Barchester Towers Anthony Trollope (iphone ebook reader .TXT) đ
- Author: Anthony Trollope
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They at once divided the spoil, each taking that addressed to the other. âQuiverful,â said she with impressive voice, âyou are to be at the palace at eleven tomorrow.â
âAnd so are you, my dear,â said he, almost gasping with the importance of the tidingsâ âand then they exchanged letters.
âSheâd never have sent for me again,â said the lady, âif it wasnât all right.â
âOh, my dear, donât be too certain,â said the gentleman, âOnly think if it should be wrong.â
âSheâd never have sent for me, Q., if it wasnât all right,â again argued the lady. âSheâs stiff and hard and proud as piecrust, but I think sheâs right at bottom.â Such was Mrs. Quiverfulâs verdict about Mrs. Proudie, to which in after times she always adhered. People when they get their income doubled usually think that those through whose instrumentality this little ceremony is performed are right at bottom.
âOh, Letty!â said Mr. Quiverful, rising from his well-worn seat.
âOh, Q.!â said Mrs. Quiverful, and then the two, unmindful of the kitchen apron, the greasy fingers, and the adherent Irish stew, threw themselves warmly into each otherâs arms.
âFor heavenâs sake, donât let anyone cajole you out of it again,â said the wife.
âLet me alone for that,â said the husband with a look of almost fierce determination, pressing his fist as he spoke rigidly on his desk, as though he had Mr. Slopeâs head below his knuckles and meant to keep it there.
âI wonder how soon it will be?â said she.
âI wonder whether it will be at all?â said he, still doubtful.
âWell, I wonât say too much,â said the lady. âThe cup has slipped twice before, and it may fall altogether this time, but Iâll not believe it. Heâll give you the appointment tomorrow. Youâll find he will.â
âHeaven send he may,â said Mr. Quiverful solemnly. And who that considers the weight of the burden on this manâs back will say that the prayer was an improper one? There were fourteen of themâ âfourteen of them livingâ âas Mrs. Quiverful had so powerfully urged in the presence of the bishopâs wife. As long as promotion cometh from any human source, whether north or south, east or west, will not such a claim as this hold good, in spite of all our examination tests, detur dignioriâs, and optimist tendencies? It is fervently to be hoped that it may. Till we can become divine, we must be content to be human, lest in our hurry for a change we sink to something lower.
And then the pair, sitting down lovingly together, talked over all their difficulties, as they so often did, and all their hopes, as they so seldom were enabled to do.
âYou had better call on that man, Q., as you come away from the palace,â said Mrs. Quiverful, pointing to an angry call for money from the Barchester draper, which the postman had left at the vicarage that morning. Cormorant that he was, unjust, hungry cormorant! When rumour first got abroad that the Quiverfuls were to go to the hospital, this fellow with fawning eagerness had pressed his goods upon the wants of the poor clergyman. He had done so, feeling that he should be paid from the hospital funds, and flattering himself that a man with fourteen children, and money wherewithal to clothe them, could not but be an excellent customer. As soon as the second rumour reached him, he applied for his money angrily.
And âthe fourteenââ âor such of them as were old enough to hope and discuss their hopesâ âtalked over their golden future. The tall grown girls whispered to each other of possible Barchester parties, of possible allowances for dress, of a possible pianoâ âthe one they had in the vicarage was so weather-beaten with the storms of years and children as to be no longer worthy of the nameâ âof the pretty garden, and the pretty house. âTwas of such things it most behoved them to whisper.
And the younger fry, they did not content themselves with whispers, but shouted to each other of their new playground beneath our dear ex-wardenâs well-loved elms, of their future own gardens, of marbles to be procured in the wished-for city, and of the rumour which had reached them of a Barchester school.
âTwas in vain that their cautious mother tried to instil into their breasts the very feeling she had striven to banish from that of their father; âtwas in vain that she repeated to the girls that âthereâs many a slip âtwixt the cup and the lip;â âtwas in vain she attempted to make the children believe that they were to live at Puddingdale all their lives. Hopes mounted high, and would not have themselves quelled. The neighbouring farmers heard the news and came in to congratulate them. âTwas Mrs. Quiverful herself who had kindled the fire, and in the first outbreak of her renewed expectations she did it so thoroughly that it was quite past her power to put it out again.
Poor matron! Good, honest matron, doing thy duty in the state to which thou hast been called, heartily if not contentedly; let the fire burn on; on this occasion the flames will not scorch; they shall warm thee and thine. âTis ordained that that husband of thine, that Q. of thy bosom, shall reign supreme for years to come over the bedesmen of Hiramâs Hospital.
And the last in all Barchester to mar their hopes, had he heard and seen all that passed at Puddingdale that day, would have been Mr. Harding. What wants had he to set in opposition to those
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