by George Eliot
 
   Scenes of Clerical Life
   Scenes of Clerical Life
   George Eliot
   This page copyright � 2002 Blackmask Online.
   http://www.blackmask.com
   VOL. I. THE SAD FORTUNES OF THE REV. AMOS BARTON. 
   CHAPTER I. 
   CHAPTER II. 
   CHAPTER III. 
   CHAPTER IV. 
   CHAPTER V. 
   CHAPTER VI. 
   CHAPTER VII. 
   CHAPTER VIII. 
   CHAPTER IX. 
   CHAPTER X. 
   CONCLUSION. 
   MR GILFIL'S LOVE-STORY 
   CHAPTER I. 
   CHAPTER II. 
   CHAPTER III. 
   CHAPTER IV. 
   CHAPTER V. 
   CHAPTER VI. 
   CHAPTER VII. 
   CHAPTER VIII. 
   CHAPTER IX. 
   CHAPTER X. 
   CHAPTER XI. 
   CHAPTER XII. 
   CHAPTER XIII. 
   CHAPTER XIV. 
   CHAPTER XV. 
   CHAPTER XVI. 
   CHAPTER XVII. 
   VOL. II. MR GILFIL'S LOVE-STORY 
   CHAPTER XVIII. 
   CHAPTER XIX. 
   CHAPTER XX. 
   CHAPTER XXI. 
   EPILOGUE. 
   JANET'S REPENTANCE 
   CHAPTER I. 
   CHAPTER II. 
   CHAPTER III. 
   CHAPTER IV. 
   CHAPTER V. 
   CHAPTER VI. 
   CHAPTER VII. 
   CHAPTER VIII. 
   CHAPTER IX. 
   GRAND ENTERTAINMENT!!! 
   CHAPTER X. 
   CHAPTER XI. 
   CHAPTER XII. 
   CHAPTER XIII. 
   CHAPTER XIV. 
   CHAPTER XV. 
   CHAPTER XVI. 
   CHAPTER XVII. 
   CHAPTER XVIII. 
   CHAPTER XIX. 
   CHAPTER XX. 
   CHAPTER XXI. 
   CHAPTER XXII. 
   CHAPTER XXIII. 
   CHAPTER XXIV. 
   CHAPTER XXV. 
   CHAPTER XXVI. 
   CHAPTER XXVII. 
   CHAPTER XXVIII. 
   VOL. I. THE SAD FORTUNES OF THE REV. AMOS BARTON. 
   CHAPTER I. 
   Shepperton Church was a very different-looking building five-and-twenty years 
   ago. To be sure, its substantial stone tower looks at you through its 
   intelligent eye, the clock, with the friendly expression of former days; but in 
   everything else what changes! Now there is a wide span of slated roof flanking 
   the old steeple; the windows are tall and symmetrical; the outer doors are 
   resplendent with oak-graining, the inner doors reverentially noiseless with a 
   garment of red baize; and the walls, you are convinced, no lichen will ever 
   again effect a settlement on�they are smooth and innutrient as the summit of the 
   Rev. Amos Barton's head, after ten years of baldness and supererogatory soap. 
   Pass through the baize doors and you will see the nave filled with well-shaped 
   benches, understood to be free seats; while in certain eligible corners, less 
   directly under the fire of the clergyman's eye, there are pews reserved for the 
   Shepperton gentility. Ample galleries are supported on iron pillars, and in one 
   of them stands the crowning glory, the very clasp or aigrette of Shepperton 
   church-adornment� namely, an organ, not very much out of repair, on which a 
   collector of small rents, differentiated by the force of circumstances into an 
   organist, will accompany the alacrity of your departure after the blessing, by a 
   sacred minuet or an easy "Gloria."
   Immense improvement! says the well-regulated mind, which unintermittingly 
   rejoices in the New Police, the Tithe Commutation Act, the pennypost, and all 
   guarantees of human advancement, and has no moments when conservative-reforming 
   intellect takes a nap, while imagination does a little Toryism by the sly, 
   revelling in regret that dear, old, brown, crumbling, picturesque inefficiency 
   is everywhere giving place to spick-and-span new-painted, new-varnished 
   efficiency, which will yield endless diagrams, plans, elevations, and sections, 
   but alas! no picture. Mine, I fear, is not a well-regulated mind: it has an 
   occasional tenderness for old abuses; it lingers with a certain fondness over 
   the days of nasal clerks and top-booted parsons, and has a sigh for the departed 
   shades of vulgar errors. So it is not surprising that I recall with a fond 
   sadness Shepperton Church as it was in the old days, with its outer coat of 
   rough stucco, its red-tiled roof, its heterogeneous windows patched with 
   desultory bits of painted glass, and its little flight of steps with their 
   wooden rail running up the outer wall, and leading to the school-children's 
   gallery.
