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Authors: T. F. Powys

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W
HEN the Rev. John Turnbull accepted the living of Shelton he told the people, by letter, that ‘he hoped to enter as a friend into their quiet lives, cheering them in their sorrows, and sharing their joys. He looked upon the village of Shelton as his home. He prayed that his ministrations among them might be blessed, though he knew that he could not be as good a man as his father. He hoped, he said, to follow in his steps.

‘He was sure that the helpmate whom he had married would join with him in bringing to their homes all the comfort that they could. A village community, he very much wished to impress this upon them, was bound together by the bonds of labour and love. There was the squire, who took the rents and concerned himself with the administration of justice; the priest gave spiritual consolation to all the people; the hard-working farmer willingly provided employment for the industrious labourer; each gave up to each a proper proportion of his time. He was coming there to take his father’s place, hoping that he might have God’s blessing and the people’s love, so that he could with gladness perform the duties of his calling.’

A printed copy of this letter was sent to each of the householders whose names the Rev. John could remember, and those who did not receive one were not a little offended by the omission.
A week or two after this letter ‘the dear girl’ made her appearance, showing herself in a new white motor, with two long-haired dogs, a chauffeur, and a footman. She came there to see ‘if the place would do,’ and she thought it ‘rather small.’ To deal with its smallness she wrote a cheque to a Maidenbridge builder.

This cheque produced groups of working men, each an artist in his own line. While some attacked the house, others laid out new lawns and trampled upon the quiet earth which had been cultivated by Henry.

‘The dear girl’ had managed her life quite as she had wished to. She believed in the most simple of all enjoyments, that of being above some one else. She had, however, not been quite pleased until she had become a wife to the Church. In that manner might be washed away the last vestige of the glass-bottle trade. The town had not been quite the right thing. In the town there had been too many like herself. She preferred that her money should glitter and shine upon the grey surface of the country in order to make an
impressive
picture of herself to the common people.

‘The dear girl’ had married the Rev. John because he was part of the country idea. His place was to be fed, to be obeyed by the servants, to be always there at breakfast with a well-washed, bacony look, shining manicured nails, and great pointed dancing pumps, making ready to read the morning prayers.

‘The dear girl’ battered at the wooden vicarage gate, and it became iron. Her cheque could do more than that. It turned out all the odds and ends, all the flotsam and jetsam that had been washed or driven by rains and winds within the Turnbull walls. One by one, white-faced
cringing
creatures, amongst them ‘Funeral’ from the dust of his tool-house, made their escape. Poor ‘Funeral’ drifted here and there, hustled about, until at last he was forced, through the taunts of his wife, to become a jobbing gardener in the town.

Often two events of the same nature happen together, and no farther off
than South Egdon vicarage there was the same kind of change proceeding. The Rev. Edward Lester had, early that spring, married Miss Rudge, because her father was kind enough to die, like Shakespear, of a surfeit, though two London doctors were in attendance. Thus favoured, in process of time Mrs. Lester arrived at South Egdon vicarage with
her
two little dogs, tailor-made coat and skirt, brown boots, and a long whip. She patted the dogs, walked round and condemned the place, the legal repairs of the Nevilles being, in her eyes, quite inadequate. She decided on her plan of change more impetuously than ‘the dear girl’ had done. The wood was to become a lake with an island in the middle, the kitchen garden a lawn, and the front drive a Swiss rockery, while the high road was to be moved three hundred yards away to accommodate those vulgar plebeians
who were still rude enough to want to walk there. Her taste in alteration darted here and there like a swallow. Almost everything about the place had to be taken up and put somewhere else. The red tiles of the back yard must be replaced by paving stones and the garden hedge by a brick wall. Feeling a drop of rain, she looked upwards and saw that the chimney-pots had not the proper glaze. The front of the house, she felt sure, looked the wrong way. It should, like every Godly parsonage, face the church and show its back to the village.

