I. - THE FAMILY BIBLE
There lived a young man at Tregarrick
called Robert Haydon. His father was not a native
of the town, but had settled there early in life and
became the leading solicitor of the place. At
the age of thirty-seven he married the daughter of
a county magistrate, and by this step bettered his
position considerably. By the time that Robert
was born his parents’ standing was very satisfactory.
They were living well inside an income of L1,200 a
year, had about L8,000 (consisting of Mrs. Haydon’s
dowry and Mr. Haydon’s bachelor savings) safely
invested, and were on visiting terms with several of
the lesser county families.
In other respects they were just as
fortunate. They had a sincere affection for each
other, and coincident opinions on the proper conduct
of life. They were people into whose heads a misgiving
seldom or never penetrated. Their religious beliefs
and the path of social duty stood as plain before
them as their front gate and as narrow as the bridge
which Mohammedans construct over hell. They loved
Bob - who of four children was their only
son - and firmly intended to do their best
for him; and as they knew what was best for him, it
followed that Bob must conform. He was a light-coloured,
docile boy, with a pleasantly ingenuous face and an
affectionate disposition; and he loved his parents,
and learned to lean on them.
They sent him in time to Marlborough,
where he wrote Latin verses of slightly unusual merit,
and bowled with a break from the off which meant that
there lay a thin vein of genius somewhere inside of
him. When once collared, his bowling became futile;
success made it deadly, and on one occasion in a school
match against the M.C.C. he did things at Lord’s
which caused a thin gathering of spectators - the
elderly men who never miss a match - to stare
at him very attentively as he returned to the pavilion.
They thought it worth while to ask, “Which ’Varsity
was he bound for?”
Bob was bound for neither. He
had to inherit, and consented to inherit, his father’s
practice without question. His consuming desire
to go up to Oxford he hinted at once, and once only,
in a conversation with his father; but Mr. Haydon
“did not care to expose his son to the temptations
which beset young men at the Universities” - this
was the very text - and preferred to keep
him under his own eye in the seclusion of Tregarrick.
To a young man who is being shielded
from temptation in a small provincial town there usually
happens one of two things. Either he takes to
drink or to discreditable essays in love-making.
It is to Bob’s credit that he did neither; a
certain delicate sanity in the fellow kept him from
these methods of killing time. Instead, he spent
his evenings at home; listened to his parents’
talk; accepted their opinions on human conduct and
affairs; and tumbled honourably into love with his
sisters’ governess.
Ethel Ormiston, the governess, was
about a year older than Bob, good to look at, and
the only being who understood what ailed Bob’s
soul during this time. She was in prison herself,
poor woman. Mrs. Haydon asserted afterwards that
Miss Ormiston had “deliberately set herself
to inveigle” the boy; but herein Mrs. Haydon
was mistaken. As a matter of fact Bob, having
discovered someone obliging and intelligent enough
to listen, dinned the story of his aspirations into
the girl’s ear with the persistent egoism of
a hobbedehoy. It must be allowed, however, that
the counsel she gave him would have annoyed his parents
excessively.
“But I do sympathise with you,”
she said after listening to an immoderately long and
peevish harangue; “and I should advise you to
go to your father, as a first step, and ask to be paid
a very small salary for the work you do - enough
to set up in lodgings alone. At present you are
pauperising yourself.”
Bob did not quite understand - so she explained:
“You are twenty-one, and still
receiving food and lodging from your parents as a
dole. At your age, if a man receives anything
at all from father or mother, he should be earning
it as a right.”
She spoke impatiently, and longed
to add that he was also impoverishing his intellect.
