CHAPTER II
Long, Long Ago
As Dr. Thorne is our hero—or I should rather
say my hero, a privilege of selecting for themselves in this
respect being left to all my readers—and as Miss Mary Thorne is to
be our heroine, a point on which no choice whatsoever is left to
anyone, it is necessary that they shall be introduced and explained
and described in a proper, formal manner. I quite feel that an
apology is due for beginning a novel with two long dull chapters
full of description. I am perfectly aware of the danger of such a
course. In so doing I sin against the golden rule which requires us
all to put our best foot foremost, the wisdom of which is fully
recognised by novelists, myself among the number. It can hardly be
expected that anyone will consent to go through with a fiction that
offers so little of allurement in its first pages; but twist it as
I will I cannot do otherwise. I find that I cannot make poor Mr.
Gresham hem and haw and turn himself uneasily in his arm-chair in a
natural manner till I have said why he is uneasy. I cannot bring in
my doctor speaking his mind freely among the bigwigs till I have
explained that it is in accordance with his usual character to do
so. This is unartistic on my part, and shows want of imagination as
well as want of skill. Whether or not I can atone for these faults
by straightforward, simple, plain story-telling—that, indeed, is
very doubtful.
Dr. Thorne belonged to a family in one sense
as good, and at any rate as old, as that of Mr. Gresham; and much
older, he was apt to boast, than that of the De Courcys. This trait
in his character is mentioned first, as it was the weakness for
which he was most conspicuous. He was second cousin to Mr. Thorne
of Ullathorne, a Barsetshire squire living in the neighbourhood of
Barchester, and who boasted that his estate had remained in his
family, descending from Thorne to Thorne, longer than had been the
case with any other estate or any other family in the county.
But Dr. Thorne was only a second cousin; and,
therefore, though he was entitled to talk of the blood as belonging
to some extent to himself, he had no right to lay claim to any
position in the county other than such as he might win for himself
if he chose to locate himself in it. This was a fact of which no
one was more fully aware than our doctor himself. His father, who
had been first cousin of a former Squire Thorne, had been a
clerical dignitary in Barchester, but had been dead now many years.
He had had two sons; one he had educated as a medical man, but the
other, and the younger, whom he had intended for the Bar, had not
betaken himself in any satisfactory way to any calling. This son
had been first rusticated from Oxford, and then expelled; and
thence returning to Barchester, had been the cause to his father
and brother of much suffering.
Old Dr. Thorne, the clergyman, died when the
two brothers were yet young men, and left behind him nothing but
some household and other property of the value of about two
thousand pounds, which he bequeathed to Thomas, the elder son, much
more than that having been spent in liquidating debts contracted by
the younger. Up to that time there had been close harmony between
the Ullathorne family and that of the clergyman; but a month or two
before the doctor’s death—the period of which we are speaking was
about two-and-twenty years before the commencement of our story—the
then Mr. Thorne of Ullathorne had made it understood that he would
no longer receive at his house his cousin Henry, whom he regarded
as a disgrace to the family.
Fathers are apt to be more lenient to their
sons than uncles to their nephews, or cousins to each other. Dr.
Thorne still hoped to reclaim his black sheep, and thought that the
head of his family showed an unnecessary harshness in putting an
obstacle in his way of doing so. And if the father was warm in
support of his profligate son, the young medical aspirant was
warmer in support of his profligate brother. Dr. Thorne, junior,
was no roué himself, but perhaps, as a young man, he had not
sufficient abhorrence of his brother’s vices. At any rate, he stuck
to him manfully; and when it was signified in the Close that
Henry’s company was not considered desirable at Ullathorne, Dr.
Thomas Thorne sent word to the squire that under such circumstances
his visits there would also cease.
This was not very prudent, as the young Galen
had elected to establish himself in Barchester, very mainly in
expectation of the help which his Ullathorne connexion would give
him. This, however, in his anger he failed to consider; he was
never known, either in early or in middle life, to consider in his
anger those points which were probably best worth his
consideration. This, perhaps, was of the less moment as his anger
was of an unenduring kind, evaporating frequently with more
celerity than he could get the angry words out of his mouth. With
the Ullathorne people, however, he did establish a quarrel
sufficiently permanent to be of vital injury to his medical
prospects.
