rarely allowed him to occupy his place at church.
   "There's Dempster," said Mrs Linnet to her daughter Mary, "looking more 
   respectable than usual, I declare. He's got a fine speech by heart to make to 
   the Bishop, I'll answer for it. But he'll be pretty well sprinkled with snuff 
   before service is over, and the Bishop won't be able to listen to him for 
   sneezing, that's one comfort."
   At length, the last stage in the long ceremony was over, the large assembly 
   streamed warm and weary into the open afternoon sunshine, and the Bishop retired 
   to the Parsonage, where, after honouring Mrs Crewe's collation, he was to give 
   audience to the delegates and Mr Tryan on the great question of the evening 
   lecture.
   Between five and six o'clock the Parsonage was once more as quiet as usual under 
   the shadow of its tall elms, and the only traces of the Bishop's recent presence 
   there were the wheel-marks on the gravel, and the long table with its garnished 
   dishes awry, its damask sprinkled with crumbs, and its decanters without their 
   stoppers. Mr Crewe was already calmly smoking his pipe in the opposite 
   sitting-room, and Janet was agreeing with Mrs Crewe that some of the blanc-mange 
   would be a nice thing to take to Sally Martin, while the little old lady herself 
   had a spoon in her hand ready to gather the crumbs into a plate, that she might 
   scatter them on the gravel for the little birds.
   Before that time, the Bishop's carriage had been seen driving through the High 
   Street on its way to Lord Trufford's, where he was to dine. The question of the 
   lecture was decided, then?
   The nature of the decision may be gathered from the following conversation which 
   took place in the bar of the Red Lion that evening.
   "So you're done, eh, Dempster?" was Mr Pilgrim's observation, uttered with some 
   gusto. He was not glad Mr Tryan had gained his point, but he was not sorry 
   Dempster was disappointed.
   "Done, sir? Not at all. It is what I anticipated. I knew we had nothing else to 
   expect in these days, when the Church is infested by a set of men who are only 
   fit to give out hymns from an empty cask, to tunes set by a journeyman cobbler. 
   But I was not the less to exert myself in the cause of sound Churchmanship for 
   the good of the town. Any coward can fight a battle when he's sure of winning; 
   but give me the man who has pluck to fight when he's sure of losing. That's my 
   way, sir; and there are many victories worse than a defeat, as Mr Tryan shall 
   learn to his cost."
   "He must be a poor shuperannyated sort of a bishop, that's my opinion," said Mr 
   Tomlinson, "to go along with a sneaking Methodist like Tryan. And, for my part, 
   I think we should be as well wi'out bishops, if they're no wiser than that. 
   Where's the use o' havin' thousands a-year an' livin' in a pallis, if they don't 
   stick to the Church?"
   "No. There you're going out of your depth, Tomlinson," said Mr Dempster. "No one 
   shall hear me say a word against Episcopacy?it is a safeguard of the Church; we 
   must have ranks and dignities there as well as everywhere else. No, sir! 
   Episcopacy is a good thing; but it may happen that a bishop is not a good thing. 
   Just as brandy is a good thing, though this particular bottle is British, and 
   tastes like sugared rain-water caught down the chimney. Here, Ratcliffe, let me 
   have something to drink, a little less like a decoction of sugar and soot."
   "I said nothing again' Episcopacy," returned Mr Tomlinson. "I only said I 
   thought we should do as well wi'out bishops; an' I'll say it again for the 
   matter o' that. Bishops never brought ony grist to my mill."
   "Do you know when the lectures are to begin?" said Mr Pilgrim.
   "They are to begin on Sunday next," said Mr Dempster in a significant tone; "but 
   I think it will not take a long sighted prophet to foresee the end of them. It 
   strikes me Mr Tryan will be looking out for another curacy shortly."
   "He'll not get many Milby people to go and hear his lectures after a while, I'll 
   bet a guinea," observed Mr Budd. "I know I'll not keep a single workman on my 
   ground who either goes to the lecture himself or lets anybody belonging to him 
   go."
   "Nor me nayther," said Mr Tomlinson. "No Tryanite shall touch a sack or drive a 
   waggon o' mine, that you may depend on. An' I know more besides me as are o' the 
   same mind."
