<p><SPAN name="c4" id="c4"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3><span class="smallcaps">Part II</span>.</h3>
<h3>CHAPTER IV.</h3>
<h4>THE DOCTOR ASKS HIS QUESTION.<br/> </h4>
<p><span class="smallcaps">The</span>
Doctor, instigated by the Bishop, had determined to ask some
questions of Mr. Peacocke as to his American life. The promise
had been given at the Palace, and the Doctor, as he returned home,
repented himself in that he had made it. His lordship was a
gossip, as bad as an old woman, as bad as Mrs. Stantiloup, and
wanted to know things in which a man should feel no interest. So
said the Doctor to himself. What was it to him, the Bishop, or to
him, the Doctor, what Mr. Peacocke had been doing in America? The
man's scholarship was patent, his morals were unexceptional, his
capacity for preaching undoubted, his peculiar fitness for his
place at Bowick unquestionable. Who had a right to know more?
That the man had been properly educated at Oxford, and properly
ordained on entering his Fellowship, was doubted by no man. Even
if there had been some temporary backslidings in America,—which
might be possible, for which of us have not backslided at some
time of our life?—why should they be raked up? There was an
uncharitableness in such a proceeding altogether opposed to the
Doctor's view of life. He hated severity. It may almost be said
that he hated that state of perfection which would require no
pardon. He was thoroughly human, quite content with his own
present position, anticipating no millennium for the future of the
world, and probably, in his heart, looking forward to heaven as
simply the better alternative when the happiness of this world
should be at an end. He himself was in no respect a wicked man,
and yet a little wickedness was not distasteful to him.</p>
<p>And he was angry with himself in that he had made such a promise.
It had been a rule of life with him never to take advice. The
Bishop had his powers, within which he, as Rector of Bowick, would
certainly obey the Bishop; but it had been his theory to oppose
his Bishop, almost more readily than any one else, should the
Bishop attempt to exceed his power. The Bishop had done so in
giving this advice, and yet he had promised. He was angry with
himself, but did not on that account think that the promise should
be evaded. Oh no! Having said that he would do it, he would do
it. And having said that he would do it, the sooner that he did
it the better. When three or four days had passed by, he despised
himself because he had not yet made for himself a fit occasion.
"It is such a mean, sneaking thing to do," he said to himself.
But still it had to be done.</p>
<p>It was on a Saturday afternoon that he said this to himself, as he
returned back to the parsonage garden from the cricket-ground,
where he had left Mr. Peacocke and the three other ushers playing
cricket with ten or twelve of the bigger boys of the school.
There was a French master, a German master, a master for
arithmetic and mathematics with the adjacent sciences, besides Mr.
Peacocke, as assistant classical master. Among them Mr. Peacocke
was <i>facile princeps</i> in rank and supposed ability; but they were
all admitted to the delights of the playground. Mr. Peacocke, in
spite of those years of his spent in America where cricket could
not have been familiar to him, remembered well his old pastime,
and was quite an adept at the game. It was ten thousand pities
that a man should be disturbed by unnecessary questionings who
could not only teach and preach, but play cricket also. But
nevertheless it must be done. When, therefore, the Doctor entered
his own house, he went into his study and wrote a short note to
his <span class="nowrap">assistant;—</span><br/> </p>
<p>"<span class="smallcaps">My dear Peacocke</span>,—Could
you come over and see me in my study
this evening for half an hour? I have a question or two which I
wish to ask you. Any hour you may name will suit me after
eight.—Yours most sincerely,</p>
<p class="ind15">"<span class="smallcaps">Jeffrey
Wortle</span>."<br/> </p>
<p>In answer to this there came a note to say that at half-past eight
Mr. Peacocke would be with the Doctor.</p>
<p>At half-past eight Mr. Peacocke came. He had fancied, on reading
the Doctor's note, that some further question would be raised as
to money. The Doctor had declared that he could no longer accept
gratuitous clerical service in the parish, and had said that he
must look out for some one else if Mr. Peacocke could not oblige
him by allowing his name to be referred in the usual way to the
Bishop. He had now determined to say, in answer to this, that the
school gave him enough to do, and that he would much prefer to
give up the church;—although he would always be happy to take a
part occasionally if he should be wanted. The Doctor had been
sitting alone for the last quarter of an hour when his assistant
entered the room, and had spent the time in endeavouring to
