[Scenes of Clerical Life by George Eliot]@TWC D-Link bookScenes of Clerical Life CHAPTER 9 6/6
The letter contained the announcement that Mr.Carpe had resolved on coming to reside at Shepperton, and that, consequently, in six months from that time Mr.Barton's duties as curate in that parish would be closed. O, it was hard! Just when Shepperton had become the place where he most wished to stay--where he had friends who knew his sorrows--where he lived close to Milly's grave.
To part from that grave seemed like parting with Milly a second time; for Amos was one who clung to all the material links between his mind and the past.
His imagination was not vivid, and required the stimulus of actual perception. It roused some bitter feeling, too, to think that Mr.Carpe's wish to reside at Shepperton was merely a pretext for removing Mr.Barton, in order that he might ultimately give the curacy of Shepperton to his own brother-in-law, who was known to be wanting a new position. Still, it must be borne; and the painful business of seeking another curacy must be set about without loss of time.
After the lapse of some months, Amos was obliged to renounce the hope of getting one at all near Shepperton, and he at length resigned himself to accepting one in a distant county.
The parish was in a large manufacturing town, where his walks would lie among noisy streets and dingy alleys, and where the children would have no garden to play in, no pleasant farm-houses to visit. It was another blow inflicted on the bruised man..
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|