<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VIIB" id="CHAPTER_VIIB"></SPAN>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>THE VICAR AND HIS COUSIN.</h3>
<p>None of the Mowbray family were present at the meeting between the Vicar
of Wrexhill and his cousin. The latter, indeed, set out from the Park at
a very early hour on the morning after his arrival, in order to
breakfast with his much esteemed relation, and to enjoy in the privacy
of his Vicarage a little friendly and confidential conversation as to
the projects and intentions concerning him, which had been hinted at in
his letters.</p>
<p>He was welcomed by Mr. Cartwright with very obliging civility; not but
that the vicar felt and showed, upon this, as well as all other
occasions, a very proper consciousness of his own superiority in all
ways. However, the Corbold connexion had been very essentially useful to
him in days past; and Mr. Stephen, the present representative of the
family, might <i>possibly</i> be extremely useful to him in days to come.
Several fresh-laid eggs were therefore placed on the table,—coffee was
added to tea,—and his reception in all ways such as to make Mr. Stephen
feel himself extremely comfortable.</p>
<p>When the repast was ended, Mr. Jacob received a hint to withdraw; and
as soon as the door was closed behind him, the serious vicar approached
his chair to that of the serious attorney, with the air of one who had
much to hear, and much to communicate.</p>
<p>"You seem hereunto, cousin Stephen, to have managed this excellent
business, which under Providence I have been enabled to put into your
hands, with great ability; and, by a continuation of mercy, I am not
without hope, that you will, as I heretofore hinted, bring the same to
good effect."</p>
<p>"There is hope, great and exceeding merciful hope, cousin William, that
all you have anticipated, and peradventure more too, may come to pass. A
blessing and a providence seem already to have lighted upon you, cousin,
in your new ministry, for into this vessel which your cousinly kindness
hath set within my sight, you have poured grace and abounding
righteousness. Surely there never was a lady endowed with such goodly
gifts who was more disposed to make a free-will offering of them to the
saints, than this pious and in all ways exemplary widow."</p>
<p>"Your remarks, cousin, are those of a man on whom the light shines. May
the mercy of Heaven strengthen unto you, for its glory, the talent it
hath bestowed! And now with the freedom of kinsmen who speak together,
tell to me what are the hopes and expectations to which your
conversation with this excellent, and already very serious lady, have
given birth."</p>
<p>"I have no wish or intention, cousin William, of hiding from you any
portion of the thoughts which it has pleased Providence to send into my
heart; the which are in fact, for the most part, founded upon the
suggestions which, by the light of truth, I discerned in the first
letter upon the widow Mowbray's affairs which you addressed unto me."</p>
<p>"Respecting the agency of her own business, and peradventure that of her
ward's also?"</p>
<p>"Even so. I have, in truth, well-founded faith and hope that by the
continuation of your friendship and good report, cousin William, I may
at no distant period attain unto both."</p>
<p>"And if you do, cousin Stephen," returned the vicar, with a smile; "your
<i>benefice</i> in the parish of Wrexhill will be worth considerably more
than mine."</p>
<p>A serious, waggish, holy, cunning smile now illuminated the
red, dry features of the attorney, and shaking his head with a
Burleigh-like-pregnancy of meaning, he said, "Ah, cousin!"</p>
<p>The vicar smiled again, and rising from his chair, put his head and
shoulders out of the open window, looking carefully, as it seemed, in
all directions; then, drawing them in again, he proceeded to open the
door of the room, and examined the passage leading to it in the same
cautious manner.</p>
<p>"My son Jacob is one of the finest young men in Europe, cousin Stephen,"
said the vicar, reseating himself; "but he is young, and as full of
little childish innocent fooleries as any baby: so it is as well not to
speak all we may have to say, without knowing that we are alone; for
many an excellent plan in which Providence seemed to have taken a great
share, has been impiously spoiled, frustrated, and destroyed, by the
want of caution in those to whom it was intrusted. Let not such sin lie
at our door! Now tell me then, cousin Stephen, and tell me frankly, why
did you smile and say, 'Ah cousin'?"</p>
<p>"Because, while speaking of what, through mercy, I may get at Wrexhill,
it seemed to me like a misdoubting of Providence not to speak a little
hint of what its chosen minister there may get too."</p>
