CHAPTER 8
The Ex-Warden Rejoices in His Probable Return
to the Hospital
Among the ladies in Barchester who have
hitherto acknowledged Mr. Slope as their spiritual director must
not be reckoned either the Widow Bold or her sister-in-law. On the
first outbreak of the wrath of the denizens of the Close, none had
been more animated against the intruder than these two ladies. And
this was natural. Who could be so proud of the musical distinction
of their own cathedral as the favourite daughter of the precentor?
Who would be so likely to resent an insult offered to the old
choir? And in such matters Miss Bold and her sister-in-law had but
one opinion.
This wrath, however, has in some degree been
mitigated, and I regret to say that these ladies allowed Mr. Slope
to be his own apologist. About a fortnight after the sermon had
been preached, they were both of them not a little surprised by
hearing Mr. Slope announced, as the page in buttons opened Mrs.
Bold’s drawing-room door. Indeed, what living man could, by a mere
morning visit, have surprised them more? Here was the great enemy
of all that was good in Barchester coming into their own
drawing-room, and they had no strong arm, no ready tongue, near at
hand for their protection. The widow snatched her baby out of its
cradle into her lap, and Mary Bold stood up ready to die manfully
in that baby’s behalf, should, under any circumstances, such a
sacrifice become necessary.
In this manner was Mr. Slope received. But
when he left, he was allowed by each lady to take her hand and to
make his adieux as gentlemen do who have been graciously
entertained! Yes, he shook hands with them, and was curtseyed out
courteously, the buttoned page opening the door as he would have
done for the best canon of them all. He had touched the baby’s
little hand and blessed him with a fervid blessing; he had spoken
to the widow of her early sorrows, and Eleanor’s silent tears had
not rebuked him; he had told Mary Bold that her devotion would be
rewarded, and Mary Bold had heard the praise without disgust. And
how had he done all this? How had he so quickly turned aversion
into, at any rate, acquaintance? How had he over-come the enmity
with which these ladies had been ready to receive him, and made his
peace with them so easily?
My readers will guess from what I have
written that I myself do not like Mr. Slope, but I am constrained
to admit that he is a man of parts. He knows how to say a soft word
in the proper place; he knows how to adapt his flattery to the ears
of his hearers; he knows the wiles of the serpent, and he uses
them. Could Mr. Slope have adapted his manners to men as well as to
women, could he ever have learnt the ways of a gentleman, he might
have risen to great things.
He commenced his acquaintance with Eleanor by
praising her father. He had, he said, become aware that he had
unfortunately offended the feelings of a man of whom he could not
speak too highly; he would not now allude to a subject which was
probably too serious for drawing-room conversation, but he would
say that it had been very far from him to utter a word in
disparagement of a man of whom all the world, at least the clerical
world, spoke so highly as it did of Mr. Harding. And so he went on,
unsaying a great deal of his sermon, expressing his highest
admiration for the precentor’s musical talents, eulogizing the
father and the daughter and the sister-in-law, speaking in that low
silky whisper which he always had specially prepared for feminine
ears, and, ultimately, gaining his object. When he left, he
expressed a hope that he might again be allowed to call; and though
Eleanor gave no verbal assent to this, she did not express dissent:
and so Mr. Slope’s right to visit at the widow’s house was
established.
The day after this visit Eleanor told her
father of it and expressed an opinion that Mr. Slope was not quite
so black as he had been painted. Mr. Harding opened his eyes rather
wider than usual when he heard what had occurred, but he said
little; he could not agree in any praise of Mr. Slope, and it was
not his practice to say much evil of anyone. He did not, however,
like the visit, and simple-minded as he was, he felt sure that Mr.
Slope had some deeper motive than the mere pleasure of making soft
speeches to two ladies.
Mr. Harding, however, had come to see his
daughter with other purpose than that of speaking either good or
evil of Mr. Slope. He had come to tell her that the place of warden
in Hiram’s Hospital was again to be filled up, and that in all
probability he would once more return to his old home and his
twelve bedesmen.
“But,” said he, laughing, “I shall be greatly
shorn of my ancient glory.”
“Why so, Papa?”
“This new act of Parliament that is to put us
all on our feet again,” continued he, “settles my income at four
hundred and fifty pounds per annum.”
