 CHAPTER XI. IFA GENAYA When Eleanor laid her head on her pillow that night, her mind was anxiously intent on some plan by which she might extricate her father from his misery, and in her warm-hearted enthusiasm self-sacrifice was decided on as the means to be adopted. Was not so good an Agamemnon worthy of an Iphigenia? She would herself personally implore John Bold to desist from his undertaking. She would explain to him her father's sorrows, the cruel misery of his position. She would tell him how her father would die if he were thus dragged before the public and exposed to such unmerited ignominy. She would appeal to his old friendship, to his generosity, to his manliness, to his mercy. If need were, she would kneel to him for the favor she would ask. But before she did this, the idea of love must be banished. There must be no bargain in the matter. To his mercy, to his generosity, she could appeal, but as a pure maiden hitherto even unsolicited, she could not appeal to his love. Nor under such circumstances could she allow him to do so. Of course, when so provoked, he would declare his passion. That was to be expected. There had been enough between them to make such a fact, sure. But it was equally certain that he must be rejected. She could not be understood as saying, Make my father free and I'm the reward. There'd be no sacrifice in that. Not so had Jeffa's daughter saved her father. Not so could she show to that kindest, dearest of parents how much she was able to bear for his good. No, to one resolve must her whole soul be bound, and so resolving, she felt that she could make her great request to bold with as much self-assured confidence as she could have done to his grandfather. And now I own I have fears for my heroine. Not as to the upshot of her mission, not in the least as to that. As to the full success of her generous scheme and the ultimate result of such a project, no one conversant with human nature and novels can have a doubt. But as to the amount of sympathy she may receive from those of her own sex. Girls below twenty and old ladies above sixty will do her justice, for in the female heart the soft springs of sweet romance reopen after many years, and again gush out with waters pure as in earlier days, and greatly refresh the path that leads downwards to the grave. But I fear that the majority of those between these two heirs will not approve of Eleanor's plan. I fear that unmarried ladies of thirty-five will declare that there can be no probability of so absurd a project being carried through. That young women on their knees before their lovers are sure to get kissed, and that they would not put themselves in such a position did they not expect it. That Eleanor is going to bold only because circumstances prevent bold from coming to her. That she is certainly a little fool or a little schemer, but that in all probability she is thinking a good deal more about herself than her father. Dear ladies, you are right as to your appreciation of the circumstances, but very wrong as to Miss Harding's character. Miss Harding was much younger than you are, and could not therefore know, as you may do, to what dangers such an encounter might expose her. She may get kissed, I think it very probable that she will, but I give my solemn word and positive assurance that the remotest idea of such a catastrophe never occurred to her as she made the great resolve now alluded to. And then she slept, and then she rose refreshed, and met her father with her kindest embrace and most loving smiles, and on the whole their breakfast was by no mean so treased as had been their dinner the day before. And then, making some excuse to her father for so soon leaving him, she started on the commencement of her operations. She knew that John Bold was in London, and that therefore the scene itself could not be enacted today, but she also knew that he was soon to be home, probably on the next day, and it was necessary that some little plan for meeting him should be concerted with his sister Mary. When she got up to the house, she went as usual into the morning sitting-room, and was startled by perceiving, by a stick, a great coat, and sundry parcels which were lying about, that Bold must have already returned. John has come back so suddenly, said Mary, coming into the room, he's been traveling all night. Then I'll come up again some other time, said Eleanor, about to be to retreat in her sudden dismay. He's out now, and will be for the next two hours, said the other. He's with that horrid finny. He only came to see him, and he returns by the mail train tonight. Returns by the mail train tonight, thought Eleanor to herself, as she strove to screw up her courage. Away again tonight, then it must be now or never, and she again sat down, having risen to go. She wished the ordeal could have been postponed. She had fully made up her mind to do the deed, but she had not made up her mind to do it this very day, and now she felt ill at ease, astray, and in difficulty. Mary, she began, I must see your brother before he goes back. Oh yes, of course, said the other. I know he'll be delighted to see you. And she tried to treat it as a matter of course, but she was not the less surprised. For Mary and Eleanor had daily talked over John Bold and his conduct, and his love, and Mary would insist on calling Eleanor her sister, and would scold her for not calling Bold by his Christian name. And Eleanor would have confessed her love, but like a modest maiden would protest against such familiarities, even with the name of her lover. And so they talked hour after hour, and Mary Bold, who was much the elder, looked forward with happy confidence to the day when Eleanor would not be ashamed to call her her sister. She was, however, fully sure that just at present Eleanor would be much more likely to avoid her brother than to seek him. Mary, I must see your brother now, today, and beg from him a great favor. And she spoke with a solemn air, not at all usual to her, and then she went on and opened to her friend all her plan, her well-waved scheme for saving her father from a sorrow which would, she said, if it lasted, bring him to his grave. But Mary, she continued, you must now, you know, cease any joking about me and Mr. Bold. You must now say no more about that. I am not ashamed to beg this favor from your brother, but when I have done so, there can never be anything further between us. And she said this with a staid and solemn air, quite worthy of Jephthah's daughter or of Iphigenia either. It was quite clear that Mary Bold did not follow the argument. That Eleanor Harding should appeal on behalf of her father to Bold's better feelings seemed to Mary quite natural. It seemed quite natural that he should relent, overcome by such filial tears and by so much beauty. But to her thinking it was at any rate equally natural that having relented John should put his arm around his mistress's waist and say, now having settled that, let us be man and wife, and all will end heavily. Why his good nature should not be rewarded when such reward would operate to the disadvantage of none, Mary who had more sense than romance could not understand, and she said as much. Eleanor, however, was firm and made quite an eloquent speech to support her own view of the question. She could not condescend, she said, to ask such a favor on any other terms than those proposed. Mary might perhaps think her high flown, but she had her own ideas and she could not submit to sacrifice her self-respect. But I'm sure you love him, don't you? pleaded Mary, and I'm sure he loves you better than anything in the world. Eleanor was going to make another speech, but a tear came to each eye and she could not. So she pretended to blow her nose and walk to the window, and made a little inward call on her own courage, and finding herself somewhat sustained, said sententiously, Mary this is nonsense. But you do love him, said Mary, who had followed her friend to the window and now spoke with her arms close wound around the other's waist. You do love him with all your heart, you know you do. I defy you to deny it. I, commenced Eleanor, turning sharply round to refute the charge, but the intended falsehood stuck in her throat and never came to utterance. She could not deny her love. So she took plentifully to tears and leaned upon her friend's bosom and sobbed there, and protested that love or no love it would make no difference in her resolve, and called Mary a thousand times the most cruel of girls, and swore her to secrecy by a hundred oaths, and ended by declaring that the girl who could betray her friend's love, even to a brother, would be as black a traitor as a soldier in a garrison who should open the city gates to the enemy. While they were yet discussing the matter, bold returned, and Eleanor was forced into sudden action. She had either to accomplish or abandon her plan, and having slipped into her friend's bedroom as the gentleman closed the hall door, she washed the marks of tears from her eyes, and resolved within herself to go through with it. Tell him I'm here, said she, and coming in, and mind whatever you do don't leave us. So Mary informed her brother with a somewhat somber air that Miss Harding was in the next room and was coming to speak to him. Eleanor was certainly thinking more of her father than of herself, as she arranged her hair before the glass and removed the traces of sorrow from her face, and yet I should be untrue if I said that she was not anxious to appear well before her lover. Why else was she so sedulous with that stubborn curl that would rebel against her hand, and smooth so eagerly her ruffled ribbons? Why else did she damp her eyes to dispel the redness and bite her pretty lips to bring back the color? Of course she was anxious to look her best, for she was but a mortal angel after all, but had she been immortal, had she flitted back to the sitting room on a cherub's wings, she could not have had a more faithful heart, or a truer wish to save her father at any cost to herself. John Bold had not met her since the day when she left him in Dungeon in the Cathedral close. Since then his whole time had been occupied in promoting the cause against her father, and not unsuccessfully. He'd often thought of her, and turned over in his mind a hundred schemes for showing her how disinterested was his love. He would write to her in beseecher not to allow the performance of a public duty to injure him in her estimation. He would write to Mr. Harding, explain all his views, and boldly claim the warden's daughter, urging that the untoward circumstances between them need be no bar to their ancient friendship, or to a closer tie. He would throw himself on his knees before his mistress. He would wait and marry the daughter when the father has lost his home and his income. He would give up the lawsuit and go to Australia, with her, of course, leaving the Jupiter and Mr. Finney to complete the case between them. Sometimes as he woke in the morning fevered and impatient, he would blow out his brains and have done with all his cares. But this idea was generally consequent on an imprudent supper enjoyed in company with Tom Towers. How beautiful Eleanor appeared to him as she slowly walked into the room. Not for nothing had all those little cares been taken. Though her sister, the Archdeacon's wife, had spoken slidingly of her charms, Eleanor was very beautiful when seen aright. Hers was not of those impassive faces, which have the beauty of a marble bust, finely chiseled features perfect in every line, true to the rules of symmetry, as lovely to a stranger as to a friend, unvarying unless in sickness or as age affects them. She had no startling brilliancy of beauty, no pearly whiteness, no radiant carnation. She had not the majestic contour that rivets attention demands instant wonder and then disappoints by the coldness of its charms. You might pass Eleanor Harding in the street without notice, but you could hardly pass an evening with her and not lose your heart. She'd never appeared more lovely to her lover than she did now. Her face was animated though it was serious and her full dark lustrous eyes shown with anxious energy. Her hand trembled as she took his and she could hardly pronounce his name when she addressed him. Bold wished with all his heart that the Australian scheme was in the act of realization and that he and Eleanor were away together, never to hear further