CHAPTER 9
The Conference
On the following morning the archdeacon was
with his father betimes, and a note was sent down to the warden
begging his attendance at the palace. Dr. Grantly, as he cogitated
on the matter, leaning back in his brougham as he journeyed into
Barchester, felt that it would be difficult to communicate his own
satisfaction either to his father or his father-in-law. He wanted
success on his own side and discomfiture on that of his enemies.
The bishop wanted peace on the subject; a settled peace if
possible, but peace at any rate till the short remainder of his own
days had spun itself out. Mr. Harding required, not only success
and peace, but he also demanded that he might stand justified
before the world.
The bishop, however, was comparatively easy
to deal with; and before the arrival of the other, the dutiful son
had persuaded his father that all was going on well, and then the
warden arrived.
It was Mr. Harding’s wont, whenever he spent
a morning at the palace, to seat himself immediately at the
bishop’s elbow, the bishop occupying a huge armchair fitted up with
candle-sticks, a reading table, a drawer, and other paraphernalia,
the position of which chair was never moved, summer or winter; and
when, as was usual, the archdeacon was there also, he confronted
the two elders, who thus were enabled to fight the battle against
him together; and together submit to defeat, for such was their
constant fate.
Our warden now took his accustomed place,
having greeted his son-in-law as he entered, and then
affectionately inquired after his friend’s health. There was a
gentleness about the bishop to which the soft womanly affection of
Mr. Harding particularly endeared itself, and it was quaint to see
how the two mild old priests pressed each other’s hand, and smiled
and made little signs of love.
“Sir Abraham’s opinion has come at last,”
began the archdeacon. Mr. Harding had heard so much, and was most
anxious to know the result.
“It is quite favourable,” said the bishop,
pressing his friend’s arm. “I am so glad.”
Mr. Harding looked at the mighty bearer of
the important news for confirmation of these glad tidings.
“Yes,” said the archdeacon; “Sir Abraham has
given most minute attention to the case; indeed, I knew he
would—most minute attention; and his opinion is—and as to his
opinion on such a subject being correct, no one who knows Sir
Abraham’s character can doubt—his opinion is, that they hav’n’t got
a leg to stand on.”
“But as how, archdeacon?”
“Why, in the first place:—but you’re no
lawyer, warden, and I doubt you won’t understand it; the gist of
the matter is this:—under Hiram’s will two paid guardians have been
selected for the hospital; the law will say two paid servants, and
you and I won’t quarrel with the name.”
“At any rate I will not if I am one of the
servants,” said Mr. Harding. “A rose, you know—”
“Yes, yes,” said the archdeacon, impatient of
poetry at such a time. “Well, two paid servants, we’ll say; one to
look after the men, and the other to look after the money. You and
Chadwick are these two servants, and whether either of you be paid
too much, or too little, more or less in fact than the founder
willed, it’s as clear as daylight that no one can fall foul of
either of you for receiving an allotted stipend.”
“That does seem clear,” said the bishop, who
had winced visibly at the words servants and stipend, which,
however, appeared to have caused no uneasiness to the
archdeacon.
“Quite clear,” said he, “and very
satisfactory. In point of fact, it being necessary to select such
servants for the use of the hospital, the pay to be given to them
must depend on the rate of pay for such services, according to
their market value at the period in question; and those who manage
the hospital must be the only judges of this.”
“And who does manage the hospital?” asked the
warden.
“Oh, let them find that out; that’s another
question: the action is brought against you and Chadwick; that’s
your defence, and a perfect and full defence it is. Now that I
think very satisfactory.”
“Well,” said the bishop, looking inquiringly
up into his friend’s face, who sat silent awhile, and apparently
not so well satisfied.
“And conclusive,” continued the archdeacon;
“if they press it to a jury, which they won’t do, no twelve men in
England will take five minutes to decide against them.”
“But according to that” said Mr. Harding, “I
might as well have sixteen hundred a year as eight, if the managers
choose to allot it to me; and as I am one of the managers, if not
the chief manager, myself, that can hardly be a just
arrangement.”
