“He shall call upon
me, and I will answer him: I will be with him
in trouble; I will deliver him, and honor
him.” Psa. xci, 15.
“Alas for hourly change!
Alas for all
The loves that from his hand proud Youth
lets fall,
Even as the beads of a told
rosary!”
That very day Richard received a letter
from Bishop Elliott. He was going to the Holy
Land and wished Richard to join him in Rome, and then
accompany him to Palestine. Richard preferred
to remain at Hallam, but both Elizabeth and Phyllis
thought he ought to respond to the Bishop’s
desire. He was an aged man among strangers, and,
apart from inclination, it seemed to be a duty to
accede to his request. So rather reluctantly
Richard left Hallam, half-inclined to complain that
Elizabeth was not sorry enough to part with him.
In truth she was conscious of feeling that it would
be pleasant to be a little while alone with the great
joy that had come to her; to consider it quietly,
to brood over it, and to ask some questions of her
soul which it must answer very truthfully.
People of self-contained natures weary
even of happiness, if happiness makes a constant demand
upon them. She loved Richard with the first love
of her heart, she loved him very truly and fondly,
but she was also very happy through the long summer
days sitting alone, or with Phyllis, and sewing pure,
loving thoughts into wonderful pieces of fine linen
and cambric and embroidery. Sometimes Phyllis
helped her, and they talked together in a sweet confidence
of the lovers so dear to them, and made little plans
for the future full of true unselfishness.
In the cool of the day they walked
through the garden and the park to see Martha; though
every day it became a more perplexing and painful
duty. The poor woman, as time went by, grew silent
and even stern. She heeded not any words of pity,
she kept apart from the world, and from all her neighbors,
and with heart unwaveringly fixed upon God, waited
with a grand and pathetic patience the answer to her
prayers. For some reason which her soul approved
she remained in the little chapel with her petition,
and the preacher going in one day, unexpectedly, found
her prostrate before the communion table, pleading
as mothers only can plead. He knelt down beside
her, and took her hand, and prayed with her and for
her.
Quite exhausted, she sat down beside
him afterward and said, amid heart-breaking sobs,
“It isn’t Ben’s life I’m asking,
sir. God gave him, and he’s a fair right
to tak’ him, when and how he will. I hev
given up asking for t’ dear lad’s life.
But O if he’d nobbut clear his good name o’
the shameful deed! I know he’s innocent,
and God knows it; but even if they hang Ben first,
I’ll give my Maker no peace till he brings the
guilty to justice, and sets t’ innocent in t’
leet o’ his countenance.”
“‘The kingdom of heaven
suffereth violence,’ Martha, ’and the violent
take it by force.’ Don’t get weary.
Christ had a mother, and he loved her. Does he
not love her still?”
“Thank you, sir, for that word.
I’ll be sure and remind him o’ her.
I’d forget that there was iver any mother but
me; or any son but my son.” “Say
a word for all other weeping mothers. Think of
them, Martha, all over the world, rich and poor, Christian
and heathen. How many mothers’ hearts are
breaking to-day. You are not alone, Martha.
A great company are waiting and weeping with you.
Don’t be afraid to ask for them, too. There
is no limit to God’s love and power.”
“I’ll pray for ivery one o’ them,
sir.”
“Do, Martha, and you’ll
get under a higher sky. It’s a good thing
to pray for ourselves; it’s a far grander thing
to pray for others. God bless you, sister, and
give you an answer of peace.”
Very shortly after this conversation
one of those singular changes in public opinion, which
cannot be accounted for, began to manifest itself.
After Clough’s positive dying declaration, it
was hardly to be expected that his daughter Mary could
show any kindness to her old lover, Ben Craven.
But week after week went by, and people saw that she
positively refused to speak to Bill Laycock, and that
she shrank even from his passing shadow, and they
began to look queerly at the man. It amounted
at first to nothing more than that; but as a mist
creeps over the landscape, and gradually possesses
it altogether, so this chill, adverse atmosphere enfolded
him. He noticed that old acquaintances dropped
away from him; men went three miles farther off to
get a shoe put on a horse. No one could have given
a clear reason for doing so, and one man did not ask
another man “why?” but the fact needed
no reasoning about. It was there. At the
harvest festivals the men drew away from him, and
the girls would not have him for a partner in any
rural game. He was asked to resign his place in
the knur club, and if he joined any cricket eleven,
the match fell to the ground.
One September evening Elizabeth and
Phyllis went to the village to leave a little basket
of dainties in Martha’s cottage. They now
seldom saw her, she was usually in the chapel; but
they knew she was grateful for the food, and it had
become all they could do for her in the hard struggle
she was having. The trees were growing bare; the
flowers were few and without scent; the birds did
not sing any more, but were shy, and twittered and
complained, while the swallows were restless, like
those going a long journey. Singing time was over,
life burning down, it was natural to be silent and
to sigh a little.
