CHAPTER 13
The Rubbish Cart
Mr. Harding was not a happy man as he walked
down the palace pathway and stepped out into the close. His
preferment and pleasant house were a second time gone from him; but
that he could endure. He had been schooled and insulted by a man
young enough to be his son; but that he could put up with. He could
even draw from the very injuries, which had been inflicted on him,
some of that consolation, which we may believe martyrs always
receive from the injustice of their own sufferings, and which is
generally proportioned in its strength to the extent of cruelty
with which martyrs are treated. He had admitted to his daughter
that he wanted the comfort of his old home, and yet he could have
returned to his lodgings in the High Street, if not with
exaltation, at least with satisfaction, had that been all. But the
venom of the chaplain’s harangue had worked into his blood, and
sapped the life of his sweet contentment.
“New men are carrying out new measures and
are carting away the useless rubbish of past centuries!” What cruel
words these had been; and how often are they now used with all the
heartless cruelty of a Slope! A man is sufficiently condemned if it
can only be shown that either in politics or religion he does not
belong to some new school established within the last score of
years. He may then regard himself as rubbish and expect to be
carted away. A man is nothing now unless he has within him a full
appreciation of the new era, an era in which it would seem that
neither honesty nor truth is very desirable, but in which success
is the only touchstone of merit. We must laugh at everything that
is established. Let the joke be ever so bad, ever so untrue to the
real principles of joking; nevertheless we must laugh—or else
beware the cart. We must talk, think, and live up to the spirit of
the times, and write up to it too, if that cacoethes be upon us, or
else we are nought. New men and new measures, long credit and few
scruples, great success or wonderful ruin, such are now the tastes
of Englishmen who know how to live. Alas, alas! Under such
circumstances Mr. Harding could not but feel that he was an
Englishman who did not know how to live. This new doctrine of Mr.
Slope and the rubbish cart, new at least at Barchester, sadly
disturbed his equanimity.
“The same thing is going on throughout the
whole country! Work is now required from every man who receives
wages!” And had he been living all his life receiving wages and
doing no work? Had he in truth so lived as to be now in his old age
justly reckoned as rubbish fit only to be hidden away in some huge
dust-hole? The school of men to whom he professes to belong, the
Grantlys, the Gwynnes, and the old high set of Oxford divines, are
afflicted with no such self-accusations as these which troubled Mr.
Harding. They, as a rule, are as satisfied with the wisdom and
propriety of their own conduct as can be any Mr. Slope, or any Dr.
Proudie, with his own. But unfortunately for himself Mr. Harding
had little of this self-reliance. When he heard himself designated
as rubbish by the Slopes of the world, he had no other resource
than to make inquiry within his own bosom as to the truth of the
designation. Alas, alas! The evidence seemed generally to go
against him.
He had professed to himself in the bishop’s
parlour that in these coming sources of the sorrow of age, in these
fits of sad regret from which the latter years of few reflecting
men can be free, religion would suffice to comfort him. Yes,
religion could console him for the loss of any worldly good; but
was his religion of that active sort which would enable him so to
repent of misspent years as to pass those that were left to him in
a spirit of hope for the future? And such repentance itself, is it
not a work of agony and of tears? It is very easy to talk of
repentance, but a man has to walk over hot ploughshares before he
can complete it; to be skinned alive as was St. Bartholomew; to be
stuck full of arrows as was St. Sebastian; to lie broiling on a
gridiron like St. Lorenzo! How if his past life required such
repentance as this? Had he the energy to go through with it?
Mr. Harding, after leaving the palace, walked
slowly for an hour or so beneath the shady elms of the close and
then betook himself to his daughter’s house. He had at any rate
made up his mind that he would go out to Plumstead to consult Dr.
Grantly, and that he would in the first instance tell Eleanor what
had occurred.
