from Overbeck; where the walls are lined with choice divinity in sombre binding, 
   and the light is softened by a screen of boughs with a grey church in the 
   background.
   But I must beg you to dismiss all such scenic prettinesses, suitable as they may 
   be to a clergyman's character and complexion; for I have to confess that Mr 
   Tryan's study was a very ugly little room indeed, with an ugly slap-dash pattern 
   on the walls, an ugly carpet on the floor, and an ugly view of cottage-roofs and 
   cabbage-gardens from the window. His own person, his writing-table, and his 
   book-case, were the only objects in the room that had the slightest air of 
   refinement; and the sole provision for comfort was a clumsy straight-backed 
   arm-chair, covered with faded chintz. The man who could live in such a room, 
   unconstrained by poverty, must either have his vision fed from within by an 
   intense passion, or he must have chosen that least attractive form of 
   self-mortification which wears no haircloth and has no meagre days, but accepts 
   the vulgar, the commonplace and the ugly, whenever the highest duty seems to lie 
   among them.
   "Mr Tryan, I hope you'll excuse me disturbin' on you," said Mr Jerome. "But I'd 
   summat partickler to say."
   "You don't disturb me at all, Mr Jerome; I'm very glad to have a visit from 
   you," said Mr Tryan, shaking him heartily by the hand, and offering him the 
   chintz-covered "easy" chair; "it is some time since I've had an opportunity of 
   seeing you, except on a Sunday."
   "Ah! sir! your time's so tecken up, I'm well awear o' that; it's not only what 
   you hev to do, but it's goin' about from place to place; an' you don't keep a 
   hoss, Mr Tryan. You don't tek care enough o' yourself?you don't indeed, an' 
   that's what I come to talk to y' about."
   "That's very good of you, Mr Jerome; but I assure you I think walking does me no 
   harm. It is rather a relief to me after speaking or writing. You know I have no 
   great circuit to make. The farthest distance I have to walk is to Milby church, 
   and if ever I want a horse on a Sunday, I hire Radley's, who lives not many 
   hundred yards from me."
   "Well, but now! the winter's comin' on, an' you'll get wet i' your feet, an' 
   Pratt tells me as your constitution's dillicate, as anybody may see, for the 
   matter o' that, wi'out bein' a doctor. An' this is the light I look at it in, Mr 
   Tryan: who's to fill up your place, if you was to be disabled, as I may say? 
   Consider what a valyable life yourn is. You've begun a great work i' Milby, an' 
   so you might carry't on, if you'd your health and strength. The more care you 
   tek o' yourself, the longer you'll live, belike, God willing, to do good to your 
   fellow-creturs."
   "Why, my dear Mr Jerome, I think I should not be a long-lived man in any case; 
   and if I were to take care of myself under the pretext of doing more good, I 
   should very likely die and leave nothing done after all."
   "Well! but keepin' a hoss wouldn't hinder you from workin'. It'ud help you to do 
   more, though Pratt says as it's usin' your voice so constant as does you the 
   most harm. Now, isn't it?I'm no scholard, Mr Tryan, an' I'm not a-goin' to 
   dictate to you?but isn't it a'most a-killin' o' yourself, to go on a' that way 
   beyond your strength? We musn't fling wer lives away."
   "No, not fling them away lightly, but we are permitted to lay down our lives in 
   a right cause. There are many duties, as you know, Mr Jerome, which stand before 
   taking care of our own lives."
   "Ah! I can't arguy wi' you, Mr Tryan; but what I wanted to say's this?There's my 
   little chacenut hoss; I should tek it quite a kindness if you'd hev him through 
   the winter an' ride him. I've thought o' sellin' him a maeny times, for Mrs 
   Jerome can't abide him; and what do I want wi' two nags? But I'm fond o' the 
   little chacenut, an' I shouldn't like to sell him. So if you'll only ride him 
   for me, you'll do me a kindness?you will indeed, Mr Tryan."
   "Thank you, Mr Jerome. I promise you to ask for him, when I feel that I want a 
   nag. There is no man I would more gladly be indebted to than you; but at present 
   I would rather not have a horse. I should ride him very little, and it would be 
   an inconvenience to me to keep him rather than otherwise."
