permanent, her face seemed to grow painfully apprehensive. ‘Names
and Surnames of the Parties’––(they were to be parties now, not
lovers, she thought). ‘Condition.’––(a horrid idea)––‘Rank or
Occupation.’––‘Age.’––‘Dwelling at’––‘Length of Residence.’––
‘Church or Building in which the Marriage is to be solemnized.’––
‘District and County in which the Parties respectively dwell.’
‘It spoils the sentiment, doesn’t it,’ she said on their way home. ‘It
seems making a more sordid business of it even than signing the
contract in a vestry. There is a little poetry in a church. But we’ll try
to get through with it, dearest, now.’
‘We will. “For what man is he that hath betrothed a wife and hath
not taken her? Let him go and return unto his house, lest he die in
the battle, and another man take her.”* So said the Jewish law-giver.’
‘How you know the Scriptures, Jude! You really ought to have
been a parson. I can only quote profane writers.’
During the interval before the issuing of the certi
ficate Sue, in
her housekeeping errands, sometimes walked past the o
ffice, and
furtively glancing in saw a
ffixed to the wall the notice of the pur-
posed clinch to their union. She could not bear its aspect. Coming
after her previous experience of matrimony, all the romance of
their attachment seemed to be starved away by placing her present
case in the same category. She was usually leading little Father
Time by the hand, and fancied that people thought him hers, and
regarded the intended ceremony as the patching up of an old
error.
Meanwhile Jude decided to link his present with his past in some
slight degree by inviting to the wedding the only person remaining
on earth who was associated with his early life at Marygreen––the
aged widow Mrs. Edlin, who had been his great-aunt’s friend and
nurse in her last illness. He hardly expected that she would come;
but she did, bringing singular presents, in the form of apples, jam,
brass snu
ffers, an ancient pewter dish, a warming-pan, and an enor-
mous bag of goose feathers towards a bed. She was allotted the spare
room in Jude’s house, whither she retired early, and where they
could hear her through the ceiling below, honestly saying the Lord’s
Prayer in a loud voice, as the Rubric directed.
As, however, she could not sleep, and discovered that Sue and
Jude were still sitting up––it being in fact only ten o’clock––she
dressed herself again, and came down; and they all sat by the
fire till
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