<p>"I get my vicar's dues, cousin Stephen; and it may be, by a blessing
upon my humble endeavours, I may, when next Easter falls, obtain some
trifle both from high and low in the way of Easter offering."</p>
<p>"Ah, cousin!" repeated the attorney, renewing his intelligent smile.</p>
<p>"Well then," said the well-pleased vicar, "speak out."</p>
<p>"I am but a plodding man of business," replied Mr. Corbold, "with such
illumination upon matters of faith as Providence hath been pleased to
bestow; but my sense, such as it is, tells me that the excellent and
pious widow of Mowbray Park will not always be permitted by Providence
to remain desolate."</p>
<p>"She does, in truth, deserve a better fate," rejoined the vicar.</p>
<p>"And what better fate can befall her, cousin William, than being bound
together in holy matrimony with one of the most shining lights to be
found among the saints on earth?"</p>
<p>"Yes!" responded the vicar with a sigh; "that is the fate she merits,
and that is the fate she ought to meet!"</p>
<p>"And shall we doubt Providence?—shall we doubt that a mate shall be
found for her? No, cousin William; doubt not, for I say unto thee, 'Thou
art the man!'"</p>
<p>The vicar endeavoured to look solemn; but, though his handsome features
were in general under excellent control, he could not at this moment
repress a pleasant sort of simpering smile that puckered round his
mouth. Mr. Stephen Corbold, perceiving that his cousin was in nowise
displeased by the prophecy he had taken the liberty to utter, returned
to the subject again, saying, "I wish you had seen her face,—she must
have been very like her daughter,—I wish you could have seen her,
cousin William, every time I named you!"</p>
<p>"Indeed! Did she really testify some emotion? I trust you are not
jesting, cousin Stephen; this is no subject for pleasantry."</p>
<p>"Most assuredly it is not! and I think that you must altogether have
forgotten my temper and character, if you suppose that I should think it
such. To tell you the truth, cousin, I look upon the time present as a
period marked and settled by Providence for the calling you up to the
high places. Will it not be a glory to have its minister and servant
placed in such a palace as Mowbray? and will it not be converting what
hitherto has doubtless been the abode of sinners, into a temple for the
elect?"</p>
<p>"I will not deny," replied the vicar, "that such thoughts have
occasionally found place in my own mind. There have already been some
very singular and remarkable manifestations in this matter; and it is
the perceiving this, which has led me to believe, and indeed feel
certain, that my duty calls upon me so to act, that this wealthy relict
of a man too much addicted to the things of this world may, finally by
becoming part and parcel of myself, lose not the things eternal."</p>
<p>"I greatly rejoice," rejoined Mr. Corbold, "that such is your decision
in this matter; and if it should so fall out that Heaven in its wisdom
and goodness shall ordain you to become the master of Mowbray Park, (at
these words the vicar cast his eyes upon the ground and meekly bowed his
head,) and I have a persuasion that it will so ordain, borne strongly in
upon my mind, then and in that case, cousin William, I trust that your
patronage and support will not be withdrawn from me."</p>
<p>"Cousin Stephen," replied the vicar, "you are a man that on many
occasions I shall covet and desire to have by me and near me, both for
your profit and advantage and my own; but in the case which you have
put, and which Heaven seems to have whispered to your soul—in the
case, Stephen, that I should ever become the master and owner of
Mowbray, and all the sundry properties thereunto belonging, I think—no
offence to you, cousin—that I should prefer managing the estates
myself."</p>
<p>The serious attorney looked somewhat crestfallen, and perhaps some such
questionings were borne in upon his mind as—"What is it to me if he
marries the widow, if I do not get the management of the estates?"</p>
<p>When the vicar raised his eyes to the face of his cousin, he probably
perceived the impression his words had produced, and kindly anxious to
restore him to more comfortable feelings, he added,—"The fine property
of Miss Torrington, cousin Stephen, might certainly be placed entirely
in your hands—the management of it I mean—till she comes of age; but
then if she marries my son, which I think not unlikely, it is probable
that Jacob may follow my example, and prefer taking care of the property
himself."</p>
<p>"Then, at the very best," replied Mr. Corbold, "I can only hope to
obtain an agency for a year or two?"</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon, cousin; my hopes for you go much farther than that.
