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<h3>CHAPTER XI.</h3>
<h4>HURST STAPLE.<br/> </h4>
<p>The next three or four days passed by heavily enough, and then Arthur
Wilkinson returned. He returned on a Saturday evening; as clergymen
always do, so as to be ready for their great day of work. There are
no Sabbath-breakers to be compared, in the vehemence of their
Sabbath-breaking, to hard-worked parochial clergymen—unless, indeed,
it be Sunday-school children, who are forced on that day to learn
long dark collects, and stand in dread catechismal row before their
spiritual pastors and masters.</p>
<p>In the first evening there was that flow of friendship which always
exists for the few first hours of meeting between men who are really
fond of each other. And these men were fond of each other; the fonder
perhaps because each of them had now cause for sorrow. Very little
was said between Arthur and Adela. There was not apparently much to
alarm the widow in their mutual manner, or to make her think that
Miss Gauntlet was to be put in her place. Adela sat among the other
girls, taking even less share in the conversation than they did; and
Arthur, though he talked as became the master of the house, talked
but little to her.</p>
<p>On the following morning they all went to church, of course. Who has
courage to remain away from church when staying at the clergyman's
house? No one ever; unless it be the clergyman's wife, or perhaps an
independent self-willed daughter. At Hurst Staple, however, on this
Sunday they all attended. Adela was in deepest mourning. Her thick
black veil was down, so as to hide her tears. The last Sunday she had
been at church her father had preached his last sermon.</p>
<p>Bertram, as he entered the door, could not but remember how long it
was since he had joined in public worship. Months and months had
passed over him since he had allowed himself to be told that the
Scriptures moved him in sundry places to acknowledge and confess his
sins. And yet there had been a time when he had earnestly poured
forth his frequent prayers to heaven; a time not long removed. It was
as yet hardly more than three years since he had sworn within himself
on the brow of Olivet to devote himself to the service of his
Saviour. Why had that oath been broken? A girl had ridiculed it; a
young girl had dissipated all that by the sheen of her beauty, by the
sparkle of her eye, by the laughter of her ruddy lip. He had promised
himself to his God, but the rustling of silks had betrayed his heart.
At her instance, at her first word, that promise had been whistled
down the wind.</p>
<p>And to what had this brought him now? As for the bright eyes, and the
flashing beauty, and the ruddy lips, they were made over in
fee-simple to another, who was ready to go further than he had gone
in seeking this world's vanities. Even the price of his apostasy had
vanished from him.</p>
<p>But was this all? was this nearly all? was this as anything to that
further misery which had come upon him? Where was his faith now, his
true, youthful, ardent faith; the belief of his inner heart; the
conviction of a God and a Saviour, which had once been to him the
source of joy? Had it all vanished when, under the walls of
Jerusalem, over against that very garden of Gethsemane, he had
exchanged the aspirations of his soul for the pressure of a soft
white hand?</p>
<p>No one becomes an infidel at once. A man who has really believed does
not lose by a sudden blow the firm convictions of his soul. But when
the work has been once commenced, when the first step has been taken,
the pace becomes frightfully fast. Three years since his belief had
been like the ardour of young love, and now what were his feelings?
Men said that he was an infidel; but he would himself deny it with a
frigid precision, with the stiffest accuracy of language; and then
argue that his acknowledgment of a superhuman creative power was not
infidelity. He had a God of his own, a cold, passionless, prudent
God; the same God, he said, to whom others looked; with this only
difference, that when others looked with fanatic enthusiasm, he
looked with well-balanced reason. But it was the same God, he said.
And as to the Saviour, he had a good deal also to say on that
subject; a good deal which might show that he was not so far from
others as others thought. And so he would prove that he was no
infidel.</p>
<p>But could he thus satisfy himself now that he again heard the psalms
of his youth? and remembered as he listened, that he had lost for
ever that beauty which had cost him so dear? Did he not now begin to
think—to feel perhaps rather than to think—that, after all, the
sound of the church bells was cheering, that it was sweet to kneel
there where others knelt, sweet to hear the voices of those young
children as they uttered together the responses of the service? Was
he so much wiser than others that he could venture on his own
judgment to set himself apart, and to throw over as useless all that
was to others so precious?</p>
<p>Such were his feelings as he sat, and knelt, and stood
there—mechanically as it were, remembering the old habits. And then
he tried to pray. But praying is by no means the easiest work to
which a man can set himself. Kneeling is easy; the repetition of the
well-known word is easy; the putting on of some solemnity of mind is
perhaps not difficult. But to remember what you are asking, why you
are asking, of whom you are asking; to feel sure that you want what
you do ask, and that this asking is the best way to get it;—that on
the whole is not easy. On this occasion Bertram probably found it
utterly beyond his capacity.</p>
<p>He declined to go to afternoon church. This is not held to be <i>de
rigueur</i> even in a parson's house, unless it be among certain of the
strictly low-church clergymen. A very high churchman may ask you to
attend at four o'clock of a winter morning, but he will not be
grievously offended if, on a Sunday afternoon, you prefer your
arm-chair, and book—probably of sermons; but that is between you and
your conscience.</p>
<p>They dined early, and in the evening, Bertram and his host walked
out. Hitherto they had had but little opportunity of conversation,
and Bertram longed to talk to some one of what was within his breast.