They left the basket on Martha’s
table and went quietly up the street. In a few
minutes they met the preacher, but he also seemed
strangely solemn, and very little inclined to talk.
At the chapel gates there were five or six people
standing. “We are going to have a prayer-meeting,”
he said, “will you come in?”
“It will soon be dark,”
answered Elizabeth, “we must reach home as quickly
as possible.”
Just then Martha Craven came out of
the chapel. A sorrow nobly borne confers a kind
of moral rank. Her neighbors, with respect and
pity, stood aside silently. She appeared to be
quite unconscious of them. At Phyllis and Elizabeth
she looked with great sad eyes, and shook her head
mournfully. To the preacher she said, “It’s
t’ eleventh hour, sir, and no answer yet!”
“Go thy ways, Martha Craven.
It will come! It is impossible thy prayers should
fail! As the Lord liveth no harm shall come to
thee or to thine!”
The plain little man was transfigured.
No ancient prophet at the height of his vision ever
spoke with more authority. Martha bowed her head
and went her way without a word; and Elizabeth and
Phyllis, full of a solemn awe, stood gazing at the
man whose rapt soul and clear, prophetic eyes looked
into the unseen and received its assurance. He
seemed to have forgotten their presence, and walked
with uplifted face into the chapel.
Elizabeth was the first to speak. “What
did he mean?”
“He has had some assurance from God. He knows.”
“Do you mean to say, Phyllis, that God speaks
to men?”
“Most surely God speaks to those
who will hear. Why should you doubt it?
He changeth not. When God talked with Enoch, and
Abraham spoke with God, no one was astonished.
When Hagar wandered in the desert, and saw an angel
descend from heaven with succor, she was not surprised.
In those days, Elizabeth, men whose feet were in the
dust breathed the air of eternity. They spoke
to God, and he answered them.”
“Does Methodism believe that this intercourse
is still possible?”
“Methodism knows it is possible.
The doctrine of assurance is either a direct divine
interposition or it is a self-deception. It is
out of the province of all human reason and philosophy.
But it is impossible that it can be self-deception.
Millions of good men and women of every shade of mental
and physical temperament have witnessed to its truth.”
“And you, Phyllis?”
“I know it.”
How wonderfully certain moods of nature
seem to frame certain states of mind. Elizabeth
never forgot the still serenity of that September
evening; the rustling of the falling leaves under their
feet, the gleaming of the blue and white asters through
the misty haze gathering over the fields and park.
They had expected to meet the squire at the gates,
but they were nearly at home ere they saw him.
He was evidently in deep trouble; even Fanny divined
it, and, with singular canine delicacy, walked a little
behind him, and forebore all her usual demonstrations.
Antony was sitting at the hall fire.
His handsome person was faultlessly dressed, and,
with a newspaper laid over his knee, he was apparently
lost in the contemplation of the singular effects made
by the firelight among the antlers and armor that
adorned the wall. He roused himself when the
girls entered, and apologized for not having come
to meet them; but there was an evident constraint and
unhappiness in the home atmosphere. Even the
“bit o’ good eating,” which was the
squire’s panacea, failed in his own case.
Antony, indeed, sat and laughed and chatted with an
easy indifference, which finally appeared to be unbearable
to his father, for he left the table before the meal
was finished.
Then a shadow settled over the party.
Elizabeth had a troubled look. She was sure there
had been some very unusual difference between Antony
and his father. They soon separated for the night,
Elizabeth going with Phyllis to her for room a final
chat. There was a little fire there, and its
blaze gave a pleasant air of cozy comfort to the room,
and deepened all its pretty rose tints. This was
to the girls their time of sweetest confidence.
They might be together all the day, but they grew
closest of all at this good-night hour.
They spoke of the squire’s evident
distress, but all Elizabeth’s suppositions as
to the cause fell distant from the truth. In fact,
the squire had received one of those blows which none
but a living hand can deal, for there are worse things
between the cradle and the grave than death—the
blow, too, had fallen without the slightest warning.
It was not the thing that he had feared which had happened
to him, but the thing which he had never dreamed of
as possible. He had been walking up and down
the terrace with Fanny, smoking his pipe, and admiring
the great beds of many-colored asters, when he saw
Antony coming toward him. He waited for his son’s
approach, and met him with a smile. Antony did
not notice his remark about the growing shortness
of the days, but plunged at once into the subject filling
his whole heart.
“Father, George Eltham and I
are thinking of going into business together.”
“Whatever is ta saying? Business?
What business?”
“Banking.”
“Now, then, be quiet, will ta? Such nonsense!”
“I am in dead earnest, father. I cannot
waste my life any longer.”
