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The Last Chronicle of Barset by Anthony Trollope - CHAPTER XLIX

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The Last Chronicle of Barset

CHAPTER XLIX

NEAR THE CLOSE

I won­der whether any­one will read these pages who has nev­er known any­thing of the bit­ter­ness of a fam­ily quar­rel? If so, I shall have a read­er very for­tu­nate, or else very cold-​blood­ed. It would be wrong to say that love pro­duces quar­rels; but love does pro­duce those in­ti­mate re­la­tions of which quar­relling is too of­ten one of the con­se­quences–one of the con­se­quences which fre­quent­ly seem to be so nat­ural, and some­times seem to be un­avoid­able. One broth­er re­bukes the oth­er–and what broth­ers ev­er lived to­geth­er be­tween whom there is no such re­buk­ing?–then some warm word is mis­un­der­stood and hot­ter words fol­low and there is a quar­rel. The hus­band tyr­an­nizes, know­ing that it is his du­ty to di­rect, and the wife dis­obeys, or on­ly par­tial­ly obeys, think­ing that a lit­tle in­de­pen­dence will be­come her–and so there is a quar­rel. The fa­ther, anx­ious on­ly for his son’s good, looks in­to that son’s fu­ture with oth­er eyes than those of his son him­self–and so there is a quar­rel. They come very eas­ily these quar­rels, but the quit­tance from them is some­times ter­ri­bly dif­fi­cult. Much of thought is nec­es­sary be­fore the an­gry man can re­mem­ber that he too in part may have been wrong; and any at­tempt at such think­ing is al­most be­yond the pow­er of him who is care­ful­ly nurs­ing his wrath, let it cool! But the nurs­ing of such quar­relling kills all hap­pi­ness. The very man who is nurs­ing his wrath lest it cool–his wrath against one whom he loves per­haps the best of all whom it has been giv­en to him to love–is him­self wretched as long as it lasts. His anger poi­sons ev­ery plea­sure of his life. He is sullen at his meals, and can­not un­der­stand his book as he turns the pages. His work, let it be what it may, is ill done. He is full of his quar­rel–nurs­ing it. He is telling him­self how much he has loved that wicked one, and that now that wicked one is re­pay­ing him sim­ply with wicked­ness! And yet the wicked one is at that very mo­ment dear­er to him than ev­er. If that wicked one would on­ly be for­giv­en how sweet would be the world again! And yet he nurs­es his wrath.

So it was in these days with Archdea­con Grant­ly. He was very an­gry with his son. It is hard­ly too much to say that in ev­ery mo­ment of his life, whether wak­ing or sleep­ing, he was think­ing of the in­jury his son was do­ing him. He had al­most come to for­get the fact that his anger had been first roused by the feel­ing that his son was about to do him­self an in­jury–to cut his own throat. Var­ious oth­er con­sid­er­ations had now added them­selves to that, and filled not on­ly his mind but his dai­ly con­ver­sa­tion with his wife. How ter­ri­ble would be the dis­grace to Lord Hartle­top, how in­cur­able the in­jury to Grisel­da, the mar­chioness, should the broth­er-​in-​law of the one, and the broth­er of the oth­er, mar­ry the daugh­ter of a con­vict­ed thief! Of him­self he would say noth­ing. So he de­clared con­stant­ly, though of him­self he did say a great deal. Of him­self he would say noth­ing, though of course such a mar­riage would ru­in him in the coun­ty. ‘My dear,’ said his wife, ‘that is non­sense. That is re­al­ly non­sense. I feel sure there is not a sin­gle per­son in the coun­ty who would think of the mar­riage in such a light.’ Then the archdea­con would have quar­relled with his wife, too, had she not been too wise to ad­mit such a quar­rel. Mrs Grant­ly was very wise and knew that it took two per­sons to make a quar­rel. He told her over and over again that she was in league with her son–that she was en­cour­ag­ing her son to mar­ry Grace Craw­ley. ‘I be­lieve that in your heart you wish it,’ he once said to her. ‘No, my dear, I do not wish it. I do not think it a be­com­ing mar­riage. But if he does mar­ry her, I should wish to re­ceive his wife in my house and cer­tain­ly would not quar­rel with him.’ ‘I will nev­er re­ceive her,’ the archdea­con had replied; ‘and as for him, I can on­ly say that in such a case I will make no pro­vi­sion for his fam­ily.’

