He does not like this branch of his
profession—indeed he hates it—but
will not admit it to himself. The habit of not
admitting things to himself has become a confirmed
one with him. Nevertheless there haunts him
an ill defined sense that life would be pleasanter
if there were no sick sinners, or if they would at
any rate face an eternity of torture with more indifference.
He does not feel that he is in his element.
The farmers look as if they were in their element.
They are full-bodied, healthy and contented; but
between him and them there is a great gulf fixed.
A hard and drawn look begins to settle about the corners
of his mouth, so that even if he were not in a black
coat and white tie a child might know him for a parson.
He knows that he is doing his duty.
Every day convinces him of this more firmly; but
then there is not much duty for him to do. He
is sadly in want of occupation. He has no taste
for any of those field sports which were not considered
unbecoming for a clergyman forty years ago. He
does not ride, nor shoot, nor fish, nor course, nor
play cricket. Study, to do him justice, he had
never really liked, and what inducement was there
for him to study at Battersby? He reads neither
old books nor new ones. He does not interest
himself in art or science or politics, but he sets
his back up with some promptness if any of them show
any development unfamiliar to himself. True,
he writes his own sermons, but even his wife considers
that his forte lies rather in the example of
his life (which is one long act of self-devotion)
than in his utterances from the pulpit. After
breakfast he retires to his study; he cuts little bits
out of the Bible and gums them with exquisite neatness
by the side of other little bits; this he calls making
a Harmony of the Old and New Testaments. Alongside
the extracts he copies in the very perfection of hand-writing
extracts from Mede (the only man, according to Theobald,
who really understood the Book of Revelation), Patrick,
and other old divines. He works steadily at
this for half an hour every morning during many years,
and the result is doubtless valuable. After some
years have gone by he hears his children their lessons,
and the daily oft-repeated screams that issue from
the study during the lesson hours tell their own horrible
story over the house. He has also taken to collecting
a hortus siccus, and through the interest of
his father was once mentioned in the Saturday Magazine
as having been the first to find a plant, whose name
I have forgotten, in the neighbourhood of Battersby.
This number of the Saturday Magazine has been bound
in red morocco, and is kept upon the drawing-room
table. He potters about his garden; if he hears
a hen cackling he runs and tells Christina, and straightway
goes hunting for the egg.
When the two Miss Allabys came, as
they sometimes did, to stay with Christina, they said
the life led by their sister and brother-in-law was
an idyll. Happy indeed was Christina in her choice,
for that she had had a choice was a fiction which
soon took root among them—and happy Theobald
in his Christina. Somehow or other Christina
was always a little shy of cards when her sisters
were staying with her, though at other times she enjoyed
a game of cribbage or a rubber of whist heartily enough,
but her sisters knew they would never be asked to Battersby
again if they were to refer to that little matter,
and on the whole it was worth their while to be asked
to Battersby. If Theobald’s temper was
rather irritable he did not vent it upon them.
By nature reserved, if he could have
found someone to cook his dinner for him, he would
rather have lived in a desert island than not.
In his heart of hearts he held with Pope that “the
greatest nuisance to mankind is man” or words
to that effect—only that women, with the
exception perhaps of Christina, were worse.
Yet for all this when visitors called he put a better
face on it than anyone who was behind the scenes would
have expected.
He was quick too at introducing the
names of any literary celebrities whom he had met
at his father’s house, and soon established an
all-round reputation which satisfied even Christina
herself.
Who so integer vitae scelerisque
purus, it was asked, as Mr Pontifex of Battersby?
Who so fit to be consulted if any difficulty about
parish management should arise? Who such a happy
mixture of the sincere uninquiring Christian and of
the man of the world? For so people actually
called him. They said he was such an admirable
man of business. Certainly if he had said he
would pay a sum of money at a certain time, the money
would be forthcoming on the appointed day, and this
is saying a good deal for any man. His constitutional
timidity rendered him incapable of an attempt to overreach
when there was the remotest chance of opposition or
publicity, and his correct bearing and somewhat stern
expression were a great protection to him against being
overreached. He never talked of money, and invariably
changed the subject whenever money was introduced.
His expression of unutterable horror at all kinds
of meanness was a sufficient guarantee that he was
not mean himself. Besides he had no business
transactions save of the most ordinary butcher’s
book and baker’s book description. His
tastes—if he had any—were, as
we have seen, simple; he had 900 pounds a year and
a house; the neighbourhood was cheap, and for some
time he had no children to be a drag upon him.
Who was not to be envied, and if envied why then
respected, if Theobald was not enviable?
Yet I imagine that Christina was on
the whole happier than her husband. She had not
to go and visit sick parishioners, and the management
of her house and the keeping of her accounts afforded
as much occupation as she desired. Her principal
duty was, as she well said, to her husband—to
love him, honour him, and keep him in a good temper.
To do her justice she fulfilled this duty to the
uttermost of her power. It would have been better
perhaps if she had not so frequently assured her husband
that he was the best and wisest of mankind, for no
one in his little world ever dreamed of telling him
anything else, and it was not long before he ceased
to have any doubt upon the matter. As for his
temper, which had become very violent at times, she
took care to humour it on the slightest sign of an
approaching outbreak. She had early found that
this was much the easiest plan. The thunder
was seldom for herself. Long before her marriage
even she had studied his little ways, and knew how
to add fuel to the fire as long as the fire seemed
to want it, and then to damp it judiciously down,
making as little smoke as possible.
