God's Good Man, Marie Corelli [me reader .txt] 📗
- Author: Marie Corelli
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He uttered these words with intense passion, rising from his seat, and walking up and down the room as he spoke. Walden watched his restless passing to and fro, with a wistful look in his honest eyes. Presently he said, smiling a little—
“You are my Bishop—and I should not presume to differ from you, Brent! YOU must instruct ME,—not I you! Yet if I may speak from my own experience---”
“You may and you shall!”—replied Brent, swiftly—“But think for a moment, before you speak, of what that experience has been! One great grief has clouded your life—the loss of your sister. After that, what has been your lot? A handful of simple souls set under your charge, in the loveliest of little villages,—souls that love you, trust you and obey you. Compared to this, take MY daily life! An over-populated diocese—misery and starvation on all sides,—men working for mere pittances,—women prostituting themselves to obtain food—children starving—girls ruined in their teens—and over it all, my wretched self, a leading representative of the Church which can do nothing to remedy these evils! And worse than all, a Church in which some of the clergy themselves who come under my rule and dominance are more dishonourable and dissolute than many of the so- called ‘reprobates’ of society whom they are elected to admonish! I tell you, Walden, I have some men under my jurisdiction whom I should like to see soundly flogged!—only I am powerless to order the castigation—and some others who ought to be serving seven years in penal servitude instead of preaching virtue to people a thousand times more virtuous than themselves!”
“I quite believe that!” said Walden, smiling—“I know one of them!”
The Bishop glanced at him, and laughed.
“You mean Putwood Leveson?” he said—“He seems a mischievous fool— but I don’t suppose there is any real harm in him, is there?”
“Real harm?”—and John flared up in a blaze of wrath—“He is the most pernicious scoundrel that ever masqueraded in the guise of a Christian!”
The Bishop paused in his walk up and down, and clasping his hands behind his back, an old habit of his, looked quizzically at his friend. A smile, kindly and almost boyish, lightened the grey pallor of his worn face.
“Why, John!” he said—“you are actually in a temper! Your mental attitude is evidently that of squared fists and ‘Come on!’ What has roused the slumbering lion, eh?”
“It doesn’t need a lion to spring at Leveson,”—said Walden, contemptuously—“A sheep would do it! The tamest cur that ever crawled would have spirit enough to make a dash for a creature so unutterably mean and false and petty! I may as well admit to you at once that I myself nearly struck him!”
“You did?” And Bishop Brent’s grave dark eyes flashed with a sudden suspicion of laughter.
“I did. I know it was not Churchman-like,—I know it was a case of ‘kicking against the pricks.’ But Leveson’s ‘pricks’ are too much like hog’s bristles for me to endure with patience!”
The Bishop assumed a serious demeanour.
“Come, come, let me hear this out!” he said—“Do you mean to tell me that you—YOU, John—actually struck a brother minister?”
“No—I do not mean to tell you anything of the kind, my Lord Bishop!” answered Walden, beginning to laugh. “I say that I ‘nearly’ struck him,—not quite! Someone else came on the scene at the critical moment, and did for me what I should certainly have done for myself had I been left to it. I cannot say I am sorry for the impulse!”
“It sounds like a tavern brawl,”—said the Bishop, shaking his head dubiously—“or a street fight. So unlike you, Walden! What was it all about?”
“The fellow was slandering a woman,”—replied Walden, hotly— “Poisoning her name with his foul tongue, and polluting it by his mere utterance—contemptible brute! I should like to have horsewhipped him---”
“Stop, stop!” interrupted the Bishop, stretching out his thin long white hand, on which one single amethyst set in a plain gold ring, shone with a pale violet fire—“I am not sure that I quite follow you, John! What woman is this?”
Despite himself, a rush of colour sprang to Walden’s brows. But he answered quite quietly.
“Miss Vancourt,—of Abbot’s Manor.”
“Miss Vancourt!” Bishop Brent looked, as he felt, utterly bewildered. “Miss Vancourt! My dear Walden, you surprise me! Did I not write to you—do you not know---”
“Oh, I know all that is reported of her,”—said John, quickly—“And I remember what you wrote. But it’s a mistake, Brent! In fact, if you will exonerate me for speaking bluntly, it’s a lie! There never was a gentler, sweeter woman than Maryllia Vancourt,—and perhaps there never was one more basely or more systematically calumniated!”
The Bishop took a turn up to the farther end of the room. Then he came back and confronted Walden with an authoritative yet kindly air.
“Look me straight in the face, John!”
John obeyed. There was a silence, while Brent scanned slowly and with appreciative affection the fine intellectual features, brave eyes, and firm, yet tender mouth of the man whom he had, since the days of their youth together, held dearest in his esteem among all other men he had ever known, while Walden, in his turn, bore the sad and searching gaze without flinching. Then the Bishop laid one hand gently on his shoulder.
