by George Eliot
 even in an uncomfortable manner. At present, to find fault with the sermon was 
   regarded as almost equivalent to finding fault with religion itself. One Sunday, 
   Mr Hackit's nephew, Master Tom Stokes, a flippant town youth, greatly 
   scandalized his excellent relatives by declaring that he could write as good a 
   sermon as Mr Gilfil's; whereupon Mr Hackit sought to reduce the presumptuous 
   youth to utter confusion, by offering him a sovereign if he would fulfil his 
   vaunt. The sermon was written, however; and though it was not admitted to be 
   anywhere within reach of Mr Gilfil's. It was yet so astonishingly like a sermon, 
   having a text, three divisions, and a concluding exhortation beginning 'And now, 
   my brethren', that the sovereign, though denied formally, was bestowed 
   informally, and the sermon was pronounced, when Master Stokes's back was turned, 
   to be 'an uncommon cliver thing'. 
   The Rev. Mr Pickard, indeed, of the Independent Meeting, had stated, in a sermon 
   preached at Rotheby, for the reduction of a debt on New Zion, built, with an 
   exuberance of faith and a deficiency of funds, by seceders from the original 
   Zion, that he lived in a parish where the Vicar was very 'dark', and in the 
   prayers he addressed to his own congregation, he was in the habit of 
   comprehensively alluding to the parishioners outside the chapel walls, as those 
   who, Gallio-like, 'cared for none of these things'. But I need hardly say that 
   no church-goer ever came within earshot of Mr Pickard. 
   It was not to the Shepperton farmers only that Mr Gilfil's society was 
   acceptable; he was a welcome guest at some of the best houses in that part of 
   the country. Old Sir Jasper Sitwell would have been glad to see him every week; 
   and if you had seen him conducting Lady Sitwell in to dinner, or had heard him 
   talking to her with quaint yet graceful gallantry, you would have inferred that 
   the earlier period of his life had been passed in more stately society than 
   could be found in Shepperton, and that his slipshod chat and homely manners were 
   but like weather-stains on a fine old block of marble, allowing you still to see 
   here and there the fineness of the grain, and the delicacy of the original tint. 
   But in his later years these visits became a little too troublesome to the old 
   gentleman, and he was rarely to be found anywhere of an evening beyond the 
   bounds of his own parish�most frequently, indeed, by the side of his own 
   sitting-room fire, smoking his pipe, and maintaining the pleasing antithesis of 
   dryness and moisture by an occasional sip of gin-and-water. 
   Here I am aware that I have run the risk of alienating all my refined 
   lady-readers, and utterly annihilating any curiosity they may have felt to know 
   the details of Mr Gilfil's love-story. 
   'Gin-and-water! foh! you may as well ask us to interest ourselves in the romance 
   of a tallow-chandler, who mingles the image of his beloved with short dips and 
   moulds.' 
   But in the first place, dear ladies, allow me to plead that gin-and-water, like 
   obesity, or baldness, or the gout, does not exclude a vast amount of antecedent 
   romance, any more than the neatly-executed 'fronts' which you may some day wear, 
   will exclude your present possession of less expensive braids. Alas, alas! we 
   poor mortals are often little better than wood-ashes� there is small sign of the 
   sap, and the leafy freshness, and the bursting buds that were once there; but 
   wherever we see wood-ashes, we know that all that early fullness of life must 
   have been. I, at least. hardly ever look at a bent old man, or a wizened old 
   woman, but I see also, with my mind's eye, that Past of which they are the 
   shrunken remnant, and the unfinished romance of rosy cheeks and bright eyes 
   seems sometimes of feeble interest and significance, compared with that drama of 
   hope and love which has long ago reached its catastrophe, and left the poor 
   soul, like a dim and dusty stage, with all its sweet garden-scenes and fair 
   perspectives overturned and thrust out of sight. 
   In the second place, let me assure you that Mr Gilfil's potations of 
   gin-and-water were quite moderate. His nose was not rubicund; on the contrary, 
   his white hair hung around a pale and venerable face. He drank it chiefly, I 
   believe, because it was cheap; and here I find myself alighting on another of 
   the Vicar's weaknesses, which, if I had cared to paint a flattering portrait 
   rather than a faithful one, I might have chosen to suppress. It is undeniable 
   that, as the years advanced, Mr Gilfil became, as Mr Hackit observed, more and 
   more 'close-fisted', though the growing propensity showed itself rather in the 
   parsimony of his personal habits, than in withholding help from the needy. He 
   was saving�so he represented the matter to himself � for a nephew, the only son 
   of a sister who had been the dearest object, all but one, in his life. 'The 
   lad,' he thought, 'will have a nice little fortune to begin life with, and will 
   bring his pretty young wife some day to see the spot where his old uncle lies. 
