God's Good Man - Marie Corelli (i want to read a book .txt) š
- Author: Marie Corelli
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Meanwhile, such brief excitement as had been caused in St. Rest by the return of āthā owld Squireās gelā and by the almost simultaneous dismissal of Oliver Leach, had well-nigh abated. A new agent had been appointed, and though Leach had left the immediate vicinity, having employment on Sir Morton Pippittās lands, he had secured a cottage for himself in the small outlying hamlet of Badsworth. He also undertook some work for the Reverend āPuttyā Leveson in assisting him to form an entomological collection for the private museum at Badsworth Hall. Mr. Leveson had a singular fellow-feeling for insects,āhe studied their habits, and collected specimens of various kinds in bottles, or āpinnedā them on cardboard trays,āhe was an interested observer of the sprightly manners practised by the harvest-bug, and the sagacious customs of the ruminating spider,āas well as the many surprising and agreeable talents developed by the common flea. Leachās virulent hatred of Maryllia Vancourt was not lessened by the apparently useful and scientific nature of the employment he had newly taken up under the guidance of his reverend instructor,āand whenever he caught a butterfly and ran his murderous pin through its quivering body at Levesonās bland command, he thought of her, and wished vindictively that she might perish as swiftly and utterly as the winged lover of the flowers. Every small bright thing in Natureās garden that he slew and brought home as trophy, inspired him with the same secret fierce desire. The act of killing a beautiful or harmless creature gave him pleasure, and he did not disguise it from himself. The Reverend āPuttyā was delighted with his aptitude, and with the many valuable additions he made to the āspecimenā cards and bottles, and the two became constant companions in their search for fresh victims among the blossoming hedgerows and fields. St. Rest, as a village, was only too glad to be rid of Leachās long detested presence to care anything at all as to his further occupations or future career,āand only Bainton kept as he said āan eye on him.ā
Bainton was a somewhat curious personage,ātalkative as he showed himself on most occasions, he was both shrewd and circumspect; no stone was more uncommunicative than he when he chose. In his heart he had set Maryllia Vancourt as second to none save his own master, John Walden,āher beauty and grace, her firm action with regard to the rescue of the āFive Sisters,ā and her quick dismissal of Oliver Leach, had all inspired him with the most unbounded admiration and respect, and he felt that he now had a double interest in life,āthe āPassonāāand the ālady of the Manor.ā But he found very little opportunity to talk about his new and cherished theme of Miss Vancourt and Miss Vancourtās many attractions to Walden,āfor John always āshut him upā on the subject with quite a curt and peremptory decision whenever be so much as mentioned her name. Which conduct on the part of one who was generally so willing to hear and patient to listen, somewhat surprised Bainton.
āFor,ā he arguedāāthere aināt much doinā in the village,āwe aināt always āon the goāāanā when a pretty face comes among us, surely itās worth looking at anā pickinā to pieces as ātwere. But Passonās that sharp on me when I sez any little thing wot might be interestinā about the lady, that Iām thinkinā heās got out oā the habit oā knowinā when a face is a male or a female one, which is wot often happens to bacheldors when they gits fixed like old shrubs in one pertikler spot oā ground. Now I should aā said heād aā bin glad to āear of somethinā new anā oncommon as ātwere,āhe likes it in the way oā flowers, anā why not in the way oā wimmin? But Passon aināt like other folkāhe donāt git on with wimmin nohowāanā the prettier they are the more he seems skeered off them.ā
But such opinions as Bainton entertained concerning his master, he kept to himself, and having once grasped the fact that any mention of Miss Vancourtās ways or Miss Vancourtās looks appeared to displease rather than to entertain the Reverend John, he avoided the subject altogether. This course of action on his part, if the truth must be told, was equally annoying to Walden, who was in the curious mental condition of wishing to know what he declined to hear.
