Jude the Obsure - Page 190/318

"If you make a fuss it will get into the papers, and you'll never get

appointed to another school. You see, they have to consider what

you did as done by a teacher of youth--and its effects as such upon

the morals of the town; and, to ordinary opinion, your position is

indefensible. You must let me say that."

To this good advice, however, Phillotson would not listen.

"I don't care," he said. "I don't go unless I am turned out. And

for this reason; that by resigning I acknowledge I have acted wrongly

by her; when I am more and more convinced every day that in the sight

of Heaven and by all natural, straightforward humanity, I have acted

rightly."

Gillingham saw that his rather headstrong friend would not be able to

maintain such a position as this; but he said nothing further, and

in due time--indeed, in a quarter of an hour--the formal letter of

dismissal arrived, the managers having remained behind to write it

after Phillotson's withdrawal. The latter replied that he should not

accept dismissal; and called a public meeting, which he attended,

although he looked so weak and ill that his friend implored him to

stay at home. When he stood up to give his reasons for contesting

the decision of the managers he advanced them firmly, as he had

done to his friend, and contended, moreover, that the matter was a

domestic theory which did not concern them. This they over-ruled,

insisting that the private eccentricities of a teacher came quite

within their sphere of control, as it touched the morals of those he

taught. Phillotson replied that he did not see how an act of natural

charity could injure morals.

All the respectable inhabitants and well-to-do fellow-natives of

the town were against Phillotson to a man. But, somewhat to his

surprise, some dozen or more champions rose up in his defence as from

the ground.

It has been stated that Shaston was the anchorage of a curious and

interesting group of itinerants, who frequented the numerous fairs

and markets held up and down Wessex during the summer and autumn

months. Although Phillotson had never spoken to one of these

gentlemen they now nobly led the forlorn hope in his defence.

The body included two cheap Jacks, a shooting-gallery proprietor

and the ladies who loaded the guns, a pair of boxing-masters, a

steam-roundabout manager, two travelling broom-makers, who called

themselves widows, a gingerbread-stall keeper, a swing-boat owner,

and a "test-your-strength" man.

This generous phalanx of supporters, and a few others of independent

judgment, whose own domestic experiences had been not without

vicissitude, came up and warmly shook hands with Phillotson; after

which they expressed their thoughts so strongly to the meeting that

issue was joined, the result being a general scuffle, wherein a black

board was split, three panes of the school windows were broken,

an inkbottle was spilled over a town-councillor's shirt front,

a churchwarden was dealt such a topper with the map of Palestine

that his head went right through Samaria, and many black eyes and

bleeding noses were given, one of which, to everybody's horror, was

the venerable incumbent's, owing to the zeal of an emancipated

chimney-sweep, who took the side of Phillotson's party. When

Phillotson saw the blood running down the rector's face he deplored

almost in groans the untoward and degrading circumstances, regretted

that he had not resigned when called upon, and went home so ill that

next morning he could not leave his bed.