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<h3>CHAPTER XVI. The Bishop and the Priest</h3>
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<br/>The afternoon on which Lady Carbury arrived at her cousin's house
had been very stormy. Roger Carbury had been severe, and Lady
Carbury had suffered under his severity,—or had at least so well
pretended to suffer as to leave on Roger's mind a strong impression
that he had been cruel to her. She had then talked of going
back at once to London, and when consenting to remain, had remained
with a very bad feminine headache. She had altogether carried
her point, but had done so in a storm. The next morning was
very calm. That question of meeting the Melmottes had been
settled, and there was no need for speaking of them again.
Roger went out by himself about the farm, immediately after
breakfast, having told the ladies that they could have the waggonette
when they pleased. "I'm afraid you'll find it tiresome driving
about our lanes," he said. Lady Carbury assured him that she
was never dull when left alone with books. Just as he was
starting he went into the garden and plucked a rose which he brought
to Henrietta. He only smiled as he gave it her, and then went
his way. He had resolved that he would say nothing to her of
his suit till Monday. If he could prevail with her then he
would ask her to remain with him when her mother and brother would be
going out to dine at Caversham. She looked up into his face as
she took the rose and thanked him in a whisper. She fully
appreciated the truth, and honour, and honesty of his character, and
could have loved him so dearly as her cousin if he would have
contented himself with such cousinly love! She was beginning,
within her heart, to take his side against her mother and brother,
and to feel that he was the safest guide that she could have.
But how could she be guided by a lover whom she did not love?
<br/>"I am afraid, my dear, we shall have a bad time of it here,"
said Lady Carbury.
<br/>"Why so, mamma?"
<br/>"It will be so dull. Your cousin is the best friend in all
the world, and would make as good a husband as could be picked out of
all the gentlemen of England; but in his present mood with me he is
not a comfortable host. What nonsense he did talk about the
Melmottes!"
<br/>"I don't suppose, mamma, that Mr and Mrs Melmotte can be nice
people."
<br/>"Why shouldn't they be as nice as anybody else? Pray,
Henrietta, don't let us have any of that nonsense from you.
When it comes from the superhuman virtue of poor dear Roger it has to
be borne, but I beg that you will not copy him."
<br/>"Mamma, I think that is unkind."
<br/>"And I shall think it very unkind if you take upon yourself to
abuse people who are able and willing to set poor Felix on his
legs. A word from you might undo all that we are doing."
<br/>"What word?"
<br/>"What word? Any word! If you have any influence with
your brother you should use it in inducing him to hurry this
on. I am sure the girl is willing enough. She did refer
him to her father."
<br/>"Then why does he not go to Mr Melmotte?"
<br/>"I suppose he is delicate about it on the score of money. If
Roger could only let it be understood that Felix is the heir to this
place, and that some day he will be Sir Felix Carbury of Carbury, I
don't think there would be any difficulty even with old Melmotte."
<br/>"How could he do that, mamma?"
<br/>"If your cousin were to die as he is now, it would be so.
Your brother would be his heir."
<br/>"You should not think of such a thing, mamma."
<br/>"Why do you dare to tell me what I am to think? Am I not to
think of my own son? Is he not to be dearer to me than any
one? And what I say, is so. If Roger were to die to-morrow
he would be Sir Felix Carbury of Carbury."
<br/>"But, mamma, he will live and have a family. Why should he
not?"
<br/>"You say he is so old that you will not look at him."
<br/>"I never said so. When we were joking, I said he was
old. You know I did not mean that he was too old to get
married. Men a great deal older get married every day."
<br/>"If you don't accept him he will never marry. He is a man of
that kind,—so stiff and stubborn and old-fashioned that nothing
will change him. He will go on boodying over it, till he will
become an old misanthrope. If you would take him I would be
quite contented. You are my child as well as Felix. But
if you mean to be obstinate I do wish that the Melmottes should be
made to understand that the property and title and name of the place
will all go together. It will be so, and why should not Felix
have the advantage?"
<br/>"Who is to say it?"
<br/>"Ah,—that's where it is. Roger is so violent and prejudiced
that one cannot get him to speak rationally."
<br/>"Oh, mamma,—you wouldn't suggest it to him;—that this place is
to go to—Felix, when he—is dead!"
<br/>"It would not kill him a day sooner."
<br/>"You would not dare to do it, mamma."