   Mr Jerome looked troubled and hesitating, as if he had something on his mind 
   that would not readily shape itself into words. At last he said, "You'll excuse 
   me, Mr Tryan, I wouldn't be teckin' a liberty, but I know what great claims you 
   hev on you as a clergyman. Is it th' expense, Mr Tryan? is it the money?"
   "No, my dear sir. I have much more than a single man needs. My way of living is 
   quite of my own choosing, and I am doing nothing but what I feel bound to do, 
   quite apart from money considerations. We cannot judge for one another, you 
   know; we have each our peculiar weaknesses and temptations. I quite admit that 
   it might be right for another man to allow himself more luxuries, and I assure 
   you I think it no superiority in myself to do without them. On the contrary, if 
   my heart were less rebellious, and if I were less liable to temptation, I should 
   not need that sort of self-denial. But," added Mr Tryan, holding out his hand to 
   Mr Jerome, "I understand your kindness, and bless you for it. If I want a horse, 
   I shall ask for the chesnut."
   Mr Jerome was obliged to rest contented with this promise, and rode home 
   sorrowfully, reproaching himself with not having said one thing he meant to say 
   when setting out, and with having "clean forgot" the arguments he had intended 
   to quote from Mr Stickney.
   Mr Jerome's was not the only mind that was seriously disturbed by the idea that 
   the curate was over-working himself. There were tender women's hearts in which 
   anxiety about the state of his affections was beginning to be merged in anxiety 
   about the state of his health. Miss Eliza Pratt had at one time passed through 
   much sleepless cogitation on the possibility of Mr Tryan's being attached to 
   some lady at a distance?at Laxeter, perhaps, where he had formerly held a 
   curacy; and her fine eyes kept close watch lest any symptom of engaged 
   affections on his part should escape her. It seemed an alarming fact that his 
   handkerchiefs were beautifully marked with hair, until she reflected that he had 
   an unmarried sister of whom he spoke with much affection as his father's 
   companion and comforter. Besides, Mr Tryan had never paid any distant visit, 
   except one for a few days to his father, and no hint escaped him of his 
   intending to take a house, or change his mode of living. No! he could not be 
   engaged, though he might have been disappointed. But this latter misfortune is 
   one from which a devoted clergy-man has been known to recover, by the aid of a 
   fine pair of grey eyes that beam on him with affectionate reverence. Before 
   Christmas, however, her cogitations began to take another turn. She heard her 
   father say very confidently that "Tryan was consumptive, and if he didn't take 
   more care of himself, his life would not be worth a year's purchase;" and shame 
   at having speculated on suppositions that were likely to prove so false, sent 
   poor M 
					     					 			iss Eliza's feelings with all the stronger impetus into the one channel of 
   sorrowful alarm at the prospect of losing the pastor who had opened to her a new 
   life of piety and self-subjection. It is a sad weakness in us, after all, that 
   the thought of a man's death hallows him anew to us; as if life were not sacred 
   too?as if it were comparatively a light thing to fail in love and reverence to 
   the brother who has to climb the whole toilsome steep with us, and all our tears 
   and tenderness were due to the one who is spared that hard journey.
   The Miss Linnets, too, were beginning to take a new view of the future, entirely 
   uncoloured by jealousy of Miss Eliza Pratt.
   "Did you notice," said Mary, one afternoon when Mrs Pettifer was taking tea with 
   them? "did you notice that short dry cough of Mr Tryan's yesterday? I think he 
   looks worse and worse every week, and I only wish I knew his sister; I would 
   write to her about him. I'm sure something should be done to make him give up 
   part of his work, and he will listen to no one here."
   "Ah," said Mrs Pettifer, "it's a thousand pities his father and sister can't 
   come and live with him, if he isn't to marry. But I wish with all my heart he 
   could have taken to some nice woman as would have made a comfortable home for 
   him. I used to think he might take to Eliza Pratt; she's a good girl, and very 
   pretty; but I see no likelihood of it now."
   "No, indeed," said Rebecca, with some emphasis; "Mr Tryan's heart is not for any 
   woman to win; it is all given to his work; and I could never wish to see him 
   with a young inexperienced wife who would be a drag on him instead of a 
   help-mate."
   "He'd need have somebody, young or old," observed Mrs Linnet, "to see as he 
   wears a flannel wescoat, an' changes his stockins when he comes in. It's my 
   opinion he's got that cough wi' sittin' i' wet shoes an' stockins; an' that Mrs 
   Wagstaff's a poor addle-headed thing; she doesn't half tek care on him."
