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<h1> DEMOS </h1>
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<h2> By George Gissing </h2>
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<div class="mynote">
[Editor’s Note: There are two chapters in this book with the<br/> same
number: XXVI.; on looking up other print copies, I find<br/> the same
numbering error also present.] <br/></div>
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<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0022"> CHAPTER XXII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0025"> CHAPTER XXV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0026"> CHAPTER XXVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0027"> CHAPTER XXVI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0028"> CHAPTER XXVII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0029"> CHAPTER XXVIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0030"> CHAPTER XXIX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0031"> CHAPTER XXX </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0032"> CHAPTER XXXI </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0033"> CHAPTER XXXII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0034"> CHAPTER XXXIII </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0035"> CHAPTER XXXIV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0036"> CHAPTER XXXV </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0037"> CHAPTER XXXVI </SPAN></p>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<p>Stanbury Hill, remote but two hours’ walk from a region blasted with mine
and factory and furnace, shelters with its western slope a fair green
valley, a land of meadows and orchard, untouched by poisonous breath. At
its foot lies the village of Wanley. The opposite side of the hollow is
clad with native wood, skirting for more than a mile the bank of a shallow
stream, a tributary of the Severn. Wanley consists in the main of one long
street; the houses are stone-built, with mullioned windows, here and there
showing a picturesque gable or a quaint old chimney. The oldest buildings
are four cottages which stand at the end of the street; once upon a time
they formed the country residence of the abbots of Belwick. The abbey of
that name still claims for its ruined self a portion of earth’s surface;
but, as it had the misfortune to be erected above the thickest coal-seam
in England, its walls are blackened with the fume of collieries and shaken
by the strain of mighty engines. Climb Stanbury Hill at nightfall, and,
looking eastward, you behold far off a dusky ruddiness in the sky, like
the last of an angry sunset; with a glass you can catch glimpses of little
tongues of flame, leaping and quivering on the horizon. That is Belwick.
The good abbots, who were wont to come out in the summer time to Wanley,
would be at a loss to recognise their consecrated home in those sooty
relics. Belwick, with its hundred and fifty fire-vomiting blast-furnaces,
would to their eyes more nearly resemble a certain igneous realm of which
they thought much in their sojourn upon earth, and which, we may assure
ourselves, they dream not of in the quietness of their last long sleep.</p>
<p>A large house, which stands aloof from the village and a little above it,
is Wanley Manor. The county history tells us that Wanley was given in the
fifteenth century to that same religious foundation, and that at the
dissolution of monasteries the Manor passed into the hands of Queen
Catherine. The house is half-timbered; from the height above it looks old
and peaceful amid its immemorial trees. Towards the end of the eighteenth
century it became the home of a family named Eldon, the estate including
the greater part of the valley below. But an Eldon who came into
possession when William IV. was King brought the fortunes of his house to
a low ebb, and his son, seeking to improve matters by abandoning his
prejudices and entering upon commercial speculation, in the end left a
widow and two boys with little more to live upon than the income which
arose from Mrs. Eldon’s settlements. The Manor was shortly after this
purchased by a Mr. Mutimer, a Belwick ironmaster; but Mrs. Eldon and her
boys still inhabited the house, in consequence of certain events which
will shortly be narrated. Wanley would have mourned their departure; they
were the aristocracy of the neighbourhood, and to have them ousted by a
name which no one knew, a name connected only with blast-furnaces, would
have made a distinct fall in the tone of Wanley society. Fortunately no
changes were made in the structure by its new owner. Not far from it you
see the church and the vicarage, these also unmolested in their quiet age.
Wanley, it is to be feared, lags far behind the times—painfully so,
when one knows for a certainty that the valley upon which it looks
conceals treasures of coal, of ironstone—blackband, to be technical—and
of fireclay. Some ten years ago it seemed as if better things were in
store; there was a chance that the vale might for ever cast off its
foolish greenery, and begin vomiting smoke and flames in humble imitation
of its metropolis beyond the hills. There are men in Belwick who have an
angry feeling whenever Wanley is mentioned to them.</p>
<p>After the inhabitants of the Manor, the most respected of those who dwelt
in Wanley were the Walthams. At the time of which I speak, this family
consisted of a middle-aged lady; her son, of one-and-twenty; and her
daughter, just eighteen. They had resided here for little more than two
years, but a gentility which marked their speech and demeanour, and the
fact that they were well acquainted with the Eldons, from the first caused
them to be looked up to. It was conjectured, and soon confirmed by Mrs.
