CHAPTER 11
Mrs. Proudie’s Reception—Concluded
“Bishop of Barchester, I presume?” said
Bertie Stanhope, putting out his hand frankly; “I am delighted to
make your acquaintance. We are in rather close quarters here, a’nt
we?”
In truth they were. They had been crowded up
behind the head of the sofa—the bishop in waiting to receive his
guest, and the other in carrying her—and they now had hardly room
to move themselves.
The bishop gave his hand quickly, made his
little studied bow, and was delighted to make—He couldn’t go on,
for he did not know whether his friend was a signor, or a count or
a prince.
“My sister really puts you all to great
trouble,” said Bertie.
“Not at all!” The bishop was delighted to
have the opportunity of welcoming La Signora Vicinironi—so at least
he said—and attempted to force his way round to the front of the
sofa. He had, at any rate, learnt that his strange guests were
brother and sister. The man, he presumed, must be Signor
Vicinironi—or count, or prince, as it might be. It was wonderful
what good English he spoke. There was just a twang of foreign
accent, and no more.
“Do you like Barchester, on the whole?” asked
Bertie.
The bishop, looking dignified, said that he
did like Barchester.
“You’ve not been here very long, I believe,”
said Bertie.
“No—not long,” said the bishop and tried
again to make his way between the back of the sofa and a heavy
rector, who was staring over it at the grimaces of the
signora.
“You weren’t a bishop before, were
you?”
Dr. Proudie explained that this was the first
diocese he had held.
“Ah—I thought so,” said Bertie, “but you are
changed about sometimes, a’nt you?”
“Translations are occasionally made,” said
Dr. Proudie, “but not so frequently as in former days.”
“They’ve cut them all down to pretty nearly
the same figure, haven’t they?” said Bertie.
To this the bishop could not bring himself to
make any answer, but again attempted to move the rector.
“But the work, I suppose, is different?”
continued Bertie. “Is there much to do here, at Barchester?” This
was said exactly in the tone that a young Admiralty clerk might use
in asking the same question of a brother acolyte at the
Treasury.
“The work of a bishop of the Church of
England,” said Dr. Proudie with considerable dignity, “is not easy.
The responsibility which he has to bear is very great
indeed.”
“Is it?” said Bertie, opening wide his
wonderful blue eyes. “Well, I never was afraid of responsibility. I
once had thoughts of being a bishop, myself.”
“Had thoughts of being a bishop!” said Dr.
Proudie, much amazed.
“That is, a parson—a parson first, you know,
and a bishop afterwards. If I had once begun, I’d have stuck to it.
But, on the whole, I like the Church of Rome the best.”
The bishop could not discuss the point, so he
remained silent.
“Now, there’s my father,” continued Bertie;
“he hasn’t stuck to it. I fancy he didn’t like saying the same
thing over so often. By the by, Bishop, have you seen my
father?”
The bishop was more amazed than ever. Had he
seen his father? “No,” he replied; he had not yet had the pleasure:
he hoped he might; and, as he said so, he resolved to bear heavy on
that fat, immovable rector, if ever he had the power of doing
so.
“He’s in the room somewhere,” said Bertie,
“and he’ll turn up soon. By the by, do you know much about the
Jews?”
At last the bishop saw a way out. “I beg your
pardon,” said he, “but I’m forced to go round the room.”
“Well—I believe I’ll follow in your wake,”
said Bertie. “Terribly hot—isn’t it?” This he addressed to the fat
rector with whom he had brought himself into the closest contact.
“They’ve got this sofa into the worst possible part of the room;
suppose we move it. Take care, Madeline.”
The sofa had certainly been so placed that
those who were behind it found great difficulty in getting out;
there was but a narrow gangway, which one person could stop. This
was a bad arrangement, and one which Bertie thought it might be
well to improve.
“Take care, Madeline,” said he, and turning
to the fat rector, added, “Just help me with a slight push.”
The rector’s weight was resting on the sofa
and unwittingly lent all its impetus to accelerate and increase the
motion which Bertie intentionally originated. The sofa rushed from
its moorings and ran half-way into the middle of the room. Mrs.
