<p><SPAN name="c17" id="c17"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER V.</h3>
<h4>CORRESPONDENCE WITH THE PALACE.<br/> </h4>
<p><span class="smallcaps">The</span>
possible glory of Mary's future career did not deter the
Doctor from thinking of his troubles,—and especially that trouble
with the Bishop which was at present heavy on his hand. He had
determined not to go on with his action, and had so resolved
because he had felt, in his more sober moments, that in bringing
the Bishop to disgrace, he would be as a bird soiling its own
nest. It was that conviction, and not any idea as to the
sufficiency or insufficiency, as to the truth or falsehood, of the
editor's apology, which had actuated him. As he had said to his
lawyer, he did not in the least care for the newspaper people. He
could not condescend to be angry with them. The abominable joke
as to the two verbs was altogether in their line. As coming from
them, they were no more to him than the ribald words of boys which
he might hear in the street. The offence to him had come from the
Bishop,—and he resolved to spare the Bishop because of the
Church. But yet something must be done. He could not leave the
man to triumph over
<ins class="corr" title="Original read ‘hiim’">him</ins>.
If nothing further were done in the
matter, the Bishop would have triumphed over him. As he could not
bring himself to expose the Bishop, he must see whether he could
not reach the man by means of his own power of words;—so he wrote
as <span class="nowrap">follows;—</span><br/> </p>
<p>"MY DEAR LORD,—I have to own that this letter is written with
feelings which have been very much lacerated by what your lordship
has done. I must tell you, in the first place, that I have
abandoned my intention of bringing an action against the
proprietors of the scurrilous newspaper which your lordship sent
me, because I am unwilling to bring to public notice the fact of a
quarrel between a clergyman of the Church of England and his
Bishop. I think that, whatever may be the difficulty between us,
it should be arranged without bringing down upon either of us
adverse criticism from the public press. I trust your lordship
will appreciate my feeling in this matter. Nothing less strong
could have induced me to abandon what seems to be the most certain
means by which I could obtain redress.</p>
<p>"I had seen the paper which your lordship sent to me before it
came to me from the palace. The scurrilous, unsavoury, and vulgar
words which it contained did not matter to me much. I have lived
long enough to know that, let a man's own garments be as clean as
they may be, he cannot hope to walk through the world without
rubbing against those who are dirty. It was only when those words
came to me from your lordship,—when I found that the expressions
which I found in that paper were those to which your lordship had
before alluded as being criticisms on my conduct in the
metropolitan press,—criticisms so grave as to make your lordship
think it necessary to admonish me respecting them,—it was only
then, I say, that I considered them to be worthy of my notice.
When your lordship, in admonishing me, found it necessary to refer
me to the metropolitan press, and to caution me to look to my
conduct because the metropolitan press had expressed its
dissatisfaction, it was, I submit to you, natural for me to ask
you where I should find that criticism which had so strongly
affected your lordship's judgment. There are perhaps half a score
of newspapers published in London whose animadversions I, as a
clergyman, might have reason to respect,—even if I did not fear
them. Was I not justified in thinking that at least some two or
three of these had dealt with my conduct, when your lordship held
the metropolitan press <i>in terrorem</i> over my head? I applied to
your lordship for the names of these newspapers, and your
lordship, when pressed for a reply, sent to me—that copy of
'Everybody's Business.'</p>
<p>"I ask your lordship to ask yourself whether, so far, I have
overstated anything. Did not that paper come to me as the only
sample you were able to send me of criticism made on my conduct in
the metropolitan press? No doubt my conduct was handled there in
very severe terms. No doubt the insinuations, if true,—or if of
such kind as to be worthy of credit with your lordship, whether
true or false,—were severe, plain-spoken, and damning. The
language was so abominable, so vulgar, so nauseous, that I will
not trust myself to repeat it. Your lordship, probably, when
sending me one copy, kept another. Now, I must ask your
lordship,—and I must beg of your lordship for a reply,—whether
the periodical itself has such a character as to justify your
lordship in founding a complaint against a clergyman on its
unproved statements, and also whether the facts of the case, as
they were known to you, were not such as to make your lordship
well aware that the insinuations were false. Before these ribald
words were printed, your lordship had heard all the facts of the
case from my own lips. Your lordship had known me and my
character for, I think, a dozen years. You know the character
that I bear among others as a clergyman, a schoolmaster, and a
gentleman. You have been aware how great is the friendship I have
felt for the unfortunate gentleman whose career is in question,
and for the lady who bears his name. When you read those
abominable words did they induce your lordship to believe that I
had been guilty of the inexpressible treachery of making love to
the poor lady whose misfortunes I was endeavouring to relieve, and
of doing so almost in my wife's presence?</p>
<p>"I defy you to have believed them. Men are various, and their
minds work in different ways,—but the same causes will produce
the same effects. You have known too much of me to have thought it
possible that I should have done as I was accused. I should hold
a man to be no less than mad who could so have believed, knowing
as much as your lordship knew. Then how am I to reconcile to my
idea of your lordship's character the fact that you should have
sent me that paper? What am I to think of the process going on in
your lordship's mind when your lordship could have brought
yourself to use a narrative which you must have known to be false,
made in a newspaper which you knew to be scurrilous, as the ground
for a solemn admonition to a clergyman of my age and standing?
