'ull do you no good by his interferin'. Dissenters are not at all looked on i' 
   Milby, an' he's as nervous as iver he can be; he'll come back as ill as ill, an' 
   niver let me hev a wink o' sleep all night."
   Mrs Jerome had been frightened at the mention of a mob, and her retrospective 
   regard for the religious communion of her youth by no means inspired her with 
   the temper of a martyr. Her husband looked at her with an expression of tender 
   and grieved remonstrance, which might have been that of the patient patriarch on 
   the memorable occasion when he rebuked his wife.
   "Susan, Susan, let me beg on you not to oppose me, an' put stumblin'-blocks i' 
   the way o' doin' what's right. I can't give up my conscience, let me give up 
   what else I may."
   "Perhaps," said Mr Tryan, feeling slightly uncomfortable, "since you are not 
   very strong, my dear sir, it will be well, as Mrs Jerome suggests, that you 
   should not run the risk of any excitement."
   "Say no more, Mr Tryan. I'll stan' by you, sir. It's my duty. It's the cause o' 
   God, sir; it's the cause o' God."
   Mr Tryan obeyed his impulse of admiration and gratitude, and put out his hand to 
   the white-haired old man, saying, "Thank you, Mr Jerome, thank you."
   Mr Jerome grasped the proffered hand in silence, and then threw himself back in 
   his chair, casting a regretful look at his wife, which seemed to say, "Why don't 
   you feel with me, Susan?"
   The sympathy of this simple-minded old man was more precious to Mr Tryan than 
   any mere onlooker could have imagined. To persons possessing a great deal of 
   that facile psychology which prejudges individuals by means of formul?, and 
   casts them, without further trouble, into duly lettered pigeon-holes, the 
   Evangelical curate might seem to be doing simply what all other men like to 
   do?carrying out objects which were identified not only with his theory, which is 
   but a kind of secondary egoism, but also with the primary egoism of his 
   feelings. Opposition may become sweet to a man when he has christened it 
   persecution: a self-obtrusive, over-hasty reformer complacently disclaiming all 
   merit, while his friends call him a martyr, has not in reality a career the most 
   arduous to the fleshly mind. But Mr Tryan was not cast in the mould of the 
   gratuitous martyr. With a power of persistence which had been often blamed as 
   obstinacy, he had an acute sensibility to the very hatred or ridicule he did not 
   flinch from provoking. Every form of disapproval jarred him painfully; and, 
   though he fronted his opponents manfully, and often with considerable warmth of 
   temper, he had no pugnacious pleasure in the contest. It was one of the 
   weaknesses of his nature to be too keenly alive to every harsh wind of opinion; 
   to wince under the frowns of the foolish; to be irritated by the injustice of 
   those who could not possibly have the elements indispensable for judging him 
   rightly; and with all this acute sensibility to blame, this dependence on 
   sympathy, he had for years been constrained into a position of antagonism. No 
   wonder, then, that good old Mr Jerome's cordial words were balm to him. He had 
   often been thankful to an old woman for saying "God bless you;" to a little 
   child for smiling at him; to a dog for submitting to be patted by him.
   Tea being over by this time, Mr Tryan proposed a walk in the garden as a means 
   of dissipating all recollection of the recent conjugal dissidence. Little 
   Lizie's appeal, "Me go, gandpa!" could not be rejected, so she was duly bonneted 
   and pinafored, and then they turned out into the evening sunshine. Not Mrs 
   Jerome, however; she had a deeply-meditated plan of retiring adinterim to the 
   kitchen and washing up the best tea-things, as a mode of getting forward with 
   the sadly-retarded business of the day.
   "This way, Mr Tryan, this way," said aid the old gentleman' "I must take you to 
   my pastur fust, an' show you our cow?the best milker i' the county. An' see here 
   at these back-buildins, how convenent the dairy is; I planned it ivery bit 
   myself. An' here I've got my little carpenter's shop an' my blacksmith's shop; I 
   do not end o' jobs here myself. I niver could bear to be idle, Mr Tryan; I must 
   al'ys be at somtehin' or other. It was time for me to ley by business an mek 
   room for younger folks. I'd got money enough, wi' only one daughter to leave it 
   to, an' I says to myself, says I, it's time to leave off moitherin' myself wi' 
   this world so much, an' give more time to thinkin's of another. But there's a 
   many hours atween getting up an' lyin' down, an' thoughts are no cumber' you can 
   move about wi' a good many on em' in your head. See here's the pastur."