<br/>"I would dare to do anything for my children. But you need
not look like that, Henrietta. I am not going to say anything
to him of the kind. He is not quick enough to understand of
what infinite service he might be to us without in any way hurting
himself." Henrietta would fain have answered that their cousin
was quick enough for anything, but was by far too honest to take part
in such a scheme as that proposed. She refrained, however, and
was silent. There was no sympathy on the matter between her and
her mother. She was beginning to understand the tortuous mazes
of manoeuvres in which her mother's mind had learned to work, and to
dislike and almost to despise them. But she felt it to be her
duty to abstain from rebukes.
<br/>In the afternoon Lady Carbury, alone, had herself driven into
Beccles that she might telegraph to her son. "You are to dine
at Caversham on Monday. Come on Saturday if you can. She
is there." Lady Carbury had many doubts as to the wording of
this message. The female in the office might too probably
understand who was the "she" who was spoken of as being at Caversham,
and might understand also the project, and speak of it
publicly. But then it was essential that Felix should know how
great and certain was the opportunity afforded to him. He had
promised to come on Saturday and return on Monday,—and, unless
warned, would too probably stick to his plan and throw over the
Longestaffes and their dinner-party. Again if he were told to
come simply for the Monday, he would throw over the chance of wooing
her on the Sunday. It was Lady Carbury's desire to get him down
for as long a period as was possible, and nothing surely would so
tend to bring him and to keep him, as a knowledge that the heiress
was already in the neighbourhood. Then she returned, and shut
herself up in her bedroom, and worked for an hour or two at a paper
which she was writing for the "Breakfast Table." Nobody should
ever accuse her justly of idleness. And afterwards, as she
walked by herself round and round the garden, she revolved in her
mind the scheme of a new book. Whatever might happen she would
persevere. If the Carburys were unfortunate their misfortunes
should come from no fault of hers. Henrietta passed the whole
day alone. She did not see her cousin from breakfast till he
appeared in the drawing-room before dinner. But she was
thinking of him during every minute of the day,—how good he was, how
honest, how thoroughly entitled to demand at any rate kindness at her
hand! Her mother had spoken of him as of one who might be
regarded as all but dead and buried, simply because of his love for
her. Could it be true that his constancy was such that he would
never marry unless she would take his hand? She came to think
of him with more tenderness than she had ever felt before, but, yet,
she would not tell herself she loved him. It might, perhaps, be
her duty to give herself to him without loving him,—because he was
so good; but she was sure that she did not love him.
<br/>In the evening the bishop came, and his wife, Mrs Yeld, and the
Hepworths of Eardly, and Father John Barham, the Beccles
priest. The party consisted of eight, which is, perhaps, the
best number for a mixed gathering of men and women at a
dinner-table,—especially if there be no mistress whose prerogative
and duty it is to sit opposite to the master. In this case Mr
Hepworth faced the giver of the feast, the bishop and the priest were
opposite to each other, and the ladies graced the four corners.
Roger, though he spoke of such things to no one, turned them over
much in his mind, believing it to be the duty of a host to administer
in all things to the comfort of his guests. In the drawing-room
he had been especially courteous to the young priest, introducing him
first to the bishop and his wife, and then to his cousins.
Henrietta watched him through the whole evening, and told herself
that he was a very mirror of courtesy in his own house. She had
seen it all before, no doubt; but she had never watched him as she
now watched him since her mother had told her that he would die
wifeless and childless because she would not be his wife and the
mother of his children.
<br/>The bishop was a man sixty years of age, very healthy and
handsome, with hair just becoming grey, clear eyes, a kindly mouth,
and something of a double chin. He was all but six feet high,
with a broad chest, large hands, and legs which seemed to have been
made for clerical breeches and clerical stockings. He was a man
of fortune outside his bishopric; and, as he never went up to London,
and had no children on whom to spend his money, he was able to live
as a nobleman in the country. He did live as a nobleman, and
was very popular. Among the poor around him he was idolized,
and by such clergy of his diocese as were not enthusiastic in their
theology either on the one side or on the other, he was regarded as a
model bishop. By the very high and the very low,—by those
rather who regarded ritualism as being either heavenly or
devilish,—he was looked upon as a timeserver, because he would not
put to sea in either of those boats. He was an unselfish man,
who loved his neighbour as himself, and forgave all trespasses, and
thanked God for his daily bread from his heart, and prayed heartily
to be delivered from temptation. But I doubt whether he was
competent to teach a creed,—or even to hold one, if it be necessary
that a man should understand and define his creed before he can hold
it. Whether he was free from, or whether he was scared by, any
inward misgivings, who shall say? If there were such he never
whispered a word of them even to the wife of his bosom. From
the tone of his voice and the look of his eye, you would say that he
was unscathed by that agony which doubt on such a matter would surely
bring to a man so placed. And yet it was observed of him that
he never spoke of his faith, or entered into arguments with men as to
the reasons on which he had based it. He was diligent in
preaching,—moral sermons that were short, pithy, and useful.