During the period necessary to these changes, the Rev. Edward Lester and his wife lived at Maidenbridge, the Rev. Edward being motored to his service every Sunday. Mrs. Lester used sometimes to go and take her place in the church too, just to please him and to show herself as a coming shining light to the people. She received the Holy Communion as a priest’s lady should, all by herself in state, before the one or two farmers’ wives who attended were called up.

The two aspiring young clergymen, who lived so near to each other, and whose wives possessed incomes that no successful munition dealer or jam merchant would have been ashamed of, were, considering all the difficulties of life, very pleased with themselves. They followed the right path, the path wherein lies human happiness. They were the blessed ones of the earth, the pleasantly fat kine for whom the world is made. In their
growth, nature blew them out as the hawker blows out the little red bladders he sells to the children on the sands.

By the time that the delightful month of June had sung itself into the Shelton valley, the Rev. John Turnbull and his lady were settled in Shelton vicarage. Mr. Duggs, walking past just to see how things were going, could not believe his own eyes. It was all so different from the times of the Rev. Hector. Mr. Duggs, noting the changes, remembered the heavy weight that he had helped to carry out of that drive, and that he had seen set so snugly under a pleasant canopy of good chalk in the Shelton churchyard.

Mr. Duggs, walking on, happened to be just by the church steps when the cart that brought the stone cross for the Rev. Hector’s grave arrived. He walked up with the men to see them put it at the head of the grave. Upon its face when it was got upright, he read the promise of the great awakening. From the good upland situation of the grave, Mr. Duggs studied the alterations at the vicarage, and fell to wondering what would happen next in the world. He knew that workmen had gone up there for many days, and now he beheld the result. Leaving the tall white cross, he walked back very mournfully through the village, stopping now and then sagely to shake his head. Getting at last into his own cottage, he delivered his one and only description of the changes to his wife:

‘They’ve give thik wold brew tub to Mr. Tasker.’

The arrival of a household of such wealth set all the finger-tips of the people of the village itching for their share. They were quite prepared to touch their hats to the very shadow of the lady or of her dogs. Some half-dozen or so began to attend the church who had never entered it before, moving crestfallenly up the path, impelled by a far-fetched idea that if they went in and sat with a book in their workworn hands, some coins might, with the blessing, fall upon them. There was always the chance, the possibility that the Rev. John after preaching from the text, ‘Cast thy bread upon the waters,’ might follow it by throwing out handfuls of shillings and pennies among the people. There was no knowing in what way the golden ship of the vicarage might spring a leak.

The vicars of Shelton and South Egdon lived so like each other that they might have been brothers. Together they rightly deserved the blessing of a religious Church and the praise of their fellow-men. They received likewise proper acknowledgment from a grateful world, that looked up to them as being able to make any village happy—if they chose to give away enough money.

They were, these happy frocked ones, eating their dinners through their own efforts. At every turning they had most carefully chosen the
road that led to the greatest amount of pleasant sensation for the body. A little outing between times provided just the right and merry appetite for their meals.

One day the two clergymen confided to one another, after a little dinner given by ‘the dear girl,’ how the days went with them.

‘Time simply swims away,’ the Rev. John was saying. ‘I can hardly remember what I do in the day. We have breakfast rather late, you know, a habit of the dear girl’s. And after breakfast, well, one must read the
Times
,
and then a pipe or two, and after that—I’m always awfully astonished how time flies—it’s the gong for lunch! After lunch I just take a tiny nap in the study. The afternoon is rather dull in the country; somehow or another it bores me to hear the clock strike four. Some people, I know, despise afternoon tea; the dear girl and I take the chance that little break gives us to talk about my village work. She really gives me all the help she can, you know. We dine at seven: perhaps a little early, but one does get hungry in these wild fields, we become almost like farmers. Only, dining so early hardly gives a chance for a motor run after tea—one can’t be a sloven over meals. Suppose we finish dinner by half-past eight, what time is there left to read? No one sits up after ten in the country, except servants.’

The Rev. John held a glass of port to the light.

The common people of the village were the very
things that the two clergymen’s ladies wished them to be: they were the dull background in the picture in which they shone out as queens. How kind the ladies were to the poor! How kind the ladies felt when they spoke to a cottage woman! How they prided themselves on the way they could come down to the lowly and be one with them, talking quite naturally about scarlet fever and the price of sugar, or whether Lyons’ tea was better than Lipton’s.