You wrote to me, as is evident from the tone and context of your
lordship's letter, because you found that the metropolitan press
had denounced my conduct. And this was the proof you sent to me
that such had been the case!</p>
<p>"It occurred to me at once that, as the paper in question had
vilely slandered me, I could redress myself by an action of law,
and that I could prove the magnitude of the evil done me by
showing the grave importance which your lordship had attached to
the words. In this way I could have forced an answer from your
lordship to the questions which I now put to you. Your lordship
would have been required to state on oath whether you believed
those insinuations or not; and, if so, why you believed them. On
grounds which I have already explained I have thought it improper
to do so. Having abandoned that course, I am unable to force any
answer from your lordship. But I appeal to your sense of honour
and justice whether you should not answer my questions;—and I
also ask from your lordship an ample apology, if, on
consideration, you shall feel that you have done me an undeserved
injury.—I have the honour to be, my lord, your lordship's most
obedient, very humble servant,</p>
<p class="ind15">"<span class="smallcaps">Jeffrey
Wortle</span>."<br/> </p>
<p>He was rather proud of this letter as he read it to himself, and
yet a little afraid of it, feeling that he had addressed his
Bishop in very strong language. It might be that the Bishop
should send him no answer at all, or some curt note from his
chaplain in which it would be explained that the tone of the
letter precluded the Bishop from answering it. What should he do
then? It was not, he thought, improbable, that the curt note from
the chaplain would be all that he might receive. He let the
letter lie by him for four-and-twenty hours after he had composed
it, and then determined that not to send it would be cowardly. He
sent it, and then occupied himself for an hour or two in
meditating the sort of letter he would write to the Bishop when
that curt reply had come from the chaplain.</p>
<p>That further letter must be one which must make all amicable
intercourse between him and the Bishop impossible. And it must be
so written as to be fit to meet the public eye if he should be
ever driven by the Bishop's conduct to put it in print. A great
wrong had been done him;—a great wrong! The Bishop had been
induced by influences which should have had no power over him to
use his episcopal rod and to smite him,—him Dr. Wortle! He would
certainly show the Bishop that he should have considered
beforehand whom he was about to smite.
"<ins class="corr" title="Opening and closing single
quotation marks added
to enclose ‘Amo’">'Amo'</ins> in the cool of the
evening!" And that given as an expression of opinion from the
metropolitan press in general! He had spared the Bishop as far as
that action was concerned, but he would not spare him should he be
driven to further measures by further injustice. In this way he
lashed himself again into a rage. Whenever those odious words
occurred to him he was almost mad with anger against the Bishop.</p>
<p>When the letter had been two days sent, so that he might have had
a reply had a reply come to him by return of post, he put a copy
of it into his pocket and rode off to call on Mr. Puddicombe. He
had thought of showing it to Mr. Puddicombe before he sent it, but
his mind had revolted from such submission to the judgment of
another. Mr. Puddicombe would no doubt have advised him not to
send it, and then he would have been almost compelled to submit to
such advice. But the letter was gone now. The Bishop had read
it, and no doubt re-read it two or three times. But he was
anxious that some other clergyman should see it,—that some other
clergyman should tell him that, even if inexpedient, it had still
been justified. Mr. Puddicombe had been made acquainted with the
former circumstances of the affair; and now, with his mind full of
his own injuries, he went again to Mr. Puddicombe.</p>
<p>"It is just the sort of letter that you would write, as a matter
of course," said Mr. Puddicombe.</p>
<p>"Then I hope that you think it is a good letter?"</p>
<p>"Good as being expressive, and good also as being true, I do think
it."</p>
<p>"But not good as being wise?"</p>
<p>"Had I been in your case I should have thought it unnecessary.
