Read The Meaning of Night Online
Authors: Michael Cox
hoped, persisting instead in a desire to accept the living, and its attendant hardships, at all
costs. At last, Dr Passingham had no choice but to shake his head sadly and agree to put
the arrangements in hand with all speed.
And so, on a cold day in March, 1819, the Reverend Achilles Daunt took up
residence, with his new wife, at Millhead Vicarage. The house – which I have personally
visited and inspected closely – stands, squat and dismal, with its back to a desolate tract
of moor and facing a gloomy view of tall black chimneys and ugly, close-packed
dwellings in the valley below. Here, indeed, was a change for Dr Daunt. Gone were the
lawns and groves and mellow stone courts of the ancient University. To his daily
contemplation now lay a very different prospect, peopled by a very different humanity.
But the new incumbent of Millhead Vicarage was determined to work hard for his
northern flock; and certainly it could not be denied that in this, his first, ministry he
performed his duties with unswerving diligence. He became especially celebrated in the
district for his well-prepared sermons, delivered with intellectual passion and dramatic
power, which soon began to draw large congregations to St Symphorian’s of a Sunday.
In appearance, he matched the heroic and manly names his parents had seen fit to
give him: a tall and confident figure, broad-shouldered, deep-voiced, bearded like a
prophet. As he tramped the wet and dirty streets of Millhead, he exuded an intimidating
air of conscious merit. To the world at large, he seemed a rock and a rampart, a citadel
against which nothing could prevail. Yet, by degrees, he began to find that great things
were not easy to accomplish in this place of toil, where kindred spirits were few. His
work amongst the working poor of the town began to depress him more than he felt it
ought to have done; nor did preferment and removal from Millhead come quickly, as he
had hoped it would. In short, Dr Daunt became something of a disappointed man.
The imminent birth of his first child did a little to lift his spirits; but, alas, the
arrival in the world of baby Phoebus brought tragedy in its wake. Within three days of
presenting Dr Daunt with his son and heir, his pretty little wife was dead, and he was left
alone, save for the perpetually howling infant, in the dreary house on the hill, with no
prospect that he could see of ever being able to leave.
The extremity of his grief brought him to the brink of despair. Great silences
descended on the house when, for days on end, the Vicar would shun all human contact.
During this black period, solicitous friends from their little circle came to offer succour to
the Vicar in his bewilderment. Amongst the most attentive was Miss Caroline Petrie, one
of those who had sat admiringly before Dr Daunt's pulpit at St Symphorian’s. Gradually,
Miss Petrie became established as the chief agent of the Vicar’s recuperation; she
concluded matters most satisfactorily by becoming the second Mrs Daunt in the autumn
of 1821.
Of the transition from the one state of spiritual and mental annihilation to the
other of restituted faith and confidence, Dr Daunt never spoke; one can only guess at the
compromises he had to make with both soul and conscience. But make them he did, with
some advantage to himself, and grave disadvantage to me, as will appear.
The formidable Miss Caroline Petrie, who brought with her to Millhead Vicarage
a small but welcome annuity, was as different from the first Mrs Daunt as could be. She
exhibited strength – of mind, as well as body – at every point. Her bearing was what one
would naturally call regal, conveying a dignity of form and expression that immediately
commanded attention in both high and low. Partly this was due to her unusual height (she
was fully a head taller even than Dr Daunt, and had the advantage of literally looking
down upon practically everyone to whom she spoke); partly it arose from her striking
physiognomy.
At this time she was nine-and-twenty, and had been living quietly with her uncle
for several years, both her parents having died some time before. She was no beauty in
the conventional sense, as the first Mrs Daunt had been, the impression created by her
features being rather of tribulation vanquished – indeed she carried the visible signature
of suffering overcome in the disfiguring etchings of small-pox.
Yet any poet worth his laurels, or painter hungry for inspiration, would have
flown instantly into a fine frenzy at first sight of that imperious face. It seemed always set
in an austere intensity of expression, as though she had at that very moment looked up
from the absorbed perusal of some improving work of irresistible interest – though such
works were in fact largely unknown to her. But there was a mitigating softness, too, a
yielding about the mouth and eyes that, as one became aware of it, transposed the whole
effect of her countenance from the minor to the major key. Besides which she had spirit,
the most charming manners when she wished, and blunt good sense. She had ambition,
too, as events were soon to show.
With the money she brought to the marriage, a nurse – Mrs Tackley by name –
was employed to watch over the infant Phoebus, which she did most capably until the
boy was two years old, when his step-mamma assumed full responsibility for his
upbringing and welfare. As a consequence, the boy’s character grew to resemble hers in
many points, particularly with regard to her worldly outlook, which stood in distinct
contrast to the longing of her husband to take up the life of the cloistered scholar once
again. It was extraordinary how close they became, and how often Dr Daunt would
encounter them locked closely together in conversation, like two conspirators. Though he
was still, of course, responsible for the boy’s formal education, in all other respects it
seemed that his wife had taken over from him as the dominant influence on his son’s life;
and even here, in the study, his authority was frequently undermined. The boy generally
applied himself well to his lessons; but if he wished at any time to go and ride his pony,
or fish in the stream at the bottom of the garden, instead of getting declensions into his
head, then he only had to appeal to his step-mamma and he would be instantly released
from his labours. On other occasions, too, the Vicar would find his wishes thwarted, and
his orders countermanded. One day, he required the boy to accompany him to one of the
worst parts of the town, where utter poverty and hopelessness were starkly manifest on
every corner, feeling no doubt that the experience would be useful in awakening in his
son some compassion for the plight of those so much less fortunate than himself. But they
were intercepted at the front door by his furious wife, who proclaimed that under no
circumstances was dear Phoebus to be exposed to such disgusting sights. The Vicar
protested; but argument was useless. He went down into the town alone, and never again
attempted to take his son with him. From these and other instances of the second Mrs
Daunt’s ascendancy, it is impossible not to conclude that, gradually, and by means he
was unable to resist, Dr Daunt’s son was being taken away from him.
