The Vicar's Daughter, George MacDonald [book recommendations for teens TXT] 📗
- Author: George MacDonald
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he had no objectionable habits except inordinate smoking. But it happened that a pupil-a girl of imaginative disposition, I presume-fell so much in love with him that she betrayed her feelings to her countess-mother, and the lessons were of course put an end to. I suspect he did not escape heart-whole himself; for he immediately dropped all his other lessons, and took to writing poetry for a new magazine, which proved of ephemeral constitution, and vanished after a few months of hectic existence.
It was remarkable that with such instability his moral nature should continue uncorrupted; but this I believe he owed chiefly to his love and admiration of his brother. For my part, I could not help liking him much. There was a half-plaintive playfulness about him, alternated with gloom, and occasionally with wild merriment, which made him interesting even when one felt most inclined to quarrel with him. The worst of him was that he considered himself a generally misunderstood, if not ill-used man, who could not only distinguish himself, but render valuable service to society, if only society would do him the justice to give him a chance. Were it only, however, for his love to my baby, I could not but be ready to take up his defence. When I mentioned what I had just heard about Miss Clare, Percivale looked both astonished and troubled; but before he could speak, Roger, with the air of a man of the world whom experience enabled to come at once to a decision, said,-
"Depend upon it, Wynnie, there is falsehood there somewhere. You will always be nearer the truth if you believe nothing, than if you believe the half of what you hear."
"That's very much what papa says," I answered. "He affirms that he never searched into an injurious report in his own parish without finding it so nearly false as to deprive it of all right to go about."
"Besides," said Roger, "look at that face! How I should like to model it. She's a good woman that, depend upon it."
I was delighted with his enthusiasm.
"I wish you would ask her again, as soon as you can," said Percivale, who always tended to embody his conclusions in acts rather than in words. "Your cousin Judy is a jolly good creature, but from your father's description of her as a girl, she must have grown a good deal more worldly since her marriage. Respectability is an awful snare."
"Yes," said Roger; "one ought to be very thankful to be a Bohemian, and have nothing expected of him, for respectability is a most fruitful mother of stupidity and injustice."
I could not help thinking that he might, however, have a little more and be none the worse.
"I should be very glad to do as you desire, husband," I said, "but how can I? I haven't learned where she lives. It was asking Judy for her address once more that brought it all out. I certainly didn't insist, as I might have done, notwithstanding what she told me; but, if she didn't remember it before, you may be sure she could not have given it me then."
"It's very odd," said Roger, stroking his long mustache, the sole ornament of the kind he wore. "It's very odd," he repeated thoughtfully, and then paused again.
"What's so very odd, Roger?" asked Percivale.
"The other evening," answered Roger, after yet a short pause, "happening to be in Tottenham Court Road, I walked for some distance behind a young woman carrying a brown beer-jug in her hand-for I sometimes amuse myself in the street by walking persistently behind some one, devising the unseen face in my mind, until the recognition of the same step following causes the person to look round at me, and give me the opportunity of comparing the two-I mean the one I had devised and the real one. When the young woman at length turned her head, it was only my astonishment that kept me from addressing her as Miss Clare. My surprise, however, gave me time to see how absurd it would have been. Presently she turned down a yard and disappeared."
"Don't tell my cousin Judy," I said. "She would believe it was Miss Clare."
"There isn't much danger," he returned. "Even if I knew your cousin, I should not be likely to mention such an incident in her hearing."
"Could it have been she?" said Percivale thoughtfully.
"Absurd!" said Roger. "Miss Clare is a lady, wherever she may live."
"I don't know," said his brother thoughtfully; "who can tell? It mightn't have been beer she was carrying."
"I didn't say it was beer," returned Roger. "I only said it was a beer-jug,-one of those brown, squat, stone jugs,-the best for beer that I know, after all,-brown, you know, with a dash of gray."
"Brown jug or not, I wish I could get a few sittings from her. She would make a lovely St. Cecilia," said my husband.
"Brown jug and all?" asked Roger.
"If only she were a little taller," I objected.
"And had an aureole," said my husband. "But I might succeed in omitting the jug as well as in adding the aureole and another half-foot of stature, if only I could get that lovely countenance on the canvas,-so full of life and yet of repose."
"Don't you think it a little hard?" I ventured to say.
"I think so," said Roger.
"I don't," said my husband. "I know what in it looks like hardness; but I think it comes of the repression of feeling."