“Four hundred and fifty,” said she, “instead
of eight hundred! Well, that is rather shabby. But still, Papa,
you’ll have the dear old house and the garden?”
“My dear,” said he, “it’s worth twice the
money;” and as he spoke he showed a jaunty kind of satisfaction in
his tone and manner, and in the quick, pleasant way in which he
paced Eleanor’s drawing-room. “It’s worth twice the money. I shall
have the house and the garden and a larger income than I can
possibly want.”
“At any rate, you’ll have no extravagant
daughter to provide for;” and as she spoke, the young widow put her
arm within his, and made him sit on the sofa beside her; “at any
rate, you’ll not have that expense.”
“No, my dear, and I shall be rather lonely
without her; but we won’t think of that now. As regards income, I
shall have plenty for all I want. I shall have my old house, and I
don’t mind owning now that I have felt sometimes the inconvenience
of living in a lodging. Lodgings are very nice for young men, but
at my time of life there is a want of—I hardly know what to call
it, perhaps not respectability—”
“Oh, Papa! I’m sure there’s been nothing like
that. Nobody has thought it; nobody in all Barchester has been more
respected than you have been since you took those rooms in High
Street. Nobody! Not the dean in his deanery, or the archdeacon out
at Plumstead.”
“The archdeacon would not be much obliged to
you if he heard you,” said he, smiling somewhat at the exclusive
manner in which his daughter confined her illustration to the
church dignitaries of the chapter of Barchester; “but at any rate I
shall be glad to get back to the old house. Since I heard that it
was all settled, I have begun to fancy that I can’t be comfortable
without my two sitting-rooms.”
“Come and stay with me, Papa, till it is
settled—there’s a dear Papa.”
“Thank ye, Nelly. But no, I won’t do that. It
would make two movings. I shall be very glad to get back to my old
men again. Alas! alas! There have six of them gone in these few
last years. Six out of twelve! And the others I fear have had but a
sorry life of it there. Poor Bunce, poor old Bunce!”
Bunce was one of the surviving recipients of
Hiram’s charity, an old man, now over ninety, who had long been a
favourite of Mr. Harding’s.
“How happy old Bunce will be,” said Mrs.
Bold, clapping her soft hands softly. “How happy they all will be
to have you back again. You may be sure there will soon be
friendship among them again when you are there.”
“But,” said he, half-laughing, “I am to have
new troubles, which will be terrible to me. There are to be twelve
old women, and a matron. How shall I manage twelve women and a
matron!”
“The matron will manage the women, of
course.”
“And who’ll manage the matron?” said
he.
“She won’t want to be managed. She’ll be a
great lady herself, I suppose. But, Papa, where will the matron
live? She is not to live in the warden’s house with you, is
she?”
“Well, I hope not, my dear.”
“Oh, Papa, I tell you fairly, I won’t have a
matron for a new stepmother.”
“You shan’t, my dear; that is, if I can help
it. But they are going to build another house for the matron and
the women, and I believe they haven’t even fixed yet on the site of
the building.”
“And have they appointed the matron?” said
Eleanor.
“They haven’t appointed the warden yet,”
replied he.
“But there’s no doubt about that, I suppose,”
said his daughter.
Mr. Harding explained that he thought there
was no doubt; that the archdeacon had declared as much, saying that
the bishop and his chaplain between them had not the power to
appoint anyone else, even if they had the will to do so, and
sufficient impudence to carry out such a will. The archdeacon was
of opinion that, though Mr. Harding had resigned his wardenship,
and had done so unconditionally, he had done so under circumstances
which left the bishop no choice as to his reappointment, now that
the affair of the hospital had been settled on a new basis by act
of Parliament. Such was the archdeacon’s opinion, and his
father-in-law received it without a shadow of doubt.
Dr. Grantly had always been strongly opposed
to Mr. Harding’s resignation of the place. He had done all in his
power to dissuade him from it. He had considered that Mr. Harding
was bound to withstand the popular clamour with which he was
attacked for receiving so large an income as eight hundred a year
from such a charity, and was not even yet satisfied that his
father-in-law’s conduct had not been pusillanimous and undignified.
He looked also on this reduction of the warden’s income as a
shabby, paltry scheme on the part of government for escaping from a
difficulty into which it had been brought by the public press. Dr.
