CHAPTER 3
The Bishop of Barchester
Bold at once repaired to the hospital. The
day was now far advanced, but he knew that Mr. Harding dined in the
summer at four, that Eleanor was accustomed to drive in the
evening, and that he might therefore probably find Mr. Harding
alone. It was between seven and eight when he reached the slight
iron gate leading into the precentor’s garden, and though, as Mr.
Chadwick observed, the day had been cold for June, the evening was
mild, and soft, and sweet. The little gate was open. As he raised
the latch he heard the notes of Mr. Harding’s violoncello from the
far end of the garden, and, advancing before the house and across
the lawn, he found him playing—and not without an audience. The
musician was seated in a garden-chair just within the summer-house,
so as to allow the violoncello which he held between his knees to
rest upon the dry stone flooring; before him stood a rough music
desk, on which was open a page of that dear sacred book, that
much-laboured and much-loved volume of church music, which had cost
so many guineas; and around sat, and lay, and stood, and leaned,
ten of the twelve old men who dwelt with him beneath old John
Hiram’s roof. The two reformers were not there. I will not say that
in their hearts they were conscious of any wrong done or to be done
to their mild warden, but latterly they had kept aloof from him,
and his music was no longer to their taste.
It was amusing to see the positions, and
eager listening faces of these well-to-do old men. I will not say
that they all appreciated the music which they heard, but they were
intent on appearing to do so; pleased at being where they were,
they were determined, as far as in them lay, to give pleasure in
return; and they were not unsuccessful. It gladdened the
precentor’s heart to think that the old bedesmen whom he loved so
well admired the strains which were to him so full of almost
ecstatic joy; and he used to boast that such was the air of the
hospital, as to make it a precinct specially fit for the worship of
St. Cecilia.
Immediately before him, on the extreme corner
of the bench which ran round the summer-house, sat one old man,
with his handkerchief smoothly lain upon his knees, who did enjoy
the moment, or acted enjoyment well. He was one on whose large
frame many years, for he was over eighty, had made small havoc—he
was still an upright, burly, handsome figure, with an open,
ponderous brow, round which clung a few, though very few, thin grey
locks. The coarse black gown of the hospital, the breeches, and
buckled shoes became him well; and as he sat with his hands folded
on his staff, and his chin resting on his hands, he was such a
listener as most musicians would be glad to welcome.
This man was certainly the pride of the
hospital. It had always been the custom that one should be selected
as being to some extent in authority over the others; and though
Mr. Bunce, for such was his name, and so he was always designated
by his inferior brethren, had no greater emoluments than they, he
had assumed, and well knew how to maintain, the dignity of his
elevation. The precentor delighted to call him his sub-warden, and
was not ashamed, occasionally, when no other guest was there, to
bid him sit down by the same parlour fire, and drink the full glass
of port which was placed near him. Bunce never went without the
second glass, but no entreaty ever made him take a third.
“Well, well, Mr. Harding; you’re too good,
much too good,” he’d always say, as the second glass was filled;
but when that was drunk, and the half-hour over, Bunce stood erect,
and with a benediction which his patron valued, retired to his own
abode. He knew the world too well to risk the comfort of such
halcyon moments, by prolonging them till they were
disagreeable.
Mr. Bunce, as may be imagined, was most
strongly opposed to innovation. Not even Dr. Grantly had a more
holy horror of those who would interfere in the affairs of the
hospital; he was every inch a churchman, and though he was not very
fond of Dr. Grantly personally, that arose from there not being
room in the hospital for two people so much alike as the doctor and
himself, rather than from any dissimilarity in feeling. Mr. Bunce
was inclined to think that the warden and himself could manage the
hospital without further assistance; and that, though the bishop
was the constitutional visitor, and as such entitled to special
reverence from all connected with John Hiram’s will, John Hiram
never intended that his affairs should be interfered with by an
archdeacon.
At the present moment, however, these cares
were off his mind, and he was looking at his warden, as though he
thought the music heavenly, and the musician hardly less so.