It was a pleasure to be taken, as Mrs. Edward Lester was, by a smallholder to see his calf. She stepped in the dung just as though she thought it was plain untrodden straw. What a sweet white spot the calf—it was intended for veal—had upon its forehead. It was so homely, the way it touched her hand with its nose. The ladies were always so affable, so charming, and dressed so suitably, that it was a real pleasure for a tired labourer, coming home from his work, to meet them and touch his hat.

This was a vision to be remembered, even when the labourer reached his own cottage which a newly lit fire had filled with smoke. And why should he not have the little dogs in his mind’s eye while he waited and watched a dirty sloven of a woman, his wife, bring out the bread and heel of cheese, explaining rather ungenerously that butter was much too dear for her to buy any for him? And then, thank goodness, he had the lady to think of!

The people of the villages were respectfully pleased with their pastors. Their chief pleasure in the Rev. John began in this wise. It once happened, by some almost impossible error, that the proper replenishing of the vicarage sideboard decanters had been overlooked when the last order had been sent to the stores. That was why an extremely valued order had been received by the ‘Soldiers’ Return’ for a dozen of whisky. This
order being
placed so locally, pleased not only
the innkeeper but the people; even the
little
boys who rolled on the green knew about it. It
brought to the people’s mind the good old days
when the clergy used to find time to
drink, when
a farmer could bleed a sheep to death for pleasure,  when all the children of a labourer were allowed
to die of smallpox.

The special pleasure that the Rev. Edward Lester gave to his people was of another kind. He gave out a notice in church that he himself would go the round of the village to collect a few ‘widows’ mites.’ He did not wish the people to give more than they could afford. The gifts were for a ‘poor clergy’s motor fund.’ ‘So many poor vicars,’ he said, ‘have no proper way of getting about the country roads.’

What the clergyman collected for, no one cared a halfpenny. What they noticed was that even Mrs. Lester lowered herself to flutter round, going in and out and here and there for
subscriptions
. They saw the Rev. Edward, with
his shining face, write down in a notebook that Mrs. Mells had given fourpence, just as carefully as the baker would have done.

The people were gratified to see the way their minister of the Gospel walked down the main street, after a light lunch, smiling here and there at the children, even chucking one remarkably plain little girl under the chin, and giving her a penny. The Rev. Edward Lester smiled, as he walked, at the cottage chimneys. They were quite low enough for him to view without holding his head very high.

As he walked along, with his dark trousers neatly turned up, he noticed a small boy, who was, so he said, searching for a yellow frog that had hopped into the ditch. Mr. Lester leaned over, and peered and smiled through his shining glasses. He prodded about with his
walking-stick
, causing the frog to jump into the road. He wished to help the boy with his sport. The boy pounced upon it, and tying its leg with a
bootlace
, flicked it into the faces of the girls he met, much to their mutual delight. To finish up, he trailed the frog along the road before a large black cat.

Seeing the frog jump safely into the road, without waiting to see what the boy did with it, the Rev. Edward Lester passed on his way laughing.

I
T is the instinct of wolves, if good fortune brings a lamb into their path, to devour it. No doubt they prefer, for the pleasant flick to their appetite, that the lamb should try to run away. When such a pack of wolfish creatures have once started to scent out a victim, they never give over the trail until the victim is devoured, or, by good fortune, escapes.

It was this kind of hunt that Neville had heard coming behind him, and though it had had to give up the chase at that corner where were the nettles, it had started a new cry after that ‘harlot’—as they called Miss Neville. Neville had given them, through his housekeeper, plenty of fiction and droll stories, but they could never forgive or forget the way their late vicar had looked at them, and the way he forgave them their hatred. All the pleasure they had ever got out of him, besides the droll stories, was an inquest. The people felt it a pity that he should have escaped their teeth so meanly by getting himself underground. There was still, however, his sister living near.

