CHAPTER XIV
Mr. Crawley of Hogglestock
And then there was that other trouble in Lady
Lufton’s mind, the sins, namely, of her selected parson. She had
selected him, and she was by no means inclined to give him up, even
though his sins against parsondom were grievous. Indeed she was a
woman not prone to give up anything, and of all things not prone to
give up a protégé. The very fact that
she herself had selected him was the strongest argument in his
favour.
But his sins against parsondom were becoming
very grievous in her eyes, and she was at a loss to know what steps
to take. She hardly dared to take him to task, him himself. Were
she to do so, and should he then tell her to mind her own
business—as he probably might do, though not in those words—there
would be a schism in the parish; and almost anything would be
better than that. The whole work of her life would be upset, all
the outlets of her energy would be impeded if not absolutely
closed, if a state of things were to come to pass in which she and
the parson of her parish should not be on good terms.
But what was to be done? Early in the winter
he had gone to Chaldicotes and to Gatherum Castle, consorting with
gamblers, Whigs, atheists, men of loose pleasure, and Proudieites.
That she had condoned; and now he was turning out a hunting parson
on her hands. It was all very well for Fanny to say that he merely
looked at the hounds as he rode about his parish. Fanny might be
deceived. Being his wife, it might be her duty not to see her
husband’s iniquities. But Lady Lufton could not be deceived. She
knew very well in what part of the county Cobbold’s Ashes lay. It
was not in Framley parish, nor in the next parish to it. It was
half-way across to Chaldicotes—in the western division; and she had
heard of that run in which two horses had been killed, and in which
Parson Robarts had won such immortal glory among West Barsetshire
sportsmen. It was not easy to keep Lady Lufton in the dark as to
matters occurring in her own county.
All these things she knew, but as yet had not
noticed, grieving over them in her own heart the more on that
account. Spoken grief relieves itself; and when one can give
counsel, one always hopes at least that that counsel will be
effective. To her son she had said, more than once, that it was a
pity that Mr. Robarts should follow the hounds.—”The world has
agreed that it is unbecoming in a clergyman,” she would urge, in
her deprecatory tone. But her son would by no means give her any
comfort. “He doesn’t hunt, you know—not as I do,” he would say.
“And if he did, I really don’t see the harm of it. A man must have
some amusement, even if he be an archbishop.” “He has amusement at
home,” Lady Lufton would answer. “What does his wife do—and his
sister?” This allusion to Lucy, however, was very soon
dropped.
Lord Lufton would in no wise help her. He
would not even passively discourage the vicar, or refrain from
offering to give him a seat in going to the meets. Mark and Lord
Lufton had been boys together, and his lordship knew that Mark in
his heart would enjoy a brush across the country quite as well as
he himself; and then what was the harm of it?
Lady Lufton’s best aid had been in Mark’s own
conscience. He had taken himself to task more than once, and had
promised himself that he would not become a sporting parson.
Indeed, where would be his hopes of ulterior promotion, if he
allowed himself to degenerate so far as that? It had been his
intention, in reviewing what he considered to be the necessary
proprieties of clerical life, in laying out his own future mode of
living, to assume no peculiar sacerdotal strictness; he would not
be known as a denouncer of dancing or of card-tables, of theatres
or of novel-reading; he would take the world around him as he found
it, endeavouring by precept and practice to lend a hand to the
gradual amelioration which Christianity is producing; but he would
attempt no sudden or majestic reforms. Cake and ale would still be
popular, and ginger be hot in the mouth, let him preach ever so—let
him be never so solemn a hermit; but a bright face, a true trusting
heart, a strong arm, and an humble mind, might do much in teaching
those around him that men may be gay and yet not profligate, that
women may be devout and yet not dead to the world.
Such had been his ideas as to his own future
life; and though many will think that, as a clergyman, he should
have gone about his work with more serious devotion of thought,
nevertheless there was some wisdom in them—some folly also,
undoubtedly, as appeared by the troubles into which they led
him.
“I will not affect to think that to be bad,”
said he to himself, “which in my heart of hearts does not seem to
be bad.” And thus he resolved that he might live without
contamination among hunting squires. And then, being a man only too
prone by nature to do as others did around him, he found by degrees
that that could hardly be wrong for him which he admitted to be
right for others.
But still his conscience upbraided him, and
he declared to himself more than once that after this year he would
hunt no more. And then his own Fanny would look at him on his
return home on those days in a manner that cut him to the heart.
