Strange! for she believed she doted
upon him, and certainly she loved him better than
either of her other children. Her version of
the matter was that there had never yet been two parents
so self-denying and devoted to the highest welfare
of their children as Theobald and herself. For
Ernest, a very great future—she was certain
of it—was in store. This made severity
all the more necessary, so that from the first he might
have been kept pure from every taint of evil.
She could not allow herself the scope for castle
building which, we read, was indulged in by every
Jewish matron before the appearance of the Messiah,
for the Messiah had now come, but there was to be
a millennium shortly, certainly not later than 1866,
when Ernest would be just about the right age for it,
and a modern Elias would be wanted to herald its approach.
Heaven would bear her witness that she had never
shrunk from the idea of martyrdom for herself and
Theobald, nor would she avoid it for her boy, if his
life was required of her in her Redeemer’s service.
Oh, no! If God told her to offer up her first-born,
as He had told Abraham, she would take him up to Pigbury
Beacon and plunge the—no, that she could
not do, but it would be unnecessary—some
one else might do that. It was not for nothing
that Ernest had been baptised in water from the Jordan.
It had not been her doing, nor yet Theobald’s.
They had not sought it. When water from the
sacred stream was wanted for a sacred infant, the channel
had been found through which it was to flow from far
Palestine over land and sea to the door of the house
where the child was lying. Why, it was a miracle!
It was! It was! She saw it all now.
The Jordan had left its bed and flowed into her own
house. It was idle to say that this was not a
miracle. No miracle was effected without means
of some kind; the difference between the faithful
and the unbeliever consisted in the very fact that
the former could see a miracle where the latter could
not. The Jews could see no miracle even in the
raising of Lazarus and the feeding of the five thousand.
The John Pontifexes would see no miracle in this
matter of the water from the Jordan. The essence
of a miracle lay not in the fact that means had been
dispensed with, but in the adoption of means to a
great end that had not been available without interference;
and no one would suppose that Dr Jones would have
brought the water unless he had been directed.
She would tell this to Theobald, and get him to see
it in the . . . and yet perhaps it would be better
not. The insight of women upon matters of this
sort was deeper and more unerring than that of men.
It was a woman and not a man who had been filled most
completely with the whole fulness of the Deity.
But why had they not treasured up the water after
it was used? It ought never, never to have been
thrown away, but it had been. Perhaps, however,
this was for the best too—they might have
been tempted to set too much store by it, and it might
have become a source of spiritual danger to them—perhaps
even of spiritual pride, the very sin of all others
which she most abhorred. As for the channel
through which the Jordan had flowed to Battersby, that
mattered not more than the earth through which the
river ran in Palestine itself. Dr Jones was certainly
worldly—very worldly; so, she regretted
to feel, had been her father-in-law, though in a less
degree; spiritual, at heart, doubtless, and becoming
more and more spiritual continually as he grew older,
still he was tainted with the world, till a very few
hours, probably, before his death, whereas she and
Theobald had given up all for Christ’s sake.
They were not worldly. At least Theobald
was not. She had been, but she was sure she
had grown in grace since she had left off eating things
strangled and blood—this was as the washing
in Jordan as against Abana and Pharpar, rivers of
Damascus. Her boy should never touch a strangled
fowl nor a black pudding—that, at any rate,
she could see to. He should have a coral from
the neighbourhood of Joppa—there were coral
insects on those coasts, so that the thing could easily
be done with a little energy; she would write to Dr
Jones about it, etc. And so on for hours
together day after day for years. Truly, Mrs
Theobald loved her child according to her lights with
an exceeding great fondness, but the dreams she had
dreamed in sleep were sober realities in comparison
with those she indulged in while awake.
When Ernest was in his second year,
Theobald, as I have already said, began to teach him
to read. He began to whip him two days after
he had begun to teach him.
“It was painful,” as he
said to Christina, but it was the only thing to do
and it was done. The child was puny, white and
sickly, so they sent continually for the doctor who
dosed him with calomel and James’s powder.
All was done in love, anxiety, timidity, stupidity,
and impatience. They were stupid in little things;
and he that is stupid in little will be stupid also
in much.
Presently old Mr Pontifex died, and
then came the revelation of the little alteration
he had made in his will simultaneously with his bequest
to Ernest. It was rather hard to bear, especially
as there was no way of conveying a bit of their minds
to the testator now that he could no longer hurt them.
As regards the boy himself anyone must see that the
bequest would be an unmitigated misfortune to him.
To leave him a small independence was perhaps the
greatest injury which one could inflict upon a young
man. It would cripple his energies, and deaden
his desire for active employment. Many a youth
was led into evil courses by the knowledge that on
arriving at majority he would come into a few thousands.
They might surely have been trusted to have their
boy’s interests at heart, and must be better
judges of those interests than he, at twenty-one,
could be expected to be: besides if Jonadab, the
son of Rechab’s father—or perhaps
it might be simpler under the circumstances to say
Rechab at once—if Rechab, then, had left
handsome legacies to his grandchildren—why
Jonadab might not have found those children so easy
to deal with, etc. “My dear,”
said Theobald, after having discussed the matter with
Christina for the twentieth time, “my dear, the
only thing to guide and console us under misfortunes
of this kind is to take refuge in practical work.
I will go and pay a visit to Mrs Thompson.”
On those days Mrs Thompson would be
told that her sins were all washed white, etc.,
a little sooner and a little more peremptorily than
on others.