, Phil, he's a crazy little firefly, that does a great deal of harm in my
parish. He inflames the Dissenters' minds on politics. There's
The Rector had risen, placed himself with his back to the fire, and thrust his hands in his pockets, ready to insist further on this wide argument. Philip sat nursing one leg, listening respectfully, as he always did, though often listening to the sonorous echo of his own statements, which suited his uncle's needs so exactly that he did not distinguish them from his old impressions.
"True," said Philip, "but in special cases we have to do with special conditions. You know I
defend the casuists. And it may happen that, for the honour of the Church in Treby and a
little also for my honour, circumstances may demand a
"Not at all. I should be making a figure which my brother clergy might well take as an affront to themselves. The character of the Establishment has suffered enough already through the Evangelicals, with their extempore incoherence and their pipe-smoking piety. Look at Wimple, the man who is vicar of Shuttleton—without his gown and bands, anybody would take him for a grocer in mourning."
"Well, I shall cut a still worse figure, and so will you, in the Dissenting magazines and newspapers. It will go the round of the kingdom. There will be a paragraph headed, 'Tory Falsehood and Clerical Cowardice,' or else 'The Meanness of the Aristocracy and the Incompetence of the Beneficed Clergy.'"
"There would be a worse paragraph if I were to consent to the debate. Of course it would be
said that I was beaten hollow, and that now the question had been cleared up at Treby Magna,
the Church had not a sound leg to stand on. Besides," the Rector went on, frowning and
smiling, "it's all very well for you to talk, Phil, but this debating is not so easy when a
man's close upon sixty. What one writes or says must be something good and scholarly;
"Then you absolutely refuse?"
"Yes, I do."
"You remember that when I wrote my letter of thanks to Lyon you approved my offer to serve him if possible."
"Certainly I remember it. But suppose he had asked you to vote for civil marriage, or to go and hear him preach every Sunday?"
"But he has not asked that."
"Something as unreasonable, though."
"Well," said Philip, taking up Mr Lyon's letter and looking graver—looking even vexed, "It is rather an unpleasant business for me. I really felt obliged to him. I think there's a sort of worth in the man beyond his class. Whatever may be the reason of the case, I shall disappoint him instead of doing him the service I offered."
"Well, that's a misfortune; we can't help it."
"The worst of it is, I should be insulting him to say, 'I will do anything else, but not
just this that
"Yes, yes. I know it's rather an unpleasant thing, Phil. You are aware that I would have done anything in reason to prevent you from becoming unpopular here. I consider your character a possession to all of us."
"I think I must call on him forthwith, and explain and apologise."
"No, sit still; I've thought of something," said the Rector, with a sudden revival of spirits. "I've just seen Sherlock coming in. He is to lunch with me to-day. It would do no harm for him to hold the debate—a curate and a young man—he'll gain by it; and it would release you from any awkwardness, Phil. Sherlock is not going to stay here long, you know; he'll soon have his title. I'll put the thing to him. He won't object if I wish it. It's a capital idea. It will do Sherlock good. He's a clever fellow, but he wants confidence."
Philip had not time to object before Mr Sherlock appeared—a young divine of good birth and figure, of sallow complexion and bashful address.
"Sherlock, you have come in most opportunely," said the Rector. "A case has turned up in the
Mr Sherlock smiled with rather a trembling lip, willing to distinguish himself, but hoping that the Rector only alluded to a dialogue on Baptism by Aspersion, or some other pamphlet suited to the purposes of the Christian Knowledge Society. But as the Rector proceeded to unfold the circumstances under which his eminent service was to be rendered, he grew more and more nervous.
"You'll oblige me very much, Sherlock," the Rector ended, "by going into this thing zealously. Can you guess what time you will require? because it will rest with us to fix the day."
"I should be rejoiced to oblige you, Mr. Debarry, but I really think I am not competent to—"
"That's you modesty, Sherlock. Don't let me hear any more of that. I know Filmore of Corpus
said you might be a first-rate man if your diffidence didn't do you injustice. And you can
refer anything to me, you know. Come, you will set about
Philip sat down to write, and the Rector, with his firm ringing voice, went on at his ease, giving "indications" to his agitated curate.
"But you can begin at once preparing a good, cogent, clear statement, and considering the probable points of assault. You can look into Jewel, Hall, Hooker, Whitgift, and the rest: you'll find them all here. My library wants nothing in English divinity. Sketch the lower ground taken by Usher and those men, but bring all your force to bear on marking out the true High-Church doctrine. Expose the wretched cavils of the Nonconformists, and the noisy futility that belongs to schismatics generally. I will give you a telling passage from Burke on the Dissenters, and some good quotations which I brought together in two sermons of my own on the Position of the English Church in Christendom. How long do you think it will take you to bring your thoughts together? You can throw them afterwards into the form of an essay; we'll have the thing printed; it will do you good with the Bishop."
With all Mr Sherlock's timidity, there was fascination for him in this distinction. He reflected that he could take coffee and sit up late, and perhaps produce something rather fine. It might be a first step towards that eminence which it was no more than his duty to aspire to. Even a polemical fame like that of a Philpotts must have had a beginning. Mr Sherlock was not insensible to the pleasure of turning sentences successfully, and it was a pleasure not always unconnected with preferment. A diffident man likes the idea of doing something remarkable, which will create belief in him without any immediate display of brilliancy. Celebrity may blush and be silent, and win a grace the more. Thus Mr Sherlock was constrained, trembling all the while, and much wishing that his essay were already in print.
"I think I could hardly be ready under a fortnight."
"Very good. Just write that, Phil, and tell him to fix the precise day and place. And then we'll go to lunch."
The Rector was quite satisfied. He had talked himself into thinking that he should like to
give Sherlock a few useful hints, look up his own earlier sermons, and benefit the Curate by
his criticism,
Philip would have had some twinges of conscience about the Curate, if he had not guessed that the honour thrust upon him was not altogether disagreeable. The Church might perhaps have had a stronger supporter; but for himself, he had done what he was bound to do; he had done his best towards fulfilling Mr Lyon's desire.
If he come not, the play is marred. Midsummer Night's Dream.
Rufus Lyon was very happy on that mild November morning appointed for the great
conference in the larger room at the Free School, between himself and the Rev. Theodore
Sherlock, B.A. The disappointment of not contending with the Rector in person, which had at
first been bitter, had been gradually lost sight of in the positive enjoyment of an
opportunity for debating on any terms. Mr Lyon had two grand elements of pleasure on such
occasions: confidence in the strength of his case, and confidence in his own power of
advocacy. Not— to use his own phrase—not that he "glorified himself herein;" for speech and
exposition were so easy to him, that if he argued forcibly, he believed it to be simply
because the truth was forcible. He was not proud of moving easily in his native medium. A
panting man thinks of himself as a clever swimmer;
Whether Mr Sherlock were that panting, self-gratulating man, remained a secret. Philip Debarry, much occupied with his electioneering affairs, had only once had an opportunity of asking his uncle how Sherlock got on, and the Rector had said, curtly, "I think he'll do. I've supplied him well with references. I advise him to read only, and decline everything else as out of order. Lyon will speak to a point, and then Sherlock will read: it will be all the more telling. It will give variety." But on this particular morning peremptory business connected with the magistracy called the Rector away.
Due notice had been given, and the feminine world of Treby Magna was much more agitated by
the prospect than by that of any candidate's speech. Mrs Pendrell at the Bank, Mrs Tiliot, and
the Church ladies generally, felt bound to hear the Curate, who was known, apparently by an
intuition concerning the nature of curates, to be a very clever young man; and he would show
them what learning had to say on the right side. One or two Dissenting ladies were not without
emotion at the thought that, seated on the front benches, they
The debate was to begin at eleven, for the Rector would not allow the evening to be chosen,
when low men and boys might want to be admitted out of mere mischief. This was one reason why
the female part of the audience outnumbered the males. But some chief Trebians were there,
even men whose means made them as independent of theory as Mr Pendrell and Mr Wace; encouraged
by reflecting that they were not in a place of worship, and would not be obliged to stay
longer than they chose. There was a muster of all Dissenters
At eleven the arrival of listeners seemed to have ceased. Mr Lyon was seated on the school tribune or daïs at his particular round table; another round table, with a chair, awaited the Curate, with whose superior position it was quite in keeping that he should not be first on the ground. A couple of extra chairs were placed farther back, and more than one important personage had been requested to act as chairman; but no Churchman would place himself in a position so equivocal as to dignity of aspect, and so unequivocal as to the obligation of sitting out the discussion; and the Rector had beforehand put a veto on any Dissenting chairman.
Mr Lyon sat patiently absorbed in his thoughts, with his notes in minute handwriting lying before him, seeming to look at the audience, but not seeing them. Every one else was contented that there should be an interval in which there could be a little neighbourly talk.
Esther was particularly happy, seated on a sidebench near her father's side of the tribune, with Felix close behind her, so that she could turn her head and talk to him. He had been very kind ever since that morning when she had called at his home, more disposed to listen indulgently to what she had to say, and less blind to her looks and movements. If he had never railed at her or ignored her, she would have been less sensitive to the attention he gave her; but as it was, the prospect of seeing him seemed to light up her life, and to disperse the old dulness. She looked unusually charming to-day, from the very fact that she was not vividly conscious of anything but of having a mind near her that asked her to be something better than she actually was. The consciousness of her own superiority amongst the people around her was superseded, and even a few brief weeks had given a softened expression to her eyes, a more feminine beseechingness and self-doubt to her manners. Perhaps, however, a little new defiance was rising in place of the old contempt—defiance of the Trebian views concerning Felix Holt.
"What a very nice-looking young woman your minister's daughter is!" said Mrs Tiliot in an
undertone to Mrs Muscat, who, as she had hoped, had
"Rather too much so, considering," said Mrs Muscat. "She's thought proud, and that's not pretty in a girl, even if there was anything to back it up. But now she seems to be encouraging that young Holt, who scoffs at everything, as you may judge by his appearance. She has despised his betters before now; but I leave you to judge whether a young man who has taken to low ways of getting his living can pay for fine cambric handkerchiefs and light kid gloves."
Mrs Muscat lowered her blond eyelashes and swayed her neat head just perceptibly from side to side, with a sincere desire to be moderate in her expressions, notwithstanding any shock that facts might have given her.
"Dear, dear," said Mrs Tiliot. "What! that is young Holt leaning forward now without a cravat? I've never seen him before to notice him, but I've heard Tiliot talking about him. They say he's a dangerous character, and goes stirring up the working men at Sproxton. And—well, to be sure, such great eyes and such a great head of hair—it is enough to frighten one. What can she see in him? Quite below her."
"Yes, and brought up a governess," said Mrs Muscat; "you'd have thought she'd know better
how to choose. But the minister has let her get the upper hand sadly too much. It's a pity in
a man of God—I don't deny he's that ."
"Well, I am sorry," said Mrs Tiliot, "for I meant her to give my girls lessons when they came from school."
Mr Wace and Mr Pendrell meanwhile were standing up and looking round at the audience, nodding to their fellow-townspeople with the affability due from men in their position.
"It's time he came now," said Mr Wace, looking at his watch and comparing it with the schoolroom clock. "This debating is a newfangled sort of thing; but the Rector would never have given in to it if there hadn't been good reasons. Nolan said he wouldn't come. He says this debating is an atheistical sort of thing; the Atheists are very fond of it. Theirs is a bad book to take a leaf out of. However, we shall hear nothing but what's good from Mr Sherlock. He preaches a capital sermon— for such a young man."
"Well, it was our duty to support him—not to leave him alone among the Dissenters," said Mr
Pendrell. "You see, everybody hasn't felt that.
"Here he comes, I think," said Mr Wace, turning round on hearing a movement near the small door on a level with the platform. "By George! it's Mr Debarry. Come now, this is handsome."
Mr Wace and Mr Pendrell clapped their hands, and the example was followed even by most of the Dissenters. Philip was aware that he was doing a popular thing, of a kind that Treby was not used to from the elder Debarrys; but his appearance had not been long premeditated. He was driving through the town towards an engagement at some distance, but on calling at Labron's office he had found that the affair which demanded his presence had been deferred, and so had driven round to the Free School. Christian came in behind him.
Mr Lyon was now roused from his abstraction, and, stepping from his slight elevation, begged Mr Debarry to act as moderator or president on the occasion.
"With all my heart," said Philip. "But Mr Sherlock has not arrived, apparently?"
"He tarries somewhat unduly," said Mr Lyon. "Nevertheless there may be a reason of which we
"No, no, no," said Mr Wace, who saw a limit to his powers of endurance. "Mr Sherlock is sure to be here in a minute or two."
"Christian," said Philip Debarry, who felt a slight misgiving, "just be so good—but stay, I'll go myself. Excuse me, gentlemen; I'll drive round to Mr Sherlock's lodgings. He may be under a little mistake as to the time. Studious men are sometimes rather absent. You needn't come with me, Christian."
As Mr Debarry went out, Rufus Lyon stepped on to the tribune again in rather an uneasy state
of mind. A few ideas had occurred to him, eminently fitted to engage the audience profitably,
and so to wrest some edification out of an unforeseen delay. But his native delicacy made him
feel that in this assembly the Church people might fairly decline any "deliverance" on his
part which exceeded the programme, and Mr Wace's negative had been energetic. But the little
man suffered from imprisoned ideas, and was as restless as a racer held in. He could not sit
down again, but walked backwards and forwards, stroking his chin, emitting
"Your father is uneasy," said Felix to Esther.
"Yes; and now, I think, he is feeling for his spectacles. I hope he has not left them at home: he will not be able to see anything two yards before him without them;—and it makes him so unconscious of what people expect or want."
"I'll go and ask him whether he has them," said Felix, striding over the form in front of him, and approaching Mr Lyon, whose face showed a gleam of pleasure at this relief from his abstracted isolation.
"Miss Lyon is afraid that you are at a loss for your spectacles, sir," said Felix.
"My dear young friend," said Mr Lyon, laying his hand on Felix Holt's fore-arm, which was
about
Esther was watching her father and Felix, and though she was not within hearing of what was
being said, she guessed the actual state of the case—that the inquiry about the spectacles had
been unheeded, and that her father was losing himself and embarrassing Felix in the
intricacies of a dissertation.
"Pray see whether you have forgotten your spectacles, father. If so, I will go home at once and look for them."
Mr Lyon was automatically obedient to Esther, and he began immediately to feel in his pockets.
"How is it that Miss Jermyn is so friendly with the Dissenting parson?" said Christian to Quorlen, the Tory printer, who was an intimate of his. "Those grand Jermyns are not Dissenters surely?"
" What Miss Jermyn?"
"Why—don't you see?—that fine girl who is talking to him,"
"Miss Jermyn! Why, that's the little parson's daughter."
"His daughter!" Christian gave a low brief whistle, which seemed a natural expression of surprise that "the rusty old ranter" should have a daughter of such distinguished appearance.
Meanwhile the search for the spectacles had proved vain. "Tis a grievous fault in me, my
"I will go at once," said Esther, refusing to let Felix go instead of her. But she had scarcely stepped off the tribune when Mr Debarry re-entered, and there was a commotion which made her wait. After a low-toned conversation with Mr Pendrell and Mr Wace, Philip Debarry stepped on to the tribune with his hat in his hand, and said, with an air of much concern and annoyance,
"I am sorry to have to tell you, ladies and gentlemen, that—doubtless owing to some accidental cause which I trust will soon be explained as nothing serious —Mr Sherlock is absent from his residence, and is not to be found. He went out early, his landlady informs me, to refresh himself by a walk on this agreeable morning, as is his habit, she tells me, when he has been kept up late by study; and he has not returned. Do not let us be too anxious. I shall cause inquiry to be made in the direction of his walk. It is easy to imagine many accidents, not of a grave character, by which he might nevertheless be absolutely detained against his will. Under these circumstances, Mr Lyon," continued Philip, turning to the minister, "I presume that the debate must be adjourned."
"The debate, doubtless," began Mr Lyon; but his further speech was drowned by a general rising of the Church people from their seats, many of them feeling that, even if the cause were lamentable, the adjournment was not altogether disagreeable.
"Good gracious me!" said Mrs Tiliot, as she took her husband's arm, "I hope the poor young man hasn't fallen into the river or broken his leg."
But some of the more acrid Dissenters, whose temper was not controlled by the habits of retail business, had begun to hiss, implying that in their interpretation the Curate's absence had not depended on any injury to life or limb.
"He's turned tail, sure enough," said Mr Muscat to the neighbour behind him, lifting his eyebrows and shoulders, and laughing in a way that showed that, deacon as he was, he looked at the affair in an entirely secular light.
But Mrs Muscat thought it would be nothing but right to have all the waters dragged, agreeing in this with the majority of the Church ladies.
"I regret sincerely, Mr Lyon," said Philip Debarry, addressing the minister with politeness,
"that I must say good-morning to you, with the
"Speak not of it in the way of apology, sir," said Mr Lyon, in a tone of depression. "I doubt not that you yourself have acted in good faith. Nor will I open any door of egress to constructions such as anger often deems ingenious, but which the disclosure of the simple truth may expose as erroneous and uncharitable fabrications. I wish you good-morning, sir."
When the room was cleared of the Church people, Mr Lyon wished to soothe his own spirit and
that of his flock by a few reflections introductory to a parting prayer. But there was a
general resistance to this effort. The men mustered round the minister, and declared their
opinion that the whole thing was disgraceful to the Church. Some said the Curate's absence had
been contrived from the first. Others more than hinted that it had been a folly in Mr Lyon to
set on foot any procedure in common with Tories and Clergymen, who, if they ever aped civility
to Dissenters, would never do anything but laugh at them in their sleeves. Brother Kemp urged
in his heavy bass that Mr Lyon should lose no time in sending an account of the affair to the
'Patriot;' and Brother Hawkins, in
apropos.
The position of receiving a many-voiced lecture from the members of his church was familiar to Mr Lyon; but now he felt weary, frustrated, and doubtful of his own temper. Felix, who stood by and saw that this man of sensitive fibre was suffering from talkers whose noisy superficiality cost them nothing, got exasperated. "It seems to me, sirs," he burst in, with his predominant voice, "that Mr Lyon has hitherto had the hard part of the business, while you of his congregation have had the easy one. Punish the Church clergy, if you like—they can take care of the themselves. But don't punish your own minister. It's no business of mine, perhaps, except so far as fair-play is everybody's business; but it seems to me the time to ask Mr Lyon to take a little rest, instead of setting on him like so many wasps."
By this speech Felix raised a displeasure which fell on the minister as well as on himself;
but he gained his immediate end. The talkers dropped off after a slight show of persistence,
and Mr Lyon quitted the field of no combat with a small group of his less imperious friends,
to whom he confided
"But regarding personalities," he added, "I have not the same clear showing. For, say that this young man was pusillanimous—I were but ill provided with arguments if I took my stand even for a moment on so poor an irrelevancy as that because one curate is ill furnished therefore Episcopacy is false. If I held up any one to just obloquy, it would be the well-designated Incumbent of this parish, who, calling himself one of the Church militant, sends a young and weak-kneed substitute to take his place in the fight."
Mr Philip Debarry did not neglect to make industrious inquiry concerning the accidents which had detained the Rev. Theodore Sherlock on his morning walk. That well-intentioned young divine was seen no more in Treby Magna. But the river was not dragged, for by the evening coach the Rector received an explanatory letter. The Rev. Theodore's agitation had increased so much during his walk, that the passing coach had been a means of deliverance not to be resisted; and, literally at the eleventh hour, he had hailed and mounted the cheerful Tally-ho! and carried away his portion of the debate in his pocket.
But the Rector had subsequently the satisfaction of receiving Mr Sherlock's painstaking production in print, with a dedication to the Rev. Augustus Debarry, a motto from St Chrysostom, and other additions, the fruit of ripening leisure. He was "sorry for poor Sherlock, who wanted confidence;" but he was convinced that for his own part he had taken the course which under the circumstances was the least compromising to the Church. Sir Maximus, however, observed to his son and brother that he had been right and they had been wrong as to the danger of vague, enormous expressions of gratitude to a Dissenting preacher, and on any differences of opinion seldom failed to remind them of that precedent.
Your fellow-man?—Divide the epithet: Say rather, you're the fellow, he the man.
When Christian quitted the Free School with the discovery that the young lady whose
appearance had first startled him with an indefinable impression in the market-place was the
daughter of the old Dissenting preacher who had shown so much agitated curiosity about his
name, he felt very much like an uninitiated chess-player who sees that the pieces are in a
peculiar position on the board, and might open the way for him to give checkmate, if he only
knew how. Ever since his interview with Jermyn, his mind had been occupied with the charade it
offered to his ingenuity. What was the real meaning of the lawyer's interest in him, and in
his relations with Maurice Christian Bycliffe? Here was a secret; and secrets were often a
source of profit, of that agreeable kind which involved little
The discovery made this morning at the Free School that Esther was the daughter of the
Dissenting preacher at last suggested a possible link. Until then, Christian had not known why
Esther's face had impressed him so peculiarly; but the minister's chief association for him
was with Bycliffe, and that association served as a flash to show him that Esther's features
and expression, and still more her bearing, now she stood and walked, revived Bycliffe's
image. Daughter? There were various ways of being a daughter. Suppose this were a case of
adoption: suppose Bycliffe were known to be dead, or thought to be dead. "Begad, if the old
Christian could see no distinct result for himself from his industry; but if there were to be any such result, it must be reached by following out every clue; and to the non-legal mind there are dim possibilities in law and heirship which prevent any issue from seeming too miraculous.
The consequence of these meditations was, that Christian hung about Treby more than usual in
his leisure time, and that on the first opportunity he accosted Mr Lyon in the street with
suitable civility, stating that since the occasion which had brought them together some weeks
before he had often wished to renew their conversation, and, with Mr Lyon's permission, would
now ask to do so. After being assured, as he had been by Jermyn, that this courier, who had
happened by some accident to
"If it is business, sir, you would perhaps do better to address yourself to Mr Jermyn."
He could not have said anything that was a more valuable hint to Christian. He inferred that the minister had made a confidant of Jermyn, and it was needful to be wary.
"On the contrary, sir," he answered, "it may be of the utmost importance to you that what passes between us should not be known to Mr Jermyn."
Mr Lyon was perplexed, and felt at once that he was no more in clear daylight concerning
Jermyn than concerning Christian. He dared not neglect the possible duty of hearing what this
man had to
Once in Mr Lyon's study, Christian opened the dialogue by saying that since he was in this room before it had occurred to him that the anxiety he had observed in Mr Lyon might be owing to some acquaintance with Maurice Christian Bycliffe—a fellow-prisoner in France whom he, Christian, had assisted in getting freed from his imprisonment, and who, in fact, had been the owner of the trifles which Mr Lyon had recently had in his possession and had restored. Christian hastened to say that he knew nothing of Bycliffe's history since they had parted in France, but that he knew of his marriage with Annette Ledru, and had been acquainted with Annette herself. He would be very glad to know what became of Bycliffe, if he could, for he liked him uncommonly.
Here Christian paused; but Mr Lyon only sat changing colour and trembling. This man's bearing and tone of mind were made repulsive to him by being brought in contact with keenly-felt memories, and he could not readily summon the courage to give answers or ask questions.
"May I ask if you knew my friend Bycliffe?" said Christian, trying a more direct method.
"No, sir; I never saw him."
"Ah! well—you have seen a very striking likeness of him. It's wonderful—unaccountable; but when I saw Miss Lyon at the Free School the other day, I could have sworn she was Bycliffe's daughter."
"Sir!" said Mr Lyon, in his deepest tone, half rising, and holding by the arms of his chair, "these subjects touch me with too sharp a point for you to be justified in thrusting them on me out of mere levity. Is there any good you seek or any injury you fear in relation to them?"
"Precisely, sir. We shall come now to an understanding. Suppose I believed that the young lady who goes by the name of Miss Lyon was the daughter of Bycliffe?"
Mr Lyon moved his lips silently.
"And suppose I had reason to suspect that there would be some great advantage for her if the law knew who was her father?"
"Sir!" said Mr Lyon, shaken out of all reticence, "I would not conceal it. She believes herself to be my daughter. But I will bear all things rather than deprive her of a right. Nevertheless I appeal to the pity of any fellow-man, not to thrust himself between her and me, but to let me disclose the truth to her myself."
"All in good time," said Christian. "We must do nothing rash. Then Miss Lyon is Annette's child?"
The minister shivered as if the edge of a knife had been drawn across his hand. But the tone of this question, by the very fact that it intensified his antipathy to Christian, enabled him to collect himself for what must be simply the endurance of a painful operation. After a moment or two he said more coolly, "It is true, sir. Her mother became my wife. Proceed with any statement which may concern my duty."
"I have no more to say than this: If there's a prize that the law might hand over to Bycliffe's daughter, I am much mistaken if there isn't a lawyer who'll take precious good care to keep the law hoodwinked. And that lawyer is Mat Jermyn. Why, my good sir, if you've been taking Jermyn into your confidence, you've been setting the fox to keep off the weasel. It strikes me that when you were made a little anxious about those articles of poor Bycliffe's, you put Jermyn on making inquiries of me. Eh? I think I am right?"
"I do not deny it."
"Ah!—it was very well you did, for by that means I've found out that he's got hold of some
"I had not purposed any further communication with Mr Jermyn, sir; indeed, I have nothing further to communicate. Except that one fact concerning my daughter's birth, which I have erred in concealing from her, I neither seek disclosures nor do I tremble before them."
"Then I have your word that you will be silent about this conversation between us? It is for your daughter's interest, mind."
"Sir, I shall be silent," said Mr Lyon, with cold gravity. "Unless," he added, with an acumen as to possibilities rather disturbing to Christian's confident contempt for the old man—"unless I were called upon by some tribunal to declare the whole truth in this relation; in which case I should submit myself to that authority of investigation which is a requisite of social order."
Christian departed, feeling satisfied that he had got the utmost to be obtained at present out of the Dissenting preacher, whom he had not dared to question more closely. He must look out for chance lights, and perhaps, too, he might catch a stray hint by stirring the sediment of Mr Crowder's memory. But he must not venture on inquiries that might be noticed. He was in awe of Jermyn.
When Mr Lyon was alone he paced up and down among his books, and thought aloud, in order to relieve himself after the constraint of this interview. "I will not wait for the urgency of necessity," he said, more than once. "I will tell the child, without compulsion. And then I shall fear nothing. And an unwonted spirit of tenderness has filled her of late. She will forgive me."
Consideration like an angel came And whipped the offending Adam out of her; Leaving her body as a paradise To envelop and contain celestial spirits.
Shakspeare : Henry V.
The next morning, after much prayer for the needful strength and wisdom, Mr Lyon came down-stairs with the resolution that another day should not pass without the fulfilment of the task he had laid on himself; but what hour he should choose for his solemn disclosure to Esther, must depend on their mutual occupations. Perhaps he must defer it till they sat up alone together, after Lyddy was gone to bed. But at breakfast Esther said,
"To-day is a holiday, father. My pupils are all going to Duffield to see the wild beasts. What have you got to do to-day? Come, you are eating no breakfast. O, Lyddy, Lyddy, the eggs are hard again. I wish you would not read Alleyne's 'Alarm' before breakfast; it makes you cry and forget the eggs."
"They are hard, and that's the truth; but there's hearts as are harder, Miss
Esther," said Lyddy.
"I think not," said Esther. "This is leathery enough for the heart of the most obdurate Jew. Pray give it little Zachary for a football."
"Dear, dear, don't you be so light, miss. We may all be dead before night."
"You speak out of season, my good Lyddy," said Mr Lyon, wearily; "depart into the kitchen."
"What have you got to do to-day, father?" persisted Esther. "I have a holiday."
Mr Lyon felt as if this were a fresh summons not to delay. "I have something of great moment to do, my dear; and since you are not otherwise demanded, I will ask you to come and sit with me up-stairs."
Esther wondered what there could be on her father's mind more pressing than his morning studies.
She soon knew. Motionless, but mentally stirred as she had never been before, Esther
listened to her mother's story, and to the outpouring of her stepfather's long-pent-up
experience. The rays of the morning sun which fell athwart the books, the sense of the
beginning day, had deepened the solemnity more than night would have done. All knowledge
Mr Lyon regarded his narrative as a confession—as a revelation to this beloved child of his own miserable weakness and error. But to her it seemed a revelation of another sort: her mind seemed suddenly enlarged by a vision of passion and struggle, of delight and renunciation, in the lot of beings who had hitherto been a dull enigma to her. And in the act of unfolding to her that he was not her real father, but had only striven to cherish her as a father, had only longed to be loved as a father, the odd, wayworn, unworldly man became the object of a new sympathy in which Esther felt herself exalted. Perhaps this knowledge would have been less powerful within her, but for the mental preparation that had come during the last two months from her acquaintance with Felix Holt, which had taught her to doubt the infallibility of her own standard, and raised a presentiment of moral depths that were hidden from her.
Esther had taken her place opposite to her
"This is a late retrieval of a long error, Esther. I make not excuses for myself, for we ought to strive that our affections be rooted in the truth. Nevertheless you—"
Esther had risen, and had glided on to the wooden stool on a level with her father's chair, where he was accustomed to lay books. She wanted to speak, but the floodgates could not be opened for words alone. She threw her arms round the old man's neck and sobbed out with a passionate cry, "Father, father! forgive me if I have not loved you enough. I will—I will!"
The old man's little delicate frame was shaken by a surprise and joy that were almost painful in their intensity. He had been going to ask forgiveness of her who asked it for herself. In that moment of supreme complex emotion one ray of the minister's joy was the thought, "Surely the work of grace is begun in her—surely here is a heart that the Lord hath touched."
They sat so, enclasped in silence, while Esther relieved her full heart. When she raised her head, she sat quite still for a minute or two looking fixedly before her, and keeping one little hand in the minister's. Presently she looked at him and said,
"Then you lived like a working man, father; you were very, very poor. Yet my mother had been used to luxury. She was well born—she was a lady."
"It is true, my dear; it was a poor life that I could give her."
Mr Lyon answered in utter dimness as to the course Esther's mind was taking. He had anticipated before his disclosure, from his long-standing discernment of tendencies in her which were often the cause of silent grief to him, that the discovery likely to have the keenest interest for her would be that her parents had a higher rank than that of the poor Dissenting preacher; but she had shown that other and better sensibilities were predominant. He rebuked himself now for a hasty and shallow judgment concerning the child's inner life, and waited for new clearness.
"But that must be the best life, father," said Esther, suddenly rising, with a flush across
her paleness, and standing with her head thrown a little
"What life, my dear child?"
"Why, that where one bears and does everything because of some great and strong feeling—so that this and that in one's circumstances don't signify."
"Yea, verily; but the feeling that should be thus supreme is devotedness to the Divine Will."
Esther did not speak; her father's words did not fit on to the impressions wrought in her by what he had told her. She sat down again, and said, more quietly,
"Mamma did not speak much of my—first father?"
"Not much, dear. She said he was beautiful to the eye, and good and generous; and that his family was of those who have been long privileged among their fellows. But now I will deliver to you the letters, which, together with a ring and locket, are the only visible memorials she retained of him."
Mr Lyon reached and delivered to Esther the box containing the relics. "Take them, and
examine them in privacy, my dear. And that I may no more err by concealment, I will tell you
some late occurrences that bear on these memorials, though
He then narrated to Esther all that had passed between himself and Christian. The possibility—to which Mr Lyon's alarms had pointed—that her real father might still be living, was a new shock. She could not speak about it to her present father, but it was registered in silence as a painful addition to the uncertainties which she suddenly saw hanging over her life.
"I have little confidence in this man's allegations," Mr Lyon ended. "I confess his presence and speech are to me as the jarring of metal. He bears the stamp of one who has never conceived aught of more sanctity than the lust of the eye and the pride of life. He hints at some possible inheritance for you, and denounces mysteriously the devices of Mr Jermyn. All this may or may not have a true foundation. But it is not my part to move in this matter save on a clearer showing."
"Certainly not, father," said Esther, eagerly. A little while ago, these problematic prospects might have set her dreaming pleasantly; but now, for some reasons that she could not have put distinctly into words, they affected her with dread.
To hear with eyes is part of love's rare wit.
Shakspeare : Sonnets.
Custom calls me to't:— What custom wills, in all things should we do't? The dust on antique time would lie unswept, And mountainous error be too highly heaped For truth to over-peer. Coriolanus.
In the afternoon Mr Lyon went out to see the sick amongst his flock, and Esther,
who had been passing the morning in dwelling on the memories and the few remaining relics of
her parents, was left alone in the parlour amidst the lingering odours of the early dinner,
not easily got rid of in that small house. Rich people, who know nothing of these vulgar
details, can hardly imagine their significance in the history of multitudes of human lives in
which the sensibilities are never adjusted to the external conditions. Esther always felt so
much discomfort from those odours that she usually seized any possibility of escaping from
them, and to-day they oppressed her the more because she was
Esther was waiting for the sake of—not a probability, but—a mere possibility, which made the
brothy odours endurable. Apparently, in less than half an hour, the possibility came to pass,
for she changed her attitude, almost started from her seat, sat down again, and listened
eagerly. If Lyddy should send him away, could she herself rush out and call him back? Why not?
Such things were
"O yes, Lyddy, beg him to come in."
"I should not have persevered," said Felix, as they shook hands, "only I know Lyddy's dismal way. But you do look ill," he went on, as he seated himself at the other end of the sofa. "Or rather—for that's a false way of putting it—you look as if you had been very much distressed. Do you mind about my taking notice of it?"
He spoke very kindly, and looked at her more persistently than he had ever done before, when her hair was perfect.
"You are quite right. I am not at all ill. But I have been very much agitated this morning. My father has been telling me things I never heard before about my mother, and giving me things that belonged to her. She died when I was a very little creature."
"Then it is no new pain or trouble for you and Mr Lyon? I could not help being anxious to know that."
Esther passed her hand over her brow before she
As she said this, she looked at Felix, and their eyes met very gravely.
"It is such a beautiful day," he said, "it would do you good to go into the air. Let me take you along the river towards Little Treby, will you?"
"I will put my bonnet on," said Esther, unhesitatingly, though they had never walked out together before.
It is true that to get into the fields they had to pass through the street; and when Esther saw some acquaintances, she reflected that her walking alone with Felix might be a subject of remark—all the more because of his cap, patched boots, no cravat, and thick stick. Esther was a little amazed herself at what she had come to. So our lives glide on: the river ends we don't know where, and the sea begins, and then there is no more jumping ashore.
When they were in the streets Esther hardly spoke. Felix talked with his usual readiness, as
easily as if he were not doing it solely to divert her thoughts, first about Job Tudge's
delicate chest,
But soon they got into the fields, where there was a right of way towards Little Treby, now following the course of the river, now crossing towards a lane, and now turning into a cart-track through a plantation.
"Here we are!" said Felix, when they had crossed the wooden bridge, and were treading on the slanting shadows made by the elm trunks. "I think this is delicious. I never feel less unhappy than in these late autumn afternoons when they are sunny."
"Less unhappy! There now!" said Esther, smiling at him with some of her habitual sauciness,
"I have caught you in self-contradiction. I have heard you quite furious against puling,
melancholy people. If I had said what you have just
"Very likely," said Felix, beating the weeds, according to the foible of our common humanity when it has a stick in its hand. "But I don't think myself a fine fellow because I'm melancholy. I don't measure my force by the negations in me, and think my soul must be a mighty one because it is more given to idle suffering than to beneficent activity. That's what your favourite gentlemen do, of the Byronic-bilious style."
"I don't admit that those are my favourite gentlemen."
"I've heard you defend them—gentlemen like your Rénés, who have no particular talent for the finite, but a general sense that the infinite is the right thing for them. They might as well boast of nausea as a proof of a strong inside."
"Stop, stop! You run on in that way to get out of my reach. I convicted you of confessing that you are melancholy."
"Yes!" said Felix, thrusting his left hand into his pocket, with a shrug; "as I could
confess to a great many other things I'm not proud of. The fact is, there are not many easy
lots to be drawn in the
"Why have you made your life so hard then?" said Esther, rather frightened as she asked the question. "It seems to me you have tried to find just the most difficult task."
