He had kept it by him, not wishing to use it if
he could help it. He had forgotten it,—so he said at times,—having
understood from Arabin that he was to have fifty pounds, and having
received more. If it had not come to him from the dean, then it had
been sent to him by the Prince of Evil for his utter undoing; and
there were times in which he seemed to think that such had been the
manner in which the fatal cheque had reached him. In all that he
said he was terribly confused, contradictory,
unintelligible,—speaking almost as a madman might speak,—ending
always in declaring that the cruelty of the world had been too much
for him, that the waters were meeting over his head, and praying to
God's mercy to remove him from the world. It need hardly be said
that his poor wife in these days had a burden on her shoulders that
was more than enough to crush any woman.
She at last acknowledged to Mr Walker that she could not account
for the twenty pounds. She herself would write again to the dean
about it, but she hardly hoped for any further assistance there.
"The dean's answer is very plain," said Mr Walker. "He says that he
gave Mr Crawley five ten-pound notes, and those five notes we have
traced to Mr Crawley's hands." Then Mrs Crawley could say nothing
further beyond making protestations of her husband's innocence.
CHAPTER II
By Heavens He Had Better Not!
I must ask the reader to make the acquaintance of Major Grantly
of Cosby Lodge, before he is introduced to the family of Mr
Crawley, at their parsonage in Hogglestock. It has been said that
Major Grantly had thrown a favourable eye on Grace Crawley,—by
which report occasion was given to all men and women in those parts
to hint that the Crawleys, with all their piety and humility, were
very cunning, and that one of the Grantlys was,—to say the least of
it,—very soft, admitted as it was throughout the county of
Barsetshire, that there was no family therein more widely awake to
the affairs generally of this world and the next combined, than the
family of which Archdeacon Grantly was the respected head and
patriarch. Mrs Walker, the most good-natured woman in Silverbridge,
had acknowledged to her daughter that she could not understand
it,—that she could not see anything at all in Grace Crawley. Mr
Walker had shrugged his shoulders and expressed a confident belief
that Major Grantly had not a shilling of his own beyond his
half-pay and his late wife's fortune, which was only six thousand
pounds. Others, who were ill-natured, had declared that Grace
Crawley was little better than a beggar, and that she could not
possibly have acquired the manners of a gentlewoman. Fletcher the
butcher had wondered whether the major would pay his future
father-in-law's debts; and Dr Tempest, the old Rector of
Silverbridge, whose four daughters were all as yet unmarried, had
turned up his old nose, and had hinted that half-pay majors did not
get caught in marriage so easily as that.
Such and such like had been the expressions of the opinion of
men and women in Silverbridge. But the matter had been discussed
further afield than at Silverbridge, and had been allowed to
intrude itself as a most unwelcome subject into the family conclave
of the archdeacon's rectory. To those who have not as yet learned
the fact from the public character and well-appreciated reputation
of the man, let it be known that Archdeacon Grantly was at this
time, as he had been for many years previously, Archdeacon of
Barchester and Rector of Plumstead Episcopi. A rich and prosperous
man he had ever been,—though he also had had his sore troubles, as
we all have,—his having arisen chiefly from want of that higher
ecclesiastical promotion which his soul had coveted, and for which
the whole tenour of his life had especially fitted him. Now, in his
green old age, he had ceased to covet, but had not ceased to
repine. He had ceased to covet aught for himself, but still coveted
much for his children; and for him such a marriage as this which
was now suggested for his son, was encompassed almost with the
bitterness of death. "I think it would kill me," he said to his
wife; "by heavens, I think it would be my death!"
A daughter of the archdeacon had made a splendid matrimonial
alliance,—so splendid that its history was at the time known to all
the aristocracy of the county, and had not been altogether
forgotten by any of those who keep themselves well instructed in
the details of the peerage. Griselda Grantly had married Lord
Dumbello, the eldest son of the Marquis of Hartletop,—than whom no
English nobleman was more puissant, if broad acres, many castles,
high title, and stars and ribbons are any sign of puissance,—and
she was now, herself, Marchioness of Hartletop, with a little Lord
Dumbello of her own. The daughter's visits to the parsonage of her
father were of necessity rare, such necessity having come from her
own altered sphere of life. A Marchioness of Hartletop has special
duties which will hardly permit her to devote herself frequently to
the humdrum society of a clerical father and mother. That it would
be so, father and mother had understood when they sent the
fortunate girl forth to a higher world. But, now and again, since
her August marriage, she had laid her coroneted head upon one of
the old rectory pillows for a night or so, and, on such occasions
all the Plumsteadians had been loud in praise of her condescension.
Now it happened that when this second and more aggravated blast of
the evil wind reached the rectory,—the renewed waft of the tidings
as to Major Grantly's infatuation regarding Miss Grace Crawley,
which, on its renewal, seemed to bring with it something of
confirmation,—it chanced, I say, that at that moment Griselda,
Marchioness of Hartletop, was gracing the paternal mansion. It need
hardly be said that the father was not slow to invoke such a
daughter's counsel, and such a sister's aid.
I am not quite sure that the mother would have been equally
quick to ask her daughter's advice, had she been left in the matter
entirely to her own propensities. Mrs Grantly had ever loved her
daughter dearly, and had been very proud of that great success in
life which Griselda had achieved; but in late years, the child had
become, as a woman, separate from the mother, and there had arisen
not unnaturally, a break of that close confidence which in early
years had existed between them. Griselda, Marchioness of Hartletop,
was more than ever a daughter of the archdeacon, even though he
might never see her. Nothing could rob him of the honour of such a
progeny,—nothing, even though there had been actual estrangement
between them. But it was not so with Mrs Grantly. Griselda had done
very well, and Mrs Grantly had rejoiced; but she had lost her
child. Now the major, who had done well also, though in a much
lesser degree, was still her child, moving in the same sphere of
life with her, still dependent in a great degree upon his father's
bounty, a neighbour in the county, a frequent visitor at the
parsonage, and a visitor who could be received without any of that
trouble that attended the unfrequent comings of Griselda, the
Marchioness, to the home of her youth.
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