<p><SPAN name="5"></SPAN> </p>
<h3>Chapter V<br/> <br/> <span class="smallcaps">Dr Grantly Visits the Hospital</span></h3>
<p> </p>
<p>Though doubt and hesitation disturbed the rest of our poor
warden, no such weakness perplexed the nobler
breast of his son-in-law. As the indomitable cock preparing
for the combat sharpens his spurs, shakes his feathers, and
erects his comb, so did the archdeacon arrange his weapons
for the coming war, without misgiving and without fear. That
he was fully confident of the justice of his cause let no one
doubt. Many a man can fight his battle with good courage,
but with a doubting conscience. Such was not the case with
Dr Grantly. He did not believe in the Gospel with more
assurance than he did in the sacred justice of all ecclesiastical
revenues. When he put his shoulder to the wheel to defend
the income of the present and future precentors of Barchester,
he was animated by as strong a sense of a holy cause, as that
which gives courage to a missionary in Africa, or enables a
sister of mercy to give up the pleasures of the world for the
wards of a hospital. He was about to defend the holy of holies
from the touch of the profane; to guard the citadel of his
church from the most rampant of its enemies; to put on his
good armour in the best of fights, and secure, if possible, the
comforts of his creed for coming generations of ecclesiastical
dignitaries. Such a work required no ordinary vigour; and
the archdeacon was, therefore, extraordinarily vigorous. It
demanded a buoyant courage, and a heart happy in its toil; and
the archdeacon's heart was happy, and his courage was buoyant.</p>
<p>He knew that he would not be able to animate his father-in-law
with feelings like his own, but this did not much disturb
him. He preferred to bear the brunt of the battle alone, and
did not doubt that the warden would resign himself into his
hands with passive submission.</p>
<p>"Well, Mr Chadwick," he said, walking into the steward's
office a day or two after the signing of the petition as
commemorated in the last chapter: "anything from Cox and
Cummins this morning?" Mr Chadwick handed him a letter;
which he read, stroking the tight-gaitered calf of his right leg
as he did so. Messrs Cox and Cummins merely said that they
had as yet received no notice from their adversaries; that they
could recommend no preliminary steps; but that should any
proceeding really be taken by the bedesmen, it would be
expedient to consult that very eminent Queen's Counsel, Sir
Abraham Haphazard.</p>
<p>"I quite agree with them," said Dr Grantly, refolding the
letter. "I perfectly agree with them. Haphazard is no doubt
the best man; a thorough churchman, a sound conservative,
and in every respect the best man we could get;—he's in the
House, too, which is a great thing."</p>
<p>Mr Chadwick quite agreed.</p>
<p>"You remember how completely he put down that scoundrel
Horseman about the Bishop of Beverley's income; how completely
he set them all adrift in the earl's case." Since the question
of St Cross had been mooted by the public, one noble lord had
become "the earl," <i>par excellence</i>, in the doctor's
estimation. "How he silenced that fellow at Rochester. Of course
we must have Haphazard; and I'll tell you what, Mr Chadwick,
we must take care to be in time, or the other party will
forestall us."</p>
<p>With all his admiration for Sir Abraham, the doctor seemed
to think it not impossible that that great man might be induced
to lend his gigantic powers to the side of the church's enemies.</p>
<p>Having settled this point to his satisfaction, the doctor
stepped down to the hospital, to learn how matters were going
on there; and as he walked across the hallowed close, and
looked up at the ravens who cawed with a peculiar reverence
as he wended his way, he thought with increased acerbity of
those whose impiety would venture to disturb the goodly grace
of cathedral institutions.</p>
<p>And who has not felt the same? We believe that Mr Horseman
himself would relent, and the spirit of Sir Benjamin Hall
give way, were those great reformers to allow themselves to
stroll by moonlight round the towers of some of our ancient
churches. Who would not feel charity for a prebendary when
walking the quiet length of that long aisle at Winchester, looking
at those decent houses, that trim grass-plat, and feeling, as
one must, the solemn, orderly comfort of the spot! Who could
be hard upon a dean while wandering round the sweet close
of Hereford, and owning that in that precinct, tone and colour,
design and form, solemn tower and storied window, are all in
unison, and all perfect! Who could lie basking in the cloisters
of Salisbury, and gaze on Jewel's library and that unequalled
spire, without feeling that bishops should sometimes be rich!</p>