"Not at all," said Felix, with curt decision. "My course was a very simple one. It was pointed out to me by conditions that I saw as clearly as I see the bars of this stile. It's a difficult stile too," added Felix, striding over. "Shall I help you, or will you be left to yourself?"
"I can do without help, thank you."
"It was all simple enough," continued Felix, as they walked on. "If I meant to put a stop to
the sale of those drugs, I must keep my mother, and of course at her age she would not leave
the place she
"But suppose every one did as you do? Please to forgive me for saying so; but I cannot see why you could not have lived as honourably with some employment that presupposes education and refinement."
"Because you can't see my history or my nature," said Felix, bluntly. "I have to determine for myself, and not for other men. I don't blame them, or think I am better than they; their circumstances are different. I would never choose to withdraw myself from the labour and common burthen of the world; but I do choose to withdraw myself from the push and the scramble for money and position. Any man is at liberty to call me a fool, and say that mankind are benefited by the push and the scramble in the long-run. But I care for the people who live now and will not be living when the long-run comes. As it is, I prefer going shares with the unlucky."
Esther did not speak, and there was silence between them for a minute or two, till they passed through a gate into a plantation where there was no large timber, but only thin-stemmed trees and underwood, so that the sunlight fell on the mossy spaces which lay open here and there.
"See how beautiful those stooping birch-stems are with the light on them!" said Felix. "Here is an old felled trunk they have not thought worth carrying away. Shall we sit down a little while?"
"Yes, the mossy ground with the dry leaves sprinkled over it is delightful to one's feet." Esther sat down and took off her bonnet, that the light breeze might fall on her head. Felix, too, threw down his cap and stick, lying on the ground with his back against the felled trunk.
"I wish I felt more as you do," she said, looking at the point of her foot, which was playing with a tuft of moss. "I can't help caring very much what happens to me. And you seem to care so little about yourself."
"You are thoroughly mistaken," said Felix. "It is just because I'm a very ambitious fellow,
with very hungry passions, wanting a great deal to satisfy me, that I have chosen to give up
what people call worldly good. At least that has been one determining reason. It all depends
on what a man gets into his consciousness—what life thrusts into his mind, so that it becomes
present to him as remorse is present to the guilty, or a mechanical problem to an inventive
genius. There are two things I've got present in that way: one of them is the picture of
Esther felt a terrible pressure on her heart—the certainty of her remoteness from Felix—the sense that she was utterly trivial to him.
"The other thing that's got into my mind like a splinter," said Felix, after a pause, "is
the life of the miserable—the spawning life of vice and hunger. I'll never be one of the sleek
dogs. The old Catholics are right, with their higher rule and their lower. Some are called to
subject themselves to a harder discipline, and renounce things voluntarily which
"It seems to me you are stricter than my father is."
"No! I quarrel with no delight that is not base or cruel, but one must sometimes accommodate one's self to a small share. That is the lot of the majority. I would wish the minority joy, only they don't want my wishes."
Again there was silence. Esther's cheeks were hot in spite of the breeze that sent her hair
floating backward. She felt an inward strain, a demand on her to see things in a light that
was not easy or soothing. When Felix had asked her to walk, he had seemed so kind, so alive to
what might be her feelings, that she had thought herself nearer to him than she had ever been
before; but since they had come out, he had appeared to forget all that. And yet she was
conscious that this impatience of hers was very petty. Battling in this way with her own
little impulses, and looking at the birch-stems opposite till her gaze was too wide for her to
see anything distinctly, she was unaware how long they had remained without speaking. She did
not know that Felix had changed his attitude a little, and was resting his elbow on the
tree-trunk, while he supported
"You are very beautiful."
She started and looked round at him, to see whether his face would give some help to the interpretation of this novel speech. He was looking up at her quite calmly, very much as a reverential Protestant might look at a picture of the Virgin, with a devoutness suggested by the type rather than by the image. Esther's vanity was not in the least gratified: she felt that, somehow or other, Felix was going to reproach her.
"I wonder," he went on, still looking at her, "whether the subtle measuring of forces will ever come to measuring the force there would be in one beautiful woman whose mind was as noble as her face was beautiful—who made a man's passion for her rush in one current with all the great aims of his life."
Esther's eyes got hot and smarting. It was no use trying to be dignified. She had turned away her head, and now said, rather bitterly, "It is difficult for a woman ever to try to be anything good when she is not believed in—when it is always supposed that she must be contemptible."
"No, dear Esther"—it was the first time Felix had been prompted to call her by her Christian name, and as he did so he laid his large hand on her two little hands, which were clasped on her knees. "You don't believe that I think you contemptible. When I first saw you—"
"I know, I know," said Esther, interrupting him impetuously, but still looking away. "You mean you did think me contemptible then. But it was very narrow of you to judge me in that way, when my life had been so different from yours. I have great faults. I know I am selfish, and think too much of my own small tastes and too little of what affects others. But I am not stupid. I am not unfeeling. I can see what is better."
"But I have not done you injustice since I knew more of you," said Felix, gently.
"Yes, you have," said Esther, turning and smiling at him through her tears. "You talk to me
like an angry pedagogue. Were you always wise? Remember the time when you were
foolish or naughty."
"That is not far off," said Felix, curtly, taking away his hand and clasping it with the
other at the back of his head. The talk, which seemed to be introducing a mutual
understanding, such as had
"Shall we get up and walk back now?" said Esther, after a few moments.
"No," said Felix, entreatingly. "Don't move yet. I daresay we shall never walk together or sit here again."
"Why not?"
"Because I am a man who am warned by visions. Those old stories of visions and dreams guiding men have their truth: we are saved by making the future present to ourselves."
"I wish I could get visions, then," said Esther, smiling at him, with an effort at playfulness, in resistance to something vaguely mournful within her.
"That is what I want," said Felix, looking at her very earnestly. "Don't turn your head. Do
look at me, and then I shall know if I may go on speaking. I do believe in you; but I want you
to have such a vision of the future that you may never lose your best self. Some charm or
other may be flung about you—some of your atta-of-rose fascinations—and nothing but a good
strong terrible vision will save you. And if it did save you, you might be that woman I was
thinking of a little while ago when I
"Why are you not likely to know what becomes of me?" said Esther, turning away her eyes in spite of his command. "Why should you not always be my father's friend and mine?"
"O, I shall go away as soon as I can to some large town," said Felix, in his more usual tone,—"some ugly, wicked, miserable place. I want to be a demagogue of a new sort; an honest one, if possible, who will tell the people they are blind and foolish, and neither flatter them nor fatten on them. I have my heritage—an order I belong to. I have the blood of a line of handicraftsmen in my veins, and I want to stand up for the lot of the handicraftsman as a good lot, in which a man may be better trained to all the best functions of his nature than if he belonged to the grimacing set who have visiting-cards, and are proud to be thought richer than their neighbours."
"Would nothing ever make it seem right to you to change your mind?" said Esther (she had
rapidly
"No," said Felix, peremptorily; "I will never be rich. I don't count that as any peculiar virtue. Some men do well to accept riches, but that is not my inward vocation: I have no fellow-feeling with the rich as a class; the habits of their lives are odious to me. Thousands of men have wedded poverty because they expect to go to heaven for it; I don't expect to go to heaven for it, but I wed it because it enables me to do what I most want to do on earth. Whatever the hopes for the world may be—whether great or small—I am a man of this generation; I will try to make life less bitter for a few within my reach. It is held reasonable enough to toil for the fortunes of a family, though it may turn to imbecility in the third generation. I choose a family with more chances in it."
Esther looked before her dreamily till she said, "That seems a hard lot; yet it is a great one." She rose to walk back.
"Then you don't think I'm a fool," said Felix, loudly, starting to his feet, and then stooping to gather up his cap and stick.
"Of course you suspected me of that stupidity."
"Well—women, unless they are Saint Theresas or Elizabeth Frys, generally think this sort of thing madness, unless when they read of it in the Bible."
"A woman can hardly ever choose in that way; she is dependent on what happens to her. She must take meaner things, because only meaner things are within her reach."
"Why, can you imagine yourself choosing hardship as the better lot?" said Felix, looking at her with a sudden question in his eyes.
"Yes, I can," she said, flushing over neck and brow.
Their words were charged with a meaning dependent entirely on the secret consciousness of
each. Nothing had been said which was necessarily personal. They walked a few yards along the
road by which they had come, without further speech, till Felix said gently, "Take my arm."
She took it, and they walked home so, entirely without conversation. Felix was struggling as a
firm man struggles with a temptation, seeing beyond it and disbelieving its lying promise.
Esther was struggling as a
"It is getting dusk," Felix then said; "will Mr Lyon be anxious about you?"
"No, I think not. Lyddy would tell him that I went out with you, and that you carried a large stick," said Esther, with her light laugh.
Felix went in with Esther to take tea, but the conversation was entirely between him and Mr
Lyon about the tricks of canvassing, the foolish personality of the placards, and the
probabilities of Transome's return, as to which Felix declared himself to have become
indifferent. This scepticism made the minister uneasy: he had great belief in the old
political watchwords, had preached that universal suffrage and no ballot were agreeable to the
will of God, and liked to believe that a visible "instrument" was forthcoming in the Radical
Candidate who had pronounced emphatically against Whig finality. Felix, being in a perverse
mood, contended that universal suffrage would be
"Nay, my friend," said the minister, "you are again sporting with paradox; for you will not deny that you glory in the name of Radical, or Root-and-branch man, as they said in the great times when Nonconformity was in its giant youth."
"A Radical—yes; but I want to go to some roots a good deal lower down than the franchise."
"Truly there is a work within which cannot be dispensed with; but it is our preliminary work to free men from the stifled life of political nullity, and bring them into what Milton calls 'the liberal air,' wherein alone can be wrought the final triumphs of the Spirit."
"With all my heart. But while Caliban is Caliban, though you multiply him by a million, he'll worship every Trinculo that carries a bottle. I forget, though—you don't read Shakspeare, Mr Lyon."
"I am bound to confess that I have so far looked into a volume of Esther's as to conceive
your meaning; but the fantasies therein were so little to be reconciled with a steady
contemplation of that
Esther sat by in unusual silence. The conviction that Felix willed her exclusion from his life was making it plain that something more than friendship between them was not so thoroughly out of the question as she had always inwardly asserted. In her pain that his choice lay aloof from her, she was compelled frankly to admit to herself the longing that it had been otherwise, and that he had entreated her to share his difficult life. He was like no one else to her: he had seemed to bring at once a law, and the love that gave strength to obey the law. Yet the next moment, stung by his independence of her, she denied that she loved him; she had only longed for a moral support under the negations of her life. If she were not to have that support, all effort seemed useless.
Esther had been so long used to hear the formulas of her father's belief without feeling or
understanding them, that they had lost all power to touch her. The first religious experience
of her life—the first self-questioning, the first voluntary subjection, the first longing to
acquire the strength of greater motives and obey the more strenuous rule—had
But was it certain that she should lose him? She did not believe that he was really indifferent to her.
But what says Jupiter, I ask thee? Alas, sir, I know not Jupiter: I never drank with him in all my life. Titus Andronicus.
The multiplication of uncomplimentary placards noticed by Mr Lyon and Felix Holt was one of several signs that the days of nomination and election were approaching. The presence of the Revising Barrister in Treby was not only an opportunity for all persons not otherwise busy to show their zeal for the purification of the voting-lists, but also to reconcile private ease and public duty by standing about the streets and lounging at doors.
It was no light business for Trebians to form an opinion; the mere fact of a public
functionary with an unfamiliar title was enough to give them pause, as a premiss that was not
to be quickly started from. To Mr Pink the saddler, for example, until some distinct injury or
benefit had accrued to him,
But Mr Pink was fond of news, which he collected and retailed with perfect impartiality,
noting facts and rejecting comments. Hence he was well pleased to have his shop so constant a
place of resort for loungers, that to many Trebians there was a strong association between the
pleasures of gossip and the smell of leather. He had the satisfaction of chalking and cutting,
and of keeping his journeymen close at work, at the very time that he learned from his
visitors who were those whose votes had been called in question before His Honour, how Lawyer
Jermyn had been too much for Lawyer Labron about Todd's cottages, and how, in the
The dusk seemed deepened the next moment by a tall figure obstructing the doorway, at sight of whom Mr Pink rubbed his hands and smiled and bowed more than once, with evident solicitude to show honour where honour was due, while he said,
"Mr Christian, sir, how do you do, sir?"
Christian answered with the condescending familiarity of a superior. "Very badly, I can tell you, with these confounded braces that you were to make such a fine job of. See, old fellow, they've burst out again."
"Very sorry, sir. Can you leave them with me?"
"O yes, I'll leave them. What's the news, eh?" said Christian, half seating himself on a high stool, and beating his boot with a hand-whip.
"Well, sir, we look to you to tell us that," said Mr Pink, with a knowing smile. "You're at headquarters—eh, sir? That was what I said to Mr Scales the other day. He came for some straps, Mr Scales did, and he asked that question in pretty near the same terms that you've done, sir, and I answered him, as I may say, ditto. Not meaning any disrespect to you, sir, but a way of speaking."
"Come, that's gammon, Pink," said Christian. "You know everything. You can tell me, if you will, who is the fellow employed to paste up Transome's handbills?"
"What do you say, Mr Sims?" said Pink, looking at the auctioneer.
"Why, you know and I know well enough. It's Tommy Trounsem—an old, crippling, half-mad fellow. Most people know Tommy. I've employed him myself for charity."
"Where shall I find him?" said Christian.
"At the Cross-Keys, in Pollard's End, most likely," said Mr Sims. "I don't know where he puts himself when he isn't at the public."
"He was a stoutish fellow fifteen year ago, when he carried pots," said Mr Pink.
"Ay, and has snared many a hare in his time," said Mr Sims. "But he was always a little cracked. Lord bless you! he used to swear he'd a right to the Transome estate."
"Why, what put that notion into his head?" said Christian, who had learned more than he expected.
"The lawing, sir—nothing but the lawing about the estate. There was a deal of it twenty year ago," said Mr Pink. "Tommy happened to turn up hereabout at that time; a big, lungeous fellow, who would speak disrespectfully of hanybody."
"O, he meant no harm," said Mr Sims. "He was fond of a drop to drink, and not quite right in the upper storey, and he could hear no difference between Trounsem and Transome. It's an odd way of speaking they have in that part where he was born—a little north'ard. You'll hear it in his tongue now, if you talk to him."
"At the Cross-Keys I shall find him, eh?" said Christian, getting off his stool. "Good-day, Pink, good-day."
Christian went straight from the saddler's to Quorlen's, the Tory printer's, with whom he
had contrived a political spree. Quorlen was a new man in Treby,
"Suppose now," he said to himself, as he strode along—"suppose there should be some secret to be got out of this old scamp, or some notion that's as good as a secret to those who know how to use it? That would be virtue rewarded. But I'm afraid the old tosspot is not likely to be good for much. There's truth in wine, and there may be some in gin and muddy beer; but whether it's truth worth my knowing, is another question. I've got plenty of truth in my time out of men who were half-seas-over, but never any that was worth a sixpence to me."
The Cross-Keys was a very old-fashioned "public:"
But though this venerable "public" had not failed to share in the recent political excitement of drinking, the pleasures it offered were not at this early hour of the evening sought by a numerous company. There were only three or four pipes being smoked by the firelight, but it was enough for Christian when he found that one of these was being smoked by the bill-sticker, whose large flat basket, stuffed with placards, leaned near him against the settle. So splendid an apparition as Christian was not a little startling at the Cross-Keys, and was gazed at in expectant silence; but he was a stranger in Pollard's End, and was taken for the highest style of traveller when he declared that he was deucedly thirsty, ordered sixpennyworth of gin and a large jug of water, and, putting a few drops of the spirit into his own glass, invited Tommy Trounsem, who sat next him; to help himself. Tommy was not slower than a shaking hand obliged him to be in accepting this invitation. He was a tall broad-shouldered old fellow, who had once been good-looking; but his cheeks and chest were both hollow now, and his limbs were shrunken.
"You've got some bills there, master, eh?" said
"Auction? no," said Tommy, with a gruff hoarseness, which was the remnant of a jovial bass, and with an accent which differed from the Trebian fitfully, as an early habit is wont to reassert itself. "I've nought to do wi' auctions; I'm a pol'tical charicter. It's me am getting Trounsem into Parl'ment."
"Trounsem, says he," the landlord observed, taking out his pipe with a low laugh. "It's Transome, sir. May be you don't belong to this part. It's the candidate 'ull do most for the working men, and's proved it too, in the way o' being openhanded and wishing 'em to enjoy themselves. If I'd twenty votes, I'd give one for Transome, and I don't care who hears me."
The landlord peeped out from his fungous cluster of features with a beery confidence that the high figure of twenty had somehow raised the hypothetic value of his vote.
"Spilkins, now," said Tommy, waving his hand to the landlord, "you let one genelman speak to another, will you? This genelman wants to know about my bills. Does he, or doesn't he?"
"What then? I spoke according," said the landlord, mildly holding his own.
"You're all very well, Spilkins," retuned Tommy, "but y'aren't me. I know what the bills are. It's public business. I'm none o' your common bill-stickers, master; I've left off sticking up ten guineas reward for a sheep-stealer, or low stuff like that. These are Trounsem's bills; and I'm the rightful family, and so I give him a lift. A Trounsem I am, and a Trounsem I'll be buried; and if Old Nick tries to lay hold on me for poaching, I'll say, 'You be hanged for a lawyer, Old Nick; every hare and pheasant on the Trounsem's land is mine;' and what rises the family, rises old Tommy; and we're going to get into Parl'ment—that's the long and the short on't, master. And I'm the head o' the family, and I stick the bills. There's Johnsons, and Thomsons, and Jacksons, and Billsons; but I'm a Trounsem, I am. What do you say to that, master?"
This appeal, accompanied by a blow on the table, while the landlord winked at the company, was addressed to Christian, who answered, with severe gravity,
"I say there isn't any work more honourable than bill-sticking."
"No, no," said Tommy, wagging his head from side to side. "I thought you'd come in to that.
I thought you'd know better than say contrairy.
As these celestial prospects might imply that a little extra gin was beginning to tell on the bill-sticker, Christian wanted to lose no time in arresting his attention. He laid his hand on Tommy's arm and spoke emphatically.
"But I'll tell you what you bill-stickers are not up to. You should be on the look-out when Debarry's side have stuck up fresh bills, and go and paste yours over them. I know where there's a lot of Debarry's bills now. Come along with me, and I'll show you. We'll paste them over, and then we'll come back and treat the company."
"Hooray!" said Tommy. "Let's be off them."
He was one of the thoroughly inured, originally hale drunkards, and did not easily lose his
head or legs or the ordinary amount of method in his talk. Strangers often suppposed that
Tommy was tipsy when he had only taken what he called "one blessed pint," chiefly from that
glorious contentment with himself and his adverse fortunes which is not usually characteristic
of the sober Briton. He knocked the ashes out of his pipe, seized his paste-vessel
The landlord and some others had confidently concluded that they understood all about Christian now. He was a Transome's man, come to see after the bill-sticking in Transome's interest. The landlord, telling his yellow wife snappishly to open the door for the gentleman, hoped soon to see him again.
"This is a Transome's house, sir," he observed, "in respect of entertaining customers of that colour. I do my duty as a publican, which, if I know it, is to turn back no genelman's money. I say, give every genelman a chanch, and the more the merrier, in Parl'ment and out of it. And if anybody says they want but two Parl'ment men, I say it 'ud be better for trade if there was six of 'em, and voters according."
"Ay, ay," said Christian; "you're a sensible man, landlord. You don't mean to vote for Debarry then, eh?"
"Not nohow," said the landlord, thinking that where negatives were good the more you heard of them the better.
As soon as the door had closed behind Christian and his new companion, Tommy said,
"Now, master, if you're to be my lantern, don't you be a Jacky Lantern, which I take to mean one as leads you the wrong way. For I'll tell you what—if you've had the luck to fall in wi' Tommy Trounsem, don't you let him drop."
"No, no—to be sure not," said Christian. "Come along here. We'll go to the Back Brewery wall first."
"No, no; don't you let me drop. Give me a shilling any day you like, and I'll tell you more nor you'll hear from Spilkins in a week. There isna many men like me. I carried pots for fifteen year off and on—what do you think o' that now, for a man as might ha' lived up there at Trounsem Park, and snared his own game? Which I'd ha' done," said Tommy, wagging his head at Christian in the dimness undisturbed by gas. "None o' your shooting for me—it's two to one you'll miss. Snaring's more fishing-like. You bait your hook, and if it isna the fishes' goodwill to come, that's nothing again' the sporting genelman. And that's what I say by snaring."
"But if you'd a right to the Transome estate, how was it you were kept out of it, old boy? It was some foul shame or other, eh?"
"It's the law—that's what it is. You're a good
"I see well enough you're deep, Tommy. How came you to know you were born to property?"
"It was the regester—the parish regester," said Tommy, with his knowing wag of the head,
"that shows as you was born. I allays felt it inside me as I was somebody, and I could see
other chaps thought it on me too; and so one day at Littleshaw, where I kep ferrets and a
little bit of a public, there comes a fine man looking after me, and walking me up and down
wi' questions. And I made out from the clerk as he'd been at the regester; and I gave the
clerk a pot or two, and he got it of our parson as the nake o' Trounsem was a great name
hereabout. And I waits a bit for my fine man to come again. Thinks I, if there's property
wants a right owner, I shall be called for; for I didn't
"Ah! well, here we are at the Back Brewery wall. Put down your paste and your basket now, old boy, and I'll help you. You paste, and I'll give you the bills, and then you can go on talking."
Tommy obeyed automatically, for he was now carried away by the rare opportunity of talking to a new listener, and was only eager to go on with his story. As soon as his back was turned, and he was stooping over his paste-pot, Christian, with quick adroitness, exchanged the placards in his own bag for those in Tommy's basket. Christian's placards had not been printed at Treby, but were a new lot which had been sent from Duffield that very day—"highly spiced," Quorlen had said, "coming from a pen that was up to that sort of thing." Christian had read the first of the sheaf, and supposed they were all alike. He proceeded to hand one to Tommy, and said,
"Here, old boy, paste this over the other. And
"Do? Why, I put up at a good public and ordered the best, for I'd a bit o' money in my pocket; and I axed about, and they said to me, if it's Trounsem business you're after, you go to Lawyer Jermyn. And I went; and says I, going along, he's may be the fine man as walked me up and down. But no such thing. I'll tell you what Lawyer Jermyn was. He stands you there, and holds you away from him wi' a pole three yard long. He stares at you, and says nothing, till you feel like a Tomfool; and then he threats you to set the justice on you; and then he's sorry for you, and hands you money, and preaches you a sarmint, and tells you you're a poor man, and he'll give you a bit of advice—and you'd better not be meddling wi' things belonging to the law, else you'll be catched up in a big wheel and fly to bits. And I went of a cold sweat, and I wished I might never come i' sight o' Lawyer Jermyn again. But he says, if you keep i' this neighbourhood, behave yourself well, and I'll pertect you. I were deep enough, but it's no use being deep, 'cause you can never know the law. And there's times when the deepest fellow's worst frightened."
"Yes, yes. There! Now for another placard. And so that was all?"
"All?" said Tommy, turning round and holding the paste-brush in suspense. "Don't you be running too quick. Thinks I, 'I'll meddle no more. I've got a bit o' money—I'll buy a basket, and be a potman. It's a pleasant life. I shall live at publics and see the world, and pick up 'quaintance, and get a chanch penny.' But when I'd turned into the Red Lion, and got myself warm again wi' a drop o' hot, something jumps into my head. Thinks I, Tommy, you've done finely for yourself: you're a rat as has broke up your house to take a journey, and show yourself to a ferret. And then it jumps into my head: I'd once two ferrets as turned on one another, and the little un killed the big un. Says I to the landlady, 'Missis, could you tell me of a lawyer,' says I, 'not very big or fine, but a second size—a pig-potato, like?' 'That I can,' says she; 'there's one now in the bar parlour.' 'Be so kind as bring us together,' says I. And she cries out—I think I hear her now—'Mr Johnson!' And what do you think?"
At this crisis in Tommy's story the grey clouds, which had been gradually thinning, opened
sufficiently to let down the sudden moonlight, and
"It's wonderful. I can't tell what to think."
"Then never do you deny Old Nick," said Tommy, with solemnity. "I've believed in him more
ever since. Who was Johnson? Why, Johnson was the fine man as had walked me up and down with
questions. And I out with it to him then and there. And he speaks me civil, and says, 'Come
away wi' me, my good fellow.' And he told me a deal o' law. And he says, whether you're a
Tommy Trounsem or no, it's no good to you, but only to them as have got hold o' the property.
If you was a Tommy Trounsem twenty times over, it 'ud be no good, for the law's bought you
out; and your life's no good, only to them as have catched hold o' the property. The more you
live, the more they'll stick in. Not as they want you now, says he—you're no good to anybody,
and you might howl like a dog for iver, and the law 'ud take no notice on you. Says Johnson,
"Come, then, fire away," said Christian. "Here's another placard."
"I'm getting a bit dry, master."
"Well, then, make haste, and you'll have something to drink all the sooner."
Tommy turned to his work again, and Christian, continuing his help, said, "And how long has Mr Jermyn been employing you?"
"Oh, no particular time—off and on; but a week or two ago he sees me upo' the road, and
speaks to me uncommon civil, and tells me to go up to his office, and he'll give me employ.
And I was noways unwilling to stick the bills to get the family into Parl'ment. For there's no
man can help the law. And the family's the family, whether you carry pots
The unwonted excitement of poor Tommy's memory was producing a reaction.
"Well, Tommy," said Christian, who had just made a discovery among the placards which altered the bent of his thoughts, "you may go back to the Cross-Keys now, if you like; here's a half-crown for you to spend handsomely. I can't go back there myself just yet; but you may give my respects to Spilkins, and mind you paste the rest of the bills early to-morrow morning."
"Ay, ay. But don't you believe too much i' Spilkins," said Tommy, pocketing the half-crown, and showing his gratitude by giving this advice—"he's no harm much—but weak. He thinks he's at the bottom o' things because he scores you up. But I bear him no ill-will. Tommy Trounsem's a good chap; and any day you like to give me half—a—crown, I'll tell you the same story over again. Not now; I'm dry. Come, help me up wi' these things; you're a younger chap than me. Well, I'll tell Spilkins you'll come again another day."
The moonlight, which had lit up poor Tommy's oratorical attitude, had served to light up for
Christian the print of the placards. He had expected the
versus Transome. There were about a dozen of them; he pressed them together
and thrust them into his pocket, returning all the rest to Tommy's basket. To take away this
dozen might not be to prevent similar bills from being posted up elsewhere, but he had reason
to believe that these were all of the same kind which had been sent to Treby from
Duffield.
Christian's interest in his practical joke had died out like a morning rushlight. Apart from this discovery in the placards, old Tommy's story had some indications in it that were worth pondering over. Where was that well-informed Johnson now? Was he still an understrapper of Jermyn's?
With this matter in his thoughts, Christian only turned in hastily at Quorlen's, threw down the black bag which contained the captured Radical handbills, said he had done the job, and hurried back to the Manor that he might study his problem.
I doe believe that, as the gall has severall receptacles in several creatures, soe there's scarce any creature but hath that emunctorye somewhere.
Sir Thomas Browne.
Fancy what a game at chess would be if all the chessmen had passions and
intellects, more or less small and cunning: if you were not only uncertain about your
adversary's men, but a little uncertain also about your own; if your knight could shuffle
himself on to a new square by the sly; if your bishop, in disgust at your castling, could
wheedle your pawns out of their places; and if your pawns, hating you because they are pawns,
could make away from their appointed posts that you might get checkmate on a sudden. You might
be the longest-headed of deductive reasoners, and yet you might be beaten by your own pawns.
You would be especially likely to be beaten, if you depended arrogantly on your mathematical
Yet this imaginary chess is easy compared with the game a man has to play against his fellow-men with other fellow-men for his instruments. He thinks himself sagacious, perhaps, because he trusts no bond except that of self-interest; but the only self-interest he can safely rely on is what seems to be such to the mind he would use or govern. Can he ever be sure of knowing this?
Matthew Jermyn was under no misgivings as to the fealty of Johnson. He had "been the making
of Johnson;" and this seems to many men a reason for expecting devotion, in spite of the fact
that they themselves, though very fond of their own persons and lives, are not at all devoted
to the Maker they believe in. Johnson was a most serviceable subordinate. Being a man who
aimed at respectability, a family man, who had a good church-pew, subscribed for engravings of
banquet pictures where there were portraits of political celebrities, and wished his children
to be more unquestionably genteel than their father, he presented all the more numerous
handles of worldly motive by which a judicious superior might keep a hold on him. But this
useful regard to respectability had
It was not this motive, however, but rather the ordinary course of business, which accounted
for Johnson's playing a double part as an electioneering agent. What men do in elections, is
not to be classed either among sins or marks of grace: it would be profane to include business
in religion, and conscience
By such causes it came to pass that Christian held in his hands a bill in which Jermyn was playfully alluded to as Mr German Cozen, who won games by clever shunffling and odd tricks without any honour, and backed Durfey's crib against Bycliffe,—in which it was adroitly implied that the so-called head of the Transomes was only the tail of the Durfeys,—and that some said the Durfeys would have died out and left their nest empty if it had not been for their German Cozen.
Johnson had not dared to use any recollections except such as might credibly exist in other minds besides his own. In the truth of the case, no one but himself had the prompting to recall these outworn scandals; but it was likely enough that such foul-winged things should be revived by election heats for Johnson to escape all suspicion.
Christian could gather only dim and uncertain inferences from this flat irony and heavy
joking; but one chief thing was clear to him. He had been right in his conjecture that
Jermyn's interest about Bycliffe had its source in some claim of Bycliffe's on the Transome
property. And then, there was that story of the old bill-sticker's, which, closely
Now it had happened that during the weeks in which Christian had been at work in trying to solve the enigma of Jermyn's interest about Bycliffe, Johnson's mind also had been somewhat occupied with suspicion and conjecture as to new information on the subject of the old Bycliffe claims which Jermyn intended to conceal from him. The letter which, after his interview with Christian, Jermyn had written with a sense of perfect safety to his faithful ally Johnson, was, as we know, written to a Johnson who had found his self-love incompatible with that faithfulness of which it was supposed to be the foundation. Anything that the patron felt it inconvenient for his obliged friend and servant to know, became by that very fact an object of peculiar curiosity. The obliged friend and servant secretly doated on his patron's inconvenience, provided that he himself did not share it; and conjecture naturally became active.
Johnson's legal imagination, being very differently furnished from Christian's, was at no
loss to conceive conditions under which there might arise a new claim on the Transome estates.
He had before
Johnson, as Jermyn's subordinate, had been closely cognisant of the details concerning the
suit instituted by successive Bycliffes, of whom Maurice Christian Bycliffe was the last, on
the plea that the extinction of Thomas Transome's line had actually come to pass—a weary suit,
which had eaten into the fortunes of two families, and had only made the cankerworms fat. The
suit had closed with the
Still, it is one thing to conceive conditions, and another to see any chance of proving their existence. Johnson at present had no glimpse of such a chance; and even if he ever gained the glimpse, he was not sure that he should ever make any use of it. His inquiries of Medwin, in obedience to Jermyn's letter, had extracted only a negative as to any information possessed by the lawyers of Bycliffe concerning a marriage, or expectation of offspring on his part. But Johnson felt not the less stung by curiosity to know what Jermyn had found out: that he had found something in relation to a possible Bycliffe, Johnson felt pretty sure. And he thought with satisfaction that Jermyn could not hinder him from knowing what he already knew about Thomas Transome's issue. Many things might occur to alter his policy and give a new value to facts. Was it certain that Jermyn would always be fortunate?
When greed and unscrupulousness exhibit themselves on a grand historical scale, and there is
question of peace or war or amicable partition, it often occurs that gentlemen of high
diplomatic talents have their minds bent on the same object from different points of view.
Each, perhaps, is thinking of a certain duchy or province, with a view to arranging the
ownership in such a way as shall best serve
But with meaner diplomatists, who might be mutually useful, such ignorance is often obstructive. Mr John Johnson and Mr Christian, otherwise Henry Scaddon, might have had a concentration of purpose and an ingenuity of device fitting them to make a figure in the parcelling of Europe, and yet they might never have met, simply because Johnson knew nothing of Christian, and because Christian did not know where to find Johnson.
His nature is too noble for the world: He would not flatter Neptune for his trident, Or Jove for his power to thunder. His heart's his mouth: What his breast forges, that his tongue must vent; And, being angry, doth forget that ever He heard the name of death--- Coriolanus.
Christian and Johnson did meet, however, by means that were quite incalculable. The
incident which brought them into communication was due to Felix Holt, who of all men in the
world had the least affinity either for the industrious or the idle parasite.
Mr Lyon had urged Felix to go to Duffield on the 15th of December, to witness the nomination of the candidates for North Loamshire. The minister wished to hear what took place; and the pleasure of gratifying him helped to outweigh some opposing reasons.
"I shall get into a rage of something or other," Felix had said. "I've told you one of my
weak
The weak point to which Felix referred was his liability to be carried completely out of his
own mastery by indignant anger. His strong health, his renunciation of selfish claims, his
habitual pre-occupation with large thoughts and with purposes independent of everyday
casualities, secured him a fine and even temper, free from moodiness or irritability. He was
full of long-suffering towards his unwise mother, who "pressed him daily with her words and
urged him, so that his soul was vexed;" he had chosen to fill his days in a way that required
the utmost exertion of patience, that required those little rill-like out-flowings of goodness
which in minds of great energy must be fed from deep sources of thought and passionate
devotedness. In this way his energies served to make him gentle; and now, in this twenty-sixth
year of his life, they had ceased to make him angry, except in the presence of something that
roused his deep indignation. When once exasperated, the passionateness of his nature threw off
the yoke of a long-trained consciousness
The nomination-day was a great epoch of successful trickery, or, to speak in a more
parliamentary manner, of war-stratagem, on the part of skilful agents. And Mr Johnson had his
share of inward chuckling and self-approval, as one who might justly expect increasing renown,
and be some day in as general request as the great Putty himself. To have the pleasure and the
praise of electioneering ingenuity, and also to get paid for it, without too much anxiety
whether the ingenuity will achieve its ultimate end, perhaps gives to some select persons a
sort of satisfaction in their superiority to their more agitated fellow-men that is worthy to
be
One of Mr Johnson's great successes was this. Spratt, the hated manager of the Sproxton
Colliery, in careless confidence that the colliers and other labourers under him would follow
his orders, had provided carts to carry some loads of voteless enthusiasm to Duffield on
behalf of Garstin; enthusiasm which, being already paid for by the recognised benefit of
Garstin's existence as a capitalist with a share in the Sproxton mines, was not to cost much
in the form of treating. A capitalist was held worthy of pious honour as the cause why working
men existed. But Mr Spratt did not sufficiently consider that a cause which has to be proved
by argument or testimony is not an object of passionate devotion to colliers: a visible cause
of beer acts of them much more strongly. And even if there had been any love of the far-off
Garstin, hatred of the too-immediate Spratt would have been the stronger motive. Hence
Johnson's calculations, made long ago with Chubb, the remarkable publican, had been well
founded, and there had been diligent care
For the show of hands and the cheering, the hustling and the pelting, the roaring and the hissing, the hard hits with small missiles, and the soft hits with small jokes, were strong enough on the side of Transome to balance the similar "demonstrations" for Garstin, even with the Debarry interest in his favour. And the inconvenient presence of Spratt was early got rid of by a dexterously managed accident, which sent him bruised and limping from the scene of action. Mr Chubb had never before felt so thoroughly that the occasion was up to a level with his talents, while the clear daylight in which his virtue would appear when at the election he voted, as his duty to himself bound him, for Garstin only, gave him thorough repose of conscience.