It will be re­mem­bered that the archdea­con had on a for­mer oc­ca­sion in­struct­ed his wife to write to their son and tell him of his fa­ther’s de­ter­mi­na­tion. Mrs Grant­ly had so ma­noeu­vred that a lit­tle time had been gained, and that those in­struc­tions had not been in­sist­ed up­on in all their bit­ter­ness. Since that time Ma­jor Grant­ly had re­newed his as­sur­ance that he would mar­ry Grace Craw­ley if Grace Craw­ley would ac­cept him–writ­ing on this oc­ca­sion di­rect to his fa­ther–and had asked his fa­ther whether, in such a case, he was to look for­ward to be dis­in­her­it­ed. ‘It is es­sen­tial that I should know,’ the ma­jor had said, ‘be­cause in such a case I must take im­me­di­ate mea­sures for leav­ing this place.’ His fa­ther had sent back his let­ter, writ­ing a few words at the bot­tom of it. ‘If you do as you pro­pose above, you must ex­pect noth­ing from me.’ The words were writ­ten in large round hand­writ­ing, very hur­ried­ly, and the son when he re­ceived them per­fect­ly un­der­stood the mood of his fa­ther’s mind when he wrote them.

Then there came tid­ings, ad­dressed on this oc­ca­sion to Mrs Grant­ly, that Cos­by Lodge was to be giv­en up. La­dy-​day had come, and the no­tice nec­es­sar­ily to be giv­en at that pe­ri­od, was so giv­en. ‘I know this will grieve you,’ Ma­jor Grant­ly had said, ‘but my fa­ther has driv­en me to it.’ This, in it­self, was a cause of great sor­row, both to the archdea­con and to Mrs Grant­ly, as there were cir­cum­stances con­nect­ed with Cos­by Lodge which made them think that it was a very de­sir­able res­idence for their son. ‘I shall sell ev­ery­thing about the place and go abroad at once,’ he said in a sub­se­quent let­ter. ‘My present idea is that, I shall set­tle my­self at Pau, as my in­come will suf­fice for me to live there, and ed­uca­tion for Edith will be cheap. At any rate I will not con­tin­ue to live in Eng­land. I could nev­er be hap­py here in cir­cum­stance so al­tered. Of course I should not have left my pro­fes­sion, un­less I had un­der­stood from my fa­ther that the in­come aris­ing from it would not be nec­es­sary to me. I do not, how­ev­er, mean to com­plain, but sim­ply to tell you that I shall go.’ There were many let­ters be­tween the moth­er and son in those days.

‘I shall stay till af­ter the tri­al,’ he said. ‘If she will then go with me, well and good; but whether she will or not, I shall not re­main here.’ All this seemed to Mrs Grant­ly to be pe­cu­liar­ly un­for­tu­nate, for had he not re­solved to go, things might even yet have right­ed them­selves. From what she could now un­der­stand of the char­ac­ter of Miss Craw­ley, whom she did not know per­son­al­ly, she thought it prob­able that Grace, in the event of her fa­ther be­ing found guilty by the ju­ry, would ab­so­lute­ly and per­sis­tent­ly refuse the of­fer made to her. She would be too good, as Mrs Grant­ly put it to her­self, to bring mis­ery and dis­grace in­to an­oth­er fam­ily. But should Mr Craw­ley be ac­quit­ted, and should the mar­riage then take place, the archdea­con him­self might prob­ably be got to for­give it. In ei­ther case there would be no ne­ces­si­ty for break­ing up the house at Cos­by Lodge. But her dear son Hen­ry, her best beloved, was ob­sti­nate and stiff-​necked and would take no ad­vice. ‘He is even worse than his fa­ther,’ she said, in her short-​lived anger, to her own fa­ther to whom alone at this time she could un­bur­den her griefs, seek­ing con­so­la­tion and en­cour­age­ment.

It was her habit to go over to the dean­ery at any rate twice a week at this time, and on the oc­ca­sion of one of the vis­its so made, she ex­pressed very strong­ly her dis­tress at the fam­ily quar­rel which had come among them. The old man took his grand­son’s part through and through. ‘I do not at all see why he should not mar­ry the young la­dy if he likes her. As for mon­ey, there ought to be enough with­out his hav­ing to look for a wife with a for­tune.’

‘It is not a ques­tion of mon­ey, pa­pa.’

‘And as to rank,’ con­tin­ued Mr Hard­ing, ‘Hen­ry will not at any rate be go­ing low­er than his fa­ther did when he mar­ried you;–not so low in­deed, for at that time I was on­ly a mi­nor canon, and Mr Craw­ley is in pos­ses­sion of a benefice.’

‘Pa­pa, all this is non­sense. It is in­deed.’

‘Very like­ly, my dear.’

‘It is not be­cause Mr Craw­ley is on­ly per­pet­ual cu­rate of Hog­gle­stock that the archdea­con ob­jects to the mar­riage. It has noth­ing to do with that at all. At the present mo­ment he is in dis­grace.’

‘Un­der a cloud, my dear. Let us pray that it may on­ly be a pass­ing cloud.’

‘All the world thinks that he is guilty. And then he is such a man;–so sin­gu­lar, so un­like any­body else! You know, pa­pa, that I don’t think very much of mon­ey, mere­ly as mon­ey.’

‘I hope not, my dear. Mon­ey is worth think­ing of, but it is not worth very much thought.’