He was never weary in furthering the welfare of his clergymen.
His house was open to them and to their wives. The edifice of
every church in his diocese was a care to him. He laboured at
schools, and was zealous in improving the social comforts of the
poor; but he was never known to declare to man or woman that the
human soul must live or die for ever according to its faith.
Perhaps there was no bishop in England more loved or more useful in
his diocese than the Bishop of Elmham.
<br/>A man more antagonistic to the bishop than Father John Barham, the
lately appointed Roman Catholic priest at Beccles, it would be
impossible to conceive;—and yet they were both eminently good
men. Father John was not above five feet nine in height, but so
thin, so meagre, so wasted in appearance, that, unless when he
stooped, he was taken to be tall. He had thick dark brown hair,
which was cut short in accordance with the usage of his Church; but
which he so constantly ruffled by the action of his hands, that,
though short, it seemed to be wild and uncombed. In his younger
days, when long locks straggled over his forehead, he had acquired a
habit, while talking energetically, of rubbing them back with his
finger, which he had not since dropped. In discussions he would
constantly push back his hair, and then sit with his hand fixed on
the top of his head. He had a high, broad forehead, enormous
blue eyes, a thin, long nose, cheeks very thin and hollow, a handsome
large mouth, and a strong square chin. He was utterly without
worldly means, except those which came to him from the ministry of
his church, and which did not suffice to find him food and raiment;
but no man ever lived more indifferent to such matters than Father
John Barham. He had been the younger son of an English country
gentleman of small fortune, had been sent to Oxford that he might
hold a family living, and on the eve of his ordination had declared
himself a Roman Catholic. His family had resented this
bitterly, but had not quarrelled with him till he had drawn a sister
with him. When banished from the house he had still striven to
achieve the conversion of other sisters by his letters, and was now
absolutely an alien from his father's heart and care. But of
this he never complained. It was a part of the plan of his life
that he should suffer for his faith. Had he been able to change
his creed without incurring persecution, worldly degradation, and
poverty, his own conversion would not have been to him comfortable
and satisfactory as it was. He considered that his father, as a
Protestant,—and in his mind Protestant and heathen were all the
same,—had been right to quarrel with him. But he loved his
father, and was endless in prayer, wearying his saints with
supplications, that his father might see the truth and be as he was.
<br/>To him it was everything that a man should believe and obey,—that
he should abandon his own reason to the care of another or of others,
and allow himself to be guided in all things by authority.
Faith being sufficient and of itself all in all, moral conduct could
be nothing to a man, except as a testimony of faith; for to him,
whose belief was true enough to produce obedience, moral conduct
would certainly be added. The dogmas of his Church were to
Father Barham a real religion, and he would teach them in season and
out of season, always ready to commit himself to the task of proving
their truth, afraid of no enemy, not even fearing the hostility which
his perseverance would create. He had but one duty before
him—to do his part towards bringing over the world to his
faith. It might be that with the toil of his whole life he
should convert but one; that he should but half convert one; that he
should do no more than disturb the thoughts of one so that future
conversion might be possible. But even that would be work
done. He would sow the seed if it might be so; but if it were
not given to him to do that, he would at any rate plough the ground.
