CHAPTER 19
Conclusion
The end of a novel, like the end of a
children’s dinner party, must be made up of sweetmeats and
sugar-plums. There is now nothing else to be told but the gala
doings of Mr. Arabin’s marriage, nothing more to be described than
the wedding-dresses, no further dialogue to be recorded than that
which took place between the archdeacon, who married them, and Mr.
Arabin and Eleanor, who were married. “Wilt thou have this woman to
thy wedded wife,” and “wilt thou have this man to thy wedded
husband, to live together according to God’s ordinance?” Mr. Arabin
and Eleanor each answered, “I will.” We have no doubt that they
will keep their promises, the more especially as the Signora Neroni
had left Barchester before the ceremony was performed.
Mrs. Bold had been somewhat more than two
years a widow before she was married to her second husband, and
little Johnny was then able with due assistance to walk on his own
legs into the drawing-room to receive the salutations of the
assembled guests. Mr. Harding gave away the bride, the archdeacon
performed the service, and the two Miss Grantlys, who were joined
in their labours by other young ladies of the neighbourhood,
performed the duties of bridesmaids with equal diligence and grace.
Mrs. Grantly superintended the breakfast and bouquets, and Mary
Bold distributed the cards and cake. The archdeacon’s three sons
had also come home for the occasion. The elder was great with
learning, being regarded by all who knew him as a certain future
double first. The second, however, bore the palm on this occasion,
being resplendent in a new uniform. The third was just entering the
university, and was probably the proudest of the three.
But the most remarkable feature in the whole
occasion was the excessive liberality of the archdeacon. He
literally made presents to everybody. As Mr. Arabin had already
moved out of the parsonage of St. Ewold’s, that scheme of
elongating the dining-room was of course abandoned; but he would
have refurnished the whole deanery had he been allowed. He sent
down a magnificent piano by Erard, gave Mr. Arabin a cob which any
dean in the land might have been proud to bestride, and made a
special present to Eleanor of a new pony-chair that had gained a
prize in the Exhibition. Nor did he even stay his hand here; he
bought a set of cameos for his wife and a sapphire bracelet for
Miss Bold; showered pearls and work-boxes on his daughters; and to
each of his sons he presented a cheque for £20. On Mr. Harding he
bestowed a magnificent violoncello with all the new-fashioned
arrangements and expensive additions, which on account of these
novelties that gentleman could never use with satisfaction to his
audience or pleasure to himself.
Those who knew the archdeacon well, perfectly
understood the causes of his extravagance. ‘Twas thus that he sang
his song of triumph over Mr. Slope. This was his pæan, his hymn of
thanksgiving, his loud oration. He had girded himself with his
sword and gone forth to the war; now he was returning from the
field laden with the spoils of the foe. The cob and the cameos, the
violoncello and the pianoforte, were all as it were trophies reft
from the tent of his now-conquered enemy.
The Arabins after their marriage went abroad
for a couple of months, according to the custom in such matters now
duly established, and then commenced their deanery life under good
auspices. And nothing can be more pleasant than the present
arrangement of ecclesiastical affairs in Barchester. The titular
bishop never interfered, and Mrs. Proudie not often. Her sphere is
more extended, more noble, and more suited to her ambition than
that of a cathedral city. As long as she can do what she pleases
with the diocese, she is willing to leave the dean and chapter to
themselves. Mr. Slope tried his hand at subverting the
old-established customs of the close, and from his failure she had
learnt experience. The burly chancellor and the meagre little
prebendary are not teased by any application respecting Sabbath-day
schools, the dean is left to his own dominions, and the intercourse
between Mrs. Proudie and Mrs. Arabin is confined to a yearly dinner
given by each to the other. At these dinners Dr. Grantly will not
take a part, but he never fails to ask for and receive a full
account of all that Mrs. Proudie either does or says.
His ecclesiastical authority has been greatly
shorn since the palmy days in which he reigned supreme as mayor of
the palace to his father, but nevertheless such authority as is now
left to him he can enjoy without interference. He can walk down the
High Street of Barchester without feeling that those who see him
are comparing his claims with those of Mr. Slope. The intercourse
between Plumstead and the deanery is of the most constant and
familiar description. Since Eleanor has been married to a
clergyman, and especially to a dignitary of the church, Mrs.
