God's Good Man by Marie Corelli (best young adult book series .txt) đ
- Author: Marie Corelli
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âMebbeâmebbe!â and Bainton twirled his cap round and round dubiouslyââBut Miss Vancourt---â
âMiss Vancourt ainât been to church once till now,ââsaid Adam,â âAnâ sheâs only cominâ now to show it to her friends. I doesnât want to think âard of her, for sheâs a sweet-looking little lady anâ a kind oneâanâ my Ipsie just worships âer,âanâ what my baby likes Iâm bound to like tooâbut I do âope she ainât a âeathen, anâ that once cominâ to church means cominâ again, anâ regâlar ever arterwards. Anyway, itâs for you anâ me, Tummas, to leave Passon to the Lord anâ the fiery tongues,âwe ainât no call to interfere with âim by tellinâ âim whoâs cominâ to church anâ who ainât. Anyoneâs free to enter the âouse oâ God, rich or poor, an âtainât a worldâs wonder if strangers worships at the Saintâs Rest as well as our own folk.â
Here the bells began to ring in perfect unison, with regular rhythm and sweet concord.
âI must go,ââcontinued AdamââI ainât done fixinâ the chairs yet, anâ itâs a quarter to eleven. Weâll be âavin âem all âere dârectly.â
He hurried into the church again just as Miss Eden and her boy-and- girl âchoirâ entered the churchyard, and Bainton seeing them, and also perceiving in the near distance the slow halting figure of Josey Letherbarrow, who made it a point never to be a minute late for divine service, rightly concluded that there was no time now, even if he were disposed to such a course, to âwarn Passonâ that he would have to preach to âfashionable folksâ that morning.
âMebbe Adamâs right,â he reflectedââAnâ yet it do worry me a bit to think of âim cominâ out of âis garden innercent like anâ not knowinâ whatâs a-waitinâ for âim. For heâs been rare quiet latelyâseems as if he was studyinâ anâ prayinâ from morninâ to night, anâ he ainât bin nowhere,âanâ no oneâs bin to see âim, âcept that scarecrow- lookinâ chap, Adderley, which HE stayed a âole arternoon, jabberinâ anâ readinâ to âim. Anâ whatâs mighty queer to me is that he ainât bin fidgettinâ over âis garden like he used to. He donât seem to care no more whether the flowers blooms or doesnât. Them phloxes up against the west wall nowâa finer show I never seenâanâ as for the lilum candidum, theyâre a perfect picter. But he donât notice âem much, anâ heâs not so keen on his water-lilies as I thought he would be, for theyâre promisinâ better this year than theyâve ever done before, anâ the buds all a-floatinâ up on top oâ the river just lovely. Anâ as for vegetablesâLord!âhe donât seem to know whether âtis beans or peas he âasâthereâs a kind oâ sap gone out oâ the garden this summer, for all that itâs so fine anâ flourishinâ. Thereâs a missinâ oâ somethinâ somewheres!â
His meditations were put to an end by the continuous arrival of all the villagers coming to church;âby twos and threes, and then by half dozens and dozens, they filed in through the churchyard, exchanging brief neighbourly greetings with one another as they passed quietly into the sacred edifice, where the soft strains of the organ now began to mingle with the outside chiming of the bells. Bainton still lingered near the porch, moved by a pardonable curiosity. He was anxious to see the first glimpse of the people who were staying at the Manor, but as yet there was no sign of any one of them, though the time wanted only five minutes to eleven.
The familiar click of the latch of the gate which divided the church precincts from the rectory garden, made him turn his head in that direction, to watch his master approaching the scene of his morningâs ministrations. The Reverend John walked slowly, with uplifted head and tranquil demeanour, and, as he turned aside up the narrow path which led to the vestry at the back of the church the faithful âTummasâ felt a sudden pang. âPassonâ looked too good for this world, he thought,âhis dignity of movement, his serene and steadfast eyes, his fine, thoughtful, though somewhat pale countenance, were all expressive of that repose and integrity of soul which lifts a man above the common level, and unconsciously to himself, wins for him the silent honour and respect of all his fellows. And yet there was a touch of pathetic isolation about him, too,âas of one who is with, yet not of, the ordinary joys, hopes, and loves of humanity,âand it was this which instinctively moved Bainton, though that simple rustic would have been at a loss to express the sense of what he felt in words. However there was no more leisure for thinking, if he wished to be in his place at the commencement of service. The servants from Abbotâs Manor were just entering the churchyard-gates, marshalled, as usual, by the housekeeper, Mrs. Spruce, and her deaf but ever dutiful husband,â and though Bainton longed to ask one of them if Miss Vancourt and her guests were really coming, he hesitated,âand in that moment of hesitation, the whole domestic retinue passed into church before him, and he judged it best and wisest to follow quickly in silence, lest, when prayers began, his master should note his absence.
