The Vicar of Wrexhill Part 23
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Rosalind coloured, and her heart whispered, "I will not be a hypocrite."
But she had agreed to sing, and she prepared to do so, seeking among her volumes for one of the easiest and shortest of Handel's songs, and determined when she had finished to make her escape.
While she was thus employed, however, Mr. Cartwright was equally active in turning over the leaves of his pocket companion; and before Miss Torrington had made her selection, he placed the tiny ma.n.u.script volume open upon the instrument, saying, "There, my dear young lady! this is an air, and these are words which we may all listen to with equal innocence and delight."
Rosalind was provoked; but every one in the room had already crowded round the piano, and having no inclination to enter upon any discussion, she sat down prepared to sing whatever was placed before her.
The air was undeniably a popular one, being no other than "Fly not yet!" which, as all the world knows, has been performed to millions of delighted listeners, in lofty halls and tiny drawing-rooms, and, moreover, ground upon every hand-organ in Great Britain for many years past. Rosalind ran her eyes over the words, which, in fair feminine characters, were written beneath the notes as follow:
Fly not yet! 'Tis just the hour When prayerful Christians own the power That, inly beaming with new light, Begins to sanctify the night For maids who love the moon.
Oh, pray!--oh, pray!
'Tis but to bless these hours of shade That pious songs and hymns are made; For now, their holy ardour glowing, Sets the soul's emotion flowing.
Oh, pray!--oh, pray!
Prayer so seldom breathes a strain So sweet as this, that, oh! 'tis pain To check its voice too soon.
Oh, pray!--oh, pray!
An expression of almost awful indignation rose to the eyes of Rosalind.
"Do you give me this, sir," she said, "as a jest?--or do you propose that I should sing it as an act of devotion?"
Mr. Cartwright withdrew the little book and immediately returned it to his pocket.
"I am sorry, Miss Torrington, that you should have asked me such a question," he replied with a kind of gentle severity which might have led almost any hearer to think him in the right. "I had hoped that my ministry at Wrexhill, short as it has been, could not have left it a matter of doubt whether, in speaking of singing or prayer, I was in jest?"
"Nevertheless, sir," rejoined Rosalind, "it does to me appear like a jest, and a very indecent one too, thus to imagine that an air long familiar to all as the vehicle of words as full of levity as of poetry can be on the sudden converted into an accompaniment to a solemn invocation to prayer--uttered, too, in the form of a vile parody."
"I think that a very few words may be able to prove to you the sophistry of such an argument," returned the vicar. "You will allow, I believe, that this air is very generally known to all cla.s.ses.--Is it not so?"
Rosalind bowed her a.s.sent.
"Well, then, let me go a step farther, and ask whether the words originally set to this air are not likely to be recalled by hearing it?"
"Beyond all doubt."
"Now observe, Miss Torrington, that what you have been pleased to call levity and poetry, I, in my clerical capacity, denounce as indecent and obscene."
"Is that your reason for setting me to play it?" said Rosalind in a tone of anger.
"That question again, does not, I fear, argue an amiable and pious state of mind," replied Mr. Cartwright, appealing meekly with his eyes to the right and left. "It is to subst.i.tute other thoughts for those which the air has. .h.i.therto suggested that I conceive the singing this song, as it now stands, desirable."
"Might it not be as well to leave the air alone altogether?" said Rosalind.
"Decidedly not," replied the vicar. "The notes, as you have allowed, are already familiar to all men, and it is therefore a duty to endeavour to make that familiarity familiarly suggest thoughts of heaven."
"Thoughts of heaven," said Rosalind, "should never be suggested familiarly."
"Dreadful--very dreadful doctrine that, Miss Torrington! and I must tell you, in devout a.s.surance of the truth I speak, that it is in order to combat and overthrow such notions as you now express, that Heaven hath vouchsafed, by an act of special providence, to send upon earth in these later days my humble self, and some others who think like me."
"And permit me, sir, in the name of the earthly father I have lost,"
replied Rosalind, while her eyes _almost_ overflowed with the glistening moisture her earnestness brought into them,--"permit me in his reverenced name to say, that constant prayer can in no way be identified with familiarity of address; and that of many lamentable evils which the cla.s.s of preachers to whom you allude have brought upon blundering Christians, that of teaching them to believe that there is righteousness in mixing the awful and majestic name of G.o.d with all the hourly, petty occurrences of this mortal life, is one of the most deplorable."
