easily that tea-time was long past, and that, after all the trouble of getting 
   down the best tea-things, Mr Tryan would not come. This honour had been shown to 
   Mr Tryan, not at all because Mrs Jerome had any high appreciation of his 
   doctrine or of his exemplary activity as a pastor, but simply because he was a 
   "Church clergyman," and as such was regarded by her with the same sort of 
   exceptional respect that a white woman who had married a native of the Society 
   Islands might be supposed to feel towards a whiteskinned visitor from the land 
   of her youth. For Mrs Jerome had been reared a Churchwoman, and having attained 
   the age of thirty before she was married, had felt the greatest repugnance in 
   the first instance to renouncing the religious forms in which she had been 
   brought up. "You know," she said in confidence to her Church acquaintances, "I 
   wouldn't give no ear at all to Mr Jerome at fust; but after all, I begun to 
   think as there was a maeny things wuss nor goin' to chapel, an' you'd better do 
   that nor not pay your way. Mr Jerome had a very pleasant manner wi' him, an' 
   there was niver another as kep a gig, an' 'ud make a settlement on me like him, 
   chapel or no chapel. It seemed very odd to me for a lung while, the preachin' 
   wi'out book, an' the stannin' up to one lung prayer, istid o' changin' yur 
   postur. But la! there's nothin' as you mayn't get used to i' time; you can al'ys 
   sit down, you know, afore the prayer's done. The ministers say welly the same 
   things as the Church parsons, by what I could iver mek out, an' we're out o' 
   chapel i' the mornin' a deal sooner nor they're out o' church. An' as for pews, 
   ourn's a deal comfortabler nor aeny i' Milby church."
   Mrs Jerome, you perceive, had not a keen susceptibility to shades of doctrine, 
   and it is probable that, after listening to Dissenting eloquence for thirty 
   years, she might safely have re-entered the Establishment without performing any 
   spiritual quarantine. Her mind, apparently, was of that non-porous flinty 
   character which is not in the least danger from surrounding damp. But on the 
   question of getting start of the sun in the day's business, and clearing her 
   conscience of the necessary sum of meals and the consequent "washing up" as soon 
   as possible, so that the family might be well in bed at nine, Mrs Jerome was 
   susceptible; and the present lingering pace of things, united with Mr Jerome's 
   unaccountable obliviousness, was not to be borne any longer. So she rang the 
   bell for Sally.
   "Goodness me, Sally! go into the garden an' see after your master. Tell him it's 
   goin' on for six, an Mr Tryan 'ull niver think o' comin' now, an' it's time we 
   got tea over. An' he's lettin' Lizzie stain her frock, I expect, among them 
   strawberry beds. Mek her come in this minute."
   No wonder Mr Jerome was tempted to linger in the garden, for though the house 
   was pretty and well deserved its name?"the White House," the tall damask roses 
   that clustered over the porch being thrown into relief by rough stucco of the 
   most brilliant white, yet the garden and orchards were Mr Jerome's glory, as 
   well they might be; and there was nothing in which he had a more innocent 
   pride?peace to a good man's memory! all his pride was innocent?than in 
   conducting a hitherto uninitiated visitor over his grounds, and making him in 
   some degree aware of the incomparable advantages possessed by the inhabitants of 
   the White House in the matter of red-streaked apples, russets, northern greens 
   (excellent for baking), swan-egg pears, and early vegetables, to say nothing of 
   flowering "srubs," pink hawthorns, lavender bushes more than ever Mrs Jerome 
   could use, and, in short, a superabundance of everything that a person retired 
   from business could desire to possess himself or to share with his friends. The 
   garden was one of those old-fashioned paradises which hardly exist any longer 
   except as memories of our childhood: no finical separation between flower and 
   kitchen garden there; no monotony of enjoyment for one sense to the exclusion of 
   another; but a charming paradisaical mingling of all that was pleasant to the 
   eyes and good for food. The rich flower-border running along every walk, with 
   its endless succession of spring flowers, anemones, auriculas, wall-flowers, 
   sweet-williams, campanulas, snapdragons, and tiger-lilies, had its taller 
   beauties, such as moss and Provence roses, varied with espalier apple-trees; the 
   crimson of a carnation was carried out in the lurking crimson of the 
   neighbouring strawberry-beds; you gathered a moss-rose one moment and a bunch of 
   currants the next; you were in a delicious fluctuation between the scent of 
   jasmine and the juice of gooseberries. Then what a high wall at one end, flanked 
   by a summer-house so lofty, that after ascending its long flight of steps you 
   could see perfectly well there was no view worth looking at; what alcoves and 
   garden-seats in all directions; and along one side, what a hedge, tall, and 
   firm, and unbroken, like a green wall!