   It will perhaps be all the better for his hearth that mine was lonely.' Mr 
   Gilfil was a bachelor, then? 
   That is the conclusion to which you would probably have come if you had entered 
   his sitting-room, where the bare tables, the large old-fashioned horse-hair 
   chairs, and the threadbare Turkey carpet perpetually fumigated with tobacco, 
   seemed to tell a story of wifeless existence that was contradicted by no 
   portrait, no piece of embroidery, no faded bit of pretty triviality, hinting of 
   taper-fingers and small feminine ambitions. And it was here that Mr Gilfil 
   passed his evenings, seldom with other society than that of Ponto, his old brown 
   setter, who, stretched out at full length on the rug with his nose between his 
   fore-paws, would wrinkle his brows and lift up his eyelids every now and then, 
   to exchange a glance of mutual understanding with his master. But there was a 
   chamber in Shepperton Vicarage which told a different story from that bare and 
   cheerless dining-room�a chamber never entered by any one besides Mr Gilfil and 
   old Martha the housekeeper, who, with David her husband as groom and gardener, 
   formed the Vicar's entire establishment. The blinds of this chamber were always 
   down, except once a-quarter, when Martha entered that she might air and clean 
   it. She always asked Mr Gilfil for the key, which he kept locked up in his 
   bureau, and returned it to him when she had finished her task. 
   It was a touching sight that the daylight streamed in upon, as Martha drew aside 
   the blinds and thick curtains, and opened the Gothic casement of the oriel 
   window! On the little dressing-table there was a dainty looking-glass in a 
   carved and gilt frame; bits of wax-candle were still in the branched sockets at 
   the sides, and on one of these branches hung a little black lace kerchief; a 
   faded satin pin-cushion, with the pins rusted in it, a scent-bottle, and a large 
   green fan, lay on the table; and on a dressing-box by the side of the glass was 
   a work-basket, and an unfinished baby-cap, yellow with age, lying in it. Two 
   gowns, of a fashion long forgotten, were hanging on nails against the door, and 
/>   a pair of tiny red slippers, with a bit of tarnished silver embroidery on them, 
   were standing at the foot of the bed. Two or three water-colour drawings, views 
   of Naples, hung upon the walls; and over the mantelpiece, above some bits of 
   rare old china, two miniatures in oval frames. One of these miniatures 
   represented a young man about seven-and-twenty, with a sanguine complexion, full 
   lips, and clear candid grey eyes. The other was the likeness of a girl probably 
   not more than eighteen, with small features, thin cheeks, a pale 
   southern-looking complexion, and large dark eyes. The gentleman wore powder; the 
   lady had her dark hair gathered away from her face, and a little cap, with a 
   cherry-coloured bow, set on the top of her head�a coquettish head-dress, but the 
   eyes spoke of sadness rather than of coquetry. 
   Such were the things that Martha had dusted and let the air upon, four times 
   a-year, ever since she was a blooming lass of twenty; and she was now, in this 
   last decade of Mr Gilfil's life, unquestionably on the wrong side of fifty. Such 
   was the locked-up chamber in Mr Gilfil's house: a sort of visible symbol of the 
   secret chamber in his heart, where he had long turned the key on early hopes and 
   early sorrows, shutting up for ever all the passion and the poetry of his life. 
   There were not many people in the parish, besides Martha, who had any very 
   distinct remembrance of Mr Gilfil's wife, or indeed who knew anything of her, 
   beyond the fact that there was a marble tablet, with a Latin inscription in 
   memory of her, over the vicarage pew. The parishioners who were old enough to 
   remember her arrival were not generally gifted with descriptive powers, and the 
   utmost you could gather from them was, that Mrs Gilfil looked like a 'furriner, 
   wi' such eyes, you can't think, an' a voice as went through you when she sung at 
   church.' The one exception was Mrs Patten, whose strong memory and taste for 
   personal narrative made her a great source of oral tradition in Shepperton. Mr 
   Hackit, who had not come into the parish until ten years after Mrs Gilfil's 
   death, would often put old questions to Mrs Patten for the sake of getting the 
   old answers, which pleased him in the same way as passages from a favourite 
   book, or the scenes of a familiar play, please more accomplished people. 
