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Little Minister, The
Chapter XLI - Rintoui and Babbie--Break-down of the Defence of the Manse
James Matthew Barrie
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       _ "You dare to look me in the face!"
       They were Rintoul's words. Yet Babbie had only ventured to look up
       because he was so long in speaking. His voice was low but harsh,
       like a wheel on which the brake is pressed sharply.
       "It seems to be more than the man is capable of," he added sourly.
       "Do you think," Babbie exclaimed, taking fare, "that he is afraid
       of you?"
       "So it seems; but I will drag him into the light, wherever he is
       skulking."
       Lord Rintoul strode to the door, and the brake was off his tongue
       already.
       "Go," said Babbie coldly, "and shout and stamp through the house;
       you may succeed in frightening the women, who are the only persons
       in it."
       "Where is he?"
       "He has gone to the Spittal to see you."
       "He knew I was on the hill."
       "He lost me in the darkness, and thought you had run away with me
       in your trap."
       "Ha! So he is off to the Spittal to ask me to give you back to
       him."
       "To compel you," corrected Babbie.
       "Pooh!" said the earl nervously, "that was but mummery on the
       hill."
       "It was a marriage."
       "With gypsies for witnesses. Their word would count for less than
       nothing. Babbie, I am still in time to save you."
       "I don't want to be saved. The marriage had witnesses no court
       could discredit."
       "What witnesses?"
       "Mr. McKenzie and yourself."
       She heard his teeth meet. When next she looked at him, there were
       tears in his eyes as well as in her own. It was perhaps the first
       time these two had, ever been in close sympathy. Both were
       grieving for Rintoul.
       "I am so sorry," Babbie began in a broken voice; then stopped,
       because they seemed such feeble words.
       "If you are sorry," the earl answered eagerly, "it is not yet too
       late. McKenzie and I saw nothing. Come away with me, Babbie, if
       only in pity for yourself."
       "Ah, but I don't pity myself."
       "Because this man has blinded you."
       "No, he has made me see."
       "This mummery on the hill--"
       "Why do you call it so? I believe God approved of that marriage,
       as He could never have countenanced yours and mine."
       "God! I never heard the word on your lips before."
       "I know that."
       "It is his teaching, doubtless?"
       "Yes."
       "And he told you that to do to me as you have done was to be
       pleasing in God's sight?"
       "No; he knows that it was so evil in God's sight that I shall
       suffer for it always."
       "But he has done no wrong, so there is no punishment for him?"
       "It is true that he has done no wrong, but his punishment will be
       worse, probably, than mine."
       "That," said the earl, scoffing, "is not just."
       "It is just. He has accepted responsibility for my sins by
       marrying me."
       "And what form is his punishment to take?"
       "For marrying me he will be driven from his church and dishonored
       in all men's eyes, unless--unless God is more merciful to us than
       we can expect."
       Her sincerity was so obvious that the earl could no longer meet it
       with sarcasm.
       "It is you I pity now," he said, looking wonderingly at her. "Do
       you not see that this man has deceived you? Where was his boasted
       purity in meeting you by stealth, as he must have been doing, and
       plotting to take you from me?"
       "If you knew him," Babbie answered, "you would not need to be told
       that he is incapable of that. He thought me an ordinary gypsy
       until an hour ago."
       "And you had so little regard for me that you waited until the eve
       of what was to be our marriage, and then, laughing at my shame,
       ran off to marry him."
       "I am not so bad as that," Babbie answered, and told him what had
       brought her to Thrums. "I had no thought but of returning to you,
       nor he of keeping me from you. We had said good-by at the mudhouse
       door--and then we heard your voice."
       "And my voice was so horrible to you that it drove you to this?"
       "I--I love him so much."
       What more could Babbie answer? These words told him that, if love
       commands, home, the friendships of a lifetime, kindnesses
       incalculable, are at once as naught. Nothing is so cruel as love
       if a rival challenges it to combat.
       "Why could you not love me, Babbie?" said the earl sadly. "I have
       done so much for you."
       It was little he had done for her that was not selfish. Men are
       deceived curiously in such matters. When, they add a new wing to
       their house, they do not call the action virtue; but if they give
       to a fellow-creature for their own gratification, they demand of
       God a good mark for it. Babbie, however, was in no mood to make
       light of the earl's gifts, and at his question she shook her head
       sorrowfully.
       "Is it because I am too--old?"
       This was the only time he ever spoke of his age to her.
       "Oh no, it is not that," she replied hastily, "I love Mr. Dishart-
       -because he loves me, I think."