   It was near this hedge that Mr Jerome was standing when Sally found him. He had 
   set down the basket of strawberries on the gravel, and had lifted up little 
   Lizzie in his arms to look at a bird's nest. Lizzie peeped, and then looked at 
   her grandpa with round blue eyes, and then peeped again.
   "D'ye see it, Lizzie?" he whispered.
   "Yes," she whispered in return, putting her lips very near grandpa's face. At 
   this moment Sally appeared.
   "Eh, eh, Sally, what's the matter? Is Mr Tryan come?"
   "No, sir, an' Missis says she's sure he won't come now, an' she wants you to 
   come in an' hev tea. Dear heart, Miss Lizzie, you've stained your pinafore, an' 
   I shouldn't wonder if it's gone through to your frock. There'll be fine work! 
   Come alonk wi' me, do."
   "Nay, nay, nay, we've done no harm, we've done no harm, hev we Lizzie? The 
   wash-tub 'll mek all right again."
   Sally, regarding the wash-tub from a different point of view, looked sourly 
   serious, and hurried away with Lizzie, who trotted submissively along, her 
   little head in eclipse under a large nankin bonnet, while Mr Jerome followed 
   leisurely with his full broad shoulders in rather a stooping posture, and his 
   large good-natured features and white locks shaded by a broad-brimmed hat.
   "Mr Jerome, I wonder at you," said Mrs Jerome, in a tone of indignant 
   remonstrance, evidently sustained by a deep sense of injury, as her husband 
   opened the parlour door. "When will you leave off invitin' people to meals an' 
   not lettin' 'em know the time? I'll answer for't, you niver said a word to Mr 
   Tryan as we should tek tea at five o'clock. It's just like you!"
   "Nay, nay, Susan," answered the husband in a soothing tone, "there's nothin' 
   amiss. I told Mr Tryan as we took tea at five punctial; mayhap summat's a 
   detainin' on him. He's a deal to do an' to think on, remember."
   "Why, it's struck six i' the kitchen a'ready. It's nonsense to look for him 
   comin' now. So you may's well ring for th' urn. Now Sally's got th' heater i' 
   th' fire, we may's well hev th' urn in, though he doesn't come. I niver see the 
   like o' you, Mr Jerome, for axin' people an' givin' me 
					     					 			 the trouble o' gettin' 
   things down an' hevin' crumpets made, an' after all they don't come. I shall hev 
   to wash every one o' these tea-things myself, for there's no trustin' 
   Sally?she'd break a fortin i' crockery i' no time!"
   "But why will you give yourself sich trouble, Susan? Our everyday tea-things 
   would ha' done as well for Mr Tryan, an' they're a deal convenenter to hold."
   "Yes, that's just your way, Mr Jerome, you're al'ys a findin' faut wi' my chany, 
   because I bought it myself afore I was married. But let me tell you, I knowed 
   how to choose chany if I didn't know how to choose a husband. An' where's 
   Lizzie? You've niver left her i' the garden by herself, wi' her white frock on 
   an' clean stockins?"
   "Be easy, my dear Susan, be easy; Lizzie's come in wi' Sally. She's hevin' her 
   pinafore took off, I'll be bound. Ah! There's Mr Tryan a-comin' through the 
   gate."
   Mrs Jerome began hastily to adjust her damask napkin and the expression of her 
   countenance for the reception of the clergyman, and Mr Jerome went out to meet 
   his guest, whom he greeted outside the door.
   "Mr Tryan, how do you do, Mr Tryan? Welcome to the White House! I'm glad to see 
   you, sir, I'm glad to see you."