of the lawsuit. He began to talk, asked after her health, said something about London being very stupid and more about Barchester being very pleasant, declared the weather to be very hot and then inquired after Mr. Harding. My father is not very well, said Eleanor. John Bold was very sorry, so sorry. He hoped it was nothing serious and put on the unmeaningly solemn phase which people usually use on such occasions. I especially want to speak to you about my father, Mr. Bold. Indeed, I'm now here on purpose to do so. Papa's very unhappy, very unhappy indeed, about this affair of the hospital. You would pity him, Mr. Bold, if you could see how rich it has made him. Oh, Miss Harding, indeed you would. Anyone would pity him. But a friend, an old friend as you are, indeed you would. He's an altered man. His cheerfulness is all gone and his sweet temper and his kind, happy tone of voice. You would hardly know him if you saw him, Mr. Bold. He is so much altered and and if this goes on, he will die. Here Eleanor had recourse to her handkerchief and so also had her auditors. But she plucked up her courage and went on with her tale. He will break his heart and die. I'm sure, Mr. Bold, it was not you who wrote those cruel things in the newspaper. John Bold eagerly protested that it was not, but his heart smote him as to his intimate alliance with Tom Towers. No, I'm sure it was not. And Papa has not for a moment thought so. You would not be so cruel, but it has nearly killed him. Papa cannot bear to think that people should so speak of him and that everybody should hear him so spoken of. They have called him avaricious and dishonest and they say his robbing the old men and taking the money of the hospital for nothing. I have never said so, Ms. Harding. I know, continued Eleanor, interrupting him, for she was now in the full floodtide of her eloquence. No, I am sure you have not, but others have said so. And if this goes on, if such things are written again, it will kill Papa. Oh, Mr. Bold, if you only knew the state he is in. Now, Papa does not care much about money. Both her auditors, brother and sister, assented to this and declared on their own knowledge that no man lived less addicted to filthy lucre than the warden. Oh, it's so kind of you to say so, Mary, and if you too, Mr. Bold, I couldn't bear that people should think unjustly of Papa. Do you know he would give up the hospital altogether? Only he cannot. The Archdeacon says it would be cowardly in that he would be deserting his order and injuring the church. Whatever may happen, Papa will not do that. He would leave the place tomorrow willingly and give up his house and the income and all if the Archdeacon, Eleanor was going to say would let him, but she stopped herself before she had compromised her father's dignity and giving a long sigh, she added. Oh, I do so wish he would. No one who knows Mr. Harding personally accuses him for a moment, said Bold. It is he that has to bear the punishment. It is he that suffers, said Eleanor. And what for? What has he done wrong? How has he deserved this persecution? He that never had an unkind thought in his life. He that never said an unkind word. And here she broke down and the violence of her sobs stopped her utterance. Bold for the fifth or sixth time declared that neither he nor any of his friends imputed any blame personally to Mr. Harding. Then why should he be persecuted? ejaculated Eleanor through her tears, forgetting in her eagerness that her intention had been to humble herself as a supliant before John Bold. Why should he be singled out for scorn and disgrace? Why should he be made so wretched? Oh, Mr. Bold! And she turned towards him as though the kneeling scene were about to be commenced. Oh, Mr. Bold, why did you begin all this? You whom we also so valued. To speak the truth, the reformer's punishment was certainly come upon him. For his present plight was not enviable. He had nothing for it but to excuse himself by platitudes about public duty, which it is by no means worthwhile to repeat, and to reiterate his eulogy on Mr. Harding's character. His position was certainly a cruel one. Had any gentleman called upon him on behalf of Mr. Harding, he could, of course, have declined to enter upon the subject. But how could he do so with a beautiful girl, with the daughter of the man whom he had injured, with his own love? In the meantime, Eleanor recollected herself, and again summoned up her energies. Mr. Bold said, she, I have come here to implore you to abandon this proceeding. He stood up from his seat and looked beyond measure distressed. To implore you to abandon it. To implore you to spare my father. To spare either his life or his reason for one or the other will pay the forfeit if this goes on. I know how much I'm asking, and how little right I have to ask anything, but I think you will listen to me as it is for my father. Oh, Mr. Bold, pray. Pray do this for us. Pray do not drive to distraction a man who has loved you so well. She did not absolutely kneel to him, but she followed him as he moved from his chair and laid her soft hands imploringly upon his arm. At any other time, how exquisitely valuable would have been that touch. But now he was distraught, dumbfounded, and unmanned. What could he say to that sweet supplient? How explained to her that the matter now was probably beyond his control? How tell her that he could not quell the storm which he had raised? Surely, surely, John, you cannot refuse her, said his sister. I would give her my soul, said he, if it would serve her. Oh, Mr. Bold, said Eleanor, do not speak so. I ask nothing for myself, and what I ask for my father it cannot harm you to grant. I would give her my soul if it would serve her, said Bold, still addressing his sister. Everything I have is hers if she will accept it, my house, my heart, my all. Every hope of my breast is centered in her. Her smiles are sweeter to me than the sun, and when I see her in sorrow as she now is, every nerve in my body suffers. No man can love better than I love her. No, no, no, ejaculated Eleanor, there can be no talk of love between us. Will you protect my father from the evil you have brought upon him? Oh, Eleanor, I will do anything. Let me tell you how I love you. No, no, no, she almost screamed. This is unmanly of you, Mr. Bold. Will you, will you, will you leave my father to die in peace in his quiet home? And seizing him by his arm in hand, she followed him across the room towards the door. I will not leave you till you promise me. I'll cling to you in the street. I'll kneel to you before all the people. You shall promise me this. You shall promise me this. You shall. And she clung to him with fixed tenacity and reiterated her resolve with hysterical passion. Speak to her, John. Answer her, said Mary, bewildered by the unexpected vehemence of Eleanor's manner. You cannot have the cruelty to refuse her. Promise me. Promise me, said Eleanor. Say that my father is safe. One word will do. I know how true you are. Say one word and I will let you go. She still held him and looked eagerly into his face, with her hair dishevelled and her eyes all bloodshot. She had no thought now of herself, no care now for her appearance. And yet, he thought he had never seen her half so lovely. He was amazed at the intensity of her beauty and could hardly believe that it was she whom he had dared to love. Promise me, she said. I will not leave you till you've promised me. I will, said he at length. I do. All I can do, I will do. Then may God Almighty bless you forever and ever, said Eleanor, and falling on her knees with her face in Mary's lap, she wept and sobbed like a child. Her strength had carried her through her allotted task, but now it was well nigh exhausted. In a while, she was partly recovered and got up to go, and would have gone, had not bold made her understand that it was necessary for him to explain to her how far it was in his power to put an end to the proceedings which had been taken against Mr. Harding. Had he spoken on any other subject she would have vanished, but on that she was bound to hear him, and now the danger of her position commenced. While she had an active part to play, while she clung to him as a supplient, it was easy enough for her to reject his proffered love, and cast from her his caressing words. But now, now that he had yielded, and was thus talking to her calmly and kindly as to her father's welfare, it was hard enough for her to do so. Then Mary Bold assisted her, but now she was quite on her brother's side. Mary said but little, but every word she did say gave some direct and deadly blow. The first thing she did was to make room for her brother between herself and Eleanor on the sofa, as the sofa was full large for three. Eleanor could not resent this, nor could she show suspicion by taking another seat. But she felt it to be a most unkind proceeding. And then Mary would talk as though they three were joined in some close peculiar bond together, as though they were in future always to wish together, contrive together, and act together. And Eleanor could not gain say this, she could not make another speech and say, Mr Bold and I are strangers, Mary, and are always to remain so. He explained to her that though undoubtedly the proceeding against the hospital had commenced solely with himself, many others were now interested in the matter, some of whom were much more influential than himself. That it was to him alone, however, that the lawyers looked for instructionists to their doings, and more important still for the payment of their bills. And he promised that he would at once give them notice that it was his intention to abandon the case. He thought, he said, that it was not probable that any active steps would be taken after he had seceded from the matter, though it was possible that some passing illusion might still be made to the hospital in the Daily Jupiter. He promised, however, that he would use his best influence to prevent any further personal illusion being made to Mr Harding. He then suggested that he would on that afternoon ride over himself to Dr Grantley, and inform him of his altered intentions on the subject, and with this view he postponed his immediate return to London. This was all very pleasant, and Eleanor did enjoy a sort of triumph in the feeling that she had attained the object for which she had sought this interview. But still the part of Iphigenia was to be played out. The gods had heard her prayer, granted her request, and were they not to have their promised sacrifice? Eleanor was not a girl to defraud them willfully, so as soon as she decently could she got up for her bonnet. Are you going so soon? said Bold, who half an hour since would have given a hundred pounds that he was in London, and she's still at Barchester. Oh yes, said she, I'm so much obliged to you, Papa will feel this to be so kind. She did not quite appreciate all her father's feelings. Of course I must tell him, and I will say that you will see the Archdeacon. But may I not say one word for myself? said Bold. I'll fetch you your bonnet, Eleanor, said Mary in the act of leaving the room. Mary, Mary, said she, getting up and catching her by the dress. Don't go, I'll get my bonnet myself. But Mary, the traitorous, stood fast by the door and permitted no such retreat. Poor Iphigenia. And with a volley of impassioned love, John Bold poured forth the feelings of his heart, swearing his mendu some truths and many falsehoods. And Eleanor repeated with every shade of vehemence the no no no, which had had a short time since so much effect. But now alas, its strength was gone. Let her be never so vehement. Her vehemence was not respected. All her no no no's were met with counter-asseverations, and at last were overpowered. The ground was cut from under her on every side. She was pressed to say whether her father would object, whether she herself had any aversion. Aversion! God help her, poor girl. The word nearly made her jump into his arms. Any other preference, this she loudly disclaimed, whether it was impossible that she should love him, Eleanor could not say that it was impossible. And so at last all her defenses demolished, all her maiden barriers swept away. She capitulated, or rather marched out with the honors of war, vanquished evidently, palpably vanquished, but still not reduced to the necessity of confessing it. And so the altar on the shore of the modern alless reeked