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HOME > Classical Novels > The Little Minister > Chapter Seventeen. INTRUSION OF HAGGART INTO THESE PAGES AGAINST THE AUTHOR’S WISH.
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Chapter Seventeen. INTRUSION OF HAGGART INTO THESE PAGES AGAINST THE AUTHOR’S WISH.
 Margaret having heard the doctor say that one may catch cold in the back, had decided1 instantly to line Gavin’s waistcoat with flannel2. She was thus engaged, with pins in her mouth and the scissors hiding from her every time she wanted them, when Jean, red and flurried, abruptly3 entered the room.  
“There! I forgot to knock at the door again,” Jean exclaimed, pausing contritely4.
 
“Never mind. Is it Rob Dow wanting the minister?” asked Margaret, who had seen Rob pass the manse dyke5.
 
“Na, he wasna wanting to see the minister.”
 
“Ah, then, he came to see you, Jean,” said Margaret, archly.
 
“A widow man!” cried Jean, tossing her head. “But Rob Dow was in no condition to be friendly wi’ onybody the now.”
 
“Jean, you don’t mean that he has been drinking again?”
 
“I canna say he was drunk.”
 
“Then what condition was he in?”
 
“He was in a—a swearing condition,” Jean answered, guardedly. “But what I want to speir at you is, can I gang down to the Tenements6 for a minute? I’ll run there and back.”
 
“Certainly you can go, Jean, but you must not run. You are always running. Did Dow bring you word that you were wanted in the Tenements?”
 
152
“No exactly, but I—I want to consult Tammas Haggart about—about something.”
 
“About Dow, I believe, Jean?”
 
“Na, but about something he has done. Oh, ma’am, you surely dinna think I would take a widow man?”
 
It was the day after Gavin’s meeting with the Egyptian at the Kaims, and here is Jean’s real reason for wishing to consult Haggart. Half an hour before she hurried to the parlour she had been at the kitchen door wondering whether she should spread out her washing in the garret or risk hanging it in the courtyard. She had just decided on the garret when she saw Rob Dow morosely7 regarding her from the gateway8.
 
“Whaur is he?” growled9 Rob.
 
“He’s out, but it’s no for me to say whaur he is,” replied Jean, whose weakness was to be considered a church official. “No that I ken10,” truthfulness11 compelled her to add, for she had an ambition to be everything she thought Gavin would like a woman to be.
 
Rob seized her wrists viciously and glowered12 into her face.
 
“You’re ane o’ them,” he said.
 
“Let me go. Ane o’ what?”
 
“Ane o’ thae limmers called women.”
 
“Sal,” retorted Jean with spirit, “you’re ane o’ thae brutes13 called men. You’re drunk, Rob Dow.”
 
“In the legs maybe, but no higher. I haud a heap.”
 
“Drunk again, after all your promises to the minister! And you said yoursel’ that he had pulled you out o’ hell by the root.”
 
“It’s himsel’ that has flung me back again,” Rob said, wildly. “Jean Baxter, what does it mean when a minister carries flowers in his pouch14; ay, and takes them out to look at them ilka minute?”
 
“How do you ken about the holly15?” asked Jean, off her guard.
 
153
“You limmer,” said Dow, “you’ve been in his pouches16.”
 
“It’s a lie!” cried the outraged17 Jean. “I just saw the holly this morning in a jug18 on his chimley.”
 
“Carefully put by? Is it hod on the chimley? Does he stand looking at it? Do you tell me he’s fond-like o’t?”
 
“Mercy me!” Jean exclaimed, beginning to shake; “wha is she, Rob Dow?”
 
“Let me see it first in its jug,” Rob answered, slyly, “and syne19 I may tell you.”
 