“Who asks thee to waste thy
life? Hev I iver grudged thee any thing to make
it happy? Thou hes hed t’ best o’
educations. If ta wants to travel, there’s
letters o’ credit waiting for thee. If ta
wants work, I’ve told thee there’s acres
and acres o’ wheat on the Hallam marshes, if
they were only drained. I’ll find ta money,
if ta wants work.”
“Father, I could not put gold
in a marsh, and then sit down and wait for the wheat
to grow; and all the wheat on Hallam, unless it bore
golden ears, would not satisfy me. George and
I are going into Sir Thomas Harrington’s for
a few months. Lord Eltham has spoken to him.
Then George is to marry Selina Digby. She has
fifty thousand pounds; and we are going to begin business.”
“Wi’ fifty thousand pounds
o’ Miss Digby’s money! It’s
t’ meanest scheme I iver heard tell on!
I’m fair shamed o’ thee!”
“I must put into the firm fifty
thousand pounds also; and I want to speak to you about
it.”
“For sure! How does ta think to get it
out o’ me now?”
“I could get Jews to advance
it on my inheritance, but I would do nothing so mean
and foolish as that. I thought it would be better
to break the entail. You give me fifty thousand
pounds as my share of Hallam, and you can have the
reversion and leave the estate to whom you wish.”
The squire fairly staggered.
Break the entail! Sell Hallam! The young
man was either mad, or he was the most wicked of sons.
“Does ta know what thou is talking
about! Hallam has been ours for a thousand years.
O Antony! Antony!”
“We have had it so long, father,
that we have grown to it like vegetables.”
“Has ta no love for t’
old place? Look at it. Is there a bonnier
spot in t’ wide world? Why-a! There’s
an old saying,
“‘When a’ t’ world
is up aloft,
God’s share will be
fair Hallam-Croft.’
“Look at ta dear old home, and
t’ sweet old gardens, and t’ great park
full o’ oaks that hev sheltered Saxons, Danes,
Normans—ivery race that has gone to make
up t’ Englishman o’ to-day.”
“There are plenty of fairer
spots than Hallam. I will build a house far larger
and more splendid than this. There shall be a
Lord Hallam, an Earl Hallam, perhaps. Gold will
buy any thing that is in the market.”
“Get thee out o’ my sight!
And I’ll tell Lord Eltham varry plainly what
I think o’ his meddling in my affairs. In
order to set up his youngest son I must give up t’
bond on t’ home that was my fathers when his
fathers were driving swine, the born thralls of the
Kerdics of Kerdic Forest. Thou art no Hallam.
No son o’ mine. Get out o’ my sight
wi’ thee!”
Antony went without anger and without
hurry. He had expected even a worse scene.
He sat down by the hall fire to think, and he was by
no means hopeless as to his demand. But the squire
had received a shock from which he never recovered
himself. It was as if some evil thing had taken
all the sweetest and dearest props of love, and struck
him across the heart with them. He had a real
well-defined heart-ache, for the mental shock had
had bodily sympathies which would have prostrated
a man of less finely balanced physique.
All night long he sat in his chair,
or walked up and down his room. The anger which
comes from wronged love and slighted advantages and
false friendship alternately possessed him. The
rooms he occupied in the east wing had been for generations
the private rooms of the masters of Hallam, and its
walls were covered with their pictures—fair,
large men, who had for the most part lived simple,
kindly lives, doing their duty faithfully in the station
to which it had pleased God to call them. He
found some comfort in their pictured presence.
He stood long before his father, and tried to understand
what he would have done in his position. Toward
daylight he fell into a chill, uneasy sleep, and dreamed
wearily and sadly of the old home. It was only
a dream, but dreams are the hieroglyphics of the other
world if we had the key to them; and at any rate the
influences they leave behind are real enough.
“Poor Martha!” was the squire’s first
thought on rousing himself. “I know now
what t’ heart-ache she spoke of is like.
I’m feared I heven’t been as sorry as
I might hev been for her.”
Yet that very night, while the squire
was suffering from the first shock of wounded, indignant
amazement, God had taken Martha’s case in his
own hand. The turn in Ben’s trouble began
just when the preacher spoke to Martha. At that
hour Bill Laycock entered the village ale-house and
called for a pot of porter. Three men, whom he
knew well, were sitting at a table, drinking and talking.
To one of them Bill said, “It’s a fine
night,” and after a sulky pause the man answered,
“It ails nowt.” Then he looked at
his mates, put down his pot, and walked out.
In a few minutes the others followed.
Laycock went back to his house and
sat down to think. There was no use fighting
popular ill-will any longer. Mary would not walk
on the same side of the street with him. It was
the evident intention of the whole village to drive
him away. He remembered that Swale had told him
there was “a feeling against him,” and
advised him to leave. But Swale had offered to
buy his house and forge for half their value, and
he imagined there was a selfish motive in the advice.