“Oh, well; all that’s nothing to the
question. The question is, whether this intruding fellow, and a lot
of cheating attorneys and pestilent dissenters, are to interfere
with an arrangement which everyone knows is essentially just and
serviceable to the Church. Pray don’t let us be splitting hairs,
and that amongst ourselves, or there’ll never be an end of the
cause or the cost.”
Mr. Harding again sat silent for a while,
during which the bishop once and again pressed his arm, and looked
in his face to see if he could catch a gleam of a contented and
eased mind; but there was no such gleam, and the poor warden
continued playing sad dirges on invisible stringed instruments in
all manner of positions; he was ruminating in his mind on this
opinion of Sir Abraham, looking to it wearily and earnestly for
satisfaction, but finding none. At last he said, “Did you see the
opinion, archdeacon?”
The archdeacon said he had not—that was to
say, he had—that was, he had not seen the opinion itself; he had
seen what had been called a copy, but he could not say whether of a
whole or part; nor could he say that what he had seen were the
ipsissima verba of the great man
himself; but what he had seen contained exactly the decision which
he had announced, and which he again declared to be to his mind
extremely satisfactory.
“I should like to see the opinion,” said the
warden; “that is, a copy of it.”
“Well, I suppose you can if you make a point
of it; but I don’t see the use myself; of course it is essential
that the purport of it should not be known, and it is therefore
unadvisable to multiply copies.”
“Why should it not be known?” asked the
warden.
“What a question for a man to ask!” said the
archdeacon, throwing up his hands in token of his surprise; “but it
is like you:—a child is not more innocent than you are in matters
of business. Can’t you see that if we tell them that no action will
lie against you, but that one may possibly lie against some other
person or persons, that we shall be putting weapons into their
hands, and be teaching them how to cut our own throats?”
The warden again sat silent, and the bishop
again looked at him wistfully: “The only thing we have now to do,”
continued the archdeacon, “is to remain quiet, hold our peace, and
let them play their own game as they please.”
“We are not to make known then,” said the
warden, “that we have consulted the attorney-general, and that we
are advised by him that the founder’s will is fully and fairly
carried out.”
“God bless my soul!” said the archdeacon,
“how odd it is that you will not see that all we are to do is to do
nothing: why should we say anything about the founder’s will? We
are in possession; and we know that they are not in a position to
put us out; surely that is enough for the present.”
Mr. Harding rose from his seat and paced
thoughtfully up and down the library, the bishop the while watching
him painfully at every turn, and the archdeacon continuing to pour
forth his convictions that the affair was in a state to satisfy any
prudent mind.
“And The
Jupiter?” said the warden, stopping suddenly.
“Oh! The
Jupiter,” answered the other. “The
Jupiter can break no bones. You must bear with that; there
is much, of course, which it is our bounden duty to bear; it cannot
be all roses for us here,” and the archdeacon looked exceedingly
moral; “besides, the matter is too trivial, of too little general
interest to be mentioned again in The
Jupiter, unless we stir up the subject.” And the archdeacon
again looked exceedingly knowing and worldly wise.
The warden continued his walk; the hard and
stinging words of that newspaper article, each one of which had
thrust a thorn as it were into his inmost soul, were fresh in his
memory; he had read it more than once, word by word, and what was
worse, he fancied it was as well known to everyone as to himself.
Was he to be looked on as the unjust griping priest he had been
there described? Was he to be pointed at as the consumer of the
bread of the poor, and to be allowed no means of refuting such
charges, of clearing his begrimed name, of standing innocent in the
world, as hitherto he had stood? Was he to bear all this, to
receive as usual his now hated income, and be known as one of those
greedy priests who by their rapacity have brought disgrace on their
church? And why? Why should he bear all this? Why should he die,
for he felt that he could not live, under such a weight of obloquy?
As he paced up and down the room he resolved in his misery and
enthusiasm that he could with pleasure, if he were allowed, give up
his place, abandon his pleasant home, leave the hospital, and live
poorly, happily, and with an unsullied name, on the small remainder
of his means.