   If you had heard the tone of mingled goodwill, veneration, and condolence in 
   which this greeting was uttered, even without seeing the face that completely 
   harmonised with it, you would have no difficulty in inferring the ground-notes 
   of Mr Jerome's character. To a fine ear that tone said as plainly as 
   possible?"Whatever recommends itself to me, Thomas Jerome, as piety and 
   goodness, shall have my love and honour. Ah, friends, this pleasant world is a 
   sad one, too, isn't it? Let us help one another, let us help one another." And 
   it was entirely owing to this basis of character, not at all from any clear and 
   precise doctrinal discrimination, that Mr Jerome had very early in life become a 
   Dissenter. In his boyish days he had been thrown where Dissent seemed to have 
   the balance of piety, purity, and good works on its side, and to become a 
   Dissenter seemed to him identical with choosing God instead of mammon. That race 
   of Dissenters is extinct in these days. when opinion has got far ahead of 
   feeling, and every chapel-going youth can fill our ears with the advantages of 
   the Voluntary system, the corruptions of a State Church, and the Scriptural 
   evidence that the first Christians were Congregationalists. Mr Jerome knew 
   nothing of this theoretic basis for Dissent, and in the utmost extent of his 
   polemical discussion he had not gone further than to question whether a 
   Christian man was bound in conscience to distinguish christmas and Easter by any 
   peculiar observance beyond the eating of mince-pies and cheese-cakes. It seemed 
   to him that all seasons were alike good for thanking God, departing from evil 
   and doing well, whereas it might be desirable to restrict the period for 
   indulging in unwholesome forms of pastry. Mr Jerome's dissent being of this 
   simple, nonpolemical kind, it is easy to understand that the report he heard of 
   Mr Tryan as a good man and a powerful preacher, who was stirring the hearts of 
   the people, had been enough to attract him to the Paddiford Church, and that 
   having felt himself more edified there than he had of late been under Mr 
   Stickney's discourses at Salem, he had driven thither repeatedly in the Sunday 
   afternoons, and had sought an opportunity of making Mr Tryan's acquaintance. The 
   evening lecture was a subject of warm interest with him, and the opposition Mr 
   Tryan met with gave that interest a strong tinge of partisanship; for there was 
   a store of irascibility in Mr Jerome's nature which must find a vent somewhere, 
   and in so kindly and upright a man could only find it in indignation against 
   those whom he held to be enemies of truth and goodness. Mr Tryan had not 
   hitherto been to the White House, but yesterday, meeting Mr Jerome in the 
   street, he had at once accepted the invitation to tea, saying there was 
   something he wished to talk about. He appeared worn and fatigued now, and after 
   shaking hands with Mrs Jerome, threw himself into a chair and looked out on the 
   pretty garden with an air of relief.
   "What a nice place you have here, Mr Jerome! I've not seen anything so quiet and 
   pretty since I came to Milby. On Paddiford Common, where I live, you know, the 
   bushes are all sprinkled with soot, and there's never any quiet except in the 
   dead of night."
   "Dear heart! dear heart! That's very bad? and for you, too, as hev to study. 
   Wouldn't it be better for you to be somewhere more out i' the country like?"
   "O no! I should lose so much time in going to and fro, and besides I like to be 
   among the people. I've no face to go and preach resignation to those poor things 
   in their smoky air and comfortless homes, when I come straight from every luxury 
   myself. There are many things quite lawful for other men, which a clergyman must 
   forego if he would do any good in a manufacturing population like this."
   Here the preparations for tea were crowned by the simultaneous appearance of 
   Lizzie and the crumpet. It is a pretty surprise, when one visits an elderly 
   couple, to see a little figure enter in a white frock with a blond head as 
   smooth as satin, round blue eyes, and a cheek like an apple blossom. A toddling 
   little girl is a centre of common feeling which makes the most dissimilar people 
   understand each other; and Mr Tryan looked at Lizzie with that quiet pleasure 
   which is always genuine.
   "Here we are, here we are!" said proud grandpapa. "You didn't think we'd got 
   such a little gell as this, did you, Mr Tryan? Why, it seems but th' other day 
   since her mother was just such another. This is our little Lizzie, this is. Come 
   an' shake hands wi' Mr Tryan, Lizzie; come."
   Lizzie advanced without hesitation, and put out one hand, while she fingered her 
   coral necklace with the other, and looked up into Mr Tryan's face with a 
   reconnoitring gaze. He stroked the satin head, and said in his gentlest voice, 
   "How do you do, Lizzie? will you give me a kiss?" She put up her little bud of a 
   mouth, and then retreating a little and glancing down at her frock, said,
   "Did id my noo fock. I put it on 'tod you wad toming. Tally taid you wouldn't 
   'ook at it."
   "Hush, hush, Lizzie, little gells must be seen and not heard," said Mrs Jerome; 
   while grandpapa, winking significantly, and looking radiant with delight at 
   Lizzie's extraordinary promise of cleverness, set her up on her high cane-chair 
   by the side of grandma, who lost no time in shielding the beauties of the new 
   frock with a napkin.