   A very pretty pasture it was, where the largespotted short-horned cow quietly 
   chewed the cud as she lay and looked sleepily at her admirers?a daintily-trimmed 
   hedge all round, dotted here and there with a mountain-ash or a cherry-tree.
   "I've a good bit more land besides this, worth your while to look at, but mayhap 
   its further nor you'd like to walk now. Bless you! I've welly an' acre o' 
   potato?ground yonters; I've a good big family to supply, you know." (Here Mr 
   Jerome winked and smiled significantly.) "An' that puts me i' mind, Mr Tryan, o' 
   summat I wanted to say to you. Clergymen like you, I know, see a deal more 
   poverty an' that, than other folks, an' hev a many claims on 'em more nor they 
   can well meet; an' if you'll mek use o' my purse any time, or let me know where 
   I can be o' any help, I'll tek it very kind on you."
   "Thank you, Mr Jerome, I will do so, I promise you. I saw a sad case yesterday; 
   a collier? a fine broad-chested fellow about thirty?was killed by the falling of 
   a wall in the Paddiford colliery. I was in one of the cottages near when they 
   brought him home on a door, and the shriek of the wife has been ringing in my 
   ears ever since. There are three little children. Happily the woman has her 
   loom, so she will be able to keep out of the workhouse; but she looks very 
   delicate."
   "Give me her name, Mr Tryan," said Mr Jerome, drawing out his pocket-book. "I'll 
   call an' see her, I'll call an' see her."
   Deep was the fountain of pity in the good old man's heart! He often ate his 
   dinner stintingly, oppressed by the thought that there were men, women, and 
   children, with no dinner to sit down to, and would relieve his mind by going out 
   in the afternoon to look for some need that he could supply, some honest 
   struggle in which he could lend a helping hand. That any living being should 
   want, was his chief sorrow; that any rational being should waste, was the next. 
   Sally, indeed, haging been scolded by master for a too lavish use of sticks in 
   lighting the kitchen fire, and various instances of recklessness with regard to 
   candle ends, considered him "as mean as aenythink;" but he had as kindly a 
   warmth as the morning sunlight, and, like the sunlight, his goodness shone on 
   all that came in his way, from the saucy rosy-cheeked lad whom he delighted to 
   make happy with a Christmas box, to the pallid sufferers up dim entries, 
   languishing under the tardy death or want and misery.
   It was very pleasant to Mr Tryan to listen to the simple chat of the old 
					     					 			 man?to 
   walk in the shade of the incomparable orchard, and hear the story of the crops 
   yielded by the red-streaked apple-tree, and the quite embarrassing plentifulness 
   of the summer pears?to drink in the sweet evening breath of the garden, as they 
   sat in the alcove?and so, for a short interval, to feel the strain of his 
   pastoral task relaxed.
   Perhaps he felt the return to that task through the dusty roads all the more 
   painfully, perhaps something in that quiet shady home had reminded him of the 
   time before he had taken on him the yoke of self-denial. The strongest heart 
   will faint sometimes under the feeling that enemies are bitter, and that friends 
   only know half its sorrows. The most resolute soul will now and then cast back a 
   yearning look in treading the rough mountain-path, away from the greensward and 
   laughing voices of the valley. However it was, in the nine o' clock twilight 
   that evening, when Mr Tryan had entered his small study and turned the key in 
   the door, he threw himself into the chair before his writing-table, and, 
   heedless of the papers there, leaned his face low on his hand, and moaned 
   heavily.
   It is apt to be so in this life, I think. While we are coldly discussing a man's 
   career, sneering at his mistakes, blaming his rashness, and labelling his 
   opinions?"he is Evangelical and narrow," or "Latitudinarian and Pantheistic," or 
   "Anglican and supercilious"?that man, in his solitude, is perhaps shedding hot 
   tears because his sacrifice is a hard one, because strength and patience are 
   failing him to speak the difficult word, and do the difficult deed.
   CHAPTER IX. 
