CHAPTER XXI
Why Puck, the Pony, Was Beaten
Mark Robarts returned home the day after the
scene at the Albany, considerably relieved in spirit. He now felt
that he might accept the stall without discredit to himself as a
clergyman in doing so. Indeed, after what Mr. Sowerby had said, and
after Lord Lufton’s assent to it, it would have been madness, he
considered, to decline it. And then, too, Mr. Sowerby’s promise
about the bills was very comfortable to him. After all, might it
not be possible that he might get rid of all these troubles with no
other drawback than that of having to pay £130 for a horse that was
well worth the money?
On the day after his return he received
proper authentic tidings of his presentation to the prebend. He
was, in fact, already prebendary, or would be as soon as the dean
and chapter had gone through the form of instituting him in his
stall. The income was already his own; and the house also would be
given up to him in a week’s time—a part of the arrangement with
which he would most willingly have dispensed had it been at all
possible to do so. His wife congratulated him nicely, with open
affection, and apparent satisfaction at the arrangement. The
enjoyment of one’s own happiness at such windfalls depends so much
on the free and freely expressed enjoyment of others! Lady Lufton’s
congratulations had nearly made him throw up the whole thing; but
his wife’s smiles re-encouraged him; and Lucy’s warm and eager joy
made him feel quite delighted with Mr. Sowerby and the Duke of
Omnium. And then that splendid animal, Dandy, came home to the
parsonage stables, much to the delight of the groom and gardener,
and of the assistant stable boy who had been allowed to creep into
the establishment, unawares, as it were, since “master” had taken
so keenly to hunting. But this satisfaction was not shared in the
drawing-room. The horse was seen on his first journey round to the
stable gate, and questions were immediately asked. It was a horse,
Mark said, “which he had bought from Mr. Sowerby some little time
since, with the object of obliging him. He, Mark, intended to sell
him again, as soon as he could do so judiciously.” This, as I have
said above, was not satisfactory. Neither of the two ladies at
Framley parsonage knew much about horses, or of the manner in which
one gentleman might think it proper to oblige another by purchasing
the superfluities of his stable; but they did both feel that there
were horses enough in the parsonage stable without Dandy, and that
the purchasing of a hunter with a view of immediately selling him
again, was, to say the least of it, an operation hardly congenial
with the usual tastes and pursuits of a clergyman.
“I hope you did not give very much money for
him, Mark,” said Fanny.
“Not more than I shall get again,” said Mark;
and Fanny saw from the form of his countenance that she had better
not pursue the subject any further at that moment.
“I suppose I shall have to go into residence
almost immediately,” said Mark, recurring to the more agreeable
subject of the stall.
“And shall we all have to go and live at
Barchester at once?” asked Lucy.
“The house will not be furnished, will it,
Mark!” said his wife. “I don’t know how we shall get on.”
“Don’t frighten yourselves. I shall take
lodgings in Barchester.”
“And we shall not see you all the time,” said
Mrs. Robarts with dismay. But the prebendary explained that he
would be backwards and forwards at Framley every week, and that in
all probability he would only sleep at Barchester on the Saturdays,
and Sundays—and, perhaps, not always then.
“It does not seem very hard work, that of a
prebendary,” said Lucy.
“But it is very dignified,” said Fanny.
“Prebendaries are dignitaries of the Church—are they not,
Mark?”
“Decidedly,” said he; “and their wives also,
by special canon law. The worst of it is that both of them are
obliged to wear wigs.”
“Shall you have a hat, Mark, with curly
things at the side, and strings through to hold them up?” asked
Lucy.
“I fear that does not come within my
perquisites.”
“Nor a rosette? Then I shall never believe
that you are a dignitary. Do you mean to say that you will wear a
hat like a common parson—like Mr. Crawley, for instance?”
“Well—I believe I may give a twist to the
leaf; but I am by no means sure till I shall have consulted the
dean in chapter.”
And thus at the parsonage they talked over
the good things that were coming to them, and endeavoured to forget
the new horse, and the hunting boots that had been used so often
during the last winter, and Lady Lufton’s altered countenance. It
might be that the evils would vanish away, and the good things
alone remain to them.
It was now the month of April, and the fields
were beginning to look green, and the wind had got itself out of
the east and was soft and genial, and the early spring flowers were
showing their bright colours in the parsonage garden, and all
things were sweet and pleasant. This was a period of the year that
was usually dear to Mrs. Robarts. Her husband was always a better
parson when the warm months came than he had been during the
winter. The distant county friends whom she did not know and of
whom she did not approve, went away when the spring came, leaving
their houses innocent and empty. The parish duty was better
attended to, and perhaps domestic duties also. At such period he
was a pattern parson and a pattern husband, atoning to his own
conscience for past shortcomings by present zeal. And then, though
she had never acknowledged it to herself, the absence of her dear
friend Lady Lufton was perhaps in itself not disagreeable. Mrs.
