“I am with thee, and
no man shall set on thee to hurt thee.”
Acts xviii, 10.
“There I will meet with
thee, and I will commune with thee from
above the mercy-seat.” Exod.
xxv, 22.
No man liveth unto himself. In
that green, flowery Eden, with the soft winds blowing
in at the open doors and windows, and the white sunshine
glorifying every thing, there was the whisper of sorrow
as well as the whisper of love. The homely life
of the village, with its absorbing tragedy, touched
all hearts; for men and women belie their nature when
they do not weep with those that weep.
At the close of the London season
the Elthams returned to their country home, and there
was much visiting and good-will. One evening they
were sitting in Eltham drawing-room after dinner.
The squire had been discussing the Clough tragedy
with great warmth; for Lord Eltham had not unnaturally
judged Ben Craven upon the apparent evidence, and was
inclined to think his position, whether he was innocent
or guilty, one of great danger. Hallam would
not see things in any such light. He had lived
only in the morally healthy atmosphere of the woods
and fields, and the sinful tragedies of life had not
been actual to him. True, he had read of them
in his weekly paper, but it was a different thing
when they came to his own door, and called for his
active sympathy.
“Right is right, Eltham,”
he said, with the emphasis of one closed hand striking
the other; “and it ’ud be a varry queer
thing if right should turn out to be wrong. It’ll
do nowt o’ t’ sort, not it.”
“But, Hallam, it seems to me
that you hev made up your mind that Craven is right—right
or wrong—and lawyer Swale told me t’
evidence was all against him.”
“Swale!” replied the squire,
snapping his fingers disdainfully. “Why-a!
Swale nivver told t’ truth i’ all his life,
if he nobbut hed t’ time to make up a lie.
As for Bingley, I wish I hed sent him over t’
seas when I hed t’ chance to do it—he’s
none fit to breathe t’ air in a decent country.”
“But Swale says that Bill Laycock
has acknowledged that he also saw Craven in his working
clothes running over t’ moor just about t’
time Clough was shot, and Bill and Craven were at one
time all but brothers.”
“Ay, ay; but there’s a
lass between ’em now—what do you make
o’ that?”
“As far as I can think it out, it’s against
Craven.”
“Then think twice about it,
Eltham, and be sure to change thy mind t’ second
time; for I tell thee, Craven is as innocent as thee
or me; and though t’ devil and t’ lawyers
hev all t’ evidence on their side, I’ll
lay thee twenty sovereigns that right’ll win.
What dost ta say, Phyllis, dearie?”
And Phyllis, who had been watching
his large, kindly face with the greatest admiration,
smiled confidently back to him, and answered, “I
think as you do Uncle Hallam,
“’For right is right, since
God is God;
And right the day must win;
To doubt would be disloyalty,
To falter would be sin.’”
Hallam looked proudly at her, and
then at his opponent, who, with glistening eyes, bowed,
and answered: “My dear young lady, that
settles the question, here. I wish with a’
my heart it did so in ivery court in t’ kingdom;
but, squire, thou knows little o’ this world,
I’m feared.”
“What by that? I don’t
want to know. As far as I can judge, t’
knowledge of t’ world is only an acquaintance
wi’ all sorts o’ evil and unjust things.
But come thy ways, Eltham, and let’s hev a bit
of a walk through t’ park. I hear t’
cuckoos telling their names to ivery tree, and ivery
bird in them, and there’s few sounds I like better,
if it bean’t a nightingale singing.”
It was getting late, and the squire’s
proposition was generally indorsed. The whole
party resolved to walk to the park gates, and the
carriage and Antony’s saddle-horse were ordered
to meet them there. It was a delightful evening,
full of an indescribable tranquillity—a
tranquillity not at all disturbed by the craik
of the rail in the clover, or the plaintive minor
of the cuckoo in the thick groves. Eltham and
the squire talked earnestly of the coming election.
Phyllis, leaning on Antony’s arm, was full of
thought, and Richard and Elizabeth fell gradually
a little behind them. In that soft light her
white garments and her fair loveliness had a peculiar
charm. She reminded Richard of some Greek goddess
full of grace and large serenity. He had resolved
not to tell her how dear she was to him until he had
better prepared the way for such a declaration; but
when the time comes the full heart must speak, though
it be only to call the beloved one’s name.
And this was at first all Richard could say:
“Elizabeth! Dear Elizabeth!”
She recognized the voice. It
was as if her soul had been waiting for it. From
the sweetest depths of her consciousness she whispered
“Richard,” and with the word made over
her full heart to him. They stood one wonderful
moment looking at each other, then he drew her to
his breast and kissed her. The sweetest strongest
words of love were never written. They are not
translatable in earthly language. Richard was
dumb with happiness, and Elizabeth understood the silence.
As they rode home and sauntered up the terraces, Antony
said, “What a dull evening we have had;”
but Phyllis was of the initiated, and knew better.
She looked at Elizabeth and smiled brightly, while
Richard clasped tighter the dear hand he was holding.