As Bold walked silently over the lawn, Mr.
Harding did not at first perceive him, and continued to draw his
bow slowly across the plaintive wires; but he soon found from his
audience that some stranger was there, and looking up, began to
welcome his young friend with frank hospitality.
“Pray, Mr. Harding—pray don’t let me disturb
you,” said Bold; “you know how fond I am of sacred music.”
“Oh! it’s nothing,” said the precentor,
shutting up the book and then opening it again as he saw the
delightfully imploring look of his old friend Bunce. Oh, Bunce,
Bunce, Bunce, I fear that after all thou art but a flatterer.
“Well, I’ll just finish it then; it’s a favourite little bit of
Bishop’s; and then, Mr. Bold, we’ll have a stroll and a chat till
Eleanor comes in and gives us tea.” And so Bold sat down on the
soft turf to listen, or rather to think how, after such sweet
harmony, he might best introduce a theme of so much discord, to
disturb the peace of him who was so ready to welcome him
kindly.
Bold thought that the performance was soon
over, for he felt that he had a somewhat difficult task, and he
almost regretted the final leave-taking of the last of the old men,
slow as they were in going through their adieux.
Bold’s heart was in his mouth, as the
precentor made some ordinary but kind remark as to the friendliness
of the visit.
“One evening call,” said he, “is worth ten in
the morning. It’s all formality in the morning; real social talk
never begins till after dinner. That’s why I dine early, so as to
get as much as I can of it.”
“Quite true, Mr. Harding,” said the other;
“but I fear I’ve reversed the order of things, and I owe you much
apology for troubling you on business at such an hour; but it is on
business that I have called just now.”
Mr. Harding looked blank and annoyed; there
was something in the tone of the young man’s voice which told him
that the interview was intended to be disagreeable, and he shrank
back at finding his kindly greeting so repulsed.
“I wish to speak to you about the hospital,”
continued Bold.
“Well, well, anything I can tell you I shall
be most happy—”
“It’s about the accounts.”
“Then, my dear fellow, I can tell you
nothing, for I’m as ignorant as a child. All I know is, that they
pay me £800 a year. Go to Chadwick, he knows all about the
accounts; and now tell me, will poor Mary Jones ever get the use of
her limb again?”
“Well, I think she will, if she’s careful;
but, Mr. Harding, I hope you won’t object to discuss with me what I
have to say about the hospital.”
Mr. Harding gave a deep, long-drawn sigh. He
did object, very strongly object, to discuss any such subject with
John Bold; but he had not the business tact of Mr. Chadwick, and
did not know how to relieve himself from the coming evil; he sighed
sadly, but made no answer.
“I have the greatest regard for you, Mr.
Harding,” continued Bold; “the truest respect, the most
sincere—”
“Thank ye, thank ye, Mr. Bold,”
interjaculated the precentor somewhat impatiently; “I’m much
obliged, but never mind that; I’m as likely to be in the wrong as
another man—quite as likely.”
“But, Mr. Harding, I must express what I
feel, lest you should think there is personal enmity in what I’m
going to do.”
“Personal enmity! Going to do! Why, you’re
not going to cut my throat, nor put me into the Ecclesiastical
Court—”
Bold tried to laugh, but he couldn’t. He was
quite in earnest, and determined in his course, and couldn’t make a
joke of it. He walked on awhile in silence before he recommenced
his attack, during which Mr. Harding, who had still the bow in his
hand, played rapidly on an imaginary violoncello. “I fear there is
reason to think that John Hiram’s will is not carried out to the
letter, Mr. Harding,” said the young man at last; “and I have been
asked to see into it.”
“Very well, I’ve no objection on earth; and
now we need not say another word about it.”
“Only one word more, Mr. Harding. Chadwick
has referred me to Cox and Cummins, and I think it my duty to apply
to them for some statement about the hospital. In what I do I may
appear to be interfering with you, and I hope you will forgive me
for doing so.”