He was a man somewhat shy of speaking of
himself, even before those who knew him best, and whom he loved the
most; but at last it burst forth from him, and with a somewhat
jerking eloquence he declared that he could not, would not, bear
this misery any longer.
“If it can be proved,” said he at last, “that
I have a just and honest right to this, as God well knows I always
deemed I had; if this salary or stipend be really my due, I am not
less anxious than another to retain it. I have the well-being of my
child to look to. I am too old to miss without some pain the
comforts to which I have been used; and I am, as others are,
anxious to prove to the world that I have been right, and to uphold
the place I have held; but I cannot do it at such a cost as this. I
cannot bear this. Could you tell me to do so?” And he appealed,
almost in tears, to the bishop, who had left his chair, and was now
leaning on the warden’s arm as he stood on the further side of the
table facing the archdeacon. “Could you tell me to sit there at
ease, indifferent, and satisfied, while such things as these are
said loudly of me in the world?”
The bishop could feel for him and sympathise
with him, but he could not advise him; he could only say, “No, no,
you shall be asked to do nothing that is painful; you shall do just
what your heart tells you to be right; you shall do whatever you
think best yourself. Theophilus, don’t advise him, pray don’t
advise the warden to do anything which is painful.”
But the archdeacon, though he could not
sympathise, could advise; and he saw that the time had come when it
behoved him to do so in a somewhat peremptory manner.
“Why, my lord,” he said, speaking to his
father—and when he called his father “my lord,” the good old bishop
shook in his shoes, for he knew that an evil time was coming. “Why,
my lord, there are two ways of giving advice: there is advice that
may be good for the present day; and there is advice that may be
good for days to come: now I cannot bring myself to give the
former, if it be incompatible with the other.”
“No, no, no, I suppose not,” said the bishop,
re-seating himself, and shading his face with his hands. Mr.
Harding sat down with his back to the further wall, playing to
himself some air fitted for so calamitous an occasion, and the
archdeacon said out his say standing, with his back to the empty
fireplace.
“It is not to be supposed but that much pain
will spring out of this unnecessarily raised question. We must all
have foreseen that, and the matter has in no wise gone on worse
than we expected; but it will be weak, yes, and wicked also, to
abandon the cause and own ourselves wrong, because the inquiry is
painful. It is not only ourselves we have to look to; to a certain
extent the interest of the Church is in our keeping. Should it be
found that one after another of those who hold preferment abandoned
it whenever it might be attacked, is it not plain that such attacks
would be renewed till nothing was left us? and, that if so
deserted, the Church of England must fall to the ground altogether?
If this be true of many, it is true of one. Were you, accused as
you now are, to throw up the wardenship, and to relinquish the
preferment which is your property, with the vain object of proving
yourself disinterested, you would fail in that object, you would
inflict a desperate blow on your brother clergymen, you would
encourage every cantankerous dissenter in England to make a similar
charge against some source of clerical revenue, and you would do
your best to dishearten those who are most anxious to defend you
and uphold your position. I can fancy nothing more weak, or more
wrong. It is not that you think that there is any justice in these
charges, or that you doubt your own right to the wardenship: you
are convinced of your own honesty, and yet would yield to them
through cowardice.”
“Cowardice!” said the bishop, expostulating.
Mr. Harding sat unmoved, gazing on his son-in-law.
“Well; would it not be cowardice? Would he
not do so because he is afraid to endure the evil things which will
be falsely spoken of him? Would that not be cowardice? And now let
us see the extent of the evil which you dread. The Jupiter publishes an article which a great
many, no doubt, will read; but of those who understand the subject
how many will believe The Jupiter?
