Francis Parkman

Vassall Morton


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LVII.

       CHAPTER LVIII.

       CHAPTER LIX.

       CHAPTER LX.

       CHAPTER LXI.

       CHAPTER LXII.

       CHAPTER LXIII.

       CHAPTER LXIV.

       CHAPTER LXV.

       CHAPTER LXVI.

       CHAPTER LXVII.

       CHAPTER LXVIII.

       CHAPTER LXIX.

       CHAPTER LXX.

       CHAPTER LXXI.

       CHAPTER LXXII.

       CHAPTER LXXIII.

       CHAPTER LXXIV.

       Table of Contents

      Remote from towns he ran his godly race.—Goldsmith.

      "Macknight on the Epistles—that's the name of the book?"

      "Yes, sir, if you please. I am desirous of consulting it with a view—"

      "Well, this way, Mr. Jacobs. Here's the librarian. Mr. Stillingfleet, let me introduce my friend, the Reverend Mr. Jacobs, of West Weathersfield."

      "I am proud to make your acquaintance, sir," said Mr. Jacobs, taking the librarian's hand with an air of diffident veneration.

      "Mr. Jacobs wishes to consult Mackwright on the Epistles."

      "Macknight, if you please, Dr. Steele."

      "O, Macknight. Will you be so kind as to let him have the use of it in my name?"

      "If you will go with Mr. Rubens, sir," said the librarian, "he will show you the book."

      "Thank you, sir," replied Mr. Jacobs, to whom the words were addressed; and he followed the assistant among the alcoves in a timid, tiptoe progress, for, to him, the very air he breathed seemed redolent of learning, and the dust beneath his feet consecrated to science.

      Dr. Steele remained behind, conversing with the librarian.

      "My friend has something of the ancient apostolic simplicity hanging about him still. He looks with as much awe at Harvard College library as I did myself forty-five years ago, when I came down from Steuben to join the freshman class."

      "So you came from Steuben! Did not old John Morton come from the same place?"

      "To be sure he did. He was the glory of the town. He pulled down the old clapboard meeting house that his father used to preach in, and built a new one for him: besides giving a start in business to half the young men of the village."

      "Do you see that undergraduate at the end of the hall, standing by the last alcove, reading?"

      "Yes; what about him? He seems a hardy, good-looking young fellow enough."

      "He is John Morton's son."

      "Is it possible? I remember him when he was a child, but have not seen him for these ten years. After his father's death, his mother took him to Europe, to be educated; but she never came back; she died in Paris."

      "He is Mr. Morton's only child—is he not?"

      "Yes; his first wife had no children; and after he had buried her—which, by the way, I believe was the happiest hour of his life—he married a very different sort of person, Margaret Vassall, this boy's mother."

      "What, one of the old Vassall race?"

      "Exactly; and, I suppose, the last survivor. I used to know her. She was a handsome woman, and, bating her family pride, altogether a very fine character. She managed her husband admirably."

      "Why, what need had John Morton of being managed?"

      "O, Morton was a noble old gentleman, a merchant of the old school, and generous as the day; but he had his faults. He made nothing of his three bottles of Madeira at dinner, and besides—Ah, Mr. Jacobs, so you have found Macknight."

      "Yes, sir," said Mr. Jacobs, coming up, "I have the volumes."

      "See that young man, yonder. That's the son of your old friend, Mr. Morton."

      "Really! upon my word! Ah! Mr. Morton was a friend to me, sir—a very kind friend."

      And, in the simplicity of his heart, Mr. Jacobs glided up to the student, and blandly accosted him.

      "How do you do, young gentleman? I knew your worthy father. I knew him well. I have often sat at his hospitable board on anniversary week."

      Thus addressed, Vassall Morton looked up from his book—it was Froissart's Chronicle—inclined his head in acknowledgment, and waited to hear more.

      "Ahem!" coughed Mr. Jacobs, a little embarrassed: "your father was a most worthy and estimable gentleman: a true friend of the feeble and destitute. Ahem!—what class are you in, Mr. Morton?"

      "The junior class," said the young man, a suppressed smile flickering at the corner of his mouth.

      "Ahem! I hope, sir, that, like your father, you will long live to be an honor to your native town."

      "Thank you, sir."

      "I wish you good morning."

      "Good morning, sir," said Morton, divided between an inclination to smile at the odd, humble little figure before him, and an unwillingness to wound the other's feelings.

      "Are you ready to go, Mr. Jacobs?" said Dr. Steele.

      "If you please, sir, we will now take our departure;"—gathering the four volumes of Macknight on the Epistles under his arm;—"Good morning, Mr. Stillingfleet; good morning, Mr. Rubens. I am indebted to your kindness, gentlemen—ahem!"

      "This is the way out, Mr. Jacobs," said Steele to his diffident friend from West Weathersfield, who, in his embarrassment, was going out at the wrong door.

      "I beg your pardon, sir—ahem!" replied Mr. Jacobs, with a bashful smile. And Dr. Steele, pointing to the true exit, ushered his rustic and reverend protégé from the sacred precinct of learning.