登陆注册
38720700000014

第14章

The introductions were gone through in much form. The archdeacon shook hands with the bishop and named Mr Harding, who received such an amount of greeting as was due from a bishop to a precentor. His lordship then presented them to his lady wife; the archdeacon first, with archidiaconal honours, and then the precentor with diminished parade. After this Mr Slope presented himself. The bishop, it is true, did mention his name, and so did Mrs Proudie too, in a louder tone; but Mr Slope took it upon himself the chief burden of his own introduction. He had great pleasure in ****** himself acquainted with Dr Grantly; he had heard much of the archdeacon's good works in that part of the diocese in which his duties as archdeacon had been exercised (thus purposely ignoring the archdeacon's hitherto unlimited dominion over the diocese at large). He was aware that his lordship depended greatly on the assistance which Dr Grantly would be able to give him in that portion of the diocese. He then thrust out his hand, and grasping that of his new foe, bedewed it unmercifully. Dr Grantly in return bowed, looked stiff, contracted his eyebrows, and wiped his hand with his pocket-handkerchief. Nothing abashed, Mr Slope then noticed the precentor, and descended to the grade of the lower clergy. He gave him a squeeze of the hand, damp indeed, but affectionate, and was very glad to make the acquaintance of Mr -;oh, yes, Mr Harding; he had not exactly caught the name--'Precentor in the cathedral' surmised Mr Slope. Mr Harding confessed that such was the humble sphere of his work. 'Some parish duties as well,' suggested Mr Slope. Mr Harding acknowledged the diminutive incumbency of St Cuthbert's. Mr Slope then left him alone, having condescended sufficiently, and joined the conversation among the higher powers.

There were four persons there, each of whom considered himself the most important personage in the diocese; himself indeed, or herself, as Mrs Proudie was one of them; and with such a difference of opinion it was not probable that they would get on pleasantly together. The bishop himself actually wore the visible apron, and trusted mainly to that--to that and to his title, both being facts which could not be overlooked. The archdeacon knew his subject, and really understood the business of bishoping, which the others did not; and this was his strong ground. Mrs Proudie had her *** to back her, and her habit of command, and was nothing daunted by the high tone of Dr Grantly's face and figure. Mr Slope had only himself and his own courage and tact to depend on, but he nevertheless was perfectly self-assured, and did not doubt but that he should soon get the better of weak men who trusted so much to externals, as both bishop and archdeacon appeared to do.

'Do you reside in Barchester, Dr Grantly?' asked the lady with the sweetest smile.

Dr Grantly explained that he lived in his own parish of Plumstead Episcopi, a few miles out of the city. Whereupon the lady hoped that the distance was not too great for country visiting, as she would be so glad to make the acquaintance of Mrs Grantly. She would take the earliest opportunity, after the arrival of her horses at Barchester; their horses were at present in London; their horses were not immediately coming down, as the bishop would be obliged in a few days, to return to town. Dr Grantly was no doubt aware that the bishop was at present much called upon by the 'University Improvement Committee': indeed, the Committee could not well proceed without him, as their final report had now to be drawn up.

The bishop had also to prepare a scheme for the 'Manufacturing Towns Morning and Evening Sunday School Society', of which he was a patron, or president, or director, and therefore the horses would not come down to Barchester at present; but whenever the horses did come down, she would take the earliest opportunity of calling at Plumstead Episcopi, providing the distance was not too great for country visiting.

The archdeacon made his fifth bow: he had made one at each mention of the horses; and promised that Mrs Grantly would do herself the honour of calling at the palace on an early day. Mrs Proudie declared that she would be delighted: she hadn't liked to ask, not being quite sure whether Mrs Grantly had horses; besides, the distance might have been &c, &c.

Dr Grantly again bowed, but said nothing. He could have bought every single individual possession of the whole family of the Proudies, and have restored them as a gift, without much feeling the loss; and had kept a separate pair of horses for the exclusive use of his wife since the day of their marriage; whereas Mrs Proudie had been hitherto jobbed about the streets of London at so much a month during the season; and at other times had managed to walk, or hire a smart fly from the livery stables.

'Are the arrangements with reference to the Sabbath-day schools generally pretty good in your archdeaconry?'

'Sabbath-day schools!' repeated the archdeacon with an affectation of surprise. 'Upon my word, I can't tell; it depends mainly on the parson's wife and daughters. There is none at Plumstead.'