Felix Holt was the only person looking on at the senseless exhibitions of this
nomination-day, who knew from the beginning the history of the trick with the Sproxton men. He
had been aware all
"Not to waste energy, to apply force where it would tell, to do small work close at hand, not waiting for speculative chances of heroism, but preparing for them"—these were the rules he had been constantly urging on himself. But what could be a greater waste than to beat a scoundrel who had law and opodeldoc at command? After this meditation, Felix felt cool and wise enough to return into the town, not, however, intending to deny himself the satisfaction of a few pungent words wherever there was place for them. Blows are sarcasms turned stupid: wit is a form of force that leaves the limbs at rest.
Anything that could be called a crowd was no longer to be seen. The show of hands having
been pronounced to be in favour of Debarry and Transome, and a poll having been demanded for
Garstin, the business of the day might be considered at an end. But in the street where the
hustings were erected, and where the great hotels stood, there were many groups, as well as
strollers and steady walkers to and fro. Men in superior greatcoats and well-brushed hats were
awaiting with more or less impatience an important dinner, either at the Crown, which was
Debarry's house, or at the Three Cranes, which was Garstin's, or at the Fox and Hounds, which
was Transome's. Knots of sober retailers, who had already dined, were to be seen at some
shop-doors; men in very shabby coats and miscellaneous head-coverings, inhabitants of Duffield
and not county voters, were lounging about in dull silence, or listening, some to a grimy man
in a flannel shirt, hatless and with turbid red hair, who was insisting on political points
with much more ease than had seemed to belong to the gentlemen speakers on the hustings, and
others to a Scotch vendor of articles useful to sell, whose unfamiliar accent seemed to have a
guarantee of truth in it wanting as an association
The group round the speaker in the flannel shirt stood at the corner of a side-street, and
the speaker himself was elevated by the head and shoulders above his hearers, not because he
was tall, but because he stood on a projecting stone. At the opposite corner of the turning
was the great inn of the Fox and Hounds, and this was the ultra-Liberal quarter of the High
Street. Felix was at once attracted by this group; he liked the look of the speaker, whose
bare arms were powerfully muscular, though he had the pallid complexion of a man who lives
chiefly amidst the heat of furnaces. He was leaning
"It's the fallacy of all monopolists," he was saying. "We know what monopolists are: men who want to keep a trade all to themselves, under the pretence that they'll furnish the public with a better article. We know what that comes to: in some countries a poor man can't afford to buy a spoonful of salt, and yet there's salt enough in the world to pickle every living thing in it. That's the sort of benefit monopolists do to mankind. And these are the man who tell us we're to let politics alone; they'll govern us better without our knowing anything about it. We must mind our business; we are ignorant; we've no time to study great questions. But I tell them this: the greatest question in the world is, how to give every man a man's share in what goes on in life—"
"Hear, hear!" said Felix, in his sonorous voice, which seemed to give a new impressiveness
to what the speaker had said. Every one looked at him:
"Not a pig's share," the speaker went on, "not a horse's share, not the share of a machine
fed with oil only to make it work and nothing else. It isn't a man's share just to mind your
pin-making, or your glass-blowing, and higgle about your own wages, and bring up your family
to be ignorant sons of ignorant fathers, and no better prospect; that's a slave's share; we
want a freeman's share, and that is to think and speak and act about what concerns us all, and
see whether these fine gentlemen who undertake to govern us are doing the best they can for
us. They've got the knowledge, say they. Very well, we've got the wants. There's many a one
would be idle if hunger didn't pinch him; but the stomach sets us to work. There's a fable
told where the nobles are the belly and the people the members. But I make, another sort of
fable. I say, we are the belly that feels the pinches, and we'll set these aristocrats, these
great people who call themselves our brains, to work at some way of satisfying us a bit
better. The aristocrats are pretty sure to try and govern for their own
is for nothing; for it would be
hard to tell what he gets by it. If the poor man had a vote in the matter, I think he'd choose
a different sort of a Church to what that is. But do you think the aristocrats will ever alter
it, if the belly doesn't pinch them? Not they. It's part of their monopoly. They'll supply us
with our religion like everything else, and get a profit on it. They'll give us plenty of
heaven. We may have land there . That's the sort of religion they like—a religion
that gives us working men heaven, and nothing else. But we'll offer to change with 'em. We'll
give them back some of their heaven, and take it out in something for us and our children in
this world. They don't seem to care so much about heaven themselves till they feel the gout
very bad; but you won't get them to give up anything else, if you don't pinch 'em for it. And
to pinch them enough, we must get the suffrage, we must get votes, that we may send the men to
Parliament who will do our
"No!—something else before all that," said Felix, again startling the audience into looking at him. But the speaker glanced coldly at him and went on.
"That's what Sir Francis Burdett went in for fifteen years ago; and it's the right thing for us, if it was Tomfool who went in for it. You must lay hold of such handles as you can. I don't believe much in Liberal aristocrats; but if there's any fine carved gold-headed stick of an aristocrat will make a broomstick of himself, I'll lose no time but I'll sweep with him. And that's what I think about Transome. And if any of you have acquaintance among county voters, give 'em a hint that you wish 'em to vote for Transome."
At the last word, the speaker stepped down from his slight eminence, and walked away
rapidly, like a man whose leisure was exhausted, and who must
Felix did at once what he would very likely have done without being asked—he stepped on to
the stone, and took off his cap by an instinctive prompting that always led him to speak
uncovered. The effect of his figure in relief against the stone background was unlike that of
the previous speaker. He was considerably taller, his head and neck were more massive, and the
expression of his mouth and eyes was something very different from the mere acuteness and
rather hard-lipped antagonism of the trades-union man. Felix Holt's face had the look of
habitual meditative abstraction from objects of mere personal vanity or desire, which is the
peculiar stamp of culture, and makes a very roughly-cut face worthy to be called "the human
face divine." Even lions and dogs know a distinction between men's glances; and doubtless
those Duffield men, in the expectation with which they looked up at Felix, were unconsciously
influenced by the grandeur of his full yet firm mouth, and the calm clearness of his grey
eyes, which were somehow
"In my opinion," he said, almost the moment after he was addressed, "that was a true word
spoken by your friend when he said the great question was how to give every man a man's share
in life. But I think he expects voting to do more towards it than I do. I want the working men
to have power. I'm a working man myself, and I don't want to be anything else. But there are
two sorts of power. There's a power to do mischief—to undo what has been done with great
expense and labour, to waste and destroy, to be cruel to the weak, to lie and quarrel, and to
talk poisonous nonsense. That's the sort of power that ignorant numbers have. It never made a
joint stool or planted a potato. Do you think it's likely to do much towards governing a great
country, and making wise laws, and giving shelter, food, and clothes to millions of men?
Ignorant power comes in the end to the same thing as wicked
"Hear, hear," said several voices, but they were not those of the original group; they
belonged to
"The way to get rid of folly is to get rid of vain expectations, and of thoughts that don't
agree with the nature of things. The men who have had true thoughts about water, and what it
will do when it is turned into steam and under all sorts of circumstances, have made
themselves a great power in the world: they are turning the wheels of engines that will help
to change most things. But no engines would have done, if there had been false notions about
the way water would act. Now, all the schemes about voting, and districts, and annual
Parliaments, and the rest, are engines, and the water or steam—the force that is to work
them—must come out of human nature—out of men's passions, feelings, desires. Whether the
engines will do good work or bad depends on these feelings;
"That's very fine," said a man in dirty fustian, with a scornful laugh. "But how are we to get the power without votes?"
"I'll tell you what's the greatest power under heaven," said Felix, "and that is public
opinion—the ruling belief in society about what is right and what is wrong, what is honourable
and what is shameful. That's the steam that is to work the engines. How can political freedom
make us better, any more than a religion we don't believe in, if people laugh and wink when
they see men abuse and defile it? And while public opinion is what it is—while men have no
better beliefs about public duty—while corruption is not felt to be a damning disgrace—while
men are not ashamed in Parliament and out of it to make public questions which concern the
welfare of millions a mere screen for their own petty private ends,—I say, no fresh scheme of
voting will much mend our condition. For, take us working men of all sorts. Suppose out of
every hundred who had a vote there were thirty who had
Felix had seen every face around him, and had particularly noticed a recent addition to his audience; but now he looked before him without appearing to fix his glance on any one. In spite of his cooling meditations an hour ago, his pulse was getting quickened by indignation, and the desire to crush what he hated was likely to vent itself in articulation. His tone became more biting.
"They would be men who would undertake to do the business for a candidate, and return him:
men who have no real opinions, but who pilfer the words of every opinion, and turn them into a
cant which will serve their purpose at the moment; men who look out for dirty work to make
their fortunes by, because dirty work wants little talent and no conscience; men who know all
the ins and outs of bribery, because there is not a cranny in their own souls where a bribe
can't enter. Such men as these will be the masters wherever there's a majority of voters who
care more for money, more for drink, more for some mean little end which is their own and
nobody else's, than for anything that has ever been called Right in the world. For suppose
there's a poor voter named Jack, who has seven children, and twelve or fifteen shillings
a-week wages, perhaps less. Jack can't read—I don't say whose fault that is—he never had the
chance to learn; he knows so little that he perhaps thinks God made the poor-laws, and if
anybody said the pattern of the workhouse was laid down in the Testament, he wouldn't be able
to contradict them. What is poor Jack likely to do when he sees a smart stranger coming to
him, who happens to be just one of those men that I say will be the
Felix was interrupted by an explosion of laughter from a majority of the bystanders. Some eyes had been turned on Johnson, who stood on the right hand of Felix, at the very beginning of the description, and these were gradually followed by others, till at last every hearer's attention was fixed on him, and the first burst of laughter from the two or three who knew the attorney's name, let every one sufficiently into the secret to make the amusement common. Johnson, who had kept his ground till his name was mentioned, now turned away, looking unusually white after being unusually red, and feeling by an attorney's instinct for his pocket-book, as if he felt it was a case for taking down the names of witnesses.
All the well-deressed hearers turned away too, thinking they had had the cream of the speech
in
"Who is this Johnson?" said Christian to a young man who had been standing near him, and had been one of the first to laugh. Christian's curiosity had naturally been awakened by what might prove a golden opportunity.
"O—a London attorney. He acts for Transome. That tremendous fellow at the corner there is some red-hot Radical demagogue, and Johnson has offended him, I suppose; else he wouldn't have turned in that way on a man of their own party."
"I had heard there was a Johnson who was an understrapper of Jermyn's," said Christian.
"Well, so this man may have been for what I know. But he's a London man now—a very busy fellow—on his own legs in Bedford Row. Ha ha! It's capital, though, when these Liberals get a slap in the face from the working men they're so very fond of."
Another turn along the street enabled Christian to come to a resolution. Having seen Jermyn
drive away an hour before, he was in no fear: he walked at once to the Fox and Hounds and
asked to speak to Mr Johnson. A brief interview, in which Christian
Christian had been very cautious in the commencement, only intimating that he knew something
important which some chance hints had induced him to think might be interesting to Mr Johnson,
but that this entirely depended on how far he had a common interest with Mr Jermyn. Johnson
replied that he had much business in which that gentleman was not concerned, but that to a
certain extent they had a common interest. Probably then, Christian observed, the affairs of
the Transome estate were part of the business in which Mr Jermyn and Mr Johnson might be
understood to represent each other—in which case he need not detain Mr Johnson? At this hint
Johnson could not conceal that he was becoming eager. He had no idea what Christian's
information was, but there were many grounds on which Johnson desired to know as much as he
could about the Transome affairs independently of Jermyn. By little and little an
understanding was arrived at. Christian told of his interview with
The two men parted, each in distrust of the other, but each well pleased to have learned
something. Johnson was not at all sure how he should act, but
"In the copia of the factious language the word Tory was entertained, ... and being a vocal clever-sounding word, readily pronounced, it kept its hold, and took possession of the foul mouths of the faction. ... The Loyalists began to cheer up and to take heart of grace, and in the working of this crisis, according to the common laws of scolding, they considered which way to make payment for so much of Tory as they had been treated with, to clear scores. ... Immediately the train took, and ran like wildfire and became general. And so the account of Tory was balanced, and soon began to run up a sharp score on the other side."—
NORTH's Examen , p. 321.
At last the great epoch of the election for North Loamshire had arrived. The roads
approaching Treby were early traversed by a larger number of vehicles, horsemen, and also
foot-passengers, than were ever seen there at the annual fair. Treby was the polling-place for
many voters whose faces were quite strange in the town; and if there were some strangers who
did not come to poll, though they had business not unconnected with the election, they were
not liable to be regarded with suspicion or especial curiosity. It was understood that no
division of a county had ever been more thoroughly canvassed, and that there would be a hard
run between
A slight drizzling rain which was observed by some Tories who looked out of their bedroom
windows before six o'clock, made them hope that, after all, the day might pass off better than
alarmists had expected. The rain was felt to be somehow on the side of quiet and Conservatism;
but soon the breaking of the clouds and the mild gleams of a December sun brought back
previous apprehensions. As there were already precedents for riot at a Reformed election, and
as the Trebian district had had its confidence in the natural course of things somewhat shaken
by a landed proprietor with an old name offering himself as a Radical candidate, the election
had been looked forward to by many with a vague sense that it would be an occasion something
like a fighting match, when bad characters would probably assemble, and there might be
struggles and alarms for respectable men, which would make it expedient
Mr Crow, the high constable of Treby, inwardly rehearsed a brief address to a riotous crowd
in case it should be wanted, having been warned by the Rector that it was a primary duty on
these occasions to keep a watch against provocation as well as violence. The Rector, with a
brother magistrate who was on the spot, had thought it desirable to swear in some special
constables, but the presence of loyal
Thus the way up to the polling-booths was variously lined, and those who walked it, to whatever side they belonged, had the advantage of hearing from the opposite side what were the most marked defects or excesses in their personal appearance; for the Trebians of that day held, without being aware that they had Cicero's authority for it, that the bodily blemishes of an opponent were a legitimate ground for ridicule; but if the voter frustrated wit by being handsome, he was groaned at and satirised according to a formula, in which the adjective was Tory, Whig, or Radical, as the case might be, and the substantive a blank to be filled up after the taste of the speaker.
Some of the more timid had chosen to go through this ordeal as early as possible in the
morning. One of the earliest was Mr Timothy Rose, the gentleman-farmer from Leek Malton. He
had left home with some foreboding, having swathed his more vital parts in layers of flannel,
and put on two greatcoats as a soft kind of armour. But reflecting with some trepidation that
there were no resources for protecting his head, he once more wavered in his intention to
vote; he once more observed to Mrs Rose that these were hard times when a man of independent
property was expected to vote
"Well, Mr Nolan," said Rose, twinkling a self-complacent look over the red prominence of his cheeks, "have you been to give your vote yet?"
"No; all in good time. I shall go presently."
"Well, I wouldn't lose an hour, I wouldn't. I said to myself, if I've got to do gentlemen a favour, I'll do it at once. You see, I've got no landlord, Nolan—I'm in that position o' life that I can be independent."
"Just so, my dear sir," said the wiry-faced Nolan,
"No, no, thankye. Mrs Rose expects me back. But, as I was saying, I'm a independent man, and I consider it's not my part to show favour to one more than another, but to make things as even as I can. If I'd been a tenant to anybody, well, in course I must have voted for my landlord—that stands to sense. But I wish everybody well; and if one's returned to Parliament more than another, nobody can say it's my doing; for when you can vote for two, you can make things even. So I gave one to Debarry and one to Transome; and I wish Garstin no ill, but I can't help the odd number, and he hangs on to Debarry, they say."
"God bless me, sir," said Mr Nolan, coughing down a laugh, "don't you perceive that you might as well have stayed at home and not voted at all, unless you would rather send a Radical to Parliament than a sober Whig?"
"Well, I'm sorry you should have anything to say against what I've done, Nolan," said Mr
Rose, rather crestfallen, though sustained by inward
At the time that Mr Timothy Rose left the town, the crowd in King Street and in the market-place, where the polling-booths stood, was fluctuating. Voters as yet were scanty, and brave fellows who had come from any distance this morning, or who had sat up late drinking the night before, required some reinforcement of their strength and spirits. Every public-house in Treby, not excepting the venerable and sombre Cross-Keys, was lively with changing and numerous company. Not, of course, that there was any treating: treating necessarily had stopped, from moral scruples, when once "the writs were out;" but there was drinking, which did equally well under any name.
Poor Tommy Trounsem, breakfasting here on Falstaff's proportion of bread, and something
which, for gentility's sake, I will call sack, was more than usually victorious over the ills
of life, and felt himself
But a disposition to concentrate at that extremity of King Street which issued in the
market-place was not universal among the increasing crowd. Some of them seemed attracted
towards another
Between ten and eleven the voters came in more rapid succession, and the whole scene became
spirited. Cheers, sarcasms, and oaths, which seemed to have a flavour of wit for many hearers,
were beginning to be reinforced by more practical
The second Tory joke was performed with much
By stages of this kind the fun grew faster, and was in danger of getting rather serious. The
Tories began to feel that their jokes were returned by others of a heavier sort, and that the
main strength of the crowd was not on the side of sound opinion,
Mr Crow and his subordinates, and all the special constables, felt that it was necessary to make some energetic effort, or else every voter would be intimidated and the poll must be adjourned. The Rector determined to get on horseback and go amidst the crowd with the constables; and he sent a message to Mr Lingon, who was at the Ram, calling on him to do the same. "Sporting Jack" was sure the good fellows meant no harm, but he was courageous enough to face any bodily dangers, and rode out in his brown leggings and coloured bandanna, speaking persuasively.
It was nearly twelve o'clock when this sally was made: the constables and magistrates tried
the most pacific measures, and they seemed to succeed.
Go from me. Yet I feel that I shall stand Henceforward in thy shadow. Never more Alone upon the threshold of my door Of individual life, I shall command The uses of my soul, nor lift my hand Serenely in the sunshine as before Without the sense of that which I forbore— Thy touch upon the palm. The widest land Doom takes to part us, leaves thy heart in mine With pulses that beat double. What I do And what I dream include thee, as the wine Must taste of its own grapes. And when I sue God for myself, He hears that name of thine, And sees within my eyes the tears of two.
Mrs Browning.
Felix Holt , seated at his work without his pupils, who had asked for a holiday
with a notion that the wooden booths promised some sort of show, noticed about eleven o'clock
that the noises which reached him from the main street were getting more and more tumultuous.
He had long seen bad auguries for this election, but, like all people who dread the prophetic
wisdom that ends in desiring the fulfilment of its own evil forebodings, he had checked
himself with remembering that, though many conditions
Felix snatched his cap and rushed out. But when he got to the turning into the marketplace
the magistrates were already on horseback there, the constables were moving about, and Felix
observed that there was no strong spirit of resistance
Felix had been thinking of Esther and her probable alarm at the noises that must have reached her more distinctly than they had reached him, for Malthouse Yard was removed but a little way from the main street. Mr Lyon was away from home, having been called to preach charity sermons and attend meetings in a distant town; and Esther, with the plaintive Lyddy for her sole companion, was not cheerfully circumstanced. Felix had not been to see her yet since her father's departure, but to-day he gave way to new reasons.
"Miss Esther was in the garret," Lyddy said, trying to see what was going on. But before she was fetched she came running down the stairs, drawn by the knock at the door, which had shaken the small dwelling.
"I am so thankful to see you," she said, eagerly. "Pray come in."
When she had shut the parlour door behind them,
"I was frightened," said Esther. "The shouting and roaring of rude men is so
hideous. It is a relief to me that my father is not at home—that he is out of the reach of any
danger he might have fallen into if he had been here. But I gave you credit for being in the
midst of the danger," she added, smiling, with a determination not to show much feeling. "Sit
down and tell me what has happened."
They sat down at the extremities of the old black sofa, and Felix said,
"To tell you the truth, I had shut myself up, and tried to be as indifferent to the election
as if I'd been one of the fishes in the Lapp, till the noises got too strong for me. But I
only saw the tail end of the disturbance. The poor noisy simpletons seemed to give way before
the magistrates and the constables. I hope nobody has been much hurt. The fear is that they
may turn out again by-and-by; their giving way so soon may not be altogether a good sign.
There's a great number of heavy fellows in the town. If they go and drink
Felix broke off, as if this talk were futile, clasped his hands behind his head, and, leaning backward, looked at Esther, who was looking at him.
"May I stay here a little while?" he said, after a moment, which seemed long.
"Pray do," said Esther, colouring. To relieve herself she took some work and bowed her head over her stitching. It was in reality a little heaven to her that Felix was there, but she saw beyond it—saw that by-and-by he would be gone, and that they should be farther on their way, not towards meeting, but parting. His will was impregnable. He was a rock, and she was no more to him than the white clinging mist-cloud.
"I wish I could be sure that you see things just as I do," he said, abruptly, after a minute's silence.
"I am sure you see them much more wisely than I do," said Esther, almost bitterly, without looking up.
"There are some people one must wish to judge one truly. Not to wish it would be mere hardness. I know you think I am a man without feeling—at least, without strong affections. You think I love nothing but my own resolutions."
"Suppose I reply in the same sort of strain?" said Esther, with a little toss of the head.
"How?"
"Why, that you think me a shallow woman, incapable of believing what is best in you, setting down everything that is too high for me as a deficiency."
"Don't parry what I say. Answer me." There was an expression of painful beseeching in the tone with which Felix said this. Esther let her work fall on her lap and looked at him, but she was unable to speak.
"I want you to tell me—once—that you know it would be easier to me to give myself up to loving and being loved, as other men do, when they can, than to—"
This breaking-off in speech was something quite new in Felix. For the first time he had lost his self-possession, and turned his eyes away. He was at variance with himself. He had begun what he felt that he ought not to finish.
Esther, like a woman as she was—a woman waiting for love, never able to ask for it—had her joy in these signs of her power; but they made her generous, not chary, as they might have done if she had had a pettier disposition. She said, with deep yet timid earnestness,
"What you have chosen to do has only convinced me that your love would be the better worth having."
All the finest part of Esther's nature trembled in those words. To be right in great memorable moments, is perhaps the thing we need most desire for ourselves.
Felix as quick as lightning turned his look upon her again, and, leaning forward, took her sweet hand and held it to his lips some moments before he let it fall again and raised his head.
"We shall always be the better for thinking of each other," he said, leaning his elbow on the back of the sofa, and supporting his head as he looked at her with calm sadness. "This thing can never come to me twice over. It is my knighthood. That was always a business of great cost."
He smiled at her, but she sat biting her inner lip, and pressing her hands together. She desired to be worthy of what she reverenced in Felix, but the inevitable renunciation was too difficult. She saw herself wandering through the future weak and forsaken. The charming sauciness was all gone from her face, but the memory of it made this child-like dependent sorrow all the more touching.
"Tell me what you would—" Felix burst out,
"Good-bye," he said, very gently, not daring to put out his hand. But Esther put up hers instead of speaking. He just pressed it and then went away.
She heard the doors close behind him, and felt free to be miserable. She cried bitterly. If she might have married Felix Holt, she could have been a good woman. She felt no trust that she could ever be good without him.
Felix reproached himself. He would have done better not to speak in that way. But the
prompting to which he had chiefly listened had been the desire to prove to Esther that he set
a high value on her feelings. He could not help seeing that he was very important to her; and
he was too simple and sincere a man to ape a sort of humility which would not have made him
any the better if he had possessed it. Such pretences turn our lives into sorry dramas. And
Felix wished Esther to know that her love was dear to him as the beloved dead are dear. He
felt that they must not marry—that they would ruin each other's lives. But he had longed for
her to know fully that his will to be always apart from
Mischief, thou art afoot.
Julius Cæsar.
Felix could not go home again immediately after quitting Esther. He got out of the town, skirted it a little while, looking across the December stillness of the fields, and then re-entered it by the main road into the market-place, thinking that, after all, it would be better for him to look at the busy doings of men than to listen in solitude to the voices within him; and he wished to know how things were going on.
It was now nearly half-past one, and Felix perceived that the street was filling with more
than the previous crowd. By the time he got in front of the booths, he was himself so
surrounded by men who were being thrust hither and thither that retreat would have been
impossible; and he went where he was obliged to go, although his height and strength were
above the average even in a crowd where there
But at present there was no evidence of any distinctly mischievous design. There was only evidence that the majority of the crowd were excited with drink, and that their action could hardly be calculated on more than those of oxen and pigs congregated amidst hootings and pushings. The confused deafening shouts, the incidental, fighting, the knocking over, pulling and scuffling, seemed to increase every moment. Such of the constables as were mixed with the crowd were quite helpless; and if an official staff was seen above the heads, it moved about fitfully, showing as little sign of a guiding hand as the summit of a buoy on the waves. Doubtless many hurts and bruises had been received, but no one could know the amount of injuries that were widely scattered.
It was clear that no more voting could be done,
But the Rector's voice was ringing and penetrating, and when he appeared on the narrow
balcony and read the formula, commanding all men to go to their homes or about their lawful
business, there was a strong transient effect. Every one within hearing listened, and for a
few moments after the final words, "God save the King!" the comparative silence continued.
Then the people began to move, the buzz rose again, and grew, and grew, till it turned to
shouts and roaring as before. The movement was that of a flood hemmed in; it carried nobody
away. Whether the crowd would obey the
Presently Mr Crow, who held himself a tactician, took a well-intentioned step, which went far to fulfil his own prophecy. He had arrived with the magistrates by a back way at the Seven Stars, and here again the Riot Act was read from a window, with much the same result as before. The Rector had returned by the same way to the Marquis, as the headquarters most suited for administration, but Mr Crowe remained at the other extremity of King Street, where some awe-striking presence was certainly needed. Seeing that the time was passing, and all effect from the voice of law had disappeared, he showed himself at an upper window, and addressed the crowd, telling them that the soldiers had been sent for, and that if they did not disperse they would have cavalry upon them instead of constables.
Mr Crow, like some other high constables more celebrated in history, "enjoyed a bad
reputation;" that is to say, he enjoyed many things which caused his reputation to be bad, and
he was anything but popular in Treby. It is probable that a pleasant message would have lost
something from his lips,
But there were proofs that the predominant will of the crowd was against "Debarry's men,"
and in favour of Transome. Several shops were invaded, and they were all of them "Tory shops."
The tradesmen who could do so, now locked their doors and barricaded their windows within.
There was a panic among the householders of this hitherto peaceful town, and a general anxiety
for the military to arrive. The Rector was in painful anxiety
It was three o'clock: more than an hour had elapsed since the reading of the Riot Act. The Rector of Treby Magna wrote an indignant message and sent it to the Ram, to Mr Lingon, the Rector of Little Treby, saying that there was evidently a Radical animus in the mob, and that Mr Transome's party should hold themselves peculiarly responsible. Where was Mr Jermyn?
Mr Lingon replied that he was going himself out towards Duffield to see after the soldiers. As for Jermyn, he was not that attorney's sponsor: he believed that Jermyn was gone away somewhere on business—to fetch voters.
A serious effort was now being made by all the civil force at command. The December day
would soon be passing into evening, and all disorder would be aggravated by obscurity. The
horrors of fire were as likely to happen as any minor evil. The constables, as many of them as
could do so, armed themselves with carbines and sabres: all the respectable inhabitants who
had any courage, prepared
Meanwhile Felix Holt had been hotly occupied in King Street. After the first window-smashing
at the Seven Stars, there was a sufficient reason for damaging that inn to the utmost. The
destructive spirit tends towards completeness; and any object once maimed or otherwise
injured, is as readily doomed by unreasoning men as by unreasoning boys. Also the Seven Stars
sheltered Spratt; and to some Sproxton men in front of that inn it was exasperating that
Spratt should be safe and sound on a day when blows were going, and justice might be rendered.
Felix had at last been willingly urged on to this spot. Hitherto swayed by the crowd, he had
been able to do nothing but defend himself and keep on his legs; but he foresaw that the
people would burst into the inn; he heard cries of "Spratt!" "Fetch him out!" "We'll pitch him
out!" "Pummel him!" It was not unlikely that lives might be sacrificed; and it was intolerable
to Felix to be witnessing the blind outrages of this mad crowd, and yet be doing nothing to
counteract them. Even some vain effort would satisfy him better than mere gazing. Within the
walls of the inn he might save some one. He went in with a miscellaneous set, who dispersed
themselves with different objects—some to the taproom, and to search for the cellar; some
up-stairs to search in all rooms for Spratt, or any one else perhaps, as a temporary scapegoat
for Spratt. Guided by the screams of women, Felix at last got to a high upstairs passage,
where the landlady and some of her servants were running away in helpless terror from two or
three half-tipsy men, who had been emptying a spirit-decanter in the bar. Assuming the tone of
a mob-leader, he cried out, "Here, boys, here's better fun this way—come with me!" and drew
the men
Down the stairs, out along the stones through the gateway, Spratt was dragged as a mere heap of linen and cloth rags. When he was got outside the gateway, there was an immense hooting and roaring, though many there had no grudge against him, and only guessed that others had the grudge. But this was the narrower part of the street; it widened as it went onwards, and Spratt was dragged on, his enemies crying, "We'll make a ring—we'll see how frightened he looks!"
"Kick him, and have done with him," Felix heard another say. "Let's go to Tiliot's vaults—there's more gin there!"
Here were two hideous threats. In dragging Spratt onward the people were getting very near
to the lane leading up to Tiliot's. Felix kept as close as
Meanwhile the foremost among the constables, who, coming by the back way, had now reached
the opening of Tiliot's Lane, discerned that the crowd had a victim amongst them. One spirited
fellow, named Tucker, who was a regular constable, feeling that no time was to be lost in
meditation, called on his neighbour to follow him, and with the sabre that happened to be his
weapon got a way for himself where he was not expected, by dint of quick resolution. At this
moment Spratt had been let go—had been dropped, in fact, almost lifeless with terror, on the
street stones, and the men round him had retreated for a little space, as if to amuse
themselves with looking at him. Felix had taken his opportunity; and seeing the first step
towards a plan he was bent on, he sprang forward close to the cowering Spratt. As he did this,
Tucker had cut his way
"Don't touch him!" said Felix. "Let him go. Here, bring Spratt, and follow me."
Felix was perfectly conscious that he was in the midst of a tangled business. But he had
chiefly before his imagination the horrors that might come if the mass of wild chaotic desires
and impulses around him were not diverted from any further attack on places where they would
get in the midst of intoxicating and inflammable materials. It was not a moment in which a
spirit like his could calculate
He was followed the more willingly, because Tiliot's Lane was seen by the hindmost to be now
defended by constables, some of whom had firearms; and where there is no strong
counter-movement, any proposition to do something unspecified stimulates stupid curiosity. To
many of the Sproxton men who were within sight of him, Felix was known personally, and vaguely
believed to be a man who meant many queer things, not at all of an everyday kind. Pressing
along like a leader, with the sabre in his hand, and inviting them to bring on Spratt, there
seemed a better reason for following him than for doing anything else. A man with a definite
will and an energetic personality acts as a sort of flag to draw and bind together the foolish
units of a mob. It was on this sort of influence over men whose mental state was a mere medley
of appetites and confused impressions, that Felix had
What Felix really intended to do, was to get the crowd by the nearest way out of the town,
and induce them to skirt it on the north side with him, keeping up in them the idea that he
was leading them to execute some stratagem by which they would surprise something worth
attacking, and circumvent the constables who were defending the lanes. In the mean time he
trusted that the soldiers would have arrived, and with this sort of mob, which was animated by
no real political passion or fury against social distinctions, it was in the highest degree
unlikely that there would be any resistance to a military force. The presence of fifty
soldiers would probably be enough to scatter the rioting hundreds. How numerous the mob was,
no one ever knew: many inhabitants afterwards were ready
He was making for a point where the street branched off on one side towards a speedy opening between hedgerows, on the other towards the shabby wideness of Pollard's End. At this forking of the street there was a large space, in the centre of which there was a small stone platform, mounting by three steps, with an old green finger-post upon it. Felix went straight to this platform and stepped upon it, crying "Halt!" in a loud voice to the men behind and before him, and calling to those who held Spratt to bring him there. All came to a stand with faces towards the finger-post, and perhaps for the first time the extremities of the crowd got a definite idea that a man with a sabre in his hand was taking the command.
"Now!" said Felix, when Spratt had been brought on to the stone platform, faint and trembling, "has anybody got cord? if not, handkerchiefs knotted fast; give them to me."
He drew out his own handkerchief, and two or
"Now, put it round his waist, wind his arms in, draw them a little backward—so! and tie it fast on the other side of the post."
When that was done, Felix said, imperatively,
"Leave him there—we shall come back to him; let us make haste; march along, lads! Up. Park Street and down Hobb's Lane."
It was the best chance he could think of for saving Spratt's life. And he succeeded. The pleasure of seeing the helpless man tied up sufficed for the moment, if there were any who had ferocity enough to count much on coming back to him. Nobody's imagination represented the certainty that some one out of the houses at hand would soon come and untie him when he was left alone.
And the rioters pushed up Park Street, a noisy stream, with Felix still in the midst of
them, though he was labouring hard to get his way to the front. He wished to determine the
course of the crowd along a by-road called Hobb's Lane, which would have taken them to the
other—the Duffield end of
Mingled with the more headlong and half-drunken crowd there were some sharp-visaged men who
loved the irrationality of riots for something else than its own sake, and who at present were
not so much the richer as they desired to be, for the pains they had taken in coming to the
Treby election, induced by certain prognostics gathered at Duffield on the nomination-day that
there might be the conditions favourable to that confusion which was always a harvest-time. It
was known to some of these sharp men that Park Street led out towards the grand house of Treby
Manor, which was as good—nay, better for their purpose than the bank. While Felix was
entertaining his ardent purpose, these other sons of Adam were entertaining another
From the front ranks backward towards Felix there ran a new summons—a new invitation.
"Let us go to Treby Manor!"
From that moment Felix was powerless; a new definite suggestion overrode his vaguer
influence. There was a determined rush past Hobb's Lane, and not down it. Felix was carried
along too. He did not know whether to wish the contrary. Once on the road, out of the town,
with openings into fields and with the wide park at hand, it would have been easy for him to
liberate himself from the crowd. At first it seemed to him the better part to do this, and to
get back to the town as fast as he could, in the hope of finding the military and getting a
detachment to come and save the Manor. But he reflected that the course of the mob had been
sufficiently seen, and that there were plenty of people in Park Street to carry the
information faster than he could. It seemed more necessary that he should secure the presence
of some help for the family at the Manor by going there himself. The Debarrys were not of the
class he was wont to be anxious about; but Felix Holt's conscience was alive to the
The light was declining: already the candles shone through many windows of the Manor.
Already the foremost part of the crowd had burst into the offices, and adroit men were busy in
the right places to find plate, after setting others to force the butler into unlocking the
cellars; and Felix had only just been able to force his way on to the front terrace, with the
hope of getting to the rooms where he would find the ladies of the household and comfort them
with the assurance that rescue must soon come, when the sound of horses' feet convinced him
that the rescue was nearer than he had expected. Just as he heard the horses, he had
approached the large
The louder and louder sound of the hoofs changed its pace and distribution. "Halt! Fire!" Bang! bang! bang!—came deafening the ears of the men on the terrace.
Before they had time or nerve to move, there was a rushing sound closer to them—again "Fire!" a bullet whizzed, and passed through Felix Holt's shoulder—the shoulder of the arm that held the naked weapon which shone in the light from the window.
Felix fell. The rioters ran confusedly, like terrified sheep. Some of the soldiers, turning, drove them along with the flat of their swords. The greater difficulty was to clear the invaded offices.
The Rector, who with another magistrate and several other gentlemen on horseback had
accompanied
Presently there was a group round Felix, who had fainted, and, reviving, had fainted again. He had had little food during the day, and had been overwrought. Two of the group were civilians, but only one of them knew Felix, the other being a magistrate not resident in Treby. The one who knew Felix was Mr John Johnson, whose zeal for the public peace had brought him from Duffield when he heard that the soldiers were summoned.
"I know this man very well," said Mr Johnson. "He is a dangerous character—quite revolutionary."
It was a weary night; and the next day, Felix, whose wound was declared trivial, was lodged in Loamford Jail. He was committed on three counts—for having assaulted a constable, for having committed manslaughter (Tucker was dead from spinal concussion), and for having led a riotous onslaught on a dwelling-house.
