“But I always heard that the school was quite popular,” said Mrs. Rolland.
“I think you’ll find,” continued Mrs. Stantiloup, “that there won’t be much left of its popularity now. Keeping that abominable woman under the same roof with the boys! No master of a school that wasn’t absolutely blown up with pride, would have taken such people as those Peacockes without making proper inquiry. And then to let him preach in the church! I suppose Mr. Momson will allow you to send for Augustus at once?” This she said turning to Mrs. Momson.
“Mr. Momson thinks so much of the Doctor’s scholarship,” said the mother, apologetically. “And we are so anxious that Gus should do well when he goes to Eton.”
“What is Latin and Greek as compared to his soul?” asked Lady Margaret.
“No, indeed,” said Mrs. Rolland. She had found herself compelled, as wife of the Bishop, to assent to the self-evident proposition which had been made. She was a quiet, silent little woman, whom the Bishop had married in the days of his earliest preferment, and who, though she was delighted to find herself promoted to the society of the big people in the diocese, had never quite lifted herself up into their sphere. Though she had her ideas as to what it was to be a Bishop’s wife, she had never yet been quite able to act up to them.
“I know that young Talbot is to leave,” said Mrs. Stantiloup. “I wrote to Mrs. Talbot immediately when all this occurred, and I’ve heard from her cousin Lady Grogram that the boy is not to go back after the holidays.” This happened to be altogether untrue. What she probably meant was, that the boy should not go back if she could prevent his doing so.
“I feel quite sure,” said Lady Margaret, “that Lady Anne will not allow her boys to remain when she finds out what sort of inmates the Doctor chooses to entertain.” The Lady Anne spoken of was Lady Anne Clifford, the widowed mother of two boys who were entrusted to the Doctor’s care.
“I do hope you’ll be firm about Gus,” said Mrs. Stantiloup to Mrs. Momson. “If we’re not to put down this kind of thing, what is the good of having any morals in the country at all? We might just as well live like pagans, and do without any marriage services, as they do in so many parts of the United States.”
“I wonder what the Bishop does think about it?” asked Mrs. Momson of the Bishop’s wife.
“It makes him very unhappy; I know that,” said Mrs. Rolland. “Of course he cannot interfere about the school. As for licensing the gentleman as a curate, that was of course quite out of the question.”
At this moment Mr. Momson, the clergyman, and the Bishop came into the room, and were offered, as is usual on such occasions, cold tea and the remains of the buttered toast. The squire was not there. Had he been with the other gentlemen, Mrs. Stantiloup, violent as she was, would probably have held her tongue; but as he was absent, the opportunity was not bad for attacking the Bishop on the subject under discussion. “We were talking, my lord, about the Bowick school.”
Now the Bishop was a man who could be very confidential with one lady, but was apt to be guarded when men are concerned. To any one of those present he might have said what he thought, had no one else been there to hear. That would have been the expression of a private opinion; but to speak before the four would have been tantamount to a public declaration.
“About the Bowick school?” said he; “I hope there is nothing going wrong with the Bowick school.”
“You must have heard about Mr. Peacocke,” said Lady Margaret.
“Yes; I have certainly heard of Mr. Peacocke. He, I believe, has left Dr. Wortle’s seminary.”
“But she remains!” said Mrs. Stantiloup, with tragic energy.
“So I understand;—in the house; but not as part of the establishment.”
“Does that make so much difference?” asked Lady Margaret.
“It does make a very great difference,” said Lady Margaret’s husband, the parson, wishing to help the Bishop in his difficulty.
“I don’t see it at all,” said Mrs. Stantiloup. “The main spirit in the matter is just as manifest whether the lady is or is not allowed to look after the boys’ linen. In fact, I despise him for making the pretence. Her doing menial work about the house would injure no one. It is her presence there—the presence of a woman who has falsely pretended to be married, when she knew very well that she had no husband.”
“When she knew that she had two,” said Lady Margaret.
“And fancy, Lady Margaret—Lady Bracy absolutely asked her to go to Carstairs! That woman was always infatuated about Dr. Wortle. What would she have done if they had gone, and this other man had followed his sister-in-law there. But Lord and Lady Bracy would ask anyone to Carstairs—just anyone that they could get hold of!”
Mr. Momson was one whose obstinacy was wont to give way when sufficiently attacked. Even he, after having been for two days subjected to the eloquence of Mrs. Stantiloup, acknowledged that the Doctor took a great deal too much upon himself. “He does it,” said Mrs. Stantiloup, “just to show that there is nothing that he can’t bring parents to assent to. Fancy—a woman living there as housekeeper with a man as usher, pretending to be husband and wife, when they knew all along that they were not married!”
Mr. Momson, who didn’t care a straw about the morals of the man whose duty it was to teach his little boy his Latin grammar, or the morals of the woman who looked after his little boy’s waistcoats and trousers, gave a half-assenting grunt. “And you