This was not the only time Jean had been asked to show the minister’s belongings20. Snecky Hobart, among others, had tried on Gavin’s hat in the manse kitchen, and felt queer for some time afterwards. Women had been introduced on tiptoe to examine the handle of his umbrella. But Rob had not come to admire. He snatched the holly from Jean’s hands, and casting it on the ground pounded it with his heavy boots, crying, “Greet as you like, Jean. That’s the end o’ his flowers, and if I had the tawpie he got them frae I would serve her in the same way.”
 
“I’ll tell him what you’ve done,” said terrified Jean, who had tried to save the berries at the expense of her fingers.
 
“Tell him,” Dow roared; “and tell him what I said too. Ay, and tell him I was at the Kaims yestreen. Tell him I’m hunting high and low for an Egyptian woman.”
 
He flung recklessly out of the courtyard, leaving Jean looking blankly at the mud that had been holly lately. Not his act of sacrilege was distressing21 her, but his news. Were these berries a love token? Had God let Rob Dow say they were a gypsy’s love token, and not slain22 him?
 
That Rob spoke23 of the Egyptian of the riots Jean never doubted. It was known that the minister had 154 met this woman in Nanny Webster’s house, but was it not also known that he had given her such a talking-to as she could never come above? Many could repeat the words in which he had announced to Nanny that his wealthy friends in Glasgow were to give her all she needed. They could also tell how majestic24 he looked when he turned the Egyptian out of the house. In short, Nanny having kept her promise of secrecy25, the people had been forced to construct the scene in the mud house for themselves, and it was only their story that was known to Jean.
 
She decided that, so far as the gypsy was concerned, Rob had talked trash. He had seen the holly in the minister’s hand, and, being in drink, had mixed it up with the gossip about the Egyptian. But that Gavin had preserved the holly because of the donor26 was as obvious to Jean as that the vase in her hand was empty. Who could she be? No doubt all the single ladies in Thrums were in love with him, but that, Jean was sure, had not helped them a step forward.
 
To think was to Jean a waste of time. Discovering that she had been thinking, she was dismayed. There were the wet clothes in the basket looking reproachfully at her. She hastened back to Gavin’s room with the vase, but it too had eyes, and they said, “When the minister misses his holly he will question you.” Now Gavin had already smiled several times to Jean, and once he had marked passages for her in her “Pilgrim’s Progress,” with the result that she prized the marks more even than the passages. To lose his good opinion was terrible to her. In her perplexity she decided to consult wise Tammas Haggart, and hence her appeal to Margaret.
 
To avoid Chirsty, the humourist’s wife, Jean sought Haggart at his workshop window, which was so small that an old book sufficed for its shutter27. Haggart, whom she could see distinctly at his loom28, soon guessed 155 from her knocks and signs (for he was strangely quick in the uptake) that she wanted him to open the window.
 
“I want to speak to you confidentially,” Jean said in a low voice. “If you saw a grand man gey fond o’ a flower, what would you think?”
 
“I would think, Jean,” Haggart answered, reflectively, “that he had gien siller for’t; ay, I would wonder——”
 
“What would you wonder?”
 
“I would wonder how muckle he paid.”
 
“But if he was a—a minister, and keepit the flower—say it was a common rose—fond-like on his chimley, what would you think?”
 
“I would think it was a black-burning disgrace for a minister to be fond o’ flowers.”
 
“I dinna haud wi’ that.”
 
“Jean,” said Haggart, “I allow no one to contradict me.”
 
“It wasna my design. But, Tammas, if a—a minister was fond o’ a particular flower—say a rose—and you destroyed it by an accident, when he wasna looking, what would you do?”
 
“I would gie him another rose for’t.”
 
“But if you didna want him to ken you had meddled29 wi’t on his chimley, what would you do?”
 
“I would put the new rose on the chimley, and he would never ken the differ.”
 
“That’s what I’ll do,” muttered Jean, but she said aloud—
 
“But it micht be that particular rose he liked?”
 
“Havers, Jean. To a thinking man one rose is identical wi’ another rose. But how are you speiring?”
 
“Just out o’ curiosity, and I maun be stepping now. Thank you
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