‘But it does give ad­van­tages, and the ab­sence of ad­van­tages must be very much felt in the ed­uca­tion of a girl. You would hard­ly wish Hen­ry to mar­ry a young wom­an who, from the want of mon­ey, had not been brought up among ladies. It is not Miss Craw­ley’s fault, but such has been her lot. We can­not ig­nore these de­fi­cien­cies, pa­pa.’

‘Cer­tain­ly not, my dear.’

‘You would not, for in­stance, wish that Hen­ry should mar­ry a kitchen-​maid.’

‘But is Miss Craw­ley a kitchen-​maid, Su­san?’

‘I don’t quite say that.’

‘I am told that she has been ed­ucat­ed in­finite­ly more than most of the young ladies in the neigh­bour­hood,’ said Mr Hard­ing.

‘You know what I mean, pa­pa. But the fact is, that it is im­pos­si­ble to deal with men. They will nev­er be rea­son­able. A mar­riage such as this would be in­ju­ri­ous to Hen­ry; but it will not be ru­inous; and as to dis­in­her­it­ing him for it, that would be down­right wicked.’

‘I think so,’ said Mr Hard­ing.

‘But the archdea­con will look at it as though it would de­stroy Hen­ry and Edith to­geth­er, while you speak of it as though it were the best thing in the world.’

‘If the young peo­ple love each oth­er, I think it would be the best thing in the world,’ said Mr Hard­ing.

‘But, pa­pa, you can­not but think that his fa­ther’s wish should go for some­thing,’ said Mrs Grant­ly, who, de­sirous as she was on the one side to sup­port her son, could not bear that her hus­band should, on the oth­er side, be de­clared to be al­to­geth­er in the wrong.

‘I do not know, my dear,’ said Mr Hard­ing; ‘but I do think that if the two young peo­ple are fond of each oth­er, and if there is any­thing for them to live up­on, it can­not be right to keep them apart. You know, my dear, she is the daugh­ter of a gen­tle­man.’ Mrs Grant­ly up­on this left her fa­ther al­most brusque­ly, with­out speak­ing an­oth­er word on the sub­ject; for though she was op­posed to the ve­he­ment anger of her hus­band, she could not en­dure the propo­si­tion now made by her fa­ther.

Mr Hard­ing was at this time liv­ing all alone in the dean­ery. For some few years the dean­ery had been his home, and as his youngest daugh­ter was the dean’s wife, there could no more com­fort­able rest­ing-​place for the evening of his life. Dur­ing the last month or two the days had gone te­dious­ly long with him; for he had had the large house all to him­self, and he was a man who did not love soli­tude. It is hard to con­ceive that the old, whose thoughts have been all thought out, should ev­er love to live alone. Soli­tude is sure­ly for the young, who have time be­fore them for the ex­ecu­tion of schemes, and who can, there­fore, take de­light in think­ing. In these days the poor old man would wan­der about the rooms, sham­bling from one cham­ber to an­oth­er, and would feel ashamed when the ser­vants met him ev­er on the move. He would make lit­tle apolo­gies for his un­easi­ness, which they would ac­cept gra­cious­ly, un­der­stand­ing, af­ter a fash­ion, why it was that he was un­easy. ‘He ain’t got noth­ing to do,’ said the house­maid to the cook ‘and as for read­ing, they say that some of the young ones can read all day some­times, and all night too; but bless you, when you’re nigh eighty, read­ing don’t go for much.’ The house­maid was right as to Mr Hard­ing’s read­ing. He was not one who had read so much in his ear­li­er days as to en­able him to make read­ing go far with him now that he was near eighty. So he wan­dered about the room, and sat here for a few min­utes, and there for a few min­utes, and though he did not sleep much, he made the hours of the night as many as pos­si­ble. Ev­ery morn­ing he sham­bled across from the dean­ery to the cathe­dral, and at­tend­ed the morn­ing ser­vice, sit­ting in the stall which he had oc­cu­pied for fifty years. The dis­tance was very short, not ex­ceed­ing, in­deed a hun­dred yards from a side-​door in the dean­ery to an­oth­er side-​door in­to the cathe­dral; but short as it was there had come to be a ques­tion whether he should be al­lowed to go alone. It had been feared that he might fall on his pas­sage and hurt him­self; for there was a step here, and a step there, and the light was not very good in the purlieus of the old cathe­dral. A word or two had been said once, and the of­fer of an arm to help him had been made; but he had re­ject­ed the of­fered as­sis­tance–soft­ly, in­deed, but still firm­ly–and ev­ery day he tot­tered off by him­self hard­ly lift­ing his feet as he went, and aid­ing him­self on his jour­ney by a hand up­on the wall when he thought that no­body was look­ing at him. But many did see him, and they who knew him–ladies gen­er­al­ly of the city–would of­fer him a hand. No­body was milder in his dis­lik­ings than Mr Hard­ing; but there were ladies in Barch­ester up­on whose arm he would al­ways de­cline to lean, bow­ing cour­te­ous­ly as he did so, and say­ing a word or two of con­strained ci­vil­ity. There were oth­ers whom he would al­low to ac­com­pa­ny him home to the door of the dean­ery, with whom he de­light­ed to linger and chat if the morn­ing was warm, and to whom he would tell lit­tle sto­ries of his own do­ings in the cathe­dral ser­vices in the old days, when Bish­op Grant­ly had ruled the dio­cese. Nev­er a word did he say against Bish­op Proudie, or against Bish­op Proudie’s wife; but the many words which he did say in praise of Bish­op Grant­ly–who, by his show­ing, was sure­ly one of the best of church­men who ev­er walked through this vale of sor­row–were as elo­quent in dis­praise of the ex­ist­ing prelate as could ev­er have been any more clear­ly-​point­ed phras­es. This dai­ly vis­it to the cathe­dral, where he would say his prayers as he had said them for so many years, and lis­ten to the or­gan, of which he knew all the pow­er and ev­ery blem­ish as though he him­self had made the stops and fixed the pipes, was the chief oc­cu­pa­tion of his life. It was a pity that it could not have been made to cov­er a larg­er por­tion of his day.