She felt a touch of contempt for him; but a touch
of contempt may go with love, and, indeed, competent
observers have held that this mixture makes the very
finest cement. Certain it is that when Bob answered
pathetically, “But I don’t want to leave
this roof, I - I can’t, Miss
Ormiston, you know!” she missed her opportunity
of pointing out that this confession stultified every
one of his previous utterances. She began a sentence,
indeed, but broke off, with her grey eyes fixed on
the ground; and when at length she lifted them, Bob
felt something take him by the throat. The few
words he proceeded to blurt out stunned him much as
if a grenade had exploded close at hand. But
when Miss Ormiston burst into tears and declared she
must go upstairs at once and pack her box, he recovered,
and, looking about, found the aspect of the world bewilderingly
changed. There were valleys where hills had stood
a moment before.
“I’ll go at once and tell
my father,” he said, drawing a full breath and
looking like the man he was for the moment.
“And,” sobbed Miss Ormiston,
“I’ll go at once and pack my box.”
Herein she showed foresight, for as
soon as Bob’s interview with his father was
over, she was commanded to leave the premises in time
to catch the early train next morning.
Then the Haydon family sat down and talked to Bob.
They began by pooh-poohing the affair.
Then, inconsequently, they talked of disgrace, and
of scratching his name out of the Family Bible, and
said they would rather follow him to his grave than
see him married to Miss Ormiston. Lastly, Mrs.
Haydon asked Bob who had nursed him, and taught him
to walk, and read and know virtue when he saw it.
Bob, in the words of the poet, replied, “My mother.”
“Very well then,” said Mrs. Haydon.
After forty-eight hours of this Bob
wrote to Miss Ormiston, saying, “My father’s
indignation is natural, and can only be conquered by
time. But I love you always.”
Miss Ormiston replied, “Your
father’s indignation is natural, perhaps.
But if you love me, it might be conquered by something
else,” or words to that effect. At any
rate, her letter implied that as it was Bob, and not
his father, who proposed to make her a wife, it was
on Bob, and not on his father, that she laid the responsibility
of fulfilling the promise.
But Bob was weak as water. Love
had given him one brief glimpse of the real world:
then his father and mother began to talk, and the covers
of the Family Bible closed like gates upon his prospect.
At the end of a week he wrote - “Nothing
shall shake me, dear Ethel. Still, some consideration
is due to them; for I am their only son.”
To this Ethel Ormiston sent no answer;
but reflected “And what consideration is due
to me? for you are my only lover.”
For a while Bob thought of enlisting,
and then of earning an honest wage as a farm-labourer;
but rejected both notions, because his training had
not taught him that independence is better than respectability - yea, than much
broadcloth. It was not that he hankered after the fleshpots, but that he
had no conception of a world without fleshpots. In the end his father came
to him and said -
“Will you give up this girl?”
And Bob answered -
“I’m sorry, father, but I can’t.”
“Very well. Rather than
see this shame brought on the family, I will send
you out to Australia. I have written to my friend
Morris, at Ballawag, New South Wales, three hundred
miles from Sydney, and he is ready to take you into
his office. You have broken my heart and your
mother’s, and you must go.”
And Bob - this man of twenty-one
or more - obeyed his father in this, and
went. I can almost forgive him, knowing how the
filial habit blinds a man. But I cannot forgive
the letter he wrote to Miss Ormiston - whom
he wished to make his wife, please remember.
Nevertheless she forgave him. She had found another
situation, and was working on. Her parents were
dead.
Five years passed, and Bob’s
mother died - twelve years, and his father
died also, leaving him the lion’s share of the
money. During this time Bob had worked away at
Ballawag and earned enough to set up as lawyer on
his own account. But because a man cannot play
fast and loose with the self-will that God gave him
and afterwards expect to do much in the world, he
was a moderately unsuccessful man still when the inheritance
dropped in. It gave him a fair income for life.
When the letter containing the news reached him, he
left the office, walked back to his house, and began
to think. Then he unlocked his safe and took
out Ethel Ormiston’s letters. They made
no great heap; for of late their correspondence had
dwindled to an annual exchange of good wishes at Christmas.
She was still earning her livelihood as a governess.
Bob thought for a week, and then wrote.
He asked Ethel Ormiston to come out and be his wife.