Waltham’s own admissions, that they had known a larger way of living than
that to which they adapted themselves in the little house on the side of
Stanbury Hill, whence they looked over the village street. Mr. Waltham
had, in fact, been a junior partner in a Belwick firm, which came to
grief. He saved enough out of the wreck to: make a modest competency for
his family, and would doubtless in time have retrieved his fortune, but
death was beforehand with him. His wife, in the second year of her
widowhood, came with her daughter Adela to Wanley; her son Alfred had gone
to commercial work in Belwick. Mrs. Waltham was a prudent woman, and
tenacious of ideas which recommended themselves to her practical
instincts; such an idea had much to do with her settlement in the remote
village, which she would not have chosen for her abode out of love of its
old-world quietness. But at the Manor was Hubert Eldon. Hubert was four
years older than Adela. He had no fortune of his own, but it was tolerably
certain that some day he would be enormously rich, and there was small
likelihood that he would marry till that expected change in his position
came about.</p>
<p>On the afternoon of a certain Good Friday, Mrs. Waltham sat at her open
window, enjoying the air and busy with many thoughts, among other things
wondering who was likely to drop in for a cup of tea. It was a late
Easter, and warm spring weather had already clothed the valley with
greenness; to-day the sun was almost hot, and the west wind brought many a
sweet odour from gardens near and far. From her sitting-room Mrs. Waltham
had the best view to be obtained from any house in Wanley; she looked, as
I have said, right over the village street, and on either hand the valley
spread before her a charming prospect. Opposite was the wooded slope,
freshening now with exquisite shades of new-born leafage; looking north,
she saw fruit-gardens, making tender harmonies; southwards spread verdure
and tillage. Yet something there was which disturbed the otherwise perfect
unity of the scene, an unaccustomed trouble to the eye. In the very midst
of the vale, perhaps a quarter of a mile to the south of the village, one
saw what looked like the beginning of some engineering enterprise—a
great throwing-up of earth, and the commencement of a roadway on which
metal rails were laid. What was being done? The work seemed too extensive
for a mere scheme of drainage. Whatever the undertaking might be, it was
now at a standstill, seeing that old Mr. Mutimer, the owner of the land,
had been in his grave just three days, and no one as yet could say whether
his heir would or would not pursue this novel project. Mrs. Waltham
herself felt that the view was spoilt, though her appreciation of nature
was not of the keenest, and she would never have thought of objecting to a
scheme which would produce money at the cost of the merely beautiful.</p>
<p>‘I scarcely think Hubert will continue it,’ she was musing to herself. ‘He
has enough without that, and his tastes don’t lie in that direction.’</p>
<p>She had on her lap a local paper, at which she glanced every now and then;
but her state of mind was evidently restless. The road on either side of
which stood the houses of the village led on to the Manor, and in that
direction Mrs. Waltham gazed frequently. The church clock chimed half-past
four, and shortly after a rosy-cheeked young girl came at a quick step up
the gravelled pathway which made the approach to the Walthams’ cottage.
She saw Mrs. Waltham at the window, and, when she was near, spoke.</p>
<p>‘Is Adela at home?’</p>
<p>‘No, Letty; she’s gone for a walk with her brother.’</p>
<p>‘I’m so sorry!’ said the girl, whose voice was as sweet as her face was
pretty. ‘We wanted her to come for croquet. Yet I was half afraid to come
and ask her whilst Mr. Alfred was at home.’</p>
<p>She laughed, and at the same time blushed a little.</p>
<p>‘Why should you be afraid of Alfred?’ asked Mrs. Waltham graciously.</p>
<p>‘Oh, I don’t know.’</p>
<p>She turned it off and spoke quickly of another subject.</p>
<p>‘How did you like Mr. Wyvern this morning?’</p>
<p>It was a new vicar, who had been in Wanley but a couple of days, and had
this morning officiated for the first time at the church.</p>
<p>‘What a voice he has!’ was the lady’s reply.</p>
<p>‘Hasn’t he? And such a hairy man! They say he’s very learned; but his
sermon was very simple—didn’t you think so?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I liked it. Only he pronounces certain words strangely.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, has Mr. Eldon come yet?’ was the young lady’s next question.</p>
<p>‘He hadn’t arrived this morning. Isn’t it extraordinary? He must be out of
England.’</p>
<p>‘But surely Mrs. Eldon knows his address, and he can’t be so very far
away.’</p>
<p>As she spoke she looked down the pathway by which she had come, and of a
sudden her face exhibited alarm.</p>
<p>‘Oh, Mrs. Waltham!’ she whispered hurriedly. ‘If Mr. Wyvern isn’t coming
to see you! I’m afraid to meet him. Do let me pop in and hide till I can
get away without being seen.’</p>
<p>The front door stood ajar, and the girl at once ran into the house. Mrs.