It was some­times sad enough to watch him as he sat alone. He would have a book near him, and for a while would keep it in his hands. It would gen­er­al­ly be some vol­ume of good old stan­dard the­ol­ogy with which he had been, or sup­posed him­self to have been, con­ver­sant from his youth. But the book would soon be laid aside, and grad­ual­ly he would move him­self away from it, and he would stand about the room, look­ing now out of a win­dow from which he would fan­cy that he could not be seen, or gaz­ing up at some print which he had known for years; and then he would sit down for a while in one chair, and for a while in an­oth­er, while his mind was wan­der­ing back in­to the old days, think­ing of old trou­bles and re­mem­ber­ing old joys. And he had a habit, when he was sure that he that he was not watched, of creep­ing up to a great black wood­en case, which al­ways stood in one cor­ner of the sit­ting-​room which he oc­cu­pied in the dean­ery. Mr Hard­ing, when he was younger, had been a per­former on the vi­olon­cel­lo, and in this case there was still the in­stru­ment from which he had been wont to ex­tract the sounds which he had so dear­ly loved. Now in these lat­ter days he nev­er made any at­tempt to play. Soon af­ter he had come to the dean­ery there had fall­en up­on him an ill­ness, and af­ter that he had nev­er again asked for his bow. They who were around him–his daugh­ter chiefly and her hus­band–had giv­en the mat­ter much thought, ar­gu­ing with them­selves whether or no it would be bet­ter to in­vite him to re­sume the task he so loved; for of all the works of his life this play­ing on the vi­olon­cel­lo had been the sweet­est to him; but even be­fore that ill­ness his hand had great­ly failed him, and the dean and Mrs Ara­bin had agreed that it would be bet­ter to let the mat­ter pass with­out a word. He had nev­er asked to be al­lowed to play. He had ex­pressed no re­grets. When he him­self would pro­pose that his daugh­ter should ‘give them a lit­tle mu­sic’–and he would make such a propo­si­tion on ev­ery evening that was suit­able–he would nev­er say a word of those for­mer per­for­mances at which he him­self had tak­en a part. But it had be­come known to Mrs Ara­bin, through the ser­vants, that he had once dragged the in­stru­ment forth from its case when he thought the house to be near­ly de­sert­ed; and a wail of sounds had been heard, very low, very short-​lived, re­cur­ring now and again at fit­ful in­ter­vals. He had at those times at­tempt­ed to play, as though with a muf­fled bow–so that none should know of his van­ity and fol­ly. Then there had been fur­ther con­sul­ta­tions at the dean­ery, and it had been again agreed that it would be best to say noth­ing to him of his mu­sic.

In these lat­ter days of which I am now speak­ing he would nev­er draw the in­stru­ment out of its case. In­deed he was aware that it was too heavy for him to han­dle with­out as­sis­tance. But he would pass his fin­gers among the broad strings, and ev­er and anon would pro­duce from one of them a low, melan­choly, al­most un­earth­ly sound. And then he would pause, nev­er dar­ing to pro­duce such notes in suc­ces­sion–one close up­on the oth­er. And these last sad moans of the old fid­dle were now known through the house­hold. They were the ghosts of the melody of days long past. He imag­ined that his vis­its to the box were un­sus­pect­ed–that none knew of the fol­ly of his old fin­gers which could not keep them­selves from touch­ing the wires; but the voice of the old vi­olon­cel­lo had been recog­nised by the ser­vants and by his daugh­ter, and when that low wail was heard through the house–like the last dy­ing note of a dirge–they would all know that Mr Hard­ing was vis­it­ing his an­cient friend.

