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<h2> CHAPTER XIV </h2>
<p>If anyone had told Mr Hugh Finlay, while he was pursuing his rigorous path
to the ideals of the University of Edinburgh, that the first notable
interest of his life in the calling and the country to which even then he
had given his future would lie in his relations with any woman, he would
have treated the prediction as mere folly. To go far enough back in
accounting for this one would arrive at the female sort, sterling and
arid, that had presided over his childhood and represented the sex to his
youth, the Aunt Lizzie, widowed and frugal and spare, who had brought him
up; the Janet Wilson, who had washed and mended him from babyhood, good
gaunt creature half-servant and half-friend—the mature respectable
women and impossible blowsy girls of the Dumfriesshire village whence he
came. With such as these relations, actual or imagined, could only be of
the most practical kind, matters to be arranged on grounds of expediency,
and certainly not of the first importance. The things of first importance—what
you could do with your energy and your brains to beat out some microscopic
good for the world, and what you could see and feel and realize in it of
value to yourself—left little room for the feminine consideration in
Finlay’s eyes; it was not a thing, simply, that existed there with any
significance. Woman in her more attractive presentment, was a daughter of
the poets, with an esoteric, or perhaps only a symbolic, or perhaps a
merely decorative function; in any case, a creature that required an
initiation to perceive her—a process to which Finlay would have been
as unwilling as he was unlikely to submit. Not that he was destitute of
ideals about women—they would have formed in that case a strange
exception to his general outlook—but he saw them on a plane detached
and impersonal, concerned with the preservation of society the maintenance
of the home, the noble devotions of motherhood. Women had been known,
historically, to be capable of lofty sentiments and fine actions: he would
have been the last to withhold their due from women. But they were removed
from the scope of his imagination, partly by the accidents I have
mentioned and partly, no doubt, by a simple lack in him of the inclination
to seek and to know them.</p>
<p>So that Christie Cameron, when she came to stay with his aunt in Bross
during the few weeks after his ordination and before his departure for
Canada, found a fair light for judgement and more than a reasonable
disposition to acquiesce in the scale of her merits, as a woman, on the
part of Hugh Finlay. He was familiar with the scale of her merits before
she came; his Aunt Lizzie did little but run them up and down. When she
arrived she answered to every item she was a good height, but not too
tall; a nice figure of a woman, but not what you would call stout; a
fresh-faced body whose excellent principles were written in every feature
she had. She was five years older than Hugh, but even that he came to
accept in Aunt Lizzie’s skilful exhibition as something to the total of
her advantages. A pleasant independent creature with a hundred a year of
her own, sensible and vigorous and good-tempered, belonging as well to the
pre-eminently right denomination. She had virtues that might have figured
handsomely in an advertisement had Aunt Lizzie, in the plenitude of her
good will, thought fit to take that measure on Christie’s behalf. But
nothing was farther from Aunt Lizzie’s mind. We must, in fairness, add
Christie Cameron to the sum of Finlay’s acquaintance with the sex; but
even then the total is slender, little to go upon.</p>
<p>Yet the fact which Mr Finlay would in those days have considered so
unimaginable remained; it had come into being and it remained. The chief
interest of his life, the chief human interest, did lie in his relations
with Advena Murchison. He might challenge it, but he could not move it; he
might explain, but he could not alter it. And there had come no point at
which it would have occurred to him to do either. When at last he had seen
how simple and possible it was to enjoy Miss Murchison’s companionship
upon unoccupied evenings he had begun to do it with eagerness and zest,
the greater because Elgin offered him practically no other. Dr Drummond
lived, for purposes of intellectual contact, at the other end of the
century, the other clergy and professional men of the town were separated
from Finlay by all the mental predispositions that rose from the virgin
soil. He was, as Mrs Murchison said, a great gawk of a fellow; he had
little adaptability; he was not of those who spend a year or two in the
New World and go back with a trans-Atlantic accent, either of tongue or of
mind. Where he saw a lack of dignity, of consideration, or of restraint,
he did not insensibly become less dignified or considerate or restrained
to smooth out perceptible differences; nor was he constituted to absorb
the qualities of those defects, and enrich his nature by the geniality,
the shrewdness, the quick mental movement that stood on the other side of
the account. He cherished in secret an admiration for the young men of
Elgin, with their unappeasable energy and their indomitable optimism, but
he could not translate it in any language of sympathy and but for Advena
his soul would have gone uncomforted and alone.</p>
<p>Advena, as we know, was his companion. Seeing herself just that,
constantly content to be just that, she walked beside him closer than he
knew. She had her woman’s prescience and trusted it. Her own heart, all
sweetly alive, counselled her to patience; her instincts laid her in bonds
to concealment. She knew, she was sure; so sure that she could play
sometimes, smiling, with her living heart—</p>
<p>The nightingale was not yet heard<br/>
For the rose was not yet blown,<br/></p>
<p>she could say of his; and what was that but play, and tender laughter, at
the expense of her own? And then, perhaps, looking up from the same book,
she would whisper, alone in her room—</p>
<p>Oh, speed the day, thou dear, dear May,<br/></p>
<p>and gaze humbly through tears at her own face in the glass loving it on
his behalf. She took her passion with the weight of a thing ordained; she
had come upon it where it waited for her, and they had gone on together,
carrying the secret. There might be farther to go, but the way could never
be long.</p>
<p>Finlay said when he came in that the heat for May was extraordinary; and
Advena reminded him that he was in a country where everything was
accomplished quickly, even summer.</p>
<p>“Except perhaps civilization.” she added. They were both young enough to
be pleased with cleverness for its specious self.</p>
<p>“Oh, that is slow everywhere,” he observed; “but how you can say so, with
every modern improvement staring you in the face—”</p>
<p>“Electric cars and telephones! Oh, I didn’t say we hadn’t the products,”
and she laughed. “But the thing itself, the precious thing; that never
comes just by wishing, does it? The art of indifference, the art of choice—”</p>
<p>“If you had refinements in the beginning what would the end be?” he
demanded. “Anaemia.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t quarrel with the logic of it. I only point out the fact. To
do that is to acquiesce, really. I acquiesce; I have to. But one may long
for the more delicate appreciations that seem to flower where life has
gone on longer.”</p>
<p>“I imagine,” Finlay said, “that to wish truly and ardently for such things
is to possess them. If you didn’t possess them you wouldn’t desire them!