Grantly observed that the government had no more right to dispose
of a sum of four hundred and fifty pounds a year out of the income
of Hiram’s legacy, than of nine hundred; whereas, as he said, the
bishop, dean, and chapter clearly had a right to settle what sum
should be paid. He also declared that the government had no more
right to saddle the charity with twelve old women than with twelve
hundred; and he was, therefore, very indignant on the matter. He
probably forgot when so talking that government had done nothing of
the kind, and had never assumed any such might or any such right.
He made the common mistake of attributing to the government, which
in such matters is powerless, the doings of Parliament, which in
such matters is omnipotent.
But though he felt that the glory and honour
of the situation of warden of Barchester Hospital were indeed
curtailed by the new arrangement; that the whole establishment had
to a certain degree been made vile by the touch of Whig
commissioners; that the place, with its lessened income, its old
women, and other innovations, was very different from the hospital
of former days; still the archdeacon was too practical a man of the
world to wish that his father-in-law, who had at present little
more than £200 per annum for all his wants, should refuse the
situation, defiled, undignified, and commission-ridden as it
was.
Mr. Harding had, accordingly, made up his
mind that he would return to his old home at the hospital, and, to
tell the truth, had experienced almost a childish pleasure in the
idea of doing so. The diminished income was to him not even the
source of momentary regret. The matron and the old women did rather
go against the grain, but he was able to console himself with the
reflection that, after all, such an arrangement might be of real
service to the poor of the city. The thought that he must receive
his reappointment as the gift of the new bishop, and probably
through the hands of Mr. Slope, annoyed him a little, but his mind
was set at rest by the assurance of the archdeacon that there would
be no favour in such a presentation. The reappointment of the old
warden would be regarded by all the world as a matter of course.
Mr. Harding, therefore, felt no hesitation in telling his daughter
that they might look upon his return to his old quarters as a
settled matter.
“And you won’t have to ask for it,
Papa?”
“Certainly not, my dear. There is no ground
on which I could ask for any favour from the bishop, whom, indeed,
I hardly know. Nor would I ask a favour, the granting of which
might possibly be made a question to be settled by Mr. Slope. No,”
said he, moved for a moment by a spirit very unlike his own, “I
certainly shall be very glad to go back to the hospital; but I
should never go there if it were necessary that my doing so should
be the subject of a request to Mr. Slope.”
This little outbreak of her father’s anger
jarred on the present tone of Eleanor’s mind. She had not learnt to
like Mr. Slope, but she had learnt to think that he had much
respect for her father; and she would, therefore, willingly use her
efforts to induce something like good feeling between them.
“Papa,” said she, “I think you somewhat
mistake Mr. Slope’s character.”
“Do I?” said he placidly.
“I think you do, Papa. I think he intended no
personal disrespect to you when he preached the sermon which made
the archdeacon and the dean so angry!”
“I never supposed he did, my dear. I hope I
never inquired within myself whether he did or no. Such a matter
would be unworthy of any inquiry, and very unworthy of the
consideration of the chapter. But I fear he intended disrespect to
the ministration of God’s services, as conducted in conformity with
the rules of the Church of England.”
“But might it not be that he thought it his
duty to express his dissent from that which you, and the dean, and
all of us here so much approve?”
“It can hardly be the duty of a young man
rudely to assail the religious convictions of his elders in the
church. Courtesy should have kept him silent, even if neither
charity nor modesty could do so.”
“But Mr. Slope would say that on such a
subject the commands of his heavenly Master do not admit of his
being silent.”
“Nor of his being courteous, Eleanor?”
“He did not say that, Papa.”
“Believe me, my child, that Christian
ministers are never called on by God’s word to insult the
convictions, or even the prejudices of their brethren, and that
religion is at any rate not less susceptible of urbane and
courteous conduct among men than any other study which men may take
up. I am sorry to say that I cannot defend Mr. Slope’s sermon in
the cathedral. But come, my dear, put on your bonnet and let us
walk round the dear old gardens at the hospital. I have never yet
had the heart to go beyond the courtyard since we left the place.
Now I think I can venture to enter.”
Eleanor rang the bell, and gave a variety of
imperative charges as to the welfare of the precious baby, whom,
all but unwillingly, she was about to leave for an hour or so, and
then sauntered forth with her father to revisit the old hospital.
It had been forbidden ground to her as well as to him since the day
on which they had walked forth together from its walls.