‘Netta,’ said he, ‘do you know who is the father of that Signora Vicinironi?’

‘It isn’t Vicinironi, papa,’ said Netta; ‘but Vesey Neroni, and she’s Dr Stanhope’s daughter. But I must go and do the civil to Griselda Grantly; I declare nobody has spoken a word to the poor girl this evening.

Dr Stanhope! Dr Vesey Stanhope! Dr Vesey Stanhope’s daughter, of whose marriage with a dissolute Italian scamp he now remembered to have heard something! And that impertinent blue cub who had examined him as to his episcopal bearings was old Stanhope’s son, and the lady who had entreated him to come and teach her child the catechism was old Stanhope’s daughter! The daughter of one of his own prebendaries! As these things flashed across his mind, he was nearly as angry as his wife had been. Nevertheless he could not but own that the mother of the last of the Neros was an agreeable woman.

Dr Proudie tripped out into the adjoining room, in which were congregated a crowd of Grantlyite clergymen, among whom the archdeacon was standing pre–eminent, while the old dean was sitting nearly buried in a huge armchair by the fire–place. The bishop was very anxious to be gracious, and, if possible, to diminish the bitterness which his chaplain had occasioned. Let Mr Slope do the fortiter in re, he himself would pour in the suaviter in modo.

‘Pray don’t stir, Mr Dean, pray don’t stir,’ he said, as the old man essayed to get up; ‘I take it as a great kindness, your coming to such an omnium gatherum as this. But we have hardly got settled yet, and Mrs Proudie has not been able to see her friends as she would wish to do. Well, Mr Archdeacon, after all, we have not been so hard upon you at Oxford.’

‘No,’ said the archdeacon; ‘you’ve only drawn our teeth and cut out our tongues; you’ve allowed us still to breathe and swallow.’

‘Ha, ha, ha!’ laughed the bishop; ‘it’s not quite so easy to cut out the tongue of an Oxford magnate,—and as for teeth,—ha, ha, ha! Why, in the way we’ve left the matter, it’s very odd if the heads of colleges don’t have their own way quite as fully as when the hebdomadal board was in all its glory; what do you say, Mr Dean?’

‘An old man, my lord, never likes changes,’ said the dean.

‘You must have been sad bunglers if it is so,’ said the archdeacon; ‘and indeed, to tell the truth, I think you have bungled it. At any rate, you must own this; you have not done the half what you boasted you would do.’

‘Now, as regards your system of professors—’ began the chancellor slowly. He was never destined to get beyond the beginning.

‘Talking of professors,’ said a soft clear voice close behind the chancellor’s elbow; ‘how much you Englishmen might learn from Germany; only you are all too proud.’

The bishop looking round, perceived that abominable young Stanhope had pursued him. The dean stared at him, as though he was some unearthly apparition; so also did two or three prebendaries and minor canons. The archdeacon laughed.

‘The German professors are men of learning,’ said Mr Harding, ‘but—’

‘German professors!’ groaned out the chancellor, as though his nervous system had received a shock which nothing but a week of Oxford air would cure.

‘Yes,’ continued Ethelbert; not at all understanding why a German professor should be contemptible in the eyes of an Oxford don. ‘Not but what the name is best earned at Oxford. In Germany the professors


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