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<h1>THE AMERICAN SENATOR</h1>
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<h4>by</h4>
<h2>ANTHONY TROLLOPE</h2>
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<p> </p>
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<h3>VOLUME I.</h3>
<h4>CHAPTER I.</h4>
<h3>DILLSBOROUGH.<br/> </h3>
<p>I never could understand why anybody should ever have begun to live
at Dillsborough, or why the population there should have been at any
time recruited by new comers. That a man with a family should cling
to a house in which he has once established himself is intelligible.
The butcher who supplied Dillsborough, or the baker, or the
ironmonger, though he might not drive what is called a roaring trade,
nevertheless found himself probably able to live, and might well
hesitate before he would encounter the dangers of a more energetic
locality. But how it came to pass that he first got himself to
Dillsborough, or his father, or his grandfather before him, has
always been a mystery to me. The town has no attractions, and never
had any. It does not stand on a bed of coal and has no connection
with iron. It has no water peculiarly adapted for beer, or for
dyeing, or for the cure of maladies. It is not surrounded by beauty
of scenery strong enough to bring tourists and holiday travellers.
There is no cathedral there to form, with its bishops, prebendaries,
and minor canons, the nucleus of a clerical circle. It manufactures
nothing specially. It has no great horse fair, or cattle fair, or
even pig market of special notoriety. Every Saturday farmers and
graziers and buyers of corn and sheep do congregate in a sleepy
fashion about the streets, but Dillsborough has no character of its
own, even as a market town. Its chief glory is its parish church,
which is ancient and inconvenient, having not as yet received any of
those modern improvements which have of late become common throughout
England; but its parish church, though remarkable, is hardly
celebrated. The town consists chiefly of one street which is over a
mile long, with a square or market-place in the middle, round which a
few lanes with queer old names are congregated, and a second small
open space among these lanes, in which the church stands. As you pass
along the street north-west, away from the railway station and from
London, there is a steep hill, beginning to rise just beyond the
market-place. Up to that point it is the High Street, thence it is
called Bullock's Hill. Beyond that you come to Norrington
Road,—Norrington being the next town, distant from Dillsborough
about twelve miles. Dillsborough, however, stands in the county of
Rufford, whereas at the top of Bullock's Hill you enter the county of
Ufford, of which Norrington is the assize town. The Dillsborough
people are therefore divided, some two thousand five hundred of them
belonging to Rufford, and the remaining five hundred to the
neighbouring county. This accident has given rise to not a few feuds,
Ufford being a large county, with pottery, and ribbons, and watches
going on in the farther confines; whereas Rufford is small and
thoroughly agricultural. The men at the top of Bullock's Hill are
therefore disposed to think themselves better than their
fellow-townsfolks, though they are small in number and not specially
thriving in their circumstances.</p>
<p>At every interval of ten years, when the census is taken, the
population of Dillsborough is always found to have fallen off in some
slight degree. For a few months after the publication of the figures
a slight tinge of melancholy comes upon the town. The landlord of the
Bush Inn, who is really an enterprising man in his way and who has
looked about in every direction for new sources of business, becomes
taciturn for a while and forgets to smile upon comers; Mr. Ribbs, the
butcher, tells his wife that it is out of the question that she and
the children should take that long-talked-of journey to the
sea-coast; and Mr. Gregory Masters, the well-known old-established
attorney of Dillsborough, whispers to some confidential friend that
he might as well take down his plate and shut up his house. But in a
month or two all that is forgotten, and new hopes spring up even in
Dillsborough; Mr. Runciman at the Bush is putting up new stables for
hunting-horses, that being the special trade for which he now finds
that there is an opening; Mrs. Ribbs is again allowed to suggest
Mare-Slocumb; and Mr. Masters goes on as he has done for the last
forty years, making the best he can of a decreasing business.</p>
<p>Dillsborough is built chiefly of brick, and is, in its own way, solid
enough. The Bush, which in the time of the present landlord's father
was one of the best posting inns on the road, is not only
substantial, but almost handsome. A broad coach way, cut through the
middle of the house, leads into a spacious, well-kept, clean yard,
and on each side of the coach way there are bay windows looking into
the street,—the one belonging to the commercial parlour, and the
other to the so-called coffee-room. But the coffee-room has in truth
fallen away from its former purposes, and is now used for a farmer's
ordinary on market days, and other similar purposes. Travellers who
require the use of a public sitting-room must all congregate in the
commercial parlour at the Bush. So far the interior of the house has