And now he was doomed to undergo another
misery. Mr. Slope had forestalled him at the widow’s house. He had
called there on the preceding afternoon. He could not, he had said,
deny himself the pleasure of telling Mrs. Bold that her father was
about to return to the pretty house at Hiram’s Hospital. He had
been instructed by the bishop to inform Mr. Harding that the
appointment would now be made at once. The bishop was of course
only too happy to be able to be the means of restoring to Mr.
Harding the preferment which he had so long adorned. And then by
degrees Mr. Slope had introduced the subject of the pretty school
which he hoped before long to see attached to the hospital. He had
quite fascinated Mrs. Bold by his description of this picturesque,
useful, and charitable appendage, and she had gone so far as to say
that she had no doubt her father would approve, and that she
herself would gladly undertake a class.
Anyone who had heard the entirely different
tone, and seen the entirely different manner in which Mr. Slope had
spoken of this projected institution to the daughter and to the
father could not have failed to own that Mr. Slope was a man of
genius. He said nothing to Mrs. Bold about the hospital sermons and
services, nothing about the exclusion of the old men from the
cathedral, nothing about dilapidation and painting, nothing about
carting away the rubbish. Eleanor had said to herself that
certainly she did not like Mr. Slope personally, but that he was a
very active, zealous clergyman and would no doubt be useful in
Barchester. All this paved the way for much additional misery to
Mr. Harding.
Eleanor put on her happiest face as she heard
her father on the stairs, for she thought she had only to
congratulate him; but directly she saw his face she knew that there
was but little matter for congratulation. She had seen him with the
same weary look of sorrow on one or two occasions before, and
remembered it well. She had seen him when he first read that attack
upon himself in The Jupiter which had
ultimately caused him to resign the hospital, and she had seen him
also when the archdeacon had persuaded him to remain there against
his own sense of propriety and honour. She knew at a glance that
his spirit was in deep trouble.
“Oh, Papa, what is it?” said she, putting
down her boy to crawl upon the floor.
“I came to tell you, my dear,” said he, “that
I am going out to Plumstead: you won’t come with me, I
suppose?”
“To Plumstead, Papa? Shall you stay
there?”
“I suppose I shall, to-night: I must consult
the archdeacon about this weary hospital. Ah me! I wish I had never
thought of it again.”
“Why, Papa, what is the matter?”
“I’ve been with Mr. Slope, my dear, and he
isn’t the pleasantest companion in the world, at least not to me.”
Eleanor gave a sort of half-blush, but she was wrong if she
imagined that her father in any way alluded to her acquaintance
with Mr. Slope.
“Well, Papa.”
“He wants to turn the hospital into a
Sunday-school and a preaching-house, and I suppose he will have his
way. I do not feel myself adapted for such an establishment, and
therefore, I suppose, I must refuse the appointment.”
“What would be the harm of the school,
Papa?”
“The want of a proper schoolmaster, my
dear.”
“But that would of course be supplied.”
“Mr. Slope wishes to supply it by making me
his schoolmaster. But as I am hardly fit for such work, I intend to
decline.”
“Oh, Papa! Mr. Slope doesn’t intend that. He
was here yesterday, and what he intends—”
“He was here yesterday, was he?” asked Mr.
Harding.
“Yes, Papa.”
“And talking about the hospital?”
“He was saying how glad he would be, and the
bishop too, to see you back there again. And then he spoke about
the Sunday-school; and to tell the truth I agreed with him; and I
thought you would have done so too. Mr. Slope spoke of a school,
not inside the hospital, but just connected with it, of which you
would be the patron and visitor; and I thought you would have liked
such a school as that; and I promised to look after it and to take
a class—and it all seemed so very—. But, oh, Papa! I shall be so
miserable if I find I have done wrong.”
“Nothing wrong at all, my dear,” said he
gently, very gently rejecting his daughter’s caress. “There can be
nothing wrong in your wishing to make yourself useful; indeed, you
ought to do so by all means. Everyone must now exert himself who
would not choose to go to the wall.” Poor Mr. Harding thus
attempted in his misery to preach the new doctrine to his child.