<p>The tone of our archdeacon's mind must not astonish us;
it has been the growth of centuries of church ascendancy; and
though some fungi now disfigure the tree, though there be
much dead wood, for how much good fruit have not we to be
thankful? Who, without remorse, can batter down the dead
branches of an old oak, now useless, but, ah! still so beautiful,
or drag out the fragments of the ancient forest, without feeling
that they sheltered the younger plants, to which they are now
summoned to give way in a tone so peremptory and so harsh?</p>
<p>The archdeacon, with all his virtues, was not a man of
delicate feeling; and after having made his morning salutations
in the warden's drawing-room, he did not scruple to
commence an attack on "pestilent" John Bold in the presence
of Miss Harding, though he rightly guessed that that lady was
not indifferent to the name of his enemy.</p>
<p>"Nelly, my dear, fetch me my spectacles from the back
room," said her father, anxious to save both her blushes and
her feelings.</p>
<p>Eleanor brought the spectacles, while her father was trying,
in ambiguous phrases, to explain to her too-practical
brother-in-law that it might be as well
not to say anything about Bold
before her, and then retreated. Nothing had been explained
to her about Bold and the hospital; but, with a woman's
instinct she knew that things were going wrong.</p>
<p>"We must soon be doing something," commenced the archdeacon,
wiping his brows with a large, bright-coloured handkerchief,
for he had felt busy, and had walked quick, and it was a broiling
summer's day. "Of course you have heard of the petition?"</p>
<p>Mr Harding owned, somewhat unwillingly, that he had
heard of it.</p>
<p>"Well!"—the archdeacon looked for some expressions of
opinion, but none coming, he continued,—"We must be doing
something, you know; we mustn't allow these people to cut the
ground from under us while we sit looking on." The archdeacon,
who was a practical man, allowed himself the use of everyday
expressive modes of speech when among his closest intimates,
though no one could soar into a more intricate labyrinth of
refined phraseology when the church was the subject, and his
lower brethren were his auditors.</p>
<p>The warden still looked mutely in his face, making the
slightest possible passes with an imaginary fiddle bow, and
stopping, as he did so, sundry imaginary strings with the
fingers of his other hand. 'Twas his constant consolation in
conversational troubles. While these vexed him sorely, the
passes would be short and slow, and the upper hand would not
be seen to work; nay, the strings on which it operated would
sometimes lie concealed in the musician's pocket, and the
instrument on which he played would be beneath his chair;—but
as his spirit warmed to the subject,—as his trusting heart
looking to the bottom of that which vexed him, would see its
clear way out,—he would rise to a higher melody, sweep the
unseen strings with a bolder hand, and swiftly fingering the
cords from his neck, down along his waistcoat, and up again
to his very ear, create an ecstatic strain of perfect music,
audible to himself and to St Cecilia, and not without effect.</p>
<p>"I quite agree with Cox and Cummins," continued the
archdeacon. "They say we must secure Sir Abraham Haphazard.
I shall not have the slightest fear in leaving the case
in Sir Abraham's hands."</p>
<p>The warden played the slowest and saddest of tunes. It was
but a dirge on one string.</p>
<p>"I think Sir Abraham will not be long in letting Master
Bold know what he's about. I fancy I hear Sir Abraham
cross-questioning him at the Common Pleas."</p>
<p>The warden thought of his income being thus discussed, his
modest life, his daily habits, and his easy work; and nothing
issued from that single cord, but a low wail of sorrow. "I
suppose they've sent this petition up to my father." The
warden didn't know; he imagined they would do so this very day.</p>
<p>"What I can't understand is, how you let them do it, with
such a command as you have in the place, or should have with
such a man as Bunce. I cannot understand why you let them do it."</p>
<p>"Do what?" asked the warden.</p>
<p>"Why, listen to this fellow Bold, and that other low pettifogger,
Finney;—and get up this petition too. Why didn't you tell
Bunce to destroy the petition?"</p>
<p>"That would have been hardly wise," said the warden.</p>
<p>"Wise;—yes, it would have been very wise if they'd done it
among themselves. I must go up to the palace and answer it now,
I suppose. It's a very short answer they'll get, I can tell you."</p>
<p>"But why shouldn't they petition, doctor?"</p>
<p>"Why shouldn't they!" responded the archdeacon, in a loud
brazen voice, as though all the men in the hospital were
expected to hear him through the walls; "why shouldn't they?