In money matters she was scrupulousness
itself. Theobald made her a quarterly allowance
for her dress, pocket money and little charities and
presents. In these last items she was liberal
in proportion to her income; indeed she dressed with
great economy and gave away whatever was over in presents
or charity. Oh, what a comfort it was to Theobald
to reflect that he had a wife on whom he could rely
never to cost him a sixpence of unauthorised expenditure!
Letting alone her absolute submission, the perfect
coincidence of her opinion with his own upon every
subject and her constant assurances to him that he
was right in everything which he took it into his
head to say or do, what a tower of strength to him
was her exactness in money matters! As years
went by he became as fond of his wife as it was in
his nature to be of any living thing, and applauded
himself for having stuck to his engagement—a
piece of virtue of which he was now reaping the reward.
Even when Christina did outrun her quarterly stipend
by some thirty shillings or a couple of pounds, it
was always made perfectly clear to Theobald how the
deficiency had arisen—there had been an
unusually costly evening dress bought which was to
last a long time, or somebody’s unexpected wedding
had necessitated a more handsome present than the
quarter’s balance would quite allow: the
excess of expenditure was always repaid in the following
quarter or quarters even though it were only ten shillings
at a time.
I believe, however, that after they
had been married some twenty years, Christina had
somewhat fallen from her original perfection as regards
money. She had got gradually in arrear during
many successive quarters, till she had contracted
a chronic loan a sort of domestic national debt, amounting
to between seven and eight pounds. Theobald at
length felt that a remonstrance had become imperative,
and took advantage of his silver wedding day to inform
Christina that her indebtedness was cancelled, and
at the same time to beg that she would endeavour henceforth
to equalise her expenditure and her income. She
burst into tears of love and gratitude, assured him
that he was the best and most generous of men, and
never during the remainder of her married life was
she a single shilling behind hand.
Christina hated change of all sorts
no less cordially than her husband. She and Theobald
had nearly everything in this world that they could
wish for; why, then, should people desire to introduce
all sorts of changes of which no one could foresee
the end? Religion, she was deeply convinced,
had long since attained its final development, nor
could it enter into the heart of reasonable man to
conceive any faith more perfect than was inculcated
by the Church of England. She could imagine no
position more honourable than that of a clergyman’s
wife unless indeed it were a bishop’s.
Considering his father’s influence it was not
at all impossible that Theobald might be a bishop
some day—and then—then would
occur to her that one little flaw in the practice of
the Church of England—a flaw not indeed
in its doctrine, but in its policy, which she believed
on the whole to be a mistaken one in this respect.
I mean the fact that a bishop’s wife does not
take the rank of her husband.
This had been the doing of Elizabeth,
who had been a bad woman, of exceeding doubtful moral
character, and at heart a Papist to the last.
Perhaps people ought to have been above mere considerations
of worldly dignity, but the world was as it was, and
such things carried weight with them, whether they
ought to do so or no. Her influence as plain
Mrs Pontifex, wife, we will say, of the Bishop of
Winchester, would no doubt be considerable.
Such a character as hers could not fail to carry weight
if she were ever in a sufficiently conspicuous sphere
for its influence to be widely felt; but as Lady Winchester—or
the Bishopess—which would sound quite nicely—who
could doubt that her power for good would be enhanced?
And it would be all the nicer because if she had a
daughter the daughter would not be a Bishopess unless
indeed she were to marry a Bishop too, which would
not be likely.
These were her thoughts upon her good
days; at other times she would, to do her justice,
have doubts whether she was in all respects as spiritually
minded as she ought to be. She must press on,
press on, till every enemy to her salvation was surmounted
and Satan himself lay bruised under her feet.
It occurred to her on one of these occasions that
she might steal a march over some of her contemporaries
if she were to leave off eating black puddings, of
which whenever they had killed a pig she had hitherto
partaken freely; and if she were also careful that
no fowls were served at her table which had had their
necks wrung, but only such as had had their throats
cut and been allowed to bleed. St Paul and the
Church of Jerusalem had insisted upon it as necessary
that even Gentile converts should abstain from things
strangled and from blood, and they had joined this
prohibition with that of a vice about the abominable
nature of which there could be no question; it would
be well therefore to abstain in future and see whether
any noteworthy spiritual result ensued. She did
abstain, and was certain that from the day of her resolve
she had felt stronger, purer in heart, and in all
respects more spiritually minded than she had ever
felt hitherto. Theobald did not lay so much
stress on this as she did, but as she settled what
he should have at dinner she could take care that
he got no strangled fowls; as for black puddings,
happily, he had seen them made when he was a boy, and
had never got over his aversion for them. She
wished the matter were one of more general observance
than it was; this was just a case in which as Lady
Winchester she might have been able to do what as plain
Mrs Pontifex it was hopeless even to attempt.
And thus this worthy couple jogged
on from month to month and from year to year.
The reader, if he has passed middle life and has a
clerical connection, will probably remember scores
and scores of rectors and rectors’ wives who
differed in no material respect from Theobald and
Christina. Speaking from a recollection and experience
extending over nearly eighty years from the time when
I was myself a child in the nursery of a vicarage,
I should say I had drawn the better rather than the
worse side of the life of an English country parson
of some fifty years ago. I admit, however, that
there are no such people to be found nowadays.
A more united or, on the whole, happier, couple could
not have been found in England. One grief only
overshadowed the early years of their married life:
I mean the fact that no living children were born to
them.