<h2><SPAN name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<p>The day at Sotherton, with all its imperfections, afforded the Miss Bertrams
much more agreeable feelings than were derived from the letters from Antigua,
which soon afterwards reached Mansfield. It was much pleasanter to think of
Henry Crawford than of their father; and to think of their father in England
again within a certain period, which these letters obliged them to do, was a
most unwelcome exercise.</p>
<p>November was the black month fixed for his return. Sir Thomas wrote of it with
as much decision as experience and anxiety could authorise. His business was so
nearly concluded as to justify him in proposing to take his passage in the
September packet, and he consequently looked forward with the hope of being
with his beloved family again early in November.</p>
<p>Maria was more to be pitied than Julia; for to her the father brought a
husband, and the return of the friend most solicitous for her happiness would
unite her to the lover, on whom she had chosen that happiness should depend. It
was a gloomy prospect, and all she could do was to throw a mist over it, and
hope when the mist cleared away she should see something else. It would hardly
be <i>early</i> in November, there were generally delays, a bad passage or
<i>something</i>; that favouring <i>something</i> which everybody who shuts
their eyes while they look, or their understandings while they reason, feels
the comfort of. It would probably be the middle of November at least; the
middle of November was three months off. Three months comprised thirteen weeks.
Much might happen in thirteen weeks.</p>
<p>Sir Thomas would have been deeply mortified by a suspicion of half that his
daughters felt on the subject of his return, and would hardly have found
consolation in a knowledge of the interest it excited in the breast of another
young lady. Miss Crawford, on walking up with her brother to spend the evening
at Mansfield Park, heard the good news; and though seeming to have no concern
in the affair beyond politeness, and to have vented all her feelings in a quiet
congratulation, heard it with an attention not so easily satisfied. Mrs. Norris
gave the particulars of the letters, and the subject was dropt; but after tea,
as Miss Crawford was standing at an open window with Edmund and Fanny looking
out on a twilight scene, while the Miss Bertrams, Mr. Rushworth, and Henry
Crawford were all busy with candles at the pianoforte, she suddenly revived it
by turning round towards the group, and saying, “How happy Mr. Rushworth
looks! He is thinking of November.”</p>
<p>Edmund looked round at Mr. Rushworth too, but had nothing to say.</p>
<p>“Your father’s return will be a very interesting event.”</p>
<p>“It will, indeed, after such an absence; an absence not only long, but
including so many dangers.”</p>
<p>“It will be the forerunner also of other interesting events: your
sister’s marriage, and your taking orders.”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Don’t be affronted,” said she, laughing, “but it does
put me in mind of some of the old heathen heroes, who, after performing great
exploits in a foreign land, offered sacrifices to the gods on their safe
return.”</p>
<p>“There is no sacrifice in the case,” replied Edmund, with a serious
smile, and glancing at the pianoforte again; “it is entirely her own
doing.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes I know it is. I was merely joking. She has done no more than what
every young woman would do; and I have no doubt of her being extremely happy.
