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    Scenes of Clerical Life

    Page 30
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    heavy-plated drawing-room candlestick, appeared at the turning of the passage

      that led to the broader entrance.

      See, she has on a light dress which sits loosely about her figure, but does not

      disguise its liberal, graceful outline. A heavy mass of straight jetblack hair

      has escaped from its fastening, and hangs over her shoulders. Her grandly-cut

      features, pale with the natural paleness of a brunette, have premature lines

      about them telling that the years have been lengthened by sorrow, and the

      delicately-curved nostril, which seems made to quiver with the proud

      consciousness of power and beauty, must have quivered to the heart-piercing

      griefs which have given that worn look to the corners of the mouth. Her wide

      open black eyes have a strangely fixed, sightless gaze, as she pauses at the

      turning, and stands silent before her husband.

      "I'll teach you to keep me waiting in the dark, you pale staring fool!"

      advancing with his slow drunken step. "What, you've been drinking again, have

      you? I'll beat you into your senses."

      He laid his hand with a firm gripe on her shoulder, turned her round, and pushed

      her slowly before him along the passage and through the dining-room door which

      stood open on their left hand.

      There was a portrait of Janet's mother, a grey-haired, dark-eyed old woman, in a

      neatly-fluted cap, hanging over the mantelpiece. Surely the aged eyes take on a

      look of anguish as they see Janet�not trembling, no! it would be better if she

      trembled�standing stupidly unmoved in her great beauty, while the heavy arm is

      lifted to strike her. The blow falls�another�and another. Surely the mother

      hears that cry�"O Robert! pity! pity!"

      Poor grey-haired woman! Was it for this you suffered a mother's pangs in your

      lone widowhood five-and-thirty years ago? Was it for this you kept the little

      worn morocco shoes Janet had first run in, and kissed them day by day when she

      was away from you, a tall girl at school? Was it for this you looked proudly at

      her when she came back to you in her rich pale beauty, like a tall white arum

      that has just unfolded its grand pure curves to the sun?

      The mother lies sleepless and praying in her lonely house, weeping the hard

      tears of age, because she dreads this may be a cruel night for her child.

      She too has a picture over her mantelpiece, drawn in chalk by Janet long years

      ago. She looked at it before she went to bed. It is a head bowed beneath a

      cross, and wearing a crown of thorns.

      CHAPTER V.

      It was half-past nine o'clock in the morning. The midsummer sun was already warm

      on the roofs and weathercocks of Milby. The church-bells were ringing, and many

      families were conscious of Sunday sensations, chiefly referable to the fact that

      the daughters had come down to breakfast in their best frocks, and with their

      hair particularly well dressed. For it was not Sunday, but Wednesday; and though

      the Bishop was going to hold a Confirmation, and to decide whether or not there

      should be a Sunday evening lecture in Milby, the sunbeams had the usual

      working-day look to the haymakers already long out in the fields, and to laggard

      weavers just "setting up" their week's "piece." The notion of its being Sunday

      was the strongest in young ladies like Miss Phipps, who was going to accompany

      her younger sister to the confirmation, and to wear a "sweetly pretty"