When the dean and Mrs Ara­bin had first talked of go­ing abroad for a long vis­it, it had been un­der­stood that Mr Hard­ing should pass the pe­ri­od of their ab­sence with his oth­er daugh­ter at Plum­stead; but when the time came he begged Mrs Ara­bin to be al­lowed to re­main in his old rooms. ‘Of course I shall go back­wards and for­wards,’ he had said. ‘There is noth­ing I like so much as a change now and then.’ The re­sult had been that he had gone once to Plum­stead dur­ing the dean’s ab­sence. When he had thus re­mon­strat­ed, beg­ging go be al­lowed to re­main in Barch­ester, Mrs Ara­bin had de­clared her in­ten­tion of giv­ing up her tour. In telling her fa­ther of this she had not said that her al­tered pur­pose had arisen from her dis­in­cli­na­tion to leave him alone; but he had per­ceived that it was so, and had then con­sent­ed to be tak­en over to Plum­stead. There was noth­ing, he said, which he would like so much as go­ing over to Plum­stead for four or five months. It had end­ed in his hav­ing his own way al­to­geth­er. The Ara­bins had gone up­on their tour, and he was left in pos­ses­sion of the dean­ery. ‘I should not like to die out of Barch­ester,’ he said to him­self in ex­cuse to him­self for his dis­in­cli­na­tion to so­journ long un­der the archdea­con’s roof. But, in truth, the archdea­con, who loved him well and who, af­ter a fash­ion, had al­ways been good to him–who had al­ways spo­ken of the con­nex­ion which had bound the two fam­ilies to­geth­er as the great bless­ing of his life–was too rough in his greet­ings for the old man. Mr Hard­ing had ev­er mixed some­thing of fear with his warm af­fec­tion for his el­der son-​in-​law, and now in these clos­ing hours of his life he could not avoid a cer­tain amount of shrink­ing from that loud voice–a cer­tain in­ap­ti­tude to be quite at ease in that com­mand­ing pres­ence. The dean, his sec­ond son-​in-​law, had been a mod­ern friend in com­par­ison with the archdea­con; but the dean was more gen­tle with him; and then the dean’s wife had ev­er been the dear­est to him of hu­man be­ings. It may be a doubt whether one of the dean’s chil­dren was not now al­most more dear, and whether in these days he did not have more free com­mu­ni­ca­tion with that lit­tle girl than with any oth­er hu­man be­ing. Her name was Su­san, but he had al­ways called her Posy, hav­ing him­self in­vent­ed for her that soubri­quet. When it had been pro­posed to him to pass the win­ter and spring at Plum­stead, the sug­ges­tion had been made al­lur­ing by a promise that Posy al­so should be tak­en to Mrs Grant­ly’s house. But he, as we have seen, re­mained at the dean­ery, and Posy had re­mained with him.

Posy was now five years old, and could talk well, and had her own ideas of things. Posy’s eyes–hers, and no oth­ers be­sides her own–were al­lowed to see the in­hab­itant of the big black case; and now that the dean­ery was so near­ly de­sert­ed, Posy’s fin­gers had touched the strings and had pro­duced an in­fan­tine moan. ‘Grand­pa, let me do it again.’ Twang! It was not, how­ev­er, in truth, a twang, but a sound as of a pro­longed dull, al­most dead­ly, hum-​m-​m-​m-​m! On this oc­ca­sion the moan was not en­tire­ly in­fan­tine–Posy’s fin­gers hav­ing been some­thing too strong–and the case was closed and locked, and grand­pa shook his head.

‘But Mrs Bax­ter won’t be an­gry,’ said Posy. Mrs Bax­ter was the house­keep­er in the dean­ery, and had Mr Hard­ing un­der her es­pe­cial charge.

‘No, my dar­ling; Mrs Bax­ter will not be an­gry, but we mustn’t dis­turb the house.’

‘No,’ said Posy, with much of im­por­tant awe in her tone; ‘we mustn’t dis­turb the house; must we, grand­pa?’ And so she gave in her ad­he­sion to the clos­ing of the case. But Posy could play cat’s-​cra­dle, and as cat’s-​cra­dle did not dis­turb the house at all, there was a good deal of cat’s-​cra­dle played in those days. Posy’s fin­gers were so soft and pret­ty, so small and deft, that the dear old man de­light­ed in tak­ing the strings from them, and in hav­ing them tak­en from his own by those ten­der lit­tle dig­its.

