- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Tono Bungay, by H. G. Wells
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- Title: Tono Bungay
- Author: H. G. Wells
- Release Date: March 18, 2006 [EBook #718]
- Last Updated: September 17, 2016
- Language: English
- Character set encoding: UTF-8
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TONO BUNGAY ***
- Produced by John Bean; Diane Bean and David Widger
- TONO-BUNGAY
- by H.G Wells
- BOOK THE FIRST
- THE DAYS BEFORE TONO-BUNGAY WAS INVENTED
- CHAPTER THE FIRST
- OF BLADESOVER HOUSE, AND MY MOTHER; AND THE CONSTITUTION OF SOCIETY
- I
- Most people in this world seem to live “in character”; they have a
- beginning, a middle and an end, and the three are congruous one with
- another and true to the rules of their type. You can speak of them as
- being of this sort of people or that. They are, as theatrical people
- say, no more (and no less) than “character actors.” They have a class,
- they have a place, they know what is becoming in them and what is due to
- them, and their proper size of tombstone tells at last how properly they
- have played the part. But there is also another kind of life that is not
- so much living as a miscellaneous tasting of life. One gets hit by some
- unusual transverse force, one is jerked out of one’s stratum and lives
- crosswise for the rest of the time, and, as it were, in a succession
- of samples. That has been my lot, and that is what has set me at last
- writing something in the nature of a novel. I have got an unusual series
- of impressions that I want very urgently to tell. I have seen life at
- very different levels, and at all these levels I have seen it with a
- sort of intimacy and in good faith. I have been a native in many social
- countries. I have been the unwelcome guest of a working baker, my
- cousin, who has since died in the Chatham infirmary; I have eaten
- illegal snacks--the unjustifiable gifts of footmen--in pantries,
- and been despised for my want of style (and subsequently married and
- divorced) by the daughter of a gasworks clerk; and--to go to my other
- extreme--I was once--oh, glittering days!--an item in the house-party
- of a countess. She was, I admit, a countess with a financial aspect, but
- still, you know, a countess. I’ve seen these people at various angles.
- At the dinner-table I’ve met not simply the titled but the great. On
- one occasion--it is my brightest memory--I upset my champagne over the
- trousers of the greatest statesman in the empire--Heaven forbid I should
- be so invidious as to name him!--in the warmth of our mutual admiration.
- And once (though it is the most incidental thing in my life) I murdered
- a man....
- Yes, I’ve seen a curious variety of people and ways of living
- altogether. Odd people they all are great and small, very much alike at
- bottom and curiously different on their surfaces. I wish I had ranged
- just a little further both up and down, seeing I have ranged so far.
- Royalty must be worth knowing and very great fun. But my contacts with
- princes have been limited to quite public occasions, nor at the other
- end of the scale have I had what I should call an inside acquaintance
- with that dusty but attractive class of people who go about on the
- high-roads drunk but enfamille (so redeeming the minor lapse), in the
- summertime, with a perambulator, lavender to sell, sun-brown children,
- a smell, and ambiguous bundles that fire the imagination. Navvies,
- farm-labourers, sailormen and stokers, all such as sit in 1834
- beer-houses, are beyond me also, and I suppose must remain so now for
- ever. My intercourse with the ducal rank too has been negligible; I
- once went shooting with a duke, and in an outburst of what was no doubt
- snobbishness, did my best to get him in the legs. But that failed.
- I’m sorry I haven’t done the whole lot though....
- You will ask by what merit I achieved this remarkable social range,
- this extensive cross-section of the British social organism. It was the
- Accident of Birth. It always is in England.
- Indeed, if I may make the remark so cosmic, everything is. But that is
- by the way. I was my uncle’s nephew, and my uncle was no less a person
- than Edward Ponderevo, whose comet-like transit of the financial
- heavens happened--it is now ten years ago! Do you remember the days
- of Ponderevo, the great days, I mean, of Ponderevo? Perhaps you had
- a trifle in some world-shaking enterprise! Then you know him only
- too well. Astraddle on Tono-Bungay, he flashed athwart the empty
- heavens--like a comet--rather, like a stupendous rocket!--and overawed
- investors spoke of his star. At his zenith he burst into a cloud of
- the most magnificent promotions. What a time that was! The Napoleon of
- domestic conveniences!