On this occasion, however, he failed. Conversation will not always go
exactly as one would have it.</p>
<p>"I was glad to see you at church to-day," said the parson. "To tell
you the truth, I did not expect it. I hope it was not intended as a
compliment to me."</p>
<p>"I rather fear it was, Arthur."</p>
<p>"You mean that you went because you did not like to displease us by
staying away?"</p>
<p>"Something like it," said Bertram, affecting to laugh. "I do not want
your mother and sisters, or you either, to regard me as an ogre. In
England, at any rate in the country in England, one is an ogre if one
doesn't go to church. It does not much matter, I believe, what one
does when one is there; so long as one is quiet, and lets the parson
have his say."</p>
<p>"There is nothing so easy as ridicule, especially in matters of
religion."</p>
<p>"Quite true. But then it is again true that it is very hard to laugh
at anything that is not in some point ridiculous."</p>
<p>"And God's worship is ridiculous?"</p>
<p>"No; but any pretence of worshipping God is so. And as it is but a
step from the ridiculous to the sublime, and as the true worship of
God is probably the highest sublimity to which man can reach; so,
perhaps, is he never so absolutely absurd, in such a bathos of the
ridiculous, as when he pretends to do so."</p>
<p>"Every effort must sometimes fall short of success."</p>
<p>"I'll explain what I mean," said Bertram, attending more to himself
than his companion. "What idea of man can be so magnificent as that
which represents him with his hands closed, and his eyes turned to
that heaven with which he holds communion? But imagine the man so
placed, and holding no such communion! You will at once have run down
the whole gamut of humanity from St. Paul to Pecksniff."</p>
<p>"But that has nothing to do with belief. It is for the man to take
care that he be, if possible, nearer to St. Paul than to Pecksniff."</p>
<p>"No, it has nothing to do with belief; but it is a gauge, the only
gauge we have, of what belief a man has. How many of those who were
sitting by silently while you preached really believed?"</p>
<p>"All, I hope; all, I trust. I firmly trust that they are all
believers; all, including yourself."</p>
<p>"I wonder whether there was one; one believer in all that which you
called on us to say that we believed? one, for instance, who believes
in the communion of saints? one who believes in the resurrection of
the body?"</p>
<p>"And why should they not believe in the communion of saints? What's
the difficulty?"</p>
<p>"Very little, certainly; as their belief goes—what they and you call
belief. Rumtunshid gara shushabad gerostophat. That is the shibboleth
of some of the Caucasian tribes. Do you believe in Rumtunshid?"</p>
<p>"If you will talk gibberish when talking on such a matter, I had
rather change the subject."</p>
<p>"Now you are unreasonable, and want to have all the gibberish to
yourself. That you should have it all to yourself in your own pulpit
we accede to you; but out here, on the heath, surely I may have my
turn. You do not believe in Rumtunshid? Then why should farmer
Buttercup be called on to believe in the communion of the saints?
What does he believe about it? Or why should you make little Flora
Buttercup tell such a huge fib as to say, that she believes in the
resurrection of the body?"</p>
<p>"It is taught her as a necessary lesson, and will be explained to her
at the proper age."</p>
<p>"No; there is no proper age for it. It will never be explained to
her. Neither Flora nor her father will ever understand anything about
it. But they will always believe it. Am I old enough to understand
it? Explain it to me. No one yet has ever attempted to do so; and yet
my education was not neglected."</p>
<p>Wilkinson had too great a fear of his friend's powers of ridicule to
venture on an explanation; so he again suggested that they should
change the subject.</p>
<p>"That is always the way," said Bertram. "I never knew a clergyman who
did not want to change the subject when that subject is the one on
which he should be ever willing to speak."</p>
<p>"If there be anything that you deem holy, you would not be willing to
hear it ridiculed."</p>
<p>"There is much that I deem holy, and for that I fear no laughter. I
am ready to defy ridicule. But if I talk to you of the asceticism of
Stylites, and tell you that I admire it, and will imitate it, will
you not then laugh at me? Of course we ridicule what we think is
false. But ridicule will run off truth like water from a duck's back.