fallen from its past greatness. But the exterior is maintained with
much care. The brickwork up to the eaves is well pointed, fresh, and
comfortable to look at. In front of the carriage-way swings on two
massive supports the old sign of the Bush, as to which it may be
doubted whether even Mr. Runciman himself knows that it has swung
there, or been displayed in some fashion, since it was the custom for
the landlord to beat up wine to freshen it before it was given to the
customers to drink. The church, too, is of brick—though the tower
and chancel are of stone. The attorney's house is of brick, which
shall not be more particularly described now as many of the scenes
which these pages will have to describe were acted there; and almost
the entire High Street in the centre of the town was brick also.</p>
<p>But the most remarkable house in Dillsborough was one standing in a
short thoroughfare called Hobbs Gate, leading down by the side of the
Bush Inn from the market-place to Church Square, as it is called. As
you pass down towards the church this house is on the right hand, and
it occupies with its garden the whole space between the market-place
and Church Square. But though the house enjoys the privilege of a
large garden,—so large that the land being in the middle of a town
would be of great value were it not that Dillsborough is in its
decadence,—still it stands flush up to the street upon which the
front door opens. It has an imposing flight of stone steps guarded by
iron rails leading up to it, and on each side of the door there is a
row of three windows, and on the two upper stories rows of seven
windows. Over the door there is a covering, on which there are
grotesquely-formed, carved wooden faces; and over the centre of each
window, let into the brickwork, is a carved stone. There are also
numerous underground windows, sunk below the earth and protected by
iron railings. Altogether the house is one which cannot fail to
attract attention; and in the brickwork is clearly marked the date,
1701,—not the very best period for English architecture as regards
beauty, but one in which walls and roofs, ceilings and buttresses,
were built more substantially than they are to-day. This was the only
house in Dillsborough which had a name of its own, and it was called
Hoppet Hall, the Dillsborough chronicles telling that it had been
originally built for and inhabited by the Hoppet family. The only
Hoppet now left in Dillsborough is old Joe Hoppet, the ostler at the
Bush; and the house, as was well known, had belonged to some member
of the Morton family for the last hundred years at least. The garden
and ground it stands upon comprise three acres, all of which are
surrounded by a high brick wall, which is supposed to be coeval with
the house. The best Ribston pippins,—some people say the only real
Ribston pippins,—in all Rufford are to be found here, and its
Burgundy pears and walnuts are almost equally celebrated. There are
rumours also that its roses beat everything in the way of roses for
ten miles round. But in these days very few strangers are admitted to
see the Hoppet Hall roses. The pears and apples do make their way
out, and are distributed either by Mrs. Masters, the attorney's wife,
or Mr. Runciman, the innkeeper. The present occupier of the house is
a certain Mr. Reginald Morton, with whom we shall also be much
concerned in these pages, but whose introduction to the reader shall
be postponed for awhile.</p>
<p>The land around Dillsborough is chiefly owned by two landlords, of
whom the greatest and richest is Lord Rufford. He, however, does not
live near the town, but away at the other side of the county, and is
not much seen in these parts unless when the hounds bring him here,
or when, with two or three friends, he will sometimes stay for a few
days at the Bush Inn for the sake of shooting the coverts. He is much
liked by all sporting men, but is not otherwise very popular with the
people round Dillsborough. A landlord if he wishes to be popular
should be seen frequently. If he lives among his farmers they will
swear by him, even though he raises his rental every ten or twelve
years and never puts a new roof to a barn for them. Lord Rufford is a
rich man who thinks of nothing but sport in all its various shapes,
from pigeon-shooting at Hurlingham to the slaughter of elephants in
Africa; and though he is lenient in all his dealings, is not much
thought of in the Dillsborough side of the county, except by those
who go out with the hounds. At Rufford, where he generally has a full
house for three months in the year and spends a vast amount of money,
he is more highly considered.</p>
<p>The other extensive landlord is Mr. John Morton, a young man, who, in
spite of his position as squire of Bragton, owner of Bragton Park,
and landlord of the entire parishes of Bragton and Mallingham,—the
latter of which comes close up to the confines of Dillsborough,—was
at the time at which our story begins, Secretary of Legation at
Washington. As he had been an absentee since he came of age,—soon
after which time he inherited the property,—he had been almost less
liked in the neighbourhood than the lord. Indeed, no one in
Dillsborough knew much about him, although Bragton Hall was but four
miles from the town, and the Mortons had possessed the property and
lived on it for the last three centuries. But there had been