- I was his nephew, his peculiar and intimate nephew. I was hanging on
- to his coat-tails all the way through. I made pills with him in the
- chemist’s shop at Wimblehurst before he began. I was, you might say, the
- stick of his rocket; and after our tremendous soar, after he had played
- with millions, a golden rain in the sky, after my bird’s-eye view of the
- modern world, I fell again, a little scarred and blistered perhaps, two
- and twenty years older, with my youth gone, my manhood eaten in upon,
- but greatly edified, into this Thames-side yard, into these white heats
- and hammerings, amidst the fine realites of steel--to think it all over
- in my leisure and jot down the notes and inconsecutive observations
- that make this book. It was more, you know, than a figurative soar. The
- zenith of that career was surely our flight across the channel in the
- Lord Roberts B....
- I warn you this book is going to be something of an agglomeration. I
- want to trace my social trajectory (and my uncle’s) as the main line of
- my story, but as this is my first novel and almost certainly my last,
- I want to get in, too, all sorts of things that struck me, things that
- amused me and impressions I got--even although they don’t minister
- directly to my narrative at all. I want to set out my own queer love
- experiences too, such as they are, for they troubled and distressed
- and swayed me hugely, and they still seem to me to contain all sorts of
- irrational and debatable elements that I shall be the clearer-headed
- for getting on paper. And possibly I may even flow into descriptions of
- people who are really no more than people seen in transit, just
- because it amuses me to recall what they said and did to us, and
- more particularly how they behaved in the brief but splendid glare of
- Tono-Bungay and its still more glaring offspring. It lit some of them
- up, I can assure you! Indeed, I want to get in all sorts of things. My
- ideas of a novel all through are comprehensive rather than austere....
- Tono-Bungay still figures on the hoardings, it stands in rows in every
- chemist’s storeroom, it still assuages the coughs of age and brightens
- the elderly eye and loosens the elderly tongue; but its social glory,
- its financial illumination, have faded from the world for ever. And I,
- sole scorched survivor from the blaze, sit writing of it here in an air
- that is never still for the clang and thunder of machines, on a table
- littered with working drawings, and amid fragments of models and notes
- about velocities and air and water pressures and trajectories--of an
- altogether different sort from that of Tono-Bungay.
- II
- I write that much and look at it, and wonder whether, after all, this is
- any fair statement of what I am attempting in this book. I’ve given, I
- see, an impression that I want to make simply a hotch-potch of anecdotes
- and experiences with my uncle swimming in the middle as the largest lump
- of victual. I’ll own that here, with the pen already started, I realise
- what a fermenting mass of things learnt and emotions experienced and
- theories formed I’ve got to deal with, and how, in a sense, hopeless my
- book must be from the very outset. I suppose what I’m really trying to
- render is nothing more nor less than Life--as one man has found it. I
- want to tell--MYSELF, and my impressions of the thing as a whole, to say
- things I have come to feel intensely of the laws, traditions, usages,
- and ideas we call society, and how we poor individuals get driven and
- lured and stranded among these windy, perplexing shoals and channels.
- I’ve got, I suppose, to a time of life when things begin to take on
- shapes that have an air of reality, and become no longer material for
- dreaming, but interesting in themselves. I’ve reached the criticising,
- novel-writing age, and here I am writing mine--my one novel--without
- having any of the discipline to refrain and omit that I suppose the
- regular novel-writer acquires.
- I’ve read an average share of novels and made some starts before this
- beginning, and I’ve found the restraints and rules of the art (as I made
- them out) impossible for me. I like to write, I am keenly interested in
- writing, but it is not my technique. I’m an engineer with a patent or
- two and a set of ideas; most of whatever artist there is in me has been
- given to turbine machines and boat building and the problem of flying,
- and do what I will I fail to see how I can be other than a lax,
- undisciplined story-teller. I must sprawl and flounder, comment and
- theorise, if I am to get the thing out I have in mind. And it isn’t
- a constructed tale I have to tell, but unmanageable realities. My
- love-story--and if only I can keep up the spirit of truth-telling all
- through as strongly as I have now, you shall have it all--falls into
- no sort of neat scheme of telling. It involves three separate feminine
- persons. It’s all mixed up with the other things....
- But I’ve said enough, I hope, to excuse myself for the method or want
- of method in what follows, and I think I had better tell without further
- delay of my boyhood and my early impressions in the shadow of Bladesover
- House.
