way of business; and, though this is of course false, I fear that it will be impossible to prove it so. He well knows that you are a clergyman, and that, therefore, he has a stronger hold on you than on other men."
"The disgrace shall fall on Sowerby," said Robarts, hardly actuated at the moment by any strong feeling of Christian forgiveness.
"I fear, Mr. Robarts, that he is somewhat in the condition of the Tozers. He will not feel it as you will do."
"I must bear it, Mr. Forrest, as best I may."
"Will you allow me, Mr. Robarts, to give you my advice. Perhaps I ought to apologize for intruding it upon you; but as the bills have been presented and dishonored across my counter, I have, of necessity, become acquainted with the circumstances."
"I am sure I am very much obliged to you," said Mark.
"You must pay this money, or, at any rate, the most considerable portion of it—the whole of it, indeed, with such deduction as a lawyer may be able to induce these hawks to make on the sight of the ready money. Perhaps £750 or £800 may see you clear of the whole affair."
"But I have not a quarter of that sum lying by me."
"No, I suppose not; but what I would recommend is this: that you should borrow the money from the bank on your own responsibility, with the joint security of some friend who may be willing to assist you with his name. Lord Lufton probably would do it."
"No, Mr. Forrest—"
"Listen to me first, before you make up your mind. If you took this step, of course you would do so with the fixed intention of paying the money yourself, without any farther reliance on Sowerby or on any one else."
"I shall not rely on Mr. Sowerby again, you may be sure of that."
"What I mean is that you must teach yourself to recognize the debt as your own. If you can do that, with your income you can surely pay it, with interest, in two years. If Lord Lufton will assist you with his name, I will so arrange the bills that the payments shall be made to fall equally over that period. In that way the world will know nothing about it, and in two years' time you will once more be a free man. Many men, Mr. Robarts, have bought their experience much dearer than that, I can assure you."