      transparent bonnet with marabout feathers on the interesting occasion, thus

      throwing into relief the suitable simplicity of her sister's attire, who was, of

      course, to appear in a new white frock; or in the pupils at Miss Townley's, who

      were absolved from all lessons, and were going to church to see the Bishop, and

      to hear the Honourable and Rever-end Mr Prendergast, the rector, read prayers�a

      high intellectual treat, as Miss Townley assured them. It seemed only natural

      that a rector, who was honourable, should read better than old Mr Crewe, who was

      only a curate, and not honourable; and when little Clara Robins wondered why

      some clergymen were rectors and others not, Ellen Marriott assured her with

      great confidence that it was only the clever men who were made rectors. Ellen

      Marriott was going to be confirmed. She was a short, fair, plump girl, with blue

      eyes and sandy hair, which was this morning arranged in taller cannon curls than

      usual, for the reception of the Episcopal benediction, and some of the young

      ladies thought her the prettiest girl in the school; but others gave the

      preference to her rival, Maria Gardner, who was much taller, and had a lovely

      "crop" of dark-brown ringlets, and who, being also about to take upon herself

      the vows made in her name at her baptism, had oiled and twisted her ringlets

      with especial care. As she seated herself at the breakfast-table before Miss

      Townley's entrance to dispense the weak coffee, her crop excited so strong a

      sensation that Ellen Marriott was at length impelled to look at it, and to say

      with suppressed but bitter sarcasm, "Is that Miss Gardner's head?" "Yes," said

      Maria, amiable and stuttering, and no match for Ellen in retort; "Th �th�this is

      my head." "Then I don't admire it at all!" was the crushing rejoinder of Ellen,

      followed by a murmur of approval among her friends. Young ladies, I suppose,

      exhaust their sac of venom in this way at school. That is the reason why they

      have such a harmless tooth for each other in after life.

      The only other candidate for confirmation at Miss Townley's was Mary Dunn, a

      draper's daughter in Milby, and a distant relation of the Miss Linnets. Her pale

      lanky hair could never be coaxed into permanent curl, and this morning the heat

      had brought it down to its natural condition of lankiness earlier than usual.

      But that was not what made her sit melancholy and apart at the lower end of the

      form. Her parents were admirers of Mr Tryan, and had been persuaded, by the Miss

      Linnets' influence, to insist that their daughter should be prepared for

      confirmation by him, over and above the preparation given to Miss Townley's

      pupils by Mr Crewe. Poor Mary Dunn! I am afraid she thought it too heavy a price

      to pay for these spiritual advantages, to be excluded from every game at ball,

      to be obliged to walk with none but little girls�in fact, to be the object of an

      aversion that nothing short of an incessant supply of plum-cakes would have

      neutralised. And Mrs Dunn was of opinion that plum-cake was unwholesome. The

      anti-Tryanite spirit, you perceive, was very strong at Miss Townley's, imported

      probably by day scholars, as well as encouraged by the fact that that clever

      woman was herself strongly opposed to innovation, and remarked every Sunday that

      Mr Crewe had preached an "excellent discourse." Poor Mary Dunn dreaded the

      moment when school-hours would be over, for then she was sure to be the butt of

      those very explicit remarks which, in young ladies' as well as young gentlemen's

      seminaries, constitute the most subtle and delicate form of the innuendo. "I'd

      never be a Tryanite, would you?" "O here comes the lady that knows so much more

      about religion than we do!" "Some people think themselves so very pious!"

      It is really surprising that young ladies
    should not be thought competent to the

      same curriculum as young gentlemen. I observe that their powers of sarcasm are

      quite equal; and if there had been a genteel academy for young gentlemen at

      Milby, I am inclined to think that, notwithstanding Euclid and the classics, the

      party spirit there would not have exhibited itself in more pungent irony, or

      more incisive satire, than was heard in Miss Townley's seminary. But there was

      no such academy, the existence of the grammar-school under Mr Crewe's

      superintendence probably discouraging speculations of that kind; and the genteel

      youths of Milby were chiefly come home for the midsummer holidays from distant

      schools. Several of us had just assumed coat-tails, and the assumption of new

      responsibilities apparently following as a matter of course, we were among the

      candidates for confirmation. I wish I could say that the solemnity of our

      feelings was on a level with the solemnity of the occasion; but unimaginative

      boys find it difficult to recognise apostolical institutions in their developed

      form, and I fear our chief emotion concerning the ceremony was a sense of

      sheepishness, and our chief opinion, the speculative and heretical position,

      that it ought to be confined to the girls. It was a pity, you will say; but it

      is the way with us men in other crises, that come a long while after

      confirmation. The golden moments in the stream of life rush past us, and we see

      nothing but sand; the angels come to visit us, and we only know them when they

      are gone.

      But, as I said, the morning was sunny, the bells were ringing, the ladies of

      Milby were dressed in their Sunday garments.

      And who is this bright-looking woman walking with hasty step along Orchard

      Street so early, with a large nosegay in her hand? Can it be Janet Dempster, on

      whom we looked with such deep pity, one sad midnight, hardly a fortnight ago?