   "O, mother!" said Rebecca, "she's a very pious woman. And I'm sure she thinks it 
   too great a privilege to have Mr Tryan with her, not to do the best she can to 
   make him comfortable. She can't help her rooms being shabby."
   "I've nothing to say again' her piety, my dear; but I know very well I shouldn't 
   like her to cook my victual. When a man comes in hungry an' tired, piety won't 
   feed him, I reckon. Hard carrots 'ull lie heavy on his stomach, piety or no 
   piety. I called in one day when she was dishin' up Mr Tryan's dinner, an' I 
   could see the potatoes was as watery as watery. It's right enough to be 
   speritial?I'm no enemy to that; but I like my potatoes mealy. I don't see as 
   anybody 'ull go to heaven the sooner for not digestin' their dinner? providin' 
   they don't die sooner, as mayhap Mr Tryan will, poor dear man!"
   "It will be a heavy day for us all when that comes to pass," said Mrs Pettifer. 
   "We shall never get anybody to fill up that gap. There's the new clergyman 
   that's just come to Shepperton? Mr Parry; I saw him the other day at Mrs Bond's. 
   He may be a very good man, and a fine preacher; they say he is; but I thought to 
   myself, what a difference between him and Mr Tryan! He's a sharp-sort-of-looking 
   man, and hasn't that feeling way with him that Mr Tryan has. What is so 
   wonderful to me in Mr Tryan is the way he puts himself on a level with one, and 
   talks to one like a brother. I'm never afraid of telling him anything. He never 
   seems to look down on anybody. He knows how to lift up those that are cast down, 
   if ever man did."
   "Yes," said Mary. "And when I see all the faces turned up to him in Paddiford 
   church, I often think how hard it would be for any clergyman who had to come 
   after him; he has made the people love him so."
   CHAPTER XII. 
   In her occasional visits to her near neighbour Mrs Pettifer, too old a friend to 
   be shunned because she was a Tryanite, Janet was obliged sometimes to hear 
   allusions to Mr Tryan, and even to listen to his praises, which she usually met 
   with playful incredulity.
   "Ah, well," she answered one day, "I like dear old Mr Crewe and his pipes a 
   great deal better than your Mr Tryan and his Gospel. When I was a little toddle, 
   Mr and Mrs Crewe used to let me play about in their garden, and have a swing 
   between the great elm-trees, because mother had no garden. I like people who are 
   kind; kindness is my religion; and that's the reason I like you, dear Mrs 
   Pettifer, though you are a Tryanite."
   "But that's Mr Tryan's religion too?at least partly. There's nobody can give 
   himself up more to doing good amongst the poor; and he thinks of their bodies 
   too, as well as their souls."
   "O yes, yes; but then he talks about faith and grace, and all that, making 
   people believe they are better than others, and that God loves them more than He 
   does the rest of the world. I know he has put a great deal of that into Sally 
   Martin's head, and it has done her no good at all. She was as nice, honest, 
   patient a girl as need be before; and now she fancies she has new light and new 
   wisdom. I dont like those notions."
   "You mistake him, indeed you do, my dear Mrs Dempster; I wish you'd go and hear 
   him preach."
   "Hear him preach! Why, you wicked woman, you would persuade me to disobey my 
   husband, would you? O, shocking! I shall run away from you. Good-by."
   A few days after this conversation, however, Janet went to Sally Martin's about 
   three o'clock in the afternoon. The pudding that had been sent in for herself 
   and "Mammy," struck her as just the sort of delicate morsel the poor consumptive 
   girl would be likely to fancy, and in her usual impulsive way she had started up 
   from the dinner-table at once, put on her bonnet, and set off with a covered 
   plateful to the neighbouring street. When she entered the house there was no one 
   to be seen; but in the little side-room where Sally lay, Janet heard a voice. It 
   was one she had not heard before, but she immediately guessed it to be Mr 
   Tryan's. Her first impulse was to set down her plate and go away, but Mrs Martin 
   might not be in, and then there would be no one to give Sally that delicious bit 
   of pudding. So she stood still, and was obliged to hear what Mr Tryan was 
   saying. He was interrupted by one of the invalid's violent fits of coughing.