- III
- There came a time when I realised that Bladesover House was not all it
- seemed, but when I was a little boy I took the place with the entirest
- faith as a complete authentic microcosm. I believed that the Bladesover
- system was a little working-model--and not so very little either--of the
- whole world.
- Let me try and give you the effect of it.
- Bladesover lies up on the Kentish Downs, eight miles perhaps from
- Ashborough; and its old pavilion, a little wooden parody of the temple
- of Vesta at Tibur, upon the hill crest behind the house, commands in
- theory at least a view of either sea, of the Channel southward and the
- Thames to the northeast. The park is the second largest in Kent, finely
- wooded with well-placed beeches, many elms and some sweet chestnuts,
- abounding in little valleys and hollows of bracken, with springs and a
- stream and three fine ponds and multitudes of fallow deer. The house was
- built in the eighteenth century, it is of pale red brick in the style of
- a French chateau, and save for one pass among the crests which opens to
- blue distances, to minute, remote, oast-set farm-houses and copses
- and wheat fields and the occasional gleam of water, its hundred
- and seventeen windows look on nothing but its own wide and handsome
- territories. A semi-circular screen of great beeches masks the church
- and village, which cluster picturesquely about the high road along the
- skirts of the great park. Northward, at the remotest corner of that
- enclosure, is a second dependent village, Ropedean, less fortunate in
- its greater distance and also on account of a rector. This divine
- was indeed rich, but he was vindictively economical because of some
- shrinkage of his tithes; and by reason of his use of the word Eucharist
- for the Lord’s Supper he had become altogether estranged from the great
- ladies of Bladesover. So that Ropedean was in the shadows through all
- that youthful time.
- Now the unavoidable suggestion of that wide park and that fair large
- house, dominating church, village and the country side, was that they
- represented the thing that mattered supremely in the world, and that all
- other things had significance only in relation to them. They represented
- the Gentry, the Quality, by and through and for whom the rest of the
- world, the farming folk and the labouring folk, the trades-people
- of Ashborough, and the upper servants and the lower servants and the
- servants of the estate, breathed and lived and were permitted. And the
- Quality did it so quietly and thoroughly, the great house mingled so
- solidly and effectually earth and sky, the contrast of its spacious
- hall and saloon and galleries, its airy housekeeper’s room and warren
- of offices with the meagre dignities of the vicar, and the pinched and
- stuffy rooms of even the post-office people and the grocer, so enforced
- these suggestions, that it was only when I was a boy of thirteen or
- fourteen and some queer inherited strain of scepticism had set me
- doubting whether Mr. Bartlett, the vicar, did really know with certainty
- all about God, that as a further and deeper step in doubting I began to
- question the final rightness of the gentlefolks, their primary necessity
- in the scheme of things. But once that scepticism had awakened it took
- me fast and far. By fourteen I had achieved terrible blasphemies and
- sacrilege; I had resolved to marry a viscount’s daughter, and I had
- blacked the left eye--I think it was the left--of her half-brother, in
- open and declared rebellion.
- But of that in its place.
- The great house, the church, the village, and the labourers and the
- servants in their stations and degrees, seemed to me, I say, to be a
- closed and complete social system. About us were other villages and
- great estates, and from house to house, interlacing, correlated, the
- Gentry, the fine Olympians, came and went. The country towns seemed mere
- collections of ships, marketing places for the tenantry, centres for
- such education as they needed, as entirely dependent on the gentry as
- the village and scarcely less directly so. I thought this was the order
- of the whole world. I thought London was only a greater country town
- where the gentle-folk kept town-houses and did their greater shopping
- under the magnificent shadow of the greatest of all fine gentlewomen,
- the Queen. It seemed to be in the divine order. That all this fine
- appearance was already sapped, that there were forces at work that might
- presently carry all this elaborate social system in which my mother
- instructed me so carefully that I might understand my “place,” to Limbo,
- had scarcely dawned upon me even by the time that Tono-Bungay was fairly
- launched upon the world.
- There are many people in England to-day upon whom it has not yet dawned.
