CHAPTER XI
The Bishop Sends his Inhibition
Tidings of Mr. Crawley’s fate reached the
palace at Barchester on the afternoon of the day on which the
magistrates had committed him. All such tidings travel very
quickly, conveyed by imperceptible wires, and distributed by
indefatigable message boys whom Rumour seems to supply for the
purpose. Barchester is twenty miles from Silverbridge by road, and
more than forty by railway. I doubt whether any one was
commissioned to send the news along the actual telegraph, and yet
Mrs. Proudie knew it before four o’clock. But she did not know it
quite accurately. “Bishop,” she said, standing at her husband’s
study door. “They have committed that man to gaol. There was no
help for them unless they had forsworn themselves.”
“Not forsworn themselves, my dear,” said the
bishop, striving, as was usual with him, by some meek and
ineffectual word to teach his wife that she was occasionally led by
her energy into error. He never persisted in the lessons when he
found, as was usual, that they were taken amiss.
“I say forsworn themselves!” said Mrs.
Proudie; “and now what do you mean to do? This is Thursday, and of
course the man must not be allowed to desecrate the church of
Hogglestock by performing the Sunday services.”
“If he has been committed, my dear, and is in
prison—”
“I said nothing about prison, bishop.”
“Gaol, my dear.”
“I say they have committed him to gaol. So my
informant tells me. But of course all the Plumstead and Framley set
will move heaven and earth to get him out, so that he may be there
as a disgrace to the diocese. I wonder how the dean will feel when
he hears of it! I do indeed. For the dean, though he is an idle,
useless man, with no church principles, and no real piety, still he
has a conscience. I think he has a conscience.”
“I’m sure he has, my dear.”
“Well—let us hope so. And if he has a
conscience, what must be his feelings when he hears that this
creature whom he has brought into the diocese has been committed to
gaol along with common felons.”
“Not with felons, my dear; at least, I should
think not.”
“I say with common felons! A downright
robbery of twenty pounds, just as though he had broken into the
bank! And so he did, with sly artifice, which is worse in such
hands than a crowbar. And now what are we to do? Here is Thursday,
and something must be done before Sunday for the souls of those
poor benighted creatures at Hogglestock.” Mrs. Proudie was ready
for the battle, and was even now sniffing the blood afar-off. “I
believe it’s a hundred and thirty pounds a year,” she said, before
the bishop had collected his thoughts sufficiently for a
reply.
“I think we must find out, first of all,
whether he is really to be shut up in prison,” said the
bishop.
“And suppose he is not to be shut up. Suppose
they have been weak, or untrue to their duty—and from what we know
of the magistrates of Barsetshire, there is too much reason to
suppose that they will have been so; suppose they have let him out,
is he to go about like a roaring lion—among the souls of the
people?”
The bishop shook in his shoes. When Mrs.
Proudie began to talk of the souls of the people he always shook in
his shoes. She had an eloquent way of raising her voice over the
word souls that was qualified to make any ordinary man shake in his
shoes. The bishop was a conscientious man, and well knew that poor
Mr. Crawley, even though he might have become a thief under
terrible temptation, would not roar at Hogglestock to the injury of
any man’s soul. He was aware that this poor clergyman had done his
duty laboriously and efficiently, and he was also aware that though
he might have been committed by the magistrates, and then let out
upon bail, he should not be regarded now, in these days before his
trial, as a convicted thief. But to explain all this to Mrs.
Proudie was beyond his power. He knew well that she would not hear
a word in mitigation of Mr. Crawley’s presumed offence. Mr. Crawley
belonged to the other party, and Mrs. Proudie was a thorough-going
partisan. I know a man—an excellent fellow, who, being himself a
strong politician, constantly expresses a belief that all
politicians opposed to him are thieves, child-murderers,
parricides, lovers of incest, demons upon earth. He is a strong
partisan, but not, I think, so strong as Mrs. Proudie. He says that
he believes all evil of his opponents; but she really believed the
evil. The archdeacon had called Mrs. Proudie a she-Beelzebub; but
that was a simple ebullition of mortal hatred. He believed her to
be simply a vulgar, interfering, brazen-faced virago. Mrs. Proudie
in truth believed that the archdeacon was an actual emanation from
Satan, sent to these parts to devour souls—as she would call it—and
that she herself was an emanation of another sort, sent from
another source expressly to Barchester, to prevent such devouring,
as far as it might possibly be prevented by a mortal agency. The
bishop knew it all—understood it all. He regarded the archdeacon as
a clergyman belonging to a party opposed to his party, and he
disliked the man. He knew that from his first coming into the
diocese he had been encountered with enmity by the archdeacon and
the archdeacon’s friends. If left to himself he could feel and to a
certain extent could resent such enmity. But he had no faith in his
wife’s doctrine of emanations. He had no faith in many things which
she believed religiously—and yet what could he do? If he attempted
to explain, she would stop him before he had got through the first
half of his first sentence.