Everyone knows what its object is: it has taken up the case against
Lord Guildford and against the Dean of Rochester, and that against
half a dozen bishops; and does not everyone know that it would take
up any case of the kind, right or wrong, false or true, with known
justice or known injustice, if by doing so it could further its own
views? Does not all the world know this of The
Jupiter? Who that really knows you will think the worse of
you for what The Jupiter says? And why
care for those who do not know you? I will say nothing of your own
comfort, but I do say that you could not be justified in throwing
up, in a fit of passion, for such it would be, the only maintenance
that Eleanor has; and if you did so, if you really did vacate the
wardenship, and submit to ruin, what would that profit you? If you
have no future right to the income, you have had no past right to
it; and the very fact of your abandoning your position would create
a demand for repayment of that which you have already received and
spent.”
The poor warden groaned as he sat perfectly
still, looking up at the hard-hearted orator who thus tormented
him, and the bishop echoed the sound faintly from behind his hands;
but the archdeacon cared little for such signs of weakness, and
completed his exhortation.
“But let us suppose the office to be left
vacant, and that your own troubles concerning it were over; would
that satisfy you? Are your only aspirations in the matter confined
to yourself and family? I know they are not. I know you are as
anxious as any of us for the church to which we belong; and what a
grievous blow would such an act of apostasy give her! You owe it to
the church of which you are a member and a minister, to bear with
this affliction, however severe it may be: you owe it to my father,
who instituted you, to support his rights: you owe it to those who
preceded you to assert the legality of their position; you owe it
to those who are to come after you, to maintain uninjured for them
that which you received uninjured from others; and you owe to us
all the unflinching assistance of perfect brotherhood in this
matter, so that upholding one another we may support our great
cause without blushing and without disgrace.”
And so the archdeacon ceased, and stood
self-satisfied, watching the effect of his spoken wisdom.
The warden felt himself, to a certain extent,
stifled; he would have given the world to get himself out into the
open air without speaking to, or noticing those who were in the
room with him; but this was impossible. He could not leave without
saying something, and he felt himself confounded by the
archdeacon’s eloquence. There was a heavy, unfeeling, unanswerable
truth in what he had said; there was so much practical, but odious
common sense in it, that he neither knew how to assent or to
differ. If it were necessary for him to suffer, he felt that he
could endure without complaint and without cowardice, providing
that he was self-satisfied of the justice of his own cause. What he
could not endure was, that he should be accused by others, and not
acquitted by himself. Doubting, as he had begun to doubt, the
justice of his own position in the hospital, he knew that his own
self-confidence would not be restored because Mr. Bold had been in
error as to some legal form; nor could he be satisfied to escape,
because, through some legal fiction, he who received the greatest
benefit from the hospital might be considered only as one of its
servants.
The archdeacon’s speech had silenced
him—stupefied him—annihilated him; anything but satisfied him. With
the bishop it fared not much better. He did not discern clearly how
things were, but he saw enough to know that a battle was to be
prepared for; a battle that would destroy his few remaining
comforts, and bring him with sorrow to the grave.
The warden still sat, and still looked at the
archdeacon, till his thoughts fixed themselves wholly on the means
of escape from his present position, and he felt like a bird
fascinated by gazing on a snake.
“I hope you agree with me,” said the
archdeacon at last, breaking the dread silence; “my lord, I hope
you agree with me.”
Oh, what a sigh the bishop gave! “My lord, I
hope you agree with me,” again repeated the merciless tyrant.
“Yes, I suppose so,” groaned the poor old
man, slowly.
“And you, warden?”
Mr. Harding was now stirred to action—he must
speak and move, so he got up and took one turn before he
answered.
“Do not press me for an answer just at
present; I will do nothing lightly in the matter, and of whatever I
do I will give you and the bishop notice.” And so without another
word he took his leave, escaping quickly through the palace hall,
and down the lofty steps; nor did he breathe freely till he found
himself alone under the huge elms of the silent close. Here he
walked long and slowly, thinking on his case with a troubled air,
and trying in vain to confute the archdeacon’s argument. He then
went home, resolved to bear it all—ignominy, suspense, disgrace,
self-doubt, and heart-burning—and to do as those would have him,
who he still believed were most fit and most able to counsel him
aright.