In diverse ways and from different tongues, the Rev. John heard the snarling sounds uttered about his brother Henry. One morning he heard a new accusation, delivered, in really worried tones, by ‘the dear girl,’ who had heard it from the woman up the lane. ‘The dear girl’ even went on telling
her story while the maids and footmen sat on their row of chairs waiting for their master to begin to read the fourth chapter of the Epistle of Paul the Apostle to the Colossians. ‘The dear girl’ ought to have stopped when the servants came in, but she really felt that something must be done about Henry.

After prayers and breakfast, the Rev. John entered his study. There was something that morning that he had to do, and the interval between meals being so short, his expectant ears already almost caught the sound of the gong; he must needs begin to do it at once. He lit a cork-tipped Turkish cigarette. When the luncheon gong sounded his letter was finished.

Some might regard the letter he wrote as holding up the ideal of rural virtue a little too high, but the truth is and always will be a queer affair to take hold of, not only in the country but everywhere.

Shelton
Vicarage,
August
9th.

 

Dear
Henry
,—
Although
I
am
particularly
busy
this
morning,
I
must
write
a
letter
to
you
without
any
further
delay
,
and
I
must
speak
plainly,
and
come
to
the
point
at
once.

I
advise
you
to
go
to
Canada.

From
the
experience
that
you
have
already
had
in
that
country,
you
must
quite
well
know
the
way
to
look
out
for
an
opening
when
you
get
there.
Your
dear
mother,
who
is
living
happily
and
so 
quietly
with
George,
would,
I
feel
sure,
help
a
little
in
the
matter
of
your
passage,
and
George
and
I
will
try
to
pay
the
remainder,
though
it
will
be
a
hard
pull
for
us.

I
am
quite
sure
that
you
are
strong
enough
to
attend
to
a
fruit
farm,
or
even
a
dairy.
A
hard-
working
young
man
can
do,
so
Mr.
Tasker
says,
a
good
deal
in
that
way.

I
must,
of
course,
leave
the
matter
of
going
to
Canada
to
you.
As
I
am
only
your
brother,
I
cannot
force
you
to
do
the
right
thing.
You
will,
I
know,
go
your
own
way
in
the
world.

My
dear
wife
and
I
most
earnestly
pray
you
to
leave
Miss
Neville.
The
village
people,
both
here
and
at
South
Egdon,
are
talking
about
you.
You
know
what
that
must
mean
to
me.
They
say
that
if
they
lived
like
that

a
woman
said
so
to
my
wife
this
morning

she
said
if
any
of
her
class
lived
like
Miss
Neville,
Mr.
Acton,
the
land
lord’s
agent,
would
turn
the
offending
one
into
the
road.

To
me
this
matter
is
very
serious.
I
pray
you
to
consider
the
moral
tone
of
Shelton,
where
your
dear
father
laboured,
and
South
Egdon,
that
is
now,
I
am
glad
to
say,
in
such
good
hands.
To
live
in
sin,
as
you
are
doing,
adds
to
the
burden
of
our
already
hard
task
with
the
poor.
Surely
the
thought
of
Father
must
come
to
you
at
times.

I
trust
that
you
will,
anyhow,
think
the
matter
over,
and
if
you
decide
to
meet
our
wishes,
we
will 
at
once
inquire
of
the
ship
agents
about
the
cost
of
a
steerage
ticket.

I
remain,
your
ever
affectionate
brother,
John
Turnbull.

A wily pryer into the human soul would perhaps suggest that the Rev. John was now become more old in days and more orthodox in the middle order of the Church, perhaps even stouter in his faith as well as stouter in his belly. All of which guesses may be equally true.

It was a fortunate thing that when the postman carried this letter to the cottage on the heath, Rose Netley, who had settled in at the farm, should have been there for an early lunch. Henry opened it, and noticing its sermon manner, at once handed it to Molly, who passed it on to Miss Rose.

Rose read it in the proper spirit, taking it as a huge joke. She laughed immoderately over it. Although Rose laughed, she by no means despised the forces of the enemy. She only wished to show by laughing that she was not afraid of them, and to give confidence to the others.