"You have studied her well for your opportunities," I said.
"I have; and I am sure, whatever Mrs. Morley may say, that, if there be any truth at all in those reports, there is some satisfactory explanation of whatever has given rise to them. I wish we knew anybody else that knew her. Do try to find some one that does, Wynnie."
"I don't know how to set about it," I said. "I should be only too glad."
"I will try," said Roger. "Does she sing?"
"I have heard Judy say she sang divinely; but the only occasion on which I met her-at their house, that time you couldn't go, Percivale-she was never asked to sing."
"I suspect," remarked Roger, "it will turn out to be only that she's something of a Bohemian, like ourselves."
"Thank you, Roger; but for my part, I don't consider myself a Bohemian at all," I said.
"I am afraid you must rank with your husband, wifie," said mine, as the wives of the working people of London often call their husbands.
"Then you do count yourself a Bohemian: pray, what significance do you attach to the epithet?" I asked.
"I don't know, except it signifies our resemblance to the gypsies," he answered.
"I don't understand you quite."
"I believe the gypsies used to be considered Bohemians," interposed Roger, "though they are doubtless of Indian origin. Their usages being quite different from those amongst which they live, the name Bohemian came to be applied to painters, musicians, and such like generally, to whom, save by courtesy, no position has yet been accorded by society-so called."
"But why have they not yet vindicated for themselves a social position," I asked, "and that a high one?"
"Because they are generally poor, I suppose," he answered; "and society is generally stupid."
"May it not be because they are so often, like the gypsies, lawless in their behavior, as well as peculiar in their habits?" I suggested.
"I understand you perfectly, Mrs. Percivale," rejoined Roger with mock offence. "But how would that apply to Charlie?"
"Not so well as to you, I confess," I answered. "But there is ground for it with him too."
"I have thought it all over many a time," said Percivale; "and I suppose it comes in part from inability to understand the worth of our calling, and in part from the difficulty of knowing where to put us."
"I suspect," I said, "one thing is that so many of them are content to be received as merely painters, or whatever they may be by profession. Many, you have told me, for instance, accept invitations which do not include their wives."
"They often go to parties, of course, where there are no ladies," said Roger.
"That is not what I mean," I replied. "They go to dinner-parties where there are ladies, and evening parties, too, without their wives."
"Whoever does that," said Percivale, "has at least no right to complain that he is regarded as a Bohemian; for in accepting such invitations, he accepts insult, and himself insults his wife."
Nothing irritated my bear so much as to be asked to dinner without me. He would not even offer the shadow of a reason for declining the invitation. "For," he would say, "if I give the real reason, namely, that I do not choose to go where my wife is excluded, they will set it down to her jealous ambition of entering a sphere beyond her reach; I will not give a false reason, and indeed have no objection to their seeing that I am offended; therefore, I assign none. If they have any chivalry in them, they may find out my reason readily enough."
I don't think I ever displeased him so much as once when I entreated him to accept an invitation to dine with the Earl of H--. The fact was, I had been fancying it my duty to persuade him to get over his offence at the omission of my name, for the sake of the advantage it would be to him in his profession. I laid it before him as gently and coaxingly as I could, representing how expenses increased, and how the children would be requiring education by and by,-reminding him that the reputation of more than one of the most popular painters had been brought about in some measure by their social qualities and the friendships they made.
"Is it likely your children will be ladies and gentlemen," he said, "if you prevail on their father to play the part of a sneaking parasite?"
I was frightened. He had never spoken to me in such a tone, but I saw too well how deeply he was hurt to take offence at his roughness. I could only beg him to forgive me, and promise never to say such a word again, assuring him that I believed as strongly as himself that the best heritage of children was their father's honor.
Free from any such clogs as the possession of a wife encumbers a husband withal, Roger could of course accept what invitations his connection with an old and honorable family procured him. One evening he came in late from a dinner at Lady Bernard's.
"Whom do you think I took down to dinner?" he asked, almost before he was seated.
"Lady Bernard?" I said, flying high.
"Her dowager aunt?" said Percivale.
"No, no; Miss Clare."
"Miss Clare!" we both repeated, with mingled question and exclamation.
"Yes, Miss Clare, incredible as it may appear," he answered.
"Did you ask her if it was she you saw carrying the jug of beer in Tottenham Court Road?" said Percivale.
