<h2>CHAPTER XLIV.</h2>
<p>It was about five in the afternoon of a summer’s day,
that Henry and his son left the sign of the Mermaid to pursue
their third day’s journey: the young man’s spirits
elated with the prospect of the reception he should meet from
Rebecca: the elder dejected at not having received a speedy
welcome from his brother.</p>
<p>The road which led to Anfield by the shortest course of
necessity took our travellers within sight of the bishop’s
palace. The turrets appeared at a distance; and on the
sudden turn round the corner of a large plantation, the whole
magnificent structure was at once exhibited before his
brother’s astonished eyes. He was struck with the
grandeur of the habitation; and, totally forgetting all the
unkind, the contemptuous treatment he had ever received from its
owner (like the same Henry in his earlier years), smiled with a
kind of transport “that William was so great a
man.”</p>
<p>After this first joyous sensation was over, “Let us go a
little nearer, my son,” said he; “no one will see us,
I hope; or, if they should, you can run and conceal yourself; and
not a creature will know me; even my brother would not know me
thus altered; and I wish to take a little farther view of his
fine house, and all his pleasure grounds.”</p>
<p>Young Henry, though impatient to be gone, would not object to
his father’s desire. They walked forward between a
shady grove and a purling rivulet, snuffed in odours from the
jessamine banks, and listened to the melody of an adjoining
aviary.</p>
<p>The allurements of the spot seemed to enchain the elder Henry,
and he at length sauntered to the very avenue of the dwelling;
but, just as he had set his daring yet trembling feet upon the
turf which led to the palace gates, he suddenly stopped, on
hearing, as he thought, the village clock strike seven, which
reminded him that evening drew on, and it was time to go.
He listened again, when he and his son, both together, said,
“It is the toll of the bell before some funeral.”</p>
<p>The signals of death, while they humble the rich, inspire the
poor with pride. The passing bell gave Henry a momentary
sense of equality; and he courageously stepped forward to the
first winding of the avenue.</p>
<p>He started back at the sight which presented itself.</p>
<p>A hearse—mourning coaches—mutes—plumed
horses—with every other token of the person’s
importance who was going to be committed to the earth.</p>
<p>Scarcely had his terrified eyes been thus unexpectedly struck,
when a coffin borne by six men issued from the gates, and was
deposited in the waiting receptacle; while gentlemen in mourning
went into the different coaches.</p>
<p>A standard-bearer now appeared with an escutcheon, on which
the keys and mitre were displayed. Young Henry, upon this,
pathetically exclaimed, “My uncle! it is my uncle’s
funeral!”</p>
<p>Henry, his father, burst into tears.</p>
<p>The procession moved along.</p>
<p>The two Henrys, the only real mourners in the train, followed
at a little distance—in rags, but in tears.</p>
<p>The elder Henry’s heart was nearly bursting; he longed
to clasp the dear remains of his brother without the dread of
being spurned for his presumption. He now could no longer
remember him either as the dean or bishop; but, leaping over that
whole interval of pride and arrogance, called only to his memory
William, such as he knew him when they lived at home together,
together walked to London, and there together almost perished for
want.</p>
<p>They arrived at the church; and, while the coffin was placing
in the dreary vault, the weeping brother crept slowly after to
the hideous spot. His reflections now fixed on a different
point. “Is this possible?” said he to
himself. “Is this the dean, whom I ever feared?
Is this the bishop, of whom within the present hour I stood in
awe? Is this William, whose every glance struck me with his
superiority? Alas, my brother! and is this horrid abode the
reward for all your aspiring efforts? Are these sepulchral
trappings the only testimonies of your greatness which you
exhibit to me on my return? Did you foresee an end like
this, while you treated me, and many more of your youthful
companions, with haughtiness and contempt; while you thought it
becoming of your dignity to shun and despise us? Where is
the difference now between my departed wife and you? Or, if
there be a difference, she, perchance, has the advantage.