My other sacrifice, of course, you do not understand.”</p>
<p>“My taking orders, I assure you, is quite as voluntary as Maria’s
marrying.”</p>
<p>“It is fortunate that your inclination and your father’s
convenience should accord so well. There is a very good living kept for you, I
understand, hereabouts.”</p>
<p>“Which you suppose has biassed me?”</p>
<p>“But <i>that</i> I am sure it has not,” cried Fanny.</p>
<p>“Thank you for your good word, Fanny, but it is more than I would affirm
myself. On the contrary, the knowing that there was such a provision for me
probably did bias me. Nor can I think it wrong that it should. There was no
natural disinclination to be overcome, and I see no reason why a man should
make a worse clergyman for knowing that he will have a competence early in
life. I was in safe hands. I hope I should not have been influenced myself in a
wrong way, and I am sure my father was too conscientious to have allowed it. I
have no doubt that I was biased, but I think it was blamelessly.”</p>
<p>“It is the same sort of thing,” said Fanny, after a short pause,
“as for the son of an admiral to go into the navy, or the son of a
general to be in the army, and nobody sees anything wrong in that. Nobody
wonders that they should prefer the line where their friends can serve them
best, or suspects them to be less in earnest in it than they appear.”</p>
<p>“No, my dear Miss Price, and for reasons good. The profession, either
navy or army, is its own justification. It has everything in its favour:
heroism, danger, bustle, fashion. Soldiers and sailors are always acceptable in
society. Nobody can wonder that men are soldiers and sailors.”</p>
<p>“But the motives of a man who takes orders with the certainty of
preferment may be fairly suspected, you think?” said Edmund. “To be
justified in your eyes, he must do it in the most complete uncertainty of any
provision.”</p>
<p>“What! take orders without a living! No; that is madness indeed; absolute
madness.”</p>
<p>“Shall I ask you how the church is to be filled, if a man is neither to
take orders with a living nor without? No; for you certainly would not know
what to say. But I must beg some advantage to the clergyman from your own
argument. As he cannot be influenced by those feelings which you rank highly as
temptation and reward to the soldier and sailor in their choice of a
profession, as heroism, and noise, and fashion, are all against him, he ought
to be less liable to the suspicion of wanting sincerity or good intentions in
the choice of his.”</p>
<p>“Oh! no doubt he is very sincere in preferring an income ready made, to
the trouble of working for one; and has the best intentions of doing nothing
all the rest of his days but eat, drink, and grow fat. It is indolence, Mr.
Bertram, indeed. Indolence and love of ease; a want of all laudable ambition,
of taste for good company, or of inclination to take the trouble of being
agreeable, which make men clergymen. A clergyman has nothing to do but be
slovenly and selfish—read the newspaper, watch the weather, and quarrel
with his wife. His curate does all the work, and the business of his own life
is to dine.”</p>
<p>“There are such clergymen, no doubt, but I think they are not so common
as to justify Miss Crawford in esteeming it their general character. I suspect
that in this comprehensive and (may I say) commonplace censure, you are not
judging from yourself, but from prejudiced persons, whose opinions you have
been in the habit of hearing. It is impossible that your own observation can
have given you much knowledge of the clergy. You can have been personally
acquainted with very few of a set of men you condemn so conclusively. You are
speaking what you have been told at your uncle’s table.”</p>
<p>“I speak what appears to me the general opinion; and where an opinion is
general, it is usually correct. Though <i>I</i> have not seen much of the
domestic lives of clergymen, it is seen by too many to leave any deficiency of
information.”</p>
<p>“Where any one body of educated men, of whatever denomination, are
condemned indiscriminately, there must be a deficiency of information, or
(smiling) of something else. Your uncle, and his brother admirals, perhaps knew
little of clergymen beyond the chaplains whom, good or bad, they were always
wishing away.”</p>
<p>“Poor William! He has met with great kindness from the chaplain of the
Antwerp,” was a tender apostrophe of Fanny’s, very much to the
purpose of her own feelings if not of the conversation.</p>
<p>“I have been so little addicted to take my opinions from my uncle,”
said Miss Crawford, “that I can hardly suppose—and since you push
me so hard, I must observe, that I am not entirely without the means of seeing
what clergymen are, being at this present time the guest of my own brother, Dr.
Grant. And though Dr. Grant is most kind and obliging to me, and though he is
really a gentleman, and, I dare say, a good scholar and clever, and often
preaches good sermons, and is very respectable, <i>I</i> see him to be an
indolent, selfish <i>bon</i> <i>vivant</i>, who must have his palate consulted
in everything; who will not stir a finger for the convenience of any one; and
who, moreover, if the cook makes a blunder, is out of humour with his excellent
wife. To own the truth, Henry and I were partly driven out this very evening by
a disappointment about a green goose, which he could not get the better of. My
poor sister was forced to stay and bear it.”</p>
<p>“I do not wonder at your disapprobation, upon my word. It is a great
defect of temper, made worse by a very faulty habit of self-indulgence; and to
see your sister suffering from it must be exceedingly painful to such feelings
as yours. Fanny, it goes against us. We cannot attempt to defend Dr.