   Then inside, what dear old quaintnesses! which I began to look at with delight, 
   even when I was so crude a member of the congregation, that my nurse found it 
   necessary to provide for the reinforcement of my devotional patience by 
   smuggling bread-and-butter into the sacred edifice. There was the chancel, 
   guarded by two little cherubims looking uncomfortably squeezed between arch and 
   wall, and adorned with the escutcheons of the Oldinport family, which showed me 
   inexhaustible possibilities of meaning in their blood-red hands, their 
   death's-heads and cross-bones, their leopards' paws, and Maltese crosses. There 
   were inscriptions on the panels of the singing-gallery, telling of benefactions 
   to the poor of Shepperton, with an involuted elegance of capitals and final 
   flourishes, which my alphabetic erudition traced with ever-new delight. No 
   benches in those days; but huge roomy pews, round which devout church-goers sat 
   during "lessons," trying to look anywhere else than into each other's eyes. No 
   low partitions allowing you, with a dreary absence of contrast and mystery, to 
   see everything at all moments; but tall dark panels, under whose shadow I sank 
   with a sense of retirement through the Litany, only to feel with more intensity 
   my burst into the conspicuousness of public life when I was made to stand up on 
   the seat during the psalms or the singing.
   And the singing was no mechanical affair of official routine; it had a drama. As 
   the moment of psalmody approached, by some process to me as mysterious and 
   untraceable as the opening of the flowers or the breaking-out of the stars, a 
   slate appeared in front of the gallery, advertising in bold characters the psalm 
   about to be sung, lest the sonorous announcement of the clerk should still leave 
   the bucolic mind in doubt on that head. Then followed the migration of the clerk 
   to the gallery, where, in company with a bassoon, two key-bugles, a carpenter 
   understood to have an amazing power of singing "counter," and two lesser musical 
   stars, he formed the complement of a choir regarded in Shepperton as one of 
   distinguished attraction, occasionally known to draw hearers from the next 
   parish. The innovation of hymn-books was as yet undreamed of; even the New 
   
Version was regarded with a sort of melancholy tolerance, as part of the common 
   degeneracy in a time when prices had dwindled, and a cotton gown was no longer 
   stout enough to last a lifetime; for the lyrical taste of the best heads in 
   Shepperton had been formed on Sternhold and Hopkins. But the greatest triumphs 
   of the Shepperton choir were reserved for the Sundays when the slate announced 
   an Anthem, with a dignified abstinence from particularisation, both words and 
   music lying far beyond the reach of the most ambitious amateur in the 
   congregation:�an anthem in which the key-bugles always ran away at a great pace, 
   while the bassoon every now and then boomed a flying shot after them.
   As for the clergyman, Mr Gilfil, an excellent old gentleman, who smoked very 
   long pipes and preached very short sermons, I must not speak of him, or I might 
   be tempted to tell the story of his life, which had its little romance, as most 
   lives have between the ages of teetotum and tobacco. And at present I am 
   concerned with quite another sort of clergyman�the Rev. Amos Barton, who did not 
   come to Shepperton until long after Mr Gilfil had departed this life�until after 
   an interval in which Evangelicalism and the Catholic Question had begun to 
   agitate the rustic mind with controversial debates. A Popish blacksmith had 
   produced a strong Protestant reaction by declaring that, as soon as the 
   Emancipation Bill was passed, he should do a great stroke of business in 
   gridirons; and the disinclination of the Shepperton parishioners generally to 
   dim the unique glory of St Lawrence, rendered the Church and Constitution an 
   affair of their business and bosoms. A zealous evangelical preacher had made the 
   old sounding-board vibrate with quite a different sort of elocution from Mr 
   Gilfil's; the hymn-book had almost superseded the Old and New Versions; and the 
   great square pews were crowded with new faces from distant corners of the 
   parish�perhaps from dissenting chapels.
   You are not imagining, I hope, that Amos Barton was the incumbent of Shepperton. 