Proudie was standing with Mr. Slope in front of the signora, and
had been trying to be condescending and sociable; but she was not
in the very best of tempers, for she found that, whenever she spoke
to the lady, the lady replied by speaking to Mr. Slope. Mr. Slope
was a favourite, no doubt, but Mrs. Proudie had no idea of being
less thought of than the chaplain. She was beginning to be stately,
stiff, and offended, when unfortunately the castor of the sofa
caught itself in her lace train, and carried away there is no
saying how much of her garniture. Gathers were heard to go,
stitches to crack, plaits to fly open, flounces were seen to fall,
and breadths to expose themselves; a long ruin of rent lace
disfigured the carpet, and still clung to the vile wheel on which
the sofa moved.
So, when a granite battery is raised,
excellent to the eyes of warfaring men, is its strength and
symmetry admired. It is the work of years. Its neat embrasures, its
finished parapets, its casemated stories show all the skill of
modern science. But, anon, a small spark is applied to the
treacherous fusee—a cloud of dust arises to the heavens—and then
nothing is to be seen but dirt and dust and ugly fragments.
We know what was the wrath of Juno when her
beauty was despised. We know to what storms of passion even
celestial minds can yield. As Juno may have looked at Paris on
Mount Ida, so did Mrs. Proudie look on Ethelbert Stanhope when he
pushed the leg of the sofa into her lace train.
“Oh, you idiot, Bertie!” said the signora,
seeing what had been done, and what were to be the
consequences.
“Idiot!” re-echoed Mrs. Proudie, as though
the word were not half strong enough to express the required
meaning; “I’ll let him know—” and then looking round to learn, at a
glance, the worst, she saw that at present it behoved her to
collect the scattered débris of her
dress.
Bertie, when he saw what he had done, rushed
over the sofa and threw himself on one knee before the offended
lady. His object, doubtless, was to liberate the torn lace from the
castor, but he looked as though he were imploring pardon from a
goddess.
“Unhand it, sir!” said Mrs. Proudie. From
what scrap of dramatic poetry she had extracted the word cannot be
said, but it must have rested on her memory, and now seemed
opportunely dignified for the occasion.
“I’ll fly to the looms of the fairies to
repair the damage, if you’ll only forgive me,” said Ethelbert,
still on his knees.
“Unhand it, sir!” said Mrs. Proudie with
redoubled emphasis, and all but furious wrath. This allusion to the
fairies was a direct mockery and intended to turn her into
ridicule. So at least it seemed to her. “Unhand it, sir!” she
almost screamed.
“It’s not me; it’s the cursed sofa,” said
Bertie, looking imploringly in her face and holding up both his
hands to show that he was not touching her belongings, but still
remaining on his knees.
Hereupon the signora laughed; not loud,
indeed, but yet audibly. And as the tigress bereft of her young
will turn with equal anger on any within reach, so did Mrs. Proudie
turn upon her female guest.
“Madam!” she said—and it is beyond the power
of prose to tell of the fire which flashed from her eyes.
The signora stared her full in the face for a
moment, and then turning to her brother said playfully, “Bertie,
you idiot, get up.”
By this time the bishop, and Mr. Slope, and
her three daughters were around her, and had collected together the
wide ruins of her magnificence. The girls fell into circular rank
behind their mother, and thus following her and carrying out the
fragments, they left the reception-rooms in a manner not altogether
devoid of dignity. Mrs. Proudie had to retire and re-array
herself.
As soon as the constellation had swept by,
Ethelbert rose from his knees and, turning with mock anger to the
fat rector, said: “After all it was your doing, sir—not mine. But
perhaps you are waiting for preferment, and so I bore it.”
Whereupon there was a laugh against the fat
rector, in which both the bishop and the chaplain joined, and thus
things got themselves again into order.
“Oh! my lord, I am so sorry for this
accident,” said the signora, putting out her hand so as to force
the bishop to take it. “My brother is so thoughtless. Pray sit
down, and let me have the pleasure of making your acquaintance.
Though I am so poor a creature as to want a sofa, I am not so
selfish as to require it all.” Madeline could always dispose
herself so as to make room for a gentleman, though, as she
declared, the crinoline of her lady friends was much too bulky to
be so accommodated.
