<h2 class="p4">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
<p class="p2">Whatever the age, or the intellect of the
passing age, may be, even if ever arise again such
a galaxy of great minds as dawned upon this
country three hundred years ago, though all those
great minds start upon their glorious career, comprising
and intensifying all the light engendered
by, before, and since the time of Shakespeare,
Bacon, Newton; then, though they enhance that
light tenfold by their own bright genius, till a
thousand waking nations gleam, like hill–tops
touched with sunrise—to guide men on the human
road, to lead them heaven–ward, all shall be no
more than a benighted river wandering away from
the stars of God. Do what we will, and think as
we may, enlarging the mind in each generation,
growing contemptuous of contempt, casting caste
to the winds of heaven, and antiquating prejudice,
nevertheless we shall never outrun, or even overtake
Christianity. Science, learning, philosophy,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
may regard it through a telescope: they touch it
no more than astronomy sets foot upon a star. To
a thoughtful man, who is scandalized at all the
littleness felt and done under the holy name, until
he almost begins to doubt if the good outweigh
the evil, it is reassurance to remember that we are
not Christians yet, and comfort to confess that on
earth we never can be. For nothing shows more
clearly that our faith is of heaven, than the truth
that we cannot rise to it until it raise us thither.
And this reflection is akin to the stately writerʼs
sentiment, that our minds conceive so much more
than our bodies can perform, to give us token,
ay, and earnest, of a future state.</p>
<p>Of all the creeds which have issued as yet from
God, or man, or the devil, there is but one
which is far in advance of all human civilization.
True Christianity, like hope, cheers us to continual
effort, exalts us to unbounded prospect, flies in
front of our best success. Let us call it a worn–out
garb, when we have begun to wear it; as yet
the mantle is in the skies, and we have only the
skirt with the name on it.</p>
<p>Such thoughts as these were always stirring in
the heart of a man of power, a leading character
in my story, a leading character everywhere,
whithersoever he went. Bull Garnet was now
forty–five years old, and all who met him were
surprised at his humble place in the commonwealth.
A sense of power so pervaded even the
air he breathed, that strong men rebelled instinctively,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
though he urged no supremacy; weak men
caught some infection from him, and went home
and astonished their families. Strong and weak
alike confessed that it was a mysterious thing
how a man of such motive strength, and self–reliance
illimitable, could be content with no
higher post than that of a common steward. But
neighbourly interest in this subject met with no
encouragement. Albeit his views of life expanded
into universal sympathy, his practice now and then
admitted some worldly–wise restrictions. And so,
while really glad to advise on the doings of all
around him, he never permitted brotherly interference
with his own.</p>
<p>Whoever saw Bull Garnet once was sure to
know him again. If you met him in a rush to
save the train, your eyes would turn and follow
him. “There goes a man remarkable, whether
for good or evil”. Tall though he was, and large
of frame, with swinging arms, and a square expression,
it was none of this that stopped the
bystanderʼs glance into a gaze. It was the cubic
mass of the forehead, the span between the enormous
eyes, and the depth of the thick–set jowl,
which rolled with the volume of a tigerʼs. The
rest of the face was in keeping therewith: the
nose bold, broad, and patulous, the mouth large
and well banked up, the chin big and heavily
rounded. No shade of a hair was ever allowed to
dim his healthy colouring, his head was cropped
close as a Puritanʼs, and when beard grew fast he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
shaved twice in a day. High culture was a necessity
to him, whether of mind, or body, or of the
world external; he would no more endure a
moustache on his lip than a frouzy hedgerow upon
his farm. That man, if you came to think about
him, more and more each time you saw how different
he was from other men. Distinctness is a
great merit in roses, especially when the French
rosarians have so overpiled the catalogue. It is
pleasant to walk up to a standard, and say, “You
are ‘Jules Margottin’, and your neighbour the
‘Keepsake of Malmaison;’ I cannot mistake you
for any other, however hot the weather may be”.
Distinctness is also a merit in apples, pears, and
even peaches; but most of all in man. And so,
without knowing the reason, perhaps, we like a
man whom we cannot mistake for any other of
our million brethren. The same principle tells in
love at first sight. But, lo! here again we are
wandering.</p>
<p>Mr. Garnetʼs leading characteristic was not at
first sight amiable. It was, if I may be allowed
for once, upon the strength of my subject,
not to mince words into <i>entremets</i>—a furious,
reckless, damnable, and thoroughly devilish
temper. All great qualities, loving–kindness,
yearnings for Christian ideals, fell like sugar–canes
to a hurricane in the outburst and rush of that
temper. He was always grieved and deeply
humbled, when the havoc was done; and, being a
man of generous nature, would bow his soul in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
atonement. But in the towering of his wrath,
how grand a sight he afforded! as fine as the rush
of the wild Atlantic upon St. Davidʼs Head. For
a time, perhaps, he would chafe and fret within
the straits of reason, his body surging to and fro,
and his mind making grasp at boundaries. Then
some little aggravation, some trifle which no other
man would notice—and out would leap all the
pent–up fury of his soul. His great eyes would
gather volume, and spring like a mastiff from a
kennel; his mighty forehead would scarp and
chine like the headland when the plough turns;
and all his aspect grow four–square with more
than hydraulic pressure. Whoever then could
gaze unmoved at the raging fire of his eyes must
be either a philosopher or a fool—and often the
two are synonymous.</p>
<p>But touch him, even then, with a single word
of softness, the thought of some one dear to him,
a large and genial sentiment, or a tender memory—and
the lines of his face would relax and quiver,
the blazing eyes be suffused and subdued to a
tremulous glow; and the man, so far beyond
reasonʼs reach, be led back, like a boy, by the
feelings.</p>
<p>All who think they can catch and analyze that
composite, subtle, volatile gas—neither body nor
spirit, yet in fief to the laws of either—which men
call “human nature”, these, I say, will opine at
once, from even this meagre description, that Mr.
Bull Garnetʼs nature was scant of that playful element,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
humour. If thought be (as German philosophers
have it) an electric emanation, then wit is
the forked flash, gone in a moment; humour the
soft summer lightning that shows us the clouds and
the depth, the background and night of ourselves.
No man of large humour can be in a passion, without
laughing inwardly at himself. And wrath,
which laughs at itself, is not of much avail in business.
Mr. Garnetʼs wrath, on the contrary, was a
fine, free–boiling, British anger, not at all amenable
to reason, and therefore very valuable. By dint of
it, he could score at night nearly twice as much
work done in the day as a peaceable man could
have reckoned. Man or woman, boy or girl, Mr.
Garnet could extract from each all the cubic capacity,
leaving them just enough of power to crawl
home stiff, and admire him. For the truth of it is,
as all know to their cost, who have had much to do
with spade or plough, hod or hammer, that the
British workman admires most the master who
makes him sweat most. Perhaps it ought not to
be so. Theoretically, we regard it thus, that a man
ought to perspire, upon principle, when he is working
for another man. But tell us where, and oh!
where, to find the model British labourer who
takes that view of the subject.</p>
<p>Sith it will na better be, let us out and look for
him. The sky is bright blue, and the white clouds
flock off it, like sheep overlapping each other.
What man but loves the open air, and to walk<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
about and think of it, with fancies flitting lazily,
like fluff of dandelion? What man but loves to sit
under a tree, and let the winds go wandering, and
the shadows come and play with him, to let work
be a pleasant memory, and hurry a storm of the
morning? Everybody except Bull Garnet.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span></p>
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