Ah, my poor brother! for distinction in the other world, I trust,
some of your anxious labours have been employed; for you are now
of less importance in this than when you and I first left our
native town, and hoped for nothing greater than to be suffered to
exist.”</p>
<p>On their quitting the church, they inquired of the bystanders
the immediate cause of the bishop’s death, and heard he had
been suddenly carried off by a raging fever.</p>
<p>Young Henry inquired “if Lady Clementina was at the
palace, or Mr. Norwynne?”</p>
<p>“The latter is there,” he was answered by a poor
woman; “but Lady Clementina has been dead these four
years.”</p>
<p>“Dead! dead!” cried young Henry. “That
worldly woman! quitted this world for ever!”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered the stranger; “she caught
cold by wearing a new-fashioned dress that did not half cover
her, wasted all away, and died the miserablest object you ever
heard of.”</p>
<p>The person who gave this melancholy intelligence concluded it
with a hearty laugh, which would have surprised the two hearers
if they had not before observed that amongst all the village
crowd that attended to see this solemn show not one afflicted
countenance appeared, not one dejected look, not one watery
eye. The pastor was scarcely known to his flock; it was in
London that his meridian lay, at the levée of ministers,
at the table of peers, at the drawing-rooms of the great; and now
his neglected parishioners paid his indifference in kind.</p>
<p>The ceremony over, and the mourning suite departed, the
spectators dispersed with gibes and jeering faces from the sad
spot; while the Henrys, with heavy hearts, retraced their steps
back towards the palace. In their way, at the crossing of a
stile, they met a poor labourer returning from his day’s
work, who, looking earnestly at the throng of persons who were
leaving the churchyard, said to the elder
Henry—“Pray, master, what are all them folk gathered
together about? What’s the matter there?”</p>
<p>“There has been a funeral,” replied Henry.</p>
<p>“Oh, zooks! what! a burying!—ay, now I see it is;
and I warrant of our old bishop—I heard he was main
ill. It is he they have been putting into the ground! is
not it?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Henry.</p>
<p>“Why, then, so much the better.”</p>
<p>“The better!” cried Henry.</p>
<p>“Yes, master; though I should be loth to be where he is
now.”</p>
<p>Henry started—“He was your pastor, man!”</p>
<p>“Ha! ha! ha! I should be sorry that my
master’s sheep, that are feeding yonder, should have no
better pastor—the fox would soon get them all.”</p>
<p>“You surely did not know him!”</p>
<p>“Not much, I can’t say I did; for he was above
speaking to poor folks, unless they did any mischief—and
then he was sure to take notice of them.”</p>
<p>“I believe he meant well,” said Henry.</p>
<p>“As to what he meant, God only knows; but I know what he
<i>did</i>.”</p>
<p>“And what did he?”</p>
<p>“Nothing at all for the poor.”</p>
<p>“If any of them applied to him, no
doubt—”</p>
<p>“Oh! they knew better than all that comes to; for if
they asked for anything, he was sure to have them sent to
Bridewell, or the workhouse. He used to say, ‘<i>The
workhouse was a fine place for a poor man</i>—<i>the food
good enough</i>, <i>and enough of it</i>;’ yet he kept a
dainty table himself. His dogs, too, fared better than we
poor. He was vastly tender and good to all his horses and
dogs, I <i>will</i> say that for him; and to all brute beasts: he
would not suffer them to be either starved or struck—but he
had no compassion for his fellow-creatures.”</p>
<p>“I am sensible you do him wrong.”</p>
<p>“That <i>he</i> is the best judge of by this time.
He has sent many a poor man to the house of correction; and now
’tis well if he has not got a place there himself.
Ha, ha, ha!”</p>
<p>The man was walking away, when Henry called to
him—“Pray can you tell me if the bishop’s son
be at the palace?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes! you’ll find master there treading in the
old man’s shoes, as proud as Lucifer.”</p>
<p>“Has he any children?”</p>
<p>“No, thank God! There’s been enow of the
name; and after the son is gone, I hope we shall have no more of
the breed.”</p>
<p>“Is Mrs. Norwynne, the son’s wife, at the
palace?”</p>
<p>“What, master! did not you know what’s become of
her?”</p>
<p>“Any accident?—”</p>
<p>“Ha, ha, ha! yes. I can’t help
laughing—why, master, she made a mistake, and went to
another man’s bed—and so her husband and she were
parted—and she has married the other man.”</p>
<p>“Indeed!” cried Henry, amazed.</p>
<p>“Ay, indeed; but if it had been my wife or yours, the
bishop would have made her do penance in a white sheet; but as it
was a lady, why, it was all very well—and any one of us,
that had been known to talk about it, would have been sent to
Bridewell straight. But we <i>did</i> talk,
notwithstanding.”</p>
<p>The malicious joy with which the peasant told this story made
Henry believe (more than all the complaints the man uttered) that
there had been want of charity and Christian deportment in the
whole conduct of the bishop’s family. He almost
wished himself back on his savage island, where brotherly love
could not be less than it appeared to be in this civilised
country.</p>
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