Grant.”</p>
<p>“No,” replied Fanny, “but we need not give up his profession
for all that; because, whatever profession Dr. Grant had chosen, he would have
taken a—not a good temper into it; and as he must, either in the navy or
army, have had a great many more people under his command than he has now, I
think more would have been made unhappy by him as a sailor or soldier than as a
clergyman. Besides, I cannot but suppose that whatever there may be to wish
otherwise in Dr. Grant would have been in a greater danger of becoming worse in
a more active and worldly profession, where he would have had less time and
obligation—where he might have escaped that knowledge of himself, the
<i>frequency</i>, at least, of that knowledge which it is impossible he should
escape as he is now. A man—a sensible man like Dr. Grant, cannot be in
the habit of teaching others their duty every week, cannot go to church twice
every Sunday, and preach such very good sermons in so good a manner as he does,
without being the better for it himself. It must make him think; and I have no
doubt that he oftener endeavours to restrain himself than he would if he had
been anything but a clergyman.”</p>
<p>“We cannot prove to the contrary, to be sure; but I wish you a better
fate, Miss Price, than to be the wife of a man whose amiableness depends upon
his own sermons; for though he may preach himself into a good-humour every
Sunday, it will be bad enough to have him quarrelling about green geese from
Monday morning till Saturday night.”</p>
<p>“I think the man who could often quarrel with Fanny,” said Edmund
affectionately, “must be beyond the reach of any sermons.”</p>
<p>Fanny turned farther into the window; and Miss Crawford had only time to say,
in a pleasant manner, “I fancy Miss Price has been more used to deserve
praise than to hear it”; when, being earnestly invited by the Miss
Bertrams to join in a glee, she tripped off to the instrument, leaving Edmund
looking after her in an ecstasy of admiration of all her many virtues, from her
obliging manners down to her light and graceful tread.</p>
<p>“There goes good-humour, I am sure,” said he presently.
“There goes a temper which would never give pain! How well she walks! and
how readily she falls in with the inclination of others! joining them the
moment she is asked. What a pity,” he added, after an instant’s
reflection, “that she should have been in such hands!”</p>
<p>Fanny agreed to it, and had the pleasure of seeing him continue at the window
with her, in spite of the expected glee; and of having his eyes soon turned,
like hers, towards the scene without, where all that was solemn, and soothing,
and lovely, appeared in the brilliancy of an unclouded night, and the contrast
of the deep shade of the woods. Fanny spoke her feelings. “Here’s
harmony!” said she; “here’s repose! Here’s what may
leave all painting and all music behind, and what poetry only can attempt to
describe! Here’s what may tranquillise every care, and lift the heart to
rapture! When I look out on such a night as this, I feel as if there could be
neither wickedness nor sorrow in the world; and there certainly would be less
of both if the sublimity of Nature were more attended to, and people were
carried more out of themselves by contemplating such a scene.”</p>
<p>“I like to hear your enthusiasm, Fanny. It is a lovely night, and they
are much to be pitied who have not been taught to feel, in some degree, as you
do; who have not, at least, been given a taste for Nature in early life. They
lose a great deal.”</p>
<p>“<i>You</i> taught me to think and feel on the subject, cousin.”</p>
<p>“I had a very apt scholar. There’s Arcturus looking very
bright.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and the Bear. I wish I could see Cassiopeia.”</p>
<p>“We must go out on the lawn for that. Should you be afraid?”</p>
<p>“Not in the least. It is a great while since we have had any
star-gazing.”</p>
<p>“Yes; I do not know how it has happened.” The glee began. “We
will stay till this is finished, Fanny,” said he, turning his back on the
window; and as it advanced, she had the mortification of seeing him advance
too, moving forward by gentle degrees towards the instrument, and when it
ceased, he was close by the singers, among the most urgent in requesting to
hear the glee again.</p>
<p>Fanny sighed alone at the window till scolded away by Mrs. Norris’s
threats of catching cold.</p>
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