Come, explain to me this about the resurrection of the body."</p>
<p>"Yet, in my flesh, shall I see God," said Arthur, in a solemn tone.</p>
<p>"But I say, no. It is impossible."</p>
<p>"Nothing is impossible with God."</p>
<p>"Yes; it is impossible that his own great laws should change. It is
impossible that they should remain, and yet not remain. Your
body—that which we all call our body—that which Flora Buttercup
believes to be her body (for in this matter she does believe) will
turn itself, through the prolific chemistry of nature, into various
productive gases by which other bodies will be formed. With which
body will you see Christ? with that which you now carry, or that you
will carry when you die? For, of course, every atom of your body
changes."</p>
<p>"It little matters which. It is sufficient for me to believe as the
Scriptures teach me."</p>
<p>"Yes; if one could believe. A Jew, when he drags his dying limbs to
the valley of Jehoshaphat, he can believe. He, in his darkness, knows
nothing of these laws of nature. But we will go to people who are not
in darkness. If I ask your mother what she means when she says—'Not
by confusion of substance; but by unity of person,' what will she
answer me?"</p>
<p>"It is a subject which it will take her some time to explain."</p>
<p>"Yes, I think so; and me some time longer to understand."</p>
<p>Wilkinson was determined not to be led into argument, and so he
remained silent. Bertram was also silent for awhile, and they walked
on, each content with his own thoughts. But yet not content.
Wilkinson would have been contented to be let alone; to have his
mind, and faith, and hopes left in the repose which nature and
education had prepared for them. But it was not so with Bertram. He
was angry with himself for not believing, and angry with others that
they did believe. They went on in this way for some ten minutes, and
then Bertram began again.</p>
<p>"Ah, that I could believe! If it were a thing to come at, as a man
wishes, who would doubt? But you, you, the priest, the teacher of the
people, you, who should make it all so easy, you will make it so
difficult, so impossible. Belief, at any rate, should be easy, though
practice may be hard."</p>
<p>"You should look to the Bible, not to us."</p>
<p>"Yes; it is there that is our stumbling-block. A book is given to us,
not over well translated from various languages, part of which is
history hyperbolically told—for all Eastern language is
hyperbolical; part of which is prophecy, the very meaning of which is
lost to us by the loss of those things which are intended to be
imaged out; and part of which is thanksgiving uttered in the language
of men who knew nothing, and could understand nothing of those rules
by which we are to be governed."</p>
<p>"You are talking of the Old Testament?"</p>
<p>"It is given to us as one whole. Then we have the story of a mystery
which is above, or, at least, beyond the utmost stretch of man's
comprehension; and the very purport of which is opposed to all our
ideas of justice. In the jurisprudence of heaven can that be just
which here, on earth, is manifestly unjust?"</p>
<p>"Is your faith in God so weak then, and your reliance on yourself so
firm, that you can believe nothing beyond your own comprehension?"</p>
<p>"I believe much that I do not understand. I believe the distance of
the earth from the sun. I believe that the seed of a man is carried
in a woman, and then brought forth to light, a living being. I do not
understand the principle of this wondrous growth. But yet I believe
it, and know that it is from God. But I cannot believe that evil is
good. I cannot believe that man placed here by God shall receive or
not receive future happiness as he may chance to agree or not to
agree with certain doctors who, somewhere about the fourth century,
or perhaps later, had themselves so much difficulty in coming to any
agreement on the disputed subject."</p>
<p>"I think, Bertram, that you are going into matters which you know are
not vital to faith in the Christian religion."</p>
<p>"What is vital, and what is not? If I could only learn that! But you
always argue in a circle. I am to have faith because of the Bible;
but I am to take the Bible through faith. Whence is the first spring
of my faith to come? where shall I find the fountain-head?"</p>
<p>"In prayer to God."</p>
<p>"But can I pray without faith? Did any man ever kneel before a log,
and ask the log that he might believe in the log? Had he no faith in
the log, could it be possible that he should be seen there kneeling
before it?"</p>
<p>"Has the Bible then for you no intrinsic evidence of its truth?"</p>
<p>"Yes, most irrefragable evidence; evidence that no thinking man can
possibly reject. Christ's teaching, the words that I have there as
coming from his mouth are irresistible evidence of his fitness to
teach. But you will permit me to use no such evidence. I must take it
all, from the beginning of my career, before I can look into its
intrinsic truth. And it must be all true to me: the sun standing
still upon Gibeon no less than the divine wisdom which showed that
Cæsar's tribute should be paid to Cæsar."</p>
<p>"If every man and every child is to select, how shall we ever have a
creed? and if no creed, how shall we have a church?"</p>
<p>"And if no church, how then parsons? Follow it on, and it comes to
that. But, in truth, you require too much; and so you get—nothing.