And then the father died, and the two
brothers were left living together with very little means between
them. At this time there were living, in Barchester, people of the
name of Scatcherd. Of that family, as then existing, we have only
to do with two, a brother and a sister. They were in a low rank of
life, the one being a journeyman stone-mason, and the other an
apprentice to a straw-bonnet maker; but they were, nevertheless, in
some sort remarkable people. The sister was reputed in Barchester
to be a model of female beauty of the strong and robuster cast, and
had also a better reputation as being a girl of good character and
honest, womanly conduct. Both of her beauty and of her reputation
her brother was exceedingly proud, and he was the more so when he
learnt that she had been asked in marriage by a decent
master-tradesman in the city.
Roger Scatcherd had also a reputation, but
not for beauty or propriety of conduct. He was known for the best
stone-mason in the four counties, and as the man who could, on
occasion, drink the most alcohol in a given time in the same
localities. As a workman, indeed, he had higher reputate even than
this: he was not only a good and very quick stone-mason, but he had
also a capacity for turning other men into good stone-masons: he
had a gift of knowing what a man could and should do; and, by
degrees, he taught himself what five, and ten, and twenty—latterly,
what a thousand and two thousand men might accomplish among them:
this, also, he did with very little aid from pen and paper, with
which he was not, and never became, very conversant. He had also
other gifts and other propensities. He could talk in a manner
dangerous to himself and others; he could persuade without knowing
that he did so; and being himself an extreme demagogue, in those
noisy times just prior to the Reform Bill, he created a hubbub in
Barchester of which he himself had had no previous
conception.
Henry Thorne among his other bad qualities
had one which his friends regarded as worse than all the others,
and which perhaps justified the Ullathorne people in their
severity. He loved to consort with low people. He not only
drank—that might have been forgiven—but he drank in tap-rooms with
vulgar drinkers; so said his friends, and so said his enemies. He
denied the charge as being made in the plural number, and declared
that his only low co-reveller was Roger Scatcherd. With Roger
Scatcherd, at any rate, he associated, and became as democratic as
Roger was himself. Now the Thornes of Ullathorne were of the very
highest order of Tory excellence.
Whether or not Mary Scatcherd at once
accepted the offer of the respectable tradesman, I cannot say.
After the occurrence of certain events which must here shortly be
told, she declared that she never had done so. Her brother averred
that she most positively had. The respectable tradesman himself
refused to speak on the subject.
It is certain, however, that Scatcherd, who
had hitherto been silent enough about his sister in those social
hours which he passed with his gentleman friend, boasted of the
engagement when it was, as he said, made; and then boasted also of
the girl’s beauty. Scatcherd, in spite of his occasional
intemperance, looked up in the world, and the coming marriage of
his sister was, he thought, suitable to his own ambition for his
family.
Henry Thorne had already heard of, and
already seen, Mary Scatcherd; but hitherto she had not fallen in
the way of his wickedness. Now, however, when he heard that she was
to be decently married, the devil tempted him to tempt her. It
boots not to tell all the tale. It came out clearly enough when all
was told, that he made her most distinct promises of marriage; he
even gave her such in writing; and having in this way obtained from
her her company during some of her little holidays—her Sundays or
summer evenings—he seduced her. Scatcherd accused him openly of
having intoxicated her with drugs; and Thomas Thorne, who took up
the case, ultimately believed the charge. It became known in
Barchester that she was with child, and that the seducer was Henry
Thorne.
Roger Scatcherd, when the news first reached
him, filled himself with drink, and then swore that he would kill
them both. With manly wrath, however, he set forth, first against
the man, and that with manly weapons. He took nothing with him but
his fists and a big stick as he went in search of Henry
Thorne.
The two brothers were then lodging together
at a farm-house close abutting on the town. This was not an
eligible abode for a medical practitioner; but the young doctor had
not been able to settle himself eligibly since his father’s death;
and wishing to put what constraint he could upon his brother, had
so located himself. To this farm-house came Roger Scatcherd one
sultry summer evening, his anger gleaming from his bloodshot eyes,
and his rage heightened to madness by the rapid pace at which he
had run from the city, and by the ardent spirits which were
fermenting within him.