“And it’s Swale’s doing, I know,”
he muttered; “he’s been a-fighting for
it iver since. Well, I’ll tak t’
L300 he offers, wi’ t’ L80 I hev in t’
house, I can make shift to reach t’ other side
o’ t’ world, and one side is happen as
good as t’ other side. I’ll go and
see Swale this varry hour.”
He was arrested by a peculiar sound
in the cellar beneath his feet, a sound that made
him turn pale to the very lips. In a few moments
the door opened, and Tim Bingley stepped into the room.
“Thou scoundrel! What does ta want here?”
“Thou get me summat to eat and
drink, and then I’ll tell thee what I want.”
His tone was not to be disputed.
He was a desperate man, and Laycock obeyed him.
“Thou told me thou would go abroad.”
“I meant to go abroad, but I
didn’t. I got drunk and lost my brass.
Thou’ll hev to give me some more. I’ll
go clean off this time.”
“I’ve got none to give thee.”
“Varry well, then I’ll
hev to be took up; and if I’m sent to York Castle,
thou’lt hev lodgings varry close to me.
Mak’ up thy mind to that, Bill Laycock.”
“I didn’t kill Clough, and thou can’t
say I did.”
Bingley did not answer. He sat
munching his bread and casting evil glances every
now and then at his wretched entertainer.
“What does ta want?”
“Thou hed better give me a fresh
suit o’ clothes; these are fair worn out—and
L20. I’ll be i’ Hull early to-morrow,
and I’ll tak’ t’ varry first ship
I can get.”
“How do I know thou will?”
“Thou’lt hev to trust my word—it’s
about as good as thine, I reckon.”
O but the way of the transgressor
is hard! There was nothing else to be done.
Hatefully, scornfully, he tossed him a suit of his
own clothes, and gave him L20 of his savings.
Then he opened the door and looked carefully all around.
It was near midnight, and all was so still that a
bird moving in the branches could have been heard.
But Laycock was singularly uneasy. He put on
his hat and walked one hundred yards or more each
way.
“Don’t be a fool,”
said Bingley, angrily; “when did ta iver know
any body about at this time o’ night, save and
it might be at Hallam or Crossley feasts?”
“But where was ta a’ day,
Bingley? Is ta sure nobody saw thee? And
when did ta come into my cellar?”
“I’ll tell thee, if ta
is bad off to know. I got into Hallam at three
o’clock this morning, and I hid mysen in Clough’s
shut-up mill a’ day. Thou knows nobody
cares to go nigh it, since—”
“Thou shot him.”
“Shut up! Thou’d
better let that subject drop. I knew I were safe
there. When it was dark and quiet, I came to thee.
Now, if ta’ll let me pass thee, I’ll tak’
Hull road.”
“Thou is sure nobody has seen thee?”
“Ay, I’m sure o’ that. Let
be now. I hevn’t any time to waste.”
Laycock watched him up the Hull road
till he slipped away like a shadow into shade.
Then he sat down to wait for morning. He would
not stay in Hallam another day. He blamed himself
for staying so long. He would take any offer
Swale made him in the morning. There would be
neither peace nor safety for him, if Tim Bingley took
it into his will to return to Hallam whenever he wanted
money.
At daylight Dolly Ives, an old woman
who cleaned his house and cooked his meals, came.
She had left the evening before at six o’clock,
and if any thing was known of Bingley’s visit
to Hallam, she would likely have heard of it.
She wasn’t a pleasant old woman, and she had
not a very good reputation, but her husband had worked
with Laycock’s father, and he had been kind
to her on several occasions when she had been in trouble.
So she had “stuck up for Bill Laycock,”
and her partisanship had become warmer from opposition.
It was at best a rude kind of liking,
for she never failed to tell any unkind thing she
heard about him. She had, however, nothing fresh
to say, and Bill felt relieved. He ate his breakfast
and went to his forge until ten o’clock.
Then he called at Swale’s. He fancied the
lawyer was “a bit offish,” but he promised
him the money that night, and with this promise Bill
had to be content. Business had long been slack;
his forge was cold when he got back, and he had no
heart to rekindle it. Frightened and miserable,
he was standing in the door tying on his leather apron,
when he saw Dolly coming as fast as she could toward
him.
He did not wait, but went to meet
her. “Whativer is ta coming here for?”
“Thou knows. Get away as
fast as ta can. There hev been men searching
t’ house, and they hev takken away t’ varry
suit Bingley wore at Ben Craven’s trial.
Now, will ta go? Here’s a shilling, it’s
a’ I hev.”
Terrified and hurried, he did the
worst possible thing for his own case—he
fled, as Dolly advised, and was almost immediately
followed and taken prisoner. In fact, he had
been under surveillance, even before Bingley left
his house at midnight. Suspicion had been aroused
by a very simple incident. Mary Clough had noticed
that a stone jar, which had stood in one of the windows
of the mill ever since it had been closed, was removed.