       "Have I not loved you always?"
       "Never," Babbie answered simply. "If you had, perhaps then I
       should have loved you."
       "Babbie," he exclaimed, "if ever man loved woman, and showed it by
       the sacrifices he made for her, I--"
       "No," Babbie said, "you don't understand what it is. Ah! I did not
       mean to hurt you."
       "If I don't know what it is, what is it?" he asked, almost humbly.
       "I scarcely know you now."
       "That is it," said Babbie.
       She gave him back his ring, and then he broke down pitifully.
       Doubtless there was good in him, but I saw him only once; and with
       nothing to contrast against it, I may not now attempt to breathe
       life into the dust of his senile passion. These were the last
       words that passed between him and Babbie:
       "There was nothing," he said wistfully, "in this wide world that
       you could not have had by asking me for it. Was not that love?"
       "No," she answered. "What right have I to everything I cry for?"
       "You should never have had a care had you married me. That is
       love."
       "It is not. I want to share my husband's cares, as I expect him to
       share mine."
       "I would have humored you in everything."
       "You always did: as if a woman's mind were for laughing at, like a
       baby's passions."
       "You had your passions, too, Babbie. Yet did I ever chide you for
       them? That was love."
       "No, it was contempt. Oh," she cried passionately, "what have not
       you men to answer for who talk of love to a woman when her face is
       all you know of her; and her passions, her aspirations, are for
       kissing to sleep, her very soul a plaything? I tell you, Lord
       Rintoul, and it is all the message I send back to the gentlemen at
       the Spittal who made love to me behind your back, that this is a
       poor folly, and well calculated to rouse the wrath of God."
       Now, Jean's ear had been to the parlor keyhole for a time, but
       some message she had to take to Margaret, and what she risked
       saying was this:
       "It's Lord Rintoul and a party that has been catched in the rain,
       and he would be obliged to you if you could gie his bride shelter
       for the nicht."
       Thus the distracted servant thought to keep Margaret's mind at
       rest until Gavin came back.
       "Lord Rintoul!" exclaimed Margaret. "What a pity Gavin has missed
       him. Of course she can stay here. Did you say I bad gone to bed? I
       should not know What to say to a lord. But ask her to come up to
       me after he has gone--and, Jean, is the parlor looking tidy?"
       Lord Rintoul having departed, Jean told Babbie how she had
       accounted to Margaret for his visit. "And she telled me to gie you
       dry claethes and her compliments, and would you gang up to the
       bedroom and see her?"
       Very slowly Babbie climbed the stairs. I suppose she is the only
       person who was ever afraid of Margaret. Her first knock on the
       bedroom door was so soft that Margaret, who was sitting up in bed,
       did not hear it. When Babbie entered the room, Margaret's first
       thought was that there could be no other so beautiful as this, and
       her second was that the stranger seemed even more timid than
       herself. After a few minutes' talk she laid aside her primness, a
       weapon she had drawn in self-defence lest this fine lady should
       not understand the grandeur of a manse, and at a "Call me Babbie,
       won't you?" she smiled.
       "That is what some other person calls you," said Margaret archly.
       "Do you know that he took twenty minutes to say good-night? My
       dear," she added hastily, misinterpreting Babbie's silence, "I
       should have been sorry had he taken one second less. Every tick of
       the clock was a gossip, telling me how he loves you."
       In the dim light a face that begged for pity was turned to
       Margaret.
       "He does love you, Babbie?" she asked, suddenly doubtful.
       Babbie turned away her face, then shook her head.
       "But you love him?"
       Again Babbie shook her head.
       "Oh, my dear," cried Margaret, in distress, "if this is so, are
       you not afraid to marry him?"
       She knew now that Babbie was crying, but she did not know why
       Babbie could not look her in the face.
       "There may be times," Babbie said, most woeful that she had not
       married Rintoul, "when it is best to marry a man though we do not
       love him."
       "You are wrong, Babbie," Margaret answered gravely; "if I know
       anything at all, it is that."
       "It may be best for others."
       "Do you mean for one other?" Margaret asked, and the girl bowed
       her head. "Ah, Babbie, you speak like a child."
       "You do not understand."
       "I do not need to be told the circumstances to know this--that if
       two people love each other, neither has any right to give the
       other up."
       Babbie turned impulsively to cast herself on the mercy of Gavin's
       mother, but no word could she say; a hot tear fell from her eyes
       "upon the coverlet, and then she looked at the door, as if to run
       away.
