The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,290 pages of information about The Last Chronicle of Barset.

The Last Chronicle of Barset eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,290 pages of information about The Last Chronicle of Barset.

‘Oh!  I wish he would!’

‘And will he not?’

‘It is very kind of you, your coming to ask him, but—­’

‘Has he so strong an objection?’

‘He will tell you that he has no money to pay a lawyer.’

’But, surely, if he were convinced that it was absolutely necessary for the vindication of his innocence, he would submit to charge himself with an expense so necessary, not only for himself, but for his family?’

’He will say it ought not to be necessary.  You know, Mr Robarts, that in some respects he is not like other men.  You will not let what I say of him set you against him?’

‘Indeed, no.’

’It is most kind of you to make the attempt.  He will be here directly, and when he comes I will leave you together.’

While she was yet speaking his step was heard along the gravel-path, and he hurried into the room with quick steps.  ’I crave your pardon, Mr Robarts,’ he said, ‘that I should keep you waiting.’ now Mr Robarts had not been there ten minutes, and any such asking of pardon was hardly necessary.  And, even in his own house, Mr Crawley affected a mock humility, as though, either through his own debasement, or because of the superior station of the other clergyman, he were not entitled to put himself on an equal footing with his visitor.  He would not have shaken hands with Mr Robarts—­intending to indicate that he did not presume to do so while the present accusation was hanging over him—­had not the action been forced upon him.  And then there was something of a protest in his manner, as though remonstrating against a thing that was unbecoming to him.  Mr Robarts, without analysing it, understood it all, and knew that behind the humility there was a crushing pride—­a pride which, in all probability, would rise up and crush him before he could get himself out of the room again.  It was, perhaps, after all, a question whether the man was not served rightly by the extremities to which he was reduced.  There was something radically wrong within him, which had put him into antagonism with all the world, and which produced these never-dying grievances.  There were many clergymen in the country with incomes as small as that which had fallen to the lot of Mr Crawley, but they managed to get on without displaying their sores as Mr Crawley displayed his.  They did not wear their old rusty cloaks with all that ostentatious bitterness of poverty which seemed to belong to that garment when displayed on Mr Crawley’s shoulders.  Such, for a moment, were Mr Robarts’ thoughts, and he almost repented himself of his present mission.  But then he thought of Mrs Crawley, and remembering that her sufferings were at any rate undeserved, determined that he would persevere.

Mrs Crawley disappeared almost as soon as her husband appeared, and Mr Robarts found himself standing in front of his friend, who remained fixed to the spot, with his hands folded over each other and his neck bent slightly forward, in token also of humility.  ‘I regret,’ he said, ’that your horse should be left there, exposed to the inclemency of the weather; but—­’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Last Chronicle of Barset from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.