“Himself or herself, it’s all the same,” he continued; “you will be
quite right, my dear, to do something of this sort; but—”
“Well, Papa.”
“I am not quite sure that if I were you I
would select Mr. Slope for my guide.”
“But I never have done so and never
shall.”
“It would be very wicked of me to speak evil
of him, for to tell the truth I know no evil of him; but I am not
quite sure that he is honest. That he is not gentleman-like in his
manners, of that I am quite sure.”
“I never thought of taking him for my guide,
Papa.”
“As for myself, my dear,” continued he, “we
know the old proverb—’It’s bad teaching an old dog tricks.’ I must
decline the Sunday-school, and shall therefore probably decline the
hospital also. But I will first see your brother-in-law.” So he
took up his hat, kissed the baby, and withdrew, leaving Eleanor in
as low spirits as himself.
All this was a great aggravation to his
misery. He had so few with whom to sympathize, that he could not
afford to be cut off from the one whose sympathy was of the most
value to him. And yet it seemed probable that this would be the
case. He did not own to himself that he wished his daughter to hate
Mr. Slope, yet had she expressed such a feeling there would have
been very little bitterness in the rebuke he would have given her
for so uncharitable a state of mind. The fact, however, was that
she was on friendly terms with Mr. Slope, that she coincided with
his views, adhered at once to his plans, and listened with delight
to his teaching. Mr. Harding hardly wished his daughter to hate the
man, but he would have preferred that to her loving him.
He walked away to the inn to order a fly,
went home to put up his carpet-bag, and then started for Plumstead.
There was, at any rate, no danger that the archdeacon would
fraternize with Mr. Slope; but then he would recommend internecine
war, public appeals, loud reproaches, and all the paraphernalia of
open battle. Now that alternative was hardly more to Mr. Harding’s
taste than the other.
When Mr. Harding reached the parsonage, he
found that the archdeacon was out, and would not be home till
dinner-time, so he began his complaint to his elder daughter. Mrs.
Grantly entertained quite as strong an antagonism to Mr. Slope as
did her husband; she was also quite as alive to the necessity of
combating the Proudie faction, of supporting the old church
interest of the close, of keeping in her own set such of the loaves
and fishes as duly belonged to it; and was quite as well prepared
as her lord to carry on the battle without giving or taking
quarter. Not that she was a woman prone to quarrelling, or
ill-inclined to live at peace with her clerical neighbours; but she
felt, as did the archdeacon, that the presence of Mr. Slope in
Barchester was an insult to everyone connected with the late
bishop, and that his assumed dominion in the diocese was a
spiritual injury to her husband. Hitherto people had little guessed
how bitter Mrs. Grantly could be. She lived on the best of terms
with all the rectors’ wives around her. She had been popular with
all the ladies connected with the close. Though much the wealthiest
of the ecclesiastical matrons of the county, she had so managed her
affairs that her carriage and horses had given umbrage to none. She
had never thrown herself among the county grandees so as to excite
the envy of other clergymen’s wives. She never talked too loudly of
earls and countesses, or boasted that she gave her governess sixty
pounds a year, or her cook seventy. Mrs. Grantly had lived the life
of a wise, discreet, peace-making woman, and the people of
Barchester were surprised at the amount of military vigour she
displayed as general of the feminine Grantlyite forces.
Mrs. Grantly soon learned that her sister
Eleanor had promised to assist Mr. Slope in the affairs of the
hospital school, and it was on this point that her attention first
fixed itself.
“How can Eleanor endure him?” said she.
“He is a very crafty man,” said her father,
“and his craft has been successful in making Eleanor think that he
is a meek, charitable, good clergyman. God forgive me, if I wrong
him, but such is not his true character in my opinion.”