   'Ah, you remember well the Sunday as Mrs Gilfil first come to church, eh, Mrs 
   Patten?' 
   'To be sure I do. It was a fine bright Sunday as ever was seen, just at the 
   beginnin' o' hay harvest. Mr Tarbett preached that day, and Mr Gilfil sat i' the 
   pew with his wife. I think I see him now, a-leading her up the aisle, an' her 
   head not reachin' much ahove his elber: a little pale woman, with eyes as black 
   as sloes, an' yet lookin' blank-like, as if she see'd nothing with 'em.' 'I 
   warrant she had her weddin' clothes on?' said Mr Hackit. 
   'Nothin' partikler smart�on'y a white hat tied down under her chin, an' a white 
   Indy muslin gown. But you don't know what Mr Gilfil was in those times. He was 
   fine an' altered before you come into the parish. He'd a fresh colour then, an' 
   a bright look wi' his eyes. as did your heart good to see. He looked rare and 
   happy that Sunday; but somehow, I'd a feelin' as it wouldn't last long. I've no 
   opinion o' furriners, Mr Hackit, for I've travelled i' their country with my 
   lady in my time, an' seen enough o' their victuals an' their nasty ways.' 
   'Mrs Gilfil come from It'ly, didn't she?' 
   'I reckon she did, but I niver could rightly hear about that. Mr Gilfil was 
   niver to be spoke to about her, and nobody else hereabout knowed anythin'. 
   Howiver, she must ha' come over pretty young, for she spoke English as well as 
   you an' me. It's them Italians as has such fine voices, an' Mrs Gilfil sung, you 
   never heared the like. He brought her here to have tea with me one afternoon, 
   and says he, in his jovial way, "Now, Mrs Patten, I want Mrs Gilfil to see the 
   neatest house, and drink the best cup o' tea, in all Shepperton; you must show 
   her your dairy and your cheese-room, and then she shall sing you a song." An' so 
   she did; an' her voice seemed sometimes to fill the room; an' then it went low 
   an' soft, as if it was whisperin' close to your heart like.' 
   'You never heared her again, I reckon?' 
   'No: she was sickly then, and she died in a few months after. She wasn't in the 
   parish much more nor half a year altogether. She didn't seem lively that 
   afternoon, an' I could see she didn't care about the dairy, nor the cheeses, 
   on'y she pretended, to please him. As for him, I niver see'd a man so wrapt up 
   in a woman. He looked at her as if he was worshippin' her, an' as if he wanted 
   to lift her off the ground ivery minute, to save her the trouble o' walkin'. 
   Poor man, poor man! It had like to ha' killed him when she died, though he niver 
   gev way, but went on ridin' about and preachin'. But he was wore to a shadow, 
   an' his eyes used to look as dead �you wouldn't ha' knowed 'em.' 'She brought 
   him no fortin?' 
   'Not she. All Mr Gilfil's property come by his mother's side. There was blood 
   an' money too, there. It's a thousand pities as he married i' that way�a fine 
   man like him, as might ha' had the pick o' the county, an' had his grandchildren 
   about him now. An' him so fond o' children, too.' 
   In this manner Mrs Patten usually wound up her reminiscences of the Vicar's 
   wife, of whom, you perceive, she knew but little. It was clear that the 
   communicative old lady had nothing to tell of Mrs Gilfil's history previous to 
   her arrival in Shepperton, and that she was unacquainted with Mr Gilfil's 
   love-story. 
   But I, dear reader, am quite as communicative as Mrs Patten, and much better 
   informed; so that, if you care to know more about the Vicar's courtship and 
   marriage, you need only carry your imagination back to the latter end of the 
   last century, and your attention forward into the next chapter. 
