<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
<p class="chapterhead">AT THE DEANERY.</p>
<p><span class="firstwords">There</span> was a dinner-party at the deanery during Miss Tallowax's
sojourn at Brotherton. Mr. Canon Holdenough and Lady Alice were
there. The bishop and his wife had been asked,—a ceremony which
was gone through once a year,—but had been debarred from accepting
the invitation by the presence of clerical guests at the palace. But
his lordship's chaplain, Mr. Groschut, was present. Mr. Groschut
also held an honorary prebendal stall, and was on of the chapter,—a
thorn sometimes in the Dean's side. But appearances were well
kept up at Brotherton, and no one was more anxious that things
should be done in a seemly way than the Dean. Therefore, Mr.
Groschut, who was a very low churchman and had once been a Jew,
but who bore a very high character for theological erudition, was
asked to the deanery. There was also one or two other clergymen
there, with their wives, and Mr. and Mrs. Houghton. Mrs. Houghton,
it will be remembered, was the beautiful woman who had refused to
become the wife of Lord George Germain. Before taking this step,
the Dean had been careful to learn whether his son-in-law would
object to meet the Houghtons. Such objection would have been
foolish, as the families had all known each other. Both Mr. De Baron,
Mrs. Houghton's father, and Mr. Houghton himself, had been intimate
with the late marquis, and had been friends of the present lord before
he had quitted the country. A lady when she refuses a gentleman
gives no cause of quarrel. All this the Dean understood; and as he
himself had known both Mr. Houghton and Mr. De Baron ever since
he came to Brotherton, he thought it better that there should be such
a meeting. Lord George blushed up to the roots of his hair, and
then said that he should be very glad to meet the gentleman and
his wife.</p>
<p>The two young brides had known each other as girls, and now met
with, at any rate, an appearance of friendship.</p>
<p>"My dear," said Mrs. Houghton, who was about four years the
elder, "of course I know all about it, and so do you. You are an
heiress, and could afford to please yourself. I had nothing of my own,
and should have had to pass all my time at Manor Cross. Are you
surprised?"</p>
<p>"Why should I be surprised?" said Lady George, who was, however,
very much surprised at this address.</p>
<p>"Well, you know; he is the handsomest man in England. Everybody
allows that; and, then, such a family—and such possibilities!
I was very much flattered. Of course he had not seen you then, or<!-- Page 21 -->
only seen you as a child, or I shouldn't have had a chance. It is a
great deal better as it is,—isn't it?"</p>
<p>"I think so, certainly."</p>
<p>"I am so glad to hear that you have a house in town. We go up
about the first of April, when the hunting is over. Mr. Houghton
does not ride much, but he hunts a great deal. We live in Berkeley
Square, you know; and I do so hope we shall see ever so much
of you."</p>
<p>"I'm sure I hope so too," said Lady George, who had never hitherto
been very fond of Miss De Baron, and had entertained a vague idea
that she ought to be a little afraid of Mrs. Houghton. But when her
father's guest was so civil to her she did not know how to be other
than civil in return.</p>
<p>"There is no reason why what has passed should make any
awkwardness;—is there?"</p>
<p>"No," said Lady George, feeling that she almost blushed at the
allusion to so delicate a subject.</p>
<p>"Of course not. Why should there? Lord George will soon get
used to me, just as if nothing had happened; and I shall always be
ever so fond of him,—in a way, you know. There shall be nothing to
make you jealous."</p>
<p>"I'm not a bit afraid of that," said Lady George, almost too
earnestly.</p>
<p>"You need not be, I'm sure. Not but what I do think he was at
one time very—very much attached to me. But it couldn't be. And
what's the good of thinking of such a thing when it can't be? I don't
pretend to be very virtuous, and I like money. Now Mr. Houghton,
at any rate, has got a large income. If I had had your fortune at my
own command, I don't say what I might not have done."</p>
<p>Lady George almost felt that she ought to be offended by all this,—almost
felt that she was disgusted; but, at the same time, she did not
quite understand it. Her father had made a point of asking the
Houghtons, and had told her that of course she would know the
Houghtons up in town. She had an idea that she was very ignorant
of the ways of life; but that now it would behove her, as a married
woman, to learn those ways. Perhaps the free and easy mode of
talking was the right thing. She did not like being told by another
lady that that other lady would have married her own husband, only
that he was a pauper; and the offence of all this seemed to be the
greater because it was all so recent. She didn't like being told that
she was not to be jealous, especially when she remembered that her
husband had been desperately in love with the lady who told her so
not many months ago. But she was not jealous, and was quite
sure she never would be jealous; and, perhaps, it did not matter.