By an evil chance, or perhaps as a consequence of that fatality which, I believe,
has shaped my history, the Vicar’s wife was the second cousin of Julius Hereward
Verney Duport, twenty-fifth Baron Tansor, of Evenwood Park in the County of
Northamptonshire – whose first wife has already been briefly mentioned in connection
with my mother. Several comfortable livings in Northamptonshire lay in the gift of Mrs
Daunt’s noble relative, and that of Evenwood itself fell vacant in the summer of 1830. On
learning of this, with fire in her eyes, Mrs Daunt instantly flew south to press her new
husband's claims with his Lordship.
Already, however, something more than wifely duty appears to have been
animating this redoubtable lady. Accounts concur that she had often expressed a wish to
remove herself and her husband – and particularly her dear boy, Phoebus – from
Millhead, which she detested; and it was doubtless kind of her to offer to lay Dr Daunt’s
abilities before Lord Tansor. Her husband, I am sure, was touched by his wife’s selfless
alacrity in this matter. I suspect, however, that selflessness was not her guiding principle,
and that in rushing south, with such demonstrable urgency, she was in fact obeying the
urgings of her own ambitious heart. For if her suit was successful, she would no longer be
a distant and forgotten relation existing in the outer darkness of Millhead: she would now
be counted amongst the Duports of Evenwood – and who knows where that might lead?
I have no records of the meeting between Mrs Daunt and Lord Tansor; but, from
Mrs Daunt’s point of view, it must have been accounted a success. An invitation to join
her was speedily sent back to Dr Daunt in the North; the boy Phoebus was packed off to
relations in Suffolk; and the outcome was, that Mr and Mrs Daunt returned together from
Northamptonshire two weeks later in high spirits.
There followed an anxious wait; but Lord Tansor did not disappoint. Barely a
fortnight had passed before a letter – tremendous in its condescension – arrived,
confirming Dr Daunt as the new Rector of St Michael and All Angels, Evenwood.
According to one of my informants, on the day after his return from his Suffolk
relations, the boy Phoebus was called before his step-mother. Sitting in a small
button-backed chair set in front of the drawing-room window – that same chair in which
the first Mrs Daunt had often sat, looking forlornly out across the remnant of moor that
lay between the vicarage and the encroaching town – she was heard to impress upon the
boy the significance of his father's translation to Evenwood, and what it would mean for
them all. I am told that she addressed him in deep melodious tones as her 'dear child', and
tenderly stroked his hair.
Then she told him something of their relations and patrons, Lord and Lady
Tansor; how great was their standing in the county, and in the country at large; how they
also had a grand house in London, which he might see in due course if he was very good;
and how he was to call them Aunt and Uncle Duport.
‘You know, don’t you, that your Uncle Duport does not have a little boy of his
own any more,’ she said, taking his hand and walking him to the window. ‘If you are
very good, as I know you will be, I am sure your uncle will be especially kind to you, for
he misses having a son dreadfully, you know, and it would be such a considerate thing if
you were to pretend sometimes to be his very own boy. Could you do that, Phoebus dear?
You will always be your Papa’s boy, of course – and mine, too. It is only a sort of game,
you know. But think what it would mean to poor Uncle Duport, who has no son of his
own, as your Papa does, to have you constantly by him, and to be able to show you
things, and perhaps take you to places. You would like that, wouldn’t you? To be taken to
nice places? ’
And the boy, of course, said he would. And then she told him of all the wonders
of Evenwood.
‘Are there chimneys at Evenwood?’ the boy asked.
‘Why, yes, my dear, but they are not like Millhead chimneys, all dirty and horrid.’
‘And is my Uncle Duport a very great man?’
‘Yes indeed,’ she said, looking out across the black valley with a slyly triumphant
smile breaking across her face, ‘a very great man.’
At the appointed time, the family's belongings and household goods were
despatched south, and the Vicarage at last stood shuttered and empty. As the fly rattled
away from the gloomy windswept house, I picture Dr Daunt leaning back against the
seat, closing his eyes, and offering up a silent prayer of thanks to his God. His
deliverance had come at last.
He was about to come into his kingdom.
10:
In Arcadia?
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Thus came the Daunt family to Evenwood, the place on which all my hopes and
ambitions have rested for so long.
His new situation suited Dr Daunt completely. With four hundred pounds a year
from his stipend, and another hundred from his glebe lands, he was now able to keep a
carriage and a good table, and generally assume a position of some consequence in the
neighbourhood. No longer beset by the adversities of his Millhead living, the Dr Daunt
lay becalmed and contented in the sunlit harbour of Evenwood.
Light and spacious, the Rectory – a former prebendal manor-house – was set
amidst well-tended gardens, beyond which was a sweet prospect of sloping meadows
and, across the river, the inviting darkness of close-set woodland. Much of the Rector’s
work – such as it was in this small and prosperous country parish – could be easily
delegated to his curate, Mr Samuel Tidy, a fidgetty young man who stood deeply in awe
of Dr Daunt (and even more of his wife). Lord Tansor laid infrequent demands on his
Rector, and those few duties required of him were easily fulfilled. Soon the Rector found
himself with ample time, and more than sufficient income, to pursue at his leisure those