“His true character, indeed!” said she, with
something approaching scorn for her father’s moderation. “I only
hope he won’t have craft enough to make Eleanor forget herself and
her position.”
“Do you mean marry him?” said he, startled
out of his usual demeanour by the abruptness and horror of so
dreadful a proposition.
“What is there so improbable in it? Of course
that would be his own object if he thought he had any chance of
success. Eleanor has a thousand a year entirely at her own
disposal, and what better fortune could fall to Mr. Slope’s lot
than the transferring of the disposal of such a fortune to
himself?”
“But you can’t think she likes him,
Susan?”
“Why not?” said Susan. “Why shouldn’t she
like him? He’s just the sort of man to get on with a woman left, as
she is, with no one to look after her.”
“Look after her!” said the unhappy father;
“don’t we look after her?”
“Ah, Papa, how innocent you are! Of course it
was to be expected that Eleanor should marry again. I should be the
last to advise her against it, if she would only wait the proper
time, and then marry at least a gentleman.”
“But you don’t really mean to say that you
suppose Eleanor has ever thought of marrying Mr. Slope? Why, Mr.
Bold has only been dead a year.”
“Eighteen months,” said his daughter. “But I
don’t suppose Eleanor has ever thought about it. It is very
probable, though, that he has; and that he will try and make her do
so; and that he will succeed too, if we don’t take care what we are
about.”
This was quite a new phase of the affair to
poor Mr. Harding. To have thrust upon him as his son-in-law, as the
husband of his favourite child, the only man in the world whom he
really positively disliked, would be a misfortune which he felt he
would not know how to endure patiently. But then, could there be
any ground for so dreadful a surmise? In all worldly matters he was
apt to look upon the opinion of his eldest daughter as one
generally sound and trustworthy. In her appreciation of character,
of motives, and the probable conduct both of men and women, she was
usually not far wrong. She had early foreseen the marriage of
Eleanor and John Bold; she had at a glance deciphered the character
of the new bishop and his chaplain; could it possibly be that her
present surmise should ever come forth as true?
“But you don’t think that she likes him?”
said Mr. Harding again.
“Well, Papa, I can’t say that I think she
dislikes him as she ought to do. Why is he visiting there as a
confidential friend, when he never ought to have been admitted
inside the house? Why is it that she speaks to him about your
welfare and your position, as she clearly has done? At the bishop’s
party the other night I saw her talking to him for half an hour at
the stretch.”
“I thought Mr. Slope seemed to talk to nobody
there but that daughter of Stanhope’s,” said Mr. Harding, wishing
to defend his child.
“Oh, Mr. Slope is a cleverer man than you
think of, Papa, and keeps more than one iron in the fire.”
To give Eleanor her due, any suspicion as to
the slightest inclination on her part towards Mr. Slope was a wrong
to her. She had no more idea of marrying Mr. Slope than she had of
marrying the bishop, and the idea that Mr. Slope would present
himself as a suitor had never occurred to her. Indeed, to give her
her due again, she had never thought about suitors since her
husband’s death. But nevertheless it was true that she had overcome
all that repugnance to the man which was so strongly felt for him
by the rest of the Grantly faction. She had forgiven him his
sermon. She had forgiven him his Low Church tendencies, his
Sabbath-schools, and puritanical observances. She had forgiven his
pharisaical arrogance, and even his greasy face and oily, vulgar
manners. Having agreed to overlook such offences as these, why
should she not in time be taught to regard Mr. Slope as a
suitor?
And as to him, it must also be affirmed that
he was hitherto equally innocent of the crime imputed to him. How
it had come to pass that a man whose eyes were generally so widely
open to everything around him had not perceived that this young
widow was rich as well as beautiful, cannot probably now be
explained. But such was the fact. Mr. Slope had ingratiated himself
with Mrs. Bold, merely as he had done with other ladies, in order
to strengthen his party in the city. He subsequently amended his
error, but it was not till after the interview between him and Mr.
Harding.