On the af­ter­noon af­ter the con­ver­sa­tion re­spect­ing Grace Craw­ley which is record­ed in the ear­ly part of this chap­ter, a mes­sen­ger from Barch­ester went over to Plum­stead, and part of his mis­sion con­sist­ed of a note from Mrs Bax­ter to Mrs Grant­ly, be­gin­ning ‘Hon­oured Madam,’ and in­form­ing Mrs Grant­ly, among oth­er things, that her ‘re­spect­ed pa­pa’, as Mrs Bax­ter called him, was not quite so well as usu­al; not that Mrs Bax­ter thought that there was much the mat­ter. Mr Hard­ing had been to the cathe­dral ser­vice, as was usu­al with him, but had come home lean­ing on a la­dy’s arm, who had thought it well to stay with him at the door till it had been opened for him. Af­ter that ‘Miss Posy’ had found him asleep, and had been un­able–or if not un­able, un­will­ing, to wake him. ‘Miss Posy’ had come down to Mrs Bax­ter some­what in a fright, and hence this let­ter had been writ­ten. Mrs Bax­ter thought that there was noth­ing ‘to fright’ Mrs Grant­ly, and she wasn’t sure that she should have writ­ten at all on­ly that Dick was bound to go over to Plum­stead with the wool; but as Dick was go­ing, Mrs Bax­ter thought it prop­er to send her du­ty, and to say that to her hum­ble way of think­ing per­haps it might be best that Mr Hard­ing shouldn’t go alone to the cathe­dral in the morn­ing. ‘If the dear rev­erend gen­tle­man was to get a tum­ble, ma’am,’ said the let­ter, ‘it would be awk­ward.’ Then Mrs Grant­ly re­mem­bered that she had left her fa­ther al­most with­out a greet­ing in the pre­vi­ous day, and she re­solved that she would go over very ear­ly on the fol­low­ing morn­ing–so ear­ly that she would be at the dean­ery be­fore her fa­ther should have gone to the cathe­dral.

‘He ought to have come over here. And not stayed there by him­self,’ said the archdea­con, when his wife told him of her in­ten­tion.

‘It is too late to think of that now, my dear; and one can un­der­stand, I think, that he should not like leav­ing the cathe­dral as long as he can at­tend it. The truth is that he does not like be­ing out of Barch­ester.’

‘He would be much bet­ter here,’ said the archdea­con. ‘Of course you can have the car­riage and go over. We can break­fast at eight; and if you can bring him back with you, do. I should tell him that he ought to come.’ Mrs Grant­ly made no an­swer to this, know­ing very well that she could not bring her­self to go be­yond the gen­tlest per­sua­sion with her fa­ther, and on the next morn­ing she was at the dean­ery by ten o’clock. Half-​past ten was the hour at which the ser­vice be­gan. Mrs Bax­ter con­trived to meet her be­fore she saw her fa­ther, and begged her not to let it be known that any spe­cial tid­ings of Mr Hard­ing’s fail­ing strength had been sent from the dean­ery to Plum­stead. ‘And how is my fa­ther?’ asked Mrs Grant­ly. ‘Well, then, ma’am,’ said Bax­ter, ‘in one sense he’s fine­ly. He took a morsel of ear­ly lamb to his din­ner yes­ter­day, and rel­ished it ev­er so well–on­ly he gave Miss Posy the best part of it. And then he sat with Miss Posy quite hap­py for an hour or so. And then he slept in his chair; and you know, ma’am, we nev­er wake him. And af­ter that old Skul­pit tod­dled up from the hos­pi­tal’–this was Hi­ram’s Hos­pi­tal of which es­tab­lish­ment, in the city of Barch­ester, Mr Hard­ing had once been the war­den and kind mas­ter, as has been told in for­mer chron­icles of the city–’and your pa­pa has said, ma’am, you know, that he is al­ways to see any of the old men when they come up. And Skul­pit is sly, and no bet­ter than he should be, and got mon­ey from your fa­ther, ma’am, I know. And then he had just a drop of tea, and af­ter that I took him a glass of port wine with my own hands. And it touched me, ma’am, so it did, when he said, “Oh, Mrs Bax­ter, how good you are; you know well what I like.” And then he went to bed. I lis­tened hard–not from idle cu­rios­ity, ma’am, as you, who know me, will be­lieve, but just be­cause it’s be­com­ing to know what he’s about, as there might be an ac­ci­dent, you know, ma’am.’ ‘You are very good, Mrs Bax­ter, very good.’ ‘Thank ye, ma’am, for say­ing so. And so I lis­tened hard; but he didn’t go to his mu­sic, poor gen­tle­man; and I think he had a qui­et night. He doesn’t sleep much at nights, poor gen­tle­man, but he’s very qui­et; least­wise he was last night.’ This was the bul­letin which Mrs Bax­ter gave Mrs Grant­ly on that morn­ing be­fore Mrs Grant­ly saw her fa­ther.