with no sacrifice. End of Chapter 11. Recording by Jessica Louise, St. Paul, Minnesota. Chapter 12 of The Warden. This Librirox recording is in the public domain. The Warden by Anthony Trollop. Chapter 12. Mr. Bold's visit to Plumstead. Whether or no the ill-natured prediction made by certain ladies in the beginning of the last chapter was or was not carried out to the letter, I'm not in a position to state. Eleanor, however, certainly did feel herself to have been baffled as she returned home with all her news to her father. Certainly she'd been victorious. Certainly she had achieved her object. Certainly she was not unhappy, and yet she did not feel herself triumphant. Everything would run smooth now. Eleanor was not at all addicted to the Lydian school of romance. She by no means objected to her lover because he came in at the door under the name of absolute instead of pulling her out of a window under the name of Beverly. And yet she felt that she had been imposed upon and could hardly think of Mary Bold with sisterly charity. I did think I could have trusted Mary, she said to herself over and over again. Oh that she should have dared to keep me in the room when I tried to get out. Eleanor, however, felt that the game was up and that she had now nothing further to do but to add to the budget of news which was prepared for her father, that John Bold was her accepted lover. We will, however, now leave her on her way and go with John Bold to Plumstead Episcopie, merely promising that Eleanor on reaching home will not find things so smooth as she fondly expected. Two messengers had come, one to her father and the other to the Archdeacon, and each of them much opposed to her quiet mode of solving all their difficulties, the one in the shape of a number of the Jupiter and the other in that of a further opinion from Sir Abraham Hathazard. John Bold got on his horse and rode off to Plumstead Episcopie, not briskly and with eager spur as men do ride when self-satisfied with their own intentions, but slowly, modestly, thoughtfully, and somewhat in dread of the coming interview. Now and again he would recur to the scene which was just over, support himself by the remembrance of the silence that gives consent, and exult as a happy lover, but even this feeling was not without a shade of remorse. Had he not shown himself childishly weak, thus to yield up the resolve of many hours of thought to the tears of a pretty girl, how was he to meet his lawyer? How was he to back out of a matter in which his name was already so publicly concerned? What, oh, what was he to say to Tom Towers? While meditating these painful things, he reached the lodge leading up to the Archdeacon's Gleeb, and for the first time in his life found himself within the sacred precincts. All the doctor's children were together on the slope of the lawn, close to the road, as Bold rode up to the hall door. They were there holding high debate on matters evidently of deep interest at Plumstead Episcopi, and the voices of the boys had been heard before the lodge gate was closed. Florenda and Grisel, frightened at the sight of so well-known an enemy to the family, fled on the first appearance of the horseman, and ran in terror to their mother's arms. Not for them was it tender branches to resent injuries, or as members of a church militant to put on armor against its enemies. But the boys stood their ground-like heroes, and boldly demanded the business of the intruder. Do you want to see anybody here, sir? said Henry, with a defiant eye and a hostile tone, which plainly said that at any rate no one there wanted to see the person so addressed, and as he spoke he brandished aloft his garden water pot, holding it by the spout ready for the braining of anyone. Henry, said Charles James slowly and with a certain dignity of diction, Mr. Bould, of course, would not have come without wanting to see someone. If Mr. Bould has a proper ground for wanting to see some person here, of course he has a right to come. But Samuel stepped lightly up to the horse's head and offered his services. Oh, Mr. Bould, said he, Papa I'm sure will be glad to see you. I suppose you want to see Papa. Shall I hold your horse for you? Oh, what a very pretty horse. And he turned his head and winked funnily at his brothers. Papa's heard such good news about the old hospital today. We know you'll be glad to hear it because you're such a friend of Grandpa Harding and so much in love with Aunt Nelly. How do you do, lads? said Bould, dismounting. I want to see your father if he's at home. Lads, said Henry, turning on his heel and addressing himself to his brother, but loud enough to be heard by Bould. Lads indeed, were lads, what does he call himself? Charles James condescended to say nothing further, but cocked his hat with much precision and left the visitor to the care of his youngest brother. Samuel stayed till the servant came, chatting and patting the horse, but as soon as Bould had disappeared through the front door, he stuck a switch under the animal's tail to make him kick if possible. The church reformers soon found himself tete-a-tete with the Archdeacon in that same room, in that sanctum sanctorum of the rectory to which we have already been introduced. As he entered, he heard the click of a certain patent lock, but it struck him with no surprise. The worthy clergyman was no doubt hiding from eyes profane his last much-studied sermon. For the Archdeacon, though he preached but seldom, was famous for his sermons. No room, Bould thought, could have been more becoming for a dignitary of the church. Each wall was loaded with theology. Over each separate bookcase was printed in small gold letters the names of those great divines whose works were ranged beneath. Beginning from the early fathers and due chronological order, there were to be found the precious labors of the chosen servants of the church, down to the last prophet written in opposition to the consecration of Dr. Hampton, and raised above this were to be seen the busts of the greatest among the great. Chrysostom, St. Augustine, Thomas A. Beckett, Cardinal Wolsey, Archbishop Laud, and Dr. Phil Potts. Every appliance that could make study pleasant and give ease to the overtoiled brain was there. Chairs made to relieve each limb and muscle, reading desks and writing desks, to suit every attitude. Lamps and candles mechanically contrived to throw their light on any favored spot, as the student might desire. A shoal of newspapers to amuse the few leisure moments which might be stolen from the labors of the day. And then from the window of view right through a bosque vista, along which ran a broad green path from the rectory to the church, at the end of which the tawny tinted, fine old tower was seen with all its variegated pinnacles and parapets. Few parish churches in England are in better repair, or better worth keeping so, than that at Plumstead Episcopi, and yet it is built in a faulty style. The body of the church is low, so low that the nearly flat leaden roof would be visible from the churchyard where it not for the carved parapet with which it is surrounded. It is cruciform, though the transeps are irregular, one being larger than the other, and the tower is much too high in proportion to the church. But the color of the building is perfect. It is that rich yellow gray which one finds nowhere but in the south and west of England, and which is so strong a characteristic of most of our old houses of Tudor architecture. The stonework also is beautiful. The mullions of the windows and thick tracery of the Gothic workmanship is as rich as fancy can desire, and though engaging on such a structure one knows by rule that the old priests who built it built it wrong, one cannot bring oneself to wish that they should have made it other than it is. When Bold was ushered into the book room he found its owner standing with his back to the empty fireplace, ready to receive him, and he could not but perceive that that expansive brow was elated with triumph, and that those full heavy lips bore more prominently than usual an appearance of arrogant success. Well, Mr. Bold, said he, what can I do for you? Very happy I can assure you to do anything for such a friend of my father-in-law. I hope you'll excuse my calling, Mr. Grantley. Certainly, certainly, said the Archdeacon, I can assure you no apology is necessary from Mr. Bold, only let me know what I can do for him. Dr. Grantley was standing himself, and he did not ask Bold to sit, and therefore he had to tell his tail standing, leaning on the table with his hat and his hand. He did, however, manage to tell it, and as the Archdeacon never once interrupted him or even encouraged him by a single word, he was not long in coming to the end of it. And so, Mr. Bold, I'm to understand, I believe, that you are desirous of abandoning this attack upon Mr. Harding. Oh, Dr. Grantley, there's been no attack, I can assure you. Well, well, we won't quarrel about words. I should call in an attack. Most men would so call an endeavour to take away from a man every shilling of income that he has to live upon. But it shan't be an attack if you don't like it. You wish to abandon this, this little game of backgammon you've begun to play? I intend to put an end to the legal proceedings which I have commenced. I understand, said the Archdeacon. You've already had enough of it. Well, I can't say that I'm surprised, carrying on a losing lawsuit where one has nothing to gain, but everything to pay is not pleasant. Bold turned very red in the face. You misinterpret my motives, said he, but, however, that is of little consequence. I did not come to trouble you with my motives, but to tell you as a matter of fact. Good morning, Dr. Grantley. One moment, one moment, said the other. I don't exactly appreciate the taste which induced you to make any personal communication to me on the subject, but I dare say I'm wrong. I dare say your judgment is the better of the two. But as you have done me the honour, as you have, as it were, forced me into a certain amount of conversation on a subject which had better, perhaps, been left to our lawyers, you will excuse me if I ask you to hear my reply to your communication. I'm in no hurry, Dr. Grantley. Well, I am, Mr. Bold. My time is not exactly leisure time, and therefore, if you please, we'll go to the point at once. You're going to abandon this lawsuit? And he paused for a reply. Yes, Dr. Grantley, I am. Having exposed a gentleman who was one of your father's warmest friends to all the ignominy and insolence which the press could heap upon his name, having somewhat ostentatiously declared that it was your duty as a man of high public virtue to protect those poor old fools whom you've humbugged there at the hospital, you now find that the game costs more than it's worth, and so you make up your mind to have done with it. A prudent resolution, Mr. Bold, but it is a pity you should have been so long in coming to it. Has it struck you that we may not now choose to give over, that we may find it necessary to punish the injury you have done to us? Are you aware, sir, that we have gone to enormous expense to resist this inquietous attempt of yours? Bold's face was now furiously red, and he nearly crushed his hat between his hands. But he said nothing. We have found it necessary to employ the best advice that money could procure. Are you aware, sir, what may be the probable cost of securing the services of the Attorney General? Not in the least, Dr. Grantley. I dare not say, sir. When you recklessly put this affair into the hands of your friend Mr. Finney, whose six and eight pences and thirteen and four pences may probably not amount to a large sum, you were indifferent as to the cost and suffering which such a proceeding might entail on others. But are you aware, sir, that these crushing costs must now come out of your own pocket? Any demand of such a nature which Mr. Harding's lawyer may have to make will doubtless be made to my lawyer. Mr. Harding's lawyer and my lawyer, did you come here merely to refer me to the lawyers? Upon my word, I think the honour of your visit might have been spared. And now, sir, I'll tell you what my opinion is. My opinion is that we shall not allow you to withdraw this matter from the courts. You can do as you please, Dr. Grantley. Good morning. Hear me out, sir, said the Archdeacon. I have here in my hands the last opinion given in this matter by Sir