       "But I have been too inquisitive," Margaret began; whereupon
       Babbie cried, "Oh no, no, no: you are very good. I have no one who
       cares whether I do right or wrong."
       "Your parents--"
       "I have had none since I was a child."
       "It is the more reason why I should be your friend," Margaret
       said, taking the girl's hand.
       "You do not know what you are saying. You cannot be my friend."
       "Yes, dear, I love you already. You have a good face, Babbie, as
       well as a beautiful one."
       Babbie could remain in the room no longer. She bade Margaret good-
       night and bent forward to kiss her; then drew back, like a Judas
       ashamed.
       "Why did you not kiss me?" Margaret asked in surprise, but poor
       Babbie walked out of the room without answering.
       Of what occurred at the manse on the following day until I reached
       it, I need tell little more. When Babbie was tending Sam'l
       Farquharson's child in the Tenements she learned of the flood in
       Glen Quharity, and that the greater part of the congregation had
       set off to the assistance of the farmers; but fearful as this made
       her for Gavin's safety, she kept the new anxiety from his mother.
       Deceived by another story of Jean's, Margaret was the one happy
       person in the house.
       "I believe you had only a lover's quarrel with Lord Rintoul last
       night," she said to Babbie in the afternoon. "Ah, you see I can
       guess what is taking you to the window so often. You must not
       think him long in coming for you. I can assure you that the rain
       which keeps my son from me must be sufficiently severe to separate
       even true lovers. Take an old woman's example, Babbie. If I
       thought the minister's absence alarming, I should be in anguish;
       but as it is, my mind is so much at ease that, see, I can thread
       my needle."
       It was in less than an hour after Margaret spoke thus tranquilly
       to Babbie that the precentor got into the manse. _
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本书目录

Chapter I - The Love-Light
Chapter II - Runs Alongside the Making of a Minister
Chapter III - The Night-Watchers
Chapter IV - First Coming of the Egyptian Woman
Chapter V - A Warlike Chapter, Culminating in the Flouting of the Minister by the Woman
Chapter VI - In which the Soldiers Meet the Amazons of Thrums
Chapter VII - Has the Folly of Looking into a Woman's Eyes by Way of Text
Chapter VIII - 3 A.M.--Monstrous Audacity of the Woman
Chapter IX - The Woman Considered in Absence--Adventures of a Military Cloak
Chapter X - First Sermon against Women
Chapter XI - Tells in a Whisper of Man's Fall during the Curling Season
Chapter XII - Tragedy of a Mud House
Chapter XIII - Second Coming of the Egyptian Woman
Chapter XIV - The Minister Dances to the Woman's Piping
Chapter XV - The Minister Bewitched--Second Sermon against Women
Chapter XVI - Continued Misbehavior of the Egyptian Woman
Chapter XVII - Intrusion of Haggart into these Pages against the Author's Wish
Chapter XVIII - Caddam--Love Leading to a Rupture
Chapter XIX - Circumstances Leading to the First Sermon in Approval of Women
Chapter XX - End of the State of Indecision
Chapter XXI - Night--Margaret--Flashing of a Lantern
Chapter XXII - Lovers
Chapter XXIII - Contains a Birth, Which is Sufficient for One Chapter
Chapter XXIV - The New World, and the Women who may not Dwell therein
Chapter XXV - Beginning of the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XXVI - Scene at the Spittal
Chapter XXVII - First Journey of the Dominie to Thrums during the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XXVIII - The Hill before Darkness Fell--Scene of the Impending Catastrophe
Chapter XXIX - Story of the Egyptian
Chapter XXX - The Meeting for Rain
Chapter XXXI - Various Bodies Converging on the Hill
Chapter XXXII - Leading Swiftly to the Appalling Marriage
Chapter XXXIII - While the Ten o'Clock Bell was Ringing
Chapter XXXIV - The Great Rain
Chapter XXXV - The Glen at Break of Day
Chapter XXXVI - Story of the Dominie
Chapter XXXVII - Second Journey of the Dominie to Thrums during the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XXXVIII - Thrums during the Twenty-four Hours--Defence of the Manse
Chapter XXXIX - How Babbie Spent the Night of August Fourth
Chapter XL - Babbie and Margaret--Defence of the Manse continued
Chapter XLI - Rintoui and Babbie--Break-down of the Defence of the Manse
Chapter XLII - Margaret, the Precentor, and God between
Chapter XLIII - Rain--Mist--The Jaws
Chapter XLIV - End of the Twenty-four Hours
Chapter XLV - Talk of a Little Maid since Grown Tall