In the first place, I would recommend it to you, immediately to settle
yourself at Wrexhill: I am told that there is a good deal of business up
and down the country hereabouts; and, if I obtain the influence that I
hope to do in more ways than one, I shall take care that no attorney is
employed but yourself, cousin Stephen. Besides this, I know that there
may happen to be settlements or wills wanting amongst us, my good
friend, which may make your being at hand very convenient; and, in all
such cases, you would do your work, you know, pretty much at your own
price. All this, however, is only contingent, I am quite aware of that;
and therefore, in order that you may in some sort share my good
fortune,—if such indeed should fall upon me,—I have been thinking,
cousin Stephen, that when I shall be married to this lady, whom it has
pleased Providence to place in my path, you, being then the near
relative of a person of consequence and high consideration in the
county, may also aspire to increase your means by the same holy
ordinance; and if such a measure should seem good to your judgment, I
have a lady in my eye,—also a widow, and a very charming one, my dear
friend,—who lives in a style that shows her to be favoured by
Providence with the goods of fortune. What say you to this, cousin
Stephen?"</p>
<p>"Why, it is borne in upon me to say, cousin William, that, in such a
case as this, I should be inclined to follow your good example, and
choose for myself. And, truth to speak, I believe the choice is in some
sort made already; and I don't see but your marriage may be as likely to
help me in this case as in the other; and as to fortune, it is probable
that you may be able to lend me a helping hand there, too; for the young
lady, I fancy, is no other than your own daughter-in-law that is to
be—the pretty Miss Helen, cousin William?"</p>
<p>The vicar as he listened to these words, very nearly uttered a whistle.
He was, however, as he whispered to himself, mercifully saved from such
an indecorum by the timely remembrance that his cousin, though an
attorney, was a very serious man; but, though he did not whistle, he
deemed it necessary to express in a more solemn and proper manner his
doubts of the success to be hoped from the scheme proposed by Mr.
Corbold.</p>
<p>"As to the fortune of the young person who may, as you observe, some day
by the blessing of Providence become my daughter-in-law, I must tell you
as a friend and kinsman, cousin Stephen, that I hold it to be very
doubtful if she ever have any fortune at all. Are you aware that she is
not regenerate?"</p>
<p>"I partly guess as much," replied the attorney. "But," he added with a
smile, "I can't say I should have any objection to marrying her first,
and leading her into the way of salvation afterwards. And when I can
testify to her having forsaken the errors of her ways, and that I have
made her a light to lighten the Gentiles, I suppose you won't object
then to her coming in for a share of her mother's inheritance?"</p>
<p>"That would certainly make a difference; but I won't disguise from you,
cousin, that I consider this young person's as a hopeless case. She was
foredoomed from the beginning of the world: I see the mark upon her.
However, that might not perhaps make such difference in your
determination, for I know you to be a man very steadfast in hope, cousin
Stephen. But there is, moreover, I think, another obstacle. You must not
take my frankness amiss; but I have an inward misgiving as to her being
willing to accept you."</p>
<p>"As the young lady is a minor, cousin William, I should count upon its
being in your power to make her marry pretty well whom you please. And
this you may rely upon, that, in case you favour me heartily in this
matter, there is no work of any kind that you could put me to, that I
should not think it my bounden duty to perform."</p>
<p>"You speak like a just and conscientious man, cousin Corbold; and, by
the blessing of Heaven upon us, I trust that we shall be so able to work
together for righteousness' sake, that in the end we may compass that
which we desire. Nevertheless, I confess that it is still borne in upon
me that the fair and excellent widow Simpson would be the wisest choice
for you."</p>
<p>"Should it please Providence that such should be my own opinion
hereafter, cousin Cartwright, I will not fail to make it known unto
you."</p>
<p>"I will rest my faith on your wisdom therein," replied the vicar: "but
it is now time that I should go to speak the blessing of a minister, and
the welcome of a friend, to the excellent lady at the Park. And remember
two things, cousin Stephen: the first is, never to remain in the room
with the widow Mowbray and myself, when no other persons are present;
and the next is in importance like unto it,—remember that the lady is
even yet new in widowhood, and that any imprudent and premature allusion
to my possibly taking her in marriage might ruin all. There are those
near her, cousin Stephen, who I question not will fight against me."</p>
<p>The attorney promised to be awake and watchful, and never to permit his
tongue to betray the counsels of his heart.</p>
<p>The cousins and friends (who, notwithstanding the difference of their
callings, considered themselves, as Mr. Corbold observed,
fellow-labourers in the vineyard,) then walked forth together towards
Mowbray Park, well pleased with themselves and all things around them at
the present, and with pious confidence in the reward of their labours
for the future.</p>
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