"May your unthinking youth, my dear young lady, plead before the G.o.d of mercy in mitigation of the wrath which such sentiments are calculated to draw down!"
"Oh!" sobbed Miss Richards.
"Alas!" sighed Mrs. Simpson.
"How can you, Rosalind, speak so to the pastor and master of our souls?"
said f.a.n.n.y, while tears of sympathy for the outraged vicar fell from her beautiful eyes.
"My dear children!--my dear friends!" said Mr. Cartwright in a voice that seemed to tremble with affectionate emotion, "think not of me!--Remember the words 'Blessed are they which are persecuted for righteousness' sake!' I turn not from the harsh rebuke of this young lady, albeit I am not insensible to its injustice,--nor, indeed, blind to its indecency. But blessed--oh! most blessed shall I hold this trial, if it lead to the awakening holy thoughts in you!--My dear young lady,"
he continued, rising from his seat and approaching Rosalind with an extended hand, "it may be as well, perhaps, that I withdraw myself at this moment. Haply, reflection may soften your young heart.--But let us part in peace, as Christians should do."
Rosalind did not take his offered hand. "In peace, sir," she said,--"decidedly I desire you to depart in peace. I have no wish to molest you in any way. But you must excuse my not accepting your proffered hand. It is but an idle and unmeaning ceremony perhaps, as things go; but the manner in which you now stretch forth your hand gives a sort of importance to it which would make it a species of falsehood in me to accept it. When it means any thing, it means cordial liking; and this, sir, I do not feel for you."
So saying, Rosalind arose and left the room.
f.a.n.n.y clasped her hands in a perfect agony, and raising her tearful eyes to Heaven as if to deprecate its wrath upon the roof that covered so great wickedness, exclaimed, "Oh, Mr. Cartwright! what can I say to you!"
Mrs. Simpson showed symptoms of being likely to faint; and as Mr.
Cartwright and f.a.n.n.y approached her, Miss Richards, with a vehemence of feeling that seemed to set language at defiance, seized the hand of the persecuted vicar and pressed it to her lips.
Several minutes were given to the interchange of emotions too strong to be described in words. Female tears were blended with holy blessings; and, as Jacob afterwards a.s.sured his sister, who had contrived un.o.bserved to escape, he at one time saw no fewer than eight human hands, great and small, all mixed together in a sort of chance-medley heap upon the chair round which they at length kneeled down.
It will be easily believed that Miss Torrington appeared no more that night; and after an hour pa.s.sed in conversation on the persecutions and revilings to which the G.o.dly are exposed, Mrs. Simpson, who declared herself dreadfully overcome, proposed to Miss Richards that they should use such strength as was left them to walk home. A very tender leave was taken of f.a.n.n.y, in which Mr. Jacob zealously joined, and the party set out for a star-lit walk to Wrexhill, its vicar supporting on each arm a very nervous and trembling hand.
Mr. Cartwright soon after pa.s.sing the Park-lodge, desired his son to step forward and order the clerk to come to him on some urgent parish business before he went to bed. The young man darted forward nothing loth, and the trio walked at a leisurely pace under the dark shadows of the oak-trees that lined the road to the village.
They pa.s.sed behind the Vicarage; when the two ladies simultaneously uttered a sigh, and breathed in a whisper, "Sweet spot!" Can it be doubted that both were thanked by a gentle pressure of the arm?
The house of Mrs. Simpson lay on the road to that of Mrs. Richards, and Miss Louisa made a decided halt before the door, distinctly p.r.o.nouncing at the same time,
"Good night, my dear Mrs. Simpson!"
But this lady knew the duties of a chaperon too well to think of leaving her young companion till she saw her safely restored to her mother's roof.
"Oh! no, my dear!" she exclaimed: "if your house were a mile off, Louisa, I should take you home."
"But you have been so poorly!" persisted the young lady, "and it is so unnecessary!"
"_It is right_," returned Mrs. Simpson with an emphasis that marked too conscientious a feeling to be further resisted. So Miss Richards was taken home, and the fair widow languidly and slowly retraced her steps to her own door, with no other companion than the Vicar of Wrexhill.
END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
VOLUME THE SECOND.
The Vicar of Wrexhill Part 23
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The Vicar of Wrexhill Part 23 summary
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