      Yes; no other woman in Milby has those searching black eyes, that tall graceful

      unconstrained figure, set off by her simple muslin dress and black lace shawl,

      that massy black hair now so neatly braided in glossy contrast with the white

      satin ribbons of her modest cap and bonnet. No other woman has that sweet

      speaking smile, with which she nods to Jonathan Lamb, the old parish clerk. And,

      ah!�now she comes nearer�there are those sad lines about the mouth and eyes on

      which that sweet smile plays like sunbeams on the storm-beaten beauty of the

      full and ripened corn.

      She is turning out of Orchard Street, and making her way as fast as she can to

      her mother's house, a pleasant cottage facing a roadside meadow from which the

      hay is being carried. Mrs Raynor has had her breakfast, and is seated in her

      arm-chair reading, when Janet opens the door, saying, in her most playful

      voice,�

      "Please, mother, I'm come to show myself to you before I go to the Parsonage.

      Have I put on my pretty cap and bonnet to satisfy you?"

      Mrs Raynor looked over her spectacles, and met her daughter's glance with eyes

      as dark and loving as her own. She was a much smaller woman than Janet, both in

      figure and feature, the chief resemblance lying in the eyes and the clear

      brunette complexion. The mother's hair had long been grey, and was gathered

      under the neatest of caps, made by her own clever fingers, as all Janet's caps

      and bonnets were too. They were well-practised fingers, for Mrs Raynor had

      supported herself in her widowhood by keeping a millinery establishment, and in

      this way had earned money enough to give her daughter what was then thought a

      first-rate education, as well as to save a sum which, eked out by her

      son-in-law, sufficed to support her in her solitary old age. Always the same

      clean, neat old lady, dressed in black silk, was Mrs Raynor: a patient, brave

      woman, who bowed with resignation under the burden of remembered sorrow, and

      bore with meek fortitude the new load that the new days brought with them.

      "Your bonnet wants pulling a trifle forwarder, my child," she said, smiling, and

      taking off her spectacles, while Janet at once knelt down before her, and waited

      to be "set to rights," as she would have done when she was a child. "You're

      going straight to Mrs Crewe's, I suppose? Are those flowers to garnish the

      dishes?"

      "No, indeed, mother. This is a nosegay for the middle of the table. I've sent up

      the dinner-service and the ham we had cooked at our house yesterday, and Betty

      is coming directly with the garnish and the plate. We shall get our good Mrs

      Crewe through her troubles famously. Dear tiny woman! You should have seen her

      lift up her hands yesterday, and pray heaven to take her before ever she should

      have another collation to get ready for the Bishop. She said, 'It's bad enough

      to have the Archdeacon, though he doesn't want half so many jelly-glasses. I

      wouldn't mind, Janet, if it was to feed all the old hungry cripples in Milby;

      but so much trouble and expense for people who eat too much every day of their

      lives!' We had such a cleaning and furbishing-up of the sitting-room yesterday!

      Nothing will ever do away with the smell of Mr Crewe's pipes, you know; but we

      have thrown it into the background, with yellow soap and dry lavender. And now I

      must run away. You will come to church, mother?"

      "Yes, my dear, I wouldn't lose such a pretty sight. It does my old eyes good to

      see so many fresh young faces. Is your husband going?"

      "Yes, Robert will be there. I've made him as neat as a new pin this morning, and

      he says the Bishop will think him too buckish by half. I took him into Mammy

      Dempster's room to show himself. We hear Tryan is making sure of the Bishop's

      support; but we shall see. I would give my crooked guinea, and all the luck it

      will ever bring me, to have him beaten, for I can't endure the sight of the man

      coming to harass dear old Mr and Mrs Crewe in their last days. Preaching the

      Gospel indeed! That is the best Gospel that makes everybody happy and

      comfortable, isn't it, mother?"

      "Ah, child, I'm afraid there's no Gospel will do that here below."

      "Well, I can do something to comfort Mrs Crewe, at least; so give me a kiss, and

      good-by till church-time."