- There are times when I doubt whether any but a very inconsiderable
- minority of English people realise how extensively this ostensible order
- has even now passed away. The great houses stand in the parks still,
- the cottages cluster respectfully on their borders, touching their eaves
- with their creepers, the English countryside--you can range through Kent
- from Bladesover northward and see persists obstinately in looking what
- it was. It is like an early day in a fine October. The hand of change
- rests on it all, unfelt, unseen; resting for awhile, as it were half
- reluctantly, before it grips and ends the thing for ever. One frost and
- the whole face of things will be bare, links snap, patience end, our
- fine foliage of pretences lie glowing in the mire.
- For that we have still to wait a little while. The new order may have
- gone far towards shaping itself, but just as in that sort of lantern
- show that used to be known in the village as the “Dissolving Views,” the
- scene that is going remains upon the mind, traceable and evident, and
- the newer picture is yet enigmatical long after the lines that are to
- replace those former ones have grown bright and strong, so that the new
- England of our children’s children is still a riddle to me. The ideas
- of democracy, of equality, and above all of promiscuous fraternity have
- certainly never really entered into the English mind. But what IS coming
- into it? All this book, I hope, will bear a little on that. Our people
- never formulates; it keeps words for jests and ironies. In the meanwhile
- the old shapes, the old attitudes remain, subtly changed and changing
- still, sheltering strange tenants. Bladesover House is now let furnished
- to Sir Reuben Lichtenstein, and has been since old Lady Drew died; it
- was my odd experience to visit there, in the house of which my mother
- had been housekeeper, when my uncle was at the climax of Tono-Bungay.
- It was curious to notice then the little differences that had come to
- things with this substitution. To borrow an image from my
- mineralogical days, these Jews were not so much a new British gentry as
- “pseudomorphous” after the gentry. They are a very clever people, the
- Jews, but not clever enough to suppress their cleverness. I wished I
- could have gone downstairs to savour the tone of the pantry. It would
- have been very different I know. Hawksnest, over beyond, I noted, had
- its pseudomorph too; a newspaper proprietor of the type that hustles
- along with stolen ideas from one loud sink-or-swim enterprise to
- another, had bought the place outright; Redgrave was in the hands of
- brewers.
- But the people in the villages, so far as I could detect, saw no
- difference in their world. Two little girls bobbed and an old labourer
- touched his hat convulsively as I walked through the village. He still
- thought he knew his place--and mine. I did not know him, but I would
- have liked dearly to have asked him if he remembered my mother, if
- either my uncle or old Lichtenstein had been man enough to stand being
- given away like that.
- In that English countryside of my boyhood every human being had a
- “place.” It belonged to you from your birth like the colour of your
- eyes, it was inextricably your destiny. Above you were your betters,
- below you were your inferiors, and there were even an unstable
- questionable few, cases so disputable that you might for the rough
- purposes of every day at least, regard them as your equals. Head
- and centre of our system was Lady Drew, her “leddyship,” shrivelled,
- garrulous, with a wonderful memory for genealogies and very, very
- old, and beside her and nearly as old, Miss Somerville, her cousin and
- companion. These two old souls lived like dried-up kernels in the great
- shell of Bladesover House, the shell that had once been gaily full of
- fops, of fine ladies in powder and patches and courtly gentlemen with
- swords; and when there was no company they spent whole days in the
- corner parlour just over the housekeeper’s room, between reading and
- slumber and caressing their two pet dogs. When I was a boy I used always
- to think of these two poor old creatures as superior beings living, like
- God, somewhere through the ceiling. Occasionally they bumped about a bit
- and one even heard them overhead, which gave them a greater effect of
- reality without mitigating their vertical predominance. Sometimes too I
- saw them. Of course if I came upon them in the park or in the shrubbery
- (where I was a trespasser) I hid or fled in pious horror, but I was
- upon due occasion taken into the Presence by request. I remember
- her “leddyship” then as a thing of black silks and a golden chain,
- a quavering injunction to me to be a good boy, a very shrunken
- loose-skinned face and neck, and a ropy hand that trembled a halfcrown
- into mine. Miss Somerville hovered behind, a paler thing of broken
- lavender and white and black, with screwed up, sandy-lashed eyes.
- Her hair was yellow and her colour bright, and when we sat in the
- housekeeper’s room of a winter’s night warming our toes and sipping
- elder wine, her maid would tell us the simple secrets of that belated
- flush.... After my fight with young Garvell I was of course banished,
- and I never saw those poor old painted goddesses again.
- Then there came and went on these floors over our respectful heads, the
- Company; people I rarely saw, but whose tricks and manners were imitated
- and discussed by their maids and valets in the housekeeper’s room and
- the steward’s room--so that I had them through a medium at second hand.