Four other men were committed: one of them for possessing himself of a gold cup with the Debarry arms on it; the three others, one of whom was the collier Dredge, for riot and assault.
That morning Treby town was no longer in terror;
The fields are hoary with December's frost. I too am hoary with the chills of age. But through the fields and through the untrodden woods Is rest and stillness—only in my heart The pall of winter ahrouds a throbbing life.
A week after that Treby Riot, Harold Transome was at Transome Court. He had
returned from a hasty visit to town, to keep his Christmas at this delightful country home,
not in the best Christmas spirits. He had lost the election; but if that had been his only
annoyance, he had good humour and good sense enough to have borne it as well as most men, and
to have paid the eight or nine thousand,
Harold might not have grieved much at a small riot in Treby, even if it had caused some
expenses to fall on the county; but the turn which the riot had actually taken, was a bitter
morsel for rumination, on more grounds than one. However the disturbances had arisen and been
aggravated—and probably no one knew the whole truth on these points —the conspicuous, gravest
incidents had all tended to throw the blame on the Radical party, that is to say, on Transome
and on Transome's agents; and so far the candidateship and its results had done Harold
dishonour in the county: precisely the opposite effect to that which was a dear object of his
ambition. More than this, Harold's conscience was active enough to be very unpleasantly
affected by what had befallen Felix Holt. His memory, always
In this matter Harold felt himself a victim. Could he hinder the tricks of his agents? In
this particular case he had tried to hinder them, and had tried in vain. He had not loved the
two agents in question, to begin with; and now at this later stage of events he was more
innocent than ever of bearing them anything but the most sincere ill-will. He was more utterly
exasperated with them than he would probably have been if his one great passion had been for
public virtue. Jermyn, with his John Johnson, had added this ugly dirty business of the Treby
election to all the long-accumulating list of offences, which Harold was resolved to visit on
him to the utmost. He had seen some handbills carrying the insinuation that there was a
discreditable indebtedness to Jermyn on the part of the Transomes. If any such notions existed
apart from electioneering slander, there was all the more reason for letting the world see
Jermyn severely punished for abusing his power over the family affairs, and
This morning he was seated as usual in his private room, which had now been handsomely
fitted up for him. It was but the third morning after the first Christmas he had spent in his
English home for fifteen years, and the home looked like an eminently desirable one. The white
frost lay on the broad lawn, on the many-formed leaves of the evergreens, and on the giant
trees at a distance. Logs of dry oak blazed on the hearth; the carpet was like warm moss under
his feet; he had breakfasted just according to his taste, and he had the interesting
occupations of a large proprietor to fill the morning. All through the house now, steps were
noiseless on carpets or on fine matting; there was warmth in hall and corridors; there were
servants enough to do everything, and to do it at the right time. Skilful Dominic was always
at hand to meet his master's demands, and his bland presence
And certainly Transome Court was now such a
This morning Harold had ordered his letters to be brought to him at the breakfast-table,
which was not his usual practice. His mother could see that there were London business letters
about which he was eager, and she had found out that the letter brought by a clerk the day
before was to make an appointment with Harold for Jermyn to come to Transome Court at eleven
this morning. She observed Harold swallow his coffee and push away
When Harold left the table she went into the long drawing-room, where she might relieve her restlessness by walking up and down, and catch the sound of Jermyn's entrance into Harold's room, which was close by. Here she moved to and fro amongst the rose-coloured satin of chairs and curtains—the great story of this world reduced for her to the little tale of her own existence —dull obscurity everywhere, except where the keen light fell on the narrow track of her own lot, wide only for a woman's anguish. At last she heard the expected ring and footstep, and the opening and closing door. Unable to walk about any longer, she sank into a large cushioned chair, helpless and prayerless. She was not thinking of God's anger or mercy, but of her son's. She was thinking of what might be brought, not by death, but by life.
Check to your queen!
Nay, your own king is bare, And moving so, you give yourself checkmate.
When Jermyn entered the room, Harold, who was seated at his library table examining papers, with his back towards the light and his face towards the door, moved his head coldly. Jermyn said an ungracious "Good-morning,"—as little as possible like a salutation to one who might regard himself as a patron. On the attorney's handsome face there was a black cloud of defiant determination, slightly startling to Harold, who had expected to feel that the overpowering weight of temper in the interview was on his own side. Nobody was ever prepared beforehand for this expression of Jermyn's face, which seemed as strongly contrasted with the cold impenetrableness which he preserved under the ordinary annoyances of business as with the bland radiance of his lighter moments.
Harold himself did not look amiable just then, but his anger was of the sort that seeks a vent without waiting to give a fatal blow; it was that of a nature more subtly mixed than Jermyn's—less animally forcible, less unwavering in selfishness, and with more of high-bred pride. He looked at Jermyn with increased disgust and secret wonder.
"Sit down," he said, curtly.
Jermyn seated himself in silence, opened his greatcoat, and took some papers from a side-pocket.
"I have written to Makepeace," said Harold, "to tell him to take the entire management of the election expenses. So you will transmit your accounts to him."
"Very well. I am come this morning on other business."
"If it's about the riot and the prisoners, I have only to say that I shall enter into no plans. If I am called on, I shall say what I know about that young fellow Felix Holt. People may prove what they can about Johnson's damnable tricks, or yours either."
"I am not come to speak about the riot. I agree with you in thinking that quite a
subordinate subject." (When Jermyn had the black cloud over his
"Be so good, then, as to open your business at once," said Harold, in a tone of imperious indifference.
"That is precisely what I wish to do. I have here information from a London correspondent that you are about to file a bill against me in Chancery." Jermyn, as he spoke, laid his hand on the papers before him, and looked straight at Harold.
"In that case the question for you is, how far your conduct as the family solicitor will bear investigation. But it is a question which you will consider quite apart from me."
"Doubtless. But prior to that there is a question which we must consider together."
The tone in which Jermyn said this gave an unpleasant shock to Harold's sense of mastery. Was it possible that he should have the weapon wrenched out of his hand?
"I shall know what to think of that," he replied, as haughtily as ever, "when you have stated what the question is."
"Simply, whether you will choose to retain the family estates, or lay yourself open to be forthwith legally deprived of them."
"I presume you refer to some underhand scheme of your own, on a par with the annuities you have drained us by in the name of Johnson," said Harold, feeling a new movement of anger. "If so, you had better state your scheme to my lawyers, Dymock and Halliwell."
"No. I think you will approve of my stating in your own ear first of all, that it depends on my will whether you remain an important landed proprietor in North Loamshire, or whether you retire from the county with the remainder of the fortune you have acquired in trade."
Jermyn paused, as if to leave time for this morsel to be tasted.
"What do you mean?" said Harold, sharply.
"Not any scheme of mine; but a state of the facts, resulting from the settlement of the estate made in 1729: a state of the facts which renders your father's title and your own title to the family estates utterly worthless as soon as the true claimant is made aware of his right."
"And you intend to inform him?"
"That depends. I am the only person who has the requisite knowledge. It rests with you to
decide whether I shall use that knowledge against you; or whether I shall use it in your
favour—by
Jermyn paused again. He had been speaking slowly, but without the least hesitation, and with a bitter definiteness of enunciation. There was a moment or two before Harold answered, and then he said abruptly,
"I don't believe you."
"I thought you were more shrewd," said Jermyn, with a touch of scorn. "I thought you understood that I had had too much experience to waste my time in telling fables to persuade a man who has put himself into the attitude of my deadly enemy."
"Well, then, say at once what your proofs are," said Harold, shaking in spite of himself, and getting nervous.
"I have no inclination to be lengthy. It is not more than a few weeks since I ascertained that there is in existence an heir of the Bycliffes, the old adversaries of your family. More curiously, it is only a few days ago—in fact, only since the day of the riot—that the Bycliffe claim has become valid, and that the right of remainder accrues to the heir in question."
"And how, pray?" said Harold, rising from his chair, and making a turn in the room, with his hands thrust in his pockets. Jermyn rose too, and stood near the hearth facing Harold, as he moved to and fro.
"By the death of an old fellow who got drunk, and was trampled to death in the riot. He was the last of that Thomas Transome's line, by the purchase of whose interest your family got its title to the estate. Your title died with him. It was supposed that the line had become extinct before—and on that supposition the old Bycliffes founded their claim. But I hunted up this man just about the time the last suit was closed. His death would have been of no consequence to you if there had not been a Bycliffe in existence; but I happen to know that there is, and that the fact can be legally proved."
For a minute or two Harold did not speak, but continued to pace the room, while Jermyn kept his position, holding his hands behind him. At last Harold said, from the other end of the room, speaking in a scornful tone,
"That sounds alarming. But it is not to be proved simply by your statement."
"Clearly. I have here a document, with a copy,
Jermyn took up the papers he had laid on the table, opening them slowly and coolly as he went on speaking, and as Harold advanced towards him.
"You may suppose that we spared no pains to ascertain the state of the title in the last suit against Maurice Christian Bycliffe, which threatened to be a hard run. This document is the result of a consultation; it gives an opinion which must be taken as a final authority. You may cast your eyes over that, if you please; I will wait your time. Or you may read the summing-up here," Jermyn ended, holding out one of the papers to Harold, and pointing to a final passage.
Harold took the paper, with a slight gesture of impatience. He did not choose to obey
Jermyn's indication, and confine himself to the summing-up. He ran through the document. But
in truth he was too much excited really to follow the details, and was rather acting than
reading, till at length he threw himself into his chair and consented to bend his attention on
the passage to which Jermyn had
" To sum up ... we are of opinion that the title of the present possessors of the
Transome estates can be strictly proved to rest solely upon a base fee created under the
original settlement of 1729, and to be good so long only as issue exists of the tenant in
tail by whom that base fee was created. We feel satisfied by the evidence that such issue
exists in the person of Thomas Transome, otherwise Trounsem, of Littleshaw. But upon his
decease without issue we are of opinion that the right in remainder of the Bycliffe family
will arise, which right would not be barred by any statute of limitation. "
When Harold's eyes were on the signatures to this document for the third time, Jermyn said,
"As it turned out, the case being closed by the death of the claimant, we had no occasion
for producing Thomas Transome, who was the old fellow I tell you of. The inquiries about him
set him agog, and after they were dropped he came into this neighbourhood, thinking there was
something fine in store for him. Here, if you like to take it, is a memorandum about him. I
repeat, that he
Harold rose from his chair again, and again paced the room. He was not prepared with any defiance.
"And where is he—this Bycliffe?" he said at last, stopping in his walk, and facing round towards Jermyn.
"I decline to say more till you promise to suspend proceedings against me."
Harold turned again, and looked out of the window, without speaking for a moment or two. It was impossible that there should not be a conflict within him, and at present it was a very confused one. At last he said,
"This person is in ignorance of his claim?"
"Yes."
"Has been brought up in an inferior station?"
"Yes," said Jermyn, keen enough to guess part of what was going on in Harold's mind. "There
is no harm in leaving him in ignorance. The question is a purely legal one. And, as I said
before, the complete knowledge of the case, as one of evidence, lies exclusively with me. I
can nullify the evidence,
"I must have time to think of this," said Harold, conscious of a terrible pressure.
"I can give you no time unless you promise me to suspend proceedings."
"And then, when I ask you, you will lay the details before me?"
"Not without a thorough understanding before-hand. If I engage not to use my knowledge against you, you must engage in writing that on being satisfied by the details, you will cancel all hostile proceedings against me, and will not institute fresh ones on the strength of any occurrences now past."
"Well, I must have time," said Harold, more than ever inclined to thrash the attorney, but feeling bound hand and foot with knots that he was not sure he could ever unfasten.
"That is to say," said Jermyn, with his black-browed persistence, "you will write to suspend proceedings."
Again Harold paused. He was more than ever exasperated, but he was threatened, mortified,
and confounded by the necessity for an immediate decision between alternatives almost equally
hateful
"Very well. It is a bargain."
"No further than this," said Harold, hastily, flashing a look at Jermyn—"no further than this, that I require time, and therefore I give it to you."
"Of course. You require time to consider whether the pleasure of trying to ruin me—me to whom you are really indebted—is worth the loss of the Transome estates—I shall wish you good-morning."
Harold did not speak to him or look at him again, and Jermyn walked out of the room. As he
appeared outside the door and closed it behind him, Mrs Transome showed her white face at
another door which opened on a level with Harold's in such a way that it was just possible for
Jermyn not to see her. He availed himself of that possibility, and walked straight across the
hall, where there was no servant in attendance to let him out, as if he believed that no one
was looking at him who could
She was convinced that he had avoided her, and she was too proud to arrest him. She was as insignificant now in his eyes as in her son's. "Men have no memories in their hearts," she said to herself, bitterly. Turning into her sitting-room, she heard the voices of Mr Transome and little Harry at play together. She would have given a great deal at this moment if her feeble husband had not always lived in dread of her temper and her tyranny, so that he might have been fond of her now. She felt herself loveless; if she was important to any one, it was only to her old waiting-woman Denner.
Are these things then necessities? Then let us meet them like necessities.
Shakspeare : Henry IV.
See now the virtue living in a word! Hobson will think of swearing it was noon When he saw Dobson at the May-day fair, To prove poor Dobson did not rob the mail. 'Tis neighbourly to save a neighbour's neck: What harm in lying when you mean no harm? But say 'tis perjury, then Hobson quakes— He'll none of perjury. Thus words embalm The conscience of mankind; and Roman laws Bring still a conscience to poor Hobson's aid.
Few men would have felt otherwise than Harold Transome felt, if, having a reversion
tantamount to possession of a fine estate, carrying an association with an old name and
considerable social importance, they were suddenly informed that there was a person who had a
legal right to deprive them of these advantages; that person's right having never been
contemplated by any one as more than a chance, and being quite unknown to himself. In ordinary
cases a shorter possession than Harold's
In fact, what he would have done had the circumstances been different was much clearer than
what he should choose to do or feel himself compelled to do in the actual crisis. He would not
have been disgraced if, on a valid claim being urged, he had got his lawyers to fight it out
for him on the chance of eluding the claim by some adroit technical management. Nobody off the
stage could be sentimental about these things, or pretend to shed tears of
But why, if it were not wrong to contest the claim, should he feel the most uncomfortable
scruples about robbing the claim of its sting by getting rid of its evidence? It was a mortal
disappointment —it was a sacrifice of indemnification— to abstain from punishing Jermyn. But
even if he brought his mind to contemplate that as the wiser course, he still shrank from what
looked like complicity with Jermyn; he still shrank from the secret nullification of a just
legal claim. If he had only known the details, if he had known who this alleged heir was, he
might have seen his way to some course that would not have grated on his sense of honour and
dignity. But Jermyn had been too acute to let Harold know this: he had even
And it did happen that, after writing to London in fulfilment of his pledge, Harold spent
many hours over that inward debate, which was not very different from what Jermyn imagined. He
took it everywhere with him, on foot and on horseback, and it was his companion through a
great deal of the night. His nature was not of a kind given to internal conflict, and he had
never before been long undecided and puzzled. This unaccustomed state of mind was so painfully
irksome to him—he rebelled so impatiently against the oppression of circumstances in which his
quick temperament and habitual decision could not help him—that it added tenfold to his hatred
of Jermyn, who was the cause of it. And thus, as the temptation to avoid
But we have seen that the attorney was much too confident in his calculations. And while Harold was being galled by his subjection to Jermyn's knowledge, independent information was on its way to him. The messenger was Christian, who, after as complete a survey of probabilities as he was capable of, had come to the conclusion that the most profitable investment he could make of his peculiar experience and testimony in relation to Bycliffe and Bycliffe's daughter, was to place them at the disposal of Harold Transome. He was afraid of Jermyn; he utterly distrusted Johnson; but he thought he was secure in relying on Harold Transome's care for his own interest; and he preferred above all issues the prospect of forthwith leaving the country with a sum that at least for a good while would put him at his ease.
When, only three mornings after the interview with Jermyn, Dominic opened the door of
Harold's sitting-room, and said that "Meester Chreestian," Mr Philip Debarry's courier and an
acquaintance of his own at Naples, requested to be admitted on business
Christian wore this morning those perfect manners of a subordinate who is not servile, which he always adopted towards his unquestionable superiors. Mr Debarry, who preferred having some one about him with as little resemblance as possible to a regular servant, had a singular liking for the adroit, quiet-mannered Christian, and would have been amazed to see the insolent assumption he was capable of in the presence of people like Mr Lyon, who were of no account in society. Christian had that sort of cleverness which is said to "know the world"—that is to say, he knew the price-current of most things.
Aware that he was looked at as a messenger while he remained standing near the door with his hat in his hand, he said, with respectful ease,
"You will probably be surprised, sir, at my coming to speak to you on my own account; and,
in fact, I could not have thought of doing so if my
"You don't come from Mr Debarry, then?" said Harold, with some surprise.
"No, sir. My business is a secret; and, if you please, must remain so."
"Is it a pledge you are demanding from me?" said Harold, rather suspiciously, having no ground for confidence in a man of Christian's position.
"Yes, sir; I am obliged to ask no less than that you will pledge yourself not to take Mr Jermyn into confidence concerning what passes between us."
"With all my heart," said Harold, something like a gleam passing over his face. His circulation had become more rapid. "But what have you had to do with Jermyn?"
"He has not mentioned me to you then—has he, sir?"
"No; certainly not—never."
Christian thought, "Aha, Mr Jermyn! you are keeping the secret well, are you?" He said, aloud,
"Then Mr Jermyn has never mentioned to you, sir, what I believe he is aware of—that there is danger of a new suit being raised against you on the part of a Bycliffe, to get the estate?"
"Ah!" said Harold, starting up, and placing himself
"It is this fact, sir, that I came to tell you of."
"From some other motive than kindness to me, I presume," said Harold, with a slight approach to a smile.
"Certainly," said Christian, as quietly as if he had been stating yesterday's weather. "I should not have the folly to use any affectation with you, Mr Transome. I lost considerable property early in life, and am now in the receipt of a salary simply. In the affair I have just mentioned to you I can give evidence which will turn the scale against you. I have no wish to do so, if you will make it worth my while to leave the country."
Harold listened as if he had been a legendary hero, selected for peculiar solicitation by
the Evil One. Here was temptation in a more alluring form than before, because it was
sweetened by the prospect of eluding Jermyn. But the desire to gain
"You are aware," he said, coolly, "that silence is not a commodity worth purchasing unless it is loaded. There are many persons, I dare say, who would like me to pay their travelling expenses for them. But they might hardly be able to show me that it was worth my while."
"You wish me to state what I know?"
"Well, that is a necessary preliminary to any further conversation."
"I think you will see, Mr Transome, that, as a matter of justice, the knowledge I can give is worth something, quite apart from my future appearance or non-appearance as a witness. I must take care of my own interest, and if anything should hinder you from choosing to satisfy me for taking an essential witness out of the way, I must at least be paid for bringing you the information."
"Can you tell me who and where this Bycliffe is?"
"I can."
"—And give me a notion of the whole affair?"
"Yes: I have talked to a lawyer—not Jermyn—who is at the bottom of the law in the affair."
"You must not count on any wish of mine to suppress evidence or remove a witness. But name your price for the information."
"In that case I must be paid the higher for my information. Say, two thousand pounds."
"Two thousand devils!" burst out Harold, throwing himself into his chair again, and turning his shoulder towards Christian. New thoughts crowded upon him. "This fellow may want to decamp for some reason or other," he said to himself. "More people besides Jermyn know about his evidence, it seems. The whole thing may look black for me if it comes out. I shall be believed to have bribed him to run away, whether or not." Thus the outside conscience came in aid of the inner.
"I will not give you one sixpence for your information," he said, resolutely, "until time has made it clear that you do not intend to decamp, but will be forthcoming when you are called for. On those terms I have no objection to give you a note, specifying that after the fulfilment of that condition —that is, after the occurrence of a suit, or the understanding that no suit is to occur—I will pay you a certain sum in consideration of the information you now give me!"
Christian felt himself caught in a vice. In the
Christian was reflecting that if he stayed, and faced some possible inconveniences of being known publicly as Henry Scaddon for the sake of what he might get from Esther, it would at least be wise to be certain of some money from Harold Transome, since he turned out to be of so peculiar a disposition as to insist on a punctilious honesty to his own disadvantage. Did he think of making a bargain with the other side? If so, he might be content to wait for the knowledge till it came in some other way. Christian was beginning to be afraid lest he should get nothing by this clever move of coming to Transome Court. At last he said,
"I think, sir, two thousand would not be an unreasonable sum, on those conditions."
"I will not give two thousand."
"Allow me to say, sir, you must consider that there is no one whose interest it is to tell you as much as I shall, even if they could; since Mr Jermyn, who knows it, has not thought fit to tell you. There may be use you don't think of in getting the information at once."
"Well?"
"I think a gentleman should act liberally under such circumstances."
"So I will."
"I could not take less than a thousand pounds. It really would not be worth my while. If Mr Jermyn knew I gave you the information, he would endeavour to injure me."
"I will give you a thousand," said Harold, immediately, for Christian had unconsciously touched a sure spring. "At least, I'll give you a note to the effect I spoke of."
He wrote as he had promised, and gave the paper to Christian.
"Now, don't be circuitous," said Harold. "You seem to have a business-like gift of speech. Who and where is this Bycliffe?"
"You will be surprised to hear, sir, that she is supposed to be the daughter of the old preacher, Lyon, in Malthouse Yard."
"Good God! How can that be?" said Harold. At once, the first occasion on which he had seen Esther rose in his memory—the little dark parlour —the graceful girl in blue, with the surprisingly distinguished manners and appearance.
"In this way. Old Lyon, by some strange means or other, married Bycliffe's widow when this girl was a baby. And the preacher didn't want the girl to know that he was not her real father: he told me that himself. But she is the image of Bycliffe, whom I knew well—an uncommonly fine woman—steps like a queen."
"I have seen her," said Harold, more than ever glad to have purchased this knowledge. "But now, go on."
Christian proceeded to tell all he knew, including his conversation with Jermyn, except so far as it had an unpleasant relation to himself.
"Then," said Harold, as the details seemed to have come to a close, "you believe that Miss Lyon and her supposed father are at present unaware of the claims that might be urged for her on the strength of her birth?"
"I believe so. But I need not tell you that where the lawyers are on the scent you can never be sure of anything long together. I must remind you, sir, that you have promised to protect me from Mr Jermyn by keeping my confidence."
"Never fear. Depend upon it, I shall betray nothing to Mr Jermyn."
Christian was dismissed with a "good-morning;" and while he cultivated some friendly reminiscences with Dominic, Harold sat chewing the cud of his new knowledge, and finding it not altogether so bitter as he had expected.
From the first, after his interview with Jermyn, the recoil of Harold's mind from the idea
of strangling a legal right threw him on the alternative of attempting a compromise. Some
middle course might be possible, which would be a less evil than a costly lawsuit, or than the
total renunciation of the estates. And now he had learned that the new claimant was a woman—a
young woman, brought up under circumstances that would make the fourth of the Transome
property seem to her an immense fortune. Both the sex and the social condition were of the
sort that lies open to many softening influences. And having seen Esther, it was inevitable
that, amongst the various issues, agreeable
Harold, as he had constantly said to his mother, was "not a marrying man;" he did not contemplate bringing a wife to Transome Court for many years to come, if at all. Having little Harry as an heir, he preferred freedom. Western women were not to his taste: they showed a transition from the feebly animal to the thinking being, which was simply troublesome. Harold preferred a slow-witted large-eyed woman, silent and affectionate, with a load of black hair weighing much more heavily than her brains. He had seen no such woman in England, except one whom he had brought with him from the East.
Therefore Harold did not care to be married until or unless some surprising chance presented
itself; and now that such a chance had occurred to suggest marriage to him, he would not admit
to himself that he contemplated marrying Esther as a plan; he was only obliged to see that
such an issue was not inconceivable. He was not going to take any step expressly directed
towards that end: what he had
At the end of these meditations he felt satisfied with himself and light-hearted. He had rejected two dishonest propositions, and he was going to do something that seemed eminently graceful. But he needed his mother's assistance, and it was necessary that he should both confide in her and persuade her.
Within two hours after Christian left him, Harold begged his mother to come into his private
room, and there he told her the strange and startling story, omitting, however, any
particulars which would involve the identification of Christian as his
Mrs Transome said little in the course of the story: she made no exclamations, but she
listened with close attention, and asked a few questions so much to the point as to surprise
Harold. When he showed her the copy of the legal opinion which Jermyn had left with him, she
said she knew it very well; she had a copy herself. The particulars of that last lawsuit were
too well engraven on her mind: it happened at a time when there was no one to supersede her,
and she was the virtual head of the family affairs. She was prepared to understand how the
estate might be in danger; but nothing had prepared her for the strange details—for the way in
which the new claimant had been reared and brought within the range of converging motives that
had led to this revelation, least of all for the part Jermyn had come to play in the
revelation. Mrs Transome saw these things through the medium of certain dominant emotions that
made them seem like a long-ripening retribution. Harold perceived that she was painfully
agitated, that she trembled, and that her white lips would not
But he did not guess what it was in his narrative which had most pierced his mother. It was something that made the threat about the estate only a secondary alarm. Now, for the first time, she heard of the intended proceedings against Jermyn. Harold had not chosen to speak of them before; but having at last called his mother into consultation, there was nothing in his mind to hinder him from speaking without reserve of his determination to visit on the attorney his shameful maladministration of the family affairs.
Harold went through the whole narrative—of what he called Jermyn's scheme to catch him in a vice, and his power of triumphantly frustrating that scheme—in his usual rapid way, speaking with a final decisiveness of tone: and his mother felt that if she urged any counter-consideration at all, she could only do so when he had no more to say.
"Now, what I want you to do, mother, if you can see this matter as I see it," Harold said in
conclusion, "is to go with me to call on this girl in Malthouse Yard. I will open the affair
to her;
"It seems almost incredible—extraordinary—a girl in her position," said Mrs Transome, with difficulty. It would have seemed the bitterest humiliating penance if another sort of suffering had left any room in her heart.
"I assure you she is a lady; I saw her when I was canvassing, and was amazed at the time. You will be quite struck with her. It is no indignity for you to invite her."
"Oh," said Mrs Transome, with low-toned bitterness, "I must put-up with all things as they are determined for me. When shall we go?"
"Well," said Harold, looking at his watch, "it is hardly two yet. We could really go to-day, when you have lunched. It is better to lose no time. I'll order the carriage."
"Stay," said Mrs Transome, making a desperate effort. "There is plenty of time. I shall not lunch. I have a word to say."
Harold withdrew his hand from the bell, and leaned against the mantelpiece to listen.
"You see I comply with your wish at once, Harold?"
"Yes, mother, I'm much obliged to you for making no difficulties."
"You ought to listen to me in return."
"Pray go on,' said Harold, expecting to be annoyed.
"What is the good of having these Chancery proceedings against Jermyn?"
"Good? This good: that fellow has burdened the estate with annuities and mortgages to the extent of three thousand a-year; and bulk of them, I am certain, he holds himself under the name of another man. And the advances this yearly interest represents, have not been much more than twenty thousand. Of course he has hoodwinked you, and my father never gave attention to these things. He has been up to all sorts of devil's work with the deeds; he didn't count on my coming back from Smyrna to fill poor Durfey's place. He shall feel the difference. And the good will be, that I shall save almost all the annuities for the rest of my father's life, which may be ten years or more, and I shall get back some of the money, and I shall punish a scoundrel. That is the good."
"He will be ruined."
"That's what I intend," said Harold, sharply.
"He exerted himself a great deal for us in the old suits: every one said he had wonderful zeal and ability," said Mrs Transome, getting courage and warmth as she went on. Her temper was rising.
"What he did, he did for his own sake, you may depend on that," said Harold, with a scornful laugh.
"There were very painful things in that last suit. You seem anxious, about this young woman, to avoid all further scandal and contests in the family. Why don't you wish to do it in this case? Jermyn might be willing to arrange things amicably—to make restitution as far as he can—if he has done anything worng."
"I will arrange nothing amicably with him," said Harold, decisively. "If he has ever done anything scandalous as our agent, let him bear the infamy. And the right way to throw the infamy on him is to show the world that he has robbed us, and that I mean to punish him. Why do you wish to shield such a fellow, mother? It has been chiefly through him that you have had to lead such a thrifty miserable life—you who used to make as brilliant a figure as a woman need wish."
Mrs Transome's rising temper was turned into a horrible sensation, as painful as a sudden concussion from something hard and immovable when we have struck out with our fist, intending to hit something warm, soft, and breathing, like ourselves. Poor Mrs Transome's strokes were sent jarring back on her by a hard unalterable past. She did not speak in answer to Harold, but rose from the chair as if she gave up the debate.
"Women are frightened at everything, I know," said Harold, kindly, feeling that he had been a little harsh after his mother's compliance. "And you have been used for so many years to think Jermyn a law of nature. Come, mother," he went on, looking at her gently, and resting his hands on her shoulders, "look cheerful. We shall get through all these difficulties. And this girl—I daresay she will be quite an interesting visitor for you. You have not had any young girl about you for a long while. Who knows? she may fall deeply in love with me, and I may be obliged to marry her."
He spoke laughingly, only thinking how he could make his mother smile. But she looked at him seriously and said, "Do you mean that, Harold?"
"Am I not capable of making a conquest? Not too fat yet—a handsome, well-rounded youth of thirty-four?"
She was forced to look straight at the beaming face, with its rich dark colour, just bent a little over her. Why could she not be happy in this son whose future she had once dreamed of, and who had been as fortunate as she had ever hoped? The tears came, not plenteously, but making her dark eyes as large and bright as youth had once made them without tears.
"There, there!" said Harold, coaxingly. "Don't be afraid. You shall not have a daughter-in-law unless she is a pearl. Now we will get ready to go."
In half an hour from that time Mrs Transome came down, looking majestic in sables and velvet, ready to call on "the girl in Malthouse Yard." She had composed herself to go through this task. She saw there was nothing better to be done. After the resolutions Harold had taken, some sort of compromise with this oddly-placed heiress was the result most to be hoped for; if the compromise turned out to be a marriage—well, she had no reason to care much: she was already powerless. It remained to be seen what this girl was.
The carriage was to be driven round the back way, to avoid too much observation. But the late election affairs might account for Mr Lyon's receiving a visit from the unsuccessful Radical candidate.
I also could speak as ye do; if your soul were in my soul's stead, I could heap up words against you, and shake mine head at you.—
Book of Job.
In the interval since Esther parted with Felix Holt on the day of the riot, she had gone through so much emotion, and had already had so strong a shock of surprise, that she was prepared to receive any new incident of an unwonted kind with comparative equanimity.
When Mr Lyon had got home again from his preaching excursion, Felix was already on his way
to Loamford Jail. The little minister was terribly shaken by the news. He saw no clear
explanation of Felix Holt's conduct; for the statements Esther had heard were so conflicting
that she had not been able to gather distinctly what had come out in the examination by the
magistrates. But Mr Lyon felt confident that Felix was innocent of any wish to abet a riot or
the infliction of injuries; what he chiefly feared was that in the fatal encounter with
"My poor young friend is being taught with mysterious severity the evil of a too confident self-reliance," he said to Esther, as they sat opposite to each other, listening and speaking sadly.
"You will go and see him, father?"
"Verily will I. But I must straightway go and see that poor afflicted woman, whose soul is doubt-less whirled about in this trouble like a shapeless and unstable thing driven by divided winds." Mr Lyon rose and took his hat hastily, ready to walk out, with his greatcoat flying open and exposing his small person to the keen air.
"Stay, father, pray, till you have had some food," said Esther, putting her hand on his arm. "You look quite weary and shattered."
"Child, I cannot stay. I can neither eat bread nor drink water till I have learned more about this young man's deeds, what can be proved and what cannot be proved against him. I fear he has none to stand by him in this town, for even by the friends of our church I have been ofttimes rebuked because he seemed dear to me. But, Esther, my beloved child—"
Here Mr Lyon grasped her arm, and seemed in the need of speech to forget his previous haste. "I bear in mind this: the Lord knoweth them that are His; but we—we are left to judge by uncertain signs, that so we may learn to exercise hope and faith towards one another; and in this uncertainty I cling with awful hope to those whom the world loves not because their conscience, albeit mistakenly, is at war with the habits of the world. Our great faith, my Esther, is the faith of martyrs: I will not lightly turn away from any man who endures harshness because he will not lie; nay, though I would not wantonly grasp at ease of mind through an arbitrary choice of doctrine, I cannot but believe that the merits of the Divine Sacrifice are wider than our utmost charity. I once believed otherwise—but not now, not now."
The minister paused, and seemed to be abstractedly gazing at some memory: he was always
liable to be snatched away by thoughts from the pursuit of a purpose which had seemed
pressing. Esther seized the opportunity and prevailed on him to fortify himself with some of
Lyddy's porridge before he went out on his tiring task of seeking definite trustworthy
knowledge from the lips of various
She, regarding all her trouble about Felix in the light of a fulfilment of her own prophecies, treated the sad history with a preference for edification above accuracy, and for mystery above relevance, worthy of a commentator on the Apocalypse. She insisted chiefly, not on the important facts that Felix had sat at his work till after eleven, like a deaf man, had rushed out in surprise and alarm, had come back to report with satisfaction that things were quiet, and had asked her to set by his dinner for him—facts which would tell as evidence that Felix was disconnected with any project of disturbances, and was averse to them. These things came out incidentally in her long plaint to the minister; but what Mrs Holt felt it essential to state was, that long before Michaelmas was turned, sitting in her chair, she had said to Felix that there would be a judgment on him for being so certain sure about the Pills and the Elixir.
"And now, Mr Lyon," said the poor woman, who had dressed herself in a gown previously cast
off, a front all out of curl, and a cap with no starch in it, while she held little coughing
Job on her knee, —"and now you see—my words have come true
was a baby, Mr Lyon, and I gave him the breast,"—here poor Mrs Holt's
motherly love overcame her expository eagerness, and she fell more and more to crying as she
spoke—"And to think there's folks saying now as he'll be transported, and his hair shaved off,
and the treadmill, and everything. O dear!"
As Mrs Holt broke off into sobbing, little Job also, who had got a confused yet profound sense of sorrow, and of Felix being hurt and gone away, set up a little wail of wondering misery.
"Nay, Mistress Holt," said the minister soothingly, "enlarge not your grief by more than
warrantable
"He never stole anything in his life, Mr Lyon," said Mrs Holt, reviving. "Nobody can throw
it in my face as my son ran away with money like the young man at the Bank—though he looked
most respectable, and far different on a Sunday to what Felix ever did. And I know it's very
hard fighting with constables; but they say Tucker's wife'll be a deal better off than she was
before, for the great folks'll pension her, and she'll be put on all the charities, and her
children at the Free School, and everything. Your trouble's easy borne when everybody gives it
a lift for you; and if judge and jury wants to do right by Felix, they'll think of his poor
mother, with the bread took out of her mouth, all but half-a-crown a-week and furniture—which,
to be sure, is most excellent, and of my own buying— and got to keep this orphin child as
Felix himself brought on me. And I might send him back to
will say—and was his own father's lawful child, and me his
mother, that was Mary Wall thirty years before ever I married his father." Here Mrs Holt's
feelings again became too much for her, but she struggled on to say, sobbingly, "And if
they're to transport him, I should like to go to the prison and take the orphin child; for he
was most fond of having him on his lap, and said he'd never marry; and there was One above
overheard him, for he's been took at his word."
Mr Lyon listened with low groans, and then tried
On one point Mrs Holt's plaint tallied with his own forebodings, and he found them verified:
the state of feeling in Treby among the Liberal Dissenting flock was unfavourable to Felix.