About an hour later Phyllis went to
Elizabeth’s room. It was a large chamber
open to the east and south, with polished oaken floors,
and hung with white dimity. She sat at one of
the open southern windows, and the wind, which gently
moved the snowy curtains, brought in with it the scent
of bleaching clover. There was no light but that
shadow of twilight which, in English summers, lingers
until it is lost in the dawning. But it was quite
sufficient. She turned her face to meet Phyllis,
and Phyllis kissed her, and said,
“I know, Elizabeth; and I am so glad.”
“Richard told you?”
“No, indeed! Richard is
too much astonished at his own happiness to speak
of it to-night. But when one loves, one understands
naturally. It has made me very happy. Why,
Elizabeth, you are weeping!”
“I am strangely sorrowful, Phyllis.
A shadow which I cannot account for chills me.
You know that I am neither imaginative nor sentimental;
but I am weeping to-night for grief which I apprehend,
but which does not exist.”
“Why do that? The ills
that never come are just the ills that give us the
sorest and most useless sorrow. They are not provided
for—no grace is promised for them.”
“That may be, Phyllis, but these
intangible griefs are very real ones while they haunt
us.”
“I once knew a Methodist preacher
who, whenever he felt himself haunted by prospective
cares and griefs, took a piece of paper and reduced
them, to writing, and so ‘faced the squadron
of his doubts.’ He told me that they usually
vanished as he mustered them. Elizabeth, there
are more than sixty admonitions against fear or unnecessary
anxiety in the Bible, and these are so various, and
so positive, that a Christian has not actually a legitimate
subject for worry left. Come, let us face your
trouble. Is it because in marrying Richard you
will have to give up this beautiful home?”
“That possibility faces me every
day, Phyllis. When Antony marries, he will, of
course, bring his wife here, and she will be mistress.
I might, for father’s sake, take a lower place,
but it would be hard. Father did not marry until
his three sisters were settled, but Antony lives in
another generation. I can hardly hope he will
be so thoughtful.”
“Do you fear that uncle will
object to your marriage with Richard?”
“No; he is very fond of Richard,
and very proud of him. Yesterday he made me notice
now strongly Richard resembled Colonel Alfred Hallam,
who was the cavalier hero of our family. And the
likeness is wonderful.”
“Has money any thing to do with it?”
“Nothing.”
“Parting with Richard?”
“I think so—the feeling
is one of a fear of long or final separation—
a shadow like an abyss which neither my love nor my
hope can cross. I find that I cannot follow out
any dream or plan which includes Richard; my soul
stumbles in all such efforts as if it was blind.
Now is there any promise for an uncertain condition
like this?”
“Yes, dear, there is a promise
with a blessing added to it. ’I will bring
the blind by a way that they knew not; I will lead
them in paths that they have not known: I will
make darkness light before them, and crooked things
straight.’” Isa. xlii, 16.
“Dear Phyllis, what a little
comforter you are! I will be happy. Indeed,
I have reason, for I never dreamed of a lover like
Richard—and he says it was the merest accident
that brought you to Europe this summer.”
“Did Richard say ‘accident?’
Do you know, Elizabeth, I think what men call ‘accident’
is really God’s own part—his special
arrangement or interposition. We were going to
Saratoga, and then one night Bishop Elliott called,
and said he was going to Europe, and as he spoke we
received a letter saying the rooms which we had always
occupied were not to be had, and the Bishop said,
‘Go with me to Europe,’ and so, in five
minutes we had decided to do so. Richard will
dislike to return to America without you; have you
thought of the many changes you must face? and some
deprivations also, Elizabeth. We are not rich.
Our home, beautiful in its way, is very different
from Hallam Hall; our life altogether is unlike yours.”
“I fear nothing of all that,
Phyllis. But my marriage until Antony marries
is out of the question. I could not leave father
until he has another daughter. That is a thing
not to be contemplated.”
“Ah, Elizabeth, in my selfishness
I had forgotten that! I was only thinking that
when Richard had you, he could better spare me, and
that John and I might have a hope also. But,
of course, Uncle Hallam comes first.”
“Yes; as long as my father needs
me, my first duty is to him.”
“Even if it be to the end of his life?”
“That is an event I never dare
to call to mind. My soul shrinks back from the
thought. A good parent is immortal to a good child,
I think.”
She said it very calmly, but no one
would have thought of disputing her position.
The still assured face partially uplifted, and the
large white hands firmly clasped upon her knee, were
a kind of silent amen to it.
Then Phyllis said “Good-night”
and went away; but dim as the light was, she took
with her a certain sense of warmth and color.
The long pink dressing-gown she had worn and the pink
rose in her hair had made a kind of glow in the corner
of the wide window where she had sat. “How
beautiful she is!” The words sprang spontaneously
to Elizabeth’s lips; and she added to them in
her thoughts, “Few girls are so lovely, so graceful,
and so clever, and yet she is as pure and unspoiled
by the world as if God had just made her.”
