<h3>XXIV</h3>
<p>The morning of the confirmation was come. It was mid-May
time, bringing with it weather not, perhaps, quite so blooming as
that assumed to be natural to the month by the joyous poets of
three hundred years ago; but a very tolerable, well-wearing May,
that the average rustic would willingly have compounded for in
lieu of Mays occasionally fairer, but usually more foul.</p>
<p>Among the larger shrubs and flowers which composed the
outworks of the Welland gardens, the lilac, the laburnum, and the
guelder-rose hung out their respective colours of purple, yellow,
and white; whilst within these, belted round from every
disturbing gale, rose the columbine, the peony, the larkspur, and
the Solomon’s seal. The animate things that moved
amid this scene of colour were plodding bees, gadding
butterflies, and numerous sauntering young feminine candidates
for the impending confirmation, who, having gaily bedecked
themselves for the ceremony, were enjoying their own appearance
by walking about in twos and threes till it was time to
start.</p>
<p>Swithin St. Cleeve, whose preparations were somewhat simpler
than those of the village belles, waited till his grandmother and
Hannah had set out, and then, locking the door, followed towards
the distant church. On reaching the churchyard gate he met
Mr. Torkingham, who shook hands with him in the manner of a man
with several irons in the fire, and telling Swithin where to sit,
disappeared to hunt up some candidates who had not yet made
themselves visible.</p>
<p>Casting his eyes round for Viviette, and seeing nothing of
her, Swithin went on to the church porch, and looked in.
From the north side of the nave smiled a host of girls, gaily
uniform in dress, age, and a temporary repression of their
natural tendency to ‘skip like a hare over the meshes of
good counsel.’ Their white muslin dresses, their
round white caps, from beneath whose borders hair-knots and curls
of various shades of brown escaped upon their low shoulders, as
if against their will, lighted up the dark pews and grey
stone-work to an unwonted warmth and life. On the south
side were the young men and boys,—heavy, angular, and
massive, as indeed was rather necessary, considering what they
would have to bear at the hands of wind and weather before they
returned to that mouldy nave for the last time.</p>
<p>Over the heads of all these he could see into the chancel to
the square pew on the north side, which was attached to Welland
House. There he discerned Lady Constantine already arrived,
her brother Louis sitting by her side.</p>
<p>Swithin entered and seated himself at the end of a bench, and
she, who had been on the watch, at once showed by subtle signs
her consciousness of the presence of the young man who had
reversed the ordained sequence of the Church services on her
account. She appeared in black attire, though not strictly
in mourning, a touch of red in her bonnet setting off the
richness of her complexion without making her gay.
Handsomest woman in the church she decidedly was; and yet a
disinterested spectator who had known all the circumstances would
probably have felt that, the future considered, Swithin’s
more natural mate would have been one of the muslin-clad maidens
who were to be presented to the Bishop with him that day.</p>
<p>When the Bishop had arrived and gone into the chancel, and
blown his nose, the congregation were sufficiently impressed by
his presence to leave off looking at one another.</p>
<p>The Right Reverend Cuthbert Helmsdale, D.D., ninety-fourth
occupant of the episcopal throne of the diocese, revealed himself
to be a personage of dark complexion, whose darkness was thrown
still further into prominence by the lawn protuberances that now
rose upon his two shoulders like the Eastern and Western
hemispheres. In stature he seemed to be tall and imposing,
but something of this aspect may have been derived from his
robes.</p>
<p>The service was, as usual, of a length which severely tried
the tarrying powers of the young people assembled; and it was not
till the youth of all the other parishes had gone up that the
turn came for the Welland bevy. Swithin and some older ones
were nearly the last. When, at the heels of Mr. Torkingham,
he passed Lady Constantine’s pew, he lifted his eyes from
the red lining of that gentleman’s hood sufficiently high
to catch hers. She was abstracted, tearful, regarding him
with all the rapt mingling of religion, love, fervour, and hope
which such women can feel at such times, and which men know
nothing of. How fervidly she watched the Bishop place his
hand on her beloved youth’s head; how she saw the great
episcopal ring glistening in the sun among Swithin’s brown
curls; how she waited to hear if Dr. Helmsdale uttered the form
‘this thy child’ which he used for the younger ones,
or ‘this thy servant’ which he used for those older;
and how, when he said, ‘this thy <i>child</i>,’ she
felt a prick of conscience, like a person who had entrapped an
innocent youth into marriage for her own gratification, till she
remembered that she had raised his social position
thereby,—all this could only have been told in its entirety
by herself.</p>
<p>As for Swithin, he felt ashamed of his own utter lack of the
high enthusiasm which beamed so eloquently from her eyes.