   "Well now, Mr Tryan," said Mr Jerome, in a very serious tone, when tea had been 
   distributed, "let me hear how you're a-goin' on about the lectur. When I was i' 
   the town yisterday, I heared as there was pessecutin' schemes a-bein' laid 
   again' you. I fear me those raskills 'ull mek things very onpleasant to you."
   "I've no doubt they will attempt it; indeed, I quite expect there will be a 
   regular mob got up on Sunday evening, as there was when the delegates returned, 
   on purpose to annoy me and the con 
					     					 			gregation on our way to church."
   "Ah, they're capible o' anything, such men as Dempster an' Budd; an' Tomlinson 
   backs 'em wi' money, though he can't wi' brains. Howiver, Dempster's lost one 
   client by's wicked doins, an' I'm deceived if he won't lose more nor one. I 
   little thought, Mr Tryan, when I put my affairs into his hands twenty 'ear ago 
   this Michaelmas, as he was to turn out a pessecutor o' religion. I niver lighted 
   on a cliverer, promisiner young man nor he was then. They talked of his bein' 
   fond of a extry glass now an' then, but niver nothin' like what he's come to 
   since. An' it's headpiece you must look for in a lawyer, Mr Tryan, it's 
   headpiece. His wife, too, was al'ys an uncommon favourite o' mine ?poor thing! I 
   hear sad stories about her now. But she's druv to it, she's druv to it, Mr 
   Tryan. A tender-hearted woman to the poor, she is, as iver lived; an' as 
   pretty-spoken a woman as you need wish to talk to. Yes! I'd al'ys a likin' for 
   Dempster an' his wife, spite o' iverything. But as soon as iver I heared o' that 
   dilegate business, I says, says I, that man shall hev no more to do wi' my 
   affairs. It may put me t' inconvenience, but I'll encourage no man as pessecutes 
   religion."
   "He is evidently the brain and hand of the persecution," said Mr Tryan. "There 
   may be a strong feeling against me in a large number of the inhabitants ?it must 
   be so, from the great ignorance of spiritual things in this place. But I fancy 
   there would have been no formal opposition to the lecture, if Dempster had not 
   planned it. I am not myself the least alarmed at anything he can do; he will 
   find I am not to be cowed or driven away by insult or personal danger. God has 
   sent me to this place, and, by His blessing, I'll not shrink from anything I may 
   have to encounter in doing His work among the people. But I feel it right to 
   call on all those who know the value of the Gospel, to stand by me publicly. I 
   think?and Mr Landor agrees with me?that it will be well for my friends to 
   proceed with me in a body to the church on Sunday evening. Dempster, you know, 
   has pretended that almost all the respectable inhabitants are opposed to the 
   lecture. Now, I wish that falsehood to be visibly contradicted. What do you 
   think of the plan? I have to-day been to see several of my friends, who will 
   make a point of being there to accompany me, and will communicate with others on 
   the subject."
   "I'll mek one, Mr Tryan, I'll mek one. You shall not be wantin' in any support 
   as I can give. Before you come to it, sir, Milby was a dead an' dark place; you 
   are the fust man i' the Church to my knowledge as has brought the word o' God 
   home to the people; an' I'll stan' by you, sir, I'll stan' by you. I'm a 
   Dissenter, Mr Tryan, I've been a Dissenter iver sin' I was fifteen 'ear old; but 
   show me good i' the Church, an' I'm a Churchman too. When I was a boy I lived at 
   Tilston; you mayn't know the place; the best part o' the land there belonged to 
   Squire Sandeman; he'd a club-foot, hed Squire Sandeman?lost a deal o' money by 
   canal shares. Well, sir, as I was sayin', I lived at Tilston, an' the rector 
   there was a terrible drinkin', fox-huntin' man; you niver see such a parish i' 
   your time for wickedness; Milby's nothin' to it. Well, sir, my father was a 
   workin' man, an' couldn't afford to gi' me ony eddication, so I went to a 
   night-school as was kep by a Dissenter, one Jacob Wright; an' it was from that 
   man, sir, as I got my little schoolin' an' my knowledge o' religion. I went to 
   chapel wi' Jacob?he was a good man was Jacob?an' to chapel I've been iver since. 
   But I'm no enemy o' the Church, sir, when the Church brings light to the 
   ignorant and the sinful; an' that's what you're a-doin', Mr Tryan. Yes, sir, 
   I'll stan' by you. I'll go to church wi' you o' Sunday evenin'."
   "You'd fur better stay at home, Mr Jerome, if I may give my opinion," interposed 
   Mrs Jerome. "It's not as I hevn't ivery respect for you, Mr Tryan, but Mr Jerome