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Chapter 7 THE DEAN AND CHAPTER TAKE COUNSEL

Word Count: 2310    |    Released on: 28/11/2017

y to his deanery, afraid to speak; and there sat, half stupefied, pondering many things in vain. Mr Harding crept forth solitary and unhappy; and, slowly passing b

nting, as he had given up his twelve old bedesmen? And what if he did! Some other Jupiter, some other Mr Slope, would come and turn him out of St Cuthbert's. Surely he could not have bee

r was not so strongly blended. The old bishop and his chaplain, the dean and his canons and minor canons, the old choir, and especially Mr Harding who was at the head of it, had all been popular in Barchester. They had spent their money and do

rld without. People in advance of the age now had new ideas, and it was quite time that Barchester should go in advance. Mr Slope might be right. Sunday certainly had to been strictly kept in Barchester, except as regarded the cathedral services. Indeed the two hours between services had long been appropriated to morning calls and hot luncheons. Then Sunday schools; Sabbath-day schools Mr Slope had called them. The late bishop had really not thought of Sunday s

y Mr Slope, or consent to sit at the feet of so abhorrent a Gamaliel. Ladies are sometimes less nice in their appreciation of physical disqualification; and, provided that a man speak to them well, they will

on Mr Slope after his performance in the cathedral pulpit. Among them Mr Quiverful, the rector of Puddingdale, whose wife still continued to present him from year to year with fresh pledges of her love, and so to increase his cares

eclared that the power rested with the dean and chapter, observing that no clergyman out of the chapter had a claim to preach there, saving only the bishop himself. To this the dean assented, but alleged that contests on such a subject would be unseemly; to which rejoined a meagre little doctor, one of the cathedral prebendaries, that the contest must be all on the side of Mr Slo

of whom might at any hour betray his trust. Whereon was heard from the burly chancellor an ejaculation sounding somewhat like 'Pooh, pooh, pooh!' but it might have been that the worthy man was but blowing out the heavy breath from his windpipe. Why silence him at all, suggested Mr Harding. Let them not be ashamed to hear what any man might have to preach to them, unless he preached false

p rose the archdeacon, I speak of the inner man, which then sprang up to more immediate action, for the doctor had, bodily, been standing all alon

those things of which he dared to speak so slightingly. What! To come here a stranger, a young, unknown, and unfriended stranger, and tell us, in the name of the bishop, his master, that we are ignorant of our duties, old-fashioned, and useless! I don't know whether to most admire his courage or his impudence! And one thing I will tell you: that sermon originated solely with the man himself. The bishop was no more a party to it than was the dean here. You all know how grieved I am to see a bishop in this diocese holding the latitudinarian ideas by which Dr Proudie has made himself conspicuous. You all know how gr

tor. 'Abominable,' re-echoed the chancellor, uttering a sound from th

m forcing this man on us; but what if the bishop allow himself to be ruled by his chaplain? In my opinion, the matter is in our own hands. Mr Slope cannot preach there without permission asked and obtained, and let that permission be invariable refused. Let all participation in the ministry of the cathedral service be refused to him. Then, if th

u may,' said

o the archdeacon's commands. They had too long been accustomed to his rule to shake it off so soon; and

f the meeting talked of in every respectable house, including the palace, but the very speeches of the dean, the archdeacon, and cha

t the vergers were to be ordered to refuse him even the accommodation of a seat; and some of the most far-going advocates for strong mea