“It was solely for the pleasure of meeting
you that I have had myself dragged here,” she continued. “Of
course, with your occupation, one cannot even hope that you should
have time to come to us, that is, in the way of calling. And at
your English dinner-parties all is so dull and so stately. Do you
know, my lord, that in coming to England my only consolation has
been the thought that I should know you;” and she looked at him
with the look of a she-devil.
The bishop, however, thought that she looked
very like an angel, and, accepting the proffered seat, sat down
beside her. He uttered some platitude as to his deep obligation for
the trouble she had taken, and wondered more and more who she
was.
“Of course you know my sad story?” she
continued.
The bishop didn’t know a word of it. He knew,
however, or thought he knew, that she couldn’t walk into a room
like other people, and so made the most of that. He put on a look
of ineffable distress and said that he was aware how God had
afflicted her.
The signora just touched the corner of her
eyes with the most lovely of pocket-handkerchiefs. Yes, she
said—she had been sorely tried—tried, she thought, beyond the
common endurance of humanity; but while her child was left to her,
everything was left. “Oh! my lord,” she exclaimed, “you must see
that infant—the last bud of a wondrous tree: you must let a mother
hope that you will lay your holy hands on her innocent head and
consecrate her for female virtues. May I hope it?” said she,
looking into the bishop’s eye and touching the bishop’s arm with
her hand.
The bishop was but a man and said she might.
After all, what was it but a request that he would confirm her
daughter?—a request, indeed, very unnecessary to make, as he should
do so as a matter of course if the young lady came forward in the
usual way.
“The blood of Tiberius,” said the signora in
all but a whisper; “the blood of Tiberius flows in her veins. She
is the last of the Neros!”
The bishop had heard of the last of the
Visigoths, and had floating in his brain some indistinct idea of
the last of the Mohicans, but to have the last of the Neros thus
brought before him for a blessing was very staggering. Still he
liked the lady: she had a proper way of thinking and talked with
more propriety than her brother. But who were they? It was now
quite clear that that blue madman with the silky beard was not a
Prince Vicinironi. The lady was married and was of course one of
the Vicinironi’s by right of the husband. So the bishop went on
learning.
“When will you see her? said the signora with
a start.
“See whom?” said the bishop.
“My child,” said the mother.
“What is the young lady’s age?” asked the
bishop.
“She is just seven,” said the signora.
“Oh,” said the bishop, shaking his head; “she
is much too young—very much too young.”
“But in sunny Italy, you know, we do not
count by years,” and the signora gave the bishop one of her very
sweetest smiles.
“But indeed, she is a great deal too young,”
persisted the bishop; “we never confirm before—”
“But you might speak to her; you might let
her hear from your consecrated lips that she is not a castaway
because she is a Roman; that she may be a Nero and yet a Christian;
that she may owe her black locks and dark cheeks to the blood of
the pagan Caesars, and yet herself be a child of grace; you will
tell her this, won’t you, my friend?”
The friend said he would, and asked if the
child could say her catechism.
“No,” said the signora, “I would not allow
her to learn lessons such as those in a land ridden over by priests
and polluted by the idolatry of Rome. It is here, here in
Barchester, that she must first be taught to lisp those holy words.
Oh, that you could be her instructor!”
Now, Dr. Proudie certainly liked the lady,
but, seeing that he was a bishop, it was not probable that he was
going to instruct a little girl in the first rudiments of her
catechism; so he said he’d send a teacher.
“But you’ll see her yourself, my lord?”
The bishop said he would, but where should he
call.
“At Papa’s house,” said the Signora with an
air of some little surprise at the question.
The bishop actually wanted the courage to ask
her who was her papa, so he was forced at last to leave her without
fathoming the mystery. Mrs. Proudie, in her second best, had now
returned to the rooms, and her husband thought it as well that he
should not remain in too close conversation with the lady whom his
wife appeared to hold in such slight esteem. Presently he came
across his youngest daughter.
“Netta,” said he, “do you know who is the
father of that Signora Vicinironi?”
“It isn’t Vicinironi, Papa,” said Netta; “but
Vesey Neroni, and she’s Doctor Stanhope’s daughter. But I must go
and do the civil to Griselda Grantly; I declare nobody has spoken a
word to the poor girl this evening.”