Grantly has found many more points of sympathy with her sister; and
on a coming occasion, which is much looked forward to by all
parties, she intends to spend a month or two at the deanery. She
never thought of spending a month in Barchester when little Johnny
Bold was born!
The two sisters do not quite agree on matters
of church doctrine, though their differences are of the most
amicable description. Mrs. Arabin’s church is two degrees higher
than that of Mrs. Grantly. This may seem strange to those who will
remember that Eleanor was once accused of partiality to Mr. Slope,
but it is no less the fact. She likes her husband’s silken vest,
she likes his adherence to the rubric, she specially likes the
eloquent philosophy of his sermons, and she likes the red letters
in her own prayer-book. It must not be presumed that she has a
taste for candles, or that she is at all astray about the real
presence, but she has an inkling that way. She sent a handsome
subscription towards certain very heavy ecclesiastical legal
expenses which have lately been incurred in Bath, her name of
course not appearing; she assumes a smile of gentle ridicule when
the Archbishop of Canterbury is named; and she has put up a
memorial window in the cathedral.
Mrs. Grantly, who belongs to the high and dry
church, the High Church as it was some fifty years since, before
tracts were written and young clergymen took upon themselves the
highly meritorious duty of cleaning churches, rather laughs at her
sister. She shrugs her shoulders and tells Miss Thorne that she
supposes Eleanor will have an oratory in the deanery before she has
done. But she is not on that account a whit displeased. A few High
Church vagaries do not, she thinks, sit amiss on the shoulders of a
young dean’s wife. It shows at any rate that her heart is in the
subject, and it shows moreover that she is removed, wide as the
poles asunder, from that cesspool of abomination in which it was
once suspected that she would wallow and grovel. Anathema
maranatha! Let anything else be held as blessed, so that that be
well cursed. Welcome kneelings and bowings, welcome matins and
complines, welcome bell, book, and candle, so that Mr. Slope’s
dirty surplices and ceremonial Sabbaths be held in due
execration!
If it be essentially and absolutely necessary
to choose between the two, we are inclined to agree with Mrs.
Grantly that the bell, book, and candle are the lesser evil of the
two. Let it however be understood that no such necessity is
admitted in these pages.
Dr. Arabin (we suppose he must have become a
doctor when he became a dean) is more moderate and less outspoken
on doctrinal points than his wife, as indeed in his station it
behoves him to be. He is a studious, thoughtful, hard-working man.
He lives constantly at the deanery and preaches nearly every
Sunday. His time is spent in sifting and editing old ecclesiastical
literature and in producing the same articles new. At Oxford he is
generally regarded as the most promising clerical ornament of the
age. He and his wife live together in perfect mutual confidence.
There is but one secret in her bosom which he has not shared. He
has never yet learned how Mr. Slope had his ears boxed.
The Stanhopes soon found that Mr. Slope’s
power need no longer operate to keep them from the delight of their
Italian villa. Before Eleanor’s marriage they had all migrated back
to the shores of Como. They had not been resettled long before the
signora received from Mrs. Arabin a very pretty though very short
epistle, in which she was informed of the fate of the writer. This
letter was answered by another—bright, charming, and witty, as the
signora’s letters always were—and so ended the friendship between
Eleanor and the Stanhopes.
One word of Mr. Harding, and we have
done.
He is still precentor of Barchester and still
pastor of the little church of St. Cuthbert’s. In spite of what he
has so often said himself, he is not even yet an old man. He does
such duties as fall to his lot well and conscientiously, and is
thankful that he has never been tempted to assume others for which
he might be less fitted.
The Author now leaves him in the hands of his
readers: not as a hero, not as a man to be admired and talked of,
not as a man who should be toasted at public dinners and spoken of
with conventional absurdity as a perfect divine, but as a good man,
without guile, believing humbly in the religion which he has
striven to teach, and guided by the precepts which he has striven
to learn.
THE END