. If they could not hear Mr Slope in the cathedral, they would hear him elsewhere; they would leave the dull dean, the dull old prebendaries, and the scarcely less dull young minor canons, to preach t

lope behind them nothing daunted, and he went about his work zealously, flattering such as would listen to his flattery, whispering religious twaddle into the ears of foolish women, ingratiating himself with the very few clergy who would rece

archester wa

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Contents

Chapter 1 WHO WILL BE THE NEW BISHOP Chapter 2 HIRAM'S HOSPITAL ACCORDING TO ACT OF PARLIAMENT Chapter 3 DR AND MRS PROUDIE Chapter 4 THE BISHOP'S CHAPLAIN Chapter 5 A MORNING VISIT Chapter 6 WAR Chapter 7 THE DEAN AND CHAPTER TAKE COUNSEL Chapter 8 THE EX-WARDEN REJOICES IN HIS PROBABLE RETURN TO THE HOSPITAL Chapter 9 THE STANHOPE FAMILY Chapter 10 MRS PROUDIE'S RECEPTION-COMMENCED Chapter 11 MRS PROUDIE'S RECEPTION-CONCLUDED
Chapter 12 SLOPE VERSUS HARDING
Chapter 13 THE RUBBISH CART
Chapter 14 THE NEW CAMPAIGN
Chapter 15 THE WIDOW'S SUITORS
Chapter 16 BABY WORSHIP
Chapter 17 WHO SHALL BE COCK OF THE WALK
Chapter 18 THE WIDOW'S PERSECUTION
Chapter 19 BARCHESTER BY MOONLIGHT
Chapter 20 MR ARABIN
Chapter 21 ST EWOLD'S PARSONAGE
Chapter 22 THE THORNES OF ULLATHORNE
Chapter 23 MR ARABIN READS HIMSELF IN AT ST EWOLD'S
Chapter 24 MR SLOPE'S MANAGES MATTERS VERY CLEVERLY AT PUDDINGDALE
Chapter 25 FOURTEEN ARGUMENTS IN FAVOUR OF MR QUIVERFUL'S CLAIMS
Chapter 26 MRS PROUDIE TAKES A FALL
Chapter 27 A LOVE SCENE
Chapter 28 MRS BOLD IS ENTERTAINED BY DR AND MRS GRANTLY AT PLUMSTEAD
Chapter 29 A SERIOUS INTERVIEW
Chapter 30 ANOTHER LOVE SCENE
Chapter 31 THE BISHOP'S LIBRARY
Chapter 32 A NEW CANDIDATE FOR ECCLESIASTICAL HONOURS
Chapter 33 MRS PROUDIE VICTRIX
Chapter 34 OXFORD-THE MASTER AND TUTOR OF LAZARUS
Chapter 35 MISS THORNE'S FETE CHAMPETRE
Chapter 36 ULLATHORNE SPORTS-ACT I
Chapter 37 THE SIGNORA NERONI, THE COUNTESS DE COURCY, AND MRS PROUDIE MEET EACH OTHER AT ULLATHORNE
Chapter 38 THE BISHOP SITS DOWN TO BREAKFAST, AND THE DEAN DIES
Chapter 39 THE LOOKALOFTS AND THE GREENACRES
Chapter 40 ULLATHORNE SPORTS-ACT II
Chapter 41 MRS BOLD CONFIDES HER SORROW TO HER FRIEND MISS STANHOPE
Chapter 42 ULLATHORNE SPORTS-ACT III
Chapter 43 MR AND MRS QUIVERFUL ARE MADE HAPPY. MR SLOPE ENCOURAGED BY THE PRESS
Chapter 44 MRS BOLD AT HOME
Chapter 45 THE STANHOPES AT HOME
Chapter 46 MR SLOPE'S PARTING INTERVIEW WITH THE SIGNORA
Chapter 47 THE DEAN ELECT
Chapter 48 MISS THORNE SHOWS HER TALENT FOR MATCH-MAKING
Chapter 49 THE BEELZEBUB COLT
Chapter 50 THE ARCHDEACON IS SATISFIED WITH THE STATE OF AFFAIRS
Chapter 51 MR SLOPE BIDS FAREWELL TO THE PALACE AND ITS INHABITANTS
Chapter 52 THE NEW DEAN TAKES POSSESSION OF THE DEANERY AND THE NEW WARDEN OF THE HOSPITAL
Chapter 53 CONCLUSION
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