At the very gate of the farm-yard, standing
placidly with his cigar in his mouth, he encountered Henry Thorne.
He had thought of searching for him through the whole premises, of
demanding his victim with loud exclamations, and making his way to
him through all obstacles. In lieu of that, there stood the man
before him.
“Well, Roger, what’s in the wind?” said Henry
Thorne.
They were the last words he ever spoke. He
was answered by a blow from the blackthorn. A contest ensued, which
ended in Scatcherd keeping his word—at any rate, as regarded the
worst offender. How the fatal blow on the temple was struck was
never exactly determined: one medical man said it might have been
done in a fight with a heavy-headed stick; another thought that a
stone had been used; a third suggested a stone-mason’s hammer. It
seemed, however, to be proved subsequently that no hammer was taken
out, and Scatcherd himself persisted in declaring that he had taken
in his hand no weapon but the stick. Scatcherd, however, was drunk;
and even though he intended to tell the truth, may have been
mistaken. There were, however, the facts that Thorne was dead; that
Scatcherd had sworn to kill him about an hour previously; and that
he had without delay accomplished his threat. He was arrested and
tried for murder; all the distressing circumstances of the case
came out on the trial: he was found guilty of manslaughter, and
sentenced to be imprisoned for six months. Our readers will
probably think that the punishment was too severe.
Thomas Thorne and the farmer were on the spot
soon after Henry Thorne had fallen. The brother was at first
furious for vengeance against his brother’s murderer; but, as the
facts came out, as he learnt what had been the provocation given,
what had been the feelings of Scatcherd when he left the city,
determined to punish him who had ruined his sister, his heart was
changed. Those were trying days for him. It behoved him to do what
in him lay to cover his brother’s memory from the obloquy which it
deserved; it behoved him also to save, or to assist to save, from
undue punishment the unfortunate man who had shed his brother’s
blood; and it behoved him also, at least so he thought, to look
after that poor fallen one whose misfortunes were less merited than
those either of his brother or of hers.
And he was not the man to get through these
things lightly, or with as much ease as he perhaps might
conscientiously have done. He would pay for the defence of the
prisoner; he would pay for the defence of his brother’s memory; and
he would pay for the poor girl’s comforts. He would do this, and he
would allow no one to help him. He stood alone in the world, and
insisted on so standing. Old Mr. Thorne of Ullathorne offered again
to open his arms to him; but he had conceived a foolish idea that
his cousin’s severity had driven his brother on to his bad career,
and he would consequently accept no kindness from Ullathorne. Miss
Thorne, the old squire’s daughter—a cousin considerably older than
himself, to whom he had at one time been much attached—sent him
money; and he returned it to her under a blank cover. He had still
enough for those unhappy purposes which he had in hand. As to what
might happen afterwards, he was then mainly indifferent.
The affair made much noise in the county, and
was inquired into closely by many of the county magistrates; by
none more closely than by John Newbold Gresham, who was then alive.
Mr. Gresham was greatly taken with the energy and justice shown by
Dr. Thorne on the occasion; and when the trial was over, he invited
him to Greshamsbury. The visit ended in the doctor establishing
himself in that village.
We must return for a moment to Mary
Scatcherd. She was saved from the necessity of encountering her
brother’s wrath, for that brother was under arrest for murder
before he could get at her. Her immediate lot, however, was a cruel
one. Deep as was her cause for anger against the man who had so
inhumanly used her, still it was natural that she should turn to
him with love rather than with aversion. To whom else could she in
such plight look for love? When, therefore, she heard that he was
slain, her heart sank within her; she turned her face to the wall,
and laid herself down to die: to die a double death, for herself
and the fatherless babe that was now quick within her.
But, in fact, life had still much to offer,
both to her and to her child. For her it was still destined that
she should, in a distant land, be the worthy wife of a good
husband, and the happy mother of many children. For that embryo one
it was destined—but that may not be so quickly told: to describe
her destiny this volume has yet to be written.
Even in those bitterest days God tempered the
wind to the shorn lamb. Dr. Thorne was by her bedside soon after
the bloody tidings had reached her, and did for her more than
either her lover or her brother could have done. When the baby was
born, Scatcherd was still in prison, and had still three months’
more confinement to undergo. The story of her great wrongs and
cruel usage was much talked of, and men said that one who had been
so injured should be regarded as having in nowise sinned at
all.