"Did you ask her address?" I said. "That is a question more worthy of an answer."
"Yes, I did. I believe I did. I think I did."
"What is it, then?"
"Upon my word, I haven't the slightest idea."
"So, Mr. Roger! You have had a perfect opportunity, and have let it slip! You are
It was remarkable that with such instability his moral nature should continue uncorrupted; but this I believe he owed chiefly to his love and admiration of his brother. For my part, I could not help liking him much. There was a half-plaintive playfulness about him, alternated with gloom, and occasionally with wild merriment, which made him interesting even when one felt most inclined to quarrel with him. The worst of him was that he considered himself a generally misunderstood, if not ill-used man, who could not only distinguish himself, but render valuable service to society, if only society would do him the justice to give him a chance. Were it only, however, for his love to my baby, I could not but be ready to take up his defence. When I mentioned what I had just heard about Miss Clare, Percivale looked both astonished and troubled; but before he could speak, Roger, with the air of a man of the world whom experience enabled to come at once to a decision, said,-
"Depend upon it, Wynnie, there is falsehood there somewhere. You will always be nearer the truth if you believe nothing, than if you believe the half of what you hear."
"That's very much what papa says," I answered. "He affirms that he never searched into an injurious report in his own parish without finding it so nearly false as to deprive it of all right to go about."
"Besides," said Roger, "look at that face! How I should like to model it. She's a good woman that, depend upon it."
I was delighted with his enthusiasm.
"I wish you would ask her again, as soon as you can," said Percivale, who always tended to embody his conclusions in acts rather than in words. "Your cousin Judy is a jolly good creature, but from your father's description of her as a girl, she must have grown a good deal more worldly since her marriage. Respectability is an awful snare."
"Yes," said Roger; "one ought to be very thankful to be a Bohemian, and have nothing expected of him, for respectability is a most fruitful mother of stupidity and injustice."
I could not help thinking that he might, however, have a little more and be none the worse.
"I should be very glad to do as you desire, husband," I said, "but how can I? I haven't learned where she lives. It was asking Judy for her address once more that brought it all out. I certainly didn't insist, as I might have done, notwithstanding what she told me; but, if she didn't remember it before, you may be sure she could not have given it me then."
"It's very odd," said Roger, stroking his long mustache, the sole ornament of the kind he wore. "It's very odd," he repeated thoughtfully, and then paused again.
"What's so very odd, Roger?" asked Percivale.
"The other evening," answered Roger, after yet a short pause, "happening to be in Tottenham Court Road, I walked for some distance behind a young woman carrying a brown beer-jug in her hand-for I sometimes amuse myself in the street by walking persistently behind some one, devising the unseen face in my mind, until the recognition of the same step following causes the person to look round at me, and give me the opportunity of comparing the two-I mean the one I had devised and the real one. When the young woman at length turned her head, it was only my astonishment that kept me from addressing her as Miss Clare. My surprise, however, gave me time to see how absurd it would have been. Presently she turned down a yard and disappeared."
"Don't tell my cousin Judy," I said. "She would believe it was Miss Clare."
"There isn't much danger," he returned. "Even if I knew your cousin, I should not be likely to mention such an incident in her hearing."
"Could it have been she?" said Percivale thoughtfully.
"Absurd!" said Roger. "Miss Clare is a lady, wherever she may live."
"I don't know," said his brother thoughtfully; "who can tell? It mightn't have been beer she was carrying."
"I didn't say it was beer," returned Roger. "I only said it was a beer-jug,-one of those brown, squat, stone jugs,-the best for beer that I know, after all,-brown, you know, with a dash of gray."
"Brown jug or not, I wish I could get a few sittings from her. She would make a lovely St. Cecilia," said my husband.
"Brown jug and all?" asked Roger.
"If only she were a little taller," I objected.
"And had an aureole," said my husband. "But I might succeed in omitting the jug as well as in adding the aureole and another half-foot of stature, if only I could get that lovely countenance on the canvas,-so full of life and yet of repose."
"Don't you think it a little hard?" I ventured to say.
"I think so," said Roger.
"I don't," said my husband. "I know what in it looks like hardness; but I think it comes of the repression of feeling."
"You have studied her well for your opportunities," I said.
"I have; and I am sure, whatever Mrs. Morley may say, that, if there be any truth at all in those reports, there is some satisfactory explanation of whatever has given rise to them. I wish we knew anybody else that knew her. Do try to find some one that does, Wynnie."