Waltham came into the passage laughing.</p>
<p>‘May I go to the top of the stairs?’ asked the other nervously. ‘You know
how absurdly shy I am. No, I’ll run out into the garden behind; then I can
steal round as soon as he comes in.’</p>
<p>She escaped, and in a minute or two the new vicar presented himself at the
door. A little maid might well have some apprehension in facing him, for
Mr. Wyvern was of vast proportions and leonine in aspect. With the
exception of one ungloved hand and the scant proportions of his face which
were not hidden by hair, he was wholly black in hue; an enormous beard,
the colour of jet, concealed the linen about his throat, and a veritable
mane, dark as night, fell upon his shoulders. His features were not
ill-matched with this sable garniture; their expression was a fixed
severity; his eye regarded you with stern scrutiny, and passed from the
examination to a melancholy reflectiveness. Yet his appearance was
suggestive of anything but ill-nature; contradictory though it may seem,
the face was a pleasant one, inviting to confidence, to respect; if he
could only have smiled, the tender humanity which lurked in the lines of
his countenance would have become evident. His age was probably a little
short of fifty.</p>
<p>A servant replied to his knock, and, after falling back in a momentary
alarm, introduced him to the sitting-room. He took Mrs. Waltham’s hand
silently, fixed upon her the full orbs of his dark eyes, and then, whilst
still retaining her fingers, looked thoughtfully about the room. It was a
pleasant little parlour, with many an evidence of refinement in those who
occupied it. Mr. Wyvern showed something like a look of satisfaction. He
seated himself, and the chair creaked ominously beneath him. Then he again
scrutinised Mrs. Waltham.</p>
<p>She was a lady of fair complexion, with a double chin. Her dress suggested
elegant tastes, and her hand was as smooth and delicate as a lady’s should
be. A long gold chain descended from her neck to the watch-pocket at her
waist, and her fingers exhibited several rings. She bore the reverend
gentleman’s scrutiny with modest grace, almost as if it flattered her. And
indeed there was nothing whatever of ill-breeding in Mr. Wyvern’s mode of
instituting acquaintance with his parishioner; one felt that he was a man
of pronounced originality, and that he might be trusted in his variance
from the wonted modes.</p>
<p>The view from the windows gave him a subject for his first remarks. Mrs.
Waltham had been in some fear of a question which would go to the roots of
her soul’s history; it would have been in keeping with his visage. But,
with native acuteness, she soon discovered that Mr. Wyvern’s gaze had very
little to do with the immediate subject of his thought, or, what was much
the same thing, that he seldom gave the whole of his attention to the
matter outwardly calling for it. He was a man of profound mental absences;
he could make replies, even put queries, and all the while be brooding
intensely upon a wholly different subject. Mrs. Waltham did not altogether
relish it; she was in the habit of being heard with deference; but, to be
sure, a clergyman only talked of worldly things by way of concession. It
certainly seemed so in this clergyman’s case.</p>
<p>‘Your prospect,’ Mr. Wyvern remarked presently, ‘will not be improved by
the works below.’</p>
<p>His voice was very deep, and all his words were weighed in the utterance.
This deliberation at times led to peculiarities of emphasis in single
words. Probably he was a man of philological crotchets; he said, for
instance, ‘pro-spect.’</p>
<p>‘I scarcely think Mr. Eldon will go on with the mining,’ replied Mrs.
Waltham.</p>
<p>‘Ah! you think not?’</p>
<p>‘I am quite sure he said that unconsciously,’ the lady remarked to
herself. ‘He’s thinking of some quite different affair.’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Eldon,’ the clergyman resumed, fixing upon her an absent eye, ‘is Mr.