All this had occurred in the drawing-room before dinner. Then
Mr. Houghton came up to her, telling that he had been commissioned<!-- Page 22 -->
by the Dean to have the honour of taking her down to dinner. Having
made his little speech, Mr. Houghton retired,—as gentlemen generally
do retire when in that position.</p>
<p>"Be as nice as you can to him," said Mrs. Houghton. "He hasn't
much to say for himself, but he isn't half a bad fellow; and a
pretty woman like you can do what she likes with him."</p>
<p>Lady George, as she went down to dinner, assured herself that she
had no slightest wish to take any unfair advantage of Mr. Houghton.</p>
<p>Lord George had taken down Miss Tallowax, the Dean having been
very wise in this matter; and Miss Tallowax was in a seventh heaven
of happiness. Miss Tallowax, though she had made no promises, was
quite prepared to do great things for her noble connexions, if her
noble connexions would treat her properly. She had already made
half-a-dozen wills, and was quite ready to make another, if Lord George
would be civil to her. The Dean was in his heart a little ashamed of
his aunt; but he was man enough to be able to bear her eccentricities
without showing his vexation, and sufficiently wise to know that more
was to be won than lost by the relationship.</p>
<p>"The best woman in the world," he had said to Lord George beforehand,
speaking of his aunt; "but, of course, you will remember
that she was not brought up as a lady."</p>
<p>Lord George, with stately urbanity, had signified his intention of
treating Miss Tallowax with every consideration.</p>
<p>"She has thirty thousand pounds at her own disposal," continued
the Dean. "I have never said a word to her about money, but,
upon my honour, I think she likes Mary better than any one else.
It's worth bearing in mind, you know."</p>
<p>Lord George smiled again in a stately manner,—perhaps showing
something of displeasure in his smile. But, nevertheless, he was
well aware that it was worth his while to bear Miss Tallowax and her
money in his mind.</p>
<p>"My lord," said Miss Tallowax, "I hope you will allow me to say
how much honoured we all feel by Mary's proud position." Lord
George bowed and smiled, and led the lady into the deanery dining-room.
Words did not come easily to him, and he hardly knew how
to answer the lady. "Of course, it's a great thing for people such as
us," continued Miss Tallowax, "to be connected with the family of a
Marquis." Again Lord George bowed. This was very bad, indeed,—a
great deal worse than he had anticipated from the aunt of so
courtly a man as his father-in-law, the Dean. The lady looked to be
about sixty; very small, very healthy, with streaky red cheeks, small
grey eyes, and a brown front. Then came upon him an idea, that it
would be a very long time before the thirty thousand pounds, or any
part of it, would come to him. And then there came to him another
idea, that as he had married the Dean's daughter, it was his duty to
behave well to the Dean's aunt, even though the money should never<!-- Page 23 -->
come to him. He therefore told Miss Tallowax that his mother hoped
to have the pleasure of seeing her at Manor Cross before she left
Brotherton. Miss Tallowax almost got out of her seat, as she
curtseyed with her head and shoulders to this proposition.</p>
<p>The Dean was a very good man at the head of his own dinner-table,
and the party went off pleasantly in spite of sundry attempts at
clerical pugnacity made by Mr. Groschut. Every man and every
beast has his own weapon. The wolf fights with his tooth, the bull
with his horn, and Mr. Groschut always fought with his bishop,—so
taught by inner instinct. The bishop, according to Mr. Groschut,
was inclined to think that this and that might be done. That such
a change might be advantageously made in reference to certain
clerical meetings, and that the hilarity of the diocese might be
enhanced by certain evangelical festivities. These remarks were
generally addressed to Mr. Canon Holdenough, who made almost no
reply to them. But the Dean was, on each occasion, prepared with
some civil answer, which, while it was an answer, would still seem to
change the conversation. It was a law in the Close that Bishop
Barton should be never allowed to interfere with the affairs of
Brotherton Cathedral; and if not the bishop, certainly not the bishop's
chaplain. Though the Canon and the Dean did not go altogether on
all fours in reference to clerical affairs generally they were both
agreed on this point. But the Chaplain, who knew the condition of
affairs as well as they did, thought the law a bad law, and was determined
to abolish it. "It certainly would be very pleasant, Mr.