"I don't know how to set about it," I said. "I should be only too glad."
"I will try," said Roger. "Does she sing?"
"I have heard Judy say she sang divinely; but the only occasion on which I met her-at their house, that time you couldn't go, Percivale-she was never asked to sing."
"I suspect," remarked Roger, "it will turn out to be only that she's something of a Bohemian, like ourselves."
"Thank you, Roger; but for my part, I don't consider myself a Bohemian at all," I said.
"I am afraid you must rank with your husband, wifie," said mine, as the wives of the working people of London often call their husbands.
"Then you do count yourself a Bohemian: pray, what significance do you attach to the epithet?" I asked.
"I don't know, except it signifies our resemblance to the gypsies," he answered.
"I don't understand you quite."
"I believe the gypsies used to be considered Bohemians," interposed Roger, "though they are doubtless of Indian origin. Their usages being quite different from those amongst which they live, the name Bohemian came to be applied to painters, musicians, and such like generally, to whom, save by courtesy, no position has yet been accorded by society-so called."
"But why have they not yet vindicated for themselves a social position," I asked, "and that a high one?"
"Because they are generally poor, I suppose," he answered; "and society is generally stupid."
"May it not be because they are so often, like the gypsies, lawless in their behavior, as well as peculiar in their habits?" I suggested.
"I understand you perfectly, Mrs. Percivale," rejoined Roger with mock offence. "But how would that apply to Charlie?"
"Not so well as to you, I confess," I answered. "But there is ground for it with him too."
"I have thought it all over many a time," said Percivale; "and I suppose it comes in part from inability to understand the worth of our calling, and in part from the difficulty of knowing where to put us."
"I suspect," I said, "one thing is that so many of them are content to be received as merely painters, or whatever they may be by profession. Many, you have told me, for instance, accept invitations which do not include their wives."
"They often go to parties, of course, where there are no ladies," said Roger.
"That is not what I mean," I replied. "They go to dinner-parties where there are ladies, and evening parties, too, without their wives."
"Whoever does that," said Percivale, "has at least no right to complain that he is regarded as a Bohemian; for in accepting such invitations, he accepts insult, and himself insults his wife."
Nothing irritated my bear so much as to be asked to dinner without me. He would not even offer the shadow of a reason for declining the invitation. "For," he would say, "if I give the real reason, namely, that I do not choose to go where my wife is excluded, they will set it down to her jealous ambition of entering a sphere beyond her reach; I will not give a false reason, and indeed have no objection to their seeing that I am offended; therefore, I assign none. If they have any chivalry in them, they may find out my reason readily enough."
I don't think I ever displeased him so much as once when I entreated him to accept an invitation to dine with the Earl of H--. The fact was, I had been fancying it my duty to persuade him to get over his offence at the omission of my name, for the sake of the advantage it would be to him in his profession. I laid it before him as gently and coaxingly as I could, representing how expenses increased, and how the children would be requiring education by and by,-reminding him that the reputation of more than one of the most popular painters had been brought about in some measure by their social qualities and the friendships they made.
"Is it likely your children will be ladies and gentlemen," he said, "if you prevail on their father to play the part of a sneaking parasite?"
I was frightened. He had never spoken to me in such a tone, but I saw too well how deeply he was hurt to take offence at his roughness. I could only beg him to forgive me, and promise never to say such a word again, assuring him that I believed as strongly as himself that the best heritage of children was their father's honor.
Free from any such clogs as the possession of a wife encumbers a husband withal, Roger could of course accept what invitations his connection with an old and honorable family procured him. One evening he came in late from a dinner at Lady Bernard's.
"Whom do you think I took down to dinner?" he asked, almost before he was seated.
"Lady Bernard?" I said, flying high.
"Her dowager aunt?" said Percivale.
"No, no; Miss Clare."
"Miss Clare!" we both repeated, with mingled question and exclamation.
"Yes, Miss Clare, incredible as it may appear," he answered.
"Did you ask her if it was she you saw carrying the jug of beer in Tottenham Court Road?" said Percivale.
"Did you ask her address?" I said. "That is a question more worthy of an answer."
"Yes, I did. I believe I did. I think I did."
"What is it, then?"
"Upon my word, I haven't the slightest idea."
"So, Mr. Roger! You have had a perfect opportunity, and have let it slip! You are
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