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<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<p>“We’ve seen changes, Mr Murchison. Aye. We’ve seen changes.”</p>
<p>Dr Drummond and Mr Murchison stood together in the store door, over which
the sign “John Murchison: Hardware,” had explained thirty years of varying
commercial fortune. They had pretty well begun life together in Elgin.
John Murchison was one of those who had listened to Mr Drummond’s trial
sermon, and had given his vote to “call” him to the charge. Since then
there had been few Sundays when, morning and evening, Mr Murchison had not
been in his place at the top of his pew, where his dignified and
intelligent head appeared with the isolated significance of a strong
individuality. People looked twice at John Murchison in a crowd; so did
his own children at home. Hearing some discussion of the selection of a
premier, Alec, looking earnestly at him once said, “Why don’t they tell
Father to be it?” The young minister looked twice at him that morning of
the trial sermon, and asked afterward who he was. A Scotchman, Mr Drummond
was told, not very long from the old country, who had bought the Playfair
business on Main Street, and settled in the “Plummer Place,” which already
had a quarter of a century’s standing in the annals of the town. The
Playfair business was a respectable business to buy; the Plummer Place,
though it stood in an unfashionable outskirt, was a respectable place to
settle in; and the minister, in casting his lot in Elgin, envisaged John
Murchison as part of it, thought of him confidently as a “dependance,” saw
him among the future elders and office-bearers of the congregation, a man
who would be punctual with his pew-rent, sage in his judgements, and whose
views upon church attendance would be extended to his family.</p>
<p>So the two came, contemporaries, to add their labour and their lives to
the building of this little outpost of Empire. It was the frankest
transfer, without thought of return; they were there to spend and be spent
within the circumference of the spot they had chosen, with no ambition
beyond. In the course of nature, even their bones and their memories would
enter into the fabric. The new country filled their eyes; the new town was
their opportunity, its destiny their fate. They were altogether occupied
with its affairs, and the affairs of the growing Dominion, yet obscure in
the heart of each of them ran the undercurrent of the old allegiance. They
had gone the length of their tether, but the tether was always there.
Thus, before a congregation that always stood in the early days, had the
minister every Sunday morning for thirty years besought the Almighty, with
ardour and humility, on behalf of the Royal Family. It came in the long
prayer, about the middle. Not in the perfunctory words of a ritual, but in
the language of his choice, which varied according to what he believed to
be the spiritual needs of the reigning House, and was at one period,
touching certain of its members, though respectful, extremely candid. The
General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, “now in session,” also—was
it ever forgotten once? And even the Prime Minister, “and those who sit in
council with him,” with just a hint of extra commendation if it happened
to be Mr Gladstone. The minister of Knox Church, Elgin, Ontario, Canada,
kept his eye on them all. Remote as he was, and concerned with affairs of
which they could know little, his sphere of duty could never revolve too
far westward to embrace them, nor could his influence, under any
circumstances, cease to be at their disposal. It was noted by some that
after Mr Drummond had got his D.D. from an American University he also
prayed occasionally for the President of the neighbouring republic; but
this was rebutted by others, who pointed out that it happened only on the
occurrence of assassinations, and held it reasonable enough. The cavillers
mostly belonged to the congregation of St Andrew’s, “Established”—a
glum, old-fashioned lot indeed—who now and then dropped in of a
Sunday evening to hear Mr Drummond preach. (There wasn’t much to be said
for the preaching at St Andrew’s.) The Established folk went on calling
the minister of Knox Church “Mr” Drummond long after he was “Doctor” to
his own congregation, on account of what they chose to consider the
dubious source of the dignity; but the Knox Church people had their own
theory to explain this hypercriticism, and would promptly turn the
conversation to the merits of the sermon.</p>
<p>Twenty-five years it was, in point, this Monday morning when the Doctor—not
being Established we need not hesitate, besides by this time nobody did—stood
with Mr Murchison in the store door and talked about having seen changes.