<br/>He had come to Beccles lately, and Roger Carbury had found out
that he was a gentleman by birth and education. Roger had found
out also that he was very poor, and had consequently taken him by the
hand. The young priest had not hesitated to accept his
neighbour's hospitality, having on one occasion laughingly protested
that he should be delighted to dine at Carbury, as he was much in
want of a dinner. He had accepted presents from the garden and
the poultry yard, declaring that he was too poor to refuse
anything. The apparent frankness of the man about himself had
charmed Roger, and the charm had not been seriously disturbed when
Father Barham, on one winter evening in the parlour at Carbury, had
tried his hand at converting his host. "I have the most
thorough respect for your religion," Roger had said; "but it would
not suit me." The priest had gone on with his logic; if he
could not sow the seed he might plough the ground. This had
been repeated two or three times, and Roger had begun to feel it to
be disagreeable. But the man was in earnest, and such
earnestness commanded respect. And Roger was quite sure that
though he might be bored, he could not be injured by such
teaching. Then it occurred to him one day that he had known the
Bishop of Elmham intimately for a dozen years, and had never heard
from the bishop's mouth,—except when in the pulpit,—a single word
of religious teaching; whereas this man, who was a stranger to him,
divided from him by the very fact of his creed, was always talking to
him about his faith. Roger Carbury was not a man given to much
deep thinking, but he felt that the bishop's manner was the
pleasanter of the two.
<br/>Lady Carbury at dinner was all smiles and pleasantness. No
one looking at her, or listening to her, could think that her heart
was sore with many troubles. She sat between the bishop and her
cousin, and was skilful enough to talk to each without neglecting the
other. She had known the bishop before, and had on one occasion
spoken to him of her soul. The first tone of the good man's
reply had convinced her of her error, and she never repeated
it. To Mr Alf she commonly talked of her mind; to Mr Broune, of
her heart; to Mr Booker of her body—and its wants. She was
quite ready to talk of her soul on a proper occasion, but she was
much too wise to thrust the subject even on a bishop. Now she
was full of the charms of Carbury and its neighbourhood. "Yes,
indeed," said the bishop, "I think Suffolk is a very nice county; and
as we are only a mile or two from Norfolk, I'll say as much for
Norfolk too. 'It's an ill bird that fouls its own, nest.'".
<br/>"I like a county in which there is something left of county
feeling," said Lady Carbury. "Staffordshire and Warwickshire,
Cheshire and Lancashire have become great towns, and have lost all
local distinctions."
<br/>"We still keep our name and reputation," said the bishop; "silly
Suffolk!"
<br/>"But that was never deserved."
<br/>"As much, perhaps, as other general epithets. I think we are
a sleepy people. We've got no coal, you see, and no iron.
We have no beautiful scenery, like the lake country,—no rivers great
for fishing, like Scotland,—no hunting grounds, like the shires."
<br/>"Partridges!" pleaded Lady Carbury, with pretty energy.
<br/>"Yes; we have partridges, fine churches, and the herring
fishery. We shall do very well if too much is not expected of
us. We can't increase and multiply as they do in the great
cities."
<br/>"I like this part of England so much the best for that very
reason. What is the use of a crowded population?"
<br/>"The earth has to be peopled, Lady Carbury."
<br/>"Oh, yes," said her ladyship, with some little reverence added to
her voice, feeling that the bishop was probably adverting to a divine
arrangement. "The world must be peopled; but for myself I like
the country better than the town."
<br/>"So do I," said Roger; "and I like Suffolk. The people are
hearty, and radicalism is not quite so rampant as it is
elsewhere. The poor people touch their hats, and the rich
people think of the poor. There is something left among us of
old English habits."
<br/>"That is so nice," said Lady Carbury.
<br/>"Something left of old English ignorance," said the bishop.
"All the same I dare say we're improving, like the rest of the
world. What beautiful flowers you have here, Mr Carbury!
At any rate, we can grow flowers in Suffolk."
<br/>Mrs Yeld, the bishop's wife, was sitting next to the priest, and
was in truth somewhat afraid of her neighbour. She was,
perhaps, a little stauncher than her husband in Protestantism; and
though she was willing to admit that Mr Barham might not have ceased
to be a gentleman when he became a Roman Catholic priest, she was not
quite sure that it was expedient for her or her husband to have much
to do with him. Mr Carbury had not taken them unawares.
Notice had been given that the priest was to be there, and the bishop
had declared that he would be very happy to meet the priest.
But Mrs Yeld had had her misgivings. She never ventured to
insist on her opinion after the bishop had expressed his; but she had
an idea that right was right, and wrong wrong,—and that Roman
Catholics were wrong, and therefore ought to be put down. And
she thought also that if there were no priests there would be no
Roman Catholics. Mr Barham was, no doubt, a man of good family,
which did make a difference.