The formal ratification of the engagement
was very quietly done. The squire had a conversation
with Richard, and after it went for a long walk in
the park. When he next met his daughter he looked
at her steadily with eyes full of tears, and she went
to him, and put her arms around his neck, and whispered
some assurance to him, which he repaid with a hearty
“God bless thee, Elizabeth!”
Antony was the least pleased.
He had long had a friendship with George Eltham, Lord
Eltham’s younger son; and among many projects
which the young men had discussed, one related to
the marriage of Elizabeth. She had, indeed, no
knowledge of their intentions, which were on a mercenary
basis, but this did not prevent Antony from feeling
that Richard had in some degree frustrated his plans.
But he allowed Himself no evidences of this feeling;
he gave Richard his congratulations, and in a merry
way “supposed that the kindest thing he could
now do for all parties was to choose a wife also.”
But very soon he ordered his horse
and rode thoughtfully over to Eltham. The Hon.
George was in his apartments reading “Blackwood,”
though there was a riding party gathering on the lawn.
“Are you not going with them?”
asked Antony, indicating the laughing group outside
with a motion of his hand.
“Not I. I hope to do something
more with my life than be my elder brother’s
lieutenant. Last night I spoke to Lord Eltham
concerning our intentions. He thinks well of
them, Antony, and promises all the help he can give
us.”
“I am sorry to tell you, George,
that Elizabeth is to marry cousin Fontaine. The
engagement is formally made and sanctioned.”
“I am very sorry. It is a great disappointment
to me.”
“You were too dilatory.
I advised you to speak to Elizabeth some months ago.”
“I tried to do so, but it was
impossible to say pretty things to her. I felt
abashed if I tried to compliment her, and she always
appeared so unconscious of a fellow, that it was depressing.”
“Well, it is too late now.”
“How do you know that? When Mr. Fontaine
has gone—”
“It will not make a particle
of difference, George; let me tell you that.
Elizabeth will be true to him, if she never sees him
again. I know her, you do not.”
“What is to be done, then?”
“I was thinking of Selina Digby.”
“O you know she is not pretty at all!”
“We agreed not to let such things as that influence
us.”
“And she is older than I am.”
“She has L50,000, that is more
than double Elizabeth’s fortune. A man
can’t have every thing. It is entirely at
her own disposal also. Your brother-in-law is
far too much absorbed in politics to interfere—the
ground there is clear for you.”
“If I succeed?”
“I will promise to find capital
equal to yours. What did my lord say concerning
our plan?”
“He said we must have some instruction,
and that he would speak to Sir Thomas Harrington.
My father secured his seat in Parliament, and he is
sure to allow us to enter his house. We shall
have every facility there for acquiring a rapid practical
knowledge of banking and finance. I told father
it was that or the colonies. I have no idea of
being ‘only Lord Francis’s brother.’”
“Money is the axle on which
the world turns, George. When you and I have
it we can buy titles—if we want them.”
The fever of fortune-making had seized
both young men. They were ambitious in the most
personal sense of the word. George’s position
as younger son constantly mortified him. He had
had dreams of obtaining honor both as a scholar and
a soldier, but he had satisfied himself that for one
career he had not the mental ability, and for the other
neither the physical courage nor endurance necessary.
Of mere rank he was not envious. He had lived
among noble men, and familiarity had bred its usual
consequence. But he did want money. He fully
recognized that gold entered every earthly gate, and
he felt within himself the capacity for its acquirement.
He had also precedents for this determination which
seemed to justify it. The Duke of Norham’s
younger son had a share in an immense brewery and wielded
a power far beyond that of his elder brother, who
was simply waiting for a dukedom. Lord Egremont,
a younger son of the Earl of Soho, controlled large
amounts of railway stock, and it was said held a mortgage
on the family castle. To prove to his father
and mother that no law of primogeniture could disinherit
him, appeared to George Eltham an object worth striving
for.
With these thoughts simmering in his
heart he met Antony Hallam at Oxford. They speedily
became friends. Antony wanted money also.
But in him the craving arose from a more domineering
ambition. He wished to rule men, to be first
every-where. He despised the simple provincial
title to which he was born, and the hall, with all
its sweet gray antiquity, was only a dull prison.
He compared its mediaeval strength, its long narrow
lattices, its low rambling rooms, its Saxon simplicity,
with the grand mansions of modern date in which he
visited. It must be remembered that it is only
recently old houses and old furniture and early English
have become fashionable. Antony’s dream
of a home was not of Hallam, but of a grander Eltham
castle, whose rooms should be twice as large and lofty
and splendid.
He would control men through their
idol, gold; he would buy some old earldom, and have
orders and honors thrust upon him. His long,
honorable descent would be a good foundation to build
upon. He told himself that the Hallams ought
to have built upon it generations ago. He almost
despised his ancestors for the simple lives they had
led. He could not endure to think of himself
sitting down as squire Hallam and ruling a few cottagers
and tilling a few hundred acres. In George Eltham
he found a kindred spirit. They might work for
different motives, but gold was the aim of both.