extravagance, as will hereafter have to be told, and there had been
no continuous residence at Bragton since the death of old Reginald
Morton, who had been the best known and the best loved of all the
squires in Rufford, and had for many years been master of the Rufford
hounds. He had lived to a very great age, and, though the
great-grandfather of the present man, had not been dead above twenty
years. He was the man of whom the older inhabitants of Dillsborough
and the neighbourhood still thought and still spoke when they gave
vent to their feelings in favour of gentlemen. And yet the old squire
in his latter days had been able to do little or nothing for
them,—being sometimes backward as to the payment of money he owed
among them. But he had lived all his days at Bragton Park, and his
figure had been familiar to all eyes in the High Street of
Dillsborough and at the front entrance of the Bush. People still
spoke of old Mr. Reginald Morton as though his death had been a sore
loss to the neighbourhood.</p>
<p>And there were in the country round sundry yeomen, as they ought to
be called,—gentlemen-farmers as they now like to style
themselves,—men who owned some acres of land, and farmed these acres
themselves. Of these we may specially mention Mr. Lawrence Twentyman,
who was quite the gentleman-farmer. He possessed over three hundred
acres of land, on which his father had built an excellent house. The
present Mr. Twentyman,—Lawrence Twentyman, Esquire, as he was called
by everybody,—was by no means unpopular in the neighbourhood. He not
only rode well to hounds but paid twenty-five pounds annually to the
hunt, which entitled him to feel quite at home in his red coat. He
generally owned a racing colt or two, and attended meetings; but was
supposed to know what he was about, and to have kept safely the five
or six thousand pounds which his father had left him. And his farming
was well done; for though he was, out-and-out, a gentleman-farmer, he
knew how to get the full worth in work done for the fourteen
shillings a week which he paid to his labourers,—a deficiency in
which knowledge is the cause why gentlemen in general find farming so
expensive an amusement. He was a handsome, good-looking man of about
thirty, and would have been a happy man had he not been too ambitious
in his aspirations after gentry. He had been at school for three
years at Cheltenham College, which, together with his money and
appearance and undoubted freehold property, should, he thought, have
made his position quite secure to him; but, though he sometimes
called young Hampton of Hampton Wick "Hampton," and the son of the
rector of Dillsborough "Mainwaring," and always called the rich young
brewers from Norrington "Botsey,"—partners in the well-known firm of
Billbrook & Botsey; and though they in return called him "Larry" and
admitted the intimacy, still he did not get into their houses. And
Lord Rufford, when he came into the neighbourhood, never asked him to
dine at the Bush. And—worst of all,—some of the sporting men and
others in the neighbourhood, who decidedly were not gentlemen, also
called him "Larry." Mr. Runciman always did so. Twenty or twenty-five
years ago Runciman had been his father's special friend,—before the
house had been built and before the days at Cheltenham College.
Remembering this Lawrence was too good a fellow to rebuke Runciman;
but to younger men of that class he would sometimes make himself
objectionable. There was another keeper of hunting stables, a younger
man, named Stubbings, living at Stanton Corner, a great hunting
rendezvous about four miles from Dillsborough; and not long since
Twentyman had threatened to lay his whip across Stubbings' shoulders
if Stubbings ever called him "Larry" again. Stubbings, who was a
little man and rode races, only laughed at Mr. Twentyman who was six
feet high, and told the story round to all the hunt. Mr. Twentyman
was more laughed at than perhaps he deserved. A man should not have
his Christian name used by every Tom and Dick without his sanction.
But the difficulty is one to which men in the position of Mr.
Lawrence Twentyman are often subject.</p>
<p>Those whom I have named, together with Mr. Mainwaring the rector, and
Mr. Surtees his curate, made up the very sparse aristocracy of
Dillsborough. The Hamptons of Hampton Wick were Ufford men, and
belonged rather to Norrington than Dillsborough. The Botseys, also
from Norrington, were members of the U. R. U., or Ufford and Rufford
United Hunt Club; but they did not much affect Dillsborough as a
town. Mr. Mainwaring, who has been mentioned, lived in another brick
house behind the church,—the old parsonage of St. John's. There was
also a Mrs. Mainwaring, but she was an invalid. Their family
consisted of one son, who was at Brasenose at this time. He always
had a horse during the Christmas vacation, and if rumour did not
belie him, kept two or three up at Oxford. Mr. Surtees, the curate,
lived in lodgings in the town. He was a painstaking, eager, clever
young man, with aspirations in church matters, which were always
being checked by his rector. Quieta non movere was the motto by which
the rector governed his life, and he certainly was not at all the man
to allow his curate to drive him into activity.</p>
<p>Such, at the time of our story, was the little town of Dillsborough.</p>
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