arrange the conversation that should follow. He had come at last
to a conclusion. He would let Mr. Peacocke know exactly what had
passed between himself and the Bishop, and would then leave it to
his usher either to tell his own story as to his past life, or to
abstain from telling it. He had promised to ask the question, and
he would ask it; but he would let the man judge for himself
whether any answer ought to be given.</p>
<p>"The Bishop has been bothering me about you, Peacocke," he said,
standing up with his back to the fireplace, as soon as the other
man had shut the door behind him. The Doctor's face was always
expressive of his inward feelings, and at this moment showed very
plainly that his sympathies were not with the Bishop.</p>
<p>"I'm sorry that his lordship should have troubled himself," said
the other, "as I certainly do not intend to take any part in his
diocese."</p>
<p>"We'll sink that for the present," said the Doctor. "I won't let
that be mixed up with what I have got to say just now. You have
taken a certain part in the diocese already, very much to my
satisfaction. I hope it may be continued; but I won't bother
about that now. As far as I can see, you are just the man that
would suit me as a colleague in the parish." Mr. Peacocke bowed,
but remained silent. "The fact is," continued the Doctor, "that
certain old women have got hold of the Bishop, and made him feel
that he ought to answer their objections. That Mrs. Stantiloup
has a tongue as loud as the town-crier's bell."</p>
<p>"But what has Mrs. Stantiloup to say about me?"</p>
<p>"Nothing, except in so far as she can hit me through you."</p>
<p>"And what does the Bishop say?"</p>
<p>"He thinks that I ought to know something of your life during
those five years you were in America."</p>
<p>"I think so also," said Mr. Peacocke.</p>
<p>"I don't want to know anything for myself. As far as I am
concerned, I am quite satisfied. I know where you were educated,
how you were ordained, and I can feel sure, from your present
efficiency, that you cannot have wasted your time. If you tell me
that you do not wish to say anything, I shall be contented, and I
shall tell the Bishop that, as far as I am concerned, there must
be an end of it."</p>
<p>"And what will he do?" asked Mr. Peacocke.</p>
<p>"Well; as far as the curacy is concerned, of course he can refuse
his licence."</p>
<p>"I have not the slightest intention of applying to his lordship
for a licence."</p>
<p>This the usher said with a tone of self-assertion which grated a
little on the Doctor's ear, in spite of his good-humour towards
the speaker. "I don't want to go into that," he said. "A man
never can say what his intentions may be six months hence."</p>
<p>"But if I were to refuse to speak of my life in America," said Mr.
Peacocke, "and thus to decline to comply with what I must confess
would be no more than a rational requirement on your part, how
then would it be with myself and my wife in regard to the school?"</p>
<p>"It would make no difference whatever," said the Doctor.</p>
<p>"There is a story to tell," said Mr. Peacocke, very slowly.</p>
<p>"I am sure that it cannot be to your disgrace."</p>
<p>"I do not say that it is,—nor do I say that it is not. There may
be circumstances in which a man may hardly know whether he has
done right or wrong. But this I do know,—that, had I done
otherwise, I should have despised myself. I could not have done
otherwise and have lived."</p>
<p>"There is no man in the world," said the Doctor, earnestly, "less
anxious to pry into the secrets of others than I am. I take
things as I find them. If the cook sends me up a good dish I
don't care to know how she made it. If I read a good book, I am
not the less gratified because there may have been something amiss
with the author."</p>
<p>"You would doubt his teaching," said Mr. Peacocke, "who had gone
astray himself."</p>
<p>"Then I must doubt all human teaching, for all men have gone
astray. You had better hold your tongue about the past, and let
me tell those who ask unnecessary questions to mind their own
business."</p>
<p>"It is very odd, Doctor," said Mr. Peacocke, "that all this should
have come from you just now."</p>
<p>"Why odd just now?"</p>
<p>"Because I had been turning it in my mind for the last fortnight
whether I ought not to ask you as a favour to listen to the story
of my life. That I must do so before I could formally accept the
curacy I had determined. But that only brought me to the
resolution of refusing the office. I think,—I think that,
irrespective of the curacy, it ought to be told. But I have not
quite made up my mind."</p>
<p>"Do not suppose that I am pressing you."</p>
<p>"Oh no; nor would your pressing me influence me. Much as I owe to
your undeserved kindness and forbearance, I am bound to say that.
Nothing can influence me in the least in such a matter but the
well-being of my wife, and my own sense of duty. And it is a
matter in which I can unfortunately take counsel from no one.
