“Not a bit more commonplace than marrying the parson,” said Lily.
“Oh, yes, it is. Parsons’ marriages are often very grand affairs. They come in among county people. That’s their luck in life. Doctors never do; nor lawyers. I don’t think lawyers ever get married in the country. They’re supposed to do it up in London. But a country doctor’s wedding is not a thing to be talked about much.”
Mrs. Boyce probably agreed in this view of the matter, seeing that she did not choose the coming marriage as her first subject of conversation. As soon as the two girls were seated she flew away immediately to the house, and began to express her very great surprise—her surprise and her joy also—at the sudden change which had been made in their plans. “It is so much nicer, you know,” said she, “that things should be pleasant among relatives.”
“Things always have been tolerably pleasant with us,” said Bell.
“Oh, yes; I’m sure of that. I’ve always said it was quite a pleasure to see you and your uncle together. And when we heard about your all having to leave—”
“But we didn’t have to leave, Mrs. Boyce. We were going to leave because we thought mamma would be more comfortable in Guestwick; and now we’re not going to leave, because we’ve all ‘changed our mindses,’ as Mrs. Crump calls it.”
“And is it true the house is going to be painted?” asked Mrs. Boyce.
“I believe it is true,” said Lily.
“Inside and out?”
“It must be done some day,” said Bell.
“Yes, to be sure; but I must say it is generous of the squire. There’s such a deal of wood-work about your house. I know I wish the Ecclesiastical Commissioners would paint ours; but nobody ever does anything for the clergy. I’m sure I’m delighted you’re going to stay. As I said to Mr. Boyce, what should we ever have done without you? I believe the squire had made up his mind that he would not let the place.”
“I don’t think he ever has let it.”
“And if there was nobody in it, it would all go to rack and ruin; wouldn’t it? Had your mamma to pay anything for the lodgings she engaged at Guestwick?”
“Upon my word, I don’t know. Bell can tell you better about that than I, as Dr. Crofts settled it. I suppose Dr. Crofts tells her everything.” And so the conversation was changed, and Mrs. Boyce was made to understand that whatever further mystery there might be, it would not be unravelled on that occasion.
It was settled that Dr. Crofts and Bell should be married about the middle of June, and the squire determined to give what grace he could to the ceremony by opening his own house on the occasion. Lord De Guest and Lady Julia were invited by special arrangement between her ladyship and Bell, as has been before explained. The colonel also with Lady Fanny came up from Torquay on the occasion, this being the first visit made by the colonel to his paternal roof for many years. Bernard did not accompany his father. He had not yet gone abroad, but there were circumstances which made him feel that he would not find himself comfortable at the wedding. The service was performed by Mr. Boyce, assisted, as the
County Chronicle
very fully remarked, by the Reverend John Joseph Jones, M.A., late of Jesus College, Cambridge, and curate of St. Peter’s, Northgate, Guestwick; the fault of which little advertisement was this—that as none of the readers of the paper had patience to get beyond the Reverend John Joseph Jones, the fact of Bell’s marriage with Dr. Crofts was not disseminated as widely as might have been wished.
The marriage went off very nicely. The squire was upon his very best behaviour, and welcomed his guests as though he really enjoyed their presence there in his halls. Hopkins, who was quite aware that he had been triumphant, decorated the old rooms with mingled flowers and greenery with an assiduous care which pleased the two girls mightily. And during this work of wreathing and decking there was one little morsel of feeling displayed which may as well be told in these last lines. Lily had been encouraging the old man while Bell for a moment had been absent.
“I wish it had been for thee, my darling!” he said; “I wish it had been for thee!”
“It is much better as it is, Hopkins,” she answered, solemnly.
“Not with him, though,” he went on, “not with him. I wouldn’t ‘a hung a bough for him. But with t’other one.”
Lily said no word further. She knew that the man was expressing the wishes of all around her. She said no word further, and then Bell returned to them.
But no one at the wedding was so gay as Lily—so gay, so bright, and so wedding-like. She flirted with the old earl till he declared that he would marry her himself. No one seeing her that evening, and knowing nothing of her immediate history, would have imagined that she herself had been cruelly jilted some six or eight months ago. And those who did know her could not imagine that what she then suffered had hit her so hard, that no recovery seemed possible for her. But though no recovery, as she herself believed, was possible for her—though she was as a man whose right arm had been taken from him in the battle, still all the world had not gone with that right arm. The bullet which had maimed her sorely had not touched her life, and she scorned to go about the world complaining either by word or look of the injury she had received. “Wives when they have lost their husbands still eat and laugh,” she said to herself, “and he is not dead like that.” So she resolved that she would be happy, and I here declare that she not only seemed to carry out her resolution, but that she did carry it out in very truth. “You’re a dear good man, and I know you’ll be good to her,” she said to Crofts just as he was about to start with his bride.
“I’ll try, at any rate,” he answered.
“And I shall expect you to be good to me too. Remember you have married the whole family; and, sir, you mustn’t believe a word of what that bad man says in his novels about mothers-in-law. He has done a great deal of harm, and shut half the ladies in England out of their daughters’ houses.”
“He shan’t shut Mrs. Dale out of mine.”
“Remember he doesn’t. Now, good-bye.” So the bride and bridegroom went off, and Lily was left to flirt with Lord De Guest.