Mutimer’s son-in-law, I understand?’</p>
<p>‘His brother, Mr. Godfrey Eldon, was.’ Mrs. Waltham corrected.</p>
<p>‘Ah! the one that died?’</p>
<p>He said it questioningly; then added—</p>
<p>‘I have a difficulty in mastering details of this kind. You would do me a
great kindness in explaining to me briefly of whom the family at the Manor
at present consists?’</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham was delighted to talk on such a subject.</p>
<p>‘Only of Mrs. Eldon and her son, Mr. Hubert Eldon. The elder son, Godfrey,
was lost in a shipwreck, on a voyage to New Zealand.’</p>
<p>‘He was a sailor?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, no!’ said the lady, with a smile. ‘He was in business at Belwick. It
was shortly after his marriage with Miss Mutimer that he took the voyage—partly
for his health, partly to examine some property his father had had an
interest in. Old Mr. Eldon engaged in speculations—I believe it was
flax-growing. The results, unfortunately, were anything but satisfactory.
It was that which led to his son entering business—quite a new thing
in their family. Wasn’t it very sad? Poor Godfrey and his young wife both
drowned! The marriage was, as you may imagine, not altogether a welcome
one to Mrs. Eldon; Mr. Mutimer was quite a self-made man, quite. I
understand he has relations in London of the very poorest class—labouring
people.’</p>
<p>‘They probably benefit by his will?’</p>
<p>‘I can’t say. In any case, to a very small extent. It has for a long time
been understood that Hubert Eldon inherits.’</p>
<p>‘Singular!’ murmured the clergyman, still in the same absent way.</p>
<p>‘Is it not? He took so to the young fellows; no doubt he was flattered to
be allied to them. And then he was passionately devoted to his daughter;
if only for her sake, he would have done his utmost for the family.’</p>
<p>‘I understand that Mr. Mutimer purchased the Manor from them?’</p>
<p>‘That was before the marriage. Godfrey Eldon sold it; he had his father’s
taste for speculation, I fancy, and wanted capital. Then Mr. Mutimer
begged them to remain in the house. He certainly was a wonderfully kind
old—old gentleman; his behaviour to Mrs. Eldon was always the
perfection of courtesy. A stranger would find it difficult to understand
how she could get on so well with him, but their sorrows brought them
together, and Mr. Mutimer’s generosity was really noble. If I had not
known his origin, I should certainly have taken him for a county
gentleman.’</p>
<p>‘Yet he proposed to mine in the valley,’ observed Mr. Wyvern, half to
himself, casting a glance at the window.</p>
<p>Mrs. Waltham did not at first see the connection between this and what she
had been saying. Then it occurred to her that Mr. Wyvern was aristocratic
in his views.</p>
<p>‘To be sure,’ she said, ‘one expects to find a little of the original—of
the money-making spirit. Of course such a thing would never have suggested
itself to the Eldons. And in fact very little of the lands remained to
them. Mr. Mutimer bought a great deal from other people.’</p>
<p>As Mr. Wyvern sat brooding, Mrs. Waltham asked—</p>
<p>‘You have seen Mrs. Eldon?’</p>
<p>‘Not yet. She is too unwell to receive visits.’</p>
<p>‘Yes, poor thing, she is a great invalid. I thought, perhaps, you—.
But I know she likes to be very quiet. What a strange thing about Mr.
Eldon, is it not? You know that he has never come yet; not even to the
funeral.’</p>
<p>‘Singular!’</p>
<p>‘An inexplicable thing! There has never been a shadow of disagreement
between them.’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Eldon is abroad, I believe?’ said the clergyman musingly.</p>
<p>‘Abroad? Oh dear, no! At least, I—. Is there news of his being
abroad?’</p>
<p>Mr. Wyvern merely shook his head.</p>
<p>‘As far as we know,’ Mrs. Waltham continued, rather disturbed by the
suggestion, ‘he is at Oxford.’</p>
<p>‘A student?’</p>
<p>‘Yes. He is quite a youth—only two-and-twenty.’</p>
<p>There was a knock at the door, and a maid-servant entered to ask if she
should lay the table for tea. Mrs. Waltham assented; then, to her visitor—</p>
<p>‘You will do us the pleasure of drinking a cup of tea, Mr. Wyvern? we make
a meal of it, in the country way. My boy and girl are sure to be in
directly.’</p>
<p>‘I should like to make their acquaintance,’ was the grave response.</p>
<p>‘Alfred, my son,’ the lady proceeded, ‘is with us for his Easter holiday.