“If he is out on bail—,” commenced the
bishop.
“Of course he will be out on bail.”
“Then I think he should feel—”
“Feel! such men never feel! What feeling can
one expect from a convicted thief?”
“Not convicted yet, my dear,” said the
bishop.
“A convicted thief,” repeated Mrs. Proudie;
and she vociferated the words in such a tone that the bishop
resolved that he would for the future let the word convicted pass
without notice. After all she was only using the phrase in a
peculiar sense given to it by herself.
“It won’t be proper, certainly, that he
should do the services,” suggested the bishop.
“Proper! It would be a scandal to the whole
diocese. How could he raise his head as he pronounced the eighth
commandment? That must be at least prevented.”
The bishop, who was seated, fretted himself
in his chair, moving about with little movements. He knew that
there was a misery coming upon him; and, as far as he could see, it
might become a great misery—a huge blistering sore upon him. When
miseries came to him, as they did not unfrequently, he would
unconsciously endeavour to fathom them and weigh them, and then,
with some gallantry, resolve to bear them, if he could find that
their depth and weight were not too great for his powers of
endurance. He would let the cold wind whistle by him, putting up
the collar of his coat, and would encounter the winter weather
without complaint. And he would be patient under the sun, knowing
well that tranquillity is best for those who have to bear tropical
heat. But when the storm threatened to knock him off his legs, when
the earth beneath him became too hot for his poor tender feet—what
could he do then? There had been with him such periods of misery,
during which he had wailed inwardly and had confessed to himself
that the wife of his bosom was too much for him. Now the storm
seemed to be coming very roughly. It would be demanded of him that
he should exercise certain episcopal authority which he knew did
not belong to him. Now, episcopal authority admits of being
stretched or contracted according to the character of the bishop
who uses it. It is not always easy for a bishop himself to know
what he may do, and what he may not do. He may certainly give
advice to any clergyman in his diocese, and he may give it in such
form that it will have in it something of authority. Such advice
coming from a dominant bishop to a clergyman with a submissive
mind, has in it very much of authority. But Bishop Proudie knew
that Mr. Crawley was not a clergyman with a submissive mind, and he
feared that he himself, as regarded from Mr. Crawley’s point of
view, was not a dominant bishop. And yet he could only act by
advice. “I will write to him,” said the bishop, “and will explain
to him that as he is circumstanced he should not appear in the
reading-desk.”
“Of course he must not appear in the
reading-desk. That scandal must at any rate be inhibited.” Now the
bishop did not at all like the use of the word inhibited,
understanding well that Mrs. Proudie intended it to be understood
as implying some episcopal command against which there should be no
appeal—but he let it pass.
“I will write to him, my dear,
to-night.”
“And Mr. Thumble can go over with the letter
the first thing in the morning.”
“Will not the post be better?”
“No, bishop; certainly not.”
“He would get it sooner, if I write to-night,
my dear.”
“In either case he will get it to-morrow
morning. An hour or two will not signify, and if Mr. Thumble takes
it himself we shall know how it is received. It will be well that
Thumble should be there in person as he will want to look for
lodgings in the parish.”
“But, my dear—”
“Well, bishop?”
“About lodgings? I hardly think that Mr.
Thumble, if we decide that Mr. Thumble shall undertake the
duty—”
“We have decided that Mr. Thumble should
undertake the duty. That is decided.”
“But I do not think he should trouble himself
to look for lodgings at Hogglestock. He can go over on the
Sundays.”
“And who is to do the parish work? Would you
have that man, a convicted thief, to look after the schools, and
visit the sick, and perhaps attend the dying?”
“There will be a great difficulty; there will
indeed,” said the bishop, becoming very unhappy, and feeling that
he was driven by circumstances either to assert his own knowledge
or teach his wife something of the law with reference to his
position as a bishop. “Who is to pay Mr. Thumble?”