   "It is very hard to bear, is it not?" he said, when she was still again. "Yet 
   God seems to support you under it wonderfully. Pray for me, Sally, that I may 
   have strength too when the hour of great suffering comes. It is one of my worst 
   weaknesses to shrink from bodily pain, and I think the time is perhaps not far 
   off when I shall have to bear what you are bearing. But now I have tired you. We 
   have talked enough. Goodby."
   Janet was surprised, and forgot her wish not to encounter Mr Tryan; the tone and 
   the words were so unlike what she had expected to hear. There was none of the 
   self-satisfied unction of the teacher, quoting, or exhorting, or expounding, for 
   the benefit of the hearer, but a simple appeal for help, a confession of 
   weakness. Mr Tryan had his deeplyfelt troubles, then? Mr Tryan, too, like 
   herself, knew what it was to tremble at a foresee 
					     					 			n trial? to shudder at an 
   impending burthen, heavier than he felt able to bear?
   The most brilliant deed of virtue could not have inclined Janet's goodwill 
   towards Mr Tryan so much as this fellowship in suffering, and the softening 
   thought was in her eyes when he appeared in the doorway, pale, weary, and 
   depressed. The sight of Janet standing there with the entire absence of 
   self-consciousness which belongs to a new and vivid impression, made him start 
   and pause a little. Their eyes met, and they looked at each other gravely for a 
   few moments. Then they bowed, and Mr Tryan passed out.
   There is a power in the direct glance of a sincere and loving human soul, which 
   will do more to dissipate prejudice and kindle charity than the most elaborate 
   arguments. The fullest exposition of Mr Tryan's doctrine might not have sufficed 
   to convince Janet that he had not an odious self-complacency in believing 
   himself a peculiar child of God; but one direct, pathetic look of his had 
   dissociated him with that conception for ever.
   This happened late in the autumn, not long before Sally Martin died. Janet 
   mentioned her new impression to no one, for she was afraid of arriving at a 
   still more complete contradiction of her former ideas. We have all of us 
   considerable regard for our past self, and are not fond of casting reflections 
   on that respected individual by a total negation of his opinions. Janet could no 
   longer think of Mr Tryan without sympathy, but she still shrank from the idea of 
   becoming his hearer and admirer. That was a reversal of the past which was as 
   little accordant with her inclination as her circumstances.
   And indeed this interview with Mr Tryan was soon thrust into the background of 
   poor Janet's memory by the daily thickening miseries of her life.
   CHAPTER XIII. 
   The loss of Mr Jerome as a client proved only the beginning of annoyances to 
   Dempster. That old gentleman had in him the vigorous remnant of an energy and 
   perseverance which had created his own fortune; and being, as I have hinted, 
   given to chewing the cud of a righteous indignation with considerable relish, he 
   was determined to carry on his retributive was against the persecuting attorney. 
   Having some influence with Mr Pryme, who was one of the most substantial 
   rate-payers in the neighbouring parish of Dingley, and who had himself a complex 
   and long-standing private account with Dempster, Mr Jerome stirred up this 
   gentleman to an investigation of some suspicious points in the attorney's 
   conduct of the parish affairs. The natural consequence was a personal quarrel 
   between Dempster and Mr Pryme; the client demanded his account, and then 
   followed the old story of an exorbitant lawyer's bill, with the unpleasant 
   anti-climax of taxing.
   These disagreeables, extending over many months, ran along side by side with the 
   pressing business of Mr Armstrong's lawsuit, which was threatening to take a 
   turn rather depreciatory of Dempster's professional prevision; and it is not 
   surprising that, being thus kept in a constant state of irritated excitement 
   about his own affairs, he had little time for the further exhibition of his 
   public spirit, or for rallying the forlorn hope of sound churchmanship against 
   cant and hypocrisy. Not a few persons who had a grudge against him, began to 
   remark, with satisfaction, that "Dempster's luck was forsaking him;" 
   particularly Mrs Linnet, who thought she saw distinctly the gradual ripening of 
   a providential scheme, whereby a just retribution would be wrought on the man 
   who had deprived her of Pye's Croft. On the other hand, Dempster's 
   well-satisfied clients, who were of opinion that the punishment of his 
   wickedness might conveniently be deferred to another world, noticed with some 
   concern that he was drinking more than ever, and that both his temper and his 
   driving were becoming more furious. Unhappily those additional glasses of 
   brandy, that exasperation of loud-tongued abuse, had other effects than any that