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"We don't want everybody," said Miss Winifred. "But _you_ would like

Miss Garth, mother, shouldn't you?"

"My son's choice shall be mine," said Mrs. Farebrother, with majestic

discretion, "and a wife would be most welcome, Camden. You will want

your whist at home when we go to Lowick, and Henrietta Noble never was

a whist-player." (Mrs. Farebrother always called her tiny old sister by

that magnificent name.)

"I shall do without whist now, mother."

"Why so, Camden? In my time whist was thought an undeniable amusement

for a good churchman," said Mrs. Farebrother, innocent of the meaning

that whist had for her son, and speaking rather sharply, as at some

dangerous countenancing of new doctrine.

"I shall be too busy for whist; I shall have two parishes," said the

Vicar, preferring not to discuss the virtues of that game.

He had already said to Dorothea, "I don't feel bound to give up St.

Botolph's. It is protest enough against the pluralism they want to

reform if I give somebody else most of the money. The stronger thing

is not to give up power, but to use it well."

"I have thought of that," said Dorothea. "So far as self is concerned,

I think it would be easier to give up power and money than to keep

them. It seems very unfitting that I should have this patronage, yet I

felt that I ought not to let it be used by some one else instead of me."

"It is I who am bound to act so that you will not regret your power,"

said Mr. Farebrother.

His was one of the natures in which conscience gets the more active

when the yoke of life ceases to gall them. He made no display of

humility on the subject, but in his heart he felt rather ashamed that

his conduct had shown laches which others who did not get benefices

were free from.

"I used often to wish I had been something else than a clergyman," he

said to Lydgate, "but perhaps it will be better to try and make as good

a clergyman out of myself as I can. That is the well-beneficed point

of view, you perceive, from which difficulties are much simplified," he

ended, smiling.

The Vicar did feel then as if his share of duties would be easy. But

Duty has a trick of behaving unexpectedly--something like a heavy

friend whom we have amiably asked to visit us, and who breaks his leg

within our gates.

Hardly a week later, Duty presented itself in his study under the

disguise of Fred Vincy, now returned from Omnibus College with his

bachelor's degree.