He had preached his anniversary sermon the night before to a full church
when, laying his hand upon his people’s heart, he had himself to repress
tears. He was aware of another strand completed in their mutual bond: the
sermon had been a moral, an emotional, and an oratorical success; and in
the expansion of the following morning Dr Drummond had remembered that he
had promised his housekeeper a new gas cooking-range, and that it was high
time he should drop into Murchison’s to inquire about it. Mrs Forsyth had
mentioned at breakfast that they had ranges with exactly the improvement
she wanted at Thompson’s, but the minister was deaf to the hint. Thompson
was a Congregationalist and, improvement or no improvement, it wasn’t
likely that Dr Drummond was going “outside the congregation” for anything
he required. It would have been on a par with a wandering tendency in his
flock, upon which he systematically frowned. He was as great an autocrat
in this as the rector of any country parish in England undermined by
Dissent; but his sense of obligation worked unfailingly both ways.</p>
<p>John Murchison had not said much about the sermon; it wasn’t his way, and
Dr Drummond knew it. “You gave us a good sermon last night, Doctor”; not
much more than that, and “I noticed the Milburns there; we don’t often get
Episcopalians”; and again, “The Wilcoxes”—Thomas Wilcox, wholesale
grocer, was the chief prop of St Andrew’s—“were sitting just in
front of us. We overtook them going home, and Wilcox explained how much
they liked the music. ‘Glad to see you,’ I said. ‘Glad to see you for any
reason,’” Mr Murchison’s eye twinkled. “But they had a great deal to say
about ‘the music.’” It was not an effusive form of felicitation; the
minister would have liked it less if it had been, felt less justified,
perhaps, in remembering about the range on that particular morning. As it
was, he was able to take it with perfect dignity and good humour, and to
enjoy the point against the Wilcoxes with that laugh of his that did
everybody good to hear; so hearty it was, so rich in the grain of the
voice, so full of the zest and flavour of the joke. The range had been
selected, and their talk of changes had begun with it, Mr Murchison
pointing out the new idea in the boiler and Dr Drummond remembering his
first kitchen stove that burned wood and stood on its four legs, with
nothing behind but the stove pipe, and if you wanted a boiler you took off
the front lids and put it on, and how remarkable even that had seemed to
his eyes, fresh from the conservative kitchen notions of the old country.
He had come, unhappily, a widower to the domestic improvements on the
other side of the Atlantic. “Often I used to think,” he said to Mr
Murchison, “if my poor wife could have seen that stove how delighted she
would have been! But I doubt this would have been too much for her
altogether!”</p>
<p>“That stove!” answered Mr Murchison. “Well I remember it. I sold it myself
to your predecessor, Mr Wishart, for thirty dollars—the last
purchase he ever made, poor man. It was great business for me—I had
only two others in the store like it. One of them old Milburn bought—the
father of this man, d’ye mind him?—the other stayed by me a matter
of seven years. I carried a light stock in those days.”</p>
<p>It was no longer a light stock. The two men involuntarily glanced round
them for the satisfaction of the contrast Murchison evoked, though neither
of them, from motives of vague delicacy, felt inclined to dwell upon it.
John Murchison had the shyness of an artist in his commercial success, and
the minister possibly felt that his relation toward the prosperity of a
member had in some degree the embarrassment of a tax-gatherer’s. The stock
was indeed heavy now. You had to go upstairs to see the ranges, where they
stood in rows, and every one of them bore somewhere upon it, in raised
black letters, John Murchison’s name. Through the windows came the
iterating ring on the iron from the foundry in Chestnut Street which fed
the shop, with an overflow that found its way from one end of the country
to the other. Finicking visitors to Elgin found this wearing, but to John
Murchison it was the music that honours the conqueror of circumstances.
The ground floor was given up to the small wares of the business, chiefly
imported; two or three young men, steady and knowledgeable-looking, moved
about in their shirt sleeves among shelves and packing-cases. One of them
was our friend Alec; our other friend Oliver looked after the books at the
foundry. Their father did everything deliberately; but presently, in his
own good time, his commercial letter paper would be headed, with regard to
these two, “John Murchison and Sons.” It had long announced that the
business was “Wholesale and Retail.”</p>
<p>Dr Drummond and Mr Murchison, considering the changes in Elgin from the
store door, did it at their leisure, the merchant with his thumbs thrust
comfortably in the armholes of his waistcoat, the minister, with that
familiar trick of his, balancing on one foot and suddenly throwing his
slight weight forward on the other. “A bundle of nerves,” people called
the Doctor: to stand still would have been a penance to him; even as he
swayed backward and forward in talking, his hand must be busy at the seals
on his watch chain and his shrewd glance travelling over a dozen things
you would never dream so clever a man would take notice of. It was a
prospect of moderate commercial activity they looked out upon, a street of
mellow shopfronts on both sides, of varying height and importance, wearing
that air of marking a period, a definite stop in growth, that so often
coexists with quite a reasonable degree of activity and independence in
colonial towns. One could almost say, standing there in the door at
Murchison’s, where the line of legitimate enterprise had been overpassed
and where its intention had been none too sanguine—on the one hand
in the faded, and pretentious red brick building with the false third
storey, occupied by Cleary which must have been let at a loss to dry-goods
or anything else; on the other hand in the solid “Gregory block,” opposite
the market, where rents were as certain as the dividends of the Bank of
British North America.</p>
<p>Main Street expressed the idea that, for the purpose of growing and doing
business, it had always found the days long enough. Drays passed through
it to the Grand Trunk station, but they passed one at a time; a certain
number of people went up and down about their affairs, but they were never
in a hurry; a street car jogged by every ten minutes or so, but nobody ran
after it. There was a decent procedure; and it was felt that Bofield—he
was dry-goods, too—in putting in an elevator was just a little
unnecessarily in advance of the times. Bofield had only two storeys, like
everybody else, and a very easy staircase, up which people often declared
they preferred to walk rather than wait in the elevator for a young man to
finish serving and work it. These, of course, were the sophisticated
people of Elgin; countryfolk, on a market day, would wait a quarter of an
hour for the young man and think nothing of it; and I imagine Bofield
found his account in the elevator, though he did complain sometimes that
such persons went up and down on frivolous pretexts or to amuse the baby.