      The mother leaned back in her chair when Janet was gone, and sank into a painful

      reverie. When our life is a continuous trial, the moments of respite seem only

      to substitute the heaviness of dread for the heaviness of actual suffering: the

      curtain of cloud seems parted an instant only that we may measure all its horror

      as it hangs low, black, and imminent, in contrast with the transient brightness;

      the water-drops that visit the parched lips in the desert, bear with them only

      the keen imagination of thirst. Janet looked glad and tender now�but what scene

      of misery was coming next? She was too like the cistus flowers in the little

      garden before the window, that, with the shades of evening, might lie with the

      delicate white and glossy dark of their petals trampled in the roadside dust.

      When the sun had sunk, and the twilight was deepening, Janet might be sitting

      there, heated, maddened, sobbing out her griefs with selfish passion, and wildly

      wishing herself dead
    .

      Mrs Raynor had been reading about the lost sheep, and the joy there is in heaven

      over the sinner that repenteth. Surely the eternal love she believed in through

      all the sadness of her lot, would not leave her child to wander farther and

      farther into the wilderness till there was no turning�the child so lovely, so

      pitiful to others, so good, till she was goaded into sin by woman's bitterest

      sorrows! Mrs Raynor had her faith and her spiritual comforts, though she was not

      in the least evangelical, and knew nothing of doctrinal zeal. I fear most of Mr.

      Tryan's hearers would have considered her destitute of saving knowledge, and I

      am quite sure she had no well-defined views on justification. Nevertheless, she

      read her Bible a great deal, and thought she found divine lessons there�how to

      bear the cross meekly, and be merciful. Let us hope that there is a saving

      ignorance, and that Mrs Raynor was justified without knowing exactly how.

      She tried to have hope and trust, though it was hard to believe that the future

      would be anything else than the harvest of the seed that was being sown before

      her eyes. But always there is seed being sown silently and unseen, and

      everywhere there come sweet flowers without our foresight or labour. We reap

      what we sow, but Nature has love over and above that justice, and gives us

      shadow and blossom and fruit that spring from no planting of ours.

      CHAPTER VI.

      Most people must have agreed with Mrs Raynor that the Confirmation that day was

      a pretty sight, at least when those slight girlish forms and fair young faces

      moved in a white rivulet along the aisles, and flowed into kneeling semicircles

      under the light of the great chancel window, softened by patches of dark old

      painted glass; and one would think that to look on while a pair of venerable

      hands pressed such young heads, and a venerable face looked upward for a

      blessing on them, would be very likely to make the heart swell gently, and to

      moisten the eyes. Yet I remember the eyes seemed very dry in Milby church that

      day, not-withstanding that the Bishop was an old man, and probably venerable

      (for though he was not an eminent Grecian, he was the brother of a Whig lord);

      and I think the eyes must have remained dry, because he had small delicate

      womanish hands adorned with ruffles, and, instead of laying them on the girls'

      heads, just let them hover over each in quick succession, as if it were not

      etiquette to touch them, and as if the laying on of hands were like the

      theatrical embrace�part of the play, and not to be really believed in. To be

      sure, there were a great many heads, and the Bishop's time was limited.

      Moreover, a wig can, under no circumstances, be affecting, except in rare cases

      of illusion; and copious lawn-sleeves cannot be expected to go directly to any

      heart except a washer-woman's.

      I know, Ned Phipps who knelt against me, and I am sure made me behave much worse

      than I should have done without him, whispered that he thought the Bishop was a

      "guy," and I certainly remember thinking that Mr Prendergast looked much more

      dignified with his plain white surplice and black hair. He was a tall commanding

      man, and read the Liturgy in a strikingly sonorous and uniform voice, which I

      tried to imitate the next Sunday at home, until my little sister began to cry,

      and said I was "yoaring at her."

      Mr Tryan sat in a pew near the pulpit with several other clergymen. He looked

      pale, and rubbed his hand over his face and pushed back his hair oftener than

      usual. Standing in the aisle close to him, and repeating the responses with

      edifying loudness, was Mr Budd, churchwarden and delegate, with a white staff in

      his hand and a backward bend of his small head and person, such as, I suppose,

      he considered suitable to a friend of sound religion. Conspicuous in the

      gallery, too, was the tall figure of Mr Dempster, whose professional avocations

     


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