One man, at any rate, so thought. At
twilight, one evening, Thorne was surprised by a visit from a
demure Barchester hardware dealer, whom he did not remember ever to
have addressed before. This was the former lover of poor Mary
Scatcherd. He had a proposal to make, and it was this—if Mary would
consent to leave the country at once, to leave it without notice
from her brother, or talk or éclat on the matter, he would sell all
that he had, marry her, and emigrate. There was but one condition;
she must leave her baby behind her. The hardware-man could find it
in his heart to be generous, to be generous and true to his love;
but he could not be generous enough to father the seducer’s
child.
“I could never abide it, sir, if I took it,”
said he; “and she—why in course she would always love it the
best.”
In praising his generosity, who can mingle
any censure for such manifest prudence? He would still make her the
wife of his bosom, defiled in the eyes of the world as she had
been; but she must be to him the mother of his own children, not
the mother of another’s child.
And now again our doctor had a hard task to
win through. He saw at once that it was his duty to use his utmost
authority to induce the poor girl to accept such an offer. She
liked the man; and here was opened to her a course which would have
been most desirable, even before her misfortune. But it is hard to
persuade a mother to part with her first babe; harder, perhaps,
when the babe had been so fathered and so born than when the world
has shone brightly on its earliest hours. She at first refused
stoutly: she sent a thousand loves, a thousand thanks, profusest
acknowledgements for his generosity to the man who showed her that
he loved her so well; but Nature, she said, would not let her leave
her child.
“And what will you do for her here, Mary?”
said the doctor. Poor Mary replied to him with a deluge of
tears.
“She is my niece,” said the doctor, taking up
the tiny infant in his huge hands; “she is already the nearest
thing, the only thing that I have in this world. I am her uncle,
Mary. If you will go with this man I will be father to her and
mother to her. Of what bread I eat, she shall eat; of what cup I
drink, she shall drink. See, Mary, here is the Bible;” and he
covered the book with his hand. “Leave her to me, and by this word
she shall be my child.”
The mother consented at last; left her baby
with the doctor, married, and went to America. All this was
consummated before Roger Scatcherd was liberated from jail. Some
conditions the doctor made. The first was, that Scatcherd should
not know his sister’s child was thus disposed of. Dr. Thorne, in
undertaking to bring up the baby, did not choose to encounter any
tie with persons who might hereafter claim to be the girl’s
relations on the other side. Relations she would undoubtedly have
had none had she been left to live or die as a workhouse bastard;
but should the doctor succeed in life, should he ultimately be able
to make this girl the darling of his own house, and then the
darling of some other house, should she live and win the heart of
some man whom the doctor might delight to call his friend and
nephew; then relations might spring up whose ties would not be
advantageous.
No man plumed himself on good blood more than
Dr. Thorne; no man had greater pride in his genealogical tree, and
his hundred and thirty clearly proved descents from MacAdam; no man
had a stronger theory as to the advantage held by men who have
grandfathers over those who have none, or have none worth talking
about. Let it not be thought that our doctor was a perfect
character. No, indeed; most far from perfect. He had within him an
inner, stubborn, self-admiring pride, which made him believe
himself to be better and higher than those around him, and this
from some unknown cause which he could hardly explain to himself.
He had a pride in being a poor man of a high family; he had a pride
in repudiating the very family of which he was proud; and he had a
special pride in keeping his pride silently to himself. His father
had been a Thorne, and his mother a Thorold. There was no better
blood to be had in England. It was in the possession of such
properties as these that he condescended to rejoice; this man, with
a man’s heart, a man’s courage, and a man’s humanity! Other doctors
round the county had ditch-water in their veins; he could boast of
a pure ichor, to which that of the great Omnium family was but a
muddy puddle. It was thus that he loved to excel his brother
practitioners, he who might have indulged in the pride of excelling
them both in talent and in energy! We speak now of his early days;
but even in his maturer life, the man, though mellowed, was the
same.