Many plans had been entertained and
discussed, but they had finally settled upon a co-partnership
in finance. They would discount bills, make advances,
and secure government contracts. The latter was
the special aim of Antony’s desires. But
they were not foolish enough to think they could succeed
without some preliminary initiation, and this they
proposed to acquire in the great banking house of Sir
Thomas Harrington. M.P. Lord Eltham had
approved the plan. It now remained to secure
the squire’s agreement and co-operation.
As for the money necessary, George Eltham proposed
to acquire it by marriage. Antony had his own
plan; he was only waiting until the Fontaines’
visit was over, and “that contemptible Craven
affair settled.”
For he saw plainly that for the time
the squire’s mind was full of outside interests,
and when Antony discussed a subject so vital to himself,
he was resolved his father should be in a position
to feel its importance, and give it his undivided
attention. Personally he had no ill-feeling toward
Ben Craven, but he was annoyed at the intrusion of
so vulgar an object of sympathy into his home.
The squire’s advocacy at Eltham had irritated
him. He was quietly angry at Elizabeth and Phyllis
daily visiting the dame. And when the Methodist
preacher had been twice to Hallam to see the squire
on the subject, he could not treat the affair with
his usual tolerant indifference.
“I have changed my mind,”
he said, one evening, with that smiling positiveness
which is so aggravating: “I am very much
inclined to believe that Ben Craven did kill Clough.”
The squire looked at him, first with
amazement, then with anger, and asked, “When
did ta lose thy good sense, and thy good-will, son
Antony?”
“I had a talk with Swale to-day, and in his
judgment—”
“Thou knows what I think o’
Swale. Was there ever a bigger old cheat than
he is? I’ll put my heart afore Swale’s
judgment, Ben Craven’s all right.”
“He will have strong evidence
and a clever lawyer against him. He is sure to
be convicted.”
“Don’t thee reckon to
know so much. Ben’s got a clever lawyer,
too; but if he’d nobbut God and his mother to
plead for him, his cause ’ud be in varry good
hands, thou may be sure o’ that.”
“I am only saying, father, what Swale says every-where.”
“I’ll warrant he’ll
talk. There’s no tax on lying. My word,
if there was, Swale’d hev to keep his mouth
shut.”
“I cannot imagine, father, what
makes you trouble yourself so much about the Cravens.”
“Thou can’t, can’t
ta? Then thou canst imagine gratitude for faithful
service given cheerfully for three hundred years.
Why-a lad, ’twas a Craven saved Alfred Hallam’s
life at Worcester fight.”
“I suppose he paid him for the
service. Any how the debt is not ours.”
“Ay, is it. It’s
my debt, and it’s thine, too. Ben may live
to do thee a service for aught thou knows.”
Antony smiled contemptuously, and
the squire continued, almost angrily, “There’s
things more unlikely; look here, my lad, nivver spit
in any well: thou may hev to drink of t’
water.”
When the words were said the squire
was sorry for them. They had come from his lips
in that forceful prophetic way some speeches take,
and they made an unpleasant impression on both father
and son; just such an impression as a bad dream leaves,
which yet seems to be wholly irrelevant and unaccountable.
Craven was in Leeds jail, and the
trial was fixed for the summer term. All things
may be better borne than suspense, and all were glad
when Ben could have a fair hearing. But every
thing was against him, and at the end of the second
day’s trial, the squire came home in sincere
trouble; Ben had been found guilty, but a conviction
of his innocence, in spite of the evidence, seemed
also to have possessed the jury, for they had strongly
recommended him to her majesty’s mercy.
Elizabeth and Phyllis went with sick,
sorrowful heart to see the dame. The strain had
told upon her before the trial, and she had lost her
cheerfulness somewhat. But she had come to a place
now where anger and sense of wrong and impatience
were past.
“Lost confidence, sister Phyllis,”
she said; “not I; I hev only stopped reckoning
on any man or woman now, be ’t queen’s
sen; and I hev put my whole trust i’ God.
Such like goings on as we’ve hed! Paper
and ink and varry little justice; but God’ll
sort ivery thing afore long.”
“The case is to come before the queen.”
“That’s well enough.
Miss Hallam, but I’ll tak’ it mysen into
God’s council-chamber—there’s
no key on that door, and there’s no fee to pay
either. He’ll put ivery thing right, see
if he doesn’t!”
“And besides, Sister Martha,
things may not be as far wrong as we think they are—may
not be wrong at all. God moves in a mysterious
way.”
“And he needs to, Sister Phyllis.
There’s many a soul ’ud run away from
him, even when he was coming to help ’em, if
they knew it was him.” “I understand
what you mean, Martha—’as a thief
in the night.’ He breaks all bars and bursts
all doors closed against him when he visits either
a soul or a cause. I heard you were at Leeds.
Do you mind telling us how things went? The squire
will not talk to any one.”