- I gathered that none of the company were really Lady Drew’s equals, they
- were greater and lesser after the manner of all things in our world.
- Once I remember there was a Prince, with a real live gentleman in
- attendance, and that was a little above our customary levels and excited
- us all, and perhaps raised our expectations unduly. Afterwards, Rabbits,
- the butler, came into my mother’s room downstairs, red with indignation
- and with tears in his eyes. “Look at that!” gasped Rabbits. My mother
- was speechless with horror. That was a sovereign, a mere sovereign, such
- as you might get from any commoner!
- After Company, I remember, came anxious days, for the poor old women
- upstairs were left tired and cross and vindictive, and in a state of
- physical and emotional indigestion after their social efforts....
- On the lowest fringe of these real Olympians hung the vicarage people,
- and next to them came those ambiguous beings who are neither quality nor
- subjects. The vicarage people certainly hold a place by themselves in
- the typical English scheme; nothing is more remarkable than the progress
- the Church has made--socially--in the last two hundred years. In the
- early eighteenth century the vicar was rather under than over the
- house-steward, and was deemed a fitting match for the housekeeper or any
- not too morally discredited discard. The eighteenth century literature
- is full of his complaints that he might not remain at table to share the
- pie. He rose above these indignities because of the abundance of younger
- sons. When I meet the large assumptions of the contemporary cleric, I
- am apt to think of these things. It is curious to note that to-day that
- down-trodden, organ-playing creature, the Church of England village
- Schoolmaster, holds much the same position as the seventeenth century
- parson. The doctor in Bladesover ranked below the vicar but above the
- “vet,” artists and summer visitors squeezed in above or below this point
- according to their appearance and expenditure, and then in a carefully
- arranged scale came the tenantry, the butler and housekeeper, the
- village shopkeeper, the head keeper, the cook, the publican, the second
- keeper, the blacksmith (whose status was complicated by his daughter
- keeping the post-office--and a fine hash she used to make of telegrams
- too!) the village shopkeeper’s eldest son, the first footman, younger
- sons of the village shopkeeper, his first assistant, and so forth.
- All these conceptions and applications of a universal precedence and
- much else I drank in at Bladesover, as I listened to the talk of valets,
- ladies’-maids, Rabbits the butler and my mother in the much-cupboarded,
- white-painted, chintz-brightened housekeeper’s room where the upper
- servants assembled, or of footmen and Rabbits and estate men of all
- sorts among the green baize and Windsor chairs of the pantry--where
- Rabbits, being above the law, sold beer without a license or any
- compunction--or of housemaids and still-room maids in the bleak,
- matting-carpeted still-room or of the cook and her kitchen maids and
- casual friends among the bright copper and hot glow of the kitchens.
- Of course their own ranks and places came by implication to these
- people, and it was with the ranks and places of the Olympians that the
- talk mainly concerned itself. There was an old peerage and a Crockford
- together with the books of recipes, the Whitaker’s Almanack, the Old
- Moore’s Almanack, and the eighteenth century dictionary, on the little
- dresser that broke the cupboards on one side of my mother’s room; there
- was another peerage, with the covers off, in the pantry; there was a
- new peerage in the billiard-room, and I seem to remember another in the
- anomalous apartment that held the upper servants’ bagatelle board and in
- which, after the Hall dinner, they partook of the luxury of sweets. And
- if you had asked any of those upper servants how such and such a Prince
- of Battenberg was related to, let us say, Mr. Cunninghame Graham or
- the Duke of Argyle, you would have been told upon the nail. As a boy, I
- heard a great deal of that sort of thing, and if to this day I am
- still a little vague about courtesy titles and the exact application of
- honorifics, it is, I can assure you, because I hardened my heart, and
- not from any lack of adequate opportunity of mastering these succulent
- particulars.
- Dominating all these memories is the figure of my mother--my mother who
- did not love me because I grew liker my father every day--and who knew
- with inflexible decision her place and the place of every one in the
- world--except the place that concealed my father--and in some details
- mine. Subtle points were put to her. I can see and hear her saying
- now, “No, Miss Fison, peers of England go in before peers of the United
- Kingdom, and he is merely a peer of the United Kingdom.” She had much
- exercise in placing people’s servants about her tea-table, where the
- etiquette was very strict. I wonder sometimes if the etiquette of
- housekeepers’ rooms is as strict to-day, and what my mother would have
- made of a chauffeur....