“The income of the parish must be
sequestrated, and he must be paid out of that. Of course he must
have the income while he does the work.”
“But, my dear, I cannot sequestrate the man’s
income.”
“I don’t believe it, bishop. If the bishop
cannot sequestrate, who can? But you are always timid in exercising
the authority put into your hands for wise purposes. Not
sequestrate the income of a man who has been proved to be a thief!
You leave that to us, and we will manage it.” The “us” here named
comprised Mrs. Proudie and the bishop’s managing chaplain.
Then the bishop was left alone for an hour to
write the letter which Mr. Thumble was to carry over to Mr.
Crawley—and after a while he did write it. Before he commenced the
task, however, he sat for some moments in his arm-chair close by
the fire-side, asking himself whether it might not be possible for
him to overcome his enemy in this matter. How would it go with him
suppose he were to leave the letter unwritten, and send in a
message by his chaplain to Mrs. Proudie, saying that as Mr. Crawley
was out on bail, the parish might be left for the present without
episcopal interference? She could not make him interfere. She could
not force him to write the letter. So, at least, he said to
himself. But as he said it, he almost thought that she could do
these things. In the last thirty years, or more, she had ever
contrived by some power latent in her to have her will effected.
But what would happen if now, even now, he were to rebel? That he
would personally become very uncomfortable, he was well aware, but
he thought that he could bear that. The food would become bad—mere
ashes between his teeth, the daily modicum of wine would lose its
flavour, the chimneys would all smoke, the wind would come from the
east, and the servants would not answer the bell. Little miseries
of that kind would crowd upon him. He had arrived at a time in life
in which such miseries make such men very miserable; but yet he
thought that he could endure them. And what other wretchedness
would come to him? She would scold him—frightfully, loudly,
scornfully, and worse than all, continually. But of this he had so
much habitually, that anything added might be borne also—if only he
could be sure that the scoldings should go on in private, that the
world of the palace should not be allowed to hear the revilings to
which he would be subjected. But to be scolded publicly was the
great evil which he dreaded beyond all evils. He was well aware
that the palace would know his misfortune, that it was known, and
freely discussed by all, from the examining chaplain down to the
palace boot-boy—nay, that it was known to all the diocese; but yet
he could smile upon those around him, and look as though he held
his own like other men—unless when open violence was displayed. But
when that voice was heard aloud along the corridors of the palace,
and when he was summoned imperiously by the woman, calling for the
bishop, so that all Barchester heard it, and when he was compelled
to creep forth from his study, at the sound of that summons, with
distressed face, and shaking hands, and short hurrying steps—a
being to be pitied even by a deacon—not venturing to assume an air
of masterdom should he chance to meet a housemaid on the
stairs—then, at such moments as that, he would feel that any
submission was better than the misery which he suffered. And he
well knew that should he now rebel, the whole house would be in a
turmoil. He would be bishoped here, and bishoped there, before the
eyes of all palatial men and women, till life would be a burden to
him. So he got up from his seat over the fire, and went to his desk
and wrote the letter. The letter was as follows—
The Palace, Barchester — December, 186—
REVEREND SIR—[he left out the dear, because
he knew that if he inserted it he would be compelled to write the
letter over again]
I have heard to-day with the greatest trouble
of spirit, that you have been taken before a bench of magistrates
assembled at Silverbridge, having been previously arrested by the
police in your parsonage house at Hogglestock, and that the
magistrates of Silverbridge have committed you to take your trial
at the next assizes at Barchester, on a charge of theft.
Far be it from me to prejudge the case. You
will understand, reverend sir, that I express no opinion whatever
as to your guilt or innocence in this matter. If you have been
guilty, may the Lord give you grace to repent of your great sin and
to make such amends as may come from immediate acknowledgement and
confession. If you are innocent, may He protect you, and make your
innocence shine before all men. In either case may the Lord be with
you and keep your feet from further stumbling.