Abraham Haphazard. I daresay you've already heard of this. I daresay it has had something to do with your visit here today. I know nothing whatever of Sir Abraham Haphazard or his opinion. Be that as it may. Here it is. He declares most explicitly that under no faces of the affair whatever have you a leg to stand upon, that Mr. Harding is as safe in his hospital as I am here in my rectory, that a more futile attempt to destroy a man was never made than this which you have made to ruin Mr. Harding. Here. And he slapped the paper on the table. I have this opinion from the very first lawyer in the land, and under these circumstances you expect me to make you a low bow for your kind offer to release Mr. Harding from the toils of your net. Sir, your net is not strong enough to hold him. Sir, your net has fallen to pieces and you knew that well enough before I told you. And now, sir, I wish you good morning, for I'm busy. Bold was now choking with passion. He'd let the Archdeacon run on because he knew not with what words to interrupt him. But now that he'd been so defied and insulted, he could not leave the room without some mupli. Dr. Grantley, he commenced. I have nothing further to say or hear, said the Archdeacon. I'll do myself the honor to order your horse. And he rang the bell. I came here, Dr. Grantley, with the warmest kindest feelings. Oh, of course you did. Nobody doubts it. With the kindest feelings, and they have been most grossly outraged by your treatment. Of course they have. I have not chosen to see my father in law ruined. What an outrage that has been to your feelings. The time will come, Dr. Grantley, when you will understand why I called upon you today. No doubt, no doubt. Is Mr. Bold's horse there? That's right. Open the front door. Good morning, Mr. Bold. And the doctor stocked into his own drawing room, closing the door behind him, and making it quite impossible that John Bold should speak another word. As he got on his horse, which he was feigned to do, feeling like a dog turned out of a kitchen, he was again greeted by little Sammy. Goodbye, Mr. Bold. I hope we may have the pleasure of seeing you again before long. I'm sure Papua will always be glad to see you. That was certainly the bitterest moment in John Bold's life. Not even the remembrance of his successful love could comfort him. Nay, when he thought of Eleanor, he felt that it was that very love which had brought him to such a pass. That he should have been so insulted and be unable to reply. That he should have given up so much to the request of a girl and then have had his motives so misunderstood. That he should have made so gross a mistake as this visit of his to the Archdeacons. He bit the top of his whip till he penetrated the horn of which it was made. He struck the poor animal and his anger, and then was doubly angry with himself and his futile passion. He had been so completely checkmated, so palpably overcome, and what was he to do? He could not continue his action after pledging himself to abandon it, nor was there any revenge in that. It was the very step to which his enemy had endeavored to goad him. He threw the reins to the servant who came to take his horse and rushed upstairs into his drawing-room where his sister Mary was sitting. If there be a devil, said he, a real devil here on earth, it is Dr. Grantley. He vouchsafed her no further intelligence, but again seizing his hat he rushed out and took his departure for London without another word to anyone. End of Chapter 12 Recording by Jessica Louise St. Paul, Minnesota Chapter 13 of The Warden This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. The Warden by Anthony Trollope Chapter 13 The Warden's Decision The meeting between Eleanor and her father was not so stormy as that described in the last chapter, but it was hardly more successful. On her return from Bolt's house she found her father in a strange state. He was not sorrowful and silent as he had been on that memorable day when his son-in-law lectured him as to all that he owed to his order, nor was he in his usual quiet mood. When Eleanor reached the hospital he was walking to and fro upon the lawn and she soon saw that he was much excited. I'm going to London, my dear, he said as soon as he saw her. London? Papa? Yes, my dear, to London. I will have this matter settled some way. There are some things Eleanor which I cannot bear. Oh, Papa, what is it? She said, leading him by the arm into the house. I had such good news for you and now you make me fear I'm too late. And then before he could let her know what had caused this sudden resolve or could point to the fatal paper which lay on the table she told him that the lawsuit was over, that Bolt had commissioned her to assure her father in his name that it would be abandoned, that there was no further cause for misery, that the whole matter might be looked on as though it had never been discussed. She did not tell him with what determined vehemence she had obtained to this concession in his favour, nor did she mention the price she was to pay for it. The warden did not express himself peculiarly gratified at this intelligence and Eleanor though she had not worked for thanks and was by no means disposed to magnify her own good offices felt hurt at the manner in which her news was received. Mr. Bolt can act as he thinks proper, my love, said he. If Mr. Bolt thinks he has been wrong, of course he will discontinue what he is doing, but that cannot change my purpose. Oh, Papa! She exclaimed all but crying with vexation. I thought you would have been so happy, I thought all would have been right now. Mr. Bolt, continued he, has said great people to work, so great that I doubt they are now beyond his control. Read that, my dear. The Warden, doubling up a number of the Jupiter, pointed to the peculiar article which she was to read. It was to the last of the three leaders which are generally furnished daily for the support of the nation that Mr. Harding directed her attention. It dealt some heavy blows on various clerical delinquents, on families who received their tens of thousands yearly for doing nothing, on men who, as the article stated, rolled in wealth which they had neither earned nor inherited, and which was in fact stolen from the poorer clergy. It named some sons of bishops, some grandsons of archbishops, men great in their way who had redeemed their disgrace in the eyes of many by the enormity of their plunder, and then, having disposed of these leviathans, it descended to Mr. Harding. We alluded some weeks since to an instance of similar injustice, though in a more humble scale, in which the warden of an alms house at Barchester has become possessed of the income of the greater part of the whole institution. Why an alms house should have a warden we cannot pretend to explain, nor can we say what special need twelve-fold men can have for the services of a separate clergyman seeing that they have twelve reserved seats for themselves in the Barchester Cathedral. But be this as it may, let the gentleman call himself warden or pre-center or what he will, let him be never so scrupulous in exacting religious duties from his twelve dependents, or never so negligent as regards the services of the Cathedral. It appears palpably clear that he can be entitled to no portion of the revenue of the hospital, accepting that which the Founder set apart for him. And it is equally clear that the Founder did not intend that three-fifths of his charity should be so consumed. The case is certainly a paltry one after the tens of thousands with which we have been dealing, for the warden's income is after all but a poor eight hundred a year. Eight hundred a year is not a magnificent preferment of itself, and the warden may, for anything we know, be worth much more to the Church. But if so, let the Church pay him out of funds justly at its own disposal. We allude to the question of the Barchester almost-house at the present moment, because we understand that a plea has been set up which will be peculiarly revolting to the minds of English Churchmen. An action has been taken against Mr. Warden Harding on behalf of the almsmen by a gentleman acting solely on public grounds, and it is to be argued that Mr. Harding takes nothing but what he received as a servant of the hospital, and that he is not himself responsible for the amount of stipend given to him for his work. Such a plea would doubtless be fair if anyone questioned the daily wages of a bricklayer employed on the building or the fee of the charwoman who cleans it, but we cannot envy the feeling of a clergyman of the Church of England who could allow such an argument to be put in his mouth. If this plea be put forward, we trust Mr. Harding will be forced as a witness to state the nature of his employment, the amount of work that he does, the income which he receives, and the source from whence he obtained his appointment. We do not think he will receive much public sympathy to atone for the annoyance of such an examination. As Eleanor read the article, her face flushed with indignation, and when she'd finished it, she almost feared to look up at her father. Well, my dear, said he, what do you think of that? Is it worthwhile to be awarding at that price? Oh, Papa, dear Papa. Mr. Bold can't unwrite that, my dear. Mr. Bold can't say that, that shan't be read by every clergyman at Oxford, nay, by every gentleman in the land. And then he walked up and down the room, while Eleanor in mute despair followed him with her eyes. And I'll tell you what, my dear. He continued, speaking now very calmly, and in a forced manner, very unlike himself. Mr. Bold can't dispute the truth of every word in that article you have just read. Nor can I. Eleanor stared at him as though she scarcely understood the words he was speaking. Nor can I, Eleanor. That's the worst of all, or would be so if there were no remedy. I have thought much of all this since we were together last night. And he came and sat beside her and put his arm around her waist as he had done then. I have thought much of what the Archdeacon has said, and of what this paper says, and I do believe I have no right to be here. No right to be warden of the hospital, Papa? No right to be warden with eight hundred a year. No right to be warden with such a house as this. No right to spend in luxury, money that was intended for charity. Mr. Bold may do as he pleases about his suit, but I hope he will not abandon it for my sake. Poor Eleanor. This was hard upon her. Was it for this she had made her great resolve? For this that she had laid aside her quiet demeanor and taken upon her the rants of a tragedy heroine. One may work and not for thanks, but yet feel hurt and not receiving them. And so it was with Eleanor. One may be disinterested in one's good actions, and yet feel discontented that they are not recognized. Charity may be given with the left hand so privily that the right hand does not know it, and yet the left hand may regret to feel that it has no immediate reward. Eleanor had had no wish to burden her father with a weight of obligation, and yet she had looked forward to much delight from the knowledge that she had freed him from his sorrows. Now such hopes were entirely over. All that she had done was of no avail. She'd humbled herself to bold in vain. The evil was utterly beyond her power to cure. She had thought also how gently she would whisper to her father all that her lover had said to her about herself, and how impossible she had found it to reject him, and then she had anticipated her father's kindly kiss and close embrace as he gave his sanction to her love. Alas, she could say nothing of this now. In speaking of Mr. Bold, her father put him aside, as one whose thoughts and sayings and acts could be of no moment. Gentle reader, did you ever feel yourself snubbed? Did you ever, when thinking much of your own importance, find yourself suddenly reduced to a non-entity? Such was Elinor's feeling now. They shall not put forward this plea on my behalf, continued the Warden. Whatever may be the truth of the matter, that at any rate is not true. And the man who wrote that article is right in saying that such a plea is revolting to an honest mind. I will go up to London, my dear, and see these lawyers myself, and if no better excuse can be made for me than that, I in the hospital will part. But the Archdeacon, Papa, I can't help it, my dear. There are some things which a