I'll let them know why they shouldn't; by the bye, warden,
I'd like to say a few words to them all together."</p>
<p>The warden's mind misgave him, and even for a moment he
forgot to play. He by no means wished to delegate to his
son-in-law his place and authority of warden; he had expressly
determined not to interfere in any step which the men might
wish to take in the matter under dispute; he was most
anxious neither to accuse them nor to defend himself. All
these things he was aware the archdeacon would do in his
behalf, and that not in the mildest manner; and yet he knew
not how to refuse the permission requested.</p>
<p>"I'd so much sooner remain quiet in the matter," said he, in
an apologetic voice.</p>
<p>"Quiet!" said the archdeacon, still speaking with his brazen
trumpet; "do you wish to be ruined in quiet?"</p>
<p>"Why, if I am to be ruined, certainly."</p>
<p>"Nonsense, warden; I tell you something must be done;—we
must act; just let me ring the bell, and send the men word
that I'll speak to them in the quad."</p>
<p>Mr Harding knew not how to resist, and the disagreeable
order was given. The quad, as it was familiarly called, was a
small quadrangle, open on one side to the river, and surrounded
on the others by the high wall of Mr Harding's garden, by one
gable end of Mr Harding's house, and by the end of the row of
buildings which formed the residences of the bedesmen. It was
flagged all round, and the centre was stoned; small stone
gutters ran from the four corners of the square to a grating in
the centre; and attached to the end of Mr Harding's house was a
conduit with four cocks covered over from the weather, at which
the old men got their water, and very generally performed their
morning toilet. It was a quiet, sombre place, shaded over by the
trees of the warden's garden. On the side towards the river,
there stood a row of stone seats, on which the old men would sit
and gaze at the little fish, as they flitted by in the running
stream. On the other side of the river was a rich, green meadow,
running up to and joining the deanery, and as little open to the
public as the garden of the dean itself. Nothing, therefore,
could be more private than the quad of the hospital; and it was
there that the archdeacon determined to convey to them his sense
of their refractory proceedings.</p>
<p>The servant soon brought in word that the men were
assembled in the quad, and the archdeacon, big with his
purpose, rose to address them.</p>
<p>"Well, warden, of course you're coming," said he, seeing that
Mr Harding did not prepare to follow him.</p>
<p>"I wish you'd excuse me," said Mr Harding.</p>
<p>"For heaven's sake, don't let us have division in the camp,"
replied the archdeacon: "let us have a long pull and a strong
pull, but above all a pull all together; come, warden, come;
don't be afraid of your duty."</p>
<p>Mr Harding was afraid; he was afraid that he was being
led to do that which was not his duty; he was not, however,
strong enough to resist, so he got up and followed
his son-in-law.</p>
<p>The old men were assembled in groups in the
quadrangle—eleven of them at least, for poor
old Johnny Bell was bed-ridden,
and couldn't come; he had, however, put his mark to the
petition, as one of Handy's earliest followers. 'Tis true he
could not move from the bed where he lay; 'tis true he had
no friend on earth, but those whom the hospital contained;
and of those the warden and his daughter were the most constant
and most appreciated; 'tis true that everything was administered
to him which his failing body could require, or which his faint
appetite could enjoy; but still his dull eye had glistened for a
moment at the idea of possessing a hundred pounds a year "to his
own cheek," as Abel Handy had eloquently expressed it; and poor
old Johnny Bell had greedily put his mark to the petition.</p>
<p>When the two clergymen appeared, they all uncovered their
heads. Handy was slow to do it, and hesitated; but the black
coat and waistcoat of which he had spoken so irreverently in
Skulpit's room, had its effect even on him, and he too doffed
his hat. Bunce, advancing before the others, bowed lowly to
the archdeacon, and with affectionate reverence expressed his
wish, that the warden and Miss Eleanor were quite well; "and
the doctor's lady," he added, turning to the archdeacon, "and
the children at Plumstead, and my lord;" and having made