   "Tryan has a good many friends in the town, though, and friends that are likely 
   to stand by him too," said Mr Pilgrim. "I should say it would be as well to let 
   him and his lectures alone. If he goes on preaching as he does, with such a 
   constitution as his, he'll get a relaxed throat by-and-by, and you'll be rid of 
   him without any trouble."
   "We'll not allow him to do himself that injury," said Mr Dempster. "Since his 
   health is not good, we'll persuade him to try change of air. Depend upon it, 
   he'll find the climate of Milby too hot for him."
   CHAPTER VII. 
   Mr Dempster did not stay long at the Red Lion that evening. He was summoned home 
   to meet Mr Armstrong, a wealthy client, and as he was kept in consultation till 
   a late hour, it happened that this was one of the nights on which Mr Dempster 
   went to bed tolerably sober. Thus the day, which had been one of Janet's 
   happiest, because it had been spent by her in helping her dear old friend Mrs 
   Crewe, ended for her with unusual quietude; and as a bright sunset promises a 
   fair morning, so a calm lying down is a good augury for a calm waking. Mr 
   Dempster, on the Thursday morning, was in one of his best humours, and though 
   perhaps some of the good humour might result from the prospect of a lucrative 
   and exciting bit of business in Mr Armstrong's probable lawsuit, the greater 
   part of it was doubtless due to those stirrings of the more kindly, healthy sap 
   of human feeling, by which goodness tries to get the upper hand in us whenever 
   it seems to have the slightest chance?on Sunday mornings, perhaps, when we are 
   set free from the grinding hurry of the week, and take the little three-year-old 
   on our knee at breakfast to share our egg and muffin; in moments of trouble, 
   when death visits our roof or illness makes us dependent on the tending hand of 
   a slighted wife; in quiet talks with an aged mother, of the days when we stood 
   at her knee with our first picture-book, or wrote her loving letters from 
   school. In the man whose childhood has known caresses there is always a fibre of 
   memory that can be touched to gentle issues, and Mr Dempster, whom you have 
   hitherto seen only as the orator of the Red Lion, and the drunken tyrant of a 
   dreary midnight home, was the first-born darling son of a fair little mother. 
   That mother was living still, and her own large black easy-chair, where she sat 
   knitting through the live-long day, was now set ready for her at the 
   breakfast-table, by her son's side, a sleek tortoise-shell cat acting as 
   provisional incumbent.
   "Good morning, Mamsey! why, you're looking as fresh as a daisy this morning. 
   You're getting young again," said Mr Dempster, looking up from his newspaper 
   when the little old lady entered. A very little old lady she was, with a pale, 
 &n 
					     					 			bsp; scarcely wrinkled face, hair of that peculiar white which tells that the locks 
   have once been blond, a natty pure white cap on her head, and a white shawl 
   pinned over her shoulders. You saw at a glance that she had been a mignonne 
   blonde, strangely unlike her tall, ugly, dingy-complexioned son; unlike her 
   daughter-in-law, too, whose large-featured brunette beauty seemed always thrown 
   into higher relief by the white presence of little Mamsey. The unlikeness 
   between Janet and her mother-in-law went deeper than outline and complexion, and 
   indeed there was little sympathy between them, for old Mrs Dempster had not yet 
   learned to believe that her son, Robert, would have gone wrong if he had married 
   the right woman?a meek woman like herself, who would have borne him children, 
   and been a deft, orderly housekeeper. In spite of Janet's tenderness and 
   attention to her, she had had little love for her daughter-in-law from the 
   first, and had witnessed the sad growth of home-misery through long years, 
   always with a disposition to lay the blame on the wife rather than on the 
   husband, and to reproach Mrs Raynor for encouraging her daughter's faults by a 
   too exclusive sympathy. But old Mrs Dempster had that rare gift of silence and 
   passivity which often supplies the absence of mental strength; and, whatever 
   were her thoughts, she said no word to aggravate the domestic discord. Patient 
   and mute she sat at her knitting through many a scene of quarrel and anguish; 
   resolutely she appeared unconscious of the sounds that reached her ears, and the 
   facts she divined after she had retired to her bed; mutely she witnessed poor 
   Janet's faults, only registering them as a balance of excuse on the side of her 
   son. The hard, astute, domineering attorney was still that little old woman's 
   pet, as he had been when she watched with triumphant pride his first tumbling 
   effort to march alone across the nursery floor. "See what a good son he is to 
   me!" she often thought. "Never gave me a harsh word. And so he might have been a 
   good husband."
