created by a letter from Sue, bearing a fresh postmark. She evidently
wrote with anxiety, and told very little about her own doings, more
than that she had passed some sort of examination for a Queen’s
Scholarship, and was going to enter a Training College at Melches-
ter,* to complete herself for the vocation she had chosen, partly by his
in
fluence. There was a Theological College at Melchester; Melches-
ter was a quiet and soothing place, almost entirely ecclesiastical in its
tone; a spot where worldly learning and intellectual smartness had
no establishment; where the altruistic feeling that he did possess
would perhaps be more highly estimated than a brilliancy which he
did not.
As it would be necessary that he should continue for a time to
work at his trade while reading up Divinity, which he had neglected
at Christminster for the ordinary classical grind, what better course
for him than to get employment at the further city, and pursue this
plan of reading? That his excessive human interest in the new place
was entirely of Sue’s making, while at the same time Sue was to be
regarded even less than formerly as proper to create it, had an ethical
contradictoriness to which he was not blind. But that much he con-
ceded to human frailty, and hoped to learn to love her only as a
friend and kinswoman.
He considered that he might so mark out his coming years as to
begin his ministry at the age of thirty; an age which much attracted
him as being that of his exemplar* when he
first began to teach in
Galilee. This would allow him plenty of time for deliberate study,
and for acquiring capital by his trade to help his aftercourse of
keeping the necessary terms at a Theological College.
Christmas had come and passed, and Sue had gone to the
Melchester Normal School. The time was just the worst in the year
for Jude to get into new employment, and he had written suggesting
to her that he should postpone his arrival for a month or so, till the
days had lengthened. She had acquiesced so readily that he wished
he had not proposed it––she evidently did not much care about him,
though she had never once reproached him for his strange conduct
in coming to her that night, and his silent disappearance. Neither
had she ever said a word about her relations with Mr. Phillotson.
Suddenly, however, quite a passionate letter arrived from Sue. She
was quite lonely and miserable, she told him. She hated the place she
was in: it was worse than the ecclesiastical designer’s; worse than
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