The building was very full,âand it was difficult to see where, if any strangers did arrive, they could be accommodated. Miss Eden, in her capacity as organist, was still playing the opening voluntary, but, despite the fact that there was no apparent disturbance of the usual order of things, there was a certain air of hushed expectancy among the people which was decidedly foreign to the normal atmosphere of St. Rest. The village lasses looked at each otherâs hats with keener interest,âthe lads fidgeted with their ties and collars more strenuously, and secreted their caps more surreptitiously behind their legs,âand the most placid-looking personage in the whole congregation was Josey Letherbarrow, who, in a very clean smock, with a small red rose in his buttonhole, and his silvery hair parted on either side and just touching his shoulders, sat restfully in his own special corner not far from the pulpit, leaning on his stick and listening with rapt attention to the fall and flow of the organ music as it swept round him in soft and ever decreasing eddies of sound. The bells ceased, and eleven oâclock struck slowly from the church tower. At the last stroke, the Reverend John entered the chancel in his plain white surplice, spotless as new-fallen snow,and as he knelt for a moment in silent devotion, the voluntary ended with a grave, long, sustained chord. A pause,-and then the âPassonâ rose, and faced his little flock, his hand laid on the open âBook of Common Prayer.â
âWhen the wicked man turneth away from his wickedness that he hath committed and doeth that which is lawful and right, he shall save his soul alive.â
Waldenâs voice rang clear and sonorous,âthe sunshine pouring through the plain glass of the high rose-window behind and above him, shed effulgence over the ancient sarcophagus in front of the altar and struck from its alabaster whiteness a kind of double light which, circling round his tall slight figure made it stand out in singularly bold relief.
âIf we say that we have no sin we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us, but if we confess our sins He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.â
A ripple of gay laughter here echoed in through the church doors, which were left open for air on account of the great heat of the day. There was an uneasy movement in the congregation,âsome men and women glanced at one another. That light, careless laughter was distinctly discordant. The Reverend John drew himself up a little more rigidly erect, and his face grew a shade paler. Steadily, he read on:â
âDearly beloved brethren, the Scripture moveth us in sundry places to acknowledge and confess our manifold sins and wickedness; and that we should not dissemble nor cloke them before the face of Almighty God our Heavenly Father, but confess them with an humble, lowly, penitent and obedient heart---â
He ceased abruptly. A glimmer of colour,âa soft gliding swish of silken skirts, an affectation of tip-toe movement up the nave,âa wave of indescribable artificial perfume,âand then, a general stir and head-turning among the people showed that a new and unaccustomed element had suddenly merged into the simple human material whereof the village of St. Rest was composed,âan element altogether strange to it, not to say troublous and confusing. Walden saw, and bit his lips hard,âhis hand instinctively clenched itself nervously on the âBook of Common Prayer.â But his rigid attitude did not relax, and he remained mute, his eyes fixed steadily on the fashionably dressed new-comers, who, greatly embarrassed by the interruption their late entrance had caused,âan interruption emphasised in so marked a manner by the silence of the officiating minister, made haste to take the chairs pointed out to them by the verger, with crimsoning faces and lowered eyelids. It was a new and most unpleasant experience for them. They did not know, of course, that it was Waldenâs habit to pause in whatever part of the service he was reading if anyone came in late,âto wait till the tardy arrivals took their places,âand then to begin the interrupted sentence over again,âa habit which had effectually succeeded in making all his parishioners punctual.
But Maryllia, whose guests they were,âMaryllia, who was responsible as their hostess for bringing them to church at all, and who herself, with Cicely, was the last to enter after service had begun, felt a rebellious wave of colour rushing up to her brows. It was very rude of Mr. Walden, she thought, to stop short in his reading and cause the whole congregation to turn and stare curiously at herself and her friends just because they were a little bit behind time! It exposed them all to public rebuke! And when the stir caused by their entrance had subsided, she stood up almost defiantly, lifting her graceful head haughtily, her soft cheeks glowing and her eyes flashing, looking twenty times prettier even than usual as she opened her daintily bound prayer-book with a careless, not to eay indifferent air, as though her thoughts were thousands of miles away from St. Rest and all belonging to it. Glancing at the different members of her party, she was glad that one of them at least, Lady Eva Beaulyon, had secured a front seat, for her ladyship was never content unless she was well to the foremost of everything. She was a reigning beauty,âthe darling of the society press, and the model of all aspiring photographers,âand she could hardly be expected to put up with any obscure corner, even in a church;âif she ever went to the Heaven of monkish legend, one could well imagine St. Peter standing aside for her to pass. Close beside her was another wonderful looking woman, a Mrs. Bludlip Courtenay, a âleaderâ in society, who went everywhere, did everything, wore the newest coat, skirt or hat from Paris directly it was put on the market, and wrote accounts
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