   O it is piteous?that sorrow of aged women! In early youth, perhaps, they said to 
   themselves, "I shall be happy when I have a husband to love me best of all;" 
   then, when the husband was too careless, "My child will comfort me;" then, 
   through the mother's watching and toil, "My child will repay me all when it 
   grows up." And at last, after the long journey of years has been wearily 
   travelled through, the mother's heart is weighed down by a heavier burthen, and 
   no hope remains but the grave.
   But this morning old Mrs Dempster sat down in her easy-chair without any 
   painful, suppressed remembrance of the preceding night.
   "I declare mammy looks younger than Mrs Crewe, who is only sixty-five," said 
   Janet. "Mrs Crewe will come to see you to-day, mammy, and tell you all about her 
   troubles with the Bishop and the collation. She'll bring her knitting, and 
   you'll have a regular gossip together."
   "The gossip will be all on one side, then, for Mrs Crewe gets so very deaf, I 
   can't make her hear a word. And if I motion to her, she always understands me 
   wrong."
   "O, she will have so much to tell you to-day, you will not want to speak 
   yourself. You, who have patience to knit those wonderful counter-panes, mammy, 
   must not be impatient with dear Mrs Crewe. Good old lady! I can't bear her to 
   think she's ever tiresome to people, and you know she's very ready to fancy 
   herself in the way. I think she would like to shrink up to the size of a mouse, 
   that she might run about and do people good without their noticing her."
   "It isn't patience I want, God knows; it's lungs to speak loud enough. But 
   you'll be at home yourself, I suppose, this morning; and you can talk to her for 
   me."
   "No, mammy; I promised poor Mrs Lowme to go and sit with her. She's confined to 
   her room, and both the Miss Lowmes are out; so I'm going to read the newspaper 
   to her and amuse her."
   "Couldn't you go another morning? As Mr Armstrong and that other gentleman are 
   coming to dinner, I should think it would be better to stay at home. Can you 
   trust Betty to see to everything? She's new to the place."
   "O I couldn't disappoint Mrs Lowme; I promised her. Betty will do very well, no 
   fear."
   Old Mrs Dempster was silent after this, and began to sip her tea. The breakfast 
   went on without further conversation for some time, Mr Dempster being absorbed 
   in the papers. At length, when he was running over the advertisements, his eye 
   seemed to be caught by something that suggested a new thought to him. He 
   presently thumped the table with an air of exultation, and said, turning to 
   Janet,?
   "I've a capital idea, Gipsy!" (that was his name for his dark-eyed wife when he 
   was in an extraordinarily good humour), "and you shall help me. It's just what 
   you're up to."
   "What is it?" said Janet, her face beaming at the sound of the pet name, now 
   heard so seldom. "Anything to do with conveyancing?"
   "It's a bit of fun worth a dozen fees?a plan for raising a laugh against Tryan 
   and his gang of hypocrites."
   "What is it? Nothing that wants a needle and thread, I hope, else I must go and 
   teaze mother."
   "No, nothing sharper than your wit?except mine. I'll tell you what it is. We'll 
   get up a programme of the Sunday evening lecture, like a play-bill, you 
   know?'Grand Performance of the celebrated Mountebank,' and so on. We'll bring in 
   the Tryanites?old Landor and the rest?in appropriate characters. Proctor shall 
   print it, and we'll circulate it in the town. It will be a capital hit."
   "Bravo!" said Janet, clapping her hands. She would just then have pretended to 
   like almost anything, in her pleasure at being appealed to by her husband, and 
   she really did like to laugh at the Tryanites. "We'll set about it directly, and 
   sketch it out before you go to the office. I've got Tryan's sermons up-stairs, 
   but I don't think there's anything in them we can use. I've only just looked 
   into them; they're not at all what I expected?dull, stupid things?nothing of the 
   roaring fire-and-brimstone sort that I expected."