Robarts did love Lady Lufton heartily; but it must be acknowledged
of her ladyship, that with all her good qualities, she was inclined
to be masterful. She liked to rule, and she made people feel that
she liked it. Mrs. Robarts would never have confessed that she
laboured under a sense of thraldom; but perhaps she was mouse
enough to enjoy the temporary absence of her kind-hearted cat. When
Lady Lufton was away Mrs. Robarts herself had more play in the
parish.
And Mark also was not unhappy, though he did
not find it practicable immediately to turn Dandy into money.
Indeed, just at this moment, when he was a good deal over at
Barchester, going through those deep mysteries and rigid
ecclesiastical examinations which are necessary before a clergyman
can become one of a chapter, Dandy was rather a thorn in his side.
Those wretched bills were to come due early in May, and before the
end of April Sowerby wrote to him saying that he was doing his
utmost to provide for the evil day; but that if the price of Dandy
could be remitted to him at once, it
would greatly facilitate his object. Nothing could be more
different than Mr. Sowerby’s tone about money at different times.
When he wanted to raise the wind, everything was so important;
haste and superhuman efforts, and men running to and fro with blank
acceptances in their hands, could alone stave off the crack of
doom; but at other times, when retaliatory applications were made
to him, he could prove with the easiest voice and most jaunty
manner that everything was quite serene. Now, at this period, he
was in that mood of superhuman efforts, and he called loudly for
the hundred and thirty pounds for Dandy. After what had passed,
Mark could not bring himself to say that he would pay nothing till
the bills were safe; and therefore with the assistance of Mr.
Forrest of the Bank, he did remit the price of Dandy to his friend
Sowerby in London.
And Lucy Robarts—we must now say a word of
her. We have seen how, on that occasion, when the world was at her
feet, she had sent her noble suitor away, not only dismissed, but
so dismissed that he might be taught never again to offer to her
the sweet incense of his vows. She had declared to him plainly that
she did not love him and could not love him, and had thus thrown
away not only riches and honour and high station, but more than
that—much worse than that—she had flung away from her the lover to
whose love her warm heart clung. That her love did cling to him,
she knew even then, and owned more thoroughly as soon as he was
gone. So much her pride had done for her, and that strong resolve
that Lady Lufton should not scowl on her and tell her that she had
entrapped her son.
I know it will be said of Lord Lufton himself
that, putting aside his peerage and broad acres, and handsome,
sonsy face, he was not worth a girl’s care and love. That will be
said because people think that heroes in books should be so much
better than heroes got up for the world’s common wear and tear. I
may as well confess that of absolute, true heroism there was only a
moderate admixture in Lord Lufton’s composition; but what would the
world come to if none but absolute true heroes were to be thought
worthy of women’s love? What would the men do? and what—oh! what
would become of the women? Lucy Robarts in her heart did not give
her dismissed lover credit for much more heroism than did truly
appertain to him—did not, perhaps, give him full credit for a
certain amount of heroism which did really appertain to him; but,
nevertheless, she would have been very glad to take him could she
have done so without wounding her pride.
That girls should not marry for money we are
all agreed. A lady who can sell herself for a title or an estate,
for an income or a set of family diamonds, treats herself as a
farmer treats his sheep and oxen—makes hardly more of herself, of
her own inner self, in which are comprised a mind and soul, than
the poor wretch of her own sex who earns her bread in the lowest
stage of degradation. But a title, and an estate, and an income,
are matters which will weigh in the balance with all Eve’s
daughters—as they do with all Adam’s sons. Pride of place, and the
power of living well in front of the world’s eye, are dear to us
all—are, doubtless, intended to be dear. Only in acknowledging so
much, let us remember that there are prices at which these good
things may be too costly. Therefore, being desirous, too, of
telling the truth in this matter, I must confess that Lucy did
speculate with some regret on what it would have been to be Lady
Lufton. To have been the wife of such a man, the owner of such a
heart, the mistress of such a destiny—what more or what better
could the world have done for her? And now she had thrown all that
aside because she would not endure that Lady Lufton should call her
a scheming, artful girl! Actuated by that fear she had repulsed him
with a falsehood, though the matter was one on which it was so
terribly expedient that she should tell the truth.
And yet she was cheerful with her brother and
sister-in-law. It was when she was quite alone, at night in her own
room, or in her solitary walks, that a single silent tear would
gather in the corner of her eye and gradually moisten her eyelids.
