and said, "Now I take this very kind, Mr. Craig; for I could not
have expected you,
considering ye have got, as I am told, your jo in
the house"; at which words the Doctor winked paukily to Mr. Daff,
who rubbed his hands with fainness, and gave a good-
humoured sort of
keckling laugh. This facetious stroke of
policy was a great relief
to the afflicted elder, for he saw by it that the Doctor did not
mean to trouble him with any inquiries
respecting his deceased wife;
and, in
consequence, he put on a blither face, and really affected
to have forgotten her already more than he had done in sincerity.
Thus the night passed in
decenttemperance" target="_blank" title="n.节制;节欲;戒酒">
temperance and a happy decorum;
insomuch, that the elders when they went away, either by the
influence of the toddy-bowl, or the Doctor's funny stories about the
Englishers, declared that he was an excellent man, and, being none
lifted up, was
worthy of his rich legacy.
At supper, the party, besides the
minister and Mrs. Pringle,
consisted of the two Irvine ladies, and Mr. Snodgrass. Miss Becky
Glibbans came in when it was about half over, to express her
mother's sorrow at not being able to call that night, "Mr. Craig's
bairn having taken an ill turn." The truth, however, was, that the
worthy elder had been rendered somewhat tozy by the
minister's
toddy, and wanted an opportunity to inform the old lady of the joke
that had been played upon him by the Doctor
calling her his jo, and
to see how she would
relish it. So by a little address Miss Becky
was sent out of the way, with the excuse we have noticed; at the
same time, as the night was rather sharp, it is not to be supposed
that she would have been the
bearer of any such message, had her own
curiosity not enticed her.
During supper the conversation was very
lively. Many "pickant
jokes," as Miss Becky described them, were
cracked by the Doctor;
but, soon after the table was cleared, he touched Mr. Snodgrass on
the arm, and,
taking up one of the candles, went with him to his
study, where he then told him, that Rachel Pringle, now Mrs. Sabre,
had informed him of a way in which he could do him a service. "I
understand, sir," said the Doctor, "that you have a notion of Miss
Bell Tod, but that until ye get a kirk there can be no marriage.
But the auld horse may die
waiting for the new grass; and,
therefore, as the Lord has put it in my power to do a good action
both to you and my people,--whom I am glad to hear you have pleased
so well,--if it can be brought about that you could be made
helperand
successor, I'll no object to give up to you the whole stipend,
and, by and by, maybe the manse to the
bargain. But that is if you
marry Miss Bell; for it was a promise that Rachel gar't me make to
her on her
wedding morning. Ye know she was a forcasting lassie,
and, I have reason to believe, has said nothing anent this to Miss
Bell herself; so that if you have no partiality for Miss Bell,
things will just rest on their own
footing; but if you have a
notion, it must be a
satisfaction to you to know this, as it will be
a pleasure to me to carry it as soon as possible into effect."
Mr. Snodgrass was a good deal agitated; he was taken by surprise,
and without words the Doctor might have guessed his
sentiments; he,
however,
frankly confessed that he did
entertain a very high opinion
of Miss Bell, but that he was not sure if a country
parish would
exactly suit him. "Never mind that," said the Doctor; "if it does
not fit at first, you will get used to it; and if a better casts up,
it will be no obstacle."
The two gentlemen then rejoined the ladies, and, after a short
conversation, Miss Becky Glibbans was admonished to depart, by the
servants bringing in the Bibles for the
worship of the evening.
This was usually performed before supper, but, owing to the bowl
being on the table, and the company jocose, it had been postponed
till all the guests who were not to sleep in the house had departed.
The Sunday morning was fine and bright for the season; the
hoarfrost, till about an hour after
sunrise, lay white on the grass
and tombstones in the
churchyard; but before the bell rung for the
congregation to
assemble, it was exhaled away, and a
freshness, that
was only known to be autumnal by the fallen and yellow leaves that
strewed the church-way path from the ash and plane trees in the
avenue, encouraged the spirits to sympathise with the universal
cheerfulness of all nature.
The return of the Doctor had been bruited through the
parish with so
much
expedition, that, when the bell rung for public
worship, none
of those who were in the practice of stopping in the
churchyard to
talk about the weather were so
ignorant as not to have heard of this
important fact. In
consequence, before the time at which the Doctor
was wont to come from the back-gate which opened from the manse-
garden into the
churchyard, a great majority of his people were
assembled to receive him.
At the last
jingle of the bell, the back-gate was usually opened,
and the Doctor was wont to come forth as punctually as a
cuckoo of a
clock at the
striking of the hour; but a deviation was observed on
this occasion. Formerly, Mrs. Pringle and the rest of the family
came first, and a few minutes were allowed to
elapse before the
Doctor, laden with grace, made his appearance. But at this time,
either because it had been settled that Mr. Snodgrass was to
officiate, or for some other reason, there was a
breach in the
observance of this time-honoured custom.
As the ringing of the bell ceased, the gate unclosed, and the Doctor
came forth. He was of that easy sort of feather-bed corpulency of
form that betokens good-nature, and had none of that smooth, red,
well-filled protuberancy, which indicates a choleric
humour and a
testy
temper. He was in fact what Mrs. Glibbans denominated "a man
of a gausy external." And some little change had taken place during
his
absence in his
visible equipage. His stockings, which were wont
to be of worsted, had
undergone a
translation into silk; his waist-
coat, instead--of the
venerable Presbyterian flap-covers to the
pockets, which were of Johnsonian
magnitude, was become plain--his
coat in all times single-breasted, with no
collar, still, however,
maintained its ancient
characteristics; instead, however, of the
former bright black cast horn, the buttons were covered with cloth.
But the chief
alteration was discernible in the furniture of the
head. He had exchanged the
simplicity of his own
respectable grey
hairs for the cauliflower hoariness of a PARRISH {3} wig, on which
he wore a broad-brimmed hat, turned up a little at each side behind,
in a portentous manner, indicatory of Episcopalian predilections.
This, however, was not justified by any
alteration in his
principles, being merely an
innocentvariation of fashion, the
natural result of a Doctor of Divinity buying a hat and wig in
London.
The moment that the Doctor made his appearance, his greeting and
salutation was quite
delightful; it was that of a father returned to
his children, and a king to his people.
Almost immediately after the Doctor, Mrs. Pringle, followed by Miss
Mally Glencairn and Miss Isabella Tod, also debouched from the gate,
and the
assembled females remarked, with no less
instinct, the
transmutation which she had
undergone. She was dressed in a dark
blue cloth pelisse, trimmed with a dyed fur, which, as she told Miss
Mally, "looked quite as well as sable, without costing a third of
the money." A most matronly muff, that, without being of sable, was
of an excellent quality, contained her hands; and a very large
Leghorn straw
bonnet, decorated
richly, but far from
excess, with a
most
substantial band and bow of a broad
crimson satin
ribbon around
her head.
If the Doctor was gratified to see his people so
gladly thronging
around him, Mrs. Pringle had no less pleasure also in her thrice-