Dr. Stanhope! Dr. Vesey Stanhope! Dr. Vesey
Stanhope’s daughter, of whose marriage with a dissolute Italian
scamp he now remembered to have heard something! And that
impertinent blue cub who had examined him as to his episcopal
bearings was old Stanhope’s son, and the lady who had entreated him
to come and teach her child the catechism was old Stanhope’s
daughter! The daughter of one of his own prebendaries! As these
things flashed across his mind, he was nearly as angry as his wife
had been. Nevertheless, he could not but own that the mother of the
last of the Neros was an agreeable woman.
Dr. Proudie tripped out into the adjoining
room, in which were congregated a crowd of Grantlyite clergymen,
among whom the archdeacon was standing pre-eminent, while the old
dean was sitting nearly buried in a huge arm chair by the
fireplace. The bishop was very anxious to be gracious, and, if
possible, to diminish the bitterness which his chaplain had
occasioned. Let Mr. Slope do the fortiter in
re, he himself would pour in the suaviter in modo.
“Pray don’t stir, Mr. Dean, pray don’t stir,”
he said as the old man essayed to get up; “I take it as a great
kindness, your coming to such an omnium
gatherum as this. But we have hardly got settled yet, and
Mrs. Proudie has not been able to see her friends as she would wish
to do. Well, Mr. Archdeacon, after all, we have not been so hard
upon you at Oxford.”
“No,” said the archdeacon, “you’ve only drawn
our teeth and cut out our tongues; you’ve allowed us still to
breathe and swallow.”
“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed the bishop; “it’s not
quite so easy to cut out the tongue of an Oxford magnate—and as for
teeth—ha, ha, ha! Why, in the way we’ve left the matter, it’s very
odd if the heads of colleges don’t have their own way quite as
fully as when the hebdomadal board was in all its glory; what do
you say, Mr. Dean?”
“An old man, my lord, never likes changes,”
said the dean.
“You must have been sad bunglers if it is
so,” said the archdeacon; “and indeed, to tell the truth, I think
you have bungled it. At any rate, you must own this; you have not
done the half what you boasted you would do.”
“Now, as regards your system of professors—”
began the chancellor slowly. He was never destined to get beyond
such beginning.
“Talking of professors,” said a soft clear
voice, close behind the chancellor’s elbow; “how much you
Englishmen might learn from Germany; only you are all too
proud.”
The bishop, looking round, perceived that
that abominable young Stanhope had pursued him. The dean stared at
him as though he were some unearthly apparition; so also did two or
three prebendaries and minor canons. The archdeacon laughed.
“The German professors are men of learning,”
said Mr. Harding, “but—”
“German professors!” groaned out the
chancellor, as though his nervous system had received a shock which
nothing but a week of Oxford air could cure.
“Yes,” continued Ethelbert, not at all
understanding why a German professor should be contemptible in the
eyes of an Oxford don. “Not but what the name is best earned at
Oxford. In Germany the professors do teach; at Oxford, I believe,
they only profess to do so, and sometimes not even that. You’ll
have those universities of yours about your ears soon, if you don’t
consent to take a lesson from Germany.”
There was no answering this. Dignified
clergymen of sixty years of age could not condescend to discuss
such a matter with a young man with such clothes and such a
beard.
“Have you got good water out at Plumstead,
Mr. Archdeacon?” said the bishop by way of changing the
conversation.
“Pretty good,” said Dr. Grantly.
“But by no means so good as his wine, my
lord,” said a witty minor canon.
“Nor so generally used,” said another; “that
is, for inward application.”
“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed the bishop, “a good
cellar of wine is a very comfortable thing in a house.”
“Your German professors, Sir, prefer beer, I
believe,” said the sarcastic little meagre prebendary.
“They don’t think much of either,” said
Ethelbert, “and that perhaps accounts for their superiority. Now
the Jewish professor—”
The insult was becoming too deep for the
spirit of Oxford to endure, so the archdeacon walked off one way
and the chancellor another, followed by their disciples, and the
bishop and the young reformer were left together on the
hearth-rug.
“I was a Jew once myself,” began
Bertie.