Holdenough, if we could have such a meeting within the confines of
the Close. I don't mean to-day, and I don't mean to-morrow; but we
might think of it. The bishop, who has the greatest love for the
cathedral services, is very much of that mind."</p>
<p>"I do not know that I care very much for any out-of-door gatherings,"
said the Canon.</p>
<p>"But why out of doors?" asked the Chaplain.</p>
<p>"Whatever meeting there is to be in the Close, will, I hope, be
held in the deanery," said the Dean; "but of all meetings, I must
say that I like meetings such as this, the best. Germain, will you
pass the bottle?" When they were alone together he always called
his son-in-law, George; but in company he dropped the more familiar
name.</p>
<p>Mr. De Baron, Mrs. Houghton's father, liked his joke. "Sporting
men," he said, "always go to a meet, and clerical men to a meeting.
What's the difference?"</p>
<p>"A good deal, if it is in the colour of the coat," said the Dean.</p>
<p>"The one is always under cover," said the Canon. "The other, I
believe, is generally held out of doors."</p>
<p>"There is, I fancy, a considerable resemblance in the energy of
those who are brought together," said the Chaplain.<!-- Page 24 --></p>
<p>"But clergymen ain't allowed to hunt, are they?" said Mr.
Houghton, who, as usual, was a little in the dark as to the subject
under consideration.</p>
<p>"What's to prevent them?" asked the Canon, who had never been
out hunting in his life, and who certainly would have advised a young
clergyman to abstain from the sport. But in asking the question, he
was enabled to strike a sidelong blow at the objectionable chaplain,
by seeming to question the bishop's authority.</p>
<p>"Their own conscience, I should hope," said the Chaplain, solemnly,
thereby parrying the blow successfully.</p>
<p>"I am very glad, then," said Mr. Houghton, "that I didn't go into
the Church." To be thought a real hunting man was the great object
of Mr. Houghton's ambition.</p>
<p>"I am afraid you would hardly have suited us, Houghton," said
the Dean. "Come, shall we go up to the ladies?"</p>
<p>In the drawing-room, after a little while, Lord George found
himself seated next to Mrs. Houghton—Adelaide De Baron, as she
had been when he had sighed in vain at her feet. How it had come
to pass that he was sitting there he did not know, but he was quite
sure that it had come to pass by no arrangement contrived by himself.
He had looked at her once since he had been in the room, almost
blushing as he did so, and had told himself that she was certainly very
beautiful. He almost thought that she was more beautiful than his
wife; but he knew,—he knew now,—that her beauty and her manners
were not as well suited to him as those of the sweet creature whom he
had married. And now he was once more seated close to her, and it
was incumbent on him to speak to her. "I hope," she said, almost
in a whisper, but still not seeming to whisper, "that we have both
become very happy since we met last."</p>
<p>"I hope so, indeed," said he.</p>
<p>"There cannot, at least, be any doubt as to you, Lord George. I
never knew a sweeter young girl than Mary Lovelace; so pretty, so
innocent, and so enthusiastic. I am but a poor worldly creature
compared to her."</p>
<p>"She is all that you say, Mrs. Houghton." Lord George also was
displeased,—more thoroughly displeased than had been his wife. But
he did not know how to show his displeasure; and though he felt it,
he still felt, also, the old influence of the woman's beauty.</p>
<p>"I am so delighted to have heard that you have got a house in
Munster Court. I hope that Lady George and I may be fast friends.