his speech, he also retired among the others, and took his place
with the rest upon the stone benches.</p>
<p>As the archdeacon stood up to make his speech, erect in the
middle of that little square, he looked like an ecclesiastical
statue placed there, as a fitting impersonation of the church
militant here on earth; his shovel hat, large, new, and
well-pronounced, a churchman's hat in every inch, declared the
profession as plainly as does the Quaker's broad brim; his
heavy eyebrows, large open eyes, and full mouth and chin
expressed the solidity of his order; the broad chest, amply
covered with fine cloth, told how well to do was its estate; one
hand ensconced within his pocket, evinced the practical hold
which our mother church keeps on her temporal possessions;
and the other, loose for action, was ready to fight if need be in
her defence; and, below these, the decorous breeches, and
neat black gaiters showing so admirably that well-turned leg,
betokened the decency, the outward beauty and grace of our
church establishment.</p>
<p>"Now, my men," he began, when he had settled himself well
in his position, "I want to say a few words to you. Your good
friend, the warden here, and myself, and my lord the bishop,
on whose behalf I wish to speak to you, would all be very sorry,
very sorry indeed, that you should have any just ground of
complaint. Any just ground of complaint on your part would
be removed at once by the warden, or by his lordship, or by
me on his behalf, without the necessity of any petition on your
part." Here the orator stopped for a moment, expecting that
some little murmurs of applause would show that the weakest
of the men were beginning to give way; but no such murmurs
came. Bunce, himself, even sat with closed lips, mute and
unsatisfactory. "Without the necessity of any petition at all,"
he repeated. "I'm told you have addressed a petition to my
lord." He paused for a reply from the men, and after a while,
Handy plucked up courage and said, "Yes, we has."</p>
<p>"You have addressed a petition to my lord, in which, as I am
informed, you express an opinion that you do not receive from
Hiram's estate all that is your due." Here most of the men
expressed their assent. "Now what is it you ask for? What is
it you want that you hav'n't got here? What is it—"</p>
<p>"A hundred a year," muttered old Moody, with a voice as
if it came out of the ground.</p>
<p>"A hundred a year!" ejaculated the archdeacon militant,
defying the impudence of these claimants with one hand
stretched out and closed, while with the other he tightly
grasped, and secured within his breeches pocket, that symbol
of the church's wealth which his own loose half-crowns not
unaptly represented. "A hundred a year! Why, my men, you
must be mad; and you talk about John Hiram's will! When
John Hiram built a hospital for worn-out old men, worn-out
old labouring men, infirm old men past their work, cripples,
blind, bed-ridden, and such like, do you think he meant to
make gentlemen of them? Do you think John Hiram intended
to give a hundred a year to old single men, who earned perhaps
two shillings or half-a-crown a day for themselves and families
in the best of their time? No, my men, I'll tell you what John
Hiram meant: he meant that twelve poor old worn-out
labourers, men who could no longer support themselves, who
had no friends to support them, who must starve and perish
miserably if not protected by the hand of charity;—he meant
that twelve such men as these should come in here in their
poverty and wretchedness, and find within these walls shelter
and food before their death, and a little leisure to make their
peace with God. That was what John Hiram meant: you
have not read John Hiram's will, and I doubt whether those
wicked men who are advising you have done so. I have; I
know what his will was; and I tell you that that was his will,
and that that was his intention."</p>
<p>Not a sound came from the eleven bedesmen, as they sat
listening to what, according to the archdeacon, was their
intended estate. They grimly stared upon his burly figure, but
did not then express, by word or sign, the anger and disgust to
which such language was sure to give rise.</p>
<p>"Now let me ask you," he continued: "do you think you are
worse off than John Hiram intended to make you? Have you
not shelter, and food, and leisure? Have you not much more?