She found him prepar­ing him­self for his vis­it to the cathe­dral. Some year or two–but no more–be­fore the date of which we are speak­ing, he had still tak­en some small part in the ser­vice; and while he had done so he had of course worn his sur­plice. Liv­ing so close to the cathe­dral–so close that he could al­most walk out of the house in­to the transept–he had kept his sur­plice in his own room, and had gone down in his vest­ment. It had been a bit­ter day to him when he had first found him­self con­strained to aban­don the white gar­ment which he loved. He had en­coun­tered some fail­ure in the per­for­mance of the slight cler­ical task al­lot­ted to him, and the dean had ten­der­ly ad­vised him to de­sist. He did not ut­ter one word of re­mon­strance. ‘It will per­haps be bet­ter,’ the dean had said. ‘Yes–it will be bet­ter,’ Mr Hard­ing had replied. ‘Few have had ac­cord­ed to them the high priv­ilege of serv­ing their Mas­ter in His house for so many years–though few more humbly, or with low­er gifts.’ But on the fol­low­ing morn­ing, and for near­ly a week af­ter­wards, he had been un­able to face the mi­nor canon and the verg­ers, and the old wom­en who knew him so well, in his or­di­nary black gar­ments. At last he went down with the dean, and oc­cu­pied a stall close to the dean’s seat –far away from that which he had sat for so many years–and in this seat he had said his prayers ev­er since that day. And now his sur­plices were washed and ironed and fold­ed and put away; but there were mo­ments in which he would stealthi­ly vis­it them, as he al­so stealthi­ly vis­it­ed his friend in the black wood­en case. This was very melan­choly, and the sad­ness of it was felt by all those who lived with him; but he nev­er al­lud­ed him­self to any of those be­reave­ments which age had brought him. What­ev­er might be his re­grets, he kept them ev­er with­in his own breast.

Posy was with him when Mrs Grant­ly went up in­to his room, hold­ing for him his hat and stick while he was en­gaged in brush­ing a sus­pi­cion of dust from his black gaiters. ‘Grand­pa­pa, here is aunt Su­san,’ said Posy. The old man looked up with some­thing–with some slight­est sign of that ha­bit­ual fear which was al­ways aroused with­in his bo­som by vis­ita­tions from Plum­stead. Had Mrs Ara­bin thor­ough­ly un­der­stood the dif­fer­ence in her fa­ther’s feel­ing to­ward her­self and to­ward her sis­ter, I think she would hard­ly have gone forth up­on any tour while he re­mained with her in the dean­ery. It is very hard some­times to know how in­tense­ly we are loved, and of what val­ue our pres­ence is to those who love us! Mrs Grant­ly saw the look–did not anal­yse it, did not quite un­der­stand it–but felt, as she had of­ten felt be­fore, that it was not al­to­geth­er laden with wel­come. But all this had noth­ing to do with the du­ty on which she had come; nor did it, in the slight­est de­gree, mil­itate against her own af­fec­tion. ‘Pa­pa,’ she said, kiss­ing him, ‘you are sur­prised to see me so ear­ly?’

‘Well, my dear, yes;–but very glad all the same. I hope ev­ery­body is well at Plum­stead?’

‘Ev­ery­body, thank you, pa­pa.’

‘That is well. Posy and I are get­ting ready for church. Are we not, Posy?’

‘Grand­pa­pa is get­ting ready. Mrs Bax­ter won’t let me go.’

‘No, my dear, no–not yet, Posy. When Posy is a great girl she can go to the cathe­dral ev­ery day. On­ly then, per­haps, Posy won’t want to go.’

‘I thought that, per­haps, pa­pa, you would sit with me a lit­tle while this morn­ing, in­stead of go­ing to morn­ing prayers.’

‘Cer­tain­ly, my dear–cer­tain­ly. On­ly I do not like not go­ing;–for who can say how of­ten I may be able to go again? There is so lit­tle time left, Su­san–so very lit­tle left.’

Af­ter that she did not have the heart to ask him to stay, and there­fore she went with him. As they passed down the stairs and out of the doors she was as­ton­ished to find how weak were his foot­steps–how pow­er­less he was against the slight­est mis­ad­ven­ture. On this very day he would have tripped at the up­ward step at the cathe­dral door had she not been with him. ‘Oh, pa­pa,’ she said ‘in­deed, in­deed, you should not come here alone.’ Then he apol­ogised for his lit­tle stum­ble with many words and much shame, as­sur­ing her that any­body might trip on an oc­ca­sion. It was pure­ly an ac­ci­dent; and though it was a com­fort to have had her arm, he was sure that he would have re­cov­ered him­self even had he been alone. He al­ways, he said, kept quite close to the wall, so that there might be no mis­take–no pos­si­bil­ity of an ac­ci­dent. All this he said vol­ubly, but with con­fused words, in the cov­ered stone pas­sage lead­ing in­to the transept. And, as he thus spoke, Mrs Grant­ly made up her mind that her fa­ther should nev­er again go to the cathe­dral alone. He nev­er did go again to the cathe­dral–alone.