She would say nothing to him. She never inquired in a sneering
tone, and with angry eyes, whether he had enjoyed his day’s sport:
but when he spoke of it, she could not answer him with enthusiasm;
and in other matters which concerned him she was always
enthusiastic.
After a while, too, he made matters worse,
for about the end of March he did another very foolish thing. He
almost consented to buy an expensive horse from Sowerby—an animal
which he by no means wanted, and which, if once possessed, would
certainly lead him into further trouble. A gentleman, when he has a
good horse in his stable, does not like to leave him there eating
his head off. If he be a gig-horse, the owner of him will be keen
to drive a gig; if a hunter, the happy possessor will wish to be
with a pack of hounds.
“Mark,” said Sowerby to him one day, when
they were out together, “this brute of mine is so fresh, I can
hardly ride him; you are young and strong; change with me for an
hour or so.” And then they did change, and the horse on which
Robarts found himself mounted went away with him beautifully.
“He’s a splendid animal,” said Mark, when
they again met.
“Yes, for a man of your weight. He’s thrown
away upon me—too much of a horse for my purposes. I don’t get along
now quite as well as I used to do. He is a nice sort of hunter;
just rising six, you know.”
How it came to pass that the price of the
splendid animal was mentioned between them, I need not describe
with exactness. But it did come to pass that Mr. Sowerby told the
parson that the horse should be his for £130.
“And I really wish you’d take him,” said
Sowerby. “It would be the means of partially relieving my mind of a
great weight.”
Mark looked up into his friend’s face with an
air of surprise, for he did not at the moment understand how this
should be the case.
“I am afraid, you know, that you will have to
put your hand into your pocket sooner or later about that accursed
bill”—Mark shrank as the profane words struck his ears—”and I
should be glad to think that you had got something in hand in the
way of value.”
“Do you mean that I shall have to pay the
whole sum of £500?”
“Oh dear, no; nothing of the kind. But
something I dare say you will have to pay: if you like to take
Dandy for a hundred and thirty, you can be prepared for that amount
when Tozer comes to you. The horse is dog cheap, and you will have
a long day for your money.”
Mark at first declared, in a quiet,
determined tone, that he did not want the horse; but it afterwards
appeared to him that if it were so fated that he must pay a portion
of Mr. Sowerby’s debts, he might as well repay himself to any
extent within his power. It would be as well perhaps that he should
take the horse and sell him. It did not occur to him that by so
doing he would put it in Mr. Sowerby’s power to say that some
valuable consideration had passed between them with reference to
this bill, and that he would be aiding that gentleman in preparing
an inextricable confusion of money-matters between them. Mr.
Sowerby well knew the value of this. It would enable him to make a
plausible story, as he had done in that other case of Lord
Lufton.
“Are you going to have Dandy?” Sowerby said
to him again.
“I can’t say that I will just at present,”
said the parson. “What should I want of him now the season’s
over?”
“Exactly, my dear fellow; and what do I want
of him now the season’s over? If it were the beginning of October
instead of the end of March, Dandy would be up at two hundred and
thirty instead of one: in six months’ time that horse will be worth
anything you like to ask for him. Look at his bone.”
The vicar did look at his bones, examining
the brute in a very knowing and unclerical manner. He lifted the
animal’s four feet, one after another, handling the frogs, and
measuring with his eye the proportion of the parts; he passed his
hand up and down the legs, spanning the bones of the lower joint;
he peered into his eyes, took into consideration the width of his
chest, the dip of his back, the form of his ribs, the curve of his
haunches, and his capabilities for breathing when pressed by work.
And then he stood away a little, eyeing him from the side, and
taking in a general idea of the form and make of the whole. “He
seems to stand over a little, I think,” said the parson.
“It’s the lie of the ground. Move him about,
Bob. There now, let him stand there.”
“He’s not perfect,” said Mark. “I don’t quite
like his heels; but no doubt he’s a niceish cut of a horse.”
“I rather think he is. If he were perfect, as
you say, he would not be going into your stables for a hundred and
thirty. Do you ever remember to have seen a perfect horse?”
“Your mare Mrs. Gamp was as nearly perfect as
possible.”
“Even Mrs. Gamp had her faults. In the first
place she was a bad feeder. But one certainly doesn’t often come
across anything much better than Mrs. Gamp.” And thus the matter
was talked over between them with much stable conversation, all of
which tended to make Sowerby more and more oblivious of his
friend’s sacred profession, and perhaps to make the vicar himself
too frequently oblivious of it also. But no: he was not oblivious
of it. He was even mindful of it; but mindful of it in such a
manner that his thoughts on the subject were nowadays always
painful.