“So it has come, John!” he said.
Then and then only the brave eyes fell,—then and then only the firm mouth trembled. But Walden was not the man to shirk any pain or confusion to himself in matters of conscience.
“I suppose it has!” he answered, simply.
The Bishop sat down, and, seemingly out of long habit, raised his eyes to the blandly smiling Virgin and Child above him.
“I am sorry!”—he murmured—“John, my dear old fellow, I am very sorry---”
“Why should you be sorry?” broke out Walden, impetuously, “There is nothing to be sorry for, except that I am a fool! But I knew THAT long ago, even if you did not!”—and he forced a smile—“Don’t be sorry for me, Brent!—I’m not in the least sorry for myself. Indeed, if I tell you the whole truth, I believe I rather like my own folly. It does nobody any harm! And after all it is not absolutely a world’s wonder that a decaying tree should, even in its decaying process, be aware of the touch of spring. It should not make the tree unhappy!”
The Bishop raised his eyes. They were full of a deep melancholy.
“We are not trees—we are men!” he said—“And as men, God has made us all aware of the love of woman,—the irresistible passion that at one time or another makes havoc or glory of our lives! It is the direst temptation on earth. Worst of all and bitterest it is when love comes too late,—too late, John!—I say in your case, it comes too late!”
John sighed and smiled.
“Love—if it has come to me at all—is never too late,”—he said with quiet patience,—“My dear Brent, don’t you understand? This little girl—this child—for she is nothing more than that to a man of my years—has slipped into my life by chance, as it were, like a stray sunbeam—no more! I feel her brightness—her warmth—her vitality—and my soul is conscious of an animation and gladness whenever she is near, of which she is the sole cause. But that is all. Her pretty ways—her utter loneliness,—are the facts of her existence which touch me to pity, and I would see her cared for and protected,—but I know myself to be too old and too unworthy to so care for and protect her. I want her to be happy, but I am fully conscious that I can never make her so. Would you call this kind of chill sentiment ‘love’?”
Brent regarded him steadfastly.
“Yes, John! I think I should!—yes, I certainly should call ‘this chill sentiment’ love! And tell me—have you never got out of your depth in the water of this ‘chill sentiment,’ or found yourself battling for dear life against an outbreak of volcanic fire?”
Walden was silent.
“I never thought,”—continued the Bishop, rather sorrowfully,—“when I wrote to you about the return of Robert Vancourt’s daughter to her childhood’s home, that she would in any serious way interfere with the peace of your life, John! I told you just what I had heard—no more. I have never seen the girl. I only know what people say of her. And that is not altogether pleasing.”
“Do you believe what people say?” interrupted Walden, suddenly,—“Is it not true that when a woman is pretty, intelligent, clean-souled and pure-minded, and as unlike the rest of ‘society’ women as she can well be, she is slandered for having the very virtues her rivals do not possess?”
“Quite true!”—said Brent—“and quite common. It is always the old story—‘Be thou as chaste as ice, as pure as snow, thou shalt not escape calumny.’ Do not imagine for a moment, John, that I am going to run the risk of losing your friendship by repeating anything that may have been said against the reputation or the character of Miss Vancourt. I have always prayed that no woman might ever come between us,”—and here a faint tinge of colour warmed the pallor of his face—“And, so far, I fancy the prayer has been granted. And I do not think that this—this—shall we call it glamour, John?—this glamour, of the imagination and the senses, will overcome you in any detrimental way. I cannot picture you as the victim of a ‘society’ siren!”
John smiled. A vision rose up before his eyes of a little figure in sparkling white draperies—a figure that bent appealingly towards him, while a soft childlike voice said—‘I’m sorry! Will you forgive me?’ The tender lines round his mouth deepened and softened at the mental picture.
“She is not a society siren,”—he said, gently—“Poor little soul! She is a mere woman, needing what woman best thrives upon—love!”
“Well, she has been loved and sought in marriage for at least three years by Lord Roxmouth,”—said the Bishop.
“Has SHE been loved and sought, or her aunt’s millions?” queried Walden—“That is the point at issue. But my dear Brent, do not let us waste time in talking over this little folly of mine—for I grant you it is folly. I’m not sorry you have found it out, for in any case I had meant to make a clean breast of it before we parted,”—he hesitated—then looked up frankly—“I would rather you spoke no more of it, Harry! I’ve made my confession. I admit I nearly struck Leveson for slandering an innocent and defenseless woman,—and I believe you’ll forgive me for that. Next, I own that though I am getting into the sere and yellow leaf, I am still
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