“She never told her love,” nor did she allow concealment to “feed
on her damask cheek.” In all her employments, in her ways about the
house, and her accustomed quiet mirth, she was the same as ever. In
this she showed the peculiar strength which God had given her. But
not the less did she in truth mourn for her lost love and spoiled
ambition.
“We are going to drive over to Hogglestock
this morning,” Fanny said one day at breakfast. “I suppose, Mark,
you won’t go with us?”
“Well, no; I think not. The pony carriage is
wretched for three.”
“Oh, as for that, I should have thought the
new horse might have been able to carry you as far as that. I heard
you say you wanted to see Mr. Crawley.”
“So I do; and the new horse, as you call him,
shall carry me there to-morrow. Will you say that I’ll be over
about twelve o’clock?”
“You had better say earlier, as he is always
out about the parish.”
“Very well, say eleven. It is parish business
about which I am going, so it need not irk his conscience to stay
in for me.”
“Well, Lucy, we must drive ourselves, that’s
all. You shall be charioteer going, and then we’ll change coming
back.” To all which Lucy agreed, and as soon as their work in the
school was over they started.
Not a word had been spoken between them about
Lord Lufton since that evening, now more than a month ago, on which
they had been walking together in the garden. Lucy had so demeaned
herself on that occasion as to make her sister-in-law quite sure
that there had been no love passages up to that time; and nothing
had since occurred which had created any suspicion in Mrs.
Robarts’s mind. She had seen at once that all the close intimacy
between them was over, and thought that everything was as it should
be.
“Do you know, I have an idea,” she said in
the pony carriage that day, “that Lord Lufton will marry Griselda
Grantly.”
Lucy could not refrain from giving a little
check at the reins which she was holding, and she felt that the
blood rushed quickly to her heart. But she did not betray herself.
“Perhaps he may,” she said, and then gave the pony a little touch
with her whip.
“Oh, Lucy, I won’t have Puck beaten. He was
going very nicely.”
“I beg Puck’s pardon. But you see when one is
trusted with a whip one feels such a longing to use it.”
“Oh, but you should keep it still. I feel
almost certain that Lady Lufton would like such a match.”
“I dare say she might. Miss Grantly will have
a large fortune, I believe.”
“It is not that altogether: but she is the
sort of young lady that Lady Lufton likes. She is ladylike and very
beautiful—”
“Come, Fanny!”
“I really think she is; not what I should
call lovely, you know, but very beautiful. And then she is quiet
and reserved; she does not require excitement, and I am sure is
conscientious in the performance of her duties.”
“Very conscientious, I have no doubt,” said
Lucy, with something like a sneer in her tone. “But the question, I
suppose, is, whether Lord Lufton likes her.”
“I think he does—in a sort of way. He did not
talk to her so much as he did to you—”
“Ah! that was all Lady Lufton’s fault,
because she didn’t have him properly labelled.”
“There does not seem to have been much harm
done?”
“Oh! by God’s mercy, very little. As for me,
I shall get over it in three or four years I don’t doubt—that’s if
I can get ass’s milk and change of air.”
“We’ll take you to Barchester for that. But
as I was saying, I really do think Lord Lufton likes Griselda
Grantly.”
“Then I really do think that he has uncommon
bad taste,” said Lucy, with a reality in her voice differing much
from the tone of banter she had hitherto used.
“What, Lucy!” said her sister-in-law, looking
at her. “Then I fear we shall really want the ass’s milk.”
“Perhaps, considering my position, I ought to
know nothing of Lord Lufton, for you say that it is very dangerous
for young ladies to know young gentlemen. But I do know enough of
him to understand that he ought not to like such a girl as Griselda
Grantly. He ought to know that she is a mere automaton, cold,
lifeless, spiritless, and even vapid. There is, I believe, nothing
in her mentally, whatever may be her moral excellences. To me she
is more absolutely like a statue than any other human being I ever
saw. To sit still and be admired is all that she desires; and if
she cannot get that, to sit still and not be admired would almost
suffice for her. I do not worship Lady Lufton as you do; but I
think quite well enough of her to wonder that she should choose
such a girl as that for her son’s wife. That she does wish it, I do
not doubt. But I shall indeed be surprised if he wishes it also.”
And then as she finished her speech, Lucy again flogged the pony.
This she did in vexation, because she felt that the tell-tale blood
had suffused her face.
“Why, Lucy, if he were your brother you could
not be more eager about it.”
“No, I could not. He is the only man friend
with whom I was ever intimate, and I cannot bear to think that he
should throw himself away. It’s horridly improper to care about
such a thing, I have no doubt.”