There is a parish called Hogglestock lying
away quite in the northern extremity of the eastern division of the
county—lying also on the borders of the western division. I almost
fear that it will become necessary, before this history be
completed, to provide a map of Barsetshire for the due explanation
of all these localities. Framley is also in the northern portion of
the county, but just to the south of the grand trunk line of
railway from which the branch to Barchester strikes off at a point
some thirty miles nearer to London. The station for Framley Court
is Silverbridge, which is, however, in the western division of the
county. Hogglestock is to the north of the railway, the line of
which, however, runs through a portion of the parish, and it
adjoins Framley, though the churches are as much as seven miles
apart. Barsetshire, taken altogether, is a pleasant green
tree-becrowded county, with large bosky hedges, pretty damp deep
lanes, and roads with broad grass margins running along them. Such
is the general nature of the county; but just up in its northern
extremity this nature alters. There it is bleak and ugly, with low
artificial hedges and without wood; not uncultivated, as it is all
portioned out into new-looking large fields, bearing turnips, and
wheat, and mangel, all in due course of agricultural rotation; but
it has none of the special beauties of English cultivation. There
is not a gentleman’s house in the parish of Hogglestock besides
that of the clergyman; and this, though it is certainly the house
of a gentleman, can hardly be said to be fit to be so. It is ugly,
and straight, and small. There is a garden attached to the house,
half in front of it and half behind; but this garden, like the rest
of the parish, is by no means ornamental, though sufficiently
useful. It produces cabbages, but no trees: potatoes of, I believe,
an excellent description, but hardly any flowers, and nothing
worthy of the name of a shrub. Indeed the whole parish of
Hogglestock should have been in the adjoining county, which is by
no means so attractive as Barsetshire—a fact well known to those
few of my readers who are well acquainted with their own
country.
Mr. Crawley, whose name has been mentioned in
these pages, was the incumbent of Hogglestock. On what principle
the remuneration of our parish clergymen was settled when the
original settlement was made, no deepest, keenest lover of
middle-aged ecclesiastical black-letter learning can, I take it,
now say. That the priests were to be paid from tithes of the parish
produce, out of which tithes certain other good things were to be
bought and paid for, such as church repairs and education, of so
much the most of us have an inkling. That a rector, being a big
sort of parson, owned the tithes of his parish in full—or at any
rate that part of them intended for the clergyman—and that a vicar
was somebody’s deputy, and therefore entitled only to little
tithes, as being a little body: of so much we that are simple in
such matters have a general idea. But one cannot conceive that even
in this way any approximation could have been made, even in those
old mediæval days, towards a fair proportioning of the pay to the
work. At any rate, it is clear enough that there is no such
approximation now.
And what a screech would there not be among
the clergy of the Church, even in these reforming days, if any
over-bold reformer were to suggest that such an approximation
should be attempted? Let those who know clergymen, and like them,
and have lived with them, only fancy it! Clergymen to be paid, not
according to the temporalities of any living which they may have
acquired, either by merit or favour, but in accordance with the
work to be done! O Doddington! and O Stanhope, think of this, if an
idea so sacrilegious can find entrance into your warm
ecclesiastical bosoms! Ecclesiastical work to be bought and paid
for according to its quantity and quality!
But, nevertheless, one may prophesy that we
Englishmen must come to this, disagreeable as the idea undoubtedly
is. Most pleasant-minded Churchmen feel, I think, on this subject
pretty much in the same way. Our present arrangement of parochial
incomes is beloved as being time-honoured, gentlemanlike, English,
and picturesque. We would fain adhere to it closely as long as we
can, but we know that we do so by the force of our prejudices, and
not by that of our judgement. A time-honoured, gentlemanlike,
English, picturesque arrangement is so far very delightful. But are
there not other attributes very desirable—nay, absolutely
necessary—in respect to which this time-honoured, picturesque
arrangement is so very deficient?