man cannot bear. I cannot bear that. And he put his hand upon the newspaper. But will the Archdeacon go with you? To tell the truth, Mr. Harding had made up his mind to steal a march upon the Archdeacon. He was aware that he could take no steps without informing his dread son-in-law, but he had resolved that he would send out a note to Plumstead Episcopie detailing his plans, but that the messenger should not leave Barchester till he himself had started for London, so that he might be a day before the doctor, who he had no doubt would follow him. In that day, if he had any luck, he might arrange it all. He might explain to Sir Abraham that he, as Warden, would have nothing further to do with the defense about to be set up. He might send in his official resignation to his friend, the bishop, and so make public the whole transaction, that even the doctor would not be able to undo what he had done. He knew too well the doctor's strength and his own weakness to suppose he could do this if they both reached London together. Indeed, he would never be able to get to London if the doctor knew of his intended journey and time to prevent it. No, I think not, said he. I think I shall start before the Archdeacon could be ready. I shall go early tomorrow morning. That will be best, Papa, said Eleanor, showing that her father's runes was appreciated. Why, yes, my love, the fact is I wish to do all this before the Archdeacon can can interfere. There's a great deal of truth in all he says. He argues very well, and I can't always answer him. But there is an old saying, Nelly. Everyone knows where his own shoe pinches. He'll say that I want moral courage and strength of character and power of endurance, and it's all true, but I'm sure I ought not to remain here if I have nothing better to put forward than a quibble. So, Nelly, we shall have to leave this pretty place. Eleanor's face brightened up as she assured her father how cordially she agreed with him. True, my love, said he, now again quite happy and at ease in his manner. What good to us is this place, or all the money, if we are to be ill-spoken of. Oh, Papa, I'm so glad. My darling child, it did cost me a paying at first, Nelly, to think that you should lose your pretty drawing-room and your ponies and your garden. The garden will be the worst of all. But there is a garden at Crabtree, a very pretty garden. Crabtree Parvo was the name of the small living which Mr. Harding had held as a minor cannon, and which still belonged to him. It was only worth some 80 pounds a year, and a small house and gleeb, all of which were now handed over to Mr. Harding's curate, but it was to Crabtree gleeb that Mr. Harding thought of retiring. This parish must not be mistaken for that other living. Crabtree Canonicorum, as it is called. Crabtree Canonicorum is a very nice thing. There are only 200 parishioners, there are 400 acres of gleeb, and the great and small tithes, which both go to the rector, are worth 400 pounds a year more. Crabtree Canonicorum is the gift of the dean in chapter, and is at this time possessed by the honorable and reverent Dr. Vessie Stanhope, who also fills the prebendal stall of goose gorge in Barchester chapter, and holds the United Rectory of Eiderdown and Stogpingum, or Stoke Pinkwem, as it should be written. This is the same Dr. Vessie Stanhope, whose hospitable villa on the Lake of Como is so well known to the elite of English travelers, and whose collection of lombard butterflies is supposed to be unique. Yes, said the warden musing. There's a very pretty garden at Crabtree, but I shall be sorry to disturb poor Smith. Smith was the curate of Crabtree, a gentleman who is maintaining a wife and half a dozen children on the income arising from his profession. Eleanor assured her father that as far as she was concerned she could leave her house and her ponies without a single regret. She was only so happy that he was going, going where he would escape all this dreadful turmoil. But we will take the music, my dear. And so they went on planning their future happiness and plotting how they would arrange it all without the interposition of the Archdeacon. And at last they again became confidential, and then the warden did thank her for what she had done. And Eleanor, lying on her father's shoulder, did find an opportunity to tell her secret. And the father gave his blessing to his child and said that the man whom she loved was honest, good, and kind-hearted and right-thinking in the main, one who wanted only a good wife to put him quite upright. A man, my love, he ended by saying, to whom I firmly believe that I can trust my treasure with safety. But what will Dr. Grantley say? Well, my dear, it can't be helped. We shall be out at Crabtree then. And Eleanor ran upstairs to prepare her father's clothes for his journey. And the warden returned to his garden to make his last adieu to every tree and shrub and shady nook that he knew so well. End of Chapter 13 Recording by Jessica Louise, St. Paul, Minnesota Chapter 14 of The Warden This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. The Warden by Anthony Trollope Chapter 14 Mount Olympus Wretched in spirit, groaning under the feeling of insult, self-condemning, and ill-satisfied in every way, bold return to his London lodgings. Ill as he had fared in his interview with the Archdeacon, he was not the less under the necessity of carrying out his pledge to Eleanor, and he went about his ungracious task with a heavy heart. The attorneys whom he had employed in London received his instructions with surprise and evident misgiving. However, they could only obey and mutter something of their sorrow that such heavy costs should only fall upon their own employer, especially as nothing was wanting but perseverance to throw them on the opposite party. Bold left the office bed early so much frequented, shaking the dust from off his feet, and before he was down the stairs an edict had already gone forth for the preparation of the bill. He next thought of the newspapers. The case had been taken up by more than one, and he was well aware that the keynote had been sounded by the Jupiter. He had been very intimate with Tom Towers, and had often discussed with him the affairs of the hospital. Bold could not say that the articles in that paper had been written at his own instigation. He did not even know as a fact that they had been written by his friend. Tom Towers had never said that such a view of the case or such a side in the dispute would be taken by the paper with which he was connected. Very discreet in such matters was Tom Towers and altogether indisposed to talk loosely of the concerns of that mighty engine of which it was his high privilege to move in secret some portion. Nevertheless, Bold believed that to him were owing those dreadful words which had caused such panic at Barchister, and he conceived himself bound to prevent their repetition. With this view he betook himself from the attorney's office to that laboratory where with amazing chemistry Tom Towers compounded thunderbolts for the destruction of all that is evil and for the furtherance of all that is good in this and other hemispheres. Who has not heard of Mount Olympus, that high abode of all the powers of type that favored seat of the great goddess Pica, that wondrous habitation of gods and devils, from whence with ceaseless hum of steam and never-ending flow of castellan ink, issue forth fifty thousand nightly edicts for the governance of a subject nation. Velvet and gilding do not make a throne, nor gold and jewels a scepter. It is a throne because the most exalted one sits there and a scepter because the most mighty one wields it. So it is with Mount Olympus. Should a stranger make his way thither at dull noonday, or during the sleepy hours of the silent afternoon, he would find no acknowledged temple of power and beauty no fitting feign for the great thunderer, no proud facades and pillared roofs to support the dignity of this greatest of earthly patentates. To the outward and uninitiated eye Mount Olympus is a somewhat humble spot, undistinguished unadorned, nay almost mean. It stands alone as it were in a mighty city, close to the densest throng of men, but partaking neither of the noise nor the crowd. A small secluded dreary spot, tenanted one would say by quite unambitious people at the easiest rents. Is this Mount Olympus? asks the unbelieving stranger. Is it from these small, dark, dingy buildings that those infallible laws precede which cabinets are called upon to obey? By which bishops are to be guided, lords and commons controlled, judges instructed in law, generals in strategy, admirals in naval tactics and orange women in the management of their barrows. Yes, my friend, from these walls from here issue the only known infallible bulls for the guidance of British souls and bodies. This little court is the Vatican of England. Here reigns a pope, self-nominated, self- consecrated, eye and much stranger to self-believing, a pope whom, if you cannot obey him, I would advise you to disobey as silently as possible. A pope hitherto afraid of no Luther, a pope who manages his own inquisition, who punishes unbelievers as no most skillful inquisitor of Spain ever dreamt of doing, one who can excommunicate thoroughly, fearfully, radically, put you beyond the pale of men's charity, make you odious to your dearest friends and turn you into a monster to be pointed at by the finger. Oh heavens, and this is not Olympus. It is a fact amazing to ordinary mortals that the Jupiter is never wrong. With what endless care, with what unsparing labour do we not strive to get together for our great national council, the men most fitting to compose it? And how we fail? Parliament is always wrong. Look at the Jupiter and see how futile are their meetings, how vain their council, how needless all their work. With what pride do we regard our chief ministers, the great servants of state, the oligarchs of the nation on whose wisdom we lean, to whom we look for guidance in our difficulties? But what are they to the writers of the Jupiter? They hold council together and with anxious thought painfully elaborate their country's good, but when all is done, the Jupiter declares that all is not. Why should we look to Lord John Russell? Why should we regard Gladstone when Tom towers without a struggle can put us right? Look at our generals what faults they make, at our admirals how inactive they are, what money, honesty and science can do is done, and yet how badly are our troops brought together, fed, conveyed, clothed, armed and managed? The most excellent of our good men do their best to man our ships with the assistance of all possible external appliances, but in vain, all, all is wrong, alas, alas, Tom towers and he alone knows all about it. Why oh why ye earthly ministers, why have ye not followed more closely this heaven sent messenger that is among us? Were it not well for us in our ignorance that we confided all things to the Jupiter? Would it not be wise in us to abandon useless talking, idle thinking and labor away with majorities in the house of commons with verdicts from judicial bench given after much delay with doubtful laws on the fallible attempts of humanity? Does not the Jupiter coming forth daily with fifty thousand impressions full of unerring decision on every mortal subject set all matters sufficiently at rest? Is not Tom towers here able to guide us and willing? Yes indeed, able and willing to guide all men in all things so long as he is obeyed as autocrat should be obeyed, with undoubting submission. Only let not ungrateful ministers seek other colleagues than those whom Tom towers may approve. Let church and state, law and physics, commerce and agriculture, the arts of war and the arts of peace all listen and obey and all will be made perfect. Has not Tom towers an all seeing eye? From the diggings of Australia to those of California, right round the habitable globe, does he not know, watch and chronicle the doings of everyone? From a bishopric in New Zealand to an unfortunate director of a Northwest passage is he not the only fit judge of capability? From the sewers of London to the central railway of India from the palaces of St. Petersburg to the cabins of Kanaat, nothing can escape him. Britons have but to read to obey and be blessed. None but the fools doubt the wisdom of the Jupiter, none but the mad dispute its facts. No established religion has