Belwick is so short a distance away, and yet too far to allow of his
living here, unfortunately.’</p>
<p>‘His age?’</p>
<p>‘Just one-and-twenty.’</p>
<p>‘The same age as my own boy.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, you have a son?’</p>
<p>‘A youngster, studying music in Germany. I have just been spending a
fortnight with him.’</p>
<p>‘How delightful! If only poor Alfred could have pursued some more—more
liberal occupation! Unhappily, we had small choice. Friends were good
enough to offer him exceptional advantages not long after his father’s
death, and I was only too glad to accept the opening. I believe he is a
clever boy; only such a dreadful Radical.’ She laughed, with a deprecatory
motion of the hands. ‘Poor Adela and he are at daggers drawn; no doubt it
is some terrible argument that detains them now on the road. I can’t think
how he got his views; certainly his father never inculcated them.’</p>
<p>‘The air, Mrs. Waltham, the air,’ murmured the clergyman.</p>
<p>The lady was not quite sure that she understood the remark, but the
necessity of reply was obviated by the entrance of the young man in
question. Alfred was somewhat undergrown, but of solid build. He walked in
a sturdy and rather aggressive way, and his plump face seemed to indicate
an intelligence, bright, indeed, but of the less refined order. His head
was held stiffly, and his whole bearing betrayed a desire to make the most
of his defective stature. His shake of the hand was an abrupt downward
jerk, like a pull at a bell-rope. In the smile with which he met Mr.
Wyvern a supercilious frame of mind was not altogether concealed; he
seemed anxious to have it understood that in <i>him</i> the clerical
attire inspired nothing whatever of superstitious reverence. Reverence, in
truth, was not Mr. Waltham’s failing.</p>
<p>Mr. Wyvern, as his habit was at introductions, spoke no words, but held
the youth’s hand for a few moments and looked him in the eyes. Alfred
turned his head aside uneasily, and was a trifle ruddy in the cheeks when
at length he regained his liberty.</p>
<p>‘By-the-by,’ he remarked to his mother when he had seated himself, with
crossed legs, ‘Eldon has turned up at last. He passed us in a cab, or so
Adela said. I didn’t catch a glimpse of the individual.’</p>
<p>‘Really!’ exclaimed Mrs. Waltham. ‘He was coming from Agworth station?’</p>
<p>‘I suppose so. There was a trunk on the four-wheeler. Adela says he looked
ill, though I don’t see how she discovered so much.’</p>
<p>‘I have no doubt she is right. He must have been ill.’</p>
<p>Mr. Wyvern, in contrast with his habit, was paying marked attention; he
leaned forward, with a hand on each knee. In the meanwhile the
preparations for tea had progressed, and as Mrs. Waltham rose at the sight
of the teapot being brought in, her daughter entered the room. Adela was
taller by half a head than her brother; she was slim and graceful. The air
had made her face bloom, and the smile which was added as she drew near to
the vicar enhanced the charm of a countenance at all times charming. She
was not less than ladylike in self-possession, but Mr. Wyvern’s towering
sableness clearly awed her a little. For an instant her eyes drooped, but
at once she raised them and met the severe gaze with unflinching orbs.
Releasing her hand, Mr. Wyvern performed a singular little ceremony: he
laid his right palm very gently on her nutbrown hair, and his lips moved.