How pleasant it was, too, that one bishop
should be getting fifteen thousand a year, and another with an
equal cure of parsons only four! That a certain prelate could get
twenty thousand one year and his successor in the same diocese only
five the next! There was something in it pleasant, and picturesque;
it was an arrangement endowed with feudal charms, and the change
which they have made was distasteful to many of us. A bishop with a
regular salary, and no appanage of land and land-bailiffs, is only
half a bishop. Let any man prove to me the contrary ever so
thoroughly—let me prove it to my own self ever so often—my heart in
this matter is not thereby a whit altered. One liked to know that
there was a dean or two who got his three thousand a year, and that
old Dr. Purple held four stalls, one of which was golden, and the
other three silver-gilt! Such knowledge was always pleasant to me!
A golden stall! How sweet is the sound thereof to church-loving
ears!
But bishops have been shorn of their beauty,
and deans are in their decadence. A utilitarian age requires the
fatness of the ecclesiastical land, in order that it may be divided
out into small portions of provender, on which necessary working
clergymen may live—into portions so infinitesimally small that
working clergymen can hardly live. And the full-blown rectors and
vicars, with full-blown tithes—with tithes when too full-blown for
strict utilitarian principles—will necessarily follow. Stanhope and
Doddington must bow their heads, with such compensation for
temporal rights as may be extracted—but probably without such
compensation as may be desired. In other trades, professions, and
lines of life, men are paid according to their work. Let it be so
in the Church. Such will sooner or later be the edict of a
utilitarian, reforming, matter-of-fact House of Parliament.
I have a scheme of my own on the subject,
which I will not introduce here, seeing that neither men nor women
would read it. And with reference to this matter, I will only here
further explain that all these words have been brought about by the
fact, necessary to be here stated, that Mr. Crawley only received
one hundred and thirty pounds a year for performing the whole
parochial duty of the parish of Hogglestock. And Hogglestock is a
large parish. It includes two populous villages, abounding in
brickmakers, a race of men very troublesome to a zealous parson who
won’t let men go rollicking to the devil without interference.
Hogglestock has full work for two men; and yet all the funds
therein applicable to parson’s work is this miserable stipend of
one hundred and thirty pounds a year. It is a stipend neither
picturesque, nor time-honoured, nor feudal, for Hogglestock takes
rank only as a perpetual curacy.
Mr. Crawley has been mentioned before as a
clergyman of whom Mr. Robarts said, that he almost thought it wrong
to take a walk out of his own parish. In so saying Mark Robarts of
course burlesqued his brother parson; but there can be no doubt
that Mr. Crawley was a strict man—a strict, stern, unpleasant man,
and one who feared God and his own conscience. We must say a word
or two of Mr. Crawley and his concerns.
He was now some forty years of age, but of
these he had not been in possession even of his present benefice
for more than four or five. The first ten years of his life as a
clergyman had been passed in performing the duties and struggling
through the life of a curate in a bleak, ugly, cold parish on the
northern coast of Cornwall. It had been a weary life and a fearful
struggle, made up of duties ill requited and not always
satisfactorily performed, of love and poverty, of increasing cares,
of sickness, debt, and death. For Mr. Crawley had married almost as
soon as he was ordained, and children had been born to him in that
chill, comfortless Cornish cottage. He had married a lady well
educated and softly nurtured, but not dowered with worldly wealth.
They two had gone forth determined to fight bravely together; to
disregard the world and the world’s ways, looking only to God and
to each other for their comfort. They would give up ideas of gentle
living, of soft raiment, and delicate feeding. Others—those that
work with their hands, even the bettermost of such workers—could
live in decency and health upon even such provision as he could
earn as a clergyman. In such manner would they live, so poorly and
so decently, working out their work, not with their hands but with
their hearts.
And so they had established themselves,
beginning the world with one bare-footed little girl of fourteen to
aid them in their small household matters; and for a while they had
both kept heart, loving each other dearly, and prospering somewhat
in their work. But a man who has once walked the world as a
gentleman knows not what it is to change his position, and place
himself lower down in the social rank. Much less can he know what
it is so to put down the woman whom he loves. There are a thousand
things, mean and trifling in themselves, which a man despises when
he thinks of them in his philosophy, but to dispense with which
puts his philosophy to so stern a proof. Let any plainest man who
reads this think of his usual mode of getting himself into his
matutinal garments, and confess how much such a struggle would cost
him.
And then children had come. The wife of the
labouring man does rear her children, and often rears them in
health, without even so many appliances of comfort as found their
way into Mrs. Crawley’s cottage; but the task to her was almost
more than she could accomplish. Not that she ever fainted or gave
way: she was made of the sterner metal of the two, and could last
on while he was prostrate.