But you are self-demonstrative, and cannot control your feelings."</p>
<p>"I do not quite understand you."</p>
<p>"What did it all matter? The Bishop did a foolish thing in
talking of the metropolitan press. But he had only meant to put
you on your guard."</p>
<p>"I do not choose to be put on my guard in that way," said the
Doctor.</p>
<p>"No; exactly. And he should have known you better than to suppose
you would bear it. Then you pressed him, and he found himself
compelled to send you that stupid newspaper. Of course he had
made a mistake. But don't you think that the world goes easier
when mistakes are forgiven?"</p>
<p>"I did forgive it, as far as foregoing the action."</p>
<p>"That, I think, was a matter of course. If you had succeeded in
putting the poor Bishop into a witness-box you would have had
every sensible clergyman in England against you. You felt that
yourself."</p>
<p>"Not quite that," said the Doctor.</p>
<p>"Something very near it; and therefore you withdrew. But you
cannot get the sense of the injury out of your mind, and,
therefore, you have persecuted the Bishop with that letter."</p>
<p>"Persecuted?"</p>
<p>"He will think so. And so should I, had it been addressed to me.
As I said before, all your arguments are true,—only I think you
have made so much more of the matter than was necessary! He ought
not to have sent you that newspaper, nor ought he to have talked
about the metropolitan press. But he did you no harm; nor had he
wished to do you harm;—and perhaps it might have been as well to
pass it over."</p>
<p>"Could you have done so?"</p>
<p>"I cannot imagine myself in such a position. I could not, at any
rate, have written such a letter as that, even if I would; and
should have been afraid to write it if I could. I value peace and
quiet too greatly to quarrel with my bishop,—unless, indeed, he
should attempt to impose upon my conscience. There was nothing of
that kind here. I think I should have seen that he had made a
mistake, and have passed it over."</p>
<p>The Doctor, as he rode home, was, on the whole, better pleased
with his visit than he had expected to be. He had been told that
his letter was argumentative and true, and that in itself had been
much.</p>
<p>At the end of the week he received a reply from the Bishop, and
found that it was not, at any rate, written by the
chaplain.<br/> </p>
<p>"<span class="smallcaps">My dear Dr. Wortle</span>,"
said the reply; "your letter has pained me
exceedingly, because I find that I have caused you a degree of
annoyance which I am certainly very sorry I have inflicted. When
I wrote to you in my letter,—which I certainly did not intend as
an admonition,—about the metropolitan press, I only meant to tell
you, for your own information, that the newspapers were making
reference to your affair with Mr. Peacocke. I doubt whether I
knew anything of the nature of 'Everybody's Business.' I am not
sure even whether I had ever actually read the words to which you
object so strongly. At any rate, they had had no weight with me.
If I had read them,—which I probably did very cursorily,—they
did not rest on my mind at all when I wrote to you. My object was
to caution you, not at all as to your own conduct, but as to
others who were speaking evil of you.</p>
<p>"As to the action of which you spoke so strongly when I had the
pleasure of seeing you here, I am very glad that you abandoned it,
for your own sake and for mine, and the sake of all us generally
to whom the peace of the Church is dear.</p>
<p>"As to the nature of the language in which you have found yourself
compelled to write to me, I must remind you that it is unusual as
coming from a clergyman to a bishop. I am, however, ready to
admit that the circumstances of the case were unusual, and I can
understand that you should have felt the matter severely. Under
these circumstances, I trust that the affair may now be allowed to
rest without any breach of those kind feelings which have hitherto
existed between us.—Yours very faithfully,</p>
<p class="ind15"><ins class="corr" title="Opening double quotation
mark added"><span class="smallcaps">"C.
Broughton</span>."</ins><br/> </p>
<p>"It is a beastly letter," the Doctor said to himself, when he had
read it, "a beastly letter;" and then he put it away without
saying any more about it to himself or to any one else. It had
appeared to him to be a "beastly letter," because it had exactly
the effect which the Bishop had intended. It did not eat "humble
pie;" it did not give him the full satisfaction of a complete
apology; and yet it left no room for a further rejoinder. It had
declared that no censure had been intended, and expressed sorrow
that annoyance had been caused. But yet to the Doctor's thinking
it was an unmanly letter. "Not intended as an admonition!" Then
why had the Bishop written in that severely affectionate and
episcopal style? He had intended it as an admonition, and the
excuse was false. So thought the Doctor, and comprised all his
criticism in the one epithet given above. After that he put the
letter away, and determined to think no more about it.</p>
<p>"Will you come in and see Mrs. Peacocke after lunch?" the Doctor
said to his wife the next morning. They paid their visit
together; and after that, when the Doctor called on the lady, he
was generally accompanied by Mrs. Wortle. So much had been
effected by
<ins class="corr" title="Opening single quotation
mark added">'Everybody's Business,'</ins> and its abominations.</p>
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