She, and she alone, besides myself, knows the circumstances, and
she is so forgetful of herself that I can hardly ask her for an
opinion."</p>
<p>The Doctor by this time had no doubt become curious. There was a
something mysterious with which he would like to become
acquainted. He was by no means a philosopher, superior to the
ordinary curiosity of mankind. But he was manly, and even at this
moment remembered his former assurances. "Of course," said he, "I
cannot in the least guess what all this is about. For myself I
hate secrets. I haven't a secret in the world. I know nothing of
myself which you mightn't know too for all that I cared. But that
is my good fortune rather than my merit. It might well have been
with me as it is with you; but, as a rule, I think that where
there is a secret it had better be kept. No one, at any rate,
should allow it to be wormed out of him by the impertinent
assiduity of others. If there be anything affecting your wife
which you do not wish all the world on this side of the water to
know, do not tell it to any one on this side of the water."</p>
<p>"There is something affecting my wife that I do not wish all the
world to know."</p>
<p>"Then tell it to no one," said Dr. Wortle, authoritatively.</p>
<p>"I will tell you what I will do," said Mr. Peacocke; "I will take
a week to think of it, and then I will let you know whether I will
tell it or whether I will not; and if I tell it I will let you
know also how far I shall expect you to keep my secret, and how
far to reveal it. I think the Bishop will be entitled to know
nothing about me unless I ask to be recognised as one of the
clergy of his diocese."</p>
<p>"Certainly not; certainly not," said the Doctor. And then the
interview was at an end.</p>
<p>Mr. Peacocke, when he went away from the Rectory, did not at once
return to his own house, but went off for a walk alone. It was
now nearly midsummer, and there was broad daylight till ten
o'clock. It was after nine when he left the Doctor's, but still
there was time for a walk which he knew well through the fields,
which would take him round by Bowick Wood, and home by a path
across the squire's park and by the church. An hour would do it,
and he wanted an hour to collect his thoughts before he should see
his wife, and discuss with her, as he would be bound to do, all
that had passed between him and the Doctor. He had said that he
could not ask her advice. In this there had been much of truth.
But he knew also that he would do nothing as to which he had not
received at any rate her assent. She, for his sake, would have
annihilated herself, had that been possible. Again and again,
since that horrible apparition had showed itself in her room at
St. Louis, she had begged that she might leave him,—not on her
own behalf, not from any dread of the crime that she was
committing, not from shame in regard to herself should her secret
be found out, but because she felt herself to be an impediment to
his career in the world. As to herself, she had no pricks of
conscience. She had been true to the man,—brutal, abominable as
he had been to her,—until she had in truth been made to believe
that he was dead; and even when he had certainly been alive,—for
she had seen him,—he had only again seen her, again to desert
her. Duty to him she could owe never. There was no sting of
conscience with her in that direction. But to the other man she
owed, as she thought, everything that could be due from a woman to
a man. He had come within her ken, and had loved her without
speaking of his love. He had seen her condition, and had
sympathised with her fully. He had gone out, with his life in his
hand,—he, a clergyman, a quiet man of letters,—to ascertain
whether she was free; and finding her, as he believed, to be free,
he had returned to take her to his heart, and to give her all that
happiness which other women enjoy, but which she had hitherto only
seen from a distance. Then the blow had come. It was necessary,
it was natural, that she should be ruined by such a blow.
Circumstances had ruined her. That fate had betaken her which so
often falls upon a woman who trusts herself and her life to a man.
But why should he fall also with her fall? There was still a
career before him. He might be useful; he might be successful; he
might be admired. Everything might still be open to him,—except
the love of another woman. As to that, she did not doubt his
truth. Why should he be doomed to drag her with him as a log tied
to his foot, seeing that a woman with a misfortune is condemned by
the general voice of the world, whereas for a man to have stumbled
is considered hardly more than a matter of course? She would
consent to take from him the means of buying her bread; but it
would be better,—she had said,—that she should eat it on her
side of the water, while he might earn it on the other.</p>
<p>We know what had come of these arguments. He had hitherto never
left her for a moment since that man had again appeared before
their eyes. He had been strong in his resolution. If it were a
crime, then he would be a criminal. If it were a falsehood, then
would he be a liar. As to the sin, there had no doubt been some
divergence of opinion between him and her. The teaching that he
had undergone in his youth had been that with which we, here, are
all more or less acquainted, and that had been strengthened in him
by the fact of his having become a clergyman. She had felt
herself more at liberty to proclaim to herself a gospel of her own
for the guidance of her own soul. To herself she had never seemed
to be vicious or impure, but she understood well that he was not
equally free from the bonds which religion had imposed upon him.
For his sake,—for his sake, it would be better that she should be
away from him.</p>
<p>All this was known to him accurately, and all this had to be
considered by him as he walked across the squire's park in the
gloaming of the evening. No doubt,—he now said to himself,—the
Doctor should have been made acquainted with his condition before
he or she had taken their place at the school. Reticence under
such circumstances had been a lie. Against his conscience there
had been many pricks. Living in his present condition he
certainly should not have gone up into that pulpit to preach the
Word of God. Though he had been silent, he had known that the
evil and the deceit would work round upon him. But now what
should he do? There was only one thing on which he was altogether
decided;—nothing should separate them. As he had said so often
before, he said again now,—"If there be sin, let it be sin." But
this was clear to him,—were he to give Dr. Wortle a true history
of what had happened to him in America, then must he certainly
leave Bowick. And this was equally certain, that before telling
his tale, he must make known his purpose to his wife.</p>
<p>But as he entered his own house he had determined that he would
tell the Doctor everything.</p>
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