And sometimes he was prostrate—prostrate in
soul and spirit. Then would he complain with bitter voice, crying
out that the world was too hard for him, that his back was broken
with his burden, that his God had deserted him. For days and days,
in such moods, he would stay within his cottage, never darkening
the door or seeing other face than those of his own inmates. Those
days were terrible both to him and her. He would sit there
unwashed, with his unshorn face resting on his hand, with an old
dressing-gown hanging loose about him, hardly tasting food, seldom
speaking, striving to pray, but striving so frequently in vain. And
then he would rise from his chair, and, with a burst of frenzy,
call upon his Creator to remove him from this misery.
In these moments she never deserted him. At
one period they had had four children, and though the whole weight
of this young brood rested on her arms, on her muscles, on her
strength of mind and body, she never ceased in her efforts to
comfort him. Then at length, falling utterly upon the ground, he
would pour forth piteous prayers for mercy, and after a night of
sleep would once more go forth to his work.
But she never yielded to despair: the
struggle was never beyond her powers of endurance. She had
possessed her share of woman’s loveliness, but that was now all
gone. Her colour quickly faded, and the fresh, soft tints soon
deserted her face and forehead. She became thin, and rough, and
almost haggard: thin till her cheek-bones were nearly pressing
through her skin, till her elbows were sharp, and her finger-bones
as those of a skeleton. Her eye did not lose its lustre, but it
became unnaturally bright, prominent, and too large for her wan
face. The soft brown locks which she had once loved to brush back,
scorning, as she would boast to herself, to care that they should
be seen, were now sparse enough and all untidy and unclean. It was
matter of little thought now whether they were seen or no. Whether
he could be made fit to go into his pulpit—whether they might be
fed—those four innocents—and their backs kept from the cold
wind—that was now the matter of her thought. And then two of them
died, and she went forth herself to see them laid under the
frost-bound sod, lest he should faint in his work over their
graves. For he would ask aid from no man—such at least was his
boast through all.
Two of them died, but their illness had been
long; and then debts came upon them. Debt, indeed, had been
creeping on them with slow but sure feet during the last five
years. Who can see his children hungry, and not take bread if it be
offered? Who can see his wife lying in sharpest want, and not seek
a remedy if there be a remedy within reach? So debt had come upon
them, and rude men pressed for small sums of money—for sums small
to the world, but impossibly large to them. And he would hide
himself within there, in that cranny of an inner chamber—hide
himself with deep shame from the world, with shame, and a sinking
heart, and a broken spirit.
But had such a man no friend? it will be
said. Such men, I take it, do not make many friends. But this man
was not utterly friendless. Almost every year one visit was paid to
him in his Cornish curacy by a brother clergyman, an old college
friend, who, as far as might in him lie, did give aid to the curate
and his wife. This gentleman would take up his abode for a week at
a farmer’s, in the neighbourhood, and though he found Mr. Crawley
in despair, he would leave him with some drops of comfort in his
soul. Nor were the benefits in this respect all on one side. Mr.
Crawley, though at some periods weak enough for himself, could be
strong for others; and, more than once, was strong to the great
advantage of this man whom he loved. And then, too, pecuniary
assistance was forthcoming—in those earlier years not in great
amount, for this friend was not then among the rich ones of the
earth—but in amount sufficient for that moderate hearth, if only
its acceptance could have been managed. But in that matter there
were difficulties without end. Of absolute money tenders Mr.
Crawley would accept none. But a bill here and there was paid, the
wife assisting; and shoes came for Kate—till Kate was placed beyond
the need of shoes; and cloth for Harry and Frank found its way
surreptitiously in beneath the cover of that wife’s solitary
trunk—cloth with which those lean fingers worked garments for the
two boys, to be worn—such was God’s will—only by the one.
Such were Mr. and Mrs. Crawley in their
Cornish curacy, and during their severest struggles. To one who
thinks that a fair day’s work is worth a fair day’s wages, it seems
hard enough that a man should work so hard and receive so little.
There will be those who think that the fault was all his own in
marrying so young. But still there remains that question, Is not a
fair day’s work worth a fair day’s wages? This man did work hard—at
a task perhaps the hardest of any that a man may do; and for ten
years he earned some seventy pounds a year. Will anyone say that he
received fair wages for his fair work, let him be married or
single? And yet there are so many who would fain pay their clergy,
if they only knew how to apply their money! But that is a long
subject, as Mr. Robarts had told Miss Dunstable.
Such was Mr. Crawley in his Cornish
curacy.