“I nivver was one to shut my
grief up i’ my heart, and let it poison my life;
not I, indeed. It seemed to me, though, as varry
little fight were made for Ben Clough afore he died;
he’d signed a paper, declaring positive as it
were Ben who shot him; and t’ case were half
done when that were said. Then Bingley were sworn,
and he said, as he were coming ovver t’ moor,
about half past six, he heard a shot, and saw Ben
Craven come from behind a whin bush, and run toward
t’ village; and a minute after Bill Laycock
came in sight; and Ben, he said, ran past him, also;
and Laycock looked after Ben, and said to Bingley—
‘that’s Ben Craven; he’s in a bit
of a hurry, I think.’”
“Was Laycock coming from the moor also?”
“Nay, he was coming from t’
village, and was going across t’ moor to a knur
match on Eltham Common.”
“Did Laycock swear to that?”
“Ay, he did. He were varry
loth to do it; for Ben and him hed laked together
when they were lads, and been thick as thack iver since,
till Mary Clough came between ’em. But
I noticed one thing, and I think the jury saw it,
too—when Laycock were asked, ’if he
were sure it was Ben that passed him,’ he turned
white to the varry lips, and could scarce make out
to whisper, ’Ay, he were sure.’
Then Ben looked at him, and I’ll nivver forget
that look, no, nor any body else that saw it, and
least of a’ t’ man hes got it.”
“You think Laycock swore to a lie?”
“I know he swore to a lie.”
“It is a pity that Ben’s working-suit
has never been found.”
“It’ll come to light; see if it doesn’t.”
“Who spoke for Ben?”
“I did. I told t’
truth, and there’s none that knows me hes a doubt
o’ that. I said that Ben came home a bit
early. He hed his cup o’ tea wi’
me, and I told him how bad off Sarah Fisher was; and
I said, ’I’ll wash up t’ tea things,
lad, and go bide wi’ her till it’s chapel
time; and so thou be ready to go wi’ me.’
Before I went out I looked into Ben’s room,
and he’d dressed himsen up i’ his Sunday
clothes, and were sitting studying i’ a book
called ‘Mechanics;’ and I said, ’Why,
Ben! Whatever hes ta put thy best clothes on
for?’ I knew right well it was for Mary Clough,
but I wasn’t too well pleased wi’ Mary,
and so I couldn’t help letting him see as he
weren’t deceiving me; and Ben said, ’Nivver
thee mind, mother, what clothes I’ve on, and
don’t be too late for t’ chapel.’”
“And yet Bingley and Laycock
swore that Ben had his working-clothes on?”
“Ay, they sware that.”
“You are come into deep waters, Martha.”
“Ay, I am; but there’s
One on t’ water wi’ me. I hev his
hand, and he’s none going to let me sink.
And good-night to you, dearies, now; for I want to
be alone wi’ him. He isn’t far off;
you can tak’ t’ word of a sorrowful woman
that he lets himsen be found, if nobbut you’re
i’ earnest seeking him.”
She turned from them, and seated herself
before her lonely hearthstone, and Phyllis saw her
glance upward at the four words, that even in the
darkest night was clear to her—“In God
we trust.”
“Martha used to be so curious,
so gossippy, so well acquainted with all her neighbors,
so anxious for their good opinion, that it strikes
me as singular,” said Elizabeth, “that
she seems to have forgotten the whole village, and
to be careless as to its verdict. Does sorrow
make us indifferent, I wonder?”
“No, I think not; but the happy
look at things upon their own level— the
earth-level; the sorrowful look up.”
Not far from Martha’s garden
gate they met the Methodist preacher. He was
going to see Martha, but hearing of her wish to be
alone, he turned and walked with Phyllis and Elizabeth
toward the park. He was a little man, with an
unworldly air, and very clear truthful eyes.
People came to their cottage doors and looked curiously
at the trio, as they went slowly toward the hall,
the preacher between the girls, and talking earnestly
to them.
“Well I nivver!” said
old Peggy Howarth, nodding her head wisely, “what
does ta think o’ that, Jane Sykes?”
“It beats ivery thing!
There’s Ezra Dixon. He’s on his way
to a class-meeting, I’ll lay thee owt ta likes;
Ezra!”
“Well, woman! What does ta want?”
“Does ta see Miss Hallam and that American lass
wi’ t’ preacher?”
“For sure I do. They’re in varry
good company.”
“They’ll hev been at Martha
Cravens, depend on’t. They say Martha taks
it varry quiet like.”
“Ay, she’s none o’
them as whimpers and whines. Now if it wer’
thee, Peggy, thou’d worrit, and better worrit;
as if worritting wer’ thy trade, and thou hed
to work at it for thy victuals. Martha’s
none like that. Is ta going to thy class to-night?”
“Nay, then, I’m not going.”
“I’d go if I was thee,
Peggy. Thou’lt hev thysen to talk about
there, and thou’lt not be tempted to say things
about t’ Cravens thou wont be able to stand
up to.”
