登陆注册
5363100000280

第280章

Robarts rode over with a groom behind him--really taking the groom because he knew that Mr Crawley would have no one to hold his horse for him--and the groom was the source of great offence. He come upon Mr Crawley standing at the school door, and stopping at once, jumped off his nag. There was something in the way in which he sprang out of the saddle and threw the reins to the man, which was not clerical to Mr Crawley's eyes. No man could be so quick in the matter of a horse who spent as many hours with the poor and with the children as should be spent by a parish clergyman. It might be probable that Mr Robarts had never stolen twenty pounds--might never be accused of so disgraceful a crime--but, nevertheless, Mr Crawley had his own ideas, and made his own comparisons.

'Crawley' said Robarts, 'I am so glad to find you at home.'

'I am generally to be found in the parish,' said the perpetual curate of Hogglestock.

'I know you are,' said Robarts, who knew the man well, and cared nothing for his friend's peculiarities when he felt his own withers to be unwrung. 'But you might have been down at Hoggle End with the brickmakers, and then, I would have had to go after you.'

'I should have grieved--' began Crawley; but Robarts interrupted him at once.

'Let us go for a walk, and I'll leave the man with the horses. I've something special to say to you, and I can say it better out here than in the house. Grace is quite well, and sends her love. She is growing to look so beautiful!'

'I hope she may grow in grace with God,' said Mr Crawley.

'She is as good a girl as ever I knew. By-the-bye, you had Henry Grantly over here the other day?'

'Major Grantly, whom I cannot name without expressing my esteem for him, did do us the honour of calling upon us not very long since. If it be with reference to him that you have taken this trouble--'

'No, no; not at all. I'll allow him and the ladies to fight out that battle. I've not the least doubt in the world how that will go. When I'm told that she made a complete conquest of the archdeacon, there cannot be any doubt about that.'

'A conquest of the archdeacon!'

But Mr Robarts did not wish to have to explain anything further about the archdeacon. 'Were you not terribly shocked, Crawley,' he asked, 'when you heard of the death of Mrs Proudie?'

'It was sudden and very awful,' said Mr Crawley. 'Such deaths are always shocking. Not more so, perhaps, as regards the wife of a bishop., than with any other woman.'

'Only we happen to know her.'

'No doubt the finite and meagre nature of our feelings does prevent us from extending our sympathies to those whom we have not seen in the flesh. It should not be so, and would not with one who had nurtured his heart with the proper care. And we are prone to permit an evil worse than that to canker our regards and to foster and to mar our solicitudes. Those who are in high station strike us more by their joys and sorrows than do the poor and lowly. Were some young duke's wife, wedded but the other day, to die, all England would put on a show of mourning--nay, would feel some true gleam of pity; but nobody cares for the widowed brickmaker seated with his starving infant on his cold hearth.'

'Of course we hear more of the big people,' said Robarts.

'Ay; and think more of them. But do not suppose, sir, that I complain of this man or that woman because his sympathies, or hers, runs out of that course which my reason tells me they should hold. The man with whom it would not be so would simply be a god among men. It is in his perfection as a man that we recognise the divinity of Christ. It is in the imperfection of men that we recognise our necessity for a Christ.

Yes, sir, the death of the poor lady at Barchester was very sudden. Ihope that my lord bears with becoming fortitude the heavy misfortune.

They say that he was a man much beholden to his wife--prone to lean upon her in his goings out and comings in. For such a man such a loss is more dreadful than for another.'

'They say she led him a terrible life, you know.'

'I am not prone, sir, to believe much of what I hear about the domesticities of other men, knowing how little any other man can know of my own. And I have, methinks, observed a proneness in the world to ridicule that dependence on a woman which every married man should acknowledge in regard to the wife of his bosom, if he cant trust her as well as love her. When I hear jocose proverbs spoken as to men such as that in this house the grey mare is the better horse, or that in that house the wife wears that garment which is supposed to denote virile command, knowing that the joke is easy, and that meekness in a man is more truly noble than the habit of stern authority, I do not allow them to go far with me in influencing my judgment.'

So spoke Mr Crawley, who never permitted the slightest interference with his own word in his own family, and who had himself been a witness of one of those scenes between the bishop and his wife in which the poor bishop had been so cruelly misused. But to Mr Crawley the thing which he himself had seen under such circumstances was as sacred as though it had come to him under the seal of confession. In speaking of the bishop and Mrs Proudie--nay, as far as was possible in thinking of them--he was bound to speak and to think as though he had not witnessed that scene in the palace study.