For the rest, the village generally grew speedily accustomed to the presence of the mistress of the Manor. She had fulfilled her promise of paying a visit to Josey Letherbarrow, and had sat with the old man in his cottage, talking to him for the better part of two hours. Rumour asserted that she had even put the kettle on the fire for him, and had made his tea. Josey himself was reticent,āand beyond the fact that he held up his head with more dignity, and showed a touch of more conscious superiority in his demeanour, he did not give himself away by condescending to narrate any word of the lengthy interview that had taken place between himself and āthā owld Squireās little gel.ā One remarkable thing was noticed by the villagers and commented upon,āMiss Vancourt had now passed two Sundays in their midst, and had never once attended church. Her servants were always there at morning service, but she herself was absent. This occasioned much whispering and head-shaking in the little community, and one evening the subject was openly discussed in the bar-room of the āMother Huffā by a group of rustic worthies whose knowledge of matters theological and political was, by themselves, considered profound. Mrs. Buggins had started the conversation, and Mrs. Buggins was well known to be a lady both pious and depressing. She presided over her husbandās āpublicā with an air of meek resignation, not unmixed with sorrowful protest,āshe occasionally tasted the finer cordials in the bar-room, and was often moved to gentle tears at the excellence of their flavour,āshe had a chronic āstitch in the side,ā and a long smooth pale yellow countenance from which the thin grey hair was combed well back from the temples in the frankly unbecoming fashion affected by the provincial British matron. She begun her remarks by plaintively opining that āit was a very strange thing not to see Miss Vancourt at church, on either of the Sundays that had passed since her returnāvery strange! Perhaps she was āHighā? Perhaps she had driven into Riversford to attend the āprocessionalā service of the Reverend Francis Anthony?ā
āPerhaps she aināt done nothing of the sort!āāgrowled a thick-set burly farmer, who with a capacious mug of ale before him was sucking at his pipe with as much zeal as a baby at its bottleāāEf you cares for my āpinion, which, māappen you doanāt, sheās neither Low nor āIgh. Sheās no Seck. If she hālonged to a Seck, she wouldnāt be readinā on a book under the Five Sisters last Sunday marninā when the bells was a-ringinā for church time. I goes past āer, anā I sez āMarnin,ā mum!ā anā she looks up smilinālike, anā sez she: āGood marnin!ā Nice day, isnāt it?ā āSplendid day, mum,ā sez I, anā she went on readinā, anā I went on a walkinā. I sez then, and I sez now, she aināt no Seck!ā
āExample,ā sighed Mrs. Buggins, āis better than precept. It would be more decent if the lady showed herself in church as a lesson to others,āif she did so more lost sheep might follow!ā
āHor-hor-hor!ā chuckled Bainton, from a corner of the roomāāDonāt you worrit yourself, Missis Buggins, ābout no lost sheep! Sheep allus goes where thereās somethinā to graze upon,āleastways thatās my āsperiemce, anā if there aināt no grazinā there aināt no sheep! Anā them as grazes on Passon Walden, gittinā out of āim all they can to āelp āem along, wouldnāt go to church, no more than Miss Vancourt do, if they didnāt know wot a man āe is to be relied on in times oā trouble, anā a regālar āusband to the parish in sickness anā in āelth, for richer, for poorer, for better, for worse, till death do āim part. Miss Vancourt donāt want nothinā out of āim as all we doos, anā she kin show āer independence ef she likes to by stayinā away from church when she fancies, anā readinā books instead of āearinā sermons,āthere aināt no harm in that.ā
āIām not so sure that I agree with you, Mr. Bainton,āāsaid a stout, oily-looking personage, named Netlips, the grocer and āgeneral storeā dealer of the village, a man who was renowned in the district for the profundity and point of his observations at electoral meetings, and for the entirely original manner in which he āusedā the English language; āPublic worship is a necessary evil. It is a factor in vulgar civilisations. Without it, the system of religious politics would fall into cohesion,āabsolute cohesion!ā And he rapped his fist on the table with a smartness that made his hearers jump. āAt the last meeting I addressed in this division, I said we must support the props. The aristocracy must bear them on their shoulders. If your Squire stays away from church, he may be called a heathen with propriety, though a Liberal. And why? Because he makes public exposure of himself as a heathen negative! He is bound to keep up the church factor in the community. Otherwise he runs straight aground on Cohesion.ā
This oratorical outburst on the part of Mr. Netlips was listened to with respectful awe and admiration.
āAy, ay!ā said Roger Buggins, who as āmine hostā stood in his shirt sleeves at the entrance of his bar, surveying his customers and mentally counting up their reckoningsāāCohesion would never doā cohesion government would send the country to pieces. Youāre right, Mr. Netlips,āyouāre right! Props must be kepā up!ā
āI donāt see no props in goinā to church,āāsaid Dan Ridley, the little working tailor of the villageāāI goes because I likes Mr. Walden, but if there was a man in the pulpit I didnāt like, Iād stop away. Thereās a deal too many wolves in sheepās clothing getting ordained in the service oā the Lord, anā I donāt blame Miss Vancourt if so be she takes time to find out the sort oā man Mr. Walden is before settinā under him as ātwere. She can say prayers anā read āem too in her own room, anā study the Bible all right without goinā to church. Many folks as
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