“Mr. Bold,” said the other, stopping, and
speaking with some solemnity, “if you act justly, say nothing in
this matter but the truth, and use no unfair weapons in carrying
out your purposes, I shall have nothing to forgive. I presume you
think I am not entitled to the income I receive from the hospital,
and that others are entitled to it. Whatever some may do, I shall
never attribute to you base motives because you hold an opinion
opposed to my own and adverse to my interests: pray do what you
consider to be your duty; I can give you no assistance, neither
will I offer you any obstacle. Let me, however, suggest to you,
that you can in no wise forward your views nor I mine, by any
discussion between us. Here comes Eleanor and the ponies, and we’ll
go in to tea.”
Bold, however, felt that he could not sit
down at ease with Mr. Harding and his daughter after what had
passed, and therefore excused himself with much awkward apology;
and merely raising his hat and bowing as he passed Eleanor and the
pony-chair, left her in disappointed amazement at his
departure.
Mr. Harding’s demeanour certainly impressed
Bold with a full conviction that the warden felt that he stood on
strong grounds, and almost made him think that he was about to
interfere without due warrant in the private affairs of a just and
honourable man; but Mr. Harding himself was anything but satisfied
with his own view of the case.
In the first place, he wished for Eleanor’s
sake to think well of Bold and to like him, and yet he could not
but feel disgusted at the arrogance of his conduct. What right had
he to say that John Hiram’s will was not fairly carried out? But
then the question would arise within his heart: Was that will
fairly acted on? Did John Hiram mean that the warden of his
hospital should receive considerably more out of the legacy than
all the twelve old men together for whose behoof the hospital was
built? Could it be possible that John Bold was right, and that the
reverend warden of the hospital had been for the last ten years and
more the unjust recipient of an income legally and equitably
belonging to others? What if it should be proved before the light
of day that he, whose life had been so happy, so quiet, so
respected, had absorbed £8,000, to which he had no title, and which
he could never repay? I do not say that he feared that such was
really the case; but the first shade of doubt now fell across his
mind, and from this evening, for many a long, long day, our good,
kind loving warden was neither happy nor at ease.
Thoughts of this kind, these first moments of
much misery, oppressed Mr. Harding as he sat sipping his tea,
absent and ill at ease. Poor Eleanor felt that all was not right,
but her ideas as to the cause of the evening’s discomfort did not
go beyond her lover, and his sudden and uncivil departure. She
thought there must have been some quarrel between Bold and her
father, and she was half angry with both, though she did not
attempt to explain to herself why she was so.
Mr. Harding thought long and deeply over
these things, both before he went to bed and after it, as he lay
awake, questioning within himself the validity of his claim to the
income which he enjoyed. It seemed clear at any rate that, however
unfortunate he might be at having been placed in such a position,
no one could say that he ought either to have refused the
appointment first, or to have rejected the income afterwards. All
the world—meaning the ecclesiastical world as confined to the
English church—knew that the wardenship of the Barchester Hospital
was a snug sinecure, but no one had ever been blamed for accepting
it. To how much blame, however, would he have been open had he
rejected it! How mad would he have been thought had he declared,
when the situation was vacant and offered to him, that he had
scruples as to receiving £800 a year from John Hiram’s property,
and that he had rather some stranger should possess it! How would
Dr. Grantly have shaken his wise head, and have consulted with his
friends in the close as to some decent retreat for the coming
insanity of the poor minor canon! If he was right in accepting the
place, it was clear to him also that he would be wrong in rejecting
any part of the income attached to it. The patronage was a valuable
appanage of the bishopric; and surely it would not be his duty to
lessen the value of that preferment which had been bestowed on
himself; surely he was bound to stand by his order.