- On the whole I am glad that I saw so much as I did of Bladesover--if
- for no other reason than because seeing it when I did, quite naively,
- believing in it thoroughly, and then coming to analyse it, has enabled
- me to understand much that would be absolutely incomprehensible in the
- structure of English society. Bladesover is, I am convinced, the clue to
- almost all that is distinctively British and perplexing to the foreign
- inquirer in England and the English-speaking peoples. Grasp firmly that
- England was all Bladesover two hundred years ago; that it has had
- Reform Acts indeed, and such--like changes of formula, but no essential
- revolution since then; that all that is modern and different has come in
- as a thing intruded or as a gloss upon this predominant formula, either
- impertinently or apologetically; and you will perceive at once the
- reasonableness, the necessity, of that snobbishness which is the
- distinctive quality of English thought. Everybody who is not actually in
- the shadow of a Bladesover is as it were perpetually seeking after
- lost orientations. We have never broken with our tradition, never even
- symbolically hewed it to pieces, as the French did in quivering fact
- in the Terror. But all the organizing ideas have slackened, the old
- habitual bonds have relaxed or altogether come undone. And America
- too, is, as it were, a detached, outlying part of that estate which
- has expanded in queer ways. George Washington, Esquire, was of the
- gentlefolk, and he came near being a King. It was Plutarch, you know,
- and nothing intrinsically American that prevented George Washington
- being a King....
- IV
- I hated teatime in the housekeeper’s room more than anything else at
- Bladesover. And more particularly I hated it when Mrs. Mackridge and
- Mrs. Booch and Mrs. Latude-Fernay were staying in the house. They were,
- all three of them, pensioned-off servants.
- Old friends of Lady Drew’s had rewarded them posthumously for a
- prolonged devotion to their minor comforts, and Mrs. Booch was also
- trustee for a favourite Skye terrier. Every year Lady Drew gave them an
- invitation--a reward and encouragement of virtue with especial reference
- to my mother and Miss Fison, the maid. They sat about in black and
- shiny and flouncey clothing adorned with gimp and beads, eating
- great quantities of cake, drinking much tea in a stately manner and
- reverberating remarks.
- I remember these women as immense. No doubt they were of negotiable
- size, but I was only a very little chap and they have assumed nightmare
- proportions in my mind. They loomed, they bulged, they impended.
- Mrs. Mackridge was large and dark; there was a marvel about her head,
- inasmuch as she was bald. She wore a dignified cap, and in front of that
- upon her brow, hair was PAINTED. I have never seen the like since. She
- had been maid to the widow of Sir Roderick Blenderhasset Impey, some
- sort of governor or such-like portent in the East Indies, and from her
- remains--in Mrs. Mackridge--I judge Lady Impey was a very stupendous and
- crushing creature indeed. Lady Impey had been of the Juno type, haughty,
- unapproachable, given to irony and a caustic wit. Mrs. Mackridge had no
- wit, but she had acquired the caustic voice and gestures along with the
- old satins and trimmings of the great lady. When she told you it was a
- fine morning, she seemed also to be telling you you were a fool and a
- low fool to boot; when she was spoken to, she had a way of acknowledging
- your poor tinkle of utterance with a voluminous, scornful “Haw!” that
- made you want to burn her alive. She also had a way of saying “Indade!”
- with a droop of the eyelids.
- Mrs. Booch was a smaller woman, brown haired, with queer little curls on
- either side of her face, large blue eyes and a small set of stereotyped
- remarks that constituted her entire mental range. Mrs. Latude-Fernay has
- left, oddly enough, no memory at all except her name and the effect of
- a green-grey silk dress, all set with gold and blue buttons. I fancy she
- was a large blonde. Then there was Miss Fison, the maid who served both
- Lady Drew and Miss Somerville, and at the end of the table opposite my
- mother, sat Rabbits the butler. Rabbits, for a butler, was an unassuming
- man, and at tea he was not as you know butlers, but in a morning
- coat and a black tie with blue spots. Still, he was large, with side
- whiskers, even if his clean-shaven mouth was weak and little. I sat
- among these people on a high, hard, early Gregorian chair, trying to
- exist, like a feeble seedling amidst great rocks, and my mother sat
- with an eye upon me, resolute to suppress the slightest manifestation
- of vitality. It was hard on me, but perhaps it was also hard upon
- these rather over-fed, ageing, pretending people, that my youthful
- restlessness and rebellious unbelieving eyes should be thrust in among
- their dignities.