'I don't suppose that there is much doubt as to her real character,' said Robarts. 'But you and I need not discuss that.'

'By no means. Such discussion would be both useless and unseemly.'

'And just at present there is something else that I specially want to say to you. Indeed, I went to Silverbridge on the same subject yesterday, and have come here expressly to have a little conversation with you.'

'If it be about affairs of mine, Mr Robarts, I am indeed troubled in spirit that so great labour should have fallen upon you.'

同类推荐
  • 佛说自爱经

    佛说自爱经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • A Knight of the Cumberland

    A Knight of the Cumberland

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 周易集注

    周易集注

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 法华义疏

    法华义疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 法华经疏

    法华经疏

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 婚然心动:总裁老公早上好

    婚然心动:总裁老公早上好

    一年前,她与他契约成婚。宴会镁光灯下,她的礼服嘶啦一声,破碎。银灰色的西装外套从天而降。“以后,我不许你穿给别人看!”她惊惶,对上他深邃的鹰眸,隐隐火光,倏忽跳动。晚宴的醉酒,他厉声质问:“在哪里?”她甚是不情愿:“金醉酒店。”黑色宾利忽的飘移而至。车厢里的阴影,她感觉出他隐隐的怒气,高贵清冷的气场,令人一颤。他鹰眸微眯:“没有什么要告诉我的?嗯?”她弯唇一笑,光华如珠:“那个人不重要。”他瞳孔紧缩:“你,只能是我的!”--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 宫氏女朝

    宫氏女朝

    历史上曾有过女子统治朝政的时代,称之为“女朝”,历经四百余年,共有三个姓氏的女人们统治过中原大地,分别为司徒氏、宫氏、陶氏。故事从宫氏第二代女皇宫梓夏开始。宫梓夏晚年,在传位给贤德但是出身低微的长女和柔善出身高贵的次女之间犹豫,不论传给谁这个朝廷都不会安宁,那么结果到底是?
  • 胡文穆杂著

    胡文穆杂著

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 风居住的第三条街

    风居住的第三条街

    用依儿的视角讲述了“第三条街”上演的一系列小悲剧:鞋子的秘密、徐老头的往事、雨的心思以及依儿的悲剧。依儿在等待父亲归来的时候,遇到从垃圾堆里爬出来的“毛球”,“毛球”长相奇特、年老、行动迟缓,它躲住在面粉厂里,成为依儿情感的寄托。久别的爸爸回来时,带头抓住、害死“毛球”,依儿躲进徐老头的渔船上离开了第三条街。
  • 剑极苍穹

    剑极苍穹

    新书《先天霸体》已经上传,请大家多多关注。
  • 神墓传说

    神墓传说

    《乾河图集》藏有八处宝藏,传说是轩辕帝,炎帝,纣王,秦始皇,汉武帝,曹操,宋太祖等人的宝阁……每一个宝阁都藏有万千秘密……
  • 小细节决定大健康

    小细节决定大健康

    本书从实际生活出发,列举了平时容易被我们忽视的、对健康有很大影响的小细节,以此保证身体的健康。
  • 中国文化名人谈父亲(上)

    中国文化名人谈父亲(上)

    在中国的文化意识中,父亲是天,是铁的纪律,是人生的权威,是绝对的原则,是冷酷的理念,严峻的教导者,但这只是文化观念的表导意识。我们通过这套书,中要告知天下的儿女们父爱如山。
  • 笃爱

    笃爱

    一位值得宣传的充满苦难的普通妇女,一位能够感动中国的至善至真至美的坚强女性。她的人生之路应该为和谐社会的建设提供路标,她丰富的感人事迹应该得到宣扬、推介、学习、和思考。甘肃省天水市麦积区建中幼儿园董事长马玉侠女士,现年60岁,原籍陕西省蒲城县。她12岁辍学,小学四年级文化程度。2003年因伤病困扰,在卧床养病期间,她思索人生,拷问自我,转辗反侧,难以成眠,她不愿老而无为,虚度光阴,像许多人一样,忽突一日空手离开人间,遂突发奇想“我要写本书”。
  • 觅佳缘

    觅佳缘

    一缕清风两不欠,只留残香舞满天。人世黄泉,相隔何止天涯?情之所系,相近不过咫尺。相遇,相知,相恋,相守,她不再是北界那个顽劣执拗的狐妖;他亦不是天界那个执掌天命的仙君,再相遇时,又会是何种模样?