the living of Fulcombe, feeling sure that he would provide me
with endless
amusement and act as a moral tonic and discipline.
Also I appreciated the man's blunt
candour. In due course he
arrived, and I
confess that after a few Sundays of experience I
began to have doubts as to the
wisdom of my choice, glad as I was
to see him
personally. His sermons at once bored me, and, when
they did not send me to sleep, excited in me a desire for debate.
How could he be so
profoundly" target="_blank" title="ad.深深地">
profoundly acquainted with mysteries before
which the world had stood amazed for ages? Was there nothing too
hot or too heavy in the
spiritual way for him to
dismiss in a few
blundering and
casual words, as he might any ordinary
incident of
every-day life, I wondered? Also his idea of High Church
observances was not mine, or, I imagine, that of anybody else.
But I will not attempt to set it out.
His peculiarities, however, were easy to excuse and entirely
swallowed up by the innate
goodness of his nature which soon made
him
beloved of
everyone in the place, for although he thought
that probably most things were sins, I never knew him to discover
a sin which he considered to be beyond the reach of forgiveness.
Bastin was indeed a most
charitable man and in his way
wide-minded.
The person whom I could not
tolerate, however, was his wife,
who, to my fancy, more resembled a
vessel, a very unattractive
vessel, full of
vinegar than a woman. Her name was Sarah and she
was small, plain, flat, sandy-haired and
odious, quite obsessed,
moreover, with her jealousies of the Rev. Basil, at whom it
pleased her to suppose that every woman in the
countryside under
fifty was throwing herself.
Here I will
confess that to the best of my
ability I took care
that they did in
outwardseeming, that is,
whenever she was
present, instructing them to sit aside with him in darkened
corners, to present him with flowers, and so forth. Several of
them easily fell into the
humour of the thing, and I have seen
him depart from a dinner-party followed by that glowering Sarah,
with a
handful of rosebuds and violets, to say nothing of the
traditional offerings of slippers, embroidered markers and the
like. Well, it was my only way of coming even with her, which I
think she knew, for she hated me poisonously.
So much for Basil Bastin. Now for Bickley. Him I had met on
several occasions since our college days, and after I was settled
at the Priory from time to time I asked him to stay with me. At
length he came, and I found out that he was not at all
comfortable in his London practice which was of a nature
uncongenial to him; further, that he did not get on with his
partners. Then, after
reflection, I made a
suggestion to him. I
pointed out that, owing to its
popularityamongst seaside
visitors, the neighbourhood of Fulcombe was a rising one, and
that although there were doctors in it, there was no really
first-classsurgeon for miles.
Now Bickley was a
first-classsurgeon, having held very high
hospital appointments, and indeed still
holding them. Why, I
asked, should he not come and set up here on his own? I would
appoint him doctor to the
estate and also give him
charge of a
cottage hospital which I was endowing, with liberty to build and
arrange it as he liked. Further, as I considered that it would be
of great
advantage to me to have a man of real
ability within
reach, I would
guarantee for three years
whateverincome he was
earning in London.
He thanked me warmly and in the end acted on the idea, with
startling results so far as his prospects were
concerned. Very
soon his really
remarkable skill became known and he was earning
more money than as an
unmarried man he could possibly want.
Indeed, scarcely a big operation took place at any town within
twenty miles, and even much farther away, at which he was not
called in to assist.
Needless to say his
advent was a great boon to me, for as he
lived in a house I let him quite near by,
whenever he had a spare
evening he would drop in to dinner, and from our absolutely
opposite standpoints we discussed all things human and divine.
Thus I was enabled to
sharpen my wits upon the hard steel of his
clear
intellect which was yet, in a sense, so limited.
I must add that I never converted him to my way of thinking and
he never converted me to his, any more than he converted Bastin,
for whom, queerly enough, he had a
liking. They pounded away at
each other, Bickley frequently getting the best of it in the
argument, and when at last Bastin rose to go, he generally made
the same remark. It was:
"It really is sad, my dear Bickley, to find a man of your
intellect so utterly wrongheaded and misguided. I have convicted
you of error at least half a dozen times, and not to
confess it
is mere pigheadedness. Good night. I am sure that Sarah will be
sitting up for me."
"Silly old idiot!" Bickley would say, shaking his fist after
him. "The only way to get him to see the truth would be to saw
his head open and pour it in."
Then we would both laugh.
Such were my two most
intimate friends, although I admit it was
rather like the
equator cultivating close relationships with the
north and south poles. Certainly Bastin was as far from Bickley
as those points of the earth are apart, while I. as it were, sat
equally distant between the two. However, we were all very happy
together, since in certain characters, there are few things that
bind men more closely than
profound differences of opinion.
Now I must turn to my more personal affairs. After all, it is
impossible for a man to satisfy his soul, if he has anything of
the sort about him which in the remotest degree answers to that
description, with the husks of
wealth,
luxury and indolence,
supplemented by
occasionaltheological and other arguments
between his friends; Becoming
profoundly" target="_blank" title="ad.深深地">
profoundly convinced of this truth,
I searched round for something to do and, like Noah's dove on the
waste of waters, found nothing. Then I asked Bickley and Bastin
for their opinions as to my best future course. Bickley proved a
barren draw. He rubbed his nose and
feebly suggested that I might
go in for "research work," which, of course, only represented his
own ambitions. I asked him
indignantly how I could do such a
thing without any
scientific qualifications
whatever. He admitted
the difficulty, but replied that I might endow others who had the
qualifications.
"In short, become a much cow for sucking scientists," I
replied, and broke off the conversation.
Bastin's idea was, first, that I should teach in a Sunday
School;
secondly, that if this
career did not satisfy all my
aspirations, I might be ordained and become a missionary.
On my rejection of this
brilliant advice, he remarked that the
only other thing he could think of was that I should get married
and have a large family, which might possibly
advantage the
nation and
ultimatelyenrich the Kingdom of Heaven, though of
such things no one could be quite sure. At any rate, he was
certain that at present I was in practice neglecting my duty,
whatever it might be, and in fact one of those cumberers of the
earth who, he observed in the newspaper he took in and read when
he had time, were "very happily named--the idle rich."
"Which reminds me," he added, "that the clothing-club finances
are in a
perfectly scandalous condition; in fact, it is ?5 in
debt, an
amount that as the
squire of the
parish I consider it
incumbent on you to make good, not as a
charity but as an
obligation."
"Look here, my friend," I said, ignoring all the rest, "will
you answer me a plain question? Have you found marriage such a
success that you consider it your duty to
recommend it to others?
And if you have, why have you not got the large family of which
you speak?"
"Of course not," he replied with his usual
frankness. "Indeed,