But somehow these arguments, though they
seemed logical, were not satisfactory. Was John Hiram’s will fairly
carried out? that was the true question: and if not, was it not his
especial duty to see that this was done—his especial duty, whatever
injury it might do to his order—however ill such duty might be
received by his patron and his friends? At the idea of his friends,
his mind turned unhappily to his son-in-law. He knew well how
strongly he would be supported by Dr. Grantly, if he could bring
himself to put his case into the archdeacon’s hands and to allow
him to fight the battle; but he knew also that he would find no
sympathy there for his doubts, no friendly feeling, no inward
comfort. Dr. Grantly would be ready enough to take up his cudgel
against all comers on behalf of the church militant, but he would
do so on the distasteful ground of the Church’s infallibility. Such
a contest would give no comfort to Mr. Harding’s doubts. He was not
so anxious to prove himself right, as to be so.
I have said before that Dr. Grantly was the
working man of the diocese, and that his father the bishop was
somewhat inclined to an idle life. So it was; but the bishop,
though he had never been an active man, was one whose qualities had
rendered him dear to all who knew him. He was the very opposite to
his son; he was a bland and a kind old man, opposed by every
feeling to authoritative demonstrations and episcopal ostentation.
It was perhaps well for him, in his situation, that his son had
early in life been able to do that which he could not well do when
he was younger, and which he could not have done at all now that he
was over seventy. The bishop knew how to entertain the clergy of
his diocese, to talk easy small-talk with the rectors’ wives, and
put curates at their ease; but it required the strong hand of the
archdeacon to deal with such as were refractory either in their
doctrines or their lives.
The bishop and Mr. Harding loved each other
warmly. They had grown old together, and had together spent many,
many years in clerical pursuits and clerical conversation. When one
of them was a bishop and the other only a minor canon they were
even then much together; but since their children had married, and
Mr. Harding had become warden and precentor, they were all in all
to each other. I will not say that they managed the diocese between
them, but they spent much time in discussing the man who did, and
in forming little plans to mitigate his wrath against church
delinquents, and soften his aspirations for church dominion.
Mr. Harding determined to open his mind, and
confess his doubts to his old friend; and to him he went on the
morning after John Bold’s uncourteous visit.
Up to this period no rumour of these cruel
proceedings against the hospital had reached the bishop’s ears. He
had doubtless heard that men existed who questioned his right to
present to a sinecure of £800 a year, as he had heard from time to
time of some special immorality or disgraceful disturbance in the
usually decent and quiet city of Barchester: but all he did, and
all he was called on to do, on such occasions, was to shake his
head, and to beg his son, the great dictator, to see that no harm
happened to the church.
It was a long story that Mr. Harding had to
tell before he made the bishop comprehend his own view of the case;
but we need not follow him through the tale. At first the bishop
counselled but one step, recommended but one remedy, had but one
medicine in his whole pharmacopoeia strong enough to touch so grave
a disorder—he prescribed the archdeacon. “Refer him to the
archdeacon,” he repeated, as Mr. Harding spoke of Bold and his
visit. “The archdeacon will set you quite right about that,” he
kindly said, when his friend spoke with hesitation of the justness
of his cause. “No man has got up all that so well as the
archdeacon;” but the dose, though large, failed to quiet the
patient; indeed it almost produced nausea.
“But, bishop,” said he, “did you ever read
John Hiram’s will?”
The bishop thought probably he had,
thirty-five years ago, when first instituted to his see, but could
not state positively: however, he very well knew that he had the
absolute right to present to the wardenship, and that the income of
the warden had been regularly settled.
“But, bishop, the question is, who has the
power to settle it? If, as this young man says, the will provides
that the proceeds of the property are to be divided into shares,
who has the power to alter these provisions?” The bishop had an
indistinct idea that they altered themselves by the lapse of years;
that a kind of ecclesiastical statute of limitation barred the
rights of the twelve bedesmen to any increase of income arising
from the increased value of property. He said something about
tradition; more of the many learned men who by their practice had
confirmed the present arrangement; then went at some length into
the propriety of maintaining the due difference in rank and income
between a beneficed clergyman and certain poor old men who were
dependent on charity; and concluded his argument by another
reference to the archdeacon.
