Agnes was born within a year, and the pale
girl died of puerperal fever. In that year lay a whole tragedy, which
could not have been more poignant in its perfection if the year had
been a thousand years. Ephraim promptly re-engaged the old
housekeeper, a course which filled Anna with secret childish revolt,
for Anna was now nine, and accomplished in all domesticity. In another
seven years the housekeeper died, a gaunt grey ruin, and Anna at
sixteen became mistress of the household, with a small sister to
cherish and control. About this time Anna began to perceive that her
father was generally regarded as a man of great wealth, having few
rivals in the entire region of the Five Towns, Definite knowledge,
however, she had none: he never spoke of his affairs; she knew only
that he possessed houses and other property in various places, that he
always turned first to the money article in the newspaper, and that
long envelopes arrived for him by post almost daily. But she had once
heard the surmise that he was worth sixty thousand of his own, apart
from the fortune of his first wife, Anna's mother. Nevertheless, it
did not occur to her to think of her father, in plain terms, as a
miser, until one day she happened to read in the 'Staffordshire Signal'
some particulars of the last will and testament of William Wilbraham,
J.P., who had just died. Mr. Wilbraham had been a famous magnate and
benefactor of the Five Towns; his revered name was in every mouth; he
had a fine seat, Hillport House, at Hillport; and his superb horses
were constantly seen, winged and nervous, in the streets of Bursley and
Hanbridge. The 'Signal' said that the net value of his estate was
sworn at fifty-nine thousand pounds. This single fact added a definite
and startling significance to figures which had previously conveyed
nothing to Anna except an idea of vastness. The crude contrast between
the things of Hillport House and the things of the six-roomed abode in
Manor Terrace gave food for reflection, silent but profound.
Tellwright had long ago retired from business, and three years after
the housekeeper died he retired, practically, from religious work, to
the grave detriment of the Hanbridge circuit. In reply to sorrowful
questioners, he said merely that he was petting old and needed rest,
and that there ought to be plenty of younger men to fill his shoes. He
gave up everything except his pew in the chapel. The circuit was
astounded by this sudden defection of a class-leader, a local preacher,
and an officer. It was an inexplicable fall from grace. Yet the
solution of the problem was quite simple. Ephraim had lost interest in
his religious avocations; they had ceased to amuse him, the old ardour
had cooled. The phenomenon is a common enough experience with men who
have passed their fiftieth year—men, too, who began with the true and
sacred zeal, which Tellwright never felt. The difference in
Tellwright's case was that, characteristically, he at once yielded to
the new instinct, caring naught for public opinion. Soon afterwards,
having purchased a lot of cottage property in Bursley, he decided to
migrate to the town of his fathers. He had more than one reason for
doing so, but perhaps the chief was that he found the atmosphere of
Hanbridge Wesleyan chapel rather uncongenial. The exodus from it was
his silent and malicious retort to a silent rebuke.
He appeared now to grow younger, discarding in some measure a certain
morose taciturnity which had hitherto marked his demeanour. He went
amiably about in the manner of a veteran determined to enjoy the brief
existence of life's winter. His stout, stiff, deliberate yet alert
figure became a familiar object to Bursley: that ruddy face, with its
small blue eyes, smooth upper lip, and short grey beard under the
smooth chin, seemed to pervade the streets, offering everywhere the
conundrum of its vague smile. Though no friend ever crossed his
doorstep, he had dozens of acquaintances of the footpath. He was not,
however, a facile talker, and he seldom gave an opinion; nor were his
remarks often noticeably shrewd. He existed within himself,
unrevealed. To the crowd, of course, he was a marvellous legend, and
moving always in the glory of that legend he received their wondering
awe—an awe tinged with contempt for his lack of ostentation and public
splendour. Commercial men with whom he had transacted business liked
to discuss his abilities, thus disseminating that solid respect for him
which had sprung from a personal experience of those abilities, and
which not even the shabbiness of his clothes could weaken.
Anna was disturbed by the arrival at the front door of the milk-girl.
Alternately with her father, she stayed at home on Sunday evenings,
partly to receive the evening milk and partly to guard the house.
1 comment