   "Roaring? No; Tryan's as soft as a sucking dove?one of your honey-mouthed 
   hypocrites. Plenty of devil and malice in him, though, I could see that, while 
   he was talking to the Bishop; but as smooth as a snake outside. He's beginning a 
   single-handed fight with me, I can see?persuading my clients away from me. We 
   shall see who will be the first to cry peccavi. Milby will do better without Mr 
   Tryan than without Robert Dempster, I fancy! and Milby shall never be flooded 
   with cant as long as I can raise a breakwater against it. But now, get the 
   breakfast things cleared away, and let us set about the play-bill. Come, mamsey, 
   come and have a walk with me round the garden, and let us see how the cucumbers 
   are getting on. I've never taken you round the garden for an age. Come, you 
   don't want a bonnet. It's like walking in a greenhouse this morning."
   "But she will want a parasol," said Janet. "There's one on the stand against the 
   garden-door, Robert."
   The little old lady took her son's arm with  
					     					 			placid pleasure. She could barely 
   reach it so as to rest upon it, but he inclined a little towards her, and 
   accommodated his heavy long-limbed steps to her feeble pace. The cat chose to 
   sun herself too, and walked close beside them, with tail erect, rubbing her 
   sleek sides against their legs, and too well fed to be excited by the twittering 
   birds. The garden was of the grassy, shady kind, often seen attached to old 
   houses in provincial towns; the apple-trees had had time to spread their 
   branches very wide, the shrubs and hardy perennial plants had grown into a 
   luxuriance that required constant trimming to prevent them from intruding on the 
   space for walking. But the farther end, which united with green fields, was open 
   and sunny.
   It was rather sad, and yet pretty, to see that little group passing out of the 
   shadow into the sunshine, and out of the sunshine into the shadow again: sad, 
   because this tenderness of the son for the mother was hardly more than a nucleus 
   of healthy life in an organ hardening by disease, because the man who was linked 
   in this way with an innocent past, had become callous in worldliness, fevered by 
   sensuality, enslaved by chance impulses; pretty, because it showed how hard it 
   is to kill the deep-down fibrous roots of human love and goodness?how the man 
   from whom we make it our pride to shrink, has yet a close brotherhood with us 
   through some of our most sacred feelings.
   As they were returning to the house, Janet met them, and said, "Now, Robert, the 
   writing things are ready. I shall be clerk, and Mat Paine can copy it out 
   after."
   Mammy once more deposited in her arm-chair, with her knitting in her hand, and 
   the cat purring at her elbow, Janet seated herself at the table, while Mr 
   Dempster placed himself near her, took out his snuff-box, and plentifully 
   suffusing himself with the inspiring powder, began to dictate.
   What he dictated, we shall see by-and-by.
   CHAPTER VIII. 
   The next day, Friday, at five o'clock by the sundial, the large bow-window of 
   Mrs Jerome's parlour was open; and that lady herself was seated within its ample 
   semicircle, having a table before her on which her best tea-tray, her best 
   china, and her best urn-rug had already been standing in readiness for half an 
   hour. Mrs Jerome's best tea-service was of delicate white fluted china, with 
   gold springs upon it?as pretty a tea-service as you need wish to see, and quite 
   good enough for chimney ornaments; indeed, as the cups were without handles, 
   most visitors who had the distinction of taking tea out of them, wished that 
   such charming china had already been promoted to that honorary position. Mrs 
   Jerome was like her china, handsome and old-fashioned. She was a buxom lady of 
   sixty, in an elaborate lace cap fastened by a frill under her chin, a dark, 
   well-curled front concealing her forehead, a snowy neckerchief exhibiting its 
   ample folds as far as her waist, and a stiff grey silk gown. She had a clean 
   damask napkin pinned before her to guard her dress during the process of 
   tea-making; her favourite geraniums in the bow-window were looking as healthy as 
   she could desire; her own handsome portrait, painted when she was twenty years 
   younger, was smiling down on her with agreeable flattery; and altogether she 
   seemed to be in as peaceful and pleasant a position as a buxom, well-drest 
   elderly lady need desire. But, as in so many other cases, appearances were 
   deceptive. Her mind was greatly perturbed and her temper ruffled by the fact 
   that it was more than a quarter past five even by the losing timepiece, that it 
   was half-past by her large gold watch, which she held in her hand as if she were 
   counting the pulse of the afternoon, and that, by the kitchen clock, which she 
   felt sure was not an hour too fast, it had already struck six. The lapse of time 
   was rendered the more unendurable to Mrs Jerome by her wonder that Mr Jerome 
   could stay out in the garden with Lizzie in that thoughtless way, taking it so