The precentor sat thoughtfully gazing at the
fire, and listening to the good-natured reasoning of his friend.
What the bishop said had a sort of comfort in it, but it was not a
sustaining comfort. It made Mr. Harding feel that many
others—indeed, all others of his own order—would think him right;
but it failed to prove to him that he truly was so.
“Bishop,” said he, at last, after both had
sat silent for a while, “I should deceive you and myself too, if I
did not tell you that I am very unhappy about this. Suppose that I
cannot bring myself to agree with Dr. Grantly!—that I find, after
inquiry, that the young man is right, and that I am wrong—what
then?”
The two old men were sitting near each
other—so near that the bishop was able to lay his hand upon the
other’s knee, and he did so with a gentle pressure. Mr. Harding
well knew what that pressure meant. The bishop had no further
argument to adduce; he could not fight for the cause as his son
would do; he could not prove all the precentor’s doubts to be
groundless; but he could sympathise with his friend, and he did so;
and Mr. Harding felt that he had received that for which he came.
There was another period of silence, after which the bishop asked,
with a degree of irritable energy, very unusual with him, whether
this “pestilent intruder” (meaning John Bold) had any friends in
Barchester.
Mr. Harding had fully made up his mind to
tell the bishop everything; to speak of his daughter’s love, as
well as his own troubles; to talk of John Bold in his double
capacity of future son-in-law and present enemy; and though he felt
it to be sufficiently disagreeable, now was his time to do
it.
“He is very intimate at my own house,
bishop.” The bishop stared. He was not so far gone in orthodoxy and
church militancy as his son, but still he could not bring himself
to understand how so declared an enemy of the establishment could
be admitted on terms of intimacy into the house, not only of so
firm a pillar as Mr. Harding, but one so much injured as the warden
of the hospital.
“Indeed, I like Mr. Bold much, personally,”
continued the disinterested victim; “and to tell you the
‘truth,’”—he hesitated as he brought out the dreadful tidings—”I
have sometimes thought it not improbable that he would be my second
son-in-law.” The bishop did not whistle: we believe that they lose
the power of doing so on being consecrated; and that in these days
one might as easily meet a corrupt judge as a whistling bishop; but
he looked as though he would have done so, but for his apron.
What a brother-in-law for the archdeacon!
what an alliance for Barchester close! what a connection for even
the episcopal palace! The bishop, in his simple mind, felt no doubt
that John Bold, had he so much power, would shut up all cathedrals,
and probably all parish churches; distribute all tithes among
Methodists, Baptists, and other savage tribes; utterly annihilate
the sacred bench, and make shovel hats and lawn sleeves as illegal
as cowls, sandals, and sackcloth! Here was a nice man to be
initiated into the comfortable arcana of ecclesiastical snuggeries;
one who doubted the integrity of parsons, and probably disbelieved
the Trinity!
Mr. Harding saw what an effect his
communication had made, and almost repented the openness of his
disclosure; he, however, did what he could to moderate the grief of
his friend and patron. “I did not say that there is any engagement
between them. Had there been, Eleanor would have told me; I know
her well enough to be assured that she would have done so; but I
see that they are fond of each other; and as a man and a father, I
have had no objection to urge against their intimacy.”
“But, Harding,” said the bishop, “how are you
to oppose him, if he is your son-in-law?”
“I don’t mean to oppose him; it is he who
opposes me; if anything is to be done in defence, I suppose
Chadwick will do it. I suppose—”
“Oh, the archdeacon will see to that: were
the young man twice his brother-in-law, the archdeacon will never
be deterred from doing what he feels to be right.”
Mr. Harding reminded the bishop that the
archdeacon and the reformer were not yet brothers, and very
probably never would be; exacted from him a promise that Eleanor’s
name should not be mentioned in any discussion between the father
bishop and son archdeacon respecting the hospital; and then took
his departure, leaving his poor old friend bewildered, amazed, and
confounded.