In that listless way which apparently trivial things
have of arresting the attention, this jar had attracted
Mary until it had become a part of the closed mill
to her. It was in its usual place when she looked
out in the morning; at noon it had disappeared.
Some one, then, was in the mill.
A strong conviction took possession of her. She
watched as the sparrow-hawk watches its prey.
Just at dusk she saw Bingley leave the mill and steal
away among the alders that lined the stream.
She suspected where he was going, and, by a shorter
route, reached a field opposite Laycock’s house,
and, from behind the hedge, saw Bingley push aside
the cellar window and crawl in. He had tried
the door first, but it was just at this hour Laycock
was in the ale-house. The rector was a magistrate;
and she went to him with her tale, and he saw at once
the importance of her information. He posted
the men who watched Laycock’s house; they saw
Bingley leave it, and when he was about a mile from
Hallam they arrested him, and took him to Leeds.
Laycock’s arrest had followed as early as a warrant
could be obtained. He sent at once for Mr. North,
and frankly confessed to him his share in the tragedy.
“It was a moment’s temptation,
sir,” he said, with bitter sorrow, “and
I hev been as miserable as any devil out o’ hell
could be iver since. T’ night as Clough
were shot, I had passed his house, and seen Mary Clough
at t’ garden gate, and she hed been varry scornful,
and told me she’d marry Ben Craven, or stay
unmarried; and I were feeling bad about it. I
thought I’d walk across t’ moor and meet
Clough, and tell him what Mary said, and as I went
along I heard a shot, and saw a man running.
As he came near I knew it was Bingley i’ Ben
Craven’s working clothes. He looked i’
my face, and said, ’Clough thinks Ben Craven
fired t’ shot. If ta helps me away, thou’lt
get Mary. Can I go to thy cottage?’ And
I said, ‘There’s a cellar underneath.’
That was all. He had stole Ben’s overworker’s
brat and cap from t’ room while Ben was drinking
his tea, and Ben nivver missed it till Jerry Oddy asked
where it was. At night I let him burn them i’
my forge. I hev wanted to tell t’ truth
often; and I were sick as could be wi’ swearing
away Ben’s life; indeed I were!”
Before noon the village was in an
uproar of excitement. Laycock followed Bingley
to Leeds, and both were committed for trial to York
Castle. Both also received the reward of their
evil deed: Bingley forfeited his life, and Laycock
went to Norfolk Island to serve out a life sentence.
The day of Ben’s release was
a great holiday. Troubled as the squire was,
he flung open the large barn at Hallam, and set a feast
for the whole village. After it there was a meeting
at the chapel, and Ben told how God had strengthened
and comforted him, and made his prison cell a very
gate of heaven. And Martha, who had so little
to say to any human being for weeks, spoke wondrously.
Her heart was burning with love and gratitude; the
happy tears streamed down her face; she stood with
clasped hands, telling how God had dealt with her,
and trying in vain to express her love and praise
until she broke into a happy song, and friends and
neighbors lifted it with her, and the rafters rang
to
“Hallelujah to the Lamb,
Who has purchased our pardon!
We will praise him again
When we pass over Jordan.”
If we talk of heaven on earth, surely
they talk of earth in heaven; and if the angels are
glad when a sinner repents, they must also feel joy
in the joy and justification of the righteous.
And though Martha and Ben’s friends and neighbors
were rough and illiterate, they sang the songs of
Zion, and spoke the language of the redeemed, and they
gathered round the happy son and mother with the unselfish
sympathy of the sons and daughters of God. Truly,
as the rector said, when speaking of the meeting,
“There is something very humanizing in Methodism.”
“And something varry civilizing,
too, parson,” answered the squire; “if
they hedn’t been in t’ Methodist chapel,
singing and praising God, they ‘ud hev been
in t’ ale-house, drinking and dancing, and varry
like quarreling. There’s no need to send
t’ constable to a Methodist rejoicing.
I reckon Mary Clough’ll hev to marry Ben Craven
in t’ long run, now.”
“I think so. Ben is to
open the mill again, and to have charge of it for
Mary. It seems a likely match.”
“Yes. I’m varry glad.
Things looked black for Ben at one time.”
“Only we don’t know what is bad and what
good.”
“It’s a great pity we
don’t. It ’ud be a varry comfortable
thing when affairs seemed a’ wrong if some angel
would give us a call, and tell us we were a bit mistaken.
There’s no sense i’ letting folks be unhappy,
when they might be taking life wi’ a bit o’
comfort.”
“But, then, our faith would not be exercised.”
“I don’t much mind about
that. I’d far rather hev things settled.
I don’t like being worritted and unsettled i’
my mind.”