You will observe that the old curse still lay on him.
A man - even a poor one - that was
worth kicking would have gone and fetched her; and
Bob had plenty of money. But he asked her to
come out and begged her to cable “Yes”
or “No.”
She cabled “Yes.”
She would start within the month from Plymouth, in
the sailing-ship Grimaldi. She chose a
sailing-ship because it was cheaper.
So Bob travelled down to Sydney to
welcome his bride. He stepped on the Grimaldi’s
deck within five minutes of her arrival, and asked
if a Miss Ormiston were on board. There advanced
a middle-aged woman, gaunt, wrinkled and unlovely - not
the woman he had chosen, but the woman he had made.
“Ethel?” was all he found to say.
“Yes, Bob; I am Ethel. And God forgive
you.”
Of the change in him she said nothing;
but held out her hand with a smile.
“Marry me, Bob, or send me back:
I give you leave to do either, and advise you to send
me back. Twelve years ago you might have been
proud of me, and so I might have helped you.
As it is, I have travelled far, and am tired.
I can never help you now.”
And though he married her, she never did.
II. - BOANERGES.
“Bill Penberthy’s come back, I hear.”
The tin-smith was sharpening his pocket-knife
on the parapet of the bridge, and, without troubling
to lift his eyes, threw just enough interrogation
into the remark to show that he meant it to lead to
conversation. Every one of the dozen men around
him held a knife, so that a stranger, crossing the
bridge, might have suspected a popular rising in the
village. But, as a matter of fact, they were merely
waiting for their turn. There is in the parapet
one stone upon which knives may be sharpened to an
incomparable edge; and, for longer than I can remember,
this has supplied the men of Gantick with the necessary
excuse for putting their heads together on fine evenings
and discussing the news.
“Ay, he’s back.”
“Losh, Uncle, I’d no idea
you was there,” said the tin-smith, wheeling
round. “And how’s your lad looking?”
“Tolerable - tolerable.
’A’s got a black suit, my sonnies, and
a white tie, and a soft hat that looks large on the
head, but can be folded and stowed in your tail pocket.”
Complacency shone over the speaker’s shrivelled
cheeks, and beamed from his horn-spectacles. “You
can tell ’en at a glance for a Circuit-man and
no common Rounder.”
“’A’s fully knowledgeable
by all accounts; learnt out, they tell me.”
“You shall hear ’en for
yourselves at meeting to-morrow. He conducts
both services. Now don’t tempt me any more,
that’s good souls: for when he’d
no sooner set foot in th’ house and kissed his
mother than he had us all down on our knees giving
hearty thanks in the most beautiful language, I said
to myself, ’many’s the time I’ve
had two minds about the money spent in making ye a
better man than your father;’ but fare thee
well, doubt! I don’t begrudge it, an’
there’s an end.”
A small girl came running down the
street to the bridge-end.
“Uncle Penberthy,” she
panted, “your tall son - Mr. William - said
I was to run down and fetch ’ee home at once.”
“Nothin’ wrong with ’en, I hope?”
“I think he’s going to hold a prayer.”
The little man looked at the blade
of his knife for a moment, half regretfully:
then briskly clasped it, slipped it into his pocket,
and hobbled away after the messenger.
The whitewashed front of the Meeting
House was bathed, next evening, with soft sunset yellow
when Mr. Penberthy the elder stole down the stairs
between the exhortations, as his custom was, and stood
bareheaded in the doorway respiring the cool air.
As a deacon he temperately used the privileges of
his office, and one of these was a seat next the door.
The Meeting House was really no more than a room - a
long upper chamber over a store; and its stairway descended
into the street so sharply that it was possible, even
for a short-armed man, to sit on the lowest step and
shake hands with a friend in the street.
The roadway was deserted for a while.