This was almost a fib on the part of the Archdeacon, for Mrs Grantly has a very nice school. To be sure it is not a Sunday School exclusively, and is not so designated; but that exemplary lady always attends there an hour before church, and hears the children say their catechi**, and sees that they are clean and tidy for church, with their hands washed, and their shoes tied; and Grisel and Florinda, her daughters, carry thither a basket of large buns, baked on the Saturday afternoon, and distribute them to all the children not especially under disgrace, which buns are carried home after church with considerable content, and eaten hot at tea, being then split and toasted. The children of Plumstead would indeed open their eyes if they heard their venerated pastor declare that there were no Sunday schools in the parish.

同类推荐
  • 佛说当来变经

    佛说当来变经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 艺堂

    艺堂

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 九曜斋笔记

    九曜斋笔记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 混元八景真经

    混元八景真经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 上清僊府琼林经

    上清僊府琼林经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 斗罗穿越之野望

    斗罗穿越之野望

    斗罗的disk,斗罗的摇,斗罗的路人在斗罗的瞧。。。
  • 家主,少爷要爬墙

    家主,少爷要爬墙

    虽说多个朋友,多条路,互惠互利是好事,可眼前的冰山男,要不要这么狠,把她一个年方二八,只想与老爹平安度日的少女,拐到互利婚姻上来,这似乎不合适吧!再说条条大路通罗马,谁说解开诅咒只有这么一种方法。被拒绝的冰山男,神色淡然的点头,说了一声好,“我尊重你的想法,你不点头我绝不强求。”然后某女莫名被公主当情敌,被表妹陷害,被渣男逼婚。某女只能抱住身边的猫咪叹息,‘你的主人可真狠!’谁知猫咪竟是公子本人……--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 战帝巅峰

    战帝巅峰

    武到极致,战到巅峰,天下之大,何其不有,战者,需越战越勇,战尽天下英雄,只为博得佳人一笑,巅峰是孤独的,看帝羽如何傲视苍宇………………
  • 从拼爹开始当召唤师

    从拼爹开始当召唤师

    在这个拼爹的时代,召唤师是超一线的职业,无论是历代枭雄还是英灵,被召唤出来都是无与伦比的荣耀。楚夏误打误撞成为了一个召唤师,而他召唤的角色却不是任何英雄,而是敌人的亲爹!打架打不过?一个咒语,直接喊来敌人的亲爹,拼爹?拼的就是你的亲爹!“楼兰王,你的儿子有点嚣张啊!”“主人稍等,我这就去教训犬子!”“无量天尊,你的女儿这么暴力,小心以后嫁不出去!”“明白了主人,我这就让她禁闭十年!”游戏人间,无往不利,靠着这个前所未有的能力,楚夏展开了一段光怪陆离的人生经历……
  • 墨上瑶花开

    墨上瑶花开

    那一世,东荒之地的竹屋旁,海棠花随风纷纷飞扬而起,他坐于树下为她抚琴,岁月静好,却最终抵不过错过。她坠下诛仙台时就想:‘墨卿,爱上你太痛苦,有来世,我不想再爱上你了。”却没有看到他多么绝望的呐喊。这一世,空等几百年,只为等她归矣。“云瑶,这一世,我想和你长长久久,永不分离。”
  • 我竟然不是最强

    我竟然不是最强

    一个刚刚开始修仙的肉身少年,因为机缘来到了现世,他认为自己一定是最强,可是,“年轻人,不要焦躁。”“什么,我还不是最强!?那我就要变成最强!”前几张可能有点白,但后面就还可以了,请你们来看看吧~= ̄ω ̄=
  • 江湖女子图鉴

    江湖女子图鉴

    沈家小姐,聪颖伶俐、姿色平平,梦想闯荡江湖,寻一英武少侠成亲。真正身入江湖之后,发现并不像自己曾经所梦想的一样浪漫,在见识了江湖的诡谲和残酷之后,在无数次因女儿身被人看轻之后,在心上人对自己的数次伤害之后,发奋图强,从武英榜夺魁,到开山立派,再到深入帝国搅乱时局,再到拜为天下第一女将军,从一个一心依附他人的小女子转变为胸怀天下的女英雄。
  • 复仇三公主的复仇爱恋

    复仇三公主的复仇爱恋

    这是关于复仇的。不喜欢勿看!紫怡是第一次写小说哦!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 你的饭卡过期了

    你的饭卡过期了

    白咏清勉强也算是个老板——食堂老板也算老板!她每天最开心的就是看着师生们在休息的时候来她的食堂里吃吃吃。杜沉文最讨厌食堂,因为他在里面吃出过许多奇奇怪怪不得了的不明物体。但是最近不得不和学生们去食堂抢饭,最后居然吃的非常开心。于是他每天最重要的事情就有两样:上课和去食堂食堂的霸道总裁会爱上他吗?杜沉文决定用自己的行动来表明决心!每天要在食堂里的抢饭大军里拔得头筹!加油!杜沉文!