ever been without its unbelievers even in the country where it is the most firmly fixed. No creed has been without scoffers, no church has so prospered as to free itself entirely from dissent. There are those who doubt the Jupiter. They live and breathe the upper air, walking here unscathed though scorned, men born of British mothers and nursed on English milk who scruple not to say that Mount Olympus has its price, that Tom towers can be bought for gold. Such is Mount Olympus the mouthpiece of all the wisdom of this great country. It may probably be said that no place in this 19th century is more worthy of notice. No treasure mandate armed with the signatures of all the government has half the power of one of those broadsheets which fly forth from hence so abundantly armed with no signature at all. Some great man, some mighty peer, will say a noble duke, retires to rest feared and honored by all his countrymen, fearless himself if not a good man at any rate a mighty man, too mighty to care much for what men may say about his want of virtue. He rises in the morning degraded, mean and miserable an object of men's scorn anxious only to retire as quickly as may be to some German obscurity, some unseen Italian privacy or indeed anywhere out of sight. What has made this awful change? What has so afflicted him? An article has appeared in the Jupiter. Some fifty lines of a narrow column have destroyed all his grace's equanimity and banished him forever from the world. No man knows who wrote the bitter words. The clubs talk confusedly of the matter whispering to each other this and that name, while Tom Towers walks quietly along Paul Mall with his coat buttoned close against the east wind as though he were a mortal man and not a god dispensing thunderbolts from Mount Olympus. It was not to Mount Olympus that our friend Bold betook himself. He had before now wandered round that lonely spot thinking how grand a thing it was to write articles for the Jupiter considering within himself whether by any stretch of the powers within him he could ever come to such distinction. Wondering how Tom Towers would take any little humble offering of his talents, calculating that Tom Towers himself must have once had a beginning, have once doubted as to his own success. Towers could not have been born a writer in the Jupiter. With such ideas, half ambitious and half awestruck, had Bold regarded the silent looking workshop of the gods, but he had never yet by word or sign attempted to influence the slightest word of his friend. On such a course was he now intent and not without much inward palpitation did he but take himself to the quiet abode of wisdom where Tom Towers was to be found mornings inhaling ambrosia and sipping nectar in the shape of toast and tea. Not far removed from Mount Olympus, but somewhat nearer to the blessed regions of the West, is the most favored abode of Temus. Washed by the rich tide which now passes from the towers of Caesar to Barry's halls of eloquence and again back with new offerings of a city's tribute, from the palaces of peers to the mart of merchants, stand those quiet walls which law has delighted to honor by its presence. What a world within a world is the temple. How quiet are its entangled walks, as someone lately has called them, and yet how close to the densest concourse of humanity, how gravely respectable its sober alleys, though removed but by a single step from the profanity of the strand and the low iniquity of Fleet Street. Old St. Dunston with its bell smiting bludgeners has been removed. The ancient shops with their faces full of pleasant history are passing away one by one. The bar itself is to go, its doom has been pronounced by the Jupiter. Rumor tells us of some huge building that is to appear in these woods dedicated to law, subversive of the courts of Westminster, an antagonistic to the roles and Lincoln's inn, but nothing yet threatens the silent beauty of the temple. It is the medieval court of the metropolis. Here on the choice's spot of this choice ground stands a lofty row of chambers looking obliquely upon the sullied Thames. Before the windows the lawn of the temple garden stretches with that dim yet delicious verger so refreshing to the eyes of Londoners. If doomed to live within the thickest of London's smoke you would surely say that that would be your chosen spot. Yes, you, you whom I now address, my dear middle aged bachelor friend, can nowhere be so well domiciled as here. No one here will ask whether you are out or at home, a loner with friends. Here no sabbiterian will investigate your Sundays. No sensorious landlady will scrutinize your empty bottle. No valetudinarian neighbor will complain of late hours. If you love books, to what place are books so suitable? The whole spot is redolent of topography. Would you worship the Pafian goddess, the groves of Cyprus are not more taciturn than those of the temple? Wit and wine are always here and always together. The revels of the temple are those of polished Greece, where the wildest worshiper of Bacchus never forgot the dignity of the god whom he adored. Where can retirement be so complete as here? Where can you be so sure of all the pleasures of society? It was here that Tom Towers lived and cultivated with eminent success the tenth muse who now governs the periodical press. But let it not be supposed that his chambers were such or so comfortless as are frequently the gaunt of bodes of legal aspirants. Four chairs, a half filled deal bookcase with hangings of dingy green bays an old office table covered with dusty papers, which are not moved once in six months, and an older penbroke brother with rickety legs for all daily uses. A dispatcher for the preparation of lobsters and coffee and an apparatus for the cooking of toast and mutton chops. Such utensils and luxuries as these did not suffice for the well-being of Tom Towers. He indulged in four rooms on the first floor, each of which was furnished, if not with the splendor, with probably more than the comfort of Stafford House. Every addition that science and art have lately made to the luxuries of modern life was to be found there. The room in which he usually sat was surrounded by bookshelves carefully filled, nor was there which was not entitled to its place in such a collection, both by its intrinsic worth and exterior splendor. A pretty portable set of steps in one corner of the room showed that those even on the higher shelves were intended for use. The chamber contained but two works of art. The one, an admirable bust of Sir Robert Peale by power, declared the individual politics of our friend, and the other, a singularly long figure of a female devotee by Millet, told equally plainly the school of art to which he was addicted. This picture was not hung as pictures usually are against the wall. There was no inch of wall vacant for such a purpose. It had a stand or desk erected for its own accommodation, and there on her pedestal, framed and glazed, stood the devotional lady looking intently at a lily as no lady ever looked before. Our modern artist whom we style pre-Raphaelites have delighted to go back, not only to the finish and peculiar manner but also to the subjects of the early painters. It is impossible to give them too much praise for the elaborate perseverance with which they have equaled the minute perfections of the masters from whom they take their inspiration. Nothing probably can exceed the painting of some of these latter day pictures. It is however singular into what faults they fall as regards their subjects. They're not quite content to take the old stock groups, a Sebastian with his arrows, a Lucio with her eyes in a dish, a Lorenzo with a gridiron, or the Virgin with two children. But they are anything but happy in their change. As a rule, no figure should be drawn in a position which it is impossible to suppose any figure should maintain. The patient endurance of Saint Sebastian, the wild ecstasy of Saint John and the wilderness, the maternal love of the Virgin are feelings naturally portrayed by a fixed posture. But the lady with the stiff back and bent neck who looks at her flower and is still looking from hour to hour gives us an idea of pain without grace and abstraction without a cause. It was easy from his rooms to see that Tom Towers was a Siborite though by no means an idle one. He was lingering over his last cup of tea surrounded by an ocean of newspapers through which he had been swimming when John Bold's card was brought in by his tiger. This tiger never knew that his master was at home though he often knew that he was not and thus Tom Towers was never invaded but by his own consent. On this occasion, after twisting the card twice in his fingers, he signified to his attendant imp that he was visible and the inner door was unbolted I have before said that he of the Jupiter and John Bold were intimate. There was no very great difference in their ages for Towers was still considerably under 40 and when Bold had been attending the London hospitals Towers, who was not then the great man that he had since become, had been much with him. Then they had often discussed together the objects of their ambition and future prospects. Then Tom Towers was struggling hard to maintain himself as a briefless barrister by short-hand reporting for any of the papers that would engage him. Then he had not dared to dream of writing leaders for the Jupiter or canvassing the conduct of cabinet ministers. Things had altered since that time. The briefless barrister was still briefless but now he despised briefs. Could he have been sure of a judge's seat he would hardly have left his present career? It is true he wore no ermine bore no outward marks of a world's respect but with what a load of inward importance was he charged. It is true his name appeared in no large capitals on no wall was chalked up Tom Towers forever freedom of the press and Tom Towers but what member of parliament had half his power? It is true that in far-off provinces men did not talk daily of Tom Towers but they said the Jupiter and acknowledged that without the Jupiter life was not worth having. This kind of hidden but still conscious glory suited the nature of the man. He loved to sit silent in a corner of his club and listen to the loud chatterings of politicians and to think how they all were in his power. How he could smite the loudest of them were it worth his while to raise his pen for such a purpose. He loved to watch the great whom he daily wrote and flatter himself that he was greater than any of them. Each of them was responsible to his country. Each of them must answer if inquired into. Each of them must endure abuse with good humor and insolence without anger. But to whom was he Tom Towers responsible? No one could insult him. No one could inquire into him. He could speak out withering words and no one could answer him. Ministers courted him though perhaps they knew not his name. Bishops feared him, judges doubted their own verdicts unless he confirmed them, and generals in their councils of war did not consider more deeply what the enemy would do than what the Jupiter would say. Tom Towers never boasted of the Jupiter. He scarcely ever named the paper even to the most intimate of his friends. He did not even wish to be spoken of as connected with it, but he nevertheless value his privileges or think the less of his own importance. It is probable that Tom Towers considered himself the most powerful man in Europe, and so he walked on from day to day studiously striving to look a man but knowing within his breast that he was a God. End of chapter 14 Recording by Jessica Louise St. Paul, Minnesota Chapter 15 of The Warden This LibriVox recording is in the public domain. The Warden by Anthony Trollop Chapter 15 Tom Towers, Dr. Antiquant and Mr. Sentiment Ah, bold, how are you? You haven't breakfasted? Oh yes, hours ago, and how are you? When one Eskimo meets another, do the two as an invariable rule ask after each other's health? Is it inherent in all human nature to make this obliging inquiry? Did any reader of this tale ever meet any friend or acquaintance without asking some such question and did anyone ever listen to the reply? Sometimes a studiously courteous questioner will show so much thought in the matter is to answer it himself by declaring that had he looked at you, he'd needn't have asked, meaning thereby to signify that you are an absolute personification of