“I’d hev some human nature
in me, Ezra Dixon, if I was thee. To think o’
this being t’ first murder as iver was i’
Hallam! and thou talking as if I ought to buckle up
my tongue about it.”
“Thou ought; but ‘oughts’
stand for nothing. To be sure thou’ll talk
about it; but go and talk i’ thy class-meeting
wi’ Josiah Banks looking i’ thy face,
and then thou’ll talk wi’ a kind heart.
Do as I tell thee.”
“Nay, I’ll not do it.”
“Thou nivver will disappoint t’ devil,
Peggy.”
Peggy did not answer; she was too
much interested in the rector’s proceedings.
He was actually crossing the road and joining the ladies
and the preacher.
“Now, then! Dost ta see
that, Ezra? Whativer’s coming to folk?
Why-a! They’re a’ going on together!”
“Why not? T’ rector’s
a varry good man. It ’ud be strange if he
didn’t feel for poor Martha as well as ivery
other kind heart. Her trouble hes made a’
maks o’ Christians feel together.”
“If Martha was nobbut a Church o’ England
woman.”
“Dost ta really think that t’
rector is cut on that sort o’ a pattern?
Not he. A man may be a Christian, Peggy, even
if he isn’t a Wesleyan Methody. Them’s
my principles, and I’m not a bit ‘shamed
o’ them.”
It was quite true; the rector had
joined the girls and the preacher, and they walked
on together as far as the park gates, talking of Martha
and her great sorrow and great faith. Then the
preacher turned back, carrying with him to his little
chapel the strength that comes from real Christian
sympathy and communion.
“What clear prophetic eyes that
Mr. North has,” said the rector, as they walked
thoughtfully under the green arches of the elms.
“He lives very near to the other
world,” said Phyllis; “I think his eyes
have got that clear far-off look with habitually gazing
into eternity. It is a great privilege to talk
to him, for one always feels that he is just from
the presence of God.”
“I have heard that you are a Dissenter, Miss
Fontaine.”
“O no, I am not. I am a Methodist.”
“That is what I meant.”
“But the two are not the same.
I am quite sure that the line between Dissent and
Methodism has been well defined from the beginning.”
The rector smiled tolerantly down
at Phyllis’s bright thoughtful face, and said:
“Do young ladies in America study theological
history?”
“I think most of them like to
understand the foundation upon which their spiritual
faith is built. I have found every side study
of Methodism very interesting. Methodism is a
more charitable and a more spiritual thing than Dissent.”
“Are you sure of that?”
“Yes. Dissenters began
every-where with showing how fallen was the Church,
how unworthy were her ministers; but Methodism began
every-where with showing her hearers how fallen they
themselves were, and how utterly unworthy. Dissent
was convinced that Episcopacy was wrong; Methodism
sprang from a sense of personal guilt. Dissent
discussed schemes of church government, as if the salvation
of the world depended upon certain forms; Methodism
had one object, to save souls and inculcate personal
holiness. Dissent boldly separated herself from
the Church; Methodism clung with loving affection to
her mother. Her separation was gradual, and accompanied
with fond regrets.”
“I like that reasoning, Miss Fontaine.”
“Do not give me credit for it;
it comes from those who have authority to speak upon
such matters. But ought not a young lady to know
as much about the origin and constitution of her Church
as of her country?”
“I suppose she ought. What do you say,
Miss Hallam?”
“That I will begin and study
the history of my Church. I am ashamed to say
I know nothing about it.”
“And I say that I will look
into Methodism a little. John Wesley, as a man,
has always possessed a great attraction to me.
It was a pity he left the Church.”
“But he never did leave it.
Just as St. Peter and St. Paul and St. John went up
to the temple at Jerusalem to pray, so Wesley, until
the very last, frequented the Church ordinances.
I think he was really a very High-Churchman.
He was even prejudiced against Presbyterians; and
a very careless reader of his works must see that he
was deeply impressed with the importance of Episcopacy,
and that he regarded it as an apostolic institution.
If he were to return to this world again, he would
undoubtedly give in his membership to the American
Methodist Episcopal Church.”
“But remember how he countenanced
field-preaching and religious services without forms.”
“Do you think it a sin to save
souls out of church? Don’t you think the
Sermon on the Mount a very fair precedent in favor
of field-preaching?”
“Miss Fontaine, you argue like
a woman. That question is not in logical sequence.
Here come Mr. Fontaine and the squire. I hope
some other time you will allow me to resume this conversation.”
The squire’s face brightened
when he saw the rector. “A ‘good-evening,’
parson. Thou thought I’d be in a bit o’
trouble to-night, didn’t ta?”
“I knew your kind heart, squire,
and that it would be sad for Martha and Ben Craven
to-night.”
“Ay, to be sure.”
He had clasped Phyllis’s hand in one of his own,
and turned round with the party; as he did so, drawing
the rector’s attention by a significant glance
to Elizabeth, who had fallen behind with Richard.
“I am very glad if that is the case, squire.”