Your flocks do not believe, do not pray, do not listen to you. They
are not in earnest. In earnest! Heavens! if a man could believe all
this, could be in earnest about it, how possibly could he care for
other things? But no; you pride yourselves on faith; but you have no
faith. There is no such thing left. In these days men do not know
what faith is."</p>
<p>In the evening, when the ladies had gone to their rooms, they were
again together; and Bertram thought that he would speak of Caroline.
But he was again foiled. There had been some little bickering on the
part of Mrs. Wilkinson. She had been querulous, and had not cared to
hide it, though George and Adela were sitting there as guests. This
had made her son unhappy, and he now spoke of it.</p>
<p>"I am sorry you should hear my mother speak in that way, George. I
hope I am not harsh to her. I try to refrain from answering her. But
unless I go back to my round jackets, and take my food from her hand
like a child, I cannot please her."</p>
<p>"Perhaps you are too careful to please her. I think you should let
her know that, to a certain extent, you must be master in your own
house."</p>
<p>"Ah! I have given that up long since. She has an idea that the house
is hers. I do not care to thwart her in that. Perhaps I should have
done it at first; but it is too late now. To-night she was angry with
me because I would not read a sermon."</p>
<p>"And why then didn't you?"</p>
<p>"I have preached two to-day." And the young clergyman yawned somewhat
wearily. "She used to read them herself. I did put a stop to that."</p>
<p>"Why so? why not let her read them?"</p>
<p>"The girls used to go to sleep, always—and then the servants slept
also, I don't think she has a good voice for sermons. But I am sure
of this, George—she has never forgiven me."</p>
<p>"And never will."</p>
<p>"Sometimes, I almost think she would wish to take my place in the
pulpit."</p>
<p>"The wish is not at all unnatural, my dear fellow."</p>
<p>"The truth is, that Lord Stapledean's message to her, and his conduct
about the living, has quite upset her. I cannot blame Lord
Stapledean. What he did was certainly kind. But I do blame myself. I
never should have accepted the living on those terms—never, never. I
knew it when I did it, and I have never since ceased to repent it."
And so saying he got up and walked quickly about the room. "Would you
believe it now; my mother takes upon herself to tell me in what way I
should read the absolution; and feels herself injured because I do
not comply?"</p>
<p>"I can tell you but of one remedy, Arthur; but I can tell you of
one."</p>
<p>"What remedy?"</p>
<p>"Take a wife to yourself; one who will not mind in what way you read
the absolution to her."</p>
<p>"A wife!" said Wilkinson, and he uttered a long sigh as he continued
his walk.</p>
<p>"Yes, a wife; why not? People say that a country clergyman should
never be without a wife; and as for myself, I firmly think that they
are right."</p>
<p>"Every curate is to marry, then?"</p>
<p>"But you are not a curate."</p>
<p>"I should only have the income of a curate. And where should I put a
wife? The house is full of women already. Who would come to such a
house as this?"</p>
<p>"There is Adela; would not she come if you asked her?"</p>
<p>"Adela!" said the young vicar. And now his walk had brought him to
the further end of the table; and there he remained for a minute or
two. "Adela!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Adela," said Bertram.</p>
<p>"What a life my mother would lead her! She is fond of her now; very.
But in that case I know that she would hate her."</p>
<p>"If I were you, I would make my wife the mistress of my house, not my
mother."</p>
<p>"Ah! you do not understand, George."</p>
<p>"But perhaps you do not like Adela—perhaps you could not teach
yourself to love her?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps not," said Wilkinson. "And perhaps she could not teach
herself to like me. But, ah! that is out of the question."</p>
<p>"There is nothing between you and Adela then?" asked Bertram.</p>
<p>"Oh, no; nothing."</p>
<p>"On your honour, nothing?"</p>
<p>"Nothing at all. It is quite out of the question. My marrying,
indeed!"</p>
<p>And then they took their bedroom candlesticks and went to their own
rooms.</p>
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