   Chapter 2
   IT is the evening of the 21St of June 1788. The day has been bright and sultry, 
   and the sun will still be more than an hour above the horizon, but his rays, 
   broken by the leafy fretwork of the elms that border the park, no longer prevent 
   two ladies from carrying out their cushions and embroidery, and seating 
   themselves to work on the lawn in front of Cheverel Manor.' The soft turf gives 
   way even under the fairy tread of the younger lady, whose small stature and slim 
   figure rest on the tiniest of full-grown feet. She trips along before the elder, 
   carrying the cushions, which she places in the favourite spot, just on the slope 
   by a clump of laurels, where they can see the sunbeams sparkling among the 
   water-lilies, and can be themselves seen from the dining-room windows. She has 
   deposited the cushions, and now turns round, so that you may have a full view of 
   her as she stands waiting the slower advance of the elder lady. You are at once 
   arrested by her large dark eyes, which, in their inexpressive unconscious 
   beauty, resemble the eyes of a fawn, and it is only by an effort of attention 
   that you notice the absence of bloom on her young cheek, and the southern 
   yellowish tint of her small neck and
 face, rising above the little black lace 
   kerchief which prevents the too immediate comparison of her skin with her white 
   muslin gown. Her large eyes seem all the more striking because the dark hair is 
   gathered away from her face, under a little cap set at the top of her head, with 
   a cherry-coloured bow on one side. 
   The elder lady, who is advancing towards the cushions, is cast in a very 
   different mould of womanhood. She is tall, and looks the taller because her 
   powdered hair is turned backward over a toupee, and surmounted by lace and 
   ribbons. She is nearly fifty, but her complexion is still fresh and beautiful, 
   with the beauty of an auburn blond; her proud pouting lips, and her head thrown 
   a little backward as she walks, give an expression of hauteur which is not 
   contradicted by the cold grey eye. The tucked-in kerchief, rising full over the 
   low tight bodice of her blue dress, sets off the majestic form of her bust, and 
   she treads the lawn as if she were one of Sir Joshua Reynolds' stately ladies, 
   who had suddenly stepped from her frame to enjoy the evening cool. 
   'Put the cushions lower, Caterina, that we may not have so much sun upon us,' 
   she called out, in a tone of authority, when still at some distance. 
   Caterina obeyed, and they sat down, making two bright patches of red and white 
   and blue on the green background of the laurels and the lawn, which would look 
   none the less pretty in a picture because one of the women's hearts was rather 
   cold and the other rather sad. 
   And a charming picture Cheverel Manor would have made that evening, if some 
   English Watteau had been there to paint it: the castellated house of grey-tinted 
   stone, with the flickering sunbeams sending dashes of golden light across the 
   many-shaped panes in the mullioned windows, and a great beech leaning athwart 
   one of the flanking towers, and breaking, with its dark flattened boughs, the 
   too formal symmetry of the front; the broad gravel-walk winding on the right, by 
   a row of tall pines, alongside the pool�on the left branching out among swelling 
   grassy mounds, surmounted by clumps of trees, where the red trunk of the Scotch 
   fir glows in the descending sunlight against the bright green of limes and 
   acacias; the great pool, where a pair of swans are swimming lazily with one leg 
   tucked under a wing, and where the open waterlilies lie calmly accepting the 
   kisses of the fluttering light-sparkles; the lawn, with its smooth emerald 
   greenness, sloping down to the rougher and browner herbage of the park, from 
   which it is invisibly fenced by a little stream that winds away from the pool, 
   and disappears under a wooden bridge in the distant pleasure-ground; and on this 
   lawn our two ladies, whose part in the landscape the painter, standing at a 
   favourable point of view in the park, would represent with a few little dabs of 
   red and white and blue. 
   Seen from the great Gothic windows of the dining-room, they had much more 
   definiteness of outline, and were distinctly visible to the three gentlemen 
   sipping their claret there, as two fair women in whom all three had a personal 
   interest. These gentlemen were a group worth considering attentively; but any 
   one entering that dining-room for the first time, would perhaps have had his 
   attention even more strongly arrested by the room itself, which was so bare of 
   furniture that it impressed one with its architectural beauty like a cathedral. 
   A piece of matting stretched from door to door, a bit of worn carpet under the 
   dining-table, and a sideboard in a deep recess, did not detain the eye for a 
   moment from the lofty groined ceiling, with its richly-carved pendants, all of 
   creamy white, relieved here and there by touches of gold. On one side, this 
   lofty ceiling was supported by pillars and arches, beyond which a lower ceiling, 
   a miniature copy of the higher one, covered the square projection which, with 
   its three large pointed windows, formed the central feature of the building. The