“Ay, it pleases me, too. But about poor
Martha, hev you seen her?”
“She wishes to be alone.”
“And no wonder. I’m sure I don’t
know whativer must be done.”
“Perhaps the queen will have mercy.”
“Mercy! He’ll get
a life sentence, if that is mercy. Hanging isn’t
any better than its called, I’ll be bound; but
if I was Ben, I’d a-deal rather be hung, and
done wi’ it. That I would!”
“I think Ben Craven will yet
be proved innocent. His mother is sure of it,
uncle.”
“That’s t’ way wi’
a mother. You can’t make ’em understand—they
will hang on.”
“Yes,” said the rector.
“Mother-love almost sees miracles.”
“Mother-love does see
miracles,” answered Phyllis. “The
mother of Moses would ‘hang on,’ as uncle
defines it, and she saw a miracle of salvation.
So did the Shunammite mother, and the Syro-phoenician
mother, and millions of mothers before and since.
Just as long as Martha hopes, I shall hope; and just
as long as Martha prays, she will hope.”
“Does ta think Martha can pray
against t’ English Constitution?”
“I heard the rector praying
against the atmospheric laws last Sunday, and you
said every word after him, uncle. When you prayed
for fine weather to get the hay in, did you expect
it in spite of all the conditions against it—falling
barometer, gathering clouds? If you did, you
were expecting a miracle.”
“Ay, I told t’ beadle,
mysen, that there wasn’t a bit o’ good
praying for fine weather as long as t’ wind
kept i’ such a contrary quarter; and it’s
like enough to rain to-night again, and heigh, for
sure! its begun mizzling. We’ll hev to
step clever, or we’ll be wet before we reach
t’ hall.”
The rector smiled at the squire’s
unconscious statement of his own position; but the
rain was not to be disregarded, and, indeed, before
they reached shelter the ladies’ dresses were
wet through, and there was so many evidences of a
storm that the rector determined to stay all night
with his friends. When Elizabeth and Phyllis came
down in dry clothing, they found a wood fire crackling
upon the hearth, and a servant laying the table for
supper.
“Elizabeth, let’s hev
that round o’ spiced beef, and some cold chicken,
and a bit o’ raspberry tart, and some clouted
cream, if there’s owt o’ t’ sort
in t’ buttery. There’s nothing like
a bit o’ good eating, if there’s owt wrong
wi’ you.”
The rector and the squire were in
their slippers, on each side of the ample hearth,
and they had each, also, a long, clean, clay pipe in
their mouth. The serenity of their faces, and
their air of thorough comfort was a delightful picture
to Phyllis. She placed herself close to her uncle,
with her head resting on his shoulder. The two
men were talking in easy, far-apart sentences of “tithes,”
and, as the subject did not interest her, she let
her eyes wander about the old room, noting its oaken
walls, richly carved and almost black with age, and
its heavy oaken furniture, the whole brightened up
with many-colored rugs, and the gleaming silver and
crystal on the high sideboard, and the gay geraniums
and roses in the deep bay windows. The table,
covered with snowy damask, seemed a kind of domestic
altar, and Phyllis thought she had never seen Elizabeth
look so grandly fair and home-like as she did that
hour, moving about in the light of the fire and candles.
She did not wonder that Richard heard nothing of the
conversation, and that his whole attention was given
to his promised wife.
The squire got the delicacies he wanted,
and really it appeared as if his advice was very good
medicine. Happiness, hope, and a sense of gratitude
was in each heart. The old room grew wonderfully
cozy and bright; the faces that gathered round the
table and the fire were full of love, and sweet, reasonable
contentment. When supper was over Richard and
Elizabeth went quietly into the great entrance hall,
where there was always a little fire burning.
They had their own hopes and joys, in which no heart,
however near and dear, could intermeddle, and this
was fully recognized. Phyllis only gave them a
bright smile as they withdrew. The squire ignored
their absence; Antony was at Eltham; for an hour the
two little groups were as happy as mortals may be.
The rector had another pipe after
supper, and still talked fitfully about “tithes.”
It seemed to be a subject which fitted in comfortably
to the pauses in a long pipe. But when he had
finished his “thimbleful” of tobacco,
and shaken out its ashes carefully, he looked at Phyllis
with a face full of renewed interest, and said,
“Squire, do you know that your
niece thinks John Wesley was a High-Churchman?”
“What I meant, sir, was this:
Wesley had very decided views in favor of the Episcopacy.
He would suffer none to lay unconsecrated hands upon
the sacraments; and in personal temperament, I think
he was as ascetic as any monk.”
“Do you think, then, that if
he had lived before the Reformation he might have
founded an order of extreme rigor, say, like La Trappe?”
“No, indeed, sir! He might
have founded an order, and it would, doubtless, have
been a rigorous one; but it would not have been one
shut up behind walls. It would have been a preaching
order, severely disciplined, perhaps, but burning
with all the zeal of the Redemptionist Fathers on
a mission.”