As a matter of fact, Elgin had begun as the centre of “trading” for the
farmers of Fox County, and had soon over-supplied that limit in demand; so
that when other interests added themselves to the activity of the town
there was still plenty of room for the business they brought. Main Street
was really, therefore, not a fair index; nobody in Elgin would have
admitted it. Its appearance and demeanour would never have suggested that
it was now the chief artery of a thriving manufacturing town, with a
collegiate institute, eleven churches, two newspapers, and an asylum for
the deaf and dumb, to say nothing of a fire department unsurpassed for
organization and achievement in the Province of Ontario. Only at twelve
noon it might be partly realized when the prolonged “toots” of seven
factory whistles at once let off, so to speak, the hour. Elgin liked the
demonstration; it was held to be cheerful and unmistakable, an indication
of “go-ahead” proclivities which spoke for itself. It occurred while yet
Dr Drummond and Mr Murchison stood together in the store door.</p>
<p>“I must be getting on,” said the minister, looking at his watch. “And what
news have you of Lorne?”</p>
<p>“Well, he seems to have got through all right.”</p>
<p>“What—you’ve heard already, then?”</p>
<p>“He telegraphed from Toronto on Saturday night.” Mr Murchison stroked his
chin, the better to retain his satisfaction. “Waste of money—the
post would have brought it this morning—but it pleased his mother.
Yes, he’s through his Law Schools examination, and at the top, too, as far
as I can make out.”</p>
<p>“Dear me, and you never mentioned it!” Dr Drummond spoke with the resigned
impatience of a familiar grievance. It was certainly a trying
characteristic of John Murchison that he never cared about communicating
anything that might seem to ask for congratulation. “Well, well! I’m very
glad to hear it.”</p>
<p>“It slipped my mind,” said Mr Murchison. “Yes, he’s full-fledged
‘barrister and solicitor’ now; he can plead your case or draw you up a
deed with the best of them. Lorne’s made a fair record, so far. We’ve no
reason to be ashamed of him.”</p>
<p>“That you have not.” Personal sentiments between these two Scotchmen were
indicated rather than indulged. “He’s going in with Fulke and Warner, I
suppose—you’ve got that fixed up?”</p>
<p>“Pretty well. Old man Warner was in this morning to talk it over. He says
they look to Lorne to bring them in touch with the new generation. It’s a
pity he lost that son of his.”</p>
<p>“Oh, a great pity. But since they had to go outside the firm they couldn’t
have done better; they couldn’t have done better. I hope Lorne will bring
them a bit of Knox Church business too; there’s no reason why Bob
Mackintosh should have it all. They’ll be glad to see him back at the
Hampden Debating Society. He’s a great light there, is Lorne; and the
Young Liberals, I hear are wanting him for chairman this year.”</p>
<p>“There’s some talk of it. But time enough—time enough for that!
He’ll do first-rate if he gets the law to practise, let alone the making
of it.”</p>
<p>“Maybe so; he’s young yet. Well, good morning to you. I’ll just step over
the way to the Express office and get a proof out of them of that sermon
of mine. I noticed their reporter fellow—what’s his name?—Rawlins,
with his pencil out last night, and I’ve no faith in Rawlins.”</p>
<p>“Better cast an eye over it,” responded Mr Murchison cordially, and stood
for a moment or two longer in the door watching the crisp, significant
little figure of the minister as he stepped briskly over the crossing to
the newspaper office. There Dr Drummond sat down, before he explained his
errand, and wrote a paragraph.</p>
<p>“We are pleased to learn,” it ran “that Mr Lorne Murchison, eldest son of
Mr John Murchison, of this town, has passed at the capital of the Province
his final examination in Law, distinguishing himself by coming out at the
top of the list. It will be remembered that Mr Murchison, upon entering
the Law Schools, also carried off a valuable scholarship. We are glad to
be able to announce that Mr Murchison, Junior, will embark upon his
profession in his native town, where he will enter the well-known firm of
Fulke and Warner.”</p>
<p>The editor, Mr Horace Williams, had gone to dinner, and Rawlins was out so
Dr Drummond had to leave it with the press foreman. Mr Williams read it
appreciatively on his return, and sent it down with the following
addition:</p>
<p>“This is doing it as well as it can be done. Elgin congratulates Mr L.
Murchison upon having produced these results, and herself upon having
produced Mr L. Murchison.”</p>
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