   He was no such thing. Those were days when a man could hold three small livings, 
   starve a curate a-piece on two of them, and live badly himself on the third. It 
   was so with the Vicar of Shepperton; a vicar given to bricks and mortar, and 
   thereby running into debt far away in a northern country�who executed his 
   vicarial functions towards Shepperton by pocketing the sum of thirty-five pounds 
   ten per annum, the net surplus remaining to him from the proceeds of that 
   living, after the disbursement of eighty pounds as the annual stipend of his 
   curate. And now, pray, can you solve me the following problem? Given a man with 
   a wife and six children: let him be obliged always to exhibit himself when 
   outside his own door in a suit of black broadcloth, such as will not undermine 
   the foundations of the Establishment by a paltry plebeian glossiness or an 
   unseemly whiteness at the edges; in a snowy cravat, which is a serious 
   investment of labour in the hemming, starching, and ironing departments; and in 
   a hat which shows no symptom of taking to the hideous doctrine of expediency, 
   and shaping itself according to circumstances; let him have a parish large 
   enough to create an external necessity for abundant shoe-leather, and an 
   internal necessity for abundant beef and mutton, as well as poor enough to 
   require frequent priestly consolation in the shape of shillings and sixpences; 
   and, lastly, let him be compelled, by his own pride and other people's, to dress 
   his wife and children with gentility from bonnet-strings to shoe-strings. By 
   what process of division can the sum of eighty pounds per annum be made to yield 
   a quotient which will cover that man's weekly expenses? This was the problem 
   presented by the position of the Rev. Amos Barton, as curate of Shepperton, 
   rather more than twenty years ago.
   What was thought of this problem, and of the man who had to work it out, by some 
   of the well-to-do inhabitants of Shepperton, two years or more after Mr Barton's 
   arrival among them, you shall hear, if you will accompany me to Cross Farm, and 
   to the fireside of Mrs Patten, a childless old lady, who had got rich chiefly by 
   the negative process of spending nothing. Mrs Patten's passive accumulation of 
   wealth, through all sorts of "bad times," on the farm of which she had been sole 
   tenant since her husband's death, her epigrammatic neighbour, Mrs Hackit, 
   sarcastically accounted for by supposing that "sixpences grew on the bents of 
   Cross Farm;" while Mr Hackit, expressing his views more literally, reminded his 
   wife that "money breeds money." Mr and Mrs Hackit, from the neighbouring farm, 
   are Mrs Patten's guests this evening; so is Mr Pilgrim, the doctor from the 
   nearest market-town, who, though occasionally affecting aristocratic airs, and 
   giving late dinners with enigmatic side-dishes and poisonous port, is never so 
   comfortable as when he is relaxing his professional legs in one of those 
   excellent farmhouses where the mice are sleek and the mistress sickly. And he is 
   at this moment in clover.
   For the flickering of Mrs Patten's bright fire is reflected in her bright copper 
   tea-kettle, the home-made muffins glisten with an inviting succulence, and Mrs 
   Patten's niece, a single lady of fifty, who has refused the most ineligible 
   offers out of devotion to her aged aunt, is pouring the rich cream into the 
   fragrant tea with a discreet liberality.
   Reader! did you ever taste such a cup of tea as Miss Gibbs is this moment 
   handing to Mr Pilgrim? Do you know the dulcet strength, the animating blandness 
   of tea sufficiently blended with real farmhouse cream? No�most likely you are a 
   miserable town-bred reader, who think of cream as a thinnish white fluid, 
   delivered in infinitesimal pennyworths down area steps; or perhaps, from a 
   presentiment of calves' brains, you refrain from any lacteal addition, and rasp 
   your tongue with unmitigated bohea. You have a vague idea of a milch cow as 
   probably a white-plaster animal standing in a butterman's window, and you know 
   nothing of the sweet history of genuine cream, such as Miss Gibb's: how it was 
   this morning in the udders of the large sleek beasts, as they stood lowing a 
   patient entreaty under the milking-shed; how it fell with a pleasant rhythm into 
   Betty's pail, sending a delicious incense into the cool air; how it was carried 
   into that temple of moist cleanliness, the dairy, where it quietly separated 
   itself from the meaner elements of milk, and lay in mellowed whiteness, ready 
   for the skimming-dish which transferred it to Miss Gibbs's glass cream-jug. If I 
   am right in my conjecture, you are unacquainted with the highest possibilities 
   of tea; and Mr Pilgrim, who is holding that cup in his hand, has an idea beyond 
   you.
   Mrs Hackit declines cream; she has so long abstained from it with an eye to the 
   weekly butter-money, that abstinence, wedded to habit, has begotten aversion. 