At the same time he all but smiled.</p>
<p>Alfred’s face was a delightful study the while; it said so clearly,
‘Confound the parson’s impudence!’ Mrs. Waltham, on the other hand, looked
pleased as she rustled to her place at the tea-tray.</p>
<p>‘So Mr. Eldon has come?’ she said, glancing at Adela. ‘Alfred says he
looks ill.’</p>
<p>‘Mother,’ interposed the young man, ‘pray be accurate. I distinctly stated
that I did not even see him, and should not have known that it was he at
all. Adela is responsible for that assertion.’</p>
<p>‘I just saw his face,’ the girl said naturally. ‘I thought he looked ill.’</p>
<p>Mr. Wyvern addressed to her a question about her walk, and for a few
minutes they conversed together. There was a fresh simplicity in Adela’s
way of speaking which harmonised well with her appearance and with the
scene in which she moved. A gentle English girl, this dainty home, set in
so fair and peaceful a corner of the world, was just the abode one would
have chosen for her. Her beauty seemed a part of the burgeoning
spring-time, She was not lavish of her smiles; a timid seriousness marked
her manner to the clergyman, and she replied to his deliberately-posed
questions with a gravity respectful alike of herself and of him.</p>
<p>In front of Mr. Wyvern stood a large cake, of which a portion was already
sliced. The vicar, at Adela’s invitation, accepted a piece of the cake;
having eaten this, he accepted another; then yet another. His absence had
come back upon him, and he talked he continued to eat portions of the
cake, till but a small fraction of the original structure remained on the
dish. Alfred, keenly observant of what was going on, pursed his lips from
time to time and looked at his mother with exaggerated gravity, leading
her eyes to the vanishing cake. Even Adela could not but remark the
reverend gentleman’s abnormal appetite, but she steadily discouraged her
brother’s attempts to draw her into the joke. At length it came to pass
that Mr. Wyvern himself, stretching his hand mechanically to the dish,
became aware that he had exhibited his appreciation of the sweet food in a
degree not altogether sanctioned by usage. He fixed his eyes on the
tablecloth, and was silent for a while.</p>
<p>As soon as the vicar had taken his departure Alfred threw himself into a
chair, thrust out his legs, and exploded in laughter.</p>
<p>‘By Jove!’ he shouted. ‘If that man doesn’t experience symptoms of
disorder! Why, I should be prostrate for a week if I consumed a quarter of
what he has put out of sight.’</p>
<p>‘Alfred, you are shockingly rude,’ reproved his mother, though herself
laughing. ‘Mr. Wyvern is absorbed in thought.’</p>
<p>‘Well, he has taken the best means, I should say, to remind himself of
actualities,’ rejoined the youth. ‘But what a man he is! How did he behave
in church this morning?’</p>
<p>‘You should have come to see,’ said Mrs. Waltham, mildly censuring her
son’s disregard of the means of grace.</p>
<p>‘I like Mr. Wyvern,’ observed Adela, who was standing at the window
looking out upon the dusking valley.</p>
<p>‘Oh, you would like any man in parsonical livery,’ scoffed her brother.</p>
<p>Alfred shortly betook himself to the garden, where, in spite of a decided
freshness in the atmosphere, he walked for half-an-hour smoking a pipe.
When he entered the house again, he met Adela at the foot of the stairs.</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Mewling has just come in,’ she whispered.</p>
<p>‘All right, I’ll come up with you,’ was the reply. ‘Heaven defend me from
her small talk!’</p>
<p>They ascended to a very little room, which made a kind of boudoir for
Adela. Alfred struck a match and lit a lamp, disclosing a nest of
wonderful purity and neatness. On the table a drawing-board was slanted;
it showed a text of Scripture in process of ‘illumination.’</p>
<p>‘Still at that kind of thing!’ exclaimed Alfred. ‘My good child, if you
want to paint, why don’t you paint in earnest? Really, Adela, I must enter
a protest! Remember that you are eighteen years of age.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t forget it, Alfred.’</p>
<p>‘At eight-and-twenty, at eight-and-thirty, you propose still to be at the
same stage of development?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t think we’ll talk of it,’ said the girl quietly. ‘We don’t
understand each other.’</p>
<p>‘Of course not, but we might, if only you’d read sensible books that I
could give you.’</p>
<p>Adela shook her head. The philosophical youth sank into his favourite
attitude—legs extended, hands in pockets, nose in air.</p>
<p>‘So, I suppose,’ he said presently, ‘that fellow really has been ill?’</p>
<p>Adela was sitting in thought; she looked up with a shadow of annoyance on
her face.</p>
<p>‘That fellow?’</p>
<p>‘Eldon, you know.’</p>
<p>‘I want to ask you a question,’ said his sister, interlocking her fingers
and pressing them against her throat. ‘Why do you always speak in a
contemptuous way of Mr. Eldon?’</p>
<p>‘You know I don’t like the individual.’</p>
<p>‘What cause has “the individual” given you?’</p>
<p>‘He’s a snob.’</p>
<p>‘I’m not sure that I know what that means,’ replied Adela, after thinking