   Mr Tryan showed no such symptoms of weakness on the critical Sunday. He 
   unhesitatingly rejected the suggestion that he should be taken to church in Mr 
   Landor's carriage?a proposition which that gentleman made as an amendment on the 
   original plan, when the rumours of meditated insult became alarming. Mr Tryan 
   declared he would have no precautions taken, but would simply trust in God and 
   his good cause. Some of his more timid friends thought this conduct rather 
   defiant than wise, and reflecting that a mob has great talents for impromptu, 
   and that legal redress is imperfect satisfaction for having one's head broken 
   with a brickbat, were beginning to question their consciences very closely as to 
   whether it was not a duty they owed to their families to stay at home on Sunday 
   evening. These timorous persons, however, were in a small minority, and the 
   generality of Mr Tryan's friends and hearers rather exulted in an opportunity of 
   braving insult for the sake of a preacher to whom they were attached on personal 
   as well as doctrinal grounds. Miss Pratt spoke of Cranmer, Riddley, and Latimer, 
   and observed that the present crisis afforded an occasion for emulating their 
   heroism even in these degenerate times; while less highly insructed persons, 
   whose memories were not well stored with precedents, simply expressed their 
   determination, as Mr Jerome had done, to "stan' by" the preacher and his cause, 
   believing it to be the "cause of God."
   On Sunday evening, then, at a quarter past six, Mr Tryan, setting out from Mr 
   Londor's with a party of his friends who had assembled there, was soon joined by 
   two other groups from Mr Pratt's and Mr Dunn's; and stray persons on their way 
   to church naturally falling into rank behind this leading file, by the time they 
   reached the entrance of Orchard Street, Mr Tryan's friends formed a considerable 
   procession, walking three or four abreast. It was in Orchard Street, and towards 
   the church gates, that the chief crowd was collected; and at Mr Dempster's 
   drawing-room window, on the upper floor, a more select assembly of 
   Anti-Tryanites were gathered, to witness the entertaining spectacle of the 
   Tryanites walking to church amidst the jeers and hootings of the crowd.
   To prompt the popular wit with appropriate sobriquets, numerous copies of Mr 
   Dempster's playbill were posted on the walls, in suitably large and emphatic 
   type. As it is possible that the most industrious collector of mural literature 
   may not have been fortunate enough to possess himself of this production, which 
   ought by all means to he preserved amongst the materials of our provincial 
   religious history, I subjoin a faithful copy.
   GRAND ENTERTAINMENT!!!
   To be given at Milby on Sunday evening next, by the Famous Comedian, TRY-IT-ON! 
   And his first-rate company, including not only an 
   Unparalleled Cast for Comedy! 
   But a Large Collection of reclaimd and converted Animals; 
   Among the rest 
   A Bear who used to dance! 
   A Parrot once given to Swearing!! 
   A Polygamous Pig!!! 
   and 
   A Monkey who used to catch fleas on a Sunday!!!! 
   Together with a 
   Pair of regenerated Linnets! 
   With an entirely new song, and plumage. 
   Mr Try-it-on
   Will first pass through the street, in procession, with his unrivalled 
   Company, warranted to have their eyes turned up 
   higher, and the corners of their mouths turned down lower, 
   than any other company of Mountebanks in this circuit!
   AFTER WHICH 
   The Theatre will be opened, and the entertainment will 
   commence at Half-Past Six, 
   When will be presented 
   A piece, never before performed on any stage, entitled, 
   THE WOLF IN SHEEPS CLOTHING; 
   or 
   The Methodist in a Mask.
         Mr Boanerges Soft Sawder,Mr Try-it-on. 
         Old ten-per-cent Godly,Mr Gander. 
         Dr Feedemup,Mr Tonic. 
         Mr Lime-Twig Lady-winner,Mr Try-it-on. 
         Miss Piety Bait-the-hook,Miss Tonic. 
         Angelica,Miss Seraphina Tonic. 
   After which 
   A miscellaneous Musical Interlude, commencing with 
   The Lamentations of Jerom-iah! 
   In nasal recitative. 
   To be followed by 
   The favourite Cackling Quartette, 
   by 
   Two Hen-birds who are no chickens! 
   The well-known counter-tenor, Mr Done, and a Gander, 
   lineally descended from the Goose that laid golden eggs! 
   To conclude with a 
   Grand Chorus by the 
   Entire Orchestra of converted Animals!!
   But owing to the unavoidable absence (from illness) of 
   the Bull-dog, who has left off fighting, Mr Tonic has kindly 
   undertaken, at a moment's notice, to supply the "bark!"
   ??? 
   The whole to conclude with a 
   Screaming Farce of 
   THE PULPIT SNATCHER.
