This is the first in the series of Mrs. Oliphant’s books entitled Chronicles of Carlingford. This is a 30+ page short story that is often packaged with the 2nd book in the series, The Doctor’s Family.
This a portrait of the newly arrived Rector as he struggles to fit in and fulfill the duties of his first living as a rector at Salem Chapel after 15 years “cloistered in All-Souls” at Oxford. The characters are well-drawn and include the following:
Mr. Proctor – the newly arriving rector
Mr. Wodehouse – a confident churchwarden;
Miss Wodehouse – his reticent 40ish daughter;
Lucy Wodehouse – his capable and vivacious 20ish daughter from a second marriage;
Frank Wentworth – the perpetual curate at St. Roque’s, a nearby chapel on the town outskirts which was the beneficiary of the previous rector, Mr. Bury’s overly Low Anglicism.
Mrs. Proctor – the Rector’s mother, whose wit and practicality balance out her son’s naivety and also entertains the reader.
I enjoyed this story as the characterizations were good and the plot, short as it is, surprised and satisfied me. I enjoy clerical stories especially, as with Trollope’s Barsetshire series, the conflict between Low and High church adherents. This is a solid, if slightly less satisfying, alternative to reading Trollope.
I am also glad I read this book separately from The Doctor’s Family as I will likely skip that one and Salem Chapel and advance to the better regarded #4 The Perpetual Curate as my next in the series. The Perpetual Curate is Mr. Frank Wentworth who, along with that book’s female protagonist Lucy Wodehouse, are introduced in this story. Based on what I have seen of them in this story, I would be interested in reading further about them.
I understand that the Carlingford Chronicles can be read out of order but this one seems to be a prelude to others in the series. However, I believe that the departing rector in this story, Mr. Bury, was the rector in #5 of the series, Miss Marjoribanks, so perhaps the books do not follow a sequential time progression.