health but such persons are only those who premeditate small effects. I suppose you're busy, inquired bold. Why yes, rather, or I should say rather not. If I have a leisure hour in the day, this is it. I want to ask if you can oblige me in a certain matter. Towers understood in a moment from the tone of his friend's voice that the certain matter referred to the newspaper. He smiled and nodded his head but made no promise. You know this lawsuit that I've been engaged in, said bold. Tom Towers intimated that he was aware of the action which was pending about the hospital. Well, I've abandoned it. Tom Towers merely raised his eyebrows, thrust his hands into his trousers' pockets and waited for his friend to proceed. Yes, I've given it up. I needn't trouble you with all the history but the fact is that the conduct of Mr. Harding Mr. Harding is the oh yes, the master of the place the man who takes all the money and does nothing, said Tom Towers interrupting him. Well, I don't know about that but his conduct in the matter has been so excellent, so little selfish, so open that I cannot proceed in the matter to his detriment. Bold's heart misgave him as to Eleanor as he said this and yet he felt that what he said was not untrue. I think nothing should now be done until the warden should be vacant. I'd be filled again, said Towers, as it certainly would before anyone heard of the vacancy and the same objection would again exist. It's an old story that of the vested rights of the incumbent, but suppose the incumbent has only a vested wrong and that the poor of the town have a vested right if they only knew how to get at it. Is not that something the case here? Bold couldn't deny it, but thought it was one of those cases which required a good deal of management before any real good could be done. It was a pity that he had not considered this before he crept into the lion's mouth in the shape of an attorney's office. It will cost you a good deal, I fear, said Towers. A few hundreds, said Bold. Perhaps three hundred. I can't help that and I'm prepared for it. It's quite philosophical. It's quite refreshing to hear a man talking of his hundreds in so purely indifferent a manner. But I'm sorry you're giving the matter up, it injures a man to commence a thing of this kind and not carry it through. Have you seen that? And he threw a small pamphlet across the table which was all but damp from the press. Bold had not seen it nor heard of it, but he was well acquainted with the author of it, a gentleman who knew of all things in these modern days, had been a good deal talked about of late. Dr. pessimist Antekent was a Scotchman who had passed a great portion of his early days in Germany. He'd studied there with much effect and had learnt to look with German subtlety into the root of things and to examine for himself their intrinsic worth and worthlessness. No man ever resolved more bravely than he to accept as good nothing that was evil, to banish from him his evil nothing that was good. It is a pity that he should not have recognized the fact that in this world no good is unalloyed, and that there is but little evil that has not in it some seed of what is goodly. Returning from Germany he had astonished the reading public by the vigor of his thoughts put forth in the quaintest language. He cannot write English, said the critics. No matter, said the public, he does write and that without yawning. And so Dr. pessimist Antekent became popular. Popularity spoiled him for all further real use as it has done many another. While with some diffidence he confined his objugations to the occasional follies or shortcomings of mankind. While he ridiculed the energy of the squire devoted to the slaughter of partridges or the mistake of some noble patron who turned a poet into a gager of beer barrels, it was all the well. We were glad to be told our faults and to look forward to the coming millennium when all men, having sufficiently studied the works of Dr. Antekent would become truthful and energetic. But the doctor mistook the signs of the times and the minds of the men instituted himself sensor of things in general and began the great task of reprobating everything in everybody without further promise than any millennium at all. This was not so well and to tell the truth our author did not succeed in his undertaking. His theories were all beautiful and the coat of morals that he taught us certainly an improvement on the practices of the age. We all of us could and many of us did learn much from the doctor while he chose to remain vague, mysterious and cloudy. But when he became practical the charm was gone. His allusion to the poet and the partridges was received very well. Oh my poor brother, said he slaughtered partridges a score of brace to each gun and poets gauging ale barrels with sixty pounds a year at Dumfries are not the signs of a great era perhaps of the smallest possible era yet written of. Whatever economies we pursue political or other let us see at once that this is the maddest of the uneconomic. Partridges killed by our land magnates at shall we say a guinea ahead to be retailed in Leadenhal at one shelling in ninepence with one poacher in limbo for every fifty birds. Our poet, maker, creator gauging ale and that badly with no leisure for making or creating only a little leisure for drinking and such like beer barrel avocations. Truly a cutting of blocks with fine razors while we scrape our trins so uncomfortably with rusty knives. Oh my political economist master of supply and demand division of labor and high pressure. Oh my loud speaking friend tell me if so much be in you what is the demand for poets in these kingdoms of Queen Victoria and what the vouchsafed supply. This was all very well this gave us some hope. We might do better with our next poet when we got one and though the partridges might not be abandoned something could perhaps be done as to the poachers. We were unwilling however to take lessons in politics from so misty a professor and when he came to tell us that the heroes of Westminster were not we began to think that he had written enough. His attack upon dispatch boxes was not thought to have much in it but as it is short the doctor shall again be allowed to speak his sentiments. Could utmost ingenuity in the management of red tape avail anything to men lying gasping. We may say all but dead. Could dispatch boxes with never so much velvet lining in Chubb's patent be of comfort to a people in extremis. I also with so many others would with parched tongue call on the name of Lord John Russell or my brother at your advice on Lord Aberdeen or my cousin on Lord Derby at yours being with my parched tongue indifferent to such matters to all one. Oh Derby oh Gladstone oh Palmerston oh Lord John each comes running with serene face in dispatch box vain physicians though there were hosts of such no dispatch box will cure this disorder. What are there other doctors new names disciples who have not burdened their souls with tape or let us call again Oh Disraeli great oppositionist man of the bitter brow or Oh Molesworth great reformer thou who promises utopia they come each with that serene face and each alas me alas my country each with a dispatch box Oh the serenity of Downing Street my brothers when hope was over on the battlefield when no chance of victory remained the ancient Roman could hide his face within his toga and die gracefully. Can you and I do so now? If so we're best for us if not oh my brothers we must die disgracefully for hope of life and victory I see none left to us in this world below I for one cannot trust much to serene face and dispatch box. There might be truth in this there might be depth reasoning but Englishman did not see enough in the argument to induce them to withdraw their confidence from the present arrangements of the government and Dr. Antikin's monthly pamphlet on the decay of the world did not receive so much attention as his earlier works. He did not confine himself to politics in these publications but roamed at large over all matters of public interest and found everything bad. According to him nobody was true and not only nobody but nothing. A man could not take off his hat to a lady without telling a lie. The lady would lie again in smiling. The ruffles of the gentleman's shirt would be fraught with deceit and the lady's flounces full of falsehood. Was ever anything more severe than that attack of his on chip bonnets or the anathemas with which he endeavored to dust the powder out of the bishop's wigs? The pamphlet which Tom Towers now pushed across the table was entitled Modern Charity and was written with the view of proving how much in the way of charity was done by our predecessors, how little by the present age, and it ended by a comparison between ancient and modern times very little to the credit of the latter. Look at this, said Towers, getting up and turning over the pages of the pamphlet and pointing to a passage near the end. Your friend the Warden, who is so little selfish, won't like that, I fear. Bold red as follows. Heaven's what a sight. Let us with eyes wide open see the godly man of four centuries since, the man of the dark ages. Let us see how he does his godlike work, and again how the godly man of these latter days does his. Shall we say that the former is one walking painfully through the world, regarding as a prudent man his worldly work, prospering in it as a diligent man will prosper, but always with an eye to that better treasure to which thieves do not creep in? Is there not much nobility in that old man, as leaning on his oaken staff he walks down the high street of his native town, and receives from all courteous salutation and acknowledgement of his worth? A noble old man, my longest inhabitants of Belgrade Square and such like vicinity, a very noble old man, though employed no better than in the wholesale carding of wool. This carding of wool, however, did in those days bring with it much profit, so that our ancient friend, when dying, was declared in whatever slang then prevailed to cut up exceeding well. For sons and daughters there was ample sustenance with the assistance of due industry, for friends and relatives some relief for grief at this great loss, for aged dependence comfort in declining years. This was much for one old man to get done in that dark fifteenth century, but this was not all. Coming generations of poor wool carders should bless the name of this rich one, and a hospital should be founded and endowed with his wealth for the feeding of such of the trade as could not by diligent carding any longer dually feed themselves. It was thus that an old man in the fifteenth century did his godlike work to the best of his power and not ignoble as appears to me. We will now take our godly man of latter days. He shall no longer be a wool carder for such are not now men of mark. We will suppose him to be one of the best of the good, one who has lacked no opportunities. Our old friend was after all, but literate. Our modern friend shall be a man educated in all seemingly knowledge. He shall in short be that blessed being, a clergyman of the Church of England. And now in what perfectest manner does he in this lower world get his godlike work done and put out of hand? Heavens in the strangest of manners. Oh my brother, in a manner not at all to be believed, but by the most minute testimony of eyesight. He does it by the magnitude of his appetite by the power of his gorge. His only occupation is to swallow the bread prepared with so much anxious care for these impoverished carders of wool. That and to sing indifferently through his nose once in the week, some saw more or less long, the shorter the better we should be inclined to say. Oh my civilized friends, great Britons that never will be slaves, men advanced to infinite state of freedom and knowledge of good and evil. Tell me, will you, what becoming monument you will erect to a highly educated clergyman of the Church of England? Bould certainly thought that his friend would not like that. He could not conceive anything that he would like less than this. To what world of toil and trouble had he Bould advised by his indiscreet attack upon the hospital? You see, said towers, that this affair has been much talked of and the public are with you. I'm sorry you should give the matter up. Have you seen the first number of the Alms House? No, Bould had not seen the Alms House. He'd seen