When he passed her again, on the return journey from the Bishop
to his seat, her face was warm with a blush which her brother
might have observed had he regarded her.</p>
<p>Whether he had observed it or not, as soon as St. Cleeve had
sat himself down again Louis Glanville turned and looked hard at
the young astronomer. This was the first time that St.
Cleeve and Viviette’s brother had been face to face in a
distinct light, their first meeting having occurred in the dusk
of a railway-station. Swithin was not in the habit of
noticing people’s features; he scarcely ever observed any
detail of physiognomy in his friends, a generalization from their
whole aspect forming his idea of them; and he now only noted a
young man of perhaps thirty, who lolled a good deal, and in whose
small dark eyes seemed to be concentrated the activity that the
rest of his frame decidedly lacked. This gentleman’s
eyes were henceforward, to the end of the service, continually
fixed upon Swithin; but as this was their natural direction, from
the position of his seat, there was no great strangeness in the
circumstance.</p>
<p>Swithin wanted to say to Viviette, ‘Now I hope you are
pleased; I have conformed to your ideas of my duty, leaving my
fitness out of consideration;’ but as he could only see her
bonnet and forehead it was not possible even to look the
intelligence. He turned to his left hand, where the organ
stood, with Miss Tabitha Lark seated behind it.</p>
<p>It being now sermon-time the youthful blower had fallen asleep
over the handle of his bellows, and Tabitha pulled out her
handkerchief intending to flap him awake with it. With the
handkerchief tumbled out a whole family of unexpected articles: a
silver thimble; a photograph; a little purse; a scent-bottle;
some loose halfpence; nine green gooseberries; a key. They
rolled to Swithin’s feet, and, passively obeying his first
instinct, he picked up as many of the articles as he could find,
and handed them to her amid the smiles of the neighbours.</p>
<p>Tabitha was half-dead with humiliation at such an event,
happening under the very eyes of the Bishop on this glorious
occasion; she turned pale as a sheet, and could hardly keep her
seat. Fearing she might faint, Swithin, who had genuinely
sympathized, bent over and whispered encouragingly,
‘Don’t mind it, Tabitha. Shall I take you out
into the air?’ She declined his offer, and presently
the sermon came to an end.</p>
<p>Swithin lingered behind the rest of the congregation
sufficiently long to see Lady Constantine, accompanied by her
brother, the Bishop, the Bishop’s chaplain, Mr. Torkingham,
and several other clergy and ladies, enter to the grand luncheon
by the door which admitted from the churchyard to the lawn of
Welland House; the whole group talking with a vivacity all the
more intense, as it seemed, from the recent two hours’
enforced repression of their social qualities within the
adjoining building.</p>
<p>The young man stood till he was left quite alone in the
churchyard, and then went slowly homeward over the hill, perhaps
a trifle depressed at the impossibility of being near Viviette in
this her one day of gaiety, and joining in the conversation of
those who surrounded her.</p>
<p>Not that he felt much jealousy of her situation, as his wife,
in comparison with his own. He had so clearly understood
from the beginning that, in the event of marriage, their outward
lives were to run on as before, that to rebel now would have been
unmanly in himself and cruel to her, by adding to embarrassments
that were great enough already. His momentary doubt was of
his own strength to achieve sufficiently high things to render
him, in relation to her, other than a patronized young favourite,
whom she had married at an immense sacrifice of position.
Now, at twenty, he was doomed to isolation even from a wife;
could it be that at, say thirty, he would be welcomed
everywhere?</p>
<p>But with motion through the sun and air his mood assumed a
lighter complexion, and on reaching home he remembered with
interest that Venus was in a favourable aspect for observation
that afternoon.</p>
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