This was the man who now promised to take to
his bosom as his own child a poor bastard whose father was already
dead, and whose mother’s family was such as the Scatcherds! It was
necessary that the child’s history should be known to none. Except
to the mother’s brother it was an object of interest to no one. The
mother had for some short time been talked of; but now the
nine-days’ wonder was a wonder no longer. She went off to her
far-away home; her husband’s generosity was duly chronicled in the
papers, and the babe was left untalked of and unknown.
It was easy to explain to Scatcherd that the
child had not lived. There was a parting interview between the
brother and sister in the jail, during which, with real tears and
unaffected sorrow, the mother thus accounted for the offspring of
her shame. Then she started, fortunate in her coming fortunes; and
the doctor took with him his charge to the new country in which
they were both to live. There he found for her a fitting home till
she should be old enough to sit at his table and live in his
bachelor house; and no one but old Mr. Gresham knew who she was, or
whence she had come.
Then Roger Scatcherd, having completed his
six months’ confinement, came out of prison.
Roger Scatcherd, though his hands were now
red with blood, was to be pitied. A short time before the days of
Henry Thorne’s death he had married a young wife in his own class
of life, and had made many resolves that henceforward his conduct
should be such as might become a married man, and might not
disgrace the respectable brother-in-law he was about to have given
him. Such was his condition when he first heard of his sister’s
plight. As has been said, he filled himself with drink and started
off on the scent of blood.
During his prison days his wife had to
support herself as she might. The decent articles of furniture
which they had put together were sold; she gave up their little
house, and, bowed down by misery, she also was brought near to
death. When he was liberated he at once got work; but those who
have watched the lives of such people know how hard it is for them
to recover lost ground. She became a mother immediately after his
liberation, and when her child was born they were in direst want;
for Scatcherd was again drinking, and his resolves were blown to
the wind.
The doctor was then living at Greshamsbury.
He had gone over there before the day on which he undertook the
charge of poor Mary’s baby, and soon found himself settled as the
Greshamsbury doctor. This occurred very soon after the birth of the
young heir. His predecessor in this career had “bettered” himself,
or endeavoured to do so, by seeking the practice of some large
town, and Lady Arabella, at a very critical time, was absolutely
left with no other advice than that of a stranger, picked up, as
she declared to Lady de Courcy, somewhere about Barchester jail, or
Barchester court-house, she did not know which.
Of course Lady Arabella could not suckle the
young heir herself. Ladies Arabella never can. They are gifted with
the powers of being mothers, but not nursing-mothers. Nature gives
them bosoms for show, but not for use. So Lady Arabella had a
wet-nurse. At the end of six months the new doctor found Master
Frank was not doing quite so well as he should do; and after a
little trouble it was discovered that the very excellent young
woman who had been sent express from Courcy Castle to
Greshamsbury—a supply being kept up on the lord’s demesne for the
family use—was fond of brandy. She was at once sent back to the
castle, of course; and, as Lady de Courcy was too much in dudgeon
to send another, Dr. Thorne was allowed to procure one. He thought
of the misery of Roger Scatcherd’s wife, thought also of her
health, and strength, and active habits; and thus Mrs. Scatcherd
became the foster-mother to young Frank Gresham.
One other episode we must tell of past times.
Previous to his father’s death, Dr. Thorne was in love. Nor had he
altogether sighed and pleaded in vain; though it had not quite come
to that, that the young lady’s friends, or even the young lady
herself, had actually accepted his suit. At that time his name
stood well in Barchester. His father was a prebendary; his cousins
and his best friends were the Thornes of Ullathorne, and the lady,
who shall be nameless, was not thought to be injudicious in
listening to the young doctor. But when Henry Thorne went so far
astray, when the old doctor died, when the young doctor quarrelled
with Ullathorne, when the brother was killed in a disgraceful
quarrel, and it turned out that the physician had nothing but his
profession and no settled locality in which to exercise it; then,
indeed, the young lady’s friends thought that she was injudicious, and the young lady herself had not
spirit enough, or love enough, to be disobedient. In those stormy
days of the trial she told Dr. Thorne that perhaps it would be wise
that they should not see each other any more.
Dr. Thorne, so counselled, at such a
moment—so informed then, when he most required comfort from his
love, at once swore loudly that he agreed with her. He rushed forth
with a bursting heart, and said to himself that the world was bad,
all bad. He saw the lady no more; and, if I am rightly informed,
never again made matrimonial overtures to anyone.