When they re­turned to the dean­ery, Mr Hard­ing was flut­tered, weary, and un­well. When his daugh­ter left him for a few min­utes he told Mrs Bax­ter in con­fi­dence of the sto­ry of his ac­ci­dent, and his great grief that his daugh­ter should have seen it. ‘Laws amer­cy, sir, it was a bless­ing she was with you,’ said Mrs Bax­ter; ‘it was, in­deed, Mr Hard­ing.’ Then Mr Hard­ing had been an­gry, and spoke al­most cross­ly to Mrs Bax­ter; but, be­fore she left the room, he found an op­por­tu­ni­ty of beg­ging her par­don–not in a set speech to that ef­fect, but by a lit­tle word of gen­tle kind­ness, which she had un­der­stood per­fect­ly. ‘Pa­pa,’ said Mrs Grant­ly to him as soon as she ha suc­ceed­ed in get­ting both Posy and Mrs Bax­ter out of the room–against the do­ing of which, Mr Hard­ing had ma­noeu­vred with all his lit­tle im­po­tent skill–’Pa­pa, you must promise that you will not go to the cathe­dral again alone, till Eleanor comes home.’ When he heard the sen­tence he looked at her with blank mis­ery in his eyes. He made not at­tempt at re­mon­strance. He begged for no respite. The word had gone forth, and he knew that it must be obeyed. Though he would have hid­den the signs of his weak­ness had he been able, he would not con­de­scend to plead that he was strong. ‘If you think it wrong, my dear, I will not go alone,’ he said. ‘Pa­pa, I do; in­deed I do. Dear pa­pa, I would not hurt you by say­ing it if I did not know that I am right.’ He was sit­ting with his hand up­on the ta­ble, and, as she spoke to him, she put her hand up­on his, ca­ress­ing it. ‘My dear,’ he said, ‘you are al­ways right.’

She left him again for a while, hav­ing some busi­ness out in the city, and he was alone in his room for an hour. What was there left to him now in the world? Old as he was, and in some things al­most child­ish, nev­er­the­less, he thought of this keen­ly, and some half-​re­alised re­mem­brance of the ‘lean and slip­pered pan­taloon’ flit­ted across his mind, caus­ing him a pang. What was there left to him now in the world? Posy and cat’s-​cra­dle! Then, in the midst of his re­grets, as he sat with his back bent in his old easy-​chair, with one arm over the shoul­der of the chair, and the oth­er hang­ing loose by his side, on a sud­den there came across his face a smile as sweet as ev­ery bright­ened the face of man or wom­an. He had been able to tell him­self that he had no ground for com­plaint–great ground rather for re­joic­ing and grat­itude. Had not the world and all in it been good to him; had he not chil­dren who loved him, who had done him hon­our, who had been to him al­ways a crown of glo­ry, nev­er a mark for re­proach; had not his lines fall­en to him in very pleas­ant places; was it not his hap­py fate to go and leave it all amidst the good words and kind lov­ing cares of de­vot­ed friends? Whose lat­ter days had ev­er been more blessed than his? And for the fu­ture–? It was as he thought of this that the smile came across his face–as though it were al­ready the face of an an­gel. And then he mut­tered to him­self a word or two. ‘Lord, now lettest Thou Thy ser­vant de­part in peace. Lord, now lettest Thou Thy ser­vant de­part in peace.’

When Mrs Grant­ly re­turned she found him in jo­cund spir­its. And yet she per­ceived that he was so weak that when he left his chair he could bare­ly get across the room with­out as­sis­tance. Mrs Bax­ter, in­deed, had not sent to her too soon, and it was well that the pro­hi­bi­tion had come in time to pre­vent some ter­ri­ble ac­ci­dent. ‘Pa­pa,’ she said, ‘I think you had bet­ter go with me to Plum­stead. The car­riage is here, and I can take you home so com­fort­ably.’ But he would not al­low him­self to be tak­en on this oc­ca­sion to Plum­stead. He smiled and thanked her, and put his hand in­to hers, and re­peat­ed his promise that he would not leave the house on any oc­ca­sion with­out as­sis­tance, and de­clared him­self spe­cial­ly thank­ful to her for com­ing to him on that spe­cial morn­ing;–but he would not be tak­en to Plum­stead. ‘When sum­mer comes,’ he said, ‘then, if you will have me for a few days!’

He meant no de­ceit, and yet he had told him­self with­in the last hour that he should nev­er see an­oth­er sum­mer. He could not tell even his daugh­ter that af­ter such a life as this, af­ter more than fifty years spent in the min­is­tra­tion of his dar­ling cathe­dral, it spe­cial­ly be­hoved him to die–as he had lived–at Barch­ester. He could not say this to his el­dest daugh­ter; but had his Eleanor been at home, he could have said it to her. He thought he might yet live to see his Eleanor once again. If this could be giv­en to him he would ask for noth­ing more.

On the af­ter­noon of the next day, Mrs Bax­ter wrote an­oth­er let­ter, in which she told Mrs Grant­ly that her fa­ther had de­clared, at his usu­al hour of ris­ing that morn­ing, that he was not go­ing to the cathe­dral, he would, he thought, lie in bed a lit­tle longer. And then he had been in bed the whole day. ‘And per­haps, hon­oured madam, look­ing at all things, it’s best as he should,’ said Mrs Bax­ter.