- Tea lasted for nearly three-quarters of an hour, and I sat it out
- perforce; and day after day the talk was exactly the same.
- “Sugar, Mrs. Mackridge?” my mother used to ask.
- “Sugar, Mrs. Latude-Fernay?”
- The word sugar would stir the mind of Mrs. Mackridge. “They say,” she
- would begin, issuing her proclamation--at least half her sentences began
- “they say”--“sugar is fatt-an-ing, nowadays. Many of the best people do
- not take it at all.”
- “Not with their tea, ma’am,” said Rabbits intelligently.
- “Not with anything,” said Mrs. Mackridge, with an air of crushing
- repartee, and drank.
- “What won’t they say next?” said Miss Fison.
- “They do say such things!” said Mrs. Booch.
- “They say,” said Mrs. Mackridge, inflexibly, “the doctors are not
- recomm-an-ding it now.”
- My Mother: “No, ma’am?”
- Mrs. Mackridge: “No, ma’am.”
- Then, to the table at large: “Poor Sir Roderick, before he died,
- consumed great quan-ta-ties of sugar. I have sometimes fancied it may
- have hastened his end.”
- This ended the first skirmish. A certain gloom of manner and a pause was
- considered due to the sacred memory of Sir Roderick.
- “George,” said my mother, “don’t kick the chair!”
- Then, perhaps, Mrs. Booch would produce a favourite piece from her
- repertoire. “The evenings are drawing out nicely,” she would say, or
- if the season was decadent, “How the evenings draw in!” It was an
- invaluable remark to her; I do not know how she would have got along
- without it.
- My mother, who sat with her back to the window, would always consider
- it due to Mrs. Booch to turn about and regard the evening in the act of
- elongation or contraction, whichever phase it might be.
- A brisk discussion of how long we were to the longest or shortest day
- would ensue, and die away at last exhausted.
- Mrs. Mackridge, perhaps, would reopen. She had many intelligent habits;
- among others she read the paper--The Morning Post. The other ladies
- would at times tackle that sheet, but only to read the births,
- marriages, and deaths on the front page. It was, of course, the old
- Morning Post that cost threepence, not the brisk coruscating young thing
- of to-day. “They say,” she would open, “that Lord Tweedums is to go to
- Canada.”
- “Ah!” said Mr. Rabbits; “dew they?”
- “Isn’t he,” said my mother, “the Earl of Slumgold’s cousin?” She knew
- he was; it was an entirely irrelevant and unnecessary remark, but still,
- something to say.
- “The same, ma’am,” said Mrs. Mackridge. “They say he was extremelay
- popular in New South Wales. They looked up to him greatlay. I knew him,
- ma’am, as a young man. A very nice pleasant young fella.”
- Interlude of respect.
- “‘Is predecessor,” said Rabbits, who had acquired from some clerical
- model a precise emphatic articulation without acquiring at the same time
- the aspirates that would have graced it, “got into trouble at Sydney.”
- “Haw!” said Mrs. Mackridge, scornfully, “so am tawled.”
- “‘E came to Templemorton after ‘e came back, and I remember them talking
- ‘im over after ‘e’d gone again.”
- “Haw?” said Mrs. Mackridge, interrogatively.
- “‘Is fuss was quotin’ poetry, ma’am. ‘E said--what was it ‘e said--‘They
- lef’ their country for their country’s good,’--which in some way was
- took to remind them of their being originally convic’s, though now
- reformed. Every one I ‘eard speak, agreed it was takless of ‘im.”
- “Sir Roderick used to say,” said Mrs. Mackridge, “that the First
- Thing,”--here Mrs. Mackridge paused and looked dreadfully at me--“and
- the Second Thing”--here she fixed me again--“and the Third Thing”--now I
- was released--“needed in a colonial governor is Tact.” She became aware
- of my doubts again, and added predominantly, “It has always struck me
- that that was a Singularly True Remark.”
- I resolved that if ever I found this polypus of Tact growing up in my
- soul, I would tear it out by the roots, throw it forth and stamp on it.