The squire spoke with a touching irritability,
and every one looked sadly at him. The day after
Antony’s frank statement of his plans, the squire
rode early into Bradford and went straight to the house
of old Simon Whaley. For three generations the
Whaleys had been the legal advisers of the Hallams,
and Simon had touched the lives or memory of all three.
He was a very old man, with a thin, cute face, and
many wrinkles on his brow; and though he seldom left
his house, age had not dimmed his intellect, or dulled
his good-will toward the family with whom he had been
so frequently associated.
“Why-a! Hallam! Come
in, squire; come in, and welcome. Sit thee down,
old friend. I’m fain and glad to see thee.
What cheer? And whativer brings thee to Bradford
so early?”
“I’m in real trouble, Whaley.”
“About some wedding, I’ll be bound.”
“No; neither love nor women
folk hev owt to do wi’ it. Antony Hallam
wants me to break t’ entail and give him L50,000.”
“Save us a’! Is t’ lad gone
by his senses?”
Then the squire repeated, as nearly
as possible, all that Antony had said to him; after
which both men sat quite still; the lawyer thinking,
the squire watching the lawyer.
“I’ll tell thee what,
Hallam, thou hed better give him what he asks.
If thou doesn’t, he’ll get Hallam into
bad hands. He has thought o’ them, or he
would nivver hev spoke o’ them; and he’ll
go to them, rather than not hev his own way.
Even if he didn’t, just as soon as he was squire,
he’d manage it. The Norfolk Hallams, who
are next to him, are a poor shiftless crowd, that
he’d buy for a song. Now dost thou want
to keep Hallam i’ thy own flesh and blood?
If ta does, I’ll tell thee what to do.”
“That is the dearest, strongest
wish I hev; and thou knows it, Whaley.”
“Then go thy ways home and tell
Antony Hallam he can hev L50,000, if he gives up to
thee every possible claim on Hallam, and every possible
assistance in putting it free in thy hands to sell,
or to leave as thou wishes.”
“He’ll do that fast enough.”
“Then thou choose a proper husband
for thy daughter and settle it upon her. Her
husband must take the name o’ Hallam; and thy
grandchildren by Elizabeth will be as near to thee
as they would be by Antony.”
“Elizabeth has chosen her husband.
He is a son of my aunt, Martha Hallam; the daughter
of Sibbald Hallam.”
“What does ta want better? That’s
famous!”
“But he’s an American.”
“Then we must mak’ an
Englishman o’ him. T’ Hallams must
be kept up. What’s his name?”
“Fontaine.”
“It’s a varry Frenchified
name. I should think he’d be glad to get
rid o’ it. Where is he now? At Hallam?”
“He is in t’ Holy Land somewhere.”
“Is he a parson?”
“No, he’s a planter; and a bit o’
a lawyer, too.”
“Whativer does he want in t’ Holy Land,
then?”
“He’s wi’ a Bishop.”
“Ay? Then he’s pious?”
“For sure; he’s a Methodist.”
“That’s not bad.
Squire Gregory was a Methodist. He saved more
’an a bit o’ money, and he bought all
o’ t’ low meadows, and built main part
o’ t’ stables, and laid out best half o’
t’ gardens. There nivver was a better or
thriftier holder o’ Hallam. Ay, ay, there’s
a kind o’ fellowship between Methodism and money.
This Mr. Fontaine will do uncommon well for Hallam,
squire, I should think.”
“If I got Antony to come to
thee, Whaley, could ta do owt wi’ him, thinks
ta?”
“I wouldn’t try it, squire.
It would be breath thrown away. Soon or later
thy son Antony will take his own way, no matter where
it leads him. Thou hes t’ reins i’
thy hand now, tak’ my advice, and settle this
thing while thou hes. It’s a deep wound,
but it’s a clean wound yet; cut off t’
limb afore it begins to fester and poison t’
whole body. And don’t thee quarrel wi’
him. He’s a man now, and there hes to be
a’ mak’s o’ men to do t’ world’s
work. Let Antony be; he’ll mebbe be a credit
to thee yet.”
“I don’t believe, Whaley,
thou understands what a sorrow this is to me.”
“Don’t I? I’ve
got a heart yet, Hallam, though thou’d happen
think I’ve varry little use for it at eighty-nine
years old; but I’ll tell thee what, instead
o’ looking at t’ troubles thou hes, just
tak’ a look at them thou hesn’t.
I nivver gave thee a bit o’ advice better worth
seven-and-sixpence than that is.”
“What does ta mean?”
“I’ll tell thee.
Thou’s fretting because Antony wants to go into
business, and to get hold o’ as much gold and
honor as iver he can put his hands on. Now suppose
he wanted to spend a’ t’ money he could
get hold of, and to drag thy old name through t’
mire o’ jockey fields and gambling houses, and
t’ filth that lies at t’ month o’
hell. Wouldn’t that be worse?”