The bishop was determined not to stand
another examination, or be led on any terms into Palestine, so he
again remembered that he had to do something very particular, and
left young Stanhope with the dean. The dean did not get the worst
of it for Ethelbert gave him a true account of his remarkable
doings in the Holy Land.
“Oh, Mr. Harding,” said the bishop,
overtaking the ci-devant warden; “I
wanted to say one word about the hospital. You know, of course,
that it is to be filled up.”
Mr. Harding’s heart beat a little, and he
said that he had heard so.
“Of course,” continued the bishop; “there can
be only one man whom I could wish to see in that situation. I don’t
know what your own views may be, Mr. Harding—”
“They are very simply told, my lord,” said
the other; “to take the place if it be offered me, and to put up
with the want of it should another man get it.”
The bishop professed himself delighted to
hear it; Mr. Harding might be quite sure that no other man would
get it. There were some few circumstances which would in a slight
degree change the nature of the duties. Mr. Harding was probably
aware of this, and would, perhaps, not object to discuss the matter
with Mr. Slope. It was a subject to which Mr. Slope had given a
good deal of attention.
Mr. Harding felt, he knew not why, oppressed
and annoyed. What could Mr. Slope do to him? He knew that there
were to be changes. The nature of them must be communicated to the
warden through somebody, and through whom so naturally as the
bishop’s chaplain? ‘Twas thus he tried to argue himself back to an
easy mind, but in vain.
Mr. Slope in the meantime had taken the seat
which the bishop had vacated on the signora’s sofa, and remained
with that lady till it was time to marshal the folk to supper. Not
with contented eyes had Mrs. Proudie seen this. Had not this woman
laughed at her distress, and had not Mr. Slope heard it? Was she
not an intriguing Italian woman, half wife and half not, full of
affectation, airs, and impudence? Was she not horribly bedizened
with velvet and pearls, with velvet and pearls, too, which had not
been torn off her back? Above all, did she not pretend to be more
beautiful than her neighbours? To say that Mrs. Proudie was jealous
would give a wrong idea of her feelings. She had not the slightest
desire that Mr. Slope should be in love with herself. But she
desired the incense of Mr. Slope’s spiritual and temporal services,
and did not choose that they should be turned out of their course
to such an object as Signora Neroni. She considered also that Mr.
Slope ought in duty to hate the signora, and it appeared from his
manner that he was very far from hating her.
“Come, Mr. Slope,” she said, sweeping by and
looking all that she felt, “can’t you make yourself useful? Do pray
take Mrs. Grantly down to supper.”
Mrs. Grantly heard and escaped. The words
were hardly out of Mrs. Proudie’s mouth, before the intended victim
had stuck her hand through the arm of one of her husband’s curates,
and saved herself. What would the archdeacon have said had he seen
her walking downstairs with Mr. Slope?
Mr. Slope heard also, but was by no means so
obedient as was expected. Indeed, the period of Mr. Slope’s
obedience to Mrs. Proudie was drawing to a close. He did not wish
yet to break with her, nor to break with her at all, if it could be
avoided. But he intended to be master in that palace, and as she
had made the same resolution it was not improbable that they might
come to blows.
Before leaving the signora he arranged a
little table before her and begged to know what he should bring
her. She was quite indifferent, she said—nothing—anything. It was
now she felt the misery of her position, now that she must be left
alone. Well, a little chicken, some ham, and a glass of
champagne.
Mr. Slope had to explain, not without
blushing for his patron, that there was no champagne.
Sherry would do just as well. And then Mr.
Slope descended with the learned Miss Trefoil on his arm. Could she
tell him, he asked, whether the ferns of Barsetshire were equal to
those of Cumberland? His strongest worldly passion was for
ferns—and before she could answer him he left her wedged between
the door and the sideboard. It was fifty minutes before she
escaped, and even then unfed.
“You are not leaving us, Mr. Slope,” said the
watchful lady of the house, seeing her slave escaping towards the
door, with stores of provisions held high above the heads of the
guests.
Mr. Slope explained that the Signora Neroni
was in want of her supper.
“Pray, Mr. Slope, let her brother take it to
her,” said Mrs. Proudie, quite out loud. “It is out of the question
that you should be so employed. Pray, Mr. Slope, oblige me; I am
sure Mr. Stanhope will wait upon his sister.”