Across the atmosphere there reigned that hush which
people wonder at on Sundays, forgetting that nature
is always still and that nine-tenths of the week’s
hubbub is made by man. Down the pale sky came
a swallow, with another in chase: their wings
were motionless as they swept past the doorway, but
the air whizzed with the speed of their flight, and
in a moment was silent again. Then from the upper
room a man’s voice began to roar out upon the
stillness. It roared, it broke out in thick sobs
that shook the closed windows in their fastenings,
it wrestled with emotion for utterance, and, overcoming
it, rose into a bellow again; but, whether soaring
or depressed, the strain upon it was never relaxed.
Uncle Penberthy, listening to his son, felt an oppression
of his own chest and drew his breath uneasily.
The tin-smith came round the corner
and halted by the door.
“That son o’ yours is
a boundless man,” he observed with an upward
nod.
“How did he strike ye this morning?”
“I don’t remember to have
been so powerfully moved in my life. Perhaps
you and me being cronies for thirty year, and he your
very son, may have helped to the more effectual working;
but be that as it may, I couldn’t master my
dinner afterwards, and that’s the trewth.
Ah, he’s a man, Uncle; and there’s no
denying we wanted one of that sort to awaken us to
a fit sense. What a dido he do kick up, to
be sure!”
The tin-smith shifted his footing
uneasily as if he had something to add.
“I hope you won’t think
it onneighbourly or disrespectful that I didn’
come agen this evenin’,” he begun, after
a pause.
“Not at all, Jem, not at all.”
“Because, you see -
“Yes, yes, I quite see.”
“I wouldn’ have ye think - but
there, I’m powerful glad you see.”
His face cleared. “Good evenin’ to
ye, Uncle!”
He went on with a brisker step, while
Uncle Penberthy drew a few more lingering breaths
and climbed the stairs again to the close air of the
meeting-room.
“I’m afraid, father, that
something in my second exhortation displeased you,”
said the Rev. William Penberthy as he walked home
from service between his parents. He was a tall
fellow with a hatchet-shaped face and eyes set rather
closely together.
“Not at all, my son. What
makes ye deem it?” The little man tilted back
his bronzed top-hat and looked up nervously.
“Because you went out in the middle of service.”
“’Tis but father’s
habit, William,” old Mrs. Penberthy made haste
to explain, laying a hand on his arm. She was
somewhat stouter of build and louder of voice than
her husband, but stood in just the same awe of her
son. “He’s done it regular since he
was appointed deacon.”
“Why?” asked William, stonily.
Uncle Penberthy pulled off his hat
to extract a red handkerchief from its crown, removed
his spectacles, and wiped them hurriedly.
“Them varmints of boys,”
he stammered, “be so troublesome round the door - occasion’lly,
that is.”
“Was that so to-night?”
“Why, no.”
“But you were absent at least
twenty minutes - all through the silent prayer
and half way through the third exhortation.”
He gazed sternly at the amiable old man. “You
didn’t hear me treat that difficulty in Colossians,
two, twenty to twenty-three? If you have time,
we’ll discuss it after private worship to-night.
If I can make you see it in what I am sure is the
right light, it will lead you to think more seriously
of that glass of beer you have fallen into the habit
of taking with your supper.”
It is but a fortnight since the Rev.
William Penberthy came home; but in that fortnight
his father and mother have aged ten years. The
old man, when I took him my watch to regulate the other
day - for on week-days he is a watch-maker - began
to ask questions, as eagerly as a child, about the
village news. It turned out that, for a whole
week, he had not been down to sharpen his knife upon
the bridge. He has given up his glass of beer,
too, and altogether the zeal of his house is eating
him up.
This morning the new minister climbed
into the van with his carpet-bag. He is off to
some Conference or other, and will be back again the
day after to-morrow. Ten minutes after he had
gone his father and mother shut up the shop and went
out together. They mean to take a whole holiday
and hear all the news. It was pitiful to see
their fumbling haste as they helped one another to
put up the shutters; and almost more pitiful to mark,
as they hurried down the street arm in arm, their
conscientious but feeble endeavour to look something
more staid than a couple of children just out of school.