assurance of grateful affection and the prophecy of coming death. Her tears 
   rose; they turned round without speaking, and went back again along the lane.
   CHAPTER XXVII. 
   In less than a week Mr Tryan was settled at Holly Mount, and there was not one 
   of his many attached hearers who did not sincerely rejoice at the event.
   The autumn that year was bright and warm, and at the beginning of October Mr 
   Walsh, the new curate, came. The mild weather, the relaxation from excessive 
   work, and perhaps another benignant influence, had for a few weeks a visibly 
   favourable effect on Mr Tryan. At least he began to feel new hopes, which 
   sometimes took the guise of new strength. He thought of the cases in which 
   consumptive patients remain nearly stationary for years, without suffering so as 
   to make their life burthensome to themselves or to others; and he began to 
   struggle with a longing that it might be so with him. He struggled with it, 
   because he felt it to be an idication that earthly affection was beginning to 
   have too strong a hold on him, and he prayed earnestly for more perfect 
   submission, and for a more absorbing delight in the Divine Presence as the chief 
   good. He was conscious that he did not wish for prolonged life solely that he 
   might do God's work in reclaiming the wanderers and sustaining the feeble: he 
   was conscious of a new yearning for those pure human joys which he had 
   voluntarily and determinedly banished from his life?for a draught of that deep 
   affection from which he had been cut off by a dark chasm of remorse. For now, 
   that affection was within his reach; he saw it there, like a palmshadowed well 
   in the desert; he could not desire to die in sight of it.
   And so the autumn rolled gently by in its "calm decay." Until November, Mr Tryan 
   continued to preach occasionally, to ride about visiting his flock, and to look 
   in at his schools; but his growing satisfaction in Mr Walsh as his successor, 
   saved him from too eager exertion and from worrying anxieties. Janet was with 
   him a great deal now, for she saw that he liked her to read to him in the 
   lengthening evenings, and it became the rule for her and her mother to have tea 
   at Holly Mount, where, with Mrs Pettifer and sometimes another friend or two, 
   they brought Mr Tryan the unaccustomed enjoyment of companionship by his own 
   fireside.
   Janet did not share his new hopes, for she was not only in the habit of hearing 
   Mr Pratt's opinion that Mr Tryan could hardly stand out through the winter, but 
   she also knew that it was shared by Dr Madely of Rotherby, whom, at her request, 
   he had consented to call in. It was not necessary or desirable to tell Mr Tryan 
   what was revealed by the stethoscope, but Janet knew the worst.
   She felt no rebellion under this prospect of bereavement, but rather, a quiet 
   submissive sorrow. Gratitude that his influence and guidance had been given her, 
   even if only for a little while? gratitude that she was permitted to be with 
   him, to take a deeper and deeper impress from daily communion with him, to be 
   something to him in these last months of his life, was so strong in her that it 
   almost silenced regret. Janet had lived through the great tragedy of woman's 
   life. Her keenest personal emotions had been poured forth in her early love?her 
   wounded affection with its years of anguish?her agony of unavailing pity over 
   that death-bed seven months ago. The thought of Mr Tryan was associated for her 
   with repose from that conflict of emotion, with trust in the unchangeable, with 
   the influx of a power to subdue self. To have been assured of his sympathy, his 
   teaching, his help, all through her life, would have been to her like a heaven 
   already begun?a deliverance from fear and danger; but the time was not yet come 
   for her to be conscious that the hold he had on her heart was any other than 
   that of the heaven-sent friend who had come to her like the angel in the prison, 
   and loosed her bonds, and led her by the hand till she could look back on the 
   dreadful doors that had once closed her in.
   Before November was over Mr Tryan had ceased to go out. A new crisis had come 
   on: the cough had changed its character, and the worst symptoms developed 
   themselves so rapidly, that Mr Pratt began to think the end would arrive sooner 
   than he had expected. Janet became a constant attendant on him now, and no one 
   could feel that she was performing anything but a sacred office. She made Holly 
   Mount her home, and, with her mother and Mrs Pettifer to help her, she filled 
   the painful days and nights with every soothing influence that care and 
   tenderness could devise. There were many visitors to the sick-room, led thither 
   by venerating affection; and there could hardly be one who did not retain in 
   after years a vivid remembrance of the scene there?of the pale wasted form in 
   the easy-chair (for he sat up to the last), of the grey eyes so full even yet of 
   inquiring kindness, as the thin, almost transparent hand was held out to give 
   the pressure of welcome; and of the sweet woman, too, whose dark watchful eyes 
   detected every want, and who supplied the want with a ready hand.
   There were others who would have had the heart and the skill to fill this place 
   by Mr Tryan's side, and who would have accepted it as an honour; but they could 
   not help feeling that God had given it to Janet by a train of events which were 
   too impressive not to shame all jealousies into silence.
   That sad history, which most of us know too well, lasted more than three months. 