- “They’re queer people--colonials,” said Rabbits, “very queer. When I was
- at Templemorton I see something of ‘em. Queer fellows, some of ‘em. Very
- respectful of course, free with their money in a spasammy sort of way,
- but--Some of ‘em, I must confess, make me nervous. They have an eye
- on you. They watch you--as you wait. They let themselves appear to be
- lookin’ at you...”
- My mother said nothing in that discussion. The word colonies always
- upset her. She was afraid, I think, that if she turned her mind in that
- direction my errant father might suddenly and shockingly be
- discovered, no doubt conspicuously bigamic and altogether offensive and
- revolutionary. She did not want to rediscover my father at all.
- It is curious that when I was a little listening boy I had such an idea
- of our colonies that I jeered in my heart at Mrs. Mackridge’s colonial
- ascendancy. These brave emancipated sunburnt English of the open, I
- thought, suffer these aristocratic invaders as a quaint anachronism, but
- as for being gratified--!
- I don’t jeer now. I’m not so sure.
- V
- It is a little difficult to explain why I did not come to do what was
- the natural thing for any one in my circumstances to do, and take my
- world for granted. A certain innate scepticism, I think, explains it and
- a certain inaptitude for sympathetic assimilation. My father, I believe,
- was a sceptic; my mother was certainly a hard woman.
- I was an only child, and to this day I do not know whether my father
- is living or dead. He fled my mother’s virtues before my distincter
- memories began. He left no traces in his flight, and she, in her
- indignation, destroyed every vestige that she could of him. Never a
- photograph nor a scrap of his handwriting have I seen; and it was, I
- know, only the accepted code of virtue and discretion that prevented her
- destroying her marriage certificate and me, and so making a clean sweep
- of her matrimonial humiliation. I suppose I must inherit something of
- the moral stupidity that would enable her to make a holocaust of every
- little personal thing she had of him. There must have been presents made
- by him as a lover, for example--books with kindly inscriptions, letters
- perhaps, a flattened flower, a ring, or such-like gage. She kept her
- wedding-ring, of course, but all the others she destroyed. She never
- told me his christian name or indeed spoke a word to me of him; though
- at times I came near daring to ask her: add what I have of him--it isn’t
- much--I got from his brother, my hero, my uncle Ponderevo. She wore her
- ring; her marriage certificate she kept in a sealed envelope in the very
- bottom of her largest trunk, and me she sustained at a private
- school among the Kentish hills. You must not think I was always at
- Bladesover--even in my holidays. If at the time these came round, Lady
- Drew was vexed by recent Company, or for any other reason wished to take
- it out of my mother, then she used to ignore the customary reminder my
- mother gave her, and I “stayed on” at the school.
- But such occasions were rare, and I suppose that between ten and
- fourteen I averaged fifty days a year at Bladesover.
- Don’t imagine I deny that was a fine thing for me. Bladesover, in
- absorbing the whole countryside, had not altogether missed greatness.
- The Bladesover system has at least done one good thing for England, it
- has abolished the peasant habit of mind. If many of us still live and
- breathe pantry and housekeeper’s room, we are quit of the dream of
- living by economising parasitically on hens and pigs.... About that park
- there were some elements of a liberal education; there was a great space
- of greensward not given over to manure and food grubbing; there was
- mystery, there was matter for the imagination. It was still a park of
- deer. I saw something of the life of these dappled creatures, heard the
- belling of stags, came upon young fawns among the bracken, found bones,
- skulls, and antlers in lonely places. There were corners that gave
- a gleam of meaning to the word forest, glimpses of unstudied natural
- splendour. There was a slope of bluebells in the broken sunlight under
- the newly green beeches in the west wood that is now precious sapphire
- in my memory; it was the first time that I knowingly met Beauty.
- And in the house there were books. The rubbish old Lady Drew read I
- never saw; stuff of the Maria Monk type, I have since gathered, had
- a fascination for her; but back in the past there had been a Drew of
- intellectual enterprise, Sir Cuthbert, the son of Sir Matthew who built
- the house; and thrust away, neglected and despised, in an old room
- upstairs, were books and treasures of his that my mother let me rout
- among during a spell of wintry wet. Sitting under a dormer window on a
- shelf above great stores of tea and spices, I became familiar with much
- of Hogarth in a big portfolio, with Raphael, there was a great book of
- engravings from the stanzas of Raphael in the Vatican--and with most