None who had observed his conduct from the windows saw anything tending to excuse him, and his
own account of his motives, given on his examination, was spoken of with head-shaking; if it
had not been for his habit of always thinking himself wiser than other people, he would never
have entertained such a wild scheme. He had set himself up for something extraordinary, and
had spoken ill of respectable tradespeople. He had put a stop to the making of salable drugs,
contrary to the nature of buying and selling, and to a due reliance on what Providence might
effect in the human inside through the instrumentality of remedies unsuitable to the stomach,
looked at in a merely secular light; and the result was what might have been expected. He had
brought his mother to poverty, and himself into trouble. And what for? He had done no good to
"the cause;" if he had fought about
The little minister's soul was bruised; he himself was keenly alive to the complication of public and private regards in this affair, and suffered a good deal at the thought of Tory triumph in the demonstration that, excepting the attack on the Seven Stars, which called itself a Whig house, all damage to property had been borne by Tories. He cared intensely for his opinions, and would have liked events to speak for them in a sort of picture-writing that everybody could understand. The enthusiasms of the world are not to be stimulated by a commentary in small and subtle characters which alone can tell the whole truth; and the picture-writing in Felix Holt's troubles was of an entirely puzzling kind: if he were a martyr, neither side wanted to claim him. Yet the minister, as we have seen, found in his Christian faith a reason for clinging the more to one who had not a large party to back him. That little man's heart was heroic: he was not one of those Liberals who make their anxiety for "the cause" of Liberalism a plea for cowardly desertion.
Besides himself, he believed there was no one who could bear testimony to the remonstrances
of Felix
This last expectation was fulfilled. Mr Lyon returned to Esther, after his day's journey to
Loamford and back, with less of trouble and perplexity in his mind: he had at least got a
definite course marked out, to which he must resign himself. Felix had declared that he would
receive no aid from Harold Transome, except the aid he might give as an honest witness. There
was nothing to be done for him but what was perfectly simple and direct. Even if the pleading
of counsel had been permitted (and at that time it was not) on behalf of a prisoner on trial
for felony, Felix would have declined it: he would in any case have spoken in his own defence.
He had a perfectly simple account to give, and needed not to avail himself of any legal
adroitness. He consented to accept the services of a respectable
"Then he is not so much cast down as you feared, father?" said Esther.
"No, child; albeit he is pale and much shaken for one so stalwart. He hath no grief, he says, save for the poor man Tucker, and for his mother; otherwise his heart is without a burthen. We discoursed greatly on the sad effect of all this for his mother, and on the perplexed condition of human things, whereby even right action seems to bring evil consequences, if we have respect only to our own brief lives, and not to that larger rule whereby we are stewards of the eternal dealings, and not contrivers of our own success."
"Did he say nothing about me, father?" said Esther, trembling a little, but unable to repress her egoism.
"Yea; he asked if you were well, and sent his affectionate regards. Nay, he bade me say
something which appears to refer to your discourse together
Mr Lyon seemed to be looking at Esther as he smiled, but she was not near enough for him to discern the expression of her face. Just then it seemed made for melancholy rather than for playfulness. Hers was not a childish beauty; and when the sparkle of mischief, wit, and vanity was out of her eyes, and the large look of abstracted sorrow was there, you would have been surprised by a certain grandeur which the smiles had hidden. That changing face was the perfect symbol of her mixed susceptible nature, in which battle was inevitable, and the side of victory uncertain.
She began to look on all that had passed between herself and Felix as something not buried,
but embalmed and kept as a relic in a private sanctuary. The very entireness of her
preoccupation about him, the perpetual repetition in her memory of all that had passed between
them, tended to produce this effect. She lived with him in the past; in the
But not yet—not while her trouble was so fresh. For it was still her trouble, and
not Felix Holt's. Perhaps it was a subtraction from his power over her, that she could never
think of him with pity, because he always seemed to her too great and strong to be pitied: he
wanted nothing. He evaded calamity by choosing privation. The best part of a woman's love is
worship; but it is hard to her to be sent away with her precious spikenard rejected, and her
long tresses too, that were let fall ready to soothe the wearied feet.
While Esther was carrying these things in her heart, the January days were beginning to pass
by with their wonted wintry monotony, except that there was rather more of good cheer than
usual remaining from the feast of Twelfth Night among the triumphant Tories, and rather more
scandal than usual excited among the mortified Dissenters by the wilfulness of their minister.
He had actually mentioned Felix Holt by name in his evening sermon
The cause was a letter brought by a special messenger from Duffield; a heavy letter addressed to Esther in a business-like manner, quite unexampled in her correspondence. And the contents of the letter were more startling than its exterior. It began:
Madam,—Herewith we send you a brief abstract of evidence which has come within our
knowledge, that the right of remainder whereby the lineal issue of Edward Bycliffe can claim
possession of the estates of which the entail was settled by John Justus Transome in
1729, now first accrues to you as the sole and lawful issue of Maurice Christian Bycliffe.
We are confident of success in the prosecution of this claim, which will result to you in the
possession of estates to the value, at the lowest, of from five to six thousand per
annum —
It was at this point that Esther, who was reading aloud, let her hand fall with the letter on her lap, and with a palpitating heart looked at her father, who looked again, in silence that lasted for two or three minutes. A certain terror was upon them both, though the thoughts that laid that weight on the tongue of each were different.
It was Mr Lyon who spoke first.
"This, then, is what the man named Christian referred to. I distrusted him, yet it seems he spoke truly."
"But," said Esther, whose imagination ran necessarily to those conditions of wealth which she could best appreciate, "do they mean that the Transomes would be turned out of Transome Court, and that I should go and live there? It seems quite an impossible thing."
"Nay, child, I know not. I am ignorant in these things, and the thought of worldly grandeur for you hath more of terror than of gladness for me. Nevertheless we must duly weigh all things, not considering aught that befalls us as a bare event, but rather as an occasion for faithful stewardship. Let us go to my study and consider this writing further."
How this announcement, which to Esther seemed as unprepared as if it had fallen from the
skies,
Jermyn's star was certainly going down, and Johnson did not feel an unmitigated grief.
Beyond some troublesome declarations as to his actual share in transactions in which his name
had been used, Johnson saw nothing formidable in prospect for himself. He was not going to be
ruined, though Jermyn probably was: he was not a highflyer, but a mere climbing-bird, who
could hold on and get his livelihood just as well if his wings were clipped a little. And, in
the mean time, here was something to be gained in this Bycliffe business, which, it was not
unpleasant to think, was a nut that Jermyn had intended to keep for his own particular
cracking, and which would be rather a severe astonishment
Under the stimulus of small many-mixed motives like these, a great deal of business has been done in the world by well-clad and, in 1833, clean-shaven men, whose names are on charity-lists, and who do not know that they are base. Mr Johnson's character was not much more exceptional than his double chin.
No system, religious or political, I believe, has laid it down as a principle that all men are alike virtuous, or even that all the people rated for £80 houses are an honour to their species.
The down we rest on in our aëry dreams Has not been plucked from birds that live and smart: 'Tis but warm snow, that melts not.
The story and the prospect revealed to Esther by the lawyers' letter, which she and
her father studied together, had made an impression on her very different from what she had
been used to figure to herself in her many day-dreams as to the effect of a sudden elevation
in rank and fortune. In her day-dreams she had not traced out the means by which such a change
could be brought about; in fact, the change had seemed impossible to her, except in her little
private Utopia, which, like other Utopias, was filled with delightful results, independent of
processes. But her mind had fixed itself habitually on the signs and luxuries of ladyhood, for
which she had the keenest perception. She had seen the very mat in her carriage, had scented
the dried rose-leaves in her corridors, had felt the soft carpets under her
It seemed that almost everything in her day-dreams —cavaliers apart—must be found at
Transome
She and her father sat with their hands locked, as they might have done if they had been listening to a solemn oracle in the days of old revealing unknown kinship and rightful heirdom. It was not that Esther had any thought of renouncing her fortune; she was incapable, in these moments, of condensing her vague ideas and feelings into any distinct plan of action, nor indeed did it seem that she was called upon to act with any promptitude. It was only that she was conscious of being strangely awed by something that was called good fortune; and the awe shut out any scheme of rejection as much as any triumphant joy in acceptance. Her first father, she learned, had died disappointed and in wrongful imprisonment, and an undefined sense of Nemesis seemed half to sanctify her inheritance, and counteract its apparent arbitrariness.
Felix Holt was present in her mind throughout: what he would say was an imaginary commentary
that she was constantly framing, and the words that she most frequently gave him—for she
dramatised under the inspiration of a sadness slightly bitter— were of this kind: "That is
clearly your destiny— to be aristocratic, to be rich. I always saw that our lots lay widely
apart. You are not fit for poverty, or any work of difficulty. But remember
Her father had not spoken since they had ended their study and discussion of the story and the evidence as it was presented to them. Into this he had entered with his usual penetrating activity; but he was so accustomed to the impersonal study of narrative, that even in these exceptional moments the habit of half a century asserted itself, and he seemed sometimes not to distinguish the case of Esther's inheritance from a story in ancient history, until some detail recalled him to the profound feeling that a great, great change might be coming over the life of this child who was so close to him. At last he relapsed into total silence, and for some time Esther was not moved to interrupt it. He had sunk back in his chair, with his hand locked in hers, and was pursuing a sort of prayerful meditation: he lifted up no formal petition, but it was as if his soul travelled again over the facts he had been considering in the company of a guide ready to inspire and correct him. He was striving to purify his feeling in this matter from selfish or worldly dross—a striving which is that prayer without ceasing, sure to wrest an answer by its sublime importunity.
There is no knowing how long they might have
"Yes, Lyddy, we come," said Esther; and then, before moving,
"Is there any advice you have in your mind for me, father?" The sense of awe was growing in Esther. Her intensest life was no longer in her dreams, where she made things to her own mind: she was moving in a world charged with forces.
"Not yet, my dear—save this: that you will seek special illumination in this juncture, and, above all, be watchful that your soul be not lifted up within you by what, rightly considered, is rather an increase of charge, and a call upon you to walk along a path which is indeed easy to the flesh, but dangerous to the spirit."
"You would always live with me, father?" Esther spoke under a strong impulse—partly
affection, partly the need to grasp at some moral help. But she had no sooner uttered the
words than they raised a vision, showing, as by a flash of lightning, the incongruity of that
past which had created the sanctities and affections of her life with that future which was
coming to her. ... The little rusty old minister, with the one luxury of his Sunday evening
pipe, smoked up the kitchen chimney,
"Touch not that chord yet, child. I must learn to think of thy lot according to the demands of Providence. We will rest a while from the subject; and I will seek calmness in my ordinary duties."
The next morning nothing more was said. Mr Lyon was absorbed in his sermon-making, for it
was near the end of the week, and Esther was obliged to attend to her pupils. Mrs Holt came by
invitation with little Job to share their dinner of roast-meat; and, after much of what the
minister called unprofitable discourse, she was quitting the house when she hastened back with
an astonished face, to tell Mr Lyon and Esther, who were already in wonder at crashing,
thundering sounds on the pavement, that there was a carriage stopping and stamping at the
entry into Malthouse Yard, with "all sorts of fine liveries," and a lady and gentleman
"If it's Mr Transome or somebody else as is great, Mr Lyon," urged Mrs Holt, "you'll remember my son, and say he's got a mother with a character they may inquire into as much as they like. And never mind what Felix says, for he's so masterful he'd stay in prison and be transported whether or no, only to have his own way. For it's not to be thought but what the great people could get him off if they would; and it's very hard with a King in the country and all the texts in Proverbs about the King's countenance, and Solomon and the live baby—"
Mr Lyon lifted up his hand deprecatingly, and Mrs Holt retreated from the parlour-door to a
corner of the kitchen, the outer doorway being occupied by Dominic, who was inquiring if Mr
and Miss Lyon were at home, and could receive Mrs Transome and Mr Harold Transome. While
Dominic went back to the carriage Mrs Holt escaped with her tiny companion to Zachary's, the
pew-opener, observing to Lyddy that she knew herself, and was not that woman to stay where she
might not be wanted; whereupon Lyddy, differing fundamentally, admonished her parting ear that
it
Harold Transome, greeting Esther gracefuly, presented his mother, whose eagle-like glance, fixed on her from the first moment of entering, seemed to Esther to pierce her through. Mrs Transome hardly noticed Mr Lyon, not from studied haughtiness, but from sheer mental inability to consider him—as a person ignorant of natural history is unable to consider a fresh-water polype otherwise than as a sort of animated weed, certainly not fit for table. But Harold saw that his mother was agreeably struck by Esther, who indeed showed to much advantage. She was not at all taken by surprise, and maintained a dignified quietude; but her previous knowledge and reflection about the possible dispossession of these Transomes gave her a softened feeling towards them which tinged her manners very agreeably.
Harold was carefully polite to the minister, throwing out a word to make him understand that he had an important part in the important business which had brought this unannounced visit; and the four made a group seated not far off each other near the window, Mrs Transome and Esther being on the sofa.
"You must be astonished at a visit from me, Miss Lyon," Mrs Transome began; "I seldom come to Treby Magna. Now I see you, the visit is an unexpected pleasure; but the cause of my coming is business of a serious nature, which my son will communicate to you."
"I ought to begin by saying that what I have to announce to you is the reverse of disagreeable, Miss Lyon," said Harold, with lively ease. "I don't suppose the world would consider it very good news for me; but a rejected candidate, Mr Lyon," Harold went on, turning graciously to the minister, "begins to be inured to loss and misfortune."
"Truly, sir," said Mr Lyon, with a rather sad solemnity, "your allusion hath a grievous bearing for me, but I will not retard your present purpose by further remark."
"You will never guess what I have to disclose,"
"Does it refer to law and inheritance?" said Esther, with a smile. She was already brightened by Harold's manner. The news seemed to be losing its chillness, and to be something really belonging to warm, comfortable, interesting life.
"Then you have already heard of it?" said Harold, inwardly vexed, but sufficiently prepared not to seem so.
"Only yesterday," said Esther, quite simply "I received a letter from some lawyers with a statement of many surprising things, showing that I was an heiress"—here she turned very prettily to address Mrs Transome—"which, as you may imagine, is one of the last things I could have supposed myself to be."
"My dear," said Mrs Transome with elderly grace, just laying her hand for an instant on Esther's, "it is a lot that would become you admirably."
Esther blushed, and said playfully,
"O, I know what to buy with fifty pounds a-year, but I know the price of nothing beyond that."
Her father sat looking at her through his spectacles, stroking his chin. It was amazing to
herself
"I daresay, then," said Harold, "you are more fully possessed of particulars than I am. So that my mother and I need only tell you what no one else can tell you—that is, what are her and my feelings and wishes under these new and unexpected circumstances."
"I am most anxious," said Esther, with a grave beautiful look of respect to Mrs Transome—"most anxious on that point. Indeed, being of course in uncertainty about it, I have not yet known whether I could rejoice." Mrs Transome's glance had softened. She liked Esther to look at her.
"Our chief anxiety," she said, knowing what Harold wished her to say, "is, that there may be no contest, no useless expenditure of money. Of course we will surrender what can be rightfully claimed."
"My mother expresses our feeling precisely, Miss Lyon," said Harold. "And I'm sure, Mr Lyon, you will understand our desire."
"Assuredly, sir. My daughter would in any case have had my advice to seek a conclusion which
would involve no strife. We endeavour, sir, in our body, to hold to the apostolic rule that
one Christian
"If it is to depend on my will," said Esther, "there is nothing that would be more repugnant to me than any struggle on such a subject. But can't the lawyers go on doing what they will in spite of me? It seems that this is what they mean."
"Not exactly," said Harold, smiling. "Of course they live by such struggles as you dislike. But we can thwart them by determining not to quarrel. It is desirable that we should consider the affair together, and put it into the hands of honourable solicitors. I assure you we Transomes will not contend for what is not our own."
"And this is what I have come to beg of you," said Mrs Transome. "It is that you will come to Transome Court—and let us take full time to arrange matters. Do oblige me: you shall not be teazed more than you like by an old woman: you shall do just as you please, and become acquainted with your future home, since it is to be yours. I can tell you a world of things that you will want to know; and the business can proceed properly."
"Do consent," said Harold, with winning brevity.
Esther was flushed, and her eyes were bright. It was impossible for her not to feel that the proposal was a more tempting step towards her change of condition than she could have thought of beforehand. She had forgotten that she was in any trouble. But she looked towards her father, who was again stroking his chin, as was his habit when he was doubting and deliberating.
"I hope you do not disapprove of Miss Lyon's granting us this favour?" said Harold to the minister.
"I have nothing to oppose to it, sir, if my daughter's own mind is clear as to her course."
"You will come—now—with us," said Mrs Transome, persuasively. "You will go back with us in the carriage."
Harold was highly gratified with the perfection of his mother's manner on this occasion,
which he had looked forward to as difficult. Since he had come home again, he had never seen
her so much at her ease, or with so much benignancy in her face. The secret lay in the charm
of Esther's sweet young deference, a sort of charm that had not before entered into Mrs
Transome's elderly life. Esther's pretty behaviour, it must be confessed, was not fed entirely
from lofty moral sources: over and above her really
"Since my father has no objection," she said, "and you urge me so kindly. But I must beg for time to pack up a few clothes."
"By all means," said Mrs Transome. "We are not at all pressed."
When Esther had left the room, Harold said, "Apart from our immediate reason for coming, Mr Lyon, I could have wished to see you about these unhappy consequences of the election contest. But you will understand that I have been much preoccupied with private affairs."
"You have well said that the consequences are unhappy sir. And but for a reliance on something more than human calculation, I know not which I should most bewail—the scandal which wrong-dealing has brought on right principles, or the snares which it laid for the feet of a young man who is dear to me. 'One soweth, and another reapeth,' is a verity that applies to evil as well as good."
"You are referring to Felix Holt. I have not neglected steps to secure the best legal help for the prisoners; but I am given to understand that Holt refuses any aid from me. I hope he will not go rashly to work in speaking in his own defence without any legal instruction. It is an opprobrium of our law that no counsel is allowed to plead for the prisoner in cases of felony. A ready tongue may do a man as much harm as good in a court of justice. He piques himself on making a display, and displays a little too much."
"Sir, you know him not," said the little minister, in his deeper tone. "He would not accept, even if it were accorded, a defence wherein the truth was screened or avoided,—not from a vainglorious spirit of self-exhibition, for he hath a singular directness and simplicity of speech; but from an averseness to a profession wherein a man may without shame seek to justify the wicked for reward, and take away the righteousness of the righteous from him."
"It's a pity a fine young fellow should do himself harm by fanatical notions of that sort. I could at least have procured the advantage of first-rate consultation. He didn't look to me like a dreamy personage."
"Nor is he dreamy; rather, his excess lies in being too practical."
"Well, I hope you will not encourage him in such irrationality: the question is not one of misrepresentation, but of adjusting fact, so as to raise it to the power of evidence. Don't you see that?"
"I do, I do. But I distrust not Felix Holt's discernment in regard to his own case. He
builds not on doubtful things, and hath no illusory hopes; on the contrary, he is of a
too-scornful incredulity where I would fain see a more childlike faith. But he will hold no
belief without action corresponding thereto; and the occasion of his return to this his native
place at a time which has proved fatal, was no other than his resolve to hinder the sale of
some drugs, which had chiefly supported his mother, but which his better knowledge showed him
to be pernicious to the human frame. He undertook to support her by his own labour: but, sir,
I pray you to mark—and old as I am, I will not deny that this young man instructs me herein—I
pray you to mark the poisonous confusion of good and evil which is the wide-spreading effect
of vicious practices. Through the use of undue electioneering means—concerning which, however,
I do not accuse you father than of having acted the part of him who washes his hands when he
delivers up to others the exercise of an iniquitous power—Felix
"I shall be proud to supply her as amply as you think desirable," said Harold, not enjoying this lecture.
"I will pray you to speak of this question with my daughter, who, it appears, may herself have large means at command, and would desire to minister to Mistress Holt's needs with all friendship and delicacy. For the present, I can take care that she lacks nothing essential."
As Mr Lyon was speaking, Esther re-entered, equipped for her drive. She laid her hand on her father's arm, and said, "You will let my pupils know at once, will you, father?"
"Doubtless, my dear," said the old man, trembling a little under the feeling that this departure of Esther's was a crisis. Nothing again would be as it had been in their mutual life. But he feared that he was being mastered by a too-tender self-regard, and struggled to keep himself calm.
Mrs Transome and Harold had both risen.
"If you are quite ready, Miss Lyon," said Harold, divining that the father and daughter would like to have an unobserved moment, "I will take my mother to the carriage, and come back for you."
When they were alone, Esther put her hands on her father's shoulders, and kissed him.
"This will not be a grief to you, I hope, father? You think it is better that I should go?"
"Nay, child, I am weak. But I would fain be capable of a joy quite apart from the accidents of my aged earthly existence, which, indeed, is a petty and almost dried-up fountain—whereas to the receptive soul the river of life pauseth not, nor is diminished."
"Perhaps you will see Felix Holt again, and tell him everything?"
"Shall I say aught to him for you?"
"O no; only that Job Tudge has a little flannel shirt and a box of lozenges," said Esther, smiling. "Ah, I hear Mr Transome coming back. I must say good-bye to Lyddy, else she will cry over my hard heart."
In spite of all the grave thoughts that had been, Esther felt it a very pleasant as well as
new experience to be led to the carriage by Harold Transome, to be seated on soft cushions,
and bowled
No man believes that many-textured knowledge and skill—as a just idea of the solar system, or the power of painting flesh, or of reading written harmonies—can come late and of a sudden; yet many will not stick at believing that happiness can come at any day and hour solely by a new disposition of events; though there is nought less capable of a magical production than a mortal's happiness, which is mainly a complex of habitual relations and dispositions not to be wrought by news from foreign parts, or any whirling of fortune's wheel for one on whose brow Time has written legibly.
Some days after Esther's arrival at Transome Court, Denner, coming to dress Mrs
Transome before dinner—a labour of love for which she had ample leisure now—found her mistress
seated with more than ever of that marble aspect of self-absorbed suffering, which to the
waiting-woman's keen observation had been gradually intensifying itself during the past week.
She had tapped at the door without having been summoned, and she had ventured to enter though
she had heard no voice saying "Come in."
Mrs Transome had on a dark warm dressing-gown, hanging in thick folds about her, and she
Denner, with all her ingrained and systematic reserve, could not help showing signs that she
was startled, when, peering from between her half-closed eyelids, she saw the motionless image
in the mirror opposite to her as she entered. Her gentle opening of the door had not roused
her mistress, to whom
"So you're come at last, Denner?"
"Yes, madam; it is not late. I'm sorry you should have undone your hair yourself."
"I undid it to see what an old hag I am. These fine clothes you put on me, Denner, are only a smart shroud."
"Pray don't talk so, madam. If there's anybody doesn't think it pleasant to look at you, so much the worse for them. For my part, I've seen no young ones fit to hold up your train. Look at your likeness down below; and though you're older now, what signifies? I wouldn't be Letty in the scullery because she's got red cheeks. She mayn't know she's a poor creature, but I know it, and that's enough for me: I know what sort of a dowdy draggletail she'll be in ten years' time. I would change with nobody, madam. And if troubles were put up to market, I'd sooner buy old than new. It's something to have seen the worst."
"A woman never has seen the worst till she is old, Denner," said Mrs Transome, bitterly.
The keen little waiting-woman was not clear as to the cause of her mistress's added bitterness; but she rarely brought herself to ask questions, when Mrs Transome did not authorise them by beginning to give her information. Banks the bailiff and the head-servant had nodded and winked a good deal over the certainty that Mr Harold was "none so fond" of Jermyn, but this was a subject on which Mrs Transome had never made up her mind to speak, and Denner knew nothing definite. Again, she felt quite sure that there was some important secret connected with Esther's presence in the house; she suspected that the close Dominic knew the secret, and was more trusted than she was, in spite of her forty years' service; but any resentment on this ground would have been an entertained reproach against her mistress, inconsistent with Denner's creed and character. She inclined to the belief that Esther was the immediate cause of the new discontent.
"If there's anything worse coming to you, I should like to know what it is, madam," she
said, after a moment's silence, speaking always in the same low quick way, and keeping up her
quiet labours. "When I awake at cock-crow, I'd sooner have one real grief on my mind than
twenty false.
"I believe you are the creature in the world that loves me best, Denner; yet you will never understand what I suffer. It's of no use telling you. There's no folly in you, and no heartache. You are made of iron. You have never had any trouble."
"I've had some of your trouble, madam."
"Yes, you good thing. But as a sick-nurse, that never caught the fever. You never even had a child."
"I can feel for things I never went through. I used to be sorry for the poor French Queen when I was young: I'd have lain cold for her to lie warm. I know people have feelings according to their birth and station. And you always took things to heart, madam, beyond anybody else. But I hope there's nothing new, to make you talk of the worst."
"Yes, Denner, there is—there is," said Mrs Transome, speaking in a low tone of misery, while she bent for her head-dress to be pinned on.
"Is it this young lady?"
"Why, what do you think about her, Denner?" said Mrs Transome, in a tone of more spirit, rather curious to hear what the old woman would say.
"I don't deny she's graceful, and she has a pretty
"I wish it were true, Denner," said Mrs Transome, energetically. "I wish he were in love with her, so that she could master him, and make him do what she pleased."
"Then it is not true—what they say?"
"Not true that she will ever master him. No woman ever will. He will make her fond of him, and afraid of him. That's one of the things you have never gone through, Denner. A woman's love is always freezing into fear. She wants everything, she is secure of nothing. This girl has a fine spirit—plenty of fire and pride and wit. Men like such captives, as they like horses that champ the bit and paw the ground: they feel more triumph in their mastery. What is the use of a woman's will?—if she tries, she doesn't get it, and she ceases to be loved. God was cruel when he made women."
Denner was used to such outbursts as this. Her
"It mayn't be good-luck to be a woman," she said. "But one begins with it from a baby: one gets used to it. And I shouldn't like to be a man —to cough so loud, and stand straddling about on a wet day, and be so wasteful with meat and drink. They're a coarse lot, I think. Then I needn't make a trouble of this young lady, madam," she added, after a moment's pause.
"No, Denner. I like her. If that were all—I should like Harold to marry her. It would be the best thing. If the truth were known—and it will be known soon—the estate is hers by law—such law as it is. It's a strange story: she's a Bycliffe really."
Denner did not look amazed, but went on fastening her mistress's dress, as she said,
"Well, madam, I was sure there was something wonderful at the bottom of it. And turning the
old lawsuits and everything else over in my mind, I
"Yes; she has good blood in her veins."
"We talked that over in the housekeeper's room —what a hand and an instep she has, and how her head is set on her shoulders—almost like your own, madam. But her lightish complexion spoils her, to my thinking. And Dominic said Mr Harold never admired that sort of woman before. There's nothing that smooth fellow couldn't tell you if he would: he knows the answers to riddles before they're made. However, he knows how to hold his tongue; I'll say that for him. And so do I, madam."
"Yes, yes; you will not talk of it till other people are talking of it."
"And so, if Mr Harold married her, it would save all fuss and mischief?"
"Yes—about the estate."
"And he seems inclined; and she'll not refuse him, I'll answer for it. And you like her, madam. There's everything to set your mind at rest."
Denner was putting the finishing-touch to Mrs Transome's dress by throwing an Indian scarf
over her shoulders, and so completing the contrast between the majestic lady in costume and
the dishevelled
"I am not at rest!" Mrs Transome said, with slow distinctness, moving from the mirror to the window, where the blind was not drawn down, and she could see the chill white landscape and the far-off unheeding stars.
Denner, more distressed by her mistress's suffering than she could have been by anything else, took up with the instinct of affection a gold vinaigrette which Mrs Transome often liked to carry with her, and going up to her put it into her hand gently. Mrs Transome grasped the little woman's hand hard, and held it so.
"Denner," she said, in a low tone, "if I could choose at this moment, I would choose that Harold should never have been born."
"Nay, my dear" (Denner had only once before in her life said "my dear" to her mistress), "it was a happiness to you then."
"I don't believe I felt the happiness then as I feel the misery now. It is foolish to say
people can't feel much when they are getting old. Not pleasure, perhaps—little comes. But they
can feel they are forsaken—why, every fibre in me seems to be a memory that makes a pang. They
can feel
"Not mine, madam, not mine. Let what would be, I should want to live for your sake, for fear you should have nobody to do for you as I would."
"Ah, then, you are a happy woman, Denner; you have loved somebody for forty years who is old and weak now, and can't do without you."
The sound of the dinner-gong resounded below, and Mrs Transome let the faithful hand fall again.
"She's beautiful; and therefore to be wooed: She is a woman; therefore to be won."—
Henry VI.
If Denner had had a suspicion that Esther's presence at Transome Court was not
agreeable to her mistress, it was impossible to entertain such a suspicion with regard to the
other members of the family. Between her and little Harry there was an extraordinary
fascination. This creature, with the soft broad brown cheeks, low forehead, great black eyes,
tiny well-defined nose, fierce biting tricks towards every person and thing he disliked, and
insistance on entirely occupying those he liked, was a human-specimen such as Esther had never
seen before, and she seemed to be equally original in Harry's experience. At first sight her
light complexion and her blue gown, probably also her sunny smile and her hands stretched out
towards him, seemed to make a show for him as of a new
"He can talk well enough if he likes," said Gappa, evidently thinking that Harry, like the monkeys, had deep reasons for his reticence.
"You mind him," he added, nodding at Esther, and shaking with low-toned laughter. "You'll hear: he knows the right names of things well enough, but he likes to make his own. He'll give you one all to yourself before long."
And when Harry seemed to have made up his mind distinctly that Esther's name was "Boo," Mr
"It's wonderful!" said he, laughing slyly.
The old man seemed so happy now in the new world created for him by Dominic and Harry, that he would perhaps have made a holocaust of his flies and beetles if it had been necessary in order to keep this living, lively kindness about him. He no longer confined himself to the library, but shuffled along from room to room, staying and looking on at what was going forward wherever he did not find Mrs Transome alone.
To Esther the sight of this feeble-minded, timid, paralytic man, who had long abdicated all
mastery over the things that were his, was something piteous. Certainly this had never been
part of the furniture she had imagined for the delightful aristocratic dwelling in her Utopia;
and the sad irony of such a lot impressed her the more because in her father she was
accustomed to age accompanied with mental acumen and activity. Her thoughts went back in
conjecture over the past life of Mr and Mrs Transome, a couple so strangely different from
Esther felt at her ease with Mrs Transome: she was gratified by the consciousness—for on
this point Esther was very quick—that Mrs Transome admired her, and looked at her with
satisfied eyes. But when they were together in the early days of her stay, the conversation
turned chiefly on what happened in Mrs Transome's youth—what she wore when she was presented
at Court—who were the most distinguished and beautiful women at that time—the terrible
excitement of the French Revolution—the emigrants she had known, and the history of various
titled members of the Lingon family. And Esther, from native delicacy, did not lead to more
recent topics of a personal kind. She was copiously instructed that the Lingon family was
better than that even of the elder Transomes, and was privileged with an explanation of the
various quarterings,
Nevertheless it was entertaining at present to be seated on soft cushions with her netting before her, while Mrs Transome went on with her embroidery, and told in that easy phrase, and with that refined high-bred tone and accent which she possessed in perfection, family stories that to Esther were like so many novellettes: what diamonds were in the Earl's family, own cousins to Mrs Transome; how poor Lady Sara's husband went off into jealous madness only a month after their marriage, and dragged that sweet blue-eyed thing by the hair; and how the brilliant Fanny, having married a country parson, became so niggardly that she had gone about almost begging for fresh eggs from the farmers' wives, though she had done very well with her six sons, as there was a bishop and no end of interest in the family, and two of them got appointments in India.
At present Mrs Transome did not touch at all on her own time of privation, or her troubles
with her eldest son, or on anything that lay very close to her heart. She conversed with
Esther, and acted the part of hostess as she performed her toilette and went on with her
embroidery: these things were
That was pleasant; and so it was to be decked by Mrs Transome's own hands in a set of turquoise ornaments, which became her wonderfully, worn with a white Cashmere dress, which was also insisted on. Esther never reflected that there was a double intention in these pretty ways towards her; with young generosity, she was rather preoccupied by the desire to prove that she herself entertained no low triumph in the fact that she had rights prejudicial to this family whose life she was learning. And besides, through all Mrs Transome's perfect manners there pierced some indefinable indications of a hidden anxiety much deeper than anything she could feel about this affair of the estate—to which she often alluded slightly as a reason for informing Esther of something. It was impossible to mistake her for a happy woman; and young speculation is always stirred by discontent for which there is no obvious cause. When we are older, we take the uneasy eyes and the bitter lips more as a matter of course.
But Harold Transome was more communicative about recent years than his mother was. He
Esther listened eagerly, and took these things to heart. The claim to an inheritance, the sudden discovery of a right to a fortune held by others, was acquiring a very distinct and unexpected meaning for her. Every day she was getting more clearly into her imagination what it would be to abandon her own past, and what she would enter into in exchange for it; what it would be to disturb a long possession, and how difficult it was to fix a point at which the disturbance might begin, so as to be contemplated without pain.
Harold Transome's thoughts turned on the same
Harold was not one to fail in a purpose for want of assiduity. After an hour or two devoted to business in the morning, he went to look for Esther, and if he did not find her at play with Harry and old Mr Transome, or chatting with his mother, he went into the drawing-room, where she was usually either seated with a book on her knee and "making a bed for her cheek" with one little hand, while she looked out of the window, or else standing in front of one of the full-length family portraits with an air of rumination. Esther found it impossible to read in these days; her life was a book which she seemed herself to be constructing—trying to make character clear before her, and looking into the ways of destiny.
The active Harold had almost always something definite to propose by way of filling the
time: if it were fine, she must walk out with him and see the grounds; and when the snow
melted and it was no longer slippery, she must get on horseback and learn
About a certain time in the morning Esther had learned to expect him. Let every wooer make himself strongly expected; he may succeed by dint of being absent, but hardly in the first instance. One morning Harold found her in the drawing-room, leaning against a consol table, and looking at the full-length portrait of a certain Lady Betty Transome, who had lived a century and a half before, and had the usual charm of ladies in Sir Peter Lely's style.
"Don't move, pray," he said on entering; "you look as if you were standing for your own portrait."
"I take that as an insinuation," said Esther, laughing, and moving towards her seat on an
ottoman near the fire, "for I notice almost all the portraits are in a conscious, affected
attitude. That fair Lady Betty looks as if she had been drilled into that posture, and had not
will enough of her
"She brightens up that panel well with her long satin skirt," said Harold, as he followed Esther, "but alive I daresay she would have been less cheerful company."
"One would certainly think that she had just been unpacked from silver paper. Ah, how
chivalrous you are!" said Esther, as Harold, kneeling on one knee, held her silken
netting-stirrup for her to put her foot through. She had often fancied pleasant scenes in
which such homage was rendered to her, and the homage was not disagreeable now it was really
come; but, strangely enough, a little darting sensation at that moment was accompanied by the
vivid remembrance of some one who had never paid the least attention to her foot. There had
been a slight blush, such as often came and went rapidly, and she was silent a moment. Harold
naturally believed that it was he himself who was filling the field of vision. He would have
liked to place himself on the ottoman near Esther, and behave very much more like a lover; but
he took a chair opposite to her at a circumspect distance. He dared not do otherwise. Along
with Esther's playful charm she conveyed an impression
"I wonder," said Esther, breaking her silence in her usual light silvery tones—"I wonder whether the women who looked in that way ever felt any troubles. I see there are two old ones up-stairs in the billiard-room who have only got fat; the expression of their faces is just of the same sort."
"A woman ought never to have any trouble. There should always be a man to guard her from it." (Harold Transome was masculine and fallible; he had incautiously sat down this morning to pay his addresses by talk about nothing in particular; and, clever experienced man as he was, he fell into nonsense.)
"But suppose the man himself got into trouble— you would wish her to mind about that. Or suppose," added Esther, suddenly looking up merrily at Harold, "the man himself was troublesome?"
"O you must not strain probabilities in that way. The generality of men are perfect. Take me, for example."
"You are a perfect judge of sauces," said Esther, who had her triumphs in letting Harold know that she was capable of taking notes.
"That is perfection number one. Pray go on."
"O, the catalogue is too long—I should be tired before I got to your magnificent ruby ring and your gloves always of the right colour."
"If you would let me tell you your perfections, I should not be tired."