Indeed, I won't call her Lady George; for she was Mary to me before
we either of us thought of getting husbands for ourselves." This was
not strictly true, but of that Lord George could know nothing. "And
I do hope,—may I hope,—that you will call on me?"</p>
<p>"Certainly I will do so."</p>
<p>"It will add so much to the happiness of my life, if you will allow<!-- Page 25 -->
me to feel that all that has come and gone has not broken the friendship
between us."</p>
<p>"Certainly not," said Lord George.</p>
<p>The lady had then said all that she had got to say, and changed her
position as silently as she had occupied it. There was no abruptness
of motion, and yet Lord George saw her talking to her husband at the
other side of the room, almost while his own words were still sounding
in his own ears. Then he watched her for the next few minutes.
Certainly, she was very beautiful. There was no room for comparison,
they were so unlike; otherwise, he would have been disposed to say
that Adelaide was the more beautiful. But Adelaide certainly would
not have suited the air of Manor Cross, or have associated well with
Lady Sarah.</p>
<p>On the next day the Marchioness and Ladies Susannah and Amelia
drove over to the deanery in great state, to call on Miss Tallowax,
and to take Lady George back to Manor Cross. Miss Tallowax enjoyed
the company of the Marchioness greatly. She had never seen a
lady of that rank before. "Only think how I must feel," she said to
her niece, that morning, "I, that never spoke to any one above a
baronet's lady in my life."</p>
<p>"I don't think you'll find much difference," said Mary.</p>
<p>"You're used to it. You're one of them yourself. You're above a
baronet's lady,—ain't you, my dear?"</p>
<p>"I have hardly looked into all that as yet, aunt." There must
surely have been a little fib in this, or the Dean's daughter must
have been very much unlike other young ladies.</p>
<p>"I suppose I ought to be afraid of you, my dear; only you are so
nice and so pretty. And as for Lord George, he was quite condescending."
Lady George knew that praise was intended, and therefore
made no objection to the otherwise objectionable epithet.</p>
<p>The visit of the Marchioness was passed over with the less disturbance
to Miss Tallowax because it was arranged that she was to be
taken over to lunch at Manor Cross on the following day. Lord
George had said a word, and Lady Sarah had consented, though, as
a rule, Lady Sarah did not like the company of vulgar people. The
peasants of the parish, down to the very poorest of the poor, were her
daily companions. With them she would spend hours, feeling no inconvenience
from their language or habits. But she did not like
gentlefolk who were not gentle. In days now long gone by, she had
only assented to the Dean, because holy orders are supposed to make
a gentleman; for she would acknowledge a bishop to be as grand a
nobleman as any, though he might have been born the son of a
butcher. But nobility and gentry cannot travel backwards, and she
had been in doubt about Miss Tallowax. But even with the Lady
<SPAN name="tn_pg_34"></SPAN><!-- TN: "Sarahs" changed to "Sarah"-->Sarah a feeling has made its way which teaches them to know that
they must submit to some changes. The thing was to be regretted,<!-- Page 26 -->
but Lady Sarah knew that she was not strong enough to stand quite
alone. "You know she is very rich," the Marchioness had said in a
whisper; "and if Brotherton marries, your poor brother will want it
so badly."</p>
<p>"That ought not to make any difference, mamma," said Lady
Sarah. Whether it did make any difference or not, Lady Sarah
herself probably hardly knew; but she did consent to the asking of
Miss Tallowax to lunch at Manor Cross.</p>
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