Of whom else is it necessary that a word or two should be said before I allow the weary pen to fall from my hand? The squire, after much inward struggling on the subject, had acknowledged to himself that his sister-in-law had not received from him that kindness which she had deserved. He had acknowledged this, purporting to do his best to amend his past errors; and I think I may say that his efforts in that line would not be received ungraciously by Mrs. Dale. I am inclined, therefore, to think that life at Allington, both at the Great House and at the Small, would soon become pleasanter than it used to be in former days. Lily soon got the Balmoral boots, or, at least, soon learned that the power of getting them as she pleased had devolved upon her from her uncle’s gift; so that she talked even of buying the squirrel’s cage; but I am not aware that her extravagance led her as far as that.
Lord de Courcy we left suffering dreadfully from gout and ill-temper at Courcy Castle. Yes, indeed! To him in his latter days life did not seem to offer much that was comfortable. His wife had now gone from him, and declared positively to her son-in-law that no earthly consideration should ever induce her to go back again—”not if I were to starve!” she said. By which she intended to signify that she would be firm in her resolve, even though she should thereby lose her carriage and horses. Poor Mr. Gazebee went down to Courcy, and had a dreadful interview with the earl; but matters were at last arranged, and her ladyship remained at Baden-Baden in a state of semi-starvation. That is to say, she had but one horse to her carriage.
As regards Crosbie, I am inclined to believe that he did again recover his power at his office. He was Mr. Butterwell’s master, and the master also of Mr. Optimist, and the major. He knew his business, and could do it, which was more, perhaps, than might fairly be said of any of the other three. Under such circumstances he was sure to get in his hand, and lead again. But elsewhere his star did not recover its ascendancy. He dined at his club almost daily, and there were those with whom he habitually formed some little circle. But he was not the Crosbie of former days—the Crosbie known in Belgravia and in St. James’s Street. He had taken his little vessel bravely out into the deep waters, and had sailed her well while fortune stuck close to him. But he had forgotten his nautical rules, and success had made him idle. His plummet and lead had not been used, and he had kept no look-out ahead. Therefore the first rock he met shivered his bark to pieces. His wife, the Lady Alexandrina, is to be seen in the one-horse carriage with her mother at Baden-Baden.
THE END
THE LAST CHRONICLE OF BARSET
First published in monthly installments from December 1, 1866, to July 6, 1867, and in book form in 1867
Contents
II.
By Heavens, He Had Better Not!
IV.
The Clergyman’s House at Hogglestock
V.
What the World Thought about it
VII.
Miss Prettyman’s Private Room
VIII.
Mr. Crawley is Taken to Silverbridge
IX.
Grace Crawley Goes to Allington
XI.
The Bishop Sends his Inhibition
XII.
Mr. Crawley Seeks for Sympathy
XIII.
The Bishop’s Angel
XIV.
Major Grantly Consults a Friend
XV.
Up in London
XVII.
Mr. Crawley is Summoned to Barchester
XVIII.
The Bishop of Barchester is Crushed
XX.
What Mr. Walker Thought about it
XXI.
Mr. Robarts on his Embassy
XXIII.
Miss Lily Dale’s Resolution
XXIV.
Mrs. Dobbs Broughton’s Dinner-Party
XXVI.
The Picture
XXVII.
A Hero at Home
XXVIII.
Showing how Major Grantly took a Walk
XXX.
Showing what Major Grantly did after his Walk
XXXI.
Showing how Major Grantly Returned to Guestwick
XXXII.
Mr. Toogood
XXXIII.
The Plumstead Foxes
XXXIV.
Mrs. Proudie Sends for her Lawyer
XXXV.
Lily Dale Writes Two Words in her Book
XXXVI.
Grace Crawley Returns Home
XXXVII.
Hook Court
XXXVIII.
Jael
XXXIX.
A New Flirtation
XL.
Mr. Toogood’s Ideas about Society
XLII.
Mr. Toogood Travels Professionally
XLIII.
Mr. Crosbie Goes into the City
XLIV.
“I Suppose I Must Let You Have It”
XLVII.
Dr. Tempest at the Palace
XLVIII.
The Softness of Sir Raffle Buffle
XLIX.
Near the Close
LI.
Mrs. Dobbs Broughton Piles her Fagots
LII.
Why Don’t you Have an “It” for Yourself?
LIII.
Rotten Row
LVI.
The Archdeacon Goes to Framley
LVII.
A Double Pledge
LVIII.
The Cross-grainedness of Men
LIX.
A Lady Presents her Compliments to Miss L. D.
LXII.
Mr. Crawley’s Letter to the Dean
LXIII.
Two Visitors to Hogglestock
LXIV.
The Tragedy in Hook Court
LXV.
Miss Van Siever Makes her Choice
LXVI.
Requiescat in Pace
LXVII.
In Memoriam
LXVIII.
The Obstinacy of Mr. Crawley
LXIX.
Mr. Crawley’s Last Appearance in his own Pulpit
LXXI.
Mr. Toogood at Silverbridge
LXXII.
Mr. Toogood at “The Dragon of Wantly”
LXXIII.
There is Comfort at Plumstead
LXXIV.
The Crawleys are Informed
LXXV.
Madalina’s Heart is Bleeding
LXXVI.
I Think he is Light of Heart
LXXVII.
The Shattered Tree
LXXVIII.
The Arabins Return to Barchester
LXXIX.
Mr. Crawley Speaks of his Coat
LXXX.
Miss Demolines Desires to Become a Finger-post
LXXXI.
Barchester Cloisters
LXXXII.
The Last Scene at Hogglestock
LXXXIII.
Mr. Crawley is Conquered
LXXXIV.
Conclusion