“Ay, it would.”
“And they who hanker after an
earldom’ll be varry like to pick up some good
things on t’ road to it. When ta can’t
mak’ t’ wind suit thee, turn round and
sail wi’ t’ wind.”
“Thou sees, Whaley, I hev saved
a good bit o’ money, and I gave Antony t’
best education Oxford could hand over for it; and I
reckoned on him getting into Parliament, and makkin’
a bit o’ a stir there, and building up t’
old name wi’ a deal o’ honor.”
“Varry good; but strike t’
nail that’ll go! What is t’ use o’
hitting them that will only bend and break i’
thy hand, and get mebbe t’ weight o’ t’
blow on thy own finger-ends. Go thee home and
talk reasonably to thy son. He’s gotten
a will o’ his own—that’s a way
wi’ t’ Hallams—and he’ll
tak’ it. Mak’ up thy mind to that.”
“But children ought to obey their fathers.”
“Ought hesn’t been t’
fashion since iver I remember; and t’ young
people o’ these days hev crossed out Fifth Commandment—happen
that’s t’ reason there is so few men blessed
wi’ the green old age that I asked for wi’
the keeping o’ it.”
The squire pondered this advice all
day, keeping apart from his family, and really suffering
very keenly. But toward evening he sent for his
son. As Antony entered his room he looked at him
with a more conscious and critical regard than he
had ever done before. He was forced to admit
that he was different from his ancestors, though inheriting
their physical peculiarities. They were mostly
splendid animals, with faces radiant with courage
and high spirits and high health. Antony’s
face was clearer and more refined, more complex, more
suggestive. His form, equally tall, was slighter,
not hampered with superfluous flesh, not so aggressively
erect. One felt that the older Hallams would have
walked straight up to the object of their ambition
and demanded it, or, if necessary, fought for it.
One was equally sure that Antony had the ability to
stoop, to bow, to slide past obstacles, to attain his
object by the pleasantest road possible.
He met his father with marked respect
and a conciliating manner; standing, with one hand
leaning on the central table, until told to sit down.
“Thou can hev what ta wants
on thy own terms, son Antony.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“Nay, I want no thanks. I hev only made
t’ best o’ a bad job.”
“I hope you may live to see
that it is not a bad job, sir. I intend no dishonor
to our name. I am as proud of it as you are.
I only desire to make it a power and an influence,
and to give it the honor it deserves.”
“Ay, ay; thou’s going
to light thy torch at t’ sun, no doubt.
I hev heard young men talk afore thee. There
is Squire Cawthorpe—he was at college wi’
me—what a grand poem he was going to write!
He’s master o’ Bagley fox hounds now,
and he nivver wrote a line as I heard tell o’.
There’s Parson Leveret! He was going to
hand in t’ millennium, and now he cares for
nowt i’ t’ world but his tithes and a bottle
o’ good port. Howiver, there’s no
use talking. Whaley will manage t’ business,
and when thou art needed he’ll go up to London
to see thee. As long as thou art young Squire
Hallam I shall continue thy allowance; when thou hest
signed away thy birthright thou wilt hev L50,000, and
nivver another penny-piece from Hallam.”
“That is just and right.”
“And sooner thou leaves Hallam,
and better it will be for both o’ us, I’m
sure. It hurts me to my heart to see thee; that
it does,”—and he got up suddenly,
and walked to the window to hide the tears that forced
themselves into his eyes.
“Shake hands with me, father.”
“Nay, I’d rather not.”
He had his hands under his coat, behind
his back, and he kept them there, staring the while
resolutely into the garden, though his large blue
eyes were too full to see any thing clearly. Antony
watched him a moment, and then approached him.
“Forget, sir, what I am going
to do. Before I leave Hallam give me your hand,
father, as you would give it to your son Antony.”
The squire was not able to resist
this appeal. He sunk into his chair and covered
his face, saying mournfully: “O, Antony!
Antony! Thou hes broken my heart.”
But when Antony knelt down by his
side, and kissed the hand that lay so pathetically
suggestive upon the broad knee, he made no movement
of dissent. In another minute the door closed
softly, and he was alone—as really a bereaved
father as if he stood at an open grave.