advertisements of Mr. Popular Sentiment's new novel of that name, but he had in no way connected it with Barchester Hospital and had never thought a moment about the subject. As a direct attack on the whole system, said towers, it'll go a long way to put down Rochester and Barchester and Dilwich and St. Cross and all such hot beds of peculation. It's very clear that Sentiment has been down to Barchester and got up the whole story there. Indeed, I thought he must have had it all from you. It's very well done as you'll see, his first numbers always are. Bould declared that Mr. Sentiment had got nothing from him and that he was deeply grieved to find that the case had become so notorious. The fire has gone too far to be quenched, said towers. The building must go now and as the timbers are all rotten, why I should be inclined to say the sooner the better. I expect to see you get some acla in the matter. This was all Wormwood to Bould. He had done enough to make his friend miserable for life and had then backed out just when the success of his project was sufficient to make the question one of real interest. How weekly he had managed his business. He'd already done the harm and then stayed his hand when the good which he had in view was to be commenced. How delightful would it have been to have employed all his energy in such a cause to have been backed by the Jupiter and written up to by two of the most popular authors of the day. The idea opened a view into the very world in which he wished to live. To what might it not have given rise? What delightful intimacies, what public praise to what Athenian banquets and rich flavor of Attic's salt. This however was now past hope. He had pledged himself to abandon the cause and could he have forgotten the pledge he had gone too far to retreat? He was now this moment sitting in Tom Tower's room with the object of deprecating any further articles in the Jupiter and greatly as he disliked the job his petition to that effect must be made. I couldn't continue it said he because I found I was in the wrong. Tom Tower shrugged his shoulders. How could a successful man be in the wrong? In that case said he of course you must abandon it. And I called this morning to ask you also to abandon it said bold. To ask me said Tom Tower's with the most placid of smiles and a consummate look of gentle surprise as though Tom Tower's was well aware that he of all men was the last to meddle in such matters. Yes said bold almost trembling with hesitation. The Jupiter you know has taken up the matter very strongly. Mr. Harding has felt what it has said deeply and I thought that if I could explain to you that he personally has not been to blame these articles might be discontinued. How calmly impassive was Tom Tower's face as this innocent little proposition was made. Had bold addressed himself to the doorposts in Mount Olympus they would have shown as much outward sign of ascent or descent. His quiescence was quite admirable his discretion certainly more than human. My dear fellow said he when bold had quite done speaking I really cannot answer for the Jupiter. But if you saw that those articles were unjust I think that you would endeavor to put a stop to them. Of course nobody doubts that you could if you chose. Nobody and everybody are always very kind but unfortunately are generally very wrong. Come come towers said bold plucking up his courage and remembering that for Eleanor's sake he was bound to make his best exertion. I have no doubt in my own mind but that you wrote the articles yourself and very well written they were it will be a great favor if you will in future abstain from any personal allusion to poor Harding. My dear bold said Tom Towers I have a sincere regard for you I've known you for many years and value your friendship. I hope you will let me explain to you without offense that none who are connected with the public press can with propriety listen to interference. Interference said bold I don't want to interfere Ah but my dear fellow you do what else is it you think that I'm able to keep certain remarks out of a newspaper. Your information is probably incorrect as most public gossip on such subject is but at any rate you think I have such power and you ask me to use it now that is interference well if you choose to call it so and now suppose for a moment that I had this power and used it as you wish isn't it clear that it would be a great abuse when men are employed in writing for the public press and if they are induced to either write or to abstain from writing by private motives surely the public press would soon be of little value look at the recognized worth of different newspapers and see if it does not mainly depend on the assurance which the public feel that such a paper is or is not independent you alluded to the Jupiter surely you cannot but see that the weight of the Jupiter is too great to be moved by any private request even though it should be made to a much more influential person than myself you've only to think of this and you'll see that I'm right the discretion of Tom Towers was boundless there was no contradicting what he said no arguing against such propositions he took such high ground that there was no getting on to it the public is defrauded said he whenever considerations are allowed to have weight quite true thou greatest oracle of the middle of the 19th century, thou sententious proclamer of the purity of the press the public is defrauded when it is purposely misled poor public how often is it misled against what a world of fraud has it to contend bold took his leave and got out of the room as quickly as he could denouncing his friend Tom Towers as a prig and a humbug I know he wrote those articles said bold to himself I know he got his information from me he was ready enough to take my word for gospel when it suited his own views and to set Mr. Harding up before the public as an imposter on no other testimony than my chanced conversation but when I offer him real evidence opposed to his own views he tells me that private motives are detrimental to public justice confound his arrogance what is any public question but a conglomeration of private interests what is any newspaper article but an expression of the views taken by one side truth it takes an age to ascertain the truth of any question the idea of Tom Towers talking of public motives in purity of purpose why it wouldn't give him a moments uneasiness to change his politics tomorrow if the paper required it such were John Bold's inward exclamations as he made his way out of the quiet labyrinth of the temple and yet there was no position of worldly power so coveted in Bold's ambition as that held by the man of whom he was thinking it was the impregnability of the place which made Bold so angry with the possessor of it and it was the same quality which made it appear so desirable passing into the strand he saw in a booksellers window an announcement of a number of the alms house so he purchased a copy and hurrying back to his lodgings proceeded to ascertain what Mr. popular sentiment had to say to the public on the subject which had lately occupied so much of his own attention in former times great objects were attained by great work when evils were to be reformed reformers set about their heavy task with grave decorum and laborious argument occupied improving a grievance and philosophical researches were printed in folio pages which it took a life to write and an eternity to read we get on now with a lighter step and quicker ridicule is found to be more convincing than argument imaginary agonies touch more than true sorrows and monthly novels convince when learned quartos fail to do so if the world is to be set right and the world is to be rebelling numbers of all such reformers Mr. sentiment is the most powerful it is incredible the number of evil practices he has put down it is to be feared he will soon lack subjects and that when he has made the working class as comfortable and got bitter beer put into proper sized pint bottles there will be nothing further for him left to do Mr. sentiment is certainly a very good poor people are so very good his hard rich people so very hard and then genuinely honest so very honest Nambi Pambi in these days is not thrown away if it be introduced in the proper quarters divine pierces are no longer interesting though possessed of every virtue but a pattern peasant or in immaculate manufacturing hero may talk as much twiddle as one of Mr. Ratcliffe's heroines and still be listened to perhaps however Mr. sentiment's great attraction is in his second rate characters if his heroes and heroines walk upon stilts as heroes and heroines I fear ever must their attendant satellites are as natural as though one met them in the street they walk and talk like men and women and live among our friends a rattling lively life yes live and will live till the names of their calling shall be forgotten your own and bucket and Mrs. Gamp will be the only words left to us to signify a detective police officer or a monthly nurse the alms house opened with a scene in a clergyman's house every luxury to be purchased by wealth was described as being there all the appearances of household indulgence generally found amongst the most self-indulgent of the rich were crowded into this abode here the reader was introduced to the demon of the book the methodophiles of the drama what story was ever written without a demon what novel, what history, what work of any sort what world would be perfect without existing principles both of good and evil the demon in the alms house was the clerical owner of this comfortable abode he was a man well stricken in years but still strong to do evil he was one who looked cruelly out of a hot, passionate bloodshot eye who had a huge red nose with a carbuncle thick lips and great double flabby chin which swelled out into solid substance like a turkey cox comb when sudden anger inspired him he had a hot furrowed low brow from which a few grizzled hairs were not yet rubbed off by the friction of this handkerchief he wore a loose unstarched white handkerchief black loose ill made clothes and huge loose shoes adapted to many corns and various bunions his husky voice told tales of much daily port wine and his language was not so decorous as became a clergyman such was the master of Mr. Sentiment's alms house he was a widower but at present accompanied by two daughters and a thin and somewhat insipid curate one of the young ladies was devoted to her father in the fashionable world and she of course was the favorite the other was equally addicted to puseism and the curate the second chapter of course introduced the reader to the more special inmates of the hospital here were discovered eight old men and it was given to be understood that four vacancies remained unfilled through the perverse ill nature of the clerical gentleman with the double chin the state of these eight poppers was touchingly dreadful six pence farthing a day had been sufficient for their diet when the alms house was founded and on six pence farthing a day were they still doomed to starve though food was four times as dear and money four times as plentiful it was shocking to find out the conversation of these eight starved old men in their dormitory shamed that of the clergyman's family in this rich drawing room the absolute words they uttered were not perhaps spoken in the purest English and it might be difficult to distinguish from their dialect to what part of the country they belonged the beauty of the sentiment however amply atoned for the imperfection of the language and it was really a pity that these eight old men could not be sent through the country as moral missionaries instead of being immured and starved in that way bold finished the number and as he threw it aside he thought that that at least had no direct appliance to Mr. Harding and that the absurdly strong coloring of the picture would disenable the work from doing either good or harm he was wrong the artist who paints for the million must use glaring colors as no one knew better than Mr. sentiment when he described the inhabitants of his alms house the radical reform which has now swept over such establishments has owed more to the twenty numbers of Mr. Sentiment's novel than to all the true complaints which have escaped from the public for the last half century End of Chapter 15 Recording by Jessica Louise St. Paul, Minnesota