   She is a thin woman with a chronic liver-complaint, which would have secured her 
   Mr Pilgrim's entire regard and unreserved good word, even if he had not been in 
   awe of her tongue, which was as sharp as his own lanc
et. She has brought her 
   knitting�no frivolous fancy knitting, but a substantial woollen stocking; the 
   click-click of her knitting-needles is the running accompaniment to all her 
   conversation, and in her utmost enjoyment of spoiling a friend's 
   self-satisfaction, she was never known to spoil a stocking.
   Mrs Patten does not admire this excessive click-clicking activity. Quiescence in 
   an easy-chair, under the sense of compound interest perpetually accumulating, 
   has long seemed an ample function to her, and she does her malevolence gently. 
   She is a pretty little old woman of eighty, with a close cap and tiny flat white 
   curls round her face, as natty and unsoiled and invariable as the waxen image of 
   a little old lady under a glass-case; once a lady's-maid, and married for her 
   beauty. She used to adore her husband, and now she adores her money, cherishing 
   a quiet blood-relation's hatred for her niece, Janet Gibbs, who, she knows, 
   expects a large legacy, and whom she is determined to disappoint. Her money 
   shall all go in a lump to a distant relation of her husband's, and Janet shall 
   be saved the trouble of pretending to cry, by finding that she is left with a 
   miserable pittance.
   Mrs Patten has more respect for her neighbour Mr Hackit than for most people. Mr 
   Hackit is a shrewd substantial man, whose advice about crops is always worth 
   listening to, and who is too well off to want to borrow money.
   And now that we are snug and warm with this little tea-party, while it is 
   freezing with February bitterness outside, we will listen to what they are 
   talking about.
   "So," said Mr Pilgrim, with his mouth only half empty of muffin, "you had a row 
   in Shepperton church last Sunday. I was at Jem Hood's, the bassoon-man's, this 
   morning, attending his wife, and he swears he'll be revenged on the parson �a 
   confounded, methodistical, meddlesome chap, who must be putting his finger in 
   every pie. What was it all about?"
   "O, a passill o' nonsense," said Mr Hackit, sticking one thumb between the 
   buttons of his capacious waistcoat, and retaining a pinch of snuff with the 
   other�for he was but moderately given to "the cups that cheer but not 
   inebriate," and had already finished his tea; "they began to sing the wedding 
   psalm for a new-married couple, as pretty a psalm an' as pretty a tune as any's 
   in the prayer-book. It's been sung for every new-married couple since I was a 
   boy. And what can be better?" Here Mr Hackit stretched out his left arm, threw 
   back his head, and broke into melody� "'O what a happy thing it is, 
   And joyful for to see, 
   Brethren to dwell together in 
   Friendship and unity.' But Mr Barton is all for th' hymns, and a sort o' 
   music as I can't join in at all."
   "And so," said Mr Pilgrim, recalling Mr Hackit from lyrical reminiscences to 
   narrative, "he called out Silence! did he? when he got into the pulpit; and gave 
   a hymn out himself to some meeting-house tune?"
   "Yes," said Mrs Hackit, stooping towards the candle to pick up a stitch, "and 
   turned as red as a turkey-cock. I often say, when he preaches about meeknes, he 
   gives himself a slap in the face. He's like me�he's got a temper of his own."
   "Rather a low-bred fellow, I think, Barton," said Mr Pilgrim, who hated the 
   Reverend Amos for two reasons�because he had called in a new doctor, recently 
   settled in Shepperton; and because, being himself a dabbler in drugs, he had the 
   credit of having cured a patient of Mr Pilgrim's. "They say his father was a 
   dissenting shoemaker; and he's half a dissenter himself. Why, doesn't he preach 
   extempore in that cottage up here, of a Sunday evening?"
   "Tchaw!"�this was Mr Hackit's favourite interjection �"that preaching without 
   book's no good, only when a man has a gift, and has the Bible at his fingers' 
   ends. It was all very well for Parry�he'd a gift; and in my youth I've heard the 
   Ranters out o' doors in Yorkshire go on for an hour or two on end, without ever 
   sticking fast a minute. There was one clever chap, I remember, as used to say, 
   'You're like the woodpigeon; it says do, do, do all day, and never sets about 
   any work itself.' That's bringing it home to people. But our parson's no gift at 
   all that way; he can preach as good a sermon as need be heard when he writes it 
   down. But when h� tries to preach wi'out book, he rambles about, and doesn't