for a moment with downcast eyes.</p>
<p>‘Because you never read anything. He’s a fellow who raises a great edifice
of pretence on rotten foundations.’</p>
<p>‘What can you mean? Mr. Eldon is a gentleman. What pretence is he guilty
of?’</p>
<p>‘Gentleman!’ uttered her brother with much scorn. ‘Upon my word, that <i>is</i>
the vulgarest of denominations! Who doesn’t call himself so nowadays! A
man’s a man, I take it, and what need is there to lengthen the name? Thank
the powers, we don’t live in feudal ages. Besides, he doesn’t seem to me
to be what you imply.’</p>
<p>Adela had taken a book; in turning over the pages, she said—</p>
<p>‘No doubt you mean, Alfred, that, for some reason, you are determined to
view him with prejudice.’</p>
<p>‘The reason is obvious enough. The fellow’s behaviour is detestable; he
looks at you from head to foot as if you were applying for a place in his
stable. Whenever I want an example of a contemptible aristocrat, there’s
Eldon ready-made. Contemptible, because he’s such a sham; as if everybody
didn’t know his history and his circumstances!’</p>
<p>‘Everybody doesn’t regard them as you do. There is nothing whatever
dishonourable in his position.’</p>
<p>‘Not in sponging on a rich old plebeian, a man he despises, and living in
idleness at his expense?’</p>
<p>‘I don’t believe Mr. Eldon does anything of the kind. Since his brother’s
death he has had a sufficient income of his own, so mother says.’</p>
<p>‘Sufficient income of his own! Bah! Five or six hundred a year; likely he
lives on that! Besides, haven’t they soaped old Mutimer into leaving them
all his property? The whole affair is the best illustration one could
possibly have of what aristocrats are brought to in a democratic age.
First of all, Godfrey Eldon marries Mutimer’s daughter; you are at liberty
to believe, if you like, that he would have married her just the same if
she hadn’t had a penny. The old fellow is flattered. They see the hold
they have, and stick to him like leeches. All for want of money, of
course. Our aristocrats begin to see that they can’t get on without money
nowadays; they can’t live on family records, and they find that people
won’t toady to them in the old way just on account of their name. Why, it
began with Eldon’s father—didn’t he put his pride in his pocket, and
try to make cash by speculation? Now I can respect him: he at all events
faced the facts of the case honestly. The despicable thing in this Hubert
Eldon is that, having got money once more, and in the dirtiest way, he
puts on the top-sawyer just as if there was nothing to be ashamed of. If
he and his mother were living in a small way on their few hundreds a year,
he might haw-haw as much as he liked, and I should only laugh at him; he’d
be a fool, but an honest one. But catch them doing that! Family pride’s
too insubstantial a thing, you see. Well, as I said, they illustrate the
natural course of things, the transition from the old age to the new. If
Eldon has sons, they’ll go in for commerce, and make themselves, if they
can, millionaires; but by that time they’ll dispense with airs and
insolence—see if they don’t.’</p>
<p>Adela kept her eyes on the pages before her, but she was listening
intently. A sort of verisimilitude in the picture drawn by her
Radical-minded brother could not escape her; her thought was troubled.
When she spoke it was without resentment, but gravely.</p>
<p>‘I don’t like this spirit in judging of people. You know quite well,
Alfred, how easy it is to see the whole story in quite another way. You
begin by a harsh and worldly judgment, and it leads you to misrepresent
all that follows. I refuse to believe that Godfrey Eldon married Mrs.
Mutimer’s daughter for her money.’</p>
<p>Alfred laughed aloud.</p>
<p>‘Of course you do, sister Adela! Women won’t admit such things; that’s <i>their</i>
aristocratic feeling!’</p>
<p>‘And that is, too, worthless and a sham? Will that, too, be done away with
in the new age?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, depend upon it! When women are educated, they will take the world as
it is, and decline to live on illusions.’</p>
<p>‘Then how glad I am to have been left without education!’</p>
<p>In the meantime a conversation of a very lively kind was in progress
between Mrs. Waltham and her visitor, Mrs. Mewling. The latter was a lady
whose position much resembled Mrs. Waltham’s: she inhabited a small house
in the village street, and spent most of her time in going about to hear
or to tell some new thing. She came in this evening with a look presageful
of news indeed.</p>
<p>‘I’ve been to Belwick to-day,’ she began, sitting very close to Mrs.
Waltham, whose lap she kept touching as she spoke with excited fluency.
‘I’ve seen Mrs. Yottle. My dear, what do you think she has told me?’</p>
<p>Mrs. Yottle was the wife of a legal gentleman who had been in Mr.
Mutimer’s confidence. Mrs. Waltham at once divined intelligence affecting
the Eldons.</p>
<p>‘What?’ she asked eagerly.</p>
<p>‘You’d never dream such a thing! what <i>will</i> come to pass! An
unthought-of possibility!’ She went on <i>crescendo</i>. ‘My dear Mrs.