   He was too feeble and suffering for the last few weeks to see any visitors, but 
   he still sat up through the day. The strange hallucinations of the disease which 
   had seemed to take a more decided hold on him just at the fatal crisis, and had 
   made him think he was perhaps getting better at the very time when death had 
   begun to hurry on with more rapid movement, had now given way, and left him 
   calmly conscious of the reality. One afternoon, near the end of February, Janet 
   was moving gently about the room, in the fire-lit dusk, arranging some things 
   that would be wanted in the night. There was no one else in the room, and his 
   eyes followed her as she moved with the firm grace natural to her, while the 
   bright fire every now and then lit up her face, and gave an unusual glow to its 
   dark beauty. Even to follow her in this way with his eyes was an exertion that 
   gave a painful tension to his face; while she looked like an image of life and 
   strength.
   "Janet," he said presently, in his faint voice? he always called her Janet now. 
   In a moment she was close to him, bending over him. He opened his hand as he 
   looked up at her, and she placed hers within it.
   "Janet," he said again, "you will have a long while to live after I am gone."
   A sudden pang of fear shot through her. She thought he felt himself dying, and 
   she sank on her knees at his feet, holding his hand, while she looked up at him, 
   almost breathless.
   "But you will not feel the need of me as you have done. ... You have a sure 
   trust in God ... I shall not look for you in vain at the last."
   "No ... no ... I shall be there ... God will not forsake me."
   Sh 
					     					 			e could hardly utter the words, though she was not weeping. She was waiting 
   with trembling eagerness for anything else he might have to say.
   "Let us kiss each other before we part."
   She lifted up her face to his, and the full lifebreathing lips met the wasted 
   dying ones in a sacred kiss of promise.
   CHAPTER XXVIII. 
   It soon came?the blessed day of deliverance, the sad day of bereavement; and in 
   the second week of March they carried him to the grave. He was buried as he had 
   desired: there was no hearse, no mourning-coach; his coffin was borne by twelve 
   of his humbler hearers, who relieved each other by turns. But he was followed by 
   a long procession of mourning friends, women as well as men.
   Slowly, amid deep silence, the dark stream passed along Orchard Street, where 
   eighteen months before the Evangelical curate had been saluted with hooting and 
   hisses. Mr. Jerome and Mr Landor were the eldest pall-bearers; and behind the 
   coffin, led by Mr Tryan's cousin, walked Janet, in quiet submissive sorrow. She 
   could not feel that he was quite gone from her; the unseen world lay so very 
   near her?it held all that had ever stirred the depths of anguish and joy within 
   her.
   It was a cloudy morning, and had been raining when they left Holly Mount; but as 
   they walked, the sun broke out, and the clouds were rolling off in large masses 
   when they entered the churchyard, and Mr Walsh's voice was heard saying, "I am 
   the Resurrection and the Life." The faces were not hard at this funeral; the 
   burial-service was not a hollow form. Every heart there was filled with the 
   memory of a man who, through a self-sacrificing life, and in a painful death, 
   had been sustained by the faith which fills that form with breath and substance.
   When Janet left the grave, she did not return to Holly Mount; she went to her 
   home in Orchard Street, where her mother was waiting to receive her. She said 
   quite calmly, "Let us walk round the garden, mother." And they walked round in 
   silence, with their hands clasped together, looking at the golden crocuses 
   bright in the spring sunshine. Janet felt a deep stillness within. She thirsted 
   for no pleasure; she craved no worldly good. She saw the years to come stretch 
   before her like an autumn afternoon, filled with resigned memory. Life to her 
   could never more have any eagerness; it was a solemn service of gratitude and 
   patient effort. She walked in the presence of unseen witnesses?of the Divine 
   love that had rescued her, of the human love that waited for its eternal repose 
   until it had seen her endure to the end.
   Janet is living still. Her black hair is grey, and her step is no longer 
   buoyant; but the sweetness of her smile remains, the love is not gone from her 
   eyes; and strangers sometimes ask, Who is that noble-looking elderly woman, that 
   walks about holding a little boy by the hand? The little boy is the son of 
   Janet's adopted daughter, and Janet in her old age has children about her knees, 
   and loving young arms round her neck.
   There is a simple gravestone in Milby churchyard, telling that in this spot lie 
   the remains of Edgar Tryan, for two years officiating curate at the Paddiford 
   Chapel-of-Ease, in this parish. It is a meagre memorial, and tells you simply 
   that the man who lies there took upon him, faithfully or unfaithfully, the 
   office of guide and instructor to his fellow-men.
   But there is another memorial of Edgar Tryan, which bears a fuller record: it is 
   Janet Dempster, rescued from self-despair, strengthened with divine hopes, and 
   now looking back on years of purity and helpful labour. The man who has left 
   such a memorial behind him, must have been one whose heart beat with true 
   compassion, and whose lips were moved by fervent faith.
   THE END.    
    
   George Eliot, Scenes of Clerical Life  
     (Series:  # ) 
    
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