<br/>Mr Barham always made his approaches very gradually. The
taciturn humility with which he commenced his operations was in exact
proportion to the enthusiastic volubility of his advanced
intimacy. Mrs Yeld thought that it became her to address to him
a few civil words, and he replied to her with a shame-faced modesty
that almost overcame her dislike to his profession. She spoke
of the poor of Beccles, being very careful to allude only to their
material position. There was too much beer drunk, no doubt, and
the young women would have finery. Where did they get the money
to buy those wonderful bonnets which appeared every Sunday? Mr
Barham was very meek, and agreed to everything that was said.
No doubt he had a plan ready formed for inducing Mrs Yeld to have
mass said regularly within her husband's palace, but he did not even
begin to bring it about on this occasion. It was not till he
made some apparently chance allusion to the superior church-attending
qualities of "our people," that Mrs Yeld drew herself up and changed
the conversation by observing that there had been a great deal of
rain lately.
<br/>When the ladies were gone the bishop at once put himself in the
way of conversation with the priest, and asked questions as to the
morality of Beccles. It was evidently Mr Barham's opinion that
"his people" were more moral than other people, though very much
poorer. "But the Irish always drink," said Mr Hepworth.
<br/>"Not so much as the English, I think," said the priest. "And
you are not to suppose that we are all Irish. Of my flock the
greater proportion are English."
<br/>"It is astonishing how little we know of our neighbours," said the
bishop. "Of course I am aware that there are a certain number
of persons of your persuasion round about us. Indeed, I could
give the exact number in this diocese. But in my own immediate
neighbourhood I could not put my hand upon any families which I know
to be Roman Catholic."
<br/>"It is not, my lord, because there are none."
<br/>"Of course not. It is because, as I say, I do not know my
neighbours."
<br/>"I think, here in Suffolk, they must be chiefly the poor," said Mr
Hepworth.
<br/>"They were chiefly the poor who at first put their faith in our
Saviour," said the priest.
<br/>"I think the analogy is hardly correctly drawn," said the bishop,
with a curious smile. "We were speaking of those who are still
attached to an old creed. Our Saviour was the teacher of a new
religion. That the poor in the simplicity of their hearts
should be the first to acknowledge the truth of a new religion is in
accordance with our idea of human nature. But that an old faith
should remain with the poor after it has been abandoned by the rich
is not so easily intelligible."
<br/>"The Roman population still believed," said Carbury, "when the
patricians had learned to regard their gods as simply useful
bugbears."
<br/>"The patricians had not ostensibly abandoned their religion.
The people clung to it thinking that their masters and rulers clung
to it also."
<br/>"The poor have ever been the salt of the earth, my lord," said the
priest.
<br/>"That begs the whole question," said the bishop, turning to his
host, and, beginning to talk about a breed of pigs which had lately
been imported into the palace sties. Father Barham turned to Mr
Hepworth and went on with his argument, or rather began
another. It was a mistake to suppose that the Catholics in the
county were all poor. There were the A's and the B's, and the
C's and the D's. He knew all their names and was proud of their
fidelity. To him these faithful ones were really the salt of
the earth, who would some day be enabled by their fidelity to restore
England to her pristine condition. The bishop had truly said
that of many of his neighbours he did not know to what Church they
belonged; but Father Barham, though he had not as yet been twelve
months in the county, knew the name of nearly every Roman Catholic
within its borders.
<br/>"Your priest is a very zealous man," said the bishop afterwards to
Roger Carbury, "and I do not doubt but that he is an excellent
gentleman; but he is perhaps a little indiscreet."
<br/>"I like him because he is doing the best he can according to his
lights; without any reference to his own worldly welfare."
<br/>"That is all very grand, and I am perfectly willing to respect
him. But I do not know that I should care to talk very freely
in his company."
<br/>"I am sure he would repeat nothing."
<br/>"Perhaps not; but he would always be thinking that he was going
to get the best of me."
<br/>"I don't think it answers," said Mrs Yeld to her husband as they
went home. "Of course I don't want to be prejudiced; but
Protestants are Protestants, and Roman Catholics are Roman
Catholics."
<br/>"You may say the same of Liberals and Conservatives, but you
wouldn't have them decline to meet each other."
<br/>"It isn't quite the same, my dear. After all religion is
religion."
<br/>"It ought to be," said the bishop.
<br/>"Of course I don't mean to put myself up against you, my dear; but
I don't know that I want to meet Mr Barham again."
<br/>"I don't know that I do, either," said the bishop; "but if he
comes in my way I hope I shall treat him civilly."
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