Ethelbert was most agreeably occupied in the
furthest corner of the room, making himself both useful and
agreeable to Mrs. Proudie’s youngest daughter.
“I couldn’t get out, madam, if Madeline were
starving for her supper,” said he; “I’m physically fixed, unless I
could fly.”
The lady’s anger was increased by seeing that
her daughter also had gone over to the enemy, and when she saw,
that in spite of her remonstrances, in the teeth of her positive
orders, Mr. Slope went off to the drawing-room, the cup of her
indignation ran over, and she could not restrain herself. “Such
manners I never saw,” she said, muttering. “I cannot and will not
permit it;” and then, after fussing and fuming for a few minutes,
she pushed her way through the crowd and followed Mr. Slope.
When she reached the room above, she found it
absolutely deserted, except by the guilty pair. The signora was
sitting very comfortably up to her supper, and Mr. Slope was
leaning over her and administering to her wants. They had been
discussing the merits of Sabbath-day schools, and the lady had
suggested that as she could not possibly go to the children, she
might be indulged in the wish of her heart by having the children
brought to her.
“And when shall it be, Mr. Slope?” said
she.
Mr. Slope was saved the necessity of
committing himself to a promise by the entry of Mrs. Proudie. She
swept close up to the sofa so as to confront the guilty pair,
stared full at them for a moment, and then said, as she passed on
to the next room, “Mr. Slope, his lordship is especially desirous
of your attendance below; you will greatly oblige me if you will
join him.” And so she stalked on.
Mr. Slope muttered something in reply, and
prepared to go downstairs. As for the bishop’s wanting him, he knew
his lady patroness well enough to take that assertion at what it
was worth; but he did not wish to make himself the hero of a scene,
or to become conspicuous for more gallantry than the occasion
required.
“Is she always like this?” said the
signora.
“Yes—always—madam,” said Mrs. Proudie,
returning; “always the same—always equally adverse to impropriety
of conduct of every description;” and she stalked back through the
room again, following Mr. Slope out of the door.
The signora couldn’t follow her, or she
certainly would have done so. But she laughed loud, and sent the
sound of it ringing through the lobby and down the stairs after
Mrs. Proudie’s feet. Had she been as active as Grimaldi, she could
probably have taken no better revenge.
“Mr. Slope,” said Mrs. Proudie, catching the
delinquent at the door, “I am surprised you should leave my company
to attend on such a painted Jezebel as that.”
“But she’s lame, Mrs. Proudie, and cannot
move. Somebody must have waited upon her.”
“Lame,” said Mrs. Proudie; “I’d lame her if
she belonged to me. What business had she here at all?—such
impertinence—such affectation.”
In the hall and adjacent rooms all manner of
cloaking and shawling was going on, and the Barchester folk were
getting themselves gone. Mrs. Proudie did her best to smirk at each
and every one as they made their adieux, but she was hardly
successful. Her temper had been tried fearfully. By slow degrees
the guests went.
“Send back the carriage quick,” said
Ethelbert, as Dr. and Mrs. Stanhope took their departure.
The younger Stanhopes were left to the very
last, and an uncomfortable party they made with the bishop’s
family. They all went into the dining-room, and then the bishop
observing that “the lady” was alone in the drawing-room, they
followed him up. Mrs. Proudie kept Mr. Slope and her daughters in
close conversation, resolving that he should not be indulged, nor
they polluted. The bishop, in mortal dread of Bertie and the Jews,
tried to converse with Charlotte Stanhope about the climate of
Italy. Bertie and the signora had no resource but in each
other.
“Did you get your supper at last, Madeline?”
said the impudent or else mischievous young man.
“Oh, yes,” said Madeline; “Mr. Slope was so
very kind as to bring it me. I fear, however, he put himself to
more inconvenience than I wished.”
Mrs. Proudie looked at her but said nothing.
The meaning of her look might have been thus translated; “If ever
you find yourself within these walls again, I’ll give you leave to
be as impudent and affected and as mischievous as you
please.”
At last the carriage returned with the three
Italian servants, and La Signora Madeline Vesey Neroni was carried
out, as she had been carried in.
The lady of the palace retired to her chamber
by no means contented with the result of her first grand party at
Barchester.