Waltham, Mr. Mutimer has left no will!’</p>
<p>It was as if an electric shock had passed from the tips of her fingers
into her hearer’s frame. Mrs. Waltham paled.</p>
<p>‘That cannot be true!’ she whispered, incapable of utterance above breath.</p>
<p>‘Oh, but there’s not a doubt of it!’ Knowing that the news would be
particularly unpalatable to Mrs. Waltham, she proceeded to dwell upon it
with dancing eyes. ‘Search has been going on since the day of the death:
not a corner that hasn’t been rummaged, not a drawer that hasn’t been
turned out, not a book in the library that hasn’t been shaken, not a wall
that hasn’t been examined for secret doors! Mr. Mutimer has died
intestate!’</p>
<p>The other lady was mute.</p>
<p>‘And shall I tell you how it came about? Two days before his death, he had
his will from Mr. Yottle, saying he wanted to make change—probably
to execute a new will altogether. My dear, he destroyed it, and death
surprised him before he could make another.’</p>
<p>‘He wished to make changes?’</p>
<p>‘Ah!’ Mrs. Mewling drew out the exclamation, shaking her raised finger,
pursing her lips. ‘And of that, too, I can tell you the reason. Mr.
Mutimer was anything but pleased with young Eldon. That young man, let me
tell you, has been conducting himself—oh, shockingly! Now you
wouldn’t dream of repeating this?’</p>
<p>‘Certainly not.’</p>
<p>‘It seems that news came not so very long ago of a certain actress,
singer,—something of the kind, you understand? Friends thought it
their duty—rightly, of course,—to inform Mr. Mutimer. I can’t
say exactly who did it; but we know that Hubert Eldon is not regarded
affectionately by a good many people. My dear, he has been out of England
for more than a month, living—oh, such extravagance! And the moral
question, too? You know—those women! Someone, they say, of European
reputation; of course no names are breathed. For my part, I can’t say I am
surprised. Young men, you know; and particularly young men of that kind!
Well, it has cost him a pretty penny; he’ll remember it as long as he
lives.</p>
<p>‘Then the property will go—’</p>
<p>‘Yes, to the working people in London; the roughest of the rough, they
say! What <i>will</i> happen? It will be impossible for us to live here if
they come and settle at the Manor. The neighbourhood will be intolerable.
Think of the rag-tag-and-bobtail they will bring with them!’</p>
<p>‘But Hubert!’ ejaculated Mrs. Waltham, whom this vision of barbaric onset
affected little in the crashing together of a great airy castle.</p>
<p>‘Well, my dear, after all he still has more to depend upon than many we
could instance. Probably he will take to the law,—that is, if he
ever returns to England.’</p>
<p>‘He is at the Manor,’ said Mrs. Waltham, with none of the pleasure it
would ordinarily have given her to be first with an item of news. ‘He came
this afternoon.’</p>
<p>‘He did! Who has seen him?’</p>
<p>‘Alfred and Adela passed him on the road. He was in a cab.’</p>
<p>‘I feel for his poor mother. What a meeting it will be! But then we must
remember that they had no actual claim on the inheritance. Of course it
will be a most grievous disappointment, but what is life made of? I’m
afraid some people will be anything but grieved. We must confess that
Hubert has not been exactly popular; and I rather wonder at it; I’m sure
he might have been if he had liked. Just a little too—too
self-conscious, don’t you think? Of course it was quite a mistake, but
people had an idea that he presumed on wealth which was not his own. Well,
well, we quiet folk look on, don’t we? It’s rather like a play.’</p>
<p>Presently Mrs. Mewling leaned forward yet more confidentially.</p>
<p>‘My dear, you won’t be offended? You don’t mind a question? There wasn’t
anything definite?—Adela, I mean.’</p>
<p>‘Nothing, nothing whatever!’ Mrs. Waltham asserted with vigour.</p>
<p>‘Ha!’ Mrs. Mewling sighed deeply. ‘How relieved I am! I did so fear!’</p>
<p>‘Nothing whatever,’ the other lady repeated.</p>
<p>‘Thank goodness! Then there is no need to breathe a word of those shocking
matters. But they do get abroad so!’</p>
<p>A reflection Mrs. Mewling was justified in making.</p>
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