"That is not complimentary; it means that the list is short."
"No; it means that the list is pleasant to dwell upon."
"Pray don't begin," said Esther, with her pretty toss of the head; "it would be dangerous to our good understanding. The person I liked best in the world was one who did nothing but scold me and tell me of my faults."
When Esther began to speak, she meant to do no
"You speak in the past tense," said Harold, at last; "yet I am rather envious of that person. I shall never be able to win your regard in the same way. Is it any one at Treby? Because in that case I can inquire about your faults."
"O you know I have always lived among grave people," said Esther, more able to recover
herself now she was spoken to. "Before I came home to be with my father I was nothing but a
school-girl first, and then a teacher in different stages of growth. People in those
circumstances are not usually flattered. But there are varieties in fault-finding. At our
Paris school the master I liked best was an old man who stormed at me terribly
Esther was getting quite cool again. But Harold was not entirely satisfied; if there was any obstacle in his way, he wished to know exactly what it was.
"That must have been a wretched life for you at Treby," he said,—"a person of your accomplishments."
"I used to be dreadfully discontented," said Esther, much occupied with mistakes she had made in her netting. "But I was becoming less so. I have had time to get rather wise, you know; I am two-and-twenty."
"Yes," said Harold, rising and walking a few paces backwards and forwards, "you are past your majority; you are empress of your own fortunes— and more besides."
"Dear me," said Esther, letting her work fall, and leaning back against the cushions; "I don't think I know very well what to do with my empire."
"Well," said Harold, pausing in front of her, leaning one arm on the mantelpiece, and
speaking very gravely, "I hope that in any case, since you appear to have no near relative who
understands affairs, you will confide in me, and trust me with all your intentions as if I had
no other personal
"I am sure you have given me reason to believe it," said Esther, with seriousness, putting out her hand to Harold. She had not been left in ignorance that he had had opportunities twice offered of stifling her claims.
Harold raised the hand to his lips, but dared not retain it more than an instant. Still the sweet reliance in Esther's manner made an irresistible temptation to him. After standing still a moment or two, while she bent over her work, he glided to the ottoman and seated himself close by her, looking at her busy hands.
"I see you have made mistakes in your work," he said, bending still nearer, for he saw that she was conscious, yet not angry.
"Nonsense! you know nothing about it," said Esther, laughing, and crushing up the soft silk under her palms. "Those blunders have a design in them."
She looked round, and saw a handsome face very near her. Harold was looking, as he felt,
thoroughly enamoured of this bright woman, who was not at
"I am wondering whether you have any deep wishes and secrets that I can't guess."
"Pray don't speak of my wishes," said Esther, quite overmastered by this new and apparently involuntary manifestation in Harold; "I could not possibly tell you one at this moment—I think I shall never find them out again. O yes," she said, abruptly, struggling to relieve herself from the oppression of unintelligible feelings—"I do know one wish distinctly. I want to go and see my father. He writes me word that all is well with him, but still I want to see him."
"You shall be driven there when you like."
"May I go now—I mean as soon as it is convenient?" said Esther, rising.
"I will give the order immediately, if you wish it," said Harold, understanding that the audience was broken up.
He rates me as a merchant does the wares He will not purchase—"quality not high!— 'Twill lose its colour opened to the sun, Has no aroma, and, in fine, is naught— I barter not for such commodities— There is no ratio betwixt sand and gems." 'Tis wicked judgment! for the soul can grow, As embryos, that live and move but blindly, Burst from the dark, emerge regenerate, And lead a life of vision and of choice.
Esther did not take the carriage into Malthouse Lane, but left it to wait for her
outside the town; and when she entered the house she put her finger on her lip to Lyddy and
ran lightly up-stairs. She wished to surprise her father by this visit, and she succeeded. The
little minister was just then almost surrounded by a wall of books, with merely his head
peeping above them, being much embarrassed to find a substitute for tables and desks on which
to arrange the volumes he kept open for reference. He was absorbed in mastering all those
painstaking interpretations of the Book of Daniel, which are by
"You will not like me to interrupt you, father?" said Esther, slyly.
"Ah, my beloved child!" he exclaimed, upsetting a pile of books, and thus unintentionally making a convenient breach in his wall, through which Esther could get up to him and kiss him. "Thy appearing is as a joy despaired of. I had thought of thee as the blinded think of the daylight—which indeed is a thing to rejoice in, like all other good, though we see it not nigh."
"Are you sure you have been as well and comfortable as you said you were in your letters?" said Esther, seating herself close in front of her father, and laying her hand on his shoulder.
"I wrote truly, my dear, according to my knowledge at the time. But to an old memory like
"That is Lyddy's fault, who sits crying over her want of Christian assurance instead of brushing your clothes and putting out your clean cravat. She is always saying her righteousness is filthy rags, and really I don't think that is a very strong expression for it. I'm sure it is dusty clothes and furniture."
"Nay, my dear, your playfulness glances too severely on our faithful Lyddy. Doubtless I am myself deficient, in that I do not aid her infirm memory by admonition. But now tell me aught that you have left untold about yourself. Your heart has gone out somewhat towards this family— the old man and the child, whom I had not reckoned of?"
"Yes, father. It is more and more difficult to me to see how I can make up my mind to disturb these people at all."
"Something should doubtless be devised to lighten
"Do you think, father—do you feel assured that a case of inheritance like this of mine is a sort of providential arrangement that makes a command?"
"I have so held it," said Mr Lyon, solemnly; "in all my meditations I have so held it. For you have to consider, my dear, that you have been led by a peculiar path, and into experience which is not ordinarily the lot of those who are seated in high places; and what I have hinted to you already in my letters on this head, I shall wish on a future opportunity to enter into more at large."
Esther was uneasily silent. On this great question of her lot she saw doubts and difficulties, in which it seemed as if her father could not help her. There was no illumination for her in this theory of providential arrangement. She said suddenly (what she had not thought of at all suddenly),
"Have you been again to see Felix Holt, father? You have not mentioned him in your letters."
"I have been since I last wrote, my dear, and
"Did you tell him of everything that has happened —I mean about me—about the Transomes?"
"Assuredly I told him, and he listened as one astonished. For he had much to hear, knowing nought of your birth, and that you had any other father than Rufus Lyon. 'Tis a narrative I trust I shall not be called on to give to others; but I was not without satisfaction in unfolding the truth to this young man, who hath wrought himself into my affection strangely—I would fain hope for ends that will be a visible good in his less way-worn life, when mine shall be no longer."
"And you told him how the Transomes had come, and that I was staying at Transome Court?"
"Yes, I told these things with some particularity, as is my wont concerning what hath imprinted itself on my mind."
"What did Felix say?"
"Truly, my dear, nothing desirable to recite," said Mr Lyon, rubbing his hand over his brow.
"Dear father, he did say something, and you
"It was a hasty remark, and rather escaped him than was consciously framed. He said, 'Then she will marry Transome; that is what Transome means.'"
"That was all?" said Esther, turning rather pale, and biting her lip with the determination that the tears should not start.
"Yes, we did not go further into that branch of the subject. I apprehend there is no warrant
for his seeming prognostic, and I should not be without disquiet if I thought otherwise. For I
confess that in your accession to this great position and property, I contemplate with hopeful
satisfaction your remaining attached to that body of congregational Dissent, which, as I hold,
hath retained most of pure and primitive discipline. Your education and peculiar history would
thus be seen to have coincided with a long train of events in making this family property a
mean of honouring and illustrating a purer form of Christianity than that which hath unhappily
obtained the pre-eminence in this land. I speak, my child, as you know, always in the hope
that you will fully join our communion; and this dear wish of my heart—nay,
If Esther had been less agitated, she would hardly have helped smiling at the picture her
father's words suggested of Harold Transome "joining the church" in Malthouse Yard. But she
was too seriously preoccupied with what Felix had said, which hurt her in a two-edged fashion
that was highly significant. First, she was angry with him for daring to say positively whom
she would marry; secondly, she was angry at the implication that there was from the first a
cool deliberate design in Harold Transome to marry her. Esther said to herself that she was
quite capable of discerning Harold Transome's disposition, and judging of his conduct. She
felt sure he was generous and open. It did not lower him in her opinion that since
circumstances had brought them together he evidently admired her—was in love with her—in
short, desired to marry her; and she thought that she discerened the delicacy which hindered
him from being more explicit. There is no point on which young women are more easily piqued
than this of their sufficiency to judge the men who
"Have you yet spoken with Mr Transome concerning Mistress Holt, my dear?" he said, as Esther was moving about the room. "I hinted to him that you would best decide how assistance should be tendered to her."
"No, father, we have not approached the subject. Mr Transome may have forgotten it, and, for several reasons, I would rather not talk of this—of money matters to him at present. There is money due to me from the Lukyns and the Pendrells."
"They have paid it," said Mr Lyon, opening his desk. "I have it here ready to deliver to you."
"Keep it, father, and pay Mrs Holt's rent with it, and do anything else that is wanted for
her. We must consider everything temporary now," said
"Truly," said Mr Lyon, smiling, "the uncertainty of things is a text rather too wide and obvious for fruitful application; and to discourse of it is, as one may say, to bottle up the air, and make a present of it to those who are already standing out of doors."
"Do you think," said Esther, in the course of their chat, "that the Treby people know at all about the reasons of my being at Transome Court?"
"I have had no sign thereof; and indeed there is no one, as it appears, who could make the
story public. The man Christian is away in London with Mr Debarry, Parliament now beginning;
and Mr Jermyn would doubtless respect the confidence of the Transomes. I have not seen him
lately. I know nothing of his movements. And so far as my own speech is concerned, and my
strict command to Lyddy, I have withheld the means of information even as to your having
returned to Transome Court
"Now, father, I think I shall be obliged to run away from you, not to keep the carriage too long," said Esther, as she finished her reforms in the minister's toilette. "You look beautiful now, and I must give Lyddy a little lecture before I go."
"Yes, my dear; I would not detain you, seeing that my duties demand me. But take with you this Treatise, which I have purposely selected. It concerns all the main questions between ourselves and the Establishment—government, discipline, State-support. It is seasonable that you should give a nearer attention to these polemics, lest you be drawn aside by the fallacious association of a State Church with elevated rank."
Esther chose to take the volume submissively, rather than to adopt the ungraceful sincerity
of saying that she was unable at present to give her mind
Thou sayst it, and not I; for thou hast done The ugly deed that made these ugly words. Sophocles : Electra.
Yea, it becomes a man To cherish memory, where he had delight. For kindness is the natural birth of kindness. Whose soul records not the great debt of joy, Is stamped for ever an ignoble man. Sophocles : Ajax.
It so happened that, on the morning of the day when Esther went to see her father,
Jermyn had not yet heard of her presence at Transome Court. One fact conducing to keep him in
this ignorance was, that some days after his critical interview with Harold— days during which
he had been wondering how long it would be before Harold made up his mind to sacrifice the
luxury of satisfied anger for the solid advantage of securring fortune and position—he was
peremptorily called away by business to the south of England, and was obliged to inform Harold
by letter of his absence. He took care also to notify his return; but Harold made no sign in
reply. The
Entirely ignorant of those converging indications and small links of incident which had
raised Christian's conjectures, and had gradually contributed to put him in possession of the
facts; ignorant too of some busy motives in the mind of his obliged servant Johnson; Jermyn
was not likely to see at once how the momentous information that Esther was the surviving
Bycliffe could possibly have reached Harold. His daughters naturally leaped, as others had
done, to the conclusion that the Transomes, seeking a governess for little Harry, had had
their choice directed to Esther, and observed that they must have attracted her by a high
salary to induce
But a mind in the grasp of a terrible anxiety is not credulous of easy solutions. The one of
stay that bears up our hopes is sure to appear frail, and if looked at long will seem to
totter. Too much depended on that unconsciousness of Harold's; and although Jermyn did not see
the course of things that could have disclosed and combined the various items of knowledge
which he had imagined to be his own secret, and therefore his safeguard, he saw quite clearly
what was likely to be the result of the disclosure. Not only would Harold Transome be no
longer afraid of him, but also, by marrying Esther (and Jermyn at once felt sure of this
issue), he would be triumphantly freed from any unpleasant consequences, and could pursue much
at his ease the gratification of ruining Matthew Jermyn. The prevision of an enemy's
triumphant ease is in any case sufficiently irritating to hatred, and there
Jermyn, on thoroughly considering his position, saw that he had no very agreeable resources at command. But he soon made up his mind what he would do next. He wrote to Mrs Transome requesting her to appoint an hour in which he could see her privately: he knew she would understand that it was to be an hour when Harold was not at home. As he sealed the letter, he indulged a faint hope that in this interview he might be assured of Esther's birth being unknown at Transome Court; but in the worst case, perhaps some help might be found in Mrs Transome. To such uses may tender relations come when they have ceased to be tender! The Hazaels of our world who are pushed on quickly against their preconceived confidence in themselves to do doglike actions by the sudden suggestion of a wicked ambition, are much fewer than those who are led on through the years by the gradual demands of a selfishness which has spread its fibres far and wide through the intricate vanities and sordid cares of an everyday existence.
In consequence of that letter to Mrs Transome, Jermyn was two days afterwards ushered into
the smaller drawing-room at Transome Court. It was a charming little room in its refurbished
condition: it had two pretty inlaid cabinets, great china vases with contents that sent forth
odours of paradise, groups of flowers in oval frames on the walls, and Mrs Transome's own
portrait in the evening costume of 1800, with a garden in the background. That brilliant young
woman looked smilingly down on Mr Jermyn as he passed in front of the fire; and at present
hers was the only gaze in the room. He could not help meeting the gaze as he waited, holding
his hat behind him—could not help seeing many memories lit up by it; but the strong bent of
his mind was to go on arguing each memory into a claim, and to see in the regard others had
for him a merit of his own. There had been plenty of roads open to him when he was a young
man; perhaps if he had not allowed himself to be determined (chiefly, of course, by the
feelings of others, for of what effect would his own feelings have been without them?) into
the road he actually took, he might have done better for himself. At any rate, he was likely
at last to get the worst of it, and it was he who had most reason to complain. The fortunate
Before three minutes had passed, however, as if by some sorcery, the brilliant smiling young woman above the mantelpiece seemed to be appearing at the doorway withered and frosted by many winters, and with lips and eyes from which the smile had departed. Jermyn advanced and they shook hands, but neither of them said anything by way of greeting. Mrs Transome seated herself, and pointed to a chair opposite and near her.
"Harold has gone to Loamford," she said, in a subdued tone. "You had something particular to say to me?"
"Yes," said Jermyn, with his soft and deferential air. "The last time I was here I could not take the opportunity of speaking to you. But I am anxious to know whether you are aware of what has passed between me and Harold?"
"Yes, he has told me everything."
"About his proceedings against me? and the reason he stopped them?"
"Yes: have you had notice that he has begun them again?"
"No," said Jermyn, with a very unpleasant sensation.
"Of course he will now," said Mrs Transome. "There is no reason in his mind why he should not."
"Has he resolved to risk the estate then?"
"He feels in no danger on that score. And if there were, the danger doesn't depend on you. The most likely thing is, that he will marry this girl."
"He knows everything then?" said Jermyn, the expression of his face getting clouded.
"Everything. It's of no use for you to think of mastering him: you can't do it. I used to wish Harold to be fortunate—and he is fortunate," said Mrs Transome, with intense bitterness. "It's not my star that he inherits."
"Do you know how he came by the information about this girl?"
"No; but she knew it all before we spoke to her. It's no secret."
Jermyn was confounded by this hopeless frustration to which he had no key. Though he thought of Christian, the thought shed no light; but the more fatal point was clear: he held no secret that could help him.
"You are aware that these Chancery proceedings may ruin me?"
"He told me they would. But if you are imagining that I can do anything, dismiss the notion. I have told him as plainly as I dare that I wish him to drop all public quarrel with you, and that you could make an arrangement without scandal. I can do no more. He will not listen to me; he doesn't mind about my feelings. He cares more for Mr Transome than he does for me. He will not listen to me any more than if I were an old balladsinger."
"It's very hard on me , I know," said Jermyn, in the tone with which a man flings
out a reproach.
"I besought you three months ago to bear anything rather than quarrel with him."
"I have not quarrelled with him. It is he who has been always seeking a quarrel with me. I have borne a good deal—more than any one else would. He set his teeth against me from the first."
"He saw things that annoyed him; and men are not like women," said Mrs Transome. There was a bitter innuendo in that truism.
"It's very hard on me—I know that," said Jermyn, with an intensification of his previous
tone,
He moved away again, laid down his hat, which he had been previously holding, and thrust his hands into his pockets as he returned. Mrs Transome sat motionless as marble, and almost as pale. Her hands lay crossed on her knees. This man, young, slim, and graceful, with a selfishness which then took the form of homage to her, had at one time kneeled to her and kissed those hands fervently; and she had thought there was a poetry in such passion beyond any to be found in everyday domesticity.
"I stretched my conscience a good deal in that affair of Bycliffe, as you know perfectly
well. I told you everything at the time. I told you I was very uneasy about those witnesses,
and about getting him thrown into prison. I know it's the blackest thing anybody could charge
me with, if
"Yes," said Mrs Transome, in a low tone. "It was a pit you didn't make another choice."
"What would have become of you?" said Jermyn, carried along a climax, like other self-justifiers. "I had to think of you. You would not have liked me to make another choice then."
"Clearly," said Mrs Transome, with concentrated bitterness, but still quietly; "the greater mistake was mine."
Egoism is usually stupid in a dialogue; but Jermyn's did not make him so stupid that he did not feel the edge of Mrs Transome's words. They increased his irritation.
"I hardly see that," he replied, with a slight laugh of scorn. "You had an estate and a position to save, to go no farther. I remember very well what you said to me—'A clever lawyer can do anything if he has the will; if it's impossible, he will make it possible. And the property is sure to be Harold's some day.' He was a baby then."
"I remember most things a little too well: you had better say at once what is your object in recalling them."
"An object that is nothing more than justice. With the relation I stood in, it was not likely I should think myself bound by all the forms that are made to bind strangers. I had often immense trouble to raise the money necessary to pay off debts and carry on the affairs; and, as I said before, I had given up other lines of advancement which would have been open to me if I had not stayed in this neighbourhood at a critical time when I was fresh to the world. Anybody who knew the whole circumstances would say that my being hunted and run down on the score of my past transactions with regard to the family affairs, is an abominably unjust and unnatural thing."
Jermyn paused a moment, and then added, "At my time of life ... and with a family about me —and after what has passed ... I should have thought there was nothing you would care more to prevent."
"I do care. It makes me miserable. That is the extent of my power—to feel miserable."
"No, it is not the extent of your power. You could save me if you would. It is not to be
supposed
Jermyn had sat down before he uttered the last words. He had lowered his voice slightly. He had the air of one who thought that he had prepared the way for an understanding. That a man with so much sharpness, with so much suavity at command—a man who piqued himself on his persuasiveness towards women,—should behave just as Jermyn did on this occasion, would be surprising, but for the constant experience that temper and selfish insensibility will defeat excellent gifts—will make a sensible person shout when shouting is out of place, and will make a polished man rude when his polish might be of eminent use to him.
As Jermyn, sitting down and leaning forward with an elbow on his knee, uttered his last words— "if he knew the whole truth"—a slight shock seemed to pass through Mrs Transome's hitherto motionless body, followed by a sudden light in her eyes, as in an animal's about to spring.
"And you expect me to tell him?" she said, not loudly, but yet with a clear metallic ring in her voice.
"Would it not be right for him to know?" said Jermyn, in a more bland and persuasive tone than he had yet used.
Perhaps some of the most terrible irony of the human lot is this of a deep truth coming to be uttered by lips that have no right to it.
"I will never tell him!" said Mrs Transome, starting up, her whole frame thrilled with a passion that seemed almost to make her young again. Her hands hung beside her clenched tightly, her eyes and lips lost the helpless repressed bitterness of discontent, and seemed suddenly fed with energy. "You reckon up your sacrifices for me: you have kept a good account of them, and it is needful; they are some of them what no one else could guess or find out. But you made your sacrifices when they seemed pleasant to you; when you told me they were your happiness; when you told me that it was I who stooped, and I who bestowed favours."
Jermyn rose too, and laid his hand on the back of the chair. He had grown visibly paler, but seemed about to speak.
"Don't speak!" Mrs Transome said peremptorily. "Don't open your lips again. You have said
enough; I will speak now. I have made sacrifices too, but it was when I knew that they were
not my happiness. It was after I saw that I had stooped— after I saw that your
tenderness had turned into calculation—after I saw that you cared for yourself
was afraid of you, and I know now I was right."
"Mrs Transome," said Jermyn, white to the lips, "it is needless to say more. I withdraw any words that have offended you."
"You can't withdraw them. Can a man apologise for being a dastard? ... And I have caused you
to strain your conscience, have I?—it is I who have sullied your purity? I should think the
demons have more honour—they are not so impudent to one another. I would not lose the misery
of being a woman, now I see what can be the baseness of a man. One must be a man—first to tell
a woman
"I do not ask it," said Jermyn, with a certain asperity. He was beginning to find this intolerable. The mere brute strength of a masculine creature rebelled. He felt almost inclined to throttle the voice out of this woman.
"You do ask it: it is what you would like. I have had a terror on me least evil should happen to you. From the first, after Harold came home, I had a horrible dread. It seemed as if murder might come between you—I didn't know what. I felt the horror of his not knowing the truth. I might have been dragged at last, by my own feeling—by my own memory—to tell him all, and make him as well as myself miserable, to save you."
Again there was a slight tremor, as if at the remembrance of womanly tenderness and pity. But immediately she launched forth again.
"But now you have asked me, I will never tell him! Be ruined—no—do something more dastardly to save yourself. If I sinned, my judgment went beforehand—that I should sin for a man like you."
Swiftly upon those last words Mrs Transome passed out of the room. The softly-padded door
For a brief space he stood still. Human beings in moments of passionate reproach and
denunciation, especially when their anger is on their own account, are never so wholly in the
right that the person who has to wince cannot possibly protest against some unreasonableness
or unfairness in their outburst. And if Jermyn had been capable of feeling that he had
thoroughly merited this infliction, he would not have uttered the words that drew it down on
him. Men do not become penitent and learn to abhor themselves by having their backs cut open
with the lash; rather, they learn to abhor the lash. What Jermyn felt about Mrs Transome when
she disappeared was, that she was a furious woman—who would not do what he wanted her to do.
And he was supported as to his justifiableness by the inward repetition of what he had already
said to her: it was right that Harold should know the truth. He did not take into account (how
should he?) the exasperation and loathing excited by his daring to urge the plea of right. A
man who had stolen the pyx, and got frightened when justice was at his heels, might feel the
sort of penitence which would induce him to run back in the dark
And it was in this way with Matthew Jermyn. So many things were more distinotly visible to him, and touched him more acutely, than the effect of his acts or words on Mrs Transome's feelings! In fact—he asked, with a touch of something that makes us all akin—was it not preposterous, this excess of feeling on points which he himself did not find powerfully moving? She had treated him most unreasonably. It would have been right for her to do what he had—not asked, but only hinted at in a mild and interrogatory manner. But the clearest and most unpleasant result of the interview was, that this right thing which he desired so much would certainly not be done for him by Mrs Transome.
As he was moving his arm from the chair-back, and turning to take his hat, there was a
boisterous noise in the entrance-hall; the door of the small drawing-room, which had closed
without latching, was pushed open, and old Mr Transome appeared with a face of feeble delight,
playing horse to little Harry, who roared and flogged behind him, while Moro yapped in a puppy
voice at their heels. But when Mr Transome saw Jermyn in the room he stood still in the
doorway, as if he did not know whether entrance were permissible. The majority
"Mr Jermyn?—why—why—where is Mrs Transome?"
Jermyn smiled his way out past the unexpected group; and little Harry, thinking he had an eligible opportunity, turned round to give a parting stroke on the stranger's coat-tails.
Whichever way my days decline, I felt and feel, though left alone, His being working in mine own, The footsteps of his life in mine.
Dear friend, far off, my lost desire, So far, so near, in woe and weal; O, loved the most when most I feel There is a lower and a higher!
Tennyson : In Memoriam.
After that morning on which Esther found herself reddened and confused by the sense
of having made a distant allusion to Felix Holt, she felt it impossible that she should even,
as she had sometimes intended, speak of him explicitly to Harold, in order to discuss the
probabilities as to the issue of his trial. She was certain she could not do it without
betraying emotion, and there were very complex reasons in Esther's mind why she could not bear
that Harold should detect her sensibility on this subject. It was not only all the fibres of
maidenly pride and reserve, of a bashfulness undefinably
All the same, her vanity winced at the idea that Harold should discern what, from his point
of view, would seem like a degradation of her taste and refinement. She could not help being
gratified by all the manifestations from those around her that she was thought thoroughly
fitted for a high position— could not help enjoying, with more or less keenness, a rehearsal
of that demeanour amongst luxuries and dignities which had often been a part of her
day-dreams, and the rehearsal included the reception of
Day after day Esther had an arm offered her, had very beaming looks upon her, had
opportunities for a great deal of light, airy talk, in which she knew herself to be charming,
and had the attractive interest of noticing Harold's practical cleverness—the masculine ease
with which he governed everybody and administered everything about him, without the least
harshness, and with a facile good-nature which yet was not weak. In the background, too, there
was the ever-present consideration, that if Harold Transome wished to marry her, and she
accepted him, the problem of her lot would be more easily solved than in any other way. It was
difficult by any theory of Providence, or consideration of results,
not the life of her day-dreams: there was
dulness already in its ease, and in the absence of high demand; and there was the vague
consciousness that the love of this not unfascinating man who hovered about her gave an air of
moral mediocrity to all her prospects. She would not have been able perhaps to define this
impression; but somehow or other by this elevation of fortune it seemed that the higher
ambition which had begun to spring in her was for ever nullified. All life seemed cheapened;
as it might seem to a young student who, having believed that to gain a certain degree he must
write a thesis in which he would bring his powers to bear with memorable effect, suddenly
ascertained that no thesis was expected, but the sum (in English money) of twenty-seven pounds
ten shillings and sixpence.
After all, she was a woman, and could not make her own lot. As she had once said to Felix,
"A woman must choose meaner things, because only meaner things are offered to her." Her lot is
made
Harold, on his side, was conscious that the interest of his wooing was not standing still. He was beginning to think it a conquest, in which it would be disappointing to fail, even if this fair nymph had no claim to the estate. He would have liked—and yet he would not have liked— that just a slight shadow of doubt as to his success should be removed. There was something about Esther that he did not altogether understand. She was clearly a woman that could be governed; she was too charming for him to fear that she would ever be obstinate or interfering. Yet there was a lightning that shot out of her now and then, which seemed the sign of a dangerous judgment; as if she inwardly saw something more admirable than Harold Transome. Now, to be perfectly charming, a woman should not see this.
One fine February day, when already the golden and purple crocuses were out on the
terrace—one of those flattering days which sometimes precede the north-east winds of March,
and make believe that the coming spring will be enjoyable—a very striking
Uncle Lingon, who disliked painful confidences, and preferred knowing "no mischief of
anybody," had not objected to being let into the important secret about Esther, and was sure
at once that the whole affair, instead of being a misfortune, was a piece of excellent luck.
For himself, he did not profess to be a judge of women, but she seemed to have all the
"points," and to carry herself as well as Arabella did, which was saying a good deal. Honest
Jack Lingon's first impressions quickly became traditions, which no subsequent evidence could
disturb. He was fond of his sister, and seemed never to be conscious of any change for the
worse in her since their early time. He considered that man a beast who said anything
unpleasant about the persons to whom he was attached. It was not that he winked; his wide-open
eyes saw nothing but what his easy disposition inclined him to see. Harold was a good fellow;
a clever chap; and
She and Harold were walking a little in advance of the rest of the party, who were retarded
by various causes. Old Mr Transome, wrapped in a cloth cloak trimmed with sable, and with a
soft warm cap also trimmed with fur on his head, had a shuffing uncertain walk. Little Harry
was dragging a toy-vehicle, on the seat of which he had insisted on tying Moro, with a piece
of scarlet drapery round him, making him look like a barbaric prince in a chariot. Moro,
having little imagination, objected to this, and barked with feeble snappishness as the
tyrannous lad ran forward, then whirled the chariot round, and ran back to "Gappa," then came
to a dead stop, which overset the chariot, that he might watch Uncle Lingon's water-spaniel
run for the
Looking back and seeing that they were a good in advance of the rest, Esther and Harold paused.
"What do you think about thinning the trees over there?" said Harold, pointing with his stick. "I have a bit of a notion that if they were divided into clumps so as to show the oaks beyond, it would be a great improvement. It would give an idea of extent that is lost now. And there might be some very pretty clumps got out of those mixed trees. What do you think?"
"I should think it would be an improvement. One likes a 'beyond' everywhere. But I never heard you express yourself so dubiously," said Esther, looking at him rather archly: "you generally see things so clearly, and are so convinced, that I shall begin to feel quite tottering if I find you in uncertainty. Pray don't begin to be doubtful; it is so infectious."
"You think me a great deal too sure—too confident?" said Harold.
"Not at all. It is an immense advantage to know your own will, when you always mean to have it."
"But suppose I couldn't get it, in spite of meaning?" said Harold, with a beaming inquiry in his eyes.
"O then," said Esther, turning her head aside, carelessly, as if she were considering the distant birch-stems, "you would bear it quite easily, as you did your not getting into Parliament. You would know you could get it another time—or get something else as good."
"The fact is," said Harold, moving on a little, as if he did not want to be quite overtaken by the others, "you consider me a fat, fatuous, self-satisfied fellow."
"O there are degrees," said Esther, with a silvery laugh; "you have just as much of those qualities as is becoming. There are different styles. You are perfect in your own."
"But you prefer another style, I suspect. A more submissive, tearful, devout worshipper, who would offer his incense with more trembling."
"You are quite mistaken," said Esther, still
Here was a very baulking answer, but in spite of it Harold could not help believing that Esther was very far from objecting to the sort of incense he had been offering just then.
"I have often read that that is in human nature," she went on, "yet it takes me by surprise in myself. I suppose," she added, smiling, "I didn't think of myself as human nature."
"I don't confess to the same waywardness," said Harold. "I am very fond of things that I can get. And I never longed much for anything out of my reach. Whatever I feel sure of getting I like all the better. I think half those priggish maxims about human nature in the lump are no more to be relied on than universal remedies. There are different sorts of human nature. Some are given to discontent and longing, others to securing and enjoying. And let me tell you, the discontented longing style is unpleasant to live with."
Harold nodded with a meaning smile at Esther.
"O, I assure you I have abjured all admiration for it," she said, smiling up at him in return.
She was remembering the schooling Felix had
"But you know, lad," said the Rector, as they paused at the expected parting, "you can't do
everything in a hurry. The wheat must have time to grow, even when you've reformed all us old
Tories off the face of the ground. Dash it! now the election's over: I'm an old Tory again.
You see, Harold, a Radical won't do for the county. At another election, you must be on the
look-out for a borough where they want a bit of blood. I should have liked you uncommonly to
stand for the county; and a Radical of good family squares well enough with a new-fashioned
Tory like young Debarry; but you see, these riots—it's been a
Harold and Esther turned, and saw an elderly woman advancing with a tiny red-haired boy, scantily attired as to his jacket, which merged into a small sparrow-tail a little higher than his waist, but muffled as to his throat with a blue woollen comforter. Esther recognised the pair too well, and felt very uncomfortable. We are so pitiably in subjection to all sorts of vanity—even the very vanities we are practically renouncing! And in spite of the almost solemn memories connected with Mrs Holt, Esther's first shudder was raised by the idea of what things this woman would say, and by the mortification of having Felix in any way represented by his mother.
As Mrs Holt advanced into closer observation, it became more evident that she was attired
with a view not to charm the eye, but rather to afflict it with all that expression of woe
which belongs to very rusty bombazine and the limpest state of false hair. Still, she was not
a woman to lose the sense of her own value, or become abject in her manners under any
circumstances of depression; and she
"Yes—you know him, Miss Lyon," said Mrs Holt, in that tone which implies that the conversation is intended for the edification of the company generally; "you know the orphin child, as Felix brought home for me that am his mother to take care of. And it's what I've done—nobody more so—though it's trouble is my reward."
Esther had raised herself again, to stand in helpless endurance of whatever might be coming.
But by this time young Harry, struck even more than the dogs by the appearance of Job Tudge,
had come round dragging his chariot, and placed himself close
"I hope Job's cough has been better lately," said Esther, in mere uncertainty as to what it would be desirable to say or do.
"I daresay you hope so, Miss Lyon," said Mrs Holt, looking at the distant landscape. "I've
no reason to disbelieve but what you wish well to the child, and to Felix, and to me. I'm sure
nobody
Here Mrs Holt paused a moment, as with a mind arrested by the painful image it had called up.
Esther's face was glowing, when Harold glanced at her; and seeing this, he was considerate enough to address Mrs Holt instead of her.
"You are then the mother of the unfortunate young man who is in prison?"
"Indeed, I am, sir," said Mrs Holt, feeling that she was now in deep water. "It's not likely
I should claim him if he wasn't my own; though it's not by my will, nor my advice, sir, that
he ever walked; for I gave him none but good. But if everybody's son was guided by their
mothers, the
This speech, in its chief points, had been deliberately prepared. Mrs Holt had set her face like a flint, to make the gentry know their duty as she knew hers: her defiant, defensive tone was due to the consciousness, not only that she was braving a powerful audience, but that she was daring to stand on the strong basis of her own judgment in opposition to her son's. Her proposals had been waived off by Mr Lyon and Felix; but she had long had the feminine conviction that if she could "get to speak" in the right quarter, things might be different. The daring bit of impromptu about the three Mr Transomes was immediately suggested by a movement of old Mr Transome to the foreground in a line with Mr Lingon and Harold; his furred and unusual costume appearing to indicate a mysterious dignity which she must hasten to include in her appeal.
And there were reasons that none could have foreseen, which made Mrs Holt's remonstrance immediately effective. While old Mr Transome stared, very much like a waxen image in which the expression is a failure, and the Rector, accustomed to female parishioners and complainants, looked on with a smile in his eyes, Harold said at once, with cordial kindness—
"I think you are quite right, Mrs Holt. And for my part, I am determined to do my best for your son, both in the witness-box and elsewhere. Take comfort; if it is necessary, the king shall be appealed to. And rely upon it, I shall bear you in mind, as Felix Holt's mother."
Rapid thoughts had convinced Harold that in this way he was best commending himself to Esther.
"Well, sir," said Mrs Holt, who was not going to pour forth disproportionate thanks, "I'm glad to hear you speak so becoming; and if you had been the king himself, I should have made free to tell you my opinion. For the Bible says, the king's favour is towards a wise servant; and it's reasonable to think he'd make all the more account of them as have never been in service, or took wage, which I never did, and never thought of my son doing; and his father left money, meaning otherways, so as he might have been a doctor on horseback at this very minute, instead of being in prison."
"What! was he regularly apprenticed to a doctor?" said Mr Lingon, who had not understood this before.
"Sir, he was, and most clever, like his father
This was a little too much for Mr Lingon's gravity; he exploded, and Harold could not help following him. Mrs Holt fixed her eyes on the distance, and slapped the back of her left hand again: it might be that this kind of mirth was the peculiar effect produced by forcible truth on high and worldly people who were neither in the Independent nor the General Baptist connection.
"I'm sure you must be tired with your long walk, and little Job too," said Esther, by way of
breaking this awkward scene. "Arn't you, Job?" she added, stooping to caress the child, who
was timidly shrinking from Harry's invitation to him to pull the little
"It's well you can feel for the orphin child, Miss Lyon," said Mrs Holt, choosing an
indirect answer rather than to humble herself by confessing fatigue before gentlemen who
seemed to be taking her too lightly. "I didn't believe but what you'd behave pretty, as you
always did to me, though everybody used to say you held yourself high. But I'm sure you never
did to Felix, for you let him sit by you at the Free School before all the town, and him with
never a bit of stock round his neck. And it shows you saw that in him worth taking
notice of;—and it is but right, if you know my words are true, as you should speak for him to
the gentlemen."