The squire patted the little hand,
which was upon his knee, and proudly asked,
“Now, then, parson, what does ta say to that?”
“I say it would be a very good
description of ’the people called Methodists’
when they began their crusade in England.”
“It is always a good description
of them when they have missionary work to do.
We have had brave soldiers among the Fontaines, and
wise statesmen, also; but braver than all, wiser than
all, was my grandfather Fontaine, who went into the
wilderness of Tennessee an apostle of Methodism, with
the Bible in his heart and his life in his hand.
If I was a man, I would do as Richard always does,
lift my hat whenever his name is mentioned.”
“Such ministers are, indeed,
spiritual heroes, Miss Fontaine; men, of whom the
world is not worthy.”
“Ah, do not say that! It
was worthy of Christ. It is worthy of them.
They are not extinct. They are still preaching—on
the savannas of the southwest—on all the
border-lands of civilization—among the
savages of the Pacific isles, and the barbarians of
Asia and Africa; voices crying in the wilderness,
’God so loved the world, that he gave his only
begotten Son’ for its salvation. A Methodist
preacher is necessarily an evangelist. Did you
ever happen to read, or to hear Wesley’s ‘charge’
to his preachers?”
“No, I never heard it, Miss Fontaine.”
“If ta knows it, Phyllis, dearie,
let him hev it. I’se warrant it’ll
fit his office very well.”
“Yes, I know it; I have heard
it many a time from my grandfather’s lips.
In his old age, when he was addressing young preachers,
he never said any thing else to them. ‘Observe,’
charged Wesley, ’it is not your business to
preach so many times, or to take care of this or that
society, but to save as many souls as you can.’”
“Now, then, that’s enough.
Phyllis, dearie, lift t’ candle and both o’
you come wi’ me; I’ve got summat to say
mysen happen.”
He had that happy look on his face
which people wear who are conscious of having the
power to give a pleasant surprise. He led them
to a large room above those in the east wing which
were specially his own. It was a handsome bedroom,
but evidently one that was rarely used.
“Look ’ee here, now;”
and he lifted the candle toward a picture over the
fire place. “Who do you mak’ that
out to be?”
“John Wesley,” said Phyllis.
“For sure; it’s John Wesley,
and in this room he slept at intervals for thirty
years. My great grandfather, Squire Gregory Hallam,
was a Methodist—one o’ t’ first
o’ them—and so you see, Phyllis, my
lass, you hev come varry naturally by your way o’
thinking.”
The rector was examining the face
with great interest. “It is a wonderful
countenance,” he said; “take a look at
it, Miss Fontaine, and see if it does not bear out
what I accidentally said about La Trappe.”
“No, indeed, it does not!
I allow that it is the face of a refined, thorough-bred
ecclesiastic. He was the son of the Church.”
“Yes; he came, indeed, from the tribe of Levi.”
“It is a fine, classical, clearly-chiseled
face—the face of a scholar and a gentleman.”
“A little of the fanatic in
it—admit that. I have seen pictures
of grand inquisitors, by Velasquez, which resemble
it.”
“You must not say such things,
my dear rector. Look again. I admit that
it is a clever face, and I have seen it compared to
that of Richelieu and Loyola, as uniting the calm
iron will and acute eye of the one with the inventive
genius and habitual devotion of the other; but I see
more than this, there is the permeation of that serenity
which comes from an assurance of the love of God.”
“God love thee, Phyllis!
Thou’lt be makkin’ a Methodist o’
me, whether I will or no. I hed no idea afore
there was a’ that in t’ picture.
I wont stay here any longer. Thanks be! It’s
sleeping-time, missee.”
“I should like to sleep in this room, squire.”
“Why, then, rector, thou shall.
A bit o’ fire and some aired bed-clothes is
a’ it wants. Thou’s sure to sleep
well in it, and thou’lt hev t’ sunrise
to wake thee up.”
And Phyllis thought, when she saw
him in the morning, that he had kept some of the sunshine
in his face. He was walking up and down the terrace
softly humming a tune to himself, and watching the
pigeons promenade with little, timid, rapid steps,
making their necks change like opals with every movement.
The roofs and lintels and the soft earth was still
wet, but the sun shone gloriously, and the clear air
was full of a thousand scents.
“How beautiful all is, and how
happy you look,” and Phyllis put her hand in
the rector’s, and let him lead her to the end
of the terrace, where she could see the green country
flooded with sunshine.
“Did you sleep well in Wesley’s chamber?”
“I slept very well; and this
morning the pleasantest thing happened. Upon
a little table I saw a Bible lying, and I read the
morning lesson, which was a very happy one; then I
lifted another book upon the stand. It was ‘The
Pilgrim’s Progress;’ and this was the passage
I lighted upon: ’The Pilgrim they laid
in a large upper chamber facing the sunrising.
The name of the chamber was Peace.’ There
was a pencil-mark against the passage, and I fancy
John Wesley put it there. It was a little thing,
but it has made me very happy.”
“I can understand.”
“God bless you, child! I am sure you can.”