But I write to you now as your bishop, to
explain to you that, circumstanced as you are, you cannot with
decency perform the church services of your parish. I have that
confidence in you that I doubt not you will agree with me in this,
and will be grateful to me for relieving you from the immediate
perplexities of your position. I have, therefore, appointed the
Rev. Caleb Thumble to perform the duties of incumbent of
Hogglestock till such time as a jury shall have decided upon your
case at Barchester; and in order that you may at once become
acquainted with Mr. Thumble, as will be most convenient that you
should do, I will commission him to deliver this letter into your
hand personally to-morrow, trusting that you will receive him with
that brotherly spirit in which he is sent on this painful
mission.
Touching the remuneration to which Mr.
Thumble will become entitled for his temporary ministrations in the
parish of Hogglestock, I do not at present lay down any strict
injunction. He must, at any rate, be paid at a rate not less than
that ordinarily afforded for a curate.
I will once again express my fervent hope
that the Lord may bring you to see the true state of your own soul,
and that He may fill you with the grace of repentance, so that the
bitter waters of the present hour may not pass over your head and
destroy you.
I have the honour to be,
Reverend Sir,
Your faithful servant in Christ,
T. BARNUM [1]
The bishop had hardly finished his letter
when Mrs. Proudie returned to the study, followed by the Rev. Caleb
Thumble. Mr. Thumble was a little man, about forty years of age,
who had a wife and children living in Barchester, and who existed
on such chance clerical crumbs as might fall from the table of the
bishop’s patronage. People in Barchester said that Mrs. Thumble was
a cousin of Mrs. Proudie’s; but as Mrs. Proudie stoutly denied the
connexion, it may be supposed that the people of Barchester were
wrong. And, had Mr. Thumble’s wife in truth been a cousin, Mrs.
Proudie would surely have provided for him during the many years in
which the diocese had been in her hands. No such provision had been
made, and Mr. Thumble, who had now been living in the diocese for
three years, had received nothing else from the bishop than such
chance employment as this which he was about to undertake at
Hogglestock. He was a humble, mild-voiced man, when within the
palace precincts, and had so far succeeded in making his way among
his brethren in the cathedral city as to be employed not
unfrequently for absent minor canons in chanting the week-day
services, being remunerated for his work at the rate of about two
shillings and sixpence a service.
The bishop handed the letter to his wife,
observing in an off-hand kind of way that she might as well see
what he said. “Of course I shall read it,” said Mrs. Proudie. And
the bishop winced visibly, because Mr. Thumble was present. “Quite
right,” said Mrs. Proudie, “quite right to let him know that you
knew that he had been arrested—actually arrested by the
police.”
“I thought it proper to mention that, because
of the scandal,” said the bishop.
“Oh, it has been terrible in the city,” said
Mr. Thumble.
“Never mind, Mr. Thumble,” said Mrs. Proudie.
“Never mind that at present.” Then she continued to read the
letter. “What’s this? Confession! That must come out, bishop. It
will never do that you should recommend confession to anybody,
under any circumstances.”
“But, my dear—”
“It must come out, bishop.”
“My lord has not meant auricular confession,”
suggested Mr. Thumble. Then Mrs. Proudie turned round and looked at
Mr. Thumble, and Mr. Thumble nearly sank amidst the tables and
chairs. “I beg your pardon, Mrs. Proudie,” he said, “I didn’t mean
to intrude.”
“The word must come out, bishop,” repeated
Mrs. Proudie. “There should be no stumbling-blocks prepared for
feet that are only too ready to fall.” And the word did come
out.
“Now, Mr. Thumble,” said the lady, as she
gave the letter to her satellite, “the bishop and I wish you to be
at Hogglestock early to-morrow. You should be there not later than
ten, certainly.” Then she paused until Mr. Thumble had given the
required promise. “And we request that you will be very firm in the
mission which is confided to you, a mission which, as of course,
you see, is of a very delicate and important nature. You must be
firm.”
“I will endeavour,” said Mr. Thumble.
“The bishop and I both feel that this most
unfortunate man must not under any circumstances be allowed to
perform the services of the Church while this charge is hanging
over him—a charge as to the truth of which no sane man can
entertain a doubt.”
“I’m afraid not, Mrs. Proudie,” said Mr.
Thumble.
“The bishop and I therefore are most anxious
that you should make Mr. Crawley understand at once—at once,” and
the lady, as she spoke, lifted up her left hand with an eloquent
violence which had its effect upon Mr. Thumble, “that he is
inhibited,”—the bishop shook in his shoes—”inhibited from the
performance of any of his sacred duties.” Thereupon, Mr. Thumble
promised obedience and went his way.