"I assure you, Mrs Holt," said Harold, coming to the rescue—"I assure you that enough has been said to make me use my best efforts for your son. And now, pray, go on to the house with the little boy and take some rest. Dominic, show Mrs Holt the way, and ask Mrs Hickes to make her comfortable, and see that somebody takes her back to Treby in the buggy."
"I will go back with Mrs Holt," said Esther, making an effort against herself.
"No, pray," said Harold, with that kind of entreaty which is really a decision. "Let Mrs Holt have time to rest. We shall have returned, and you can see her before she goes. We will say goodbye for the present, Mrs Holt."
The poor woman was not sorry to have the prospect of rest and food, especially for "the orphin child," of whom she was tenderly careful. Like many women who appear to others to have a masculine decisiveness of tone, and to themselves to have a masculine force of mind, and who come into severe collision with sons arrived at the masterful stage, she had the maternal cord vibrating strongly within her towards all tiny children. And when she saw Dominic pick up Job and hoist him on his arm for a little while, by way of making acquaintance, she regarded him with an approval which she had not thought it possible to extend to a foreigner. Since Dominic was going, Harry and old Mr Transome chose to follow. Uncle Lingon shook hands and turned off across the grass, and thus Esther was left alone with Harold.
But there was a new consciousness between them. Harold's quick perception was least likely
to be slow in seizing indications of anything that might affect his position with regard to
Esther. Some
Naturally, when they were left alone, it was Harold who spoke first. "I should think there's a good deal of worth in this young fellow—this Holt, notwithstanding the mistakes he has made. A little queer and conceited, perhaps; but that is usually the case with men of his class when they are at all superior to their fellows."
"Felix Holt is a highly cultivated man; he is not at all conceited," said Esther. The different kinds of pride within her were coalescing now. She was aware that there had been a betrayal.
"Ah?" said Harold, not quite liking the tone of this answer. "This eccentricity is a sort of fanaticism, then?—this giving up being a doctor on horseback, as the old woman calls it, and taking to—let me see—watchmaking, isn't it?"
"If it is eccentricity to be very much better than other men, he is certainly eccentric; and fanatical too, if it is fanatical to renounce all small selfish motives for the sake of a great and unselfish one. I never knew what nobleness of character really was before I knew Felix Holt."
It seemed to Esther as if, in the excitement of this moment, her own words were bringing her a clearer revelation.
"God bless me!" said Harold, in a tone of surprised yet thorough belief, and looking in Esther's face. "I wish you had talked to me about this before."
Esther at that moment looked perfectly beautiful, with an expression which Harold had never hitherto seen. All the confusion which had depended on personal feeling had given way before the sense that she had to speak the truth about the man whom she felt to be admirable.
"I think I didn't see the meaning of anything fine—I didn't even see the value of my father's character, until I had been taught a little by hearing what Felix Holt said, and seeing that his life was like his words."
Harold looked and listened, and felt his slight jealousy allayed rather than heightened.
"This is not
"He's quite an apostolic sort of fellow, then," was the self-quieting answer he gave to her
last words. "He didn't look like that; but I had only a short interview with him, and I was
given to understand that he refused to see me in prison. I believe he's not very well inclined
towards me. But you saw a great deal of him, I suppose; and your testimony to any one is
enough for me," said Harold, lowering his voice rather tenderly. "Now I know what your opinion
is, I shall spare no effort on behalf of such a young man. In fact, I had come to
After that energetic speech of Esther's, as often happens, the tears had just suffused her eyes. It was nothing more than might have been expected in a tender-hearted woman, considering Felix Holt's circumstances, and the tears only made more lovely the look with which she met Harold's when he spoke so kindly. She felt pleased with him; she was open to the fallacious delight of being assured that she had power over him to make him do what she liked, and quite forgot the many impressions which had convinced her that Harold had a padded yoke ready for the neck of every man, woman, and child that depended on him.
After a short silence, they were getting near the stone gateway, and Harold said, with an air of intimate consultation—
"What could we do for this young man, supposing he were let off? I shall send a letter with
fifty pounds to the old woman to-morrow. I ought to have done it before, but it really slipped
my memory, amongst the many things that have occupied me lately. But this young man—what do
you think would be the best thing we could do for him, if he gets at large again? He should be
put
Esther was recovering her liveliness a little, and was disposed to encourage it for the sake of veiling other feelings, about which she felt renewed reticence, now that the overpowering influence of her enthusiasm was past. She was rather wickedly amused and scornful at Harold's misconceptions and ill-placed intentions of patronage.
"You are hopelessly in the dark," she said, with a light laugh and toss of her head. "What would you offer Felix Holt? a place in the Excise? You might as well think of offering it to John the Baptist. Felix has chosen his lot. He means always to be a poor man."
"Means? Yes," said Harold, slightly piqued,"but what a man means usually depends on what happens. I mean to be a commoner; but a peerage might present itself under acceptable circumstances."
"O there is no sum in proportion to be done there," said Esther, again gaily. "As you are to
a peerage, so is not Felix Holt to any offer of advantage that you could imagine for
him."
"You must think him fit for any position—the first in the county."
"No, I don't," said Esther, shaking her head mischievously. "I think him too high for it."
"I see you can be ardent in your admiration."
"Yes, it is my champagne; you know I don't like the other kind."
"That would be satisfactory if one were sure of getting your admiration," said Harold, leading her up to the terrace, and amongst the crocuses, from whence they had a fine view of the park and river. They stood still near the east parapet, and saw the dash of light on the water, and the pencilled shadows of the trees on the grassy lawn.
"Would it do as well to admire you, instead of being worthy to be admired?" said Harold, turning his eyes from that landscape to Esther's face.
"It would be a thing to be put up with," said Esther, smiling at him rather roguishly. "But you are not in that state of self-despair."
"Well, I am conscious of not having those severe virtues that you have been praising."
"That is true. You are quite in another genre ."
"A woman would not find me a tragic hero."
"O, no! She must dress for genteel comedy— such as your mother once described to me—where the most thrilling event is the drawing of a handsome cheque."
"You are a naughty fairy," said Harold, daring to press Esther's hand a little more closely to him, and drawing her down the eastern steps into the pleasure-ground, as if he were unwilling to give up the conversation. "Confess that you are disgusted with my want of romance."
"I shall not confess to being disgusted. I shall ask you to confess that you are not a romantic figure."
"I am a little too stout."
"For romance—yes. At least you must find security for not getting stouter."
"And I don't look languishing enough?"
"O yes—rather too much so—at a fine cigar."
"And I am not in danger of committing suicide?"
"No; you are a widower."
Harold did not reply immediately to this last thrust of Esther's. She had uttered it with
innocent thoughtlessness from the playful suggestions of the moment; but it was a fact that
Harold's previous married life had entered strongly into her impressions about him. The
presence of Harry made it inevitable. Harold took this allusion of Esther's as an indication
that his quality of widower was a point that made against him; and after a brief silence he
said, in an altered, more serious tone—
Esther began to tremble a little, as she always did when the love-talk between them seemed getting serious. She only gave the rather stumbling answer, "How so?"
"Harry's mother had been a slave—was bought, in fact."
It was impossible for Harold to preconceive the effect this had on Esther. His natural disqualification for judging of a girl's feelings was heightened by the blinding effect of an exclusive object— which was to assure her that her own place was peculiar and supreme. Hitherto Esther's acquaintance with Oriental love was derived chiefly from Byronic poems, and this had not sufficed to adjust her mind to a new story, where the Giaour concerned was giving her his arm. She was unable to speak; and Harold went on—
"Though I am close on thirty-five, I never met with a woman at all like you before. There are new eras in one's life that are equivalent to youth—are something better than youth. I was never an aspirant till I knew you."
Esther was still silent.
"Not that I dare to call myself that. I am not so confident a personage as you imagine. I am necessarily in a painful position for a man who has any feeling."
Here at last Harold had stirred the right fibre. Esther's generosity seized at once the whole meaning implied in that last sentence. She had a fine sensibility to the line at which flirtation must cease; and she was now pale, and shaken with feelings she had not yet defined for herself.
"Do not let us speak of difficult things any more now," she said, with gentle seriousness. "I am come into a new world of late, and have to learn life all over again. Let us go in. I must see poor Mrs Holt again, and my little friend Job."
She paused at the glass door that opened on the terrace, and entered there, while Harold went round to the stables.
When Esther had been up-stairs and descended again into the large entrance-hall, she found
its stony spaciousness made lively by human figures extremely unlike the statues. Since Harry
insisted on playing with Job again, Mrs Hòlt and her orphan, after dining, had just been
brought to this delightful scene for a game at hide-and-seek, and for exhibiting the climbing
powers of the two pet-squirrels.
Mrs Holt held on her lap a basket filled with good things for Job, and seemed much soothed by pleasant company and excellent treatment. As Esther, descending softly and unobserved, leaned over the stone bannisters and looked at the scene for a minute or two, she saw that Mrs Holt's attention, having been directed to the squirrel which had scampered on to the head of the Silenus carrying the infant Bacchus, had been drawn downward to the tiny babe looked at with so much afiection by the rather ugly and hairy gentleman, of whom she nevertheless spoke with reserve as of one who possibly belonged to the Transome family.
"It's most pretty to see its little limbs, and the gentleman holding it. I should think he
was
Denner, peering and smiling quietly, was about to reply, when she was prevented by the appearance of old Mr Transome, who since his walk had been having "forty winks" on the sofa in the library, and now came out to look for Harry. He had doffed his furred cap and cloak, but in lying down to sleep he had thrown over his shoulders a soft Oriental scarf which Harold had given him, and this still hung over this scanty white hair and down to his knees, held fast by his wooden-looking arms and laxly clasped hands, which fell in front of him.
This singular appearance of an undoubted Transome fitted exactly into Mrs Holt's thought at
the moment. It lay in the probabilities of things that gentry's intellects should be peculiar:
since they had not to get their own living, the good Lord might have economised in their case
that common sense which others were so much more in need of; and in the shuffling figure
before her she saw a descendant of the gentleman who had chosen to be represented without his
clothes—all the more eccentric where there were the means of buying the best. But
"I hope I'm in no ways taking a liberty, sir," she began, while the old gentleman looked at her with bland feebleness; "I'm not that woman to sit anywhere out of my own home without inviting, and pressing too. But I was brought here to wait, because the little gentleman wanted to play with the orphin child."
"Very glad, my good woman—sit down—sit down," said Mr Transome, nodding and smiling between his clauses. "Nice little boy. Your grandchild?"
"Indeed, sir, no," said Mrs Holt, continuing to stand. Quite apart from any awe of Mr
Transome— sitting down, she felt, would be a too great familiarity with her own pathetic
importance on this extra and unlooked-for occasion. "It's not me has any grandchild, nor ever
shall have, though most fit. But with my only son saying he'll never be married, and in prison
besides, and some saying he'll be transported, you may see yourself—though a gentleman—as
there isn't much chance of my having
"Yes, yes—poor woman—what shall I say?" said old Mr Transome, feeling himself scolded, and as usual desirousof mollifying displeasure.
"Sir, I can tell you what to say fast enough; for it's what I should say myself if I could
get to speak to the King. For I've asked them that know, and they say it's the truth both out
of the Bible and in, as the King can pardon anything and anybody. And judging by his
countenance on the new signs, and the talk there was a while ago about his being the people's
friend, as the minister once said it from the very pulpit—if there's any meaning in words,
he'll
"Yes—a very good man—he'll do anything right," said Mr Transome, whose own ideas about the King just then were somewhat misty, consisting chiefly in broken reminiscences of George the Third. "I'll ask him anything you like," he added, with a pressing desire to satisfy Mrs Holt, who alarmed him slightly.
"Then, sir, if you'll go in your carriage and say, This young man, Felix Holt by name, as his father was known the country round, and his mother most respectable—he never meant harm to anybody, and so far from bloody murder and fighting, would part with his victual to them that needed it more—and if you'd get other gentlemen to say the same, and if they're not satisifed to inquire—I'll not believe but what the King 'ud let my son out of prison. Or if it's true he must stand his trial, the King 'ud take care no mischief happened to him. I've got my senses, and I'll never believe as in a country where there's a God above and a king below, the right thing can't be done if great people was willing to do it."
Mrs Holt, like all orators, had waxed louder and more energetic, ceasing to propel her
arguments,
Little Harry, alive to anything that had relation to "Gappa," had paused in his game, and, discerning what he thought a hostile aspect in this naughty black old woman, rushed towards her and proceeded first to beat her with his mimic jockey's whip, and then, suspecting that her bombazine was not sensitive, to set his teeth in her arm. While Dominic rebuked him and pulled him off, Nimrod began to bark anxiously, and the scene was become alarming even to the squirrels, which scrambled as far off as possible.
Esther, who had been waiting for an opportunity of intervention, now came up to Mrs Holt to speak some soothing words; and old Mr Transome, seeing a sufficient screen between himself and his formidable suppliant, at last gathered courage to turn round and shuffle away with unusual swiftness into the library.
"Dear Mrs Holt," said Esther, "do rest comforted.
This hint was sufficient. Dominic went to see if the vehicle was ready, and Denner, remarking that Mrs Holt would like to mount it in the inner court, invited her to go back into the housekeeper's room. But there was a fresh resistance raised in Harry by the threatened departure of Job, who had seemed an invaluable addition to the menagerie of tamed creatures; and it was barely in time that Esther had the relief of seeing the entrance-hall cleared so as to prevent any further encounter of Mrs Holt with Harold, who was now coming up the flight of steps at the entrance.
I'm sick at heart. The eye of day, The insistent summer noon, seems pitiless, Shining in all the barren crevices Of weary life, leaving no shade, no dark, Where I may dream that hidden waters lie.
Shortly after Mrs Holt's striking presentation of herself at Trnasome Court, Esther
went on a second visit to her father. The Loamford Assizes were approaching; it was expected
that in about ten days Felix Holt's trial would come on, and some hints in her father's
letters had given Esther the impression that he was taking a melancholy view of the result.
Harold Transome had once or twice mentioned the subject with a facile hopefulness as to "the
young fellow's coming off easily," which, in her anxious mind, was not a counterpoise to
disquieting suggestions, and she had not chosen to introduce another conversation about Felix
Holt, by questioning Harold concerning the probabilities he relied on. Since those moments on
the terrace, Harold had daily become
The little minister was much depressed, unable
"I had been encouraged by the assurances of men instructed in this regard," said Mr Lyon, while Esther sat on the stool near him, and listened anxiously, "that though he were pronounced guilty in regard to this deed whereinto he hath calamitously fallen, yet that a judge mildly disposed, and with a due sense of that invisible activity of the soul whereby the deeds which are the same in the outward appearance and effect, yet differ as the knife-stroke of the surgeon, even though it kill, differs from the knife-stroke of a wanton mutilator, might use his discretion in tempering the punishment, so that it would not be very evil to bear. But now it is said that the judge who cometh is a severe man, and one nourishing a prejudice against the bolder spirits who stand not in the old paths."
"I am going to be present at the trial, father," said Esther, who was preparing the way to
express a wish, which she was timid about even with her father. "I mentioned to Mrs Transome
that I should like to do so, and she said that she used in old days
"Assuredly I shall be there, having been summoned to bear witness to Felix's character, and to his having uttered remonstrances and warnings long beforehand whereby he proved himself an enemy to riot. In our ears, who know him, it sounds strangely that aught else should be credible; but he hath few to speak for him, though I trust that Mr Harold Transome's testimony will go far, if, as you say, he is disposed to set aside all minor regards, and not to speak the truth grudgingly and reluctantly. For the very truth hath a colour from the disposition of the utterer."
"He is kind; he is capable of being generous," said Esther.
"It is well. For I verily believe that evil-minded men have been at work against Felix. The
Duffield Watchman hath written continually in allusion to him as one of those
mischievous men who seek to elevate themselves through the dishonour of their party; and as
one of those who go not heart and soul with the needs of the people, but seek only to get a
hearing for themselves by raising their voices in crotchety discord. It is these things that
cause me
"Father," said Esther, timidly, while the eyes of both were filling with tears, "I should like to see him again, before his trial. Might I? Will you ask him? Will you take me?"
The minister raised his suffused eyes to hers, and did not speak for a moment or two. A new thought had visited him. But his delicate tenderness shrank even from an inward inquiry that was too curious—that seemed like an effort to peep at sacred secrets.
"I see nought against it, my dear child, if you arrived early enough, and would take the elderly lady into your confidence, so that you might descend from the carriage at some suitable place—the house of the Independent minister, for example—where I could meet and accompany you. I would forewarn Felix, who would doubtless delight to see your face again; seeing that he may go away, and be, as it were, burried from you, even though it may be only in prison, and not—"
This was too much for Esther. She threw her arms round her father's neck and sobbed like a
child. It was an unspeakable relief to her after all the pent-up stifling experience, all the
inward
No word was spoken for some minutes, till Esther raised herself, dried her eyes, and with an action that seemed playful, though there was no smile on her face, pressed her handkerchief against her father's cheeks. Then, when she had put her hand in his, he said, solemnly,
"'Tis a great and mysterious gift, this clinging of the heart, my Esther, whereby it hath often seemed to me that even in the very moment of suffering our souls have the keenest foretaste of heaven. I speak not lightly, but as one who hath endured. And 'tis a strange truth that only in the agony of parting we look into the depths of love."
So the interview ended, without any question from Mr Lyon concerning what Esther contemplated as the ultimate arrangement between herself and the Transomes.
After this conversation, which showed him that what happened to Felix touched Esther more
closely than he had supposed, the minister felt no impulse to raise the images of a future so
unlike anything that
In the ages since Adam's marriage, it has been good for some men to be alone, and for some
women also. But Esther was not one of these women: she was intensely of the feminine type,
verging neither towards the saint nor the angel. She was "a fair divided excellence, whose
fulness of perfection" must be in marriage. And, like all youthful creatures, she felt as if
the present conditions of choice were final. It belonged to the freshness of her heart that,
having had her emotions strongly stirred by real objects, she never speculated on possible
relations yet to come. It seemed to her that she stood at the first and last parting of the
ways. And, in one sense,
We may not make this world a paradise By walking it together with clasped hands And eyes that meeting feed a double strength. We must be only joined by pains divine, Of spirits blent in mutual memories.
It was a consequence of that interview with her father, that when Esther stepped early on a grey March morning into the carriage with Mrs Transome, to go to the Loamford Assizes, she was full of an expectation that held her lips in trembling silence, and gave her eyes that sightless beauty which tells that the vision is all within.
Mrs Transome did not disturb her with unnecessary speech. Of late, Esther's anxious
observation had been drawn to a change in Mrs Transome, shown in many small ways which only
women notice. It was not only that when they sat together the talk seemed more of an effort to
her: that might have come from the gradual draining away of matter for discourse pertaining to
most sorts
"My dear, I shall make this house dull for you. You sit with me like an embodied patience. I am unendurable; I am getting into a melancholy dotage. A fidgety old woman like me is as unpleasant to see as a rook with its wing broken. Don't mind me, my dear. Run away from me without ceremony. Every one else does, you see. I am part of the old furniture with new drapery."
"Dear Mrs Transome," said Esther, gliding to the low ottoman close by the basket of embroidery, "do you dislike my sitting with you?"
"Only for your own sake, my fairy," said Mrs Transome, smiling faintly, and putting her hand under Esther's chin. "Doesn't it make you shudder to look at me?"
"Why will you say such naughty things?" said Esther, affectionately. "If you had had a daughter, she would have desired to be with you most when you most wanted cheering. And surely every young woman has something of a daughter's feeling towards an older one who has been kind to her."
"I should like you to be really my daughter," said Mrs Transome, rousing herself to look a little brighter. "That is something still for an old woman to hope for."
Esther blushed: she had not foreseen this application
"O, you are so good; I shall ask you to indulge me very much. It is to let us set out very early to Loamford on Wednesday, and put me down at a particular house, that I may keep an engagement with my father. It is a private matter, that I wish no one to know about, if possible. And he will bring me back to you wherever you appoint."
In that way Esther won her end without needing to betray it; and as Harold was already away at Loamford, she was the more secure.
The Independent minister's house at which she was set down, and where she was received by her father, was in a quiet street not far from the jail. Esther had thrown a dark cloak over the handsomer coverings which Denner had assured her was absolutely required of ladies who sat anywhere near the judge at a great trial; and as the bonnet of that day did not throw the face into high relief, but rather into perspective, a veil drawn down gave her a sufficiently inconspicuous appearance.
"I have arranged all things, my dear," said Mr
They walked away at once, Esther not asking a question. She had no consciousness of the road along which they passed; she could never remember anything but a dim sense of entering within high walls and going along passages, till they were ushered into a larger space than she expected, and her father said,—
"It is here that we are permitted to see Felix, my Esther. He will presently appear."
Esther automatically took off her gloves and bonnet, as if she had entered the house after a
walk. She had lost the complete consciousness of everything except that she was going to see
Felix. She trembled. It seemed to her as if he too would look altered after her new life—as if
even the past would change for her and be no longer a steadfast remembrance, but something she
had been mistaken about, as she had been about the new life. Perhaps she was growing out of
that childhood to which common things have rareness, and all objects look larger. Perhaps from
henceforth the whole world was to be meaner for her. The dread concentrated in those moments
seemed worse than anything she had known before. It was what the dread of a pilgrim
But soon the door opened slightly; some one looked in; then it opened wide, and Felix Holt entered.
"Miss Lyon—Esther!" and her hand was in his grasp.
He was just the same—no, something inexpressibly better, because of the distance and separation, and the half-weary novelties, which made him like the return of morning.
"Take no heed of me, children," said Mr Lyon. "I have some notes to make, and my time is precious. We may remain here only a quarter of an hour." And the old man sat down at a window with his back to them, writing with his head bent close to the paper.
"You are very pale; you look ill, compared with your old self," said Esther. She had taken her hand away, but they stood still near each other, she looking up at him.
"The fact is, I'm not fond of prison," said Felix, smiling; "but I suppose the best I can hope for is to have a good deal more of it."
"It is thought that in the worst case a pardon may be obtained," said Esther, avoiding Harold Transome's name.
"I don't rely on that," said Felix, shaking his head. "My wisest course is to make up my mind to the very ugliest penalty they can condemn me to. If I can face that, anything less will seem easy. But you know," he went on, smiling at her brightly, "I never went in for fine company and cushions. I can't be very heavily disappointed in that way."
"Do you see things just as you used to do?" said Esther, turning pale as she said it—"I mean—about poverty, and the people you will live among. Has all the misunderstanding and sadness left you just as obstinate?" She tried to smile, but could not succeed.
"What—about the sort of life I should lead if I were free again?" said Felix.
"Yes. I can't help being discouraged for you by all these things that have happened. See how you may fail!" Esther spoke timidly. She saw a peculiar smile, which she knew well, gathering in his eyes. "Ah, I daresay I am silly," she said, deprecatingly.
"No, you are dreadfully inspired," said Felix.
"But I'm proof against that word failure. I've seen behind it. The only failure a man ought to fear is failure in cleaving to the purpose he sees to be best. As to just the amount of result he may see from his particular work—that's a tremendous uncertainty: the universe has not been arranged for the gratification of his feelings. As long as a man sees and believes in some great good, he'll prefer working towards that in the way he's best fit for, come what may. I put effects at their minimum, but I'd rather have the minimum of effect, if it's of the sort I care for, than the maximum of effect I don't care for—a lot of fine things that are not to my taste—and if they were, the conditions of holding them while the world is what it is, are such as would jar on me like grating metal."
"Yes," said Esther, in a low tone, "I think I understand that now, better than I used to do." The words of Felix at last seemed strangely to fit her own experience. But she said no more, though he seemed to wait for it a moment or two, looking at her. But then he went on—
"I don't mean to be illustrious, you know, and make a new era, else it would be kind of you to get a raven and teach it to croak 'failure' in my ears. Where great things can't happen, I care for very small things, such as will never be known beyond a few garrets and workshops. And then, as to one thing I believe in, I don't think I can altogether fail. If there's anything our people want convincing of, it is, that there's some dignity and happiness for a man other than changing his station. That's one of the beliefs I choose to consecrate my life to. If anybody could demonstrate to me that I was a flat for it, I shouldn't think it would follow that I must borrow money to set up genteelly and order new clothes. That's not a rigorous consequence to my understanding."
They smiled at each other, with the old sense of amusement they had so often had together.
"You are just the same," said Esther.
"And you?" said Felix. "My affairs have been
"Yes," said Esther, rather falteringly.
"Well," said Felix, looking at her gravely again, "it's a case of fitness that seems to give a chance sanction to that musty law. The first time I saw you, your birth was an immense puzzle to me. However, the appropriate conditions are come at last."
These words seemed cruel to Esther. But Felix could not know all the reasons for their seeming so. She could not speak; she was turning cold and feeling her heart beat painfully.
"All your tastes are gratified now," he went on innocently. "But you'll remember the old pedagogue and his lectures?"
One thought in the mind of Felix was, that Esther was sure to marry Harold Transome. Men readily believe these things of the women who love them. But he could not allude to the marriage more directly. He was afraid of this destiny for her, without having any very distinct knowledge by which to justify his fear to the mind of another. It did not satisfy him that Esther should marry Harold Transome.
"My children," said Mr Lyon at this moment,
Esther did not speak, but Felix could not help observing now that her hands had turned to a deathly coldness, and that she was trembling. He believed, he knew, that whatever prospects she had, this feeling was for his sake. An overpowering impulse from mingled love, gratitude, and anxiety, urged him to say—
"I had a horrible struggle, Esther. But you see I was right. There was a fitting lot in reserve for you. But remember you have cost a great price— don't throw what is precious away. I shall want the news that you have a happiness worthy of you."
Esther felt too miserable for tears to come. She looked helplessly at Felix for a moment, then took her hands from his, and, turning away mutely, walked dreamily towards her father, and said, "Father, I am ready—there is no more to say."
She turned back again, towards the chair where her bonnet lay, with a face quite corpse-like above her dark garment.
"Esther!"
She heard Felix say the word, with an entreating
She never could recall anything else that happened, till she was in the carriage again with Mrs Transome.
Why, there are maidens of heroic touch, And yet they seem like things of gossamer You'd pinch the life out of, as out of moths. O, it is not loud tones and mouthingness, 'Tis not the arms akimbo and large strides, That make a woman's force. The tiniest birds, With softest downy breasts, have passions in them And are brave with love.
Esther was so placed in the Court, under Mrs Transome's wing, as to see and hear
everything without effort. Harold had received them at the hotel, and had observed that Esther
looked ill, and was unusually abstracted in her manner, but this seemed to be sufficiently
accounted for by her sympathetic anxiety about the result of a trial in which the prisoner at
the bar was a friend, and in which both her father and himself were important witnesses. Mrs
Transome had no reluctance to keep a small secret from her son, and no betrayal was made of
that previous "engagement" of Esther's with her father. Harold was particularly delicate and
unobtrusive in
If Esther had been less absorbed by supreme feelings, she would have been aware that she was
an object of special notice. In the bare squareness of a public hall, where there was not one
jutting angle to hang a guess or a thought upon, not an image or a bit of colour to stir the
fancy, and where the only objects of speculation, of admiration, or of any interest whatever,
were human beings, and especially the human beings that occupied positions indicating some
importance, the notice bestowed on Esther would not have been surprising, even if it had been
merely a tribute to her youthful charm, which was well companioned by Mrs Transome's elderly
majesty. But it was due also to whisperings that she was an hereditary claimant of the
Transome estates, whom Harold Transome was about to marry. Harold himself had of late not
cared to conceal either the fact or the probability: they both tended rather to his honour
than his dishonour.
The Court was still more crowded than on the previous day, when our poor acquaintance Dredge and his two collier companions were sentenced to a year's imprisonment with hard labour, and the more enlightened prisoner, who stole the Debarrys' plate, to transportation for life. Poor Dredge had cried, had wished he'd "never heared of a 'lection," and in spite of sermons from the jail chaplain, fell back on the explanation that this was a world in which Spratt and Old Nick were sure to get the best of it; so that in Dredge's case, at least, most observers must have had the melancholy conviction that there had been no enhancement of public spirit and faith in progress from that wave of political agitation which had reached the Sproxton Pits.
But curiosity was necessarily at a higher pitch to-day, when the character of the prisoner
and the circumstances of his offence were of a highly unusual kind. As soon as Felix appeared
at the bar, a murmur rose and spread into a loud buzz, which continued until there had been
repeated authoritative calls for silence in the Court. Rather singularly, it was now for the
first time that Esther had a feeling of pride in him on the ground simply of
tête-à-tête under the sombre light of the
little parlour in Malthouse Yard.
Esther had felt some relief in hearing from her father that Felix had insisted on doing without his mother's presence; and since to Mrs Holt's imagination, notwithstanding her general desire to have her character inquired into, there was no greatly consolatory difference between being a witness and a criminal, and an appearance of any kind "before the judge" could hardly be made to suggest anything definite that would overcome the dim sense of unalleviated disgrace, she had been less inclined than usual to complain of her son's decision. Esther had shuddered beforehand at the inevitable farce there would be in Mrs Holt's testimony. But surely Felix would lose something for want of a witness who could testify to his behaviour in the morning before he became involved in the tumult?
"He is really a fine young fellow," said Harold, coming to speak to Esther after a colloquy with the prisoner's solicitor. "I hope he will not make a blunder in defending himself."
"He is not likely to make a blunder," said Esther. She had recovered her colour a little, and was brighter than she had been all the morning before.
Felix had seemed to include her in his general glance, but had avoided looking at her
particularly.
"Dear me," she said, prompted to speak without any reflection; "how angry you look! I never saw you look so angry before. It is not my father you are looking at?"
"Oh no! I am angry at something I'm looking away from," said Harold, making an effort to drive back the troublesome demon who would stare out at window. "It's that Jermyn," he added, glancing at his mother as well as Esther. "He will thrust himself under my eyes everywhere since I refused him an interview and returned his letter. I'm determined never to speak to him directly again, if I can help it."
Mrs Transome heard with a changeless face. She had for some time been watching, and had taken on her marble look of immobility. She said an inward bitter "Of course!" to everything that was unpleasant.
After this Esther soon became impatient of all
Three other witnesses gave evidence of expressions used by the prisoner, tending to show the
character of the acts with which he was charged. Two were Treby tradesmen, the third was a
clerk from Duffield. The clerk had heard Felix speak at Duffield; the Treby men had frequently
heard him declare himself on public matters; and they all
When the case for the prosecution closed, all strangers thought that it looked very black
for the prisoner. In two instances only Felix had chosen to put a cross-examining question.
The first was to ask Spratt if he did not believe that his having been tied to the post had
saved him from a probably
Esther had hitherto listened closely but calmly. She knew that there would be this strong adverse testimony; and all her hopes and fears were bent on what was to come beyond it. It was when the prisoner was asked what he had to adduce in reply that she felt herself in the grasp of that tremor which does not disable the mind, but rather gives keener consciousness of a mind having a penalty of body attached to it.
There was a silence as of night when Felix Holt began to speak. His voice was firm and clear: he spoke with simple gravity, and evidently without any enjoyment of the occasion. Esther had never seen his face look so weary.
"My Lord, I am not going to occupy the time of the Court with unnecessary words. I believe
the witnesses for the prosecution have spoken the truth as far as a superficial observation
would enable them to do it; and I see nothing that can weigh with the jury in my favour,
unless they believe my
Felix then gave a concise narrative of his motives and conduct on the day of the riot, from the moment when he was startled into quitting his work by the earlier uproar of the morning. He omitted, of course, his visit to Malthouse Yard, and merely said that he went out to walk again after returning to quiet his mother's mind. He got warmed by the story of his experience, which moved him more strongly than ever, now he recalled it in vibrating words before a large audience of his fellow-men. The sublime delight of truthful speech to one who has the great gift of uttering it, will make itself felt even through the pangs of sorrow.
"That is all I have to say for myself, my Lord. I pleaded 'Not guilty' to the charge of
Manslaughter, because I know that word may carry a meaning which would not fairly apply to my
act. When I threw Tucker down, I did not see the possibility
"I foresaw he would make a blunder," said Harold, in a low voice to Esther. Then, seeing her
shrink a little, he feared she might suspect him of being merely stung by the allusion to
himself. "I don't mean what he said about the Radical candidate," he added hastily, in
correction. "I don't mean the last sentence. I mean that whole peroration of his, which he
ought to have left unsaid. It has done him harm with the jury— they won't understand it, or
rather will misunderstand it. And I'll answer for it, it has soured the judge. It remains to
be seen what we witnesses can say for him, to nullify the effect of what he has said for
himself. I hope the attorney has done his best in collecting the evidence: I understand the
expense of the witnesses is undertaken by some
The first witness called for the defence was Mr Lyon. The gist of his statements was, that
from the beginning of September last until the day of election he was in very frequent
intercourse with the prisoner; that he had become intimately acquainted with his character and
views of life, and his conduct with respect to the election, and that these were totally
inconsistent with any other supposition than that his being involved in the riot, and his
fatal encounter with the constable, were due to the calamitous failure of a bold but good
purpose. He stated further that he had been present when an interview had occurred in his own
house between the prisoner and Mr Harold Transome, who was then canvassing for the
representation of North Loamshire. That the object of the prisoner in seeking this interview
had been to inform Mr Transome of treating given in his name to the workmen in the pits and on
the canal at Sproxton, and to remonstrate against its continuance; the prisoner fearing that
disturbance and mischief might result from what he believed to be the end towards which this
treating was directed—namely, the presence of these men on the occasions of the
The quaint appearance and manner of the little Dissenting minister could not fail to
stimulate the peculiar wit of the bar. He was subjected to a troublesome cross-examination,
which he bore with wide-eyed shortsighted quietude and absorption in the duty of truthful
response. On being asked, rather sneeringly, if the prisoner was not one of his flock? he
answered, in that deeper tone which
"Nay—would to God he were! I should then feel that the great virtues and the pure life I have beheld in him were a witness to the efficacy of the faith I believe in and the discipline of the Church whereunto I belong."
Perhaps it required a larger power of comparison than was possessed by any of that audience to appreciate the moral elevation of an Independent minister who could utter those words. Nevertheless there was a murmur, which was clearly one of sympathy.
The next witness, and the one on whom the interest of the spectators was chiefly
concentrated, was Harold Transome. There was a decided predominance of Tory feeling in the
Court, and the human disposition to enjoy the infliction of a little punishment on an opposite
party, was, in this instance, of a Tory complexion. Harold was keenly alive to this, and to
everything else that might prove disagreeable to him in his having to appear in the
witness-box. But he was not likely to lose his self-possession, or to fail in adjusting
himself gracefully, under conditions which most men would find it difficult to carry without
awkwardness. He
When he entered the witness-box he was much admired by the ladies amongst the audience, many of whom sighed a little at the thought of his wrong course in politics. He certainly looked like a handsome portrait by Sir Thomas Lawrence, in which that remarkable artist had happily omitted the usual excess of honeyed blandness mixed with alert intelligence, which is hardly compatible with the state of man out of paradise. He stood not far off Felix; and the two Radicals certainly made a striking contrast. Felix might have come from the hands of a sculptor in the later Roman period, when the plastic impulse was stirred by the grandeur of barbaric forms—when rolled collars were not yet conceived, and satin stocks were not.
Harold Transome declared that he had had only
Harold spoke with as noticeable a directness and emphasis, as if what he said could have no reaction on himself. He had of course not entered unnecessarily into what occurred in Jermyn's office. But now he was subjected to a cross-examination on this subject, which gave rise to some subdued shrugs, smiles, and winks, among county gentlemen.
