THE PARISH TRILOGY - Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood, The Seaboard Parish & The Vicar's Daughter. George MacDonald

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THE PARISH TRILOGY - Annals of a Quiet Neighbourhood, The Seaboard Parish & The Vicar's Daughter - George MacDonald

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saves the world."

      "You are right, I daresay. You are more sure about it than I am though."

      "Let us agree where we can," I said, "first of all; and that will make us able to disagree, where we must, without quarrelling."

      "Good," he said—"Would you like to see my work shop?"

      "Very much, indeed," I answered, heartily.

      "Do you take any pleasure in applied mechanics?"

      "I used to do so as a boy. But of course I have little time now for anything of the sort."

      "Ah! of course."

      He pushed a compartment of books. It yielded, and we entered a small closet. In another moment I found myself leaving the floor, and in yet a moment we were on the floor of an upper room.

      "What a nice way of getting up-stairs!" I said.

      "There is no other way of getting to this room," answered Mr Stoddart. "I built it myself; and there was no room for stairs. This is my shop. In my library I only read my favourite books. Here I read anything I want to read; write anything I want to write; bind my books; invent machines; and amuse myself generally. Take a chair."

      I obeyed, and began to look about me.

      The room had many books in detached book-cases. There were various benches against the walls between,—one a bookbinder's; another a carpenter's; a third had a turning-lathe; a fourth had an iron vice fixed on it, and was evidently used for working in metal. Besides these, for it was a large room, there were several tables with chemical apparatus upon them, Florence-flasks, retorts, sand-baths, and such like; while in a corner stood a furnace.

      "What an accumulation of ways and means you have about you!" I said; "and all, apparently, to different ends."

      "All to the same end, if my object were understood."

      "I presume I must ask no questions as to that object?"

      "It would take time to explain. I have theories of education. I think a man has to educate himself into harmony. Therefore he must open every possible window by which the influences of the All may come in upon him. I do not think any man complete without a perfect development of his mechanical faculties, for instance, and I encourage them to develop themselves into such windows."

      "I do not object to your theory, provided you do not put it forward as a perfect scheme of human life. If you did, I should have some questions to ask you about it, lest I should misunderstand you."

      He smiled what I took for a self-satisfied smile. There was nothing offensive in it, but it left me without anything to reply to. No embarrassment followed, however, for a rustling motion in the room the same instant attracted my attention, and I saw, to my surprise, and I must confess, a little to my confusion, Miss Oldcastle. She was seated in a corner, reading from a quarto lying upon her knees.

      "Oh! you didn't know my niece was here? To tell the truth, I forgot her when I brought you up, else I would have introduced you."

      "That is not necessary, uncle," said Miss Oldcastle, closing her book.

      I was by her instantly. She slipped the quarto from her knee, and took my offered hand.

      "Are you fond of old books?" I said, not having anything better to say.

      "Some old books," she answered.

      "May I ask what book you were reading?"

      "I will answer you—under protest," she said, with a smile.

      "I withdraw the question at once," I returned.

      "I will answer it notwithstanding. It is a volume of Jacob Behmen."

      "Do you understand him?"

      "Yes. Don't you?"

      "Well, I have made but little attempt," I answered. "Indeed, it was only as I passed through London last that I bought his works; and I am sorry to find that one of the plates is missing from my copy."

      "Which plate is it? It is not very easy, I understand, to procure a perfect copy. One of my uncle's copies has no two volumes bound alike. Each must have belonged to a different set."

      "I can't tell you what the plate is. But there are only three of those very curious unfolding ones in my third volume, and there should be four."

      "I do not think so. Indeed, I am sure you are wrong."

      "I am glad to hear it—though to be glad that the world does not possess what I thought I only was deprived of, is selfishness, cover it over as one may with the fiction of a perfect copy."

      "I don't know," she returned, without any response to what I said. "I should always like things perfect myself."

      "Doubtless," I answered; and thought it better to try another direction.

      "How is Mrs Oldcastle?" I asked, feeling in its turn the reproach of hypocrisy; for though I could have suffered, I hope, in my person and goods and reputation, to make that woman other than she was, I could not say that I cared one atom whether she was in health or not. Possibly I should have preferred the latter member of the alternative; for the suffering of the lower nature is as a fire that drives the higher nature upwards. So I felt rather hypocritical when I asked Miss Oldcastle after her.

      "Quite well, thank you," she answered, in a tone of indifference, which implied either that she saw through me, or shared in my indifference. I could not tell which.

      "And how is Miss Judy?" I inquired.

      "A little savage, as usual."

      "Not the worse for her wetting, I hope."

      "Oh! dear no. There never was health to equal that child's. It belongs to her savage nature."

      "I wish some of us were more of savages, then," I returned; for I saw signs of exhaustion in her eyes which moved my sympathy.

      "You don't mean me, Mr Walton, I hope. For if you do, I assure you your interest is quite thrown away. Uncle will tell you I am as strong as an elephant."

      But here came a slight elevation of her person; and a shadow at the same moment passed over her face. I saw that she felt she ought not to have allowed herself to become the subject of conversation.

      Meantime her uncle was busy at one of his benches filing away at a piece of brass fixed in the vice. He had thick gloves on. And, indeed, it had puzzled me before to think how he could have so many kinds of work, and yet keep his hands so smooth and white as they were. I could not help thinking the results could hardly be of the most useful description if they were all accomplished without some loss of whiteness and smoothness in the process. Even the feet that keep the garments clean must be washed themselves in the end.

      When I glanced away from Miss Oldcastle in the embarrassment produced by the repulsion of her last manner, I saw Judy in the room. At the same moment Miss Oldcastle rose.

      "What is the matter, Judy?" she said.

      "Grannie wants you," said Judy.

      Miss

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