As they say, as they say—”</p>
<p>“As they say?”</p>
<p>“About love. Some novelist does. To be conscious in any way toward it is
to be fatally infected.”</p>
<p>“What novelist?” Advena asked, with shining interest.</p>
<p>“Some novelist. I—I can’t have invented it,” he replied, somewhat
confounded. He got up and walked to the window, where it stood open upon
the verandah. “I don’t write novels,” he said.</p>
<p>“Perhaps you live them,” suggested Advena. “I mean, of course,” she added,
laughing, “the highest class of fiction.”</p>
<p>“Heaven forbid!”</p>
<p>“Why Heaven forbid? You are sensitive to life, and a great deal of it
comes into your scope. You can’t see a thing truly without feeling it; you
can’t feel it without living it. I don’t write novels either, but I
experience—whole publishers’ lists.”</p>
<p>“That means,” he said, smiling, “that your vision is up to date. You see
the things, the kind of things that you read of next day. The modern moral
sophistications—?”</p>
<p>“Don’t make me out boastful,” she replied. “I often do.”</p>
<p>“Mine would be old-fashioned, I am afraid. Old stories of pain”—he
looked out upon the lawn, white where the chestnut blossoms were dropping,
and his eyes were just wistful enough to stir her adoration—“and of
heroism that is quite dateless in the history of the human heart. At least
one likes to hope so.”</p>
<p>“I somehow think,” she ventured timidly, “that yours would be classic.”</p>
<p>Finlay withdrew his glance abruptly from the falling blossoms as if they
had tempted him to an expansion he could not justify. He was impatient
always of the personal note, and in his intercourse with Miss Murchison he
seemed of late to be constantly sounding it.</p>
<p>“Oh, I don’t know,” he said, almost irritably. “I only meant that I see
the obvious things, while you seem to have an eye for the subtle. There’s
reward, I suppose, in seeing anything. But about those more delicate
appreciations of societies longer evolved, I sometimes think that you
don’t half realize, in a country like this, how much there is to make up.”</p>
<p>“Is there anything really to make up?” she asked.</p>
<p>“Oh, so much! Freedom from old habits, inherited problems: look at the
absurd difficulty they have in England in handling such a matter as
education! Here you can’t even conceive it—the schools have been on
logical lines from the beginning, or almost. Political activity over there
is half-strangled at this moment by the secular arm of religion; here it
doesn’t even impede the circulation! Conceive any Church, or the united
Churches, for the matter of that, asking a place in the conduct of the
common schools of Ontario! How would the people take it? With anger, or
with laughter, but certainly with sense. ‘By all mean let the ministers
serve education on the School Boards,’ they would say, ‘by election like
other people’—an opportunity, by the way, which has just been
offered to me. I’m nominated for East Elgin in place of Leverett, the
tanner, who is leaving the town. I shall do my best to get in, too; there
are several matters that want seeing to over there. The girls’ playground,
for one thing, is practically under water in the spring.”</p>
<p>“You should get in without the least difficulty. Oh, yes there is
something in a fresh start: we’re on the straight road as a nation, in
most respects; we haven’t any picturesque old prescribed lanes to travel.
So you think that makes up?”</p>
<p>“It’s one thing. You might put down space—elbow-room.”</p>
<p>“An empty horizon,” Advena murmured.</p>
<p>“For faith and the future. An empty horizon is better than none. England
has filled hers up. She has now—these,” and he nodded at a window
open to the yellow west. Advena looked with him.</p>
<p>“Oh, if you have a creative imagination,” she said “like Wallingham’s. But
even then your vision must be only political economic, material. You can’t
conceive the—flowers—that will come out of all that. And if
you could it wouldn’t be like having them.”</p>
<p>“And the scope of the individual, his chance of self-respect, unhampered
by the traditions of class, which either deaden it or irritate it in
England! His chance of significance and success! And the splendid,
buoyant, unused air to breathe, and the simplicity of life, and the plenty
of things!”</p>
<p>“I am to be consoled because apples are cheap.”</p>
<p>“You are to be consoled for a hundred reasons. Doesn’t it console you to
feel under your very feet the forces that are working to the immense
amelioration of a not altogether undeserving people?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Advena, rebelliously; and indeed he had been a trifle didactic
to her grievance. They laughed together, and then with a look at her in
which observation seemed suddenly to awake, Finlay said—</p>
<p>“And those things aren’t all, or nearly all. I sometimes think that the
human spirit, as it is set free in these wide unblemished spaces, may be
something more pure and sensitive, more sincerely curious about what is
good and beautiful—”</p>
<p>He broke off, still gazing at her, as if she had been an idea and no more.
How much more she was she showed him by a vivid and beautiful blush.</p>
<p>“I am glad you are so well satisfied,” she said, and then, as if her words
had carried beyond their intention, she blushed again.</p>
<p>Upon which Hugh Finlay saw his idea incarnate.</p>
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