“I think we might acknowledge that if he and
his mother are both satisfied, we may be satisfied also.”
“I shall not be satisfied. It’s no use your
looking at me, Fanny. You will make me talk of it, and I won’t tell
a lie on the subject. I do like Lord Lufton very much; and I do
dislike Griselda Grantly almost as much. Therefore I shall not be
satisfied if they become man and wife. However, I do not suppose
that either of them will ask my consent; nor is it probable that
Lady Lufton will do so.” And then they went on for perhaps a
quarter of a mile without speaking.
“Poor Puck!” at last Lucy said. “He shan’t be
whipped any more, shall he, because Miss Grantly looks like a
statue? And, Fanny, don’t tell Mark to put me into a lunatic
asylum. I also know a hawk from a heron, and that’s why I don’t
like to see such a very unfitting marriage.” There was then nothing
more said on the subject, and in two minutes they arrived at the
house of the Hogglestock clergyman.
Mrs. Crawley had brought two children with
her when she came from the Cornish curacy to Hogglestock, and two
other babies had been added to her cares since then. One of these
was now ill with croup, and it was with the object of offering to
the mother some comfort and solace, that the present visit was
made. The two ladies got down from their carriage, having obtained
the services of a boy to hold Puck, and soon found themselves in
Mrs. Crawley’s single sitting-room. She was sitting there with her
foot on the board of a child’s cradle, rocking it, while an infant
about three months old was lying in her lap. For the elder one, who
was the sufferer, had in her illness usurped the baby’s place. Two
other children, considerably older, were also in the room. The
eldest was a girl, perhaps nine years of age, and the other a boy
three years her junior. These were standing at their father’s
elbow, who was studiously endeavouring to initiate them in the
early mysteries of grammar. To tell the truth Mrs. Robarts would
much have preferred that Mr. Crawley had not been there, for she
had with her and about her certain contraband articles, presents
for the children, as they were to be called, but in truth relief
for that poor, much-tasked mother, which they knew it would be
impossible to introduce in Mr. Crawley’s presence.
She, as we have said, was not quite so gaunt,
not altogether so haggard as in the latter of those dreadful
Cornish days. Lady Lufton and Mrs. Arabin between them, and the
scanty comfort of their improved, though still wretched, income,
had done something towards bringing her back to the world in which
she had lived in the soft days of her childhood. But even the
liberal stipend of a hundred and thirty pounds a year—liberal
according to the scale by which the incomes of clergymen in some of
our new districts are now apportioned—would not admit of a
gentleman with his wife and four children living with the ordinary
comforts of an artisan’s family. As regards the mere eating and
drinking, the amounts of butcher’s meat and tea and butter, they of
course were used in quantities which any artisan would have
regarded as compatible only with demi-starvation. Better clothing
for her children was necessary, and better clothing for him. As for
her own raiment, the wives of few artisans would have been content
to put up with Mrs. Crawley’s best gown. The stuff of which it was
made had been paid for by her mother when she with much difficulty
bestowed upon her daughter her modest wedding trousseau.
Lucy had never seen Mrs. Crawley. These
visits to Hogglestock were not frequent, and had generally been
made by Lady Lufton and Mrs. Robarts together. It was known that
they were distasteful to Mr. Crawley, who felt a savage
satisfaction in being left to himself. It may almost be said of him
that he felt angry with those who relieved him, and he had
certainly never as yet forgiven the Dean of Barchester for paying
his debts. The dean had also given him his present living; and
consequently his old friend was not now so dear to him as when in
old days he would come down to that farm-house, almost as penniless
as the curate himself. Then they would walk together for hours
along the rock-bound shore, listening to the waves, discussing deep
polemical mysteries, sometimes with hot fury, then again with
tender, loving charity, but always with a mutual acknowledgement of
each other’s truth. Now they lived comparatively near together, but
no opportunities arose for such discussions. At any rate once a
quarter Mr. Crawley was pressed by his old friend to visit him at
the deanery, and Dr. Arabin had promised that no one else should be
in the house if Mr. Crawley objected to society. But this was not
what he wanted. The finery and grandeur of the deanery, and the
comfort of that warm, snug library, would silence him at once. Why
did not Dr. Arabin come out there to Hogglestock, and tramp with
him through the dirty lanes as they used to tramp? Then he could
have enjoyed himself; then he could have talked; then old days
would have come back to them. But now!—”Arabin always rides on a
sleek, fine horse, nowadays,” he once said to his wife with a
sneer. His poverty had been so terrible to himself that it was not
in his heart to love a rich friend.