no
friends,--no one to speak a good word for you?"
WAIFE (jerking up his head with a haughty air).--"So--so! Who talks to
you about me, sir? I am speaking of my innocent child. Does she want a
good word spoken for her? Heaven has written it in her face."
Hartopp persisted no more; the excellent man was sincerely grieved at
his visitor's obstinate avoidance of the true question at issue; for the
Mayor could have found employment for a man of Waife's evident education
and talent. But such employment would entail responsibilities and trust.
How recommend to it a man of whose life and circumstances nothing could
be known,--a man without a character? And Waife interested him deeply.
We have all felt that there are some persons towards whom we are
attracted by a peculiar sympathy not to be explained,--a something in
the manner, the cut of the face, the tone of the voice. If there are
fifty applicants for a benefit in our gift, one of the fifty wins his
way to our preference at first sight, though with no better right to it
than his fellows. We can no more say why we like the man than we can say
why we fall in love with a woman in whom no one else would discover
a charm. "There is," says a Latin love-poet, "no why or wherefore
in liking." Hartopp, therefore, had taken, from the first moment, to
Waife,--the staid, respectable, thriving man, all muffled up from head
to foot in the whitest lawn of reputation,--to the wandering, shifty,
tricksome scatterling, who had not seemingly secured, through the course
of a life bordering upon age, a single certificate for good conduct. On
his hearthstone, beside his ledger-book, stood the Mayor, looking with
a respectful admiration that puzzled himself upon the forlorn creature,
who could give no reason why he should not be rather in the Gatesboro'
parish stocks than in its chief magistrate's easy-chair. Yet, were
the Mayor's sympathetic liking and respectful admiration wholly
unaccountable? Runs there not between one warm human heart and another
the electric chain of a secret understanding? In that maimed outcast, so
stubbornly hard to himself, so tremulously sensitive for his sick child,
was there not the majesty to which they who have learned that Nature has
her nobles, reverently bow the head! A man true to man's grave religion
can no more despise a life wrecked in all else, while a hallowing
affection stands out sublime through the rents and chinks of fortune,
than he can profane w
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