The questions were directed so as to bring out, if possible, some indication that Felix Holt was moved to his remonstrance by personal resentment against the political agents concerned in setting on foot the treating at Sproxton, but such questioning is a sort of target-shooting that sometimes hits about widely. The cross-examining counsel had close connections among the Tories of Loamshire, and enjoyed his business to-day. Under the fire of various questions about Jermyn and the agent employed by him at Sproxton, Harold got warm, and in one of his replies said, with his rapid sharpness,
"Mr Jermyn was my agent then, not now: I
The sense that he had shown a slight heat would have vexed Harold more if he had not got some satisfaction out of the thought that Jermyn heard those words. He recovered his good temper quickly, and when, subsequently, the question came,
"You acquiesced in the treating of the Sproxton men, as necesary to the efficient working of the reformed constituency?" Harold replied, with quiet fluency,
"Yes; on my return to England, before I put up for North Loamshire, I got the best advice from practised agents, both Whig and Tory. They all agreed as to electioneering measures."
The next witness was Michael Brincey, otherwise Mike Brindle, who gave evidence of the
sayings and doings of the prisoner amongst the Sproxton men. Mike declared the Felix went
"uncommon again' drink, and pitch-and-toss, and quarrelling, and sich," and was "all for
schooling and bringing up the little chaps;" but on being cross-examined, he admitted that he
"couldn't give much account;" that Felix did talk again'idle folks, whether poor or rich, and
that most like he meant the rich, who had "a rights to be idle," which was
With the two succeeding witnesses, who swore to the fact that Felix had tried to lead the mob along Hobb's Lane instead of towards the Manor, and to the violently threatening character of Tucker's attack on him, the case for the defence was understood to close.
Meanwhile Esther had been looking on and listening with growing misery, in the sense that
all had not been said which might have been said on behalf of Felix. If it was the jury who
were to be acted on, she argued to herself, there might have been an impression made on their
feeling which would determine their verdict. Was it not constantly said and seen that juries
pronounced Guilty or Not Guilty from sympathy for or against the accused? She was too
inexperienced to check her own argument by thoroughly representing to herself the
When a woman feels purely and nobly, that ardour of hers which breaks through formulas too
rigorously urged on men by daily practical needs, makes one of her most precious influences:
she is the added impulse that shatters the stiffening crust of cautious experience. Her
inspired ignorance gives a sublimity to actions so incongruously simple, that otherwise they
would make men smile. Some of that ardour which has flashed out and illuminated all poetry and
history was burning to-day in the bosom of sweet Esther Lyon. In this, at least, her woman's
lot was perfect: that the man she loved was her hero; that her woman's passion and her
reverence for rarest goodness rushed together in an undivided current. And to-day they were
making one danger, one terror, one irresistible impulse for her heart. Her feelings were
growing into a necessity for action, rather than a resolve to act. She could not support the
thought that the
"Pray tell the attorney that I have evidence to give for the prisoner—lose no time."
"Do you know what you are going to say, my dear?" said Mr Lingon, looking at her in astonishment.
"Yes—I entreat you, for God's sake," said Esther, in that low tone of urgent beseeching which is equivalent to a cry; and with a look of appeal more penetrating still, "I would rather die than not do it."
The old Rector, always leaning to the good-natured view of things, felt chiefly that there
seemed to be an additional chance for the poor fellow who
Before Harold was aware of Esther's intention she was on her way to the witness-box. When she appeared there, it was as if a vibration, quick as light, had gone through the Court and had shaken Felix himself, who had hitherto seemed impassive. A sort of gleam seemed to shoot across his face, and any one close to him could have seen that his hand, which lay on the edge of the dock, trembled.
At the first moment Harold was startled and alarmed; the next, he felt delight in Esther's beautiful aspect, and in the admiration of the Court. There was no blush on her face: she stood, divested of all personal considerations whether of vanity or shyness. Her clear voice sounded as it might have done if she had been making a confession of faith. She began and went on without query or interruption. Every face looked grave and respectful.
"I am Esther Lyon, the daughter of Mr Lyon, the Independent minister at Treby, who has been
one of the witnesses for the prisoner. I know Felix Holt well. On the day of the election at
Treby, when I had been much alarmed by the noises that reached me from the main street, Felix
Holt came to call upon me. He knew that my father was away,
There was something so naive and beautiful in this action of Esther's, that it conquered
every low or petty suggestion even in the commonest minds. The three men in that assembly who
knew her best —even her father and Felix Holt—felt a thrill of surprise mingling with their
admiration. This bright, delicate, beautiful-shaped thing that seemed most like a toy or
ornament—some hand had touched the chords, and there came forth music that brought tears. Half
a year before, Esther's dread of being
Harold Transome was ready to give her his hand and lead her back to her place. When she was there, Felix, for the first time, could not help looking towards her, and their eyes met in one solemn glance.
Afterwards Esther found herself unable to listen so as to form any judgment on what she
heard. The acting out of that strong impulse had exhausted her energy. There was a brief
pause, filled with a murmur, a buzz, and much coughing. The audience generally felt as if dull
weather was setting in again. And under those auspices the counsel for the prosecution got up
to make his reply. Esther's deed had its effect beyond the momentary one, but the effect was
not visible in the rigid necessities of legal procedure. The counsel's duty of restoring all
unfavourable facts to due prominence in the minds of the jurors, had its effect altogether
reinforced by the summing-up of the judge. Even the bare discernment of facts, much more their
arrangement with a view to inferences, must carry a bias: human impartiality, whether judicial
or not, can hardly escape being more or less loaded. It was not that the judge had severe
intentions; it was only that he
Esther seemed now so tremulous, and looked so ill, that Harold begged her to leave the Court with his mother and Mr Lingon. He would come and tell her the issue. But she said, quietly, that she would rather stay; she was only a little overcome by the exertion of speaking. She was inwardly resolved to see Felix to the last moment before he left the Court.
Though she could not follow the address of the counsel or the judge, she had a keen ear for
what was brief and decisive. She heard the verdict, "Guilty of manslaughter." And every word
uttered by the judge in pronouncing sentence fell upon her like an unforgetable sound that
would come
Esther gave a start from her seat. Her heart swelled with a horrible sensation of pain; but, alarmed lest she should lose her self-command, she grasped Mrs Transome's hand, getting some strength from that human contact.
Esther saw that Felix had turned. She could no longer see his face. "Yes," she said, drawing down her veil, "let us go."
The devil tempts us not—'tis we tempt him, Beckoning his skill with opportunity.
The more permanent effect of Esther's action in the trial was visible in a meeting
which took place the next day in the principal room of the White Hart at Loamford. To the
magistrates and other county gentlemen who were drawn together about noon, some of the
necessary impulse might have been lacking but for that stirring of heart in certain
just-spirited men and good fathers among them, which had been raised to a high pitch of
emotion by Esther's maidenly fervour. Among these one of the foremost was Sir Maximus Debarry,
who had come to the assizes with a mind, as usual, slightly rebellious under an influence
which he never ultimately resisted—the influence of his son. Philip Debarry himself was
detained in London, but in his correspondence with his father he had urged him, as well as his
uncle
Before the trial commenced, Sir Maximus had
"I tell you what, Gus! we must exert ourselves to get a pardon for this young fellow. Confound it! what's the use of mewing him up for four years? Example? Nonsense. Will there be a man knocked down the less for it? That girl made me cry. Depend upon it, whether she's going to marry Transome or not, she's been fond of Holt—in her poverty, you know. She's a modest, brave, beautiful woman. I'd ride a steeplechase, old as I am, to gratify her feelings. Hang it! the fellow's a good fellow if she thinks so. And he threw out a fine sneer, I thought, at the Radical candidate. Depend upon it, he's a good fellow at bottom."
The Rector had not exactly the same kind of ardour, nor was he open to precisely that
process of
North Loamshire
Herald suggested, "of all shades of political opinion," but—of as many shades as were to
be found among the gentlemen of that county.
Harold Transome had been energetically active in bringing about this meeting. Over and above
the stings of conscience and a determination to act up to the level of all recognised
honourableness, he had the powerful motive of desiring to do what would satisfy Esther. His
gradually heightened perception that she had a strong feeling towards Felix Holt had not made
him uneasy. Harold had
Thus, he was sufficiently at rest on this point not to be exercising any painful
self-conquest in acting as the zealous advocate of Felix Holt's cause with all persons worth
influencing; but it was by no direct intercourse between him and Sir Maximus that they found
themselves in co-operation, for the old baronet would not recognise Harold by more than the
faintest bow, and Harold was not a man to expose himself to a rebuff. Whatever he in his
inmost soul regarded as nothing more than a narrow prejudice, he could defy, not with airs of
importance, but with easy indifference. He could bear most things good-humouredly where he
felt that he had the superiority. The object of the meeting was discussed, and the memorial
agreed upon without any clashing. Mr Lingon was gone home, but it was expected that his
concurrence and signature would be given, as well as those of other gentlemen who were absent.
The business gradually reached that stage at which the concentration of interest ceases—when
the attention of all but a few who are more practically concerned drops off and disperses
itself in private chat, and there is no longer any particular reason why everybody stays
except that everybody is there. The room was rather a long one, and invited to a little
movement:
But in the mean time there were moving towards this room at the White Hart the footsteps of
a person whose presence had not been invited, and who, very far from being drawn thither by
the belief that he would be welcome, knew well that his entrance would, to one person at
least, be bitterly disagreeable. They were the footsteps of Mr Jermyn, whose appearance that
morning was not less comely and less carefully tended than usual, but who was suffering the
torment of a compressed rage, which, if not impotent to inflict pain on another, was impotent
to avert evil from himself. After his interview with Mrs Transome there had been for some
reasons a delay of positive procedures against him by Harold, of which delay Jermyn had twice
availed himself; first, to seek an interview with
Since Harold would not give Jermyn access to him, that vigorous attorney was resolved to
take it. He knew all about the meeting at the White Hart, and he was going thither with the
determination of accosting Harold. He thought he knew what he should say, and the tone in
which he should say it. It would be a vague intimation, carrying the effect of a threat, which
should compel Harold to give
When Jermyn entered the room at the White Hart he did not immediately see Harold. The door
was at the extremity of the room, and the view was obstructed by groups of gentlemen with
figures broadened by overcoats. His entrance excited no peculiar observation: several persons
had come in late. Only one or two, who knew Jermyn well, were not too much preoccupied to have
a glancing remembrance of what had been chatted about freely the day before—Harold's irritated
reply about his agent, from the witness-box. Receiving and giving a slight nod here and there,
Jermyn pushed his way, looking round keenly, until he saw Harold standing near the other end
of the room. The solicitor who had acted for Felix was just then speaking to him, but having
put a paper into his hand turned away; and Harold, standing isolated, though at no great
distance
Jermyn walked quickly and quietly close up to him. The two men were of the same height, and before Harold looked round Jermyn's voice was saying, close to his ear, not in a whisper, but in a hard, incisive, disrespectful and yet not loud tone.
"Mr Transome, I must speak to you in private."
The sound jarred through Harold with a sensation all the more insufferable because of the
revulsion from the satisfied, almost elated, state in which it had seized him. He started and
looked round into Jermyn's eyes. For an instant, which seemed long,
"You will repent else—for your mother's sake."
At that sound, quick as a leaping flame, Harold had struck Jermyn across the face with his whip. The brim of the hat had been a defence. Jermyn, a powerful man, had instantly thrust out his hand and clutched Harold hard by the clothes just below the throat, pushing him slightly so as to make him stagger.
By this time everybody's attention had been called to this end of the room, but both Jermyn and Harold were beyond being arrested by any consciousness of spectators.
"Let me go, you scoundrel!" said Harold, fiercely, "or I'll be the death of you."
"Do," said Jermyn, in a grating voice; " I am your father. "
In the thrust by which Harold had been made to stagger backward a little, the two men had
got very
The young strong man reeled with a sick faintness. But in the same moment Jermyn released his hold, and Harold felt himself supported by the arm. It was Sir Maximus Debarry who had taken hold of him.
"Leave the room, sir!" the Baronet said to Jermyn, in a voice of imperious scorn. "This is a meeting of gentlemen."
"Come, Harold," he said, in the old friendly voice, "come away with me."
'Tis law as stedfast as the throne of Zeus--- Our days are heritors of days gone by.
Æschylus : Agamemnon.
A little after five o'clock that day, Harold arrived at Transome Court. As he was winding along the broad road of the park, some parting gleams of the March sun pierced the trees here and there, and threw on the grass a long shadow of himself and the groom riding, and illuminated a window or two of the home he was approaching. But the bitterness in his mind made these sunny gleams almost as odious as an artificial smile. He wished he had never come back to this pale English sunshine.
In the course of his eighteen miles' drive, he had made up his mind what he would do. He
understood now, as he had never understood before, the neglected solitariness of his mother's
life, the allusions
As he stepped from the carriage and entered the hall, there were the voice and the trotting feet of little Harry as usual, and the rush to clasp his father's leg and make his joyful puppy-like noises. Harold just touched the boy's head, and then said to Dominic in a weary voice.
"Take the child away. Ask where my mother is."
Mrs Transome, Dominic said, was up-stairs. He had seen her go up after coming in from her walk with Miss Lyon, and she had not come down again.
Harold, throwing off his hat and greatcoat, went straight to his mother's dressing-room.
There was still a hope in his mind. He might be suffering simply from a lie. There is much
misery created in the world by mere mistake or slander, and he
Her voice said immediately, "Come in."
Mrs Transome was resting in her easy-chair, as she often did between an afternoon walk and dinner. She had taken off her walking-dress and wrapped herself in a soft dressing-gown. She was neither more nor less empty of joy than usual. But when she saw Harold, a dreadful certainty took possession of her. It was as if a long-expected letter, with a black seal, had come at last.
Harold's face told her what to fear the more decisively, because she had never before seen it express a man's deep agitation. Since the time of its pouting childhood and careless youth she had seen only the confident strength and good-humoured imperiousness of maturity. The last five hours had made a change as great as illness makes. Harold looked as if he had been wrestling, and had had some terrible blow. His eyes had that sunken look which, because it is unusual, seems to intensify expression.
He looked at his mother as he entered, and her eyes followed him as he moved, till he came and stood in front of her, she looking up at him, with white lips.
"Mother," he said, speaking with a distinct slow-ness, in strange contrast with his habitual manner, "tell me the truth, that I may know how to act."
He paused a moment, and then said, "Who is my father?"
She was mute: her lips only trembled. Harold stood silent for a few moments, as if waiting. Then he spoke again.
" He has said—said it before others—that he is my father."
He looked still at his mother. She seemed as if age were striking her with a sudden wand—as if her trembling face were getting haggard before him. She was mute. But her eyes had not fallen; they looked up in helpless misery at her son.
Her son turned away his eyes from her, and left her. In that moment Harold felt hard: he could show no pity. All the pride of his nature rebelled against his sonship.
That day Esther dined with old Mr Transome only. Harold sent word that he was
engaged and had already dined, and Mrs Transome that she was feeling ill. Esther was much
disappointed that any tidings Harold might have brought relating to Felix were deferred in
this way; and, her anxiety making her fearful, she was haunted by the thought that if there
had been anything cheering to tell, he would have found time to tell it without delay. Old Mr
Transome went as usual to his sofa in the library to sleep after dinner, and Esther had to
seat herself in the small drawing-room, in a well-lit solitude that was unusually dispiriting
to her. Pretty as this room was, she did not like it. Mrs Transome's fulllength portrait,
being the only picture there, urged
Just then Dominic came to say that Mr Harold sent his compliments, and begged that she would grant him an interview in his study. He disliked the small drawing-room: if she would oblige him by going to the study at once, he would join her very soon. Esther went, in some wonder and anxiety. What she most feared or hoped in these moments related to Felix Holt, and it did not occur to her that Harold could have anything special to say to her that evening on other subjects.
Certainly the study was pleasanter than the small drawing-room. A quiet light shone on
nothing but greenness and dark wood, and Dominic
He had recovered his self-possession since his interview with his mother: he had dressed, and was perfectly calm. He had been occupied with resolute thoughts, determining to do what he knew that perfect honour demanded, let it cost him what it would. It is true he had a tacit hope behind, that it might not cost him what he prized most highly: it is true he had a glimpse even of reward; but it was not less true that he would have acted as he did without that hope or glimpse. It was the most serious moment in Harold Transome's life: for the first time the iron had entered into his soul, and he felt the hard pressure of our common lot, the yoke of that mighty resistless destiny laid upon us by the acts of other men as well as our own.
When Esther looked at him she relented, and felt ashamed of her gratuitous impatience. She saw that his mind was in some way burdened. But then immediately sprang the dread that he had to say something hopeless about Felix.
They shook hands in silence, Esther looking at him with anxious surprise. He released her hand, but it did not occur to her to sit down, and they both continued standing on the hearth.
"Don't let me alarm you," said Harold, seeing that her face gathered solemnity from his. "I suppose I carry the marks of a past agitation. It relates entirely to troubles of my own—of my own family. No one beyond is involved in them."
Esther wondered still more, and felt still more relenting.
"But," said Harold, after a slight pause, and in a voice that was weighted with new feeling, "it involves a difference in my position with regard to you; and it is on this point that I wished to speak to you at once. When a man sees what ought to be done, he had better do it forthwith. He can't answer for himself to-morrow."
While Esther continued to look at him, with eyes widened by anxious expectation, Harold
turned a
"My feelings drag me another way. I need not tell you that your regard has become very important to me—that if our mutual position had been different— that, in short, you must have seen—if it had not seemed to be a matter of worldly interest, I should have told you plainly already that I loved you, and that my happiness could be complete only if you would consent to marry me."
Esther felt her heart beginning to beat painfully. Harold's voice and words moved her so much that her own task seemed more difficult than she had before imagined. It seemed as if the silence, unbroken by anything but the clicking of the fire, had been long, before Harold turned round towards her again and said.
"But to-day I have heard something that affects my own position. I cannot tell you what it
is. There is no need. It is not any culpability of my own. But I have not just the same
unsullied name and fame in the eyes of the world around us, as I believed that I had when I
allowed myself to entertain that wish about you. You are very young, entering on a fresh life
with bright prospects—you are worthy of everything that is best. I may be
Esther was keenly touched. With a paradoxical longing, such as often happens to us, she wished at that moment that she could have loved this man with her whole heart. The tears came into her eyes; she did not speak, but, with an angel's tenderness in her face, she laid her hand on his sleeve. Harold commanded himself strongly, and said,
"What is to be done now is, that we should proceed at once to the necessary legal measures for putting you in possession of your own, and arranging mutual claims. After that I shall probably leave England."
Esther was oppressed by an overpowering difficulty. Her sympathy with Harold at this moment was so strong, that it spread itself like a mist over all previous thought and resolve. It was impossible now to wound him afresh. With her hand still resting on his arm, she said timidly,
"Should you be urged—obliged to go—in any case?"
"Not in every case, perhaps," Harold said, with an evident movement of the blood towards his face; "at least not for long, not for always."
Esther was conscious of the gleam in his eyes. With terror at herself, she said, in difficult haste, "I can't speak. I can't say anything to-night. A great decision has to be made: I must wait—till to-morrow."
She was moving her hand from his arm, when Harold took it reverentially and raised it to his lips. She turned towards her chair, and as he released her hand she sank down on the seat with a sense that she needed that support. She did not want to go away from Harold yet. All the while there was something she needed to know, and yet she could not bring herself to ask it. She must resign herself to depend entirely on his recollection of anything beyond his own immediate trial. She sat helpless under contending sympathies, while Harold stood at some distance from her, feeling more harassed by weariness and uncertainty, now that he had fulfilled his resolve, and was no longer under the excitement of actually fulfilling it.
Esther's last words had forbidden his revival of the subject that was necessarily supreme
with him. But still she sat there, and his mind, busy as to the
"You will be glad to hear that we shall get a very powerfully signed memorial to the Home Secretary about young Holt. I think your speaking for him helped a great deal. You made all the men wish what you wished."
This was what Esther had been yearning to hear and dared not ask, as well from respect for Harold's absorption in his own sorrow, as from the shrinking that belongs to our dearest need. The intense relief of hearing what she longed to hear, affected her whole frame: her colour, her expression, changed as if she had been suddenly freed from some torturing constraint. But we interpret signs of emotion as we interpret other signs—often quite erroneously, unless we have the right key to what they signify. Harold did not gather that this was what Esther had waited for, or that the change in her indicated more than he had expected her to feel at this allusion to an unusual act which she had done under a strong impulse.
Besides, the introduction of a new subject after very momentous words have passed, and are
still dwelling on the mind, is necessarily a sort of concussion,
It seemed natural that soon afterward Esther put out her hand and said, "Good-night."
Harold went to his bedroom on the same level with his study, thinking of the morning with an uncertainty that dipped on the side of hope. This sweet woman, for whom he felt a passion newer than any he had expected to feel, might possibly make some hard things more bearable—if she loved him. If not—well, he had acted so that he could defy any one to say he was not a gentleman.
Esther went up-stairs to her bedroom, thinking that she should not sleep that night. She set her light on a high stand, and did not touch her dress. What she desired to see with undisturbed clearness were things not present: the rest she needed was the rest of a final choice. It was difficult. On each side there was renunciation.
She drew up her blinds, liking to see the grey sky, where there were some veiled glimmerings
of moonlight, and the lines of the for-ever running river, and the bending movement of the
black trees. She wanted the largeness of the world to help her thought. This young creature,
who trod lightly backward and forward, and leaned against the window-frame,
There was something which she now felt profoundly to be the best thing that life could give
her. But—if it was to be had at all—it was not to be had without paying a heavy price for it,
such as we must pay for all that is greatly good. A supreme love, a motive that gives a
sublime rhythm to a woman's life, and exalts habit into partnership with the soul's highest
needs, is not to be had where and how she wills: to know that high initiation, she must often
tread where it is hard to tread, and feel the chill air, and watch through darkness. It is not
true that love makes all things easy: it makes us choose what is difficult. Esther's previous
life had brought her into close acquaintance with many negations, and with many positive ills
too, not of the acutely painful, but of the distasteful sort. What if she chose the hardship,
and had to bear it alone, with no strength to lean upon—no other
And on the other side there was a lot where everything seemed easy—but for the fatal absence
of those feelings which, now she had once known them, it seemed nothing less than a fall and a
degradation to do without. With a terrible prescience which a multitude of impressions during
her stay at Transome Court had contributed to form, she saw
It was already near midnight, but with these thoughts succeeding and returning in her mind
like
The great question in life is the suffering we cause; and the utmost ingenuity of metaphysics cannot justify the man who has pierced the heart that loved him.—
Benjamin Constant.
When Denner had gone up to her mistress's room to dress her for dinner, she had
found her seated just as Harold had found her, only with eyelids dropping and trembling over
slowly-rolling tears— nay, with a face in which every sensitive feature, every muscle, seemed
to be quivering with a silent endurance of some agony.
Denner went and stood by the chair a minute without speaking, only laying her hand gently on Mrs Transome's. At last she said, beseechingly, "Pray speak, madam. What has happened?"
"The worst, Denner—the worst."
"You are ill. Let me undress you, and put you to bed."
"No, I am not ill. I am not going to die! I shall live—I shall live!"
"What may I do?"
"Go and say I shall not dine. Then you may come back, if you will."
The patient waiting-woman came back and sat by her mistress in motionless silence. Mrs Transome would not let her dress be touched, and waved away all proffers with a slight movement of her hand. Denner dared not even light a candle without being told. At last, when the evening was far gone, Mrs Transome said,
"Go down, Denner, and find out where Harold is, and come back and tell me."
"Shall I ask him to come to you, madam?"
"No; don't dare to do it, if you love me. Come back."
Denner brought word that Mr Harold was in his study, and that Miss Lyon was with him. He had not dined, but had sent later to ask Miss Lyon to go into his study.
"Light the candles and leave me."
"Mayn't I come again?"
"No. It may be that my son will come to me."
"Mayn't I sleep on the little bed in your bedroom?"
"No, good Denner; I am not ill. You can't help me."
"That's the hardest word of all, madam."
"The time will come—but not now. Kiss me. Now go."
The small quiet old woman obeyed, as she had always done. She shrank from seeming to claim an equal's share in her mistress's sorrow.
For two hours Mrs Transome's mind hung on what was hardly a hope—hardly more than the listening for a bare possibility. She began to create the sounds that her anguish craved to hear—began to imagine a footfall, and a hand upon the door. Then, checked by continual disappointment, she tried to rouse a truer consciousness by rising from her seat and walking to her window, where she saw streaks of light moving and disappearing on the grass, and the sound of bolts and closing doors. She hurried away and threw herself into her seat again, and buried her head in the deafening down of the cushions. There was no sound of comfort for her.
Then her heart cried out within her against the cruelty of this son. When he turned from her
in the first moment, he had not had time to feel anything but the blow that had fallen on
himself. But afterwards—was it possible that he should not be touched with a son's pity—was it
possible that he should
her . She started up with a new restlessness from this spirit
of resistance. She was not penitent. She had borne too hard a punishment. Always the edge of
calamity had fallen on her . Who had felt for her? She was desolate. God had no pity,
else her son would not have been so hard. What dreary future was there after this dreary past?
She, too, looked out into the dim night; but the black boundary of trees and the long line of
the river seemed only part of the loneliness and monotony of her life.
Suddenly she saw a light on the stone balustrades of the balcony that projected in front of
Esther's window, and the flash of a moving candle falling on a shrub below. Esther was still
awake and up. What had Harold told her—what had passed between them? Harold was fond of this
young creature, who had been always sweet and reverential to her. There was mercy in her young
heart; she might be a daughter who had no impulse to punish and to strike her whom fate had
stricken. On the dim loneliness before her she seemed to see Esther's gentle look; it was
possible still that the
Mrs Transome was walking towards the door when it opened. As Esther saw that image of restless misery, it blent itself by a rapid flash with all that Harold had said in the evening. She divined that the son's new trouble must be one with the mother's long sadness. But there was no waiting. In an instant Mrs Transome felt Esther's arm round her neck, and a voice saying softly,
"O why didn't you call me before?"
They turned hand in hand into the room, and sat down together on a sofa at the foot of the
bed. The disordered grey hair—the haggard face—the reddened eyelids under which the tears
seemed to be coming again with pain, pierced Esther to the heart. A passionate desire to
soothe this suffering
"God has some pity on me."
"Rest on my bed," said Esther. "You are so tired. I will cover you up warmly, and then you will sleep."
"No—tell me, dear—tell me what Harold said."
"That he has had some new trouble."
"He said nothing hard about me?"
"No—nothing. He did not mention you."
"I have been an unhappy woman, dear."
"I feared it," said Esther, pressing her gently.
"Men are selfish. They are selfish and cruel. What they care for is their own pleasure and their own pride."
"Not all," said Esther, on whom these words fell with a painful jar.
"All I have ever loved," said Mrs Transome. She paused a moment or two, and then said, "For more than twenty years I have not had an hour's happiness. Harold knows it, and yet he is hard to me."
"He will not be. To-morrow he will not be. I am sure he will be good," said Esther, pleadingly. "Remember—he said to me his trouble was new— he has not had time."
"It is too hard to bear, dear," Mrs Transome said, a new sob rising as she clung fast to Esther in return. "I am old, and expect so little now—a very little thing would seem great. Why should I be punished any more?"
Esther found it difficult to speak. The dimlysuggested tragedy of this woman's life, the dreary waste of years empty of sweet trust and affection, afflicted her even to horror. It seemed to have come as a last vision to urge her towards the life where the draughts of joy sprang from the unchanging fountains of reverence and devout love.
But all the more she longed to still the pain of this heart that beat against hers.
"Do let me go to your own room with you, and let me undress you, and let me tend upon you," she said, with a woman's gentle instinct. "It will be a very great thing to me. I shall seem to have a mother again. Do let me."
Mrs Transome yielded at last, and let Esther soothe her with a daughter's tendance. She was
undressed and went to bed; and at last dozed fitfully,
Mrs Transome was now in the sounder morning sleep which sometimes comes after a long night of misery. Esther beckoned Denner into the dressingroom, and said,
"It is late, Mrs Hickes. Do you think Mr Harold is out of his room?"
"Yes, a long while; he was out earlier than usual."
"Will you ask him to come up here? Say I begged you."
When Harold entered, Esther was leaning against the back of the empty chair where yesterday he had seen his mother sitting. He was in a state of wonder and suspense, and when Esther approached him and gave him her hand, he said, in a startled way,
"Good God! how ill you look! Have you been sitting up with my mother?"
"Yes. She is asleep now," said Esther. They
"Has she told you anything?" said Harold.
"No—only that she is wretched. O, I think I would bear a great deal of unhappiness to save her from having any more."
A painful thrill passed through Harold, and showed itself in his face with that pale rapid flash which can never be painted. Esther pressed her hands together, and said, timidly, though it was from an urgent prompting,
"There is nothing in all this place—nothing since ever I came here—I could care for so much as that you should sit down by her now, and that she should see you when she wakes."
Then with delicate instinct, she added, just laying her hand on his sleeve, "I know you would have come. I know you meant it. But she is asleep now. Go gently before she wakes."
Harold just laid his right hand for an instant on the back of Esther's as it rested on his sleeve, and then stepped softly to his mother's bedside.
An hour afterwards, when Harold had laid his mother's pillow afresh, and sat down again by her, she said,
"If that dear thing will marry you, Harold, it will make up to you for a great deal."
But before the day closed Harold knew that this was not to be. That young presence, which had flitted like a white new-winged dove over all the saddening relics and new finery of Transome Court, could not find its home there. Harold heard from Esther's lips that she loved some one else, and that she resigned all claim to the Transome estates.
She wished to go back to her father.
One April day, when the sun shone on the lingering rain-drops, Lyddy was gone out, and Esther chose to sit in the kitchen, in the wicker chair against the white table, between the fire and the window. The kettle was singing, and the clock was ticking steadily towards four o'clock.
She was not reading, but stitching; and as her fingers moved nimbly, something played about her parted lips like a ray. Suddenly she laid down her work, pressed her hands together on her knees, and bent forward a little. The next moment there came a loud rap at the door. She started up and opened it, but kept herself hidden behind it.
"Mr Lyon at home?" said Felix, in his firm tones.
"No, sir," said Esther from behind her screen; "but Miss Lyon is, if you'll please to walk in."
"Esther!" exclaimed Felix, amazed.
They held each other by both hands, and looked into each other's faces with delight.
"You are out of prison?"
"Yes, till I do something bad again. But you? —how is it all?"
"Oh, it is," said Esther, smiling brightly as she moved towards the wicker chair, and seated herself again, "that everything is as usual: my father is gone to see the sick; Lyddy is gone in deep despondency to buy the grocery; and I am sitting here, with some vanity in me, needing to be scolded."
Felix had seated himself on a chair that happened to be near her, at the corner of the table. He looked at her still with questioning eyes—he grave, she mischievously smiling.
"Are you come back to live here then?"
"Yes."
"You are not going to be married to Harold Transome, or to be rich?"
"No." Something made Esther take up her work again, and begin to stitch. The smiles were dying into a tremor.
"Why?" said Felix, in rather a low tone, leaning his elbow on the table, and resting his head on his hand while he looked at her.
"I did not wish to marry him, or to be rich."
"You have given it all up?" said Felix, leaning forward a little, and speaking in a still lower tone.
Esther did not speak. They heard the kettle singing and the clock loudly ticking. There was no knowing how it was: Esther's work fell, their eyes met; and the next instant their arms were round each other's necks, and once more they kissed each other.
When their hands fell again, their eyes were bright with tears. Felix laid his hand on her shoulder.
"Could you share the life of a poor man, then, Esther?"
"If I thought well enough of him," she said, the smile coming again, with the pretty saucy movement of her head.
"Have you considered well what it would be? —that it will be a very bare and simple life?"
"Yes—without atta of roses."
Felix suddenly removed his hand from her shoulder, rose from his chair, and walked a step or
"And the people I shall live among, Esther? They have not just the same follies and vices as the rich, but they have their own forms of folly and vice; and they have not what are called the refinements of the rich to make their faults more bearable. I don't say more bearable to me—I'm not fond of those refinements; but you are."
Felix paused an instant, and then added,
"It is very serious, Esther."
"I know it is serious," said Esther, looking up at him. "Since I have been at Transome Court I have seen many things very seriously. If I had not, I should not have left what I did leave. I made a deliberate choice."
Felix stood a moment or two, dwelling on her with a face where the gravity gathered tenderness.
"And these curls?" he said, with a sort of relenting, seating himself again, and putting his hand on them.
"They cost nothing—they are natural."
"You are such a delicate creature."
"I am very healthy. Poor women, I think, are
"How?" said Felix, with an anxious start. "What do you mean?"
"I think even of two pounds a-week: one needn't live up to the splendour of all that, you know; we might live as simply as you liked: there would be money to spare, and you could do wonders, and be obliged to work too, only not if sickness came. And then I think of a little income for your mother, enough for her to live as she has been used to live; and a little income for my father, to save him from being dependent when he is no longer able to preach."
Esther said all this in a playful tone, but she ended, with a grave look of appealing submission,
"I mean—if you approve. I wish to do what you think it will be right to do."
Felix put his hand on her shoulder again and reflected a little while, looking on the hearth: then he said, lifting up his eyes, with a smile at her,
"Why, I shall be able to set up a great library, and lend the books to be dog's-eared and marked with bread-crumbs."
Esther said, laughing, "You think you are to do everything. You don't know how clever I am. I mean to go on teaching a great many things."
"Teaching me?"
"Oh yes," she said, with a little toss; "I shall improve your French accent."
"You won't want me to wear a stock?" said Felix, with a defiant shake of the head.
"No; and you will not attribute stupid thoughts to me before I've uttered them."
They laughed merrily, each holding the other's arms, like girl and boy. There was the ineffable sense of youth in common.
Then Felix leaned forward, that their lips might meet again, and after that his eyes roved tenderly over her face and curls.
"I'm a rough, severe fellow, Esther. Shall you never repent?—never be inwardly reproaching me that I was not a man who could have shared your wealth? Are you quite sure?"
"Quite sure!" said Esther, shaking her head; "for then I should have honoured you less. I am weak—my husband must be greater and nobler than I am."
"O, I tell you what, though!" said Felix, starting
"I call that retribution," said Esther, with a laugh as sweet as the morning thrush.
The very next May, Felix and Esther were married. Every one in those days was married at the parish church; but Mr Lyon was not satisfied without an additional private solemnity, "wherein there was no bondage to questionable forms, so that he might have a more enlarged utterance of joy and supplication."
It was a very simple wedding; but no wedding, even the gayest, ever raised so much interest and debate in Treby Magna. Even very great people, like Sir Maximus and his family, went to the church to look at this bride, who had renounced wealth, and chosen to be the wife of a man who said he would always be poor.
Some few shook their heads; could not quite believe it; and thought there was "more behind."
Mrs Holt, that day, said she felt herself to be receiving "some reward," implying that justice certainly had much more in reserve. Little Job Tudge had an entirely new suit, of which he fingered every separate brass button in a way that threatened an arithmetical mania; and Mrs Holt had out her best tea-trays and put down her carpet again, with the satisfaction of thinking that there would no more be boys coming in all weathers with dirty shoes.
For Felix and Esther did not take up their abode in Treby Magna; and after a while Mr Lyon left the town too, and joined them where they dwelt. On his resignation the church in Malthouse Yard chose a successor to him whose doctrine was rather higher.
There were other departures from Treby. Mr Jermyn's establishment was broken up, and he was
understood to have gone to reside at a great distance: some said "abroad," that large home of
As for Mr Christian, he had no more profitable secrets at his disposal. But he got his thousand pounds from Harold Transome.
The Transome family were absent for some time from Transome Court. The place was kept up and shown to visitors, but not by Denner, who was away with her mistress. After a while the family came back, and Mrs Transome died there. Sir Maximus was at her funeral, and throughout that neighbourhood there was silence about the past.
Uncle Lingon continued to watch over the shooting on the Manor and the covers until that event occurred which he had predicted as a part of Church reform sure to come. Little Treby had a new rector, but others were sorry besides the old pointers.
As to all that wide parish of Treby Magna, it has since prospered as the rest of England has
prospered.
As to the town in which Felix Holt now resides, I will keep that a secret, lest he should be troubled by any visitor having the insufferable motive of curiosity.
I will only say that Esther has never repented. Felix, however, grumbles a little that she has made his life too easy, and that, if it were not for much walking, he should be a sleek dog.
There is a young Felix, who has a great deal more science than his father, but not much more money.