         Mr Saintly Smooth-face,Mr Try-it-on! 
         Mr Worming Sneaker,Mr Try-it-on!! 
         Mr All-grace No-works,Mr Try-it-on!!! 
         Mr Elect-and-Chosen Apewell,Mr Try-it-on!!!! 
         Mr Malevolent Prayerful,Mr Try-it-on!!!!! 
         Mr Foist-himself Everywhere,Mr Try-it-on!!!!!! 
         Mr Flout-the-aged Upstart,Mr Try-it-on!!!!!!! 
   Admission Free. A Collection will be made at the Doors. Vivat Rex!
   This satire, though it presents the keenest edge of Milby wit, does not strike 
   you as lacerating, I imagine. But 
					     					 			 hatred is like fire?it makes even light 
   rubbish deadly. And Mr Dempster's sarcasms were not merely visible on the walls; 
   they were reflected in the derisive glances, and audible in the jeering voices 
   of the crowd. Through this pelting shower of nicknames and bad puns, with an ad 
   libitum accompaniment of groans, howls, hisses, and hee-haws, but of no heavier 
   missiles, Mr Tryan walked pale and composed, giving his arm to old Mr Landor, 
   Whose step was feeble. On the other side of him was Mr Jerome, who still walked 
   firmly, though his shoulders were slightly bowed.
   Outwardly Mr Tryan was composed, but inwardly he was suffering acutely from 
   these tones of hatred and scorn. However strong his consciousness of right, he 
   found it no stronger armour against such weapons as derisive glances and 
   virulent words, than against stones and clubs: his conscience was in repose, but 
   his sensibility was bruised.
   Once more only did the Evangelical curate pass up Orchard Street followed by a 
   train of friends; once more only was there a crowd assembled to witness his 
   entrance through the church gates. But that second time no voice was heard above 
   a whisper, and the whispers were words of sorrow and blessing. That second time, 
   Janet Dempster was not looking on in scorn and merriment; her eyes were worn 
   with grief and watching, and she was following her beloved friend and pastor to 
   the grave.
   CHAPTER X. 
   History, we know, is apt to repeat herself, and to foist very old incidents upon 
   us with only a slight change of costume. From the time of Xerxes downwards, we 
   have seen generals playing the braggadocio at the outset of their campaigns, and 
   conquering the enemy with the greatest ease in after-dinner speeches. But events 
   are apt to be in disgusting discrepancy with the anticipations of the most 
   ingenious tacticians; the difficulties of the expedition are ridiculously at 
   variance with able calculations; the enemy has the impudence not to fall into 
   confusion as had been reasonably expected of him; the mind of the gallant 
   general begins to be distracted by news of intrigues against him at home, and, 
   notwithstanding the handsome compliments he paid to Providence as his undoubted 
   patron before setting out, there seems every probability that the Te Deums will 
   be all on the other side.
   So it fell out with Mr Dempster in his memorable campaign against the 
   Anti-Tryanites. After all the premature triumph of the return from Elmstoke, the 
   battle of the Evening Lecture had been lost; the enemy was in possession of the 
   field; and the utmost hope remaining was, that by a harassing guerilla warfare 
   he might be driven to evacuate the country.
   For some time this sort of warfare was kept up with considerable spirit. The 
   shafts of Milby ridicule were made more formidable by being poisoned with 
   calumny; and very ugly stories, narrated with circumstantial minuteness, were 
   soon in circulation concerning Mr Tryan and his hearers, from which stories it 
   was plainly deducible that Evangelicalism led by a necessary consequence to 
   hypocritical indulgence in vice. Some old friendships were broken asunder, and 
   there were near relations who felt that religious differences, unmitigated by 
   any prospect of a legacy, were a sufficient ground for exhibiting their family 
   antipathy. Mr Bud harangued his workmen, and theatened them with dismissal if 
   they or their families were known to attend the evening lecture; and Mr 
   Tomlinson, on discovering that his foreman was a rank Tryanite, blustered to a 
   great extent, and would have cashiered that valuable functionary on the spot, if 
   such a retributive procedure had not been inconvenient.
   On the whole, however, at the end of a few months, the balance of substantial 
   loss was on the side of the Anti-Tryanites. Mr Pratt, indeed, had lost a patient 
   or two besides Mr Dempster's family; but as it was evident that Evangelicalism 
   had not dried up the stream of his anecdote, or in the least altered his view of