Have you not every indulgence which you are capable of
enjoying? Have you not twice better food, twice a better bed,
ten times more money in your pocket than you were ever able
to earn for yourselves before you were lucky enough to get into
this place? And now you send a petition to the bishop, asking
for a hundred pounds a year! I tell you what, my friends;
you are deluded, and made fools of by wicked men who are
acting for their own ends. You will never get a hundred pence
a year more than what you have now: it is very possible that
you may get less; it is very possible that my lord the bishop,
and your warden, may make changes—"</p>
<p>"No, no, no," interrupted Mr Harding, who had been listening
with indescribable misery to the tirade of his son-in-law;
"no, my friends. I want no changes,—at least no changes that
shall make you worse off than you now are, as long as you and
I live together."</p>
<p>"God bless you, Mr Harding," said Bunce; and "God bless
you, Mr Harding, God bless you, sir: we know you was
always our friend," was exclaimed by enough of the men to
make it appear that the sentiment was general.</p>
<p>The archdeacon had been interrupted in his speech before he
had quite finished it; but he felt that he could not recommence
with dignity after this little ebullition, and he led the way
back into the garden, followed by his father-in-law.</p>
<p>"Well," said he, as soon as he found himself within the cool
retreat of the warden's garden; "I think I spoke to them
plainly." And he wiped the perspiration from his brow; for
making a speech under a broiling mid-day sun in summer, in a
full suit of thick black cloth, is warm work.</p>
<p>"Yes, you were plain enough," replied the warden, in a tone
which did not express approbation.</p>
<p>"And that's everything," said the other, who was clearly well
satisfied with himself; "that's everything: with those sort of
people one must be plain, or one will not be understood. Now,
I think they did understand me;—I think they knew what I meant."</p>
<p>The warden agreed. He certainly thought they had understood
to the full what had been said to them.</p>
<p>"They know pretty well what they have to expect from us;
they know how we shall meet any refractory spirit on their
part; they know that we are not afraid of them. And now I'll just
step into Chadwick's, and tell him what I've done; and then I'll
go up to the palace, and answer this petition of theirs."</p>
<p>The warden's mind was very full,—full nearly to overcharging
itself; and had it done so,—had he allowed himself to speak
the thoughts which were working within him, he would indeed
have astonished the archdeacon by the reprobation he would
have expressed as to the proceeding of which he had been so
unwilling a witness. But different feelings kept him silent; he
was as yet afraid of differing from his son-in-law;—he was
anxious beyond measure to avoid even a semblance of rupture
with any of his order, and was painfully fearful of having to
come to an open quarrel with any person on any subject. His
life had hitherto been so quiet, so free from strife; his little
early troubles had required nothing but passive fortitude; his
subsequent prosperity had never forced upon him any active
cares,—had never brought him into disagreeable contact with
anyone. He felt that he would give almost anything,—much
more than he knew he ought to do,—to relieve himself from the
storm which he feared was coming. It was so hard that the
pleasant waters of his little stream should be disturbed and
muddied by rough hands; that his quiet paths should be made a
battlefield; that the unobtrusive corner of the world which had
been allotted to him, as though by Providence, should be invaded
and desecrated, and all within it made miserable and unsound.</p>
<p>Money he had none to give; the knack of putting guineas
together had never belonged to him; but how willingly, with
what a foolish easiness, with what happy alacrity, would he
have abandoned the half of his income for all time to come,
could he by so doing have quietly dispelled the clouds that
were gathering over him,—could he have thus compromised
the matter between the reformer and the conservative, between
his possible son-in-law, Bold, and his positive son-in-law,
the archdeacon.</p>
<p>And this compromise would not have been made from any
prudential motive of saving what would yet remain, for Mr
Harding still felt little doubt but he should be left for life in
quiet possession of the good things he had, if he chose to retain
them. No; he would have done so from the sheer love of
quiet, and from a horror of being made the subject of public
talk. He had very often been moved to pity,—to that inward
weeping of the heart for others' woes; but none had he ever
pitied more than that old lord, whose almost fabulous wealth,
drawn from his church preferments, had become the subject
of so much opprobrium, of such public scorn; that wretched
clerical octogenarian Crœsus, whom men would not allow to
die in peace,—whom all the world united to decry and to abhor.</p>
<p>Was he to suffer such a fate? Was his humble name to be
bandied in men's mouths, as the gormandiser of the resources
of the poor, as of one who had filched from the charity of other
ages wealth which had been intended to relieve the old and the
infirm? Was he to be gibbeted in the press, to become a byword
for oppression, to be named as an example of the greed of the
English church? Should it ever be said that he had robbed those
old men, whom he so truly and so tenderly loved in his heart
of hearts? As he slowly paced, hour after hour, under those noble
lime-trees, turning these sad thoughts within him, he became all
but fixed in his resolve that some great step must be taken to
relieve him from the risk of so terrible a fate.</p>
<p>In the meanwhile, the archdeacon, with contented mind and
unruffled spirit, went about his business. He said a word or
two to Mr Chadwick, and then finding, as he expected, the
petition lying in his father's library, he wrote a short answer to
the men, in which he told them that they had no evils to
redress, but rather great mercies for which to be thankful;
and having seen the bishop sign it, he got into his brougham
and returned home to Mrs Grantly, and Plumstead Episcopi.</p>
<p> </p>
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