Chapter 133
"Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor knowledge, nor wisdom, in the grave, whither thou goest."
Then he leaned a little forward on the cus.h.i.+on; and, after a pause, began his sermon, which lay before him, and worked out the text.
It was an admirable discourse, clear and practical; but you will not care to have it recapitulated for you, as it was recapitulated in the local newspapers. Remembering what the bringing up of the Halliburtons had been, it was impossible that Gar's sermons should not be practical; and the congregation began to think they had been mistaken in their estimate of what a young man could do. He told the judges where their duty lay, as fearlessly as he told it to the college boys, as he told it to all. He told them that the golden secret of success and happiness in this life, lay in the faithful and earnest performance of the duties that crowded on their path, striving on unweariedly, whatsoever those duties might be, whether pleasant or painful; _joined to implicit reliance on, and trust in G.o.d_. A plainer sermon was never preached. In manner he was remarkably calm and impressive, and the tone of his voice was quiet and persuasive, just as if he were speaking to them. He was listened to with breathless interest throughout; even those gentry, the college boys, were for once beguiled into attending to a sermon. Jane's tears fell incessantly, and she had to let down her white veil to hide them; as on that day, years ago, when she had let down her black c.r.a.pe veil to conceal them, in the office of Anthony Dare. Different tears this time.
The sermon lasted just half an hour, and it had seemed only a quarter of one. The bishop then rose and gave the blessing, and the crowds began to file out. As the preacher was being marshalled by a verger through the choir to take his place in the procession next the high sheriff, Mr.
Keating met him and grasped his hand.
"You are all right, Gar," he whispered, "and I am proud of having educated you. That sermon will tell home to some of the drones."
"I knew he'd astonish 'em!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Dobbs, who had walked all the way from Deoffam to see the sight, to hear her master preach to the cathedral, and had fought out a standing-place for herself right in front of the pulpit. "_His_ sermons aren't filled up with bottomless pits as are never full enough, like those of some preachers be."
That sermon and the Rev. Edgar Halliburton were talked of much in Helstonleigh that day.
But ere the close of another day the town was ringing with the name of Frank. He had led; he, Frank Halliburton! A cause of some importance was tried in the _Nisi Prius_ Court, in which the defendant was Mr. Glenn the surgeon. Mr. Glenn, who had liked Frank from the hour he first conversed with him that evening at his house, now so long ago--a conversation at which you had the pleasure of a.s.sisting--who had also the highest opinion of Frank's abilities in his profession, had made it a point that his case should be intrusted
Justice Keene and the jury, and Frank sat down in triumph and won his verdict.
"I told you I should do it, mother," said he, quietly, when he reached Deoffam that night, after being nearly smothered with congratulations.
"You will live to see me on the woolsack yet."
Jane laughed. She often had laughed at the same boast. She was alone that evening; Gar was attending the high sheriff at an official dinner at Helstonleigh. "Will no lesser prize content you, Frank?" asked she, jestingly. "Say, for example, the Solicitor-Generals.h.i.+p?"
"Only as a stepping-stone."
"And you still get on well? Seriously speaking now. Frank."
"First-rate," answered Frank. "This day's work will be the best lift for me, though, unless I am mistaken. I had two fresh briefs put into my hands as I sat down," he added, going off in a laugh. "See if I make this year less than a thousand!"
"And the next thing, I suppose, you will be thinking of getting married?"
The bold barrister actually blushed. "What nonsense, mother! Marry, and lose my fellows.h.i.+p!"
"Frank, it is so! I see it in your face. You must tell me who it is."
"Well, as yet it is no one. I must wait until my eloquence, as they called it to-day in court, is a more a.s.sured fact with the public, and then I may speak out to the judge. She means waiting for me, though, so it is all right."
"Tell me, Frank," repeated Jane; "who is 'she'?"
"Maria Leader."
Jane looked at him doubtingly. "Not Sir William's daughter?"
"His second daughter."
"Is not that rather too aspiring for Frank Halliburton?"
"Maria does not think so. I have been aspiring all my life, mother; and so long as I work on for it honourably and uprightly, I see no harm in being so."
"No, Frank; good instead of harm. How did you become acquainted with her?"
"Her brother and I are chums: have been ever since we were at Oxford.
Bob is at the Chancery bar, but he has not much nous for it--not half the clever man that his father was. His chambers are next to mine, and I often go home with him. The girls make a great deal of us, too. That is how I first knew Maria."
"Then I suppose you see something of the judge?"
"Oh dear," laughed Frank, "the judge and I are upon intimate terms in private life; quite cronies. You would not think it, though, if you saw me bowing before my lord when he sits in his big wig. Sometimes I fancy he suspects."
"Suspects what?"
"That I and Maria would like to join cause together. But I don't mind if he does. I am a favourite of his. The very Sunday before we came on circuit he asked me to dine there. We went to church in the evening, and I had Maria under my wing; Sir William and Lady Leader trudging on before us."
"Well, Frank, I wish you success. I don't think you would choose any but a nice girl, a good girl----"
"Stop a moment, mother; you will meet the judge to-morrow night, and you may then draw a picture of Maria. She is as like him as two peas."
"How old is she, Frank?"
"Two-and-twenty. _I_ shall have her. He was not always the great Judge Leader, you know, mother; and he knows it. And he knows that every one must have a beginning, as he and my lady had it. For years after they were married he did not make five hundred a year, and they had to live upon it. He does not fear to revert to it, either; often talks of it to me and Bob--a sort of hint, I suppose, that folk do get on in time, by dint of patience. You will like Sir William Leader."
Yes: Jane would meet Sir William on the following night, for that would be the evening of the entertainment given by the high sheriff to the judges at Deoffam Hall.
CHAPTER XXVI.
THE HIGH SHERIFF'S DINNER PARTY.
William Halliburton drove his wife over in the pony carriage in the afternoon; they would dress and sleep at Deoffam. They went early, and in driving past Deoffam Vicarage, who should be at the gate looking out for them, but Anna! Not Anna Lynn now, but Anna Gurney.
"William, William, there's Anna!" Mary exclaimed. "I will get out here."
He a.s.sisted her down, and they remained talking with Anna. Then William asked what he was to do. Wait with the carriage for Mary, or drive on to the hall, and walk back for her?
"Drive to the hall," said Mary, who wished to stay a little while with Anna. "But, William," she added, as he got in, "don't let my box go round to the stables."
"With all its finery!" laughed William.
"It contains my dinner dress," Mary explained to Anna. "Have you been here long?"
"This hour, I think," replied Anna. "My husband had business a mile or two further on, and drove me here. What a nice garden this is! See, I have been picking Gar's flowers."
"Where is Mrs. Halliburton?" asked Mary.
"Dobbs called her in to settle some dispute in the kitchen. I know Dobbs is a great tyrant over that new housemaid."
"But now tell me about yourself, Anna," said Mary, leading her to a bench. "I have scarcely seen you since you were married. How do you like being your own mistress?"