And now the spiritual life of the two villages proceeded in its gently devout circles. They were rightly proud of the way their churches were filled on Sunday.

The people of South Egdon began to be very familiar with their vicar. He was always walking about amongst them. And since those blessed
days when he had collected their money, he was always welcome to go wherever he wished.

The proper time had now come for the
clergymen
in the two villages to ferret out of their holes candidates for the Confirmation that the Bishop was to hold at South Egdon. As with
everything
else, the villages went together in this programme. The two vicars during their longest interval sought in the cottages for boys and girls who had completed their education and were old enough to say ‘bloody’
or to be nurse-maids.

The Rev. John fished in his cure, and the Rev. Edward in his. The Rev. John landed the greater number of fish, and he prided himself that it was his grand manner of talking to the people that did it.

The next thing that had to be done was to instruct the candidates, and the Rev. John had to get both the boys and the girls into one interval. He could not possibly spare two. By squeezing in the girls at five-forty, and by hurrying out the boys at half-past six, he had just time to get ready for his own dinner at seven. Inside the vicarage the children were very good, docile, and meek. And no wonder! They had to report all about the furniture to their mothers. They might be asked, not by the Bishop but by their more earthly father, exactly what there was on the sideboard, or what kind of coal went into the fire. When the end of the lesson came they all knew the dining-room by heart. They had
got used, besides, to the sound of the Rev. John’s voice, it seemed to help them to remember the pictures. Of course the Bishop was much too wise to ask any one a question.

His Lordship’s other important duties
compelled
him to hold the service in the morning. The Shelton girls found to their sorrow that it was all over and themselves home before
dinnertime
. They had the whole afternoon at home to talk about one of their companions who, from what they knew about her, certainly ought not to have been there at all, ‘unless,’ as one mother put it, ‘the good Bishop wished to kill two birds with one pat on the head.’

The Shelton boys were left to come home as they liked, it had been trouble enough to get them there. Several of them loafed out toward the heath, hoping, as it was a cold day, to stone to death a blackbird, or, with luck, even a wren.

Through years so many that no man can count them, these boys had been arrived at. Out of the dim background of immortal nature they had come, and their ever-recurring answer to the mystery beyond them and to the depths behind was the one word ‘bloody!’ That was their right word to use when, after long waiting through everlasting years, at last the wonder of thought was with them—‘bloody!’

‘Dear children’—that was the way the Bishop had begun his address. The dear children loafed out on to the heath, killing, on their way, a thrush
and a hedge-sparrow. The earth that had brought them forth remained pensive about them.

Out on the heath, near where they passed, a solitary figure stooped, cutting gorse. The boys watched while this lonely one made the bundle ready to carry. The boys, so lately confirmed in their attachment to the Church, recognized the figure. It was Henry Turnbull. All the children of Shelton knew about him. They knew about his wicked life. Their mothers had often used a word to express the sin they supposed that he was guilty of, and these dear children, so sweet from under the Bishop’s very hands,
likewise
named this sin after the approved Shelton manner.

When Miss Neville had first gone over to the heath, she had brought the little furniture that she needed from Maidenbridge. There was only one piece that she had taken from her brother’s house, and that happened to be a small bed. This bed had been conveyed in open
daylight
, through Shelton towards the heath, naturally going up Mr. Tasker’s hill. Having once seen the bed, and a great many of them did see it, the village mind began to plod in sweet thought about it, reasoning, in their usual able manner, that three persons, two of them females, and one bed opened the way to a nice kind of problem.

They hoped to have learned something from Alice, but she, alas! had turned traitor to them,
wholly giving herself up to the enemy. If she went anywhere, it was by train to Maidenbridge; so although they often lay in wait, not even the young men were able to pounce upon her.

The confirmed boys, with their knees still dusty from the floor of the pew, evoked the Shelton idea, with one or two merry additions from South Egdon. They called out polite questions about that bed to Henry, who
continued
to do up his faggot. The boys followed up their words with stones, and saw with delight, when Henry took up his bundle, that his face was bleeding from a nasty cut that a sharp flint had made over his left eye.

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