Antony’s adieu to Phyllis was
easily made, but his parting with his sister hurt
him in his deepest affections. Whatever of unselfish
love he felt belonged to Elizabeth, and she returned
to her brother the very strongest care and tenderness
of her nature. They had a long conference, from
which Antony came away pale and sick with emotion,
leaving his sister sobbing on her couch. It is
always a painful thing to witness grief from which
we are shut out, and Phyllis was unhappy without being
able to weep with her uncle and cousins. But it
is one blessing of a refined household that sorrow
must be put aside for the duties and courtesies of
life. The dinner table was set, and the squire
washed his face, and put on his evening suit, his long
white vest and lace kerchief, and, without being conscious
of it, was relieved by the change. And Elizabeth
had to rouse herself and take thought for her household
duties, and dress even more carefully than usual, in
order to make her white cheeks and sorrowful eyes less
noticeable. And the courtesies of eating together
made a current in the tide of unhappy thought; so
that before the meal was over there had been some
smiles; and hope, the apprehender of joy, the sister
of faith, had whispered to both father and sister,
“Keep a good heart! Things may be better
than they appear to be.”
As the squire rose from the table,
he said: “Now, Elizabeth, I hev something
varry particular to say to thee. Phyllis will
bide by herself an hour, and then we’ll hev
no more secrets, and we’ll try to be as happy
as things will let us be.”
Elizabeth was in some measure prepared
for what her father had to say; but she was placed
in a very unhappy position. She did what was kindest
and wisest under the circumstances, accepted without
remonstrance the part assigned her. The young
are usually romantic, and their first impulses are
generously impracticable ones. Elizabeth was not
wiser than her years by nature, but she was wiser
by her will. For the first few minutes it had
seemed to her the most honorable and womanly thing
to refuse to stand in her brother’s place.
But her good heart and good sense soon told her that
it would be the kindest course to submit. Yet
she was quite aware that her succession would be regarded
by the tenants and neighbors with extreme dislike.
They would look upon Richard and herself as supplanters;
Richard’s foreign birth would be a constant
offense; her clear mind took in all the consequences,
and she felt hurt at Antony for forcing them upon
her.
She sat pale and silent, listening
to all the squire said, and vainly trying to find
some honorable and kind way out of the position.
“Thou must know what thou art
doing, Elizabeth,” he said, “and must
take the charge wi’ thy eyes open to a’
it asks of thee.”
Then he showed her the books of the
estate, made her understand the value of every field
and meadow, of every house and farm and young plantation
of wood. “It’s a grand property, and
Antony was a born fool to part wi’ such a bird
in t’ hand for any number o’ finer ones
in t’ bush. Does ta understand its value?”
“I am sure I do.”
“And thou is proud o’ being the daughter
o’ such land?”
“I love every rood of it.”
“Then listen to me. Thy
mother gave thee L5,000. It was put out at interest
on thy first birthday, and I hev added a L100 now and
then, as I could see my way clear to do so. Thou
hes now L22,000 o’ thy own—a varry
tidy fortune. If ta takes Hallam thou must pay
down a’ of this to Antony. I’ll hev
to find t’ other L28,000 by a mortgage.
Then I shall sell all t’ young timber that’s
wise to sell, and some o’ Hallam marsh, to pay
off t’ mortgage. That will take time to
do wisely, and it will be work enough for me for t’
balance or my life. But I’ll leave thee
Hallam clear if God spare me five years longer, and
then there’ll be few women i’ England
thou need envy.”
“Whatever I have is yours, father.
Do as you think best. I will try to learn all
about the estate, and I promise you most faithfully
to hold it in a good stewardship for those who shall
come after me.”
“Give me a kiss, my lass, on
that promise. I don’t say as a lass can
iver be to Hallam what Antony should hev been; but
thou’rt bound to do thy best.”
“And, father, Antony is very
clever. Who can tell what he may do? If
a man wants to go up, the door is open to wit and skill
and industry. Antony has all these.”
“Fair words! Fair words,
Elizabeth! But we wont sell t’ wheat till
we have reaped t’ field; and Antony’s wheat
isn’t sown yet. He’s gotten more
projects in his mind than there’s places on t’
map. I don’t like such ways!”
“If Antony is any thing, father,
he is clear-sighted for his own interest. He
knows the road he is going to take, you may be very
sure.”
“Nay, then, I’m not sure.
I’ll always suspect that a dark road is a bad
road until I’m safe off it.”
“We may as well hope for the
best. Antony appeared to understand what he was
doing.”
“Antony has got t’ gold
sickness varry bad, and they’d be fools indeed
who’d consult a man wi’ a fever on his
own case. But we’re nobbut talking for
talking’s sake. Let us go to Phyllis.
She’ll hev been more ’an a bit lonely,
I’m feared.”
A servant with candles opened the
parlor door for them. The rector was sitting
in the fire-light, and Phyllis softly playing and singing
at the piano. She looked up with a smile in her
eyes, and finished her hymn. The four lines seemed
like a voice from heaven to the anxious father and
sister:
“Judge not the Lord by feeble sense,
But trust him for his grace;
Behind a frowning providence
He hides a smiling face.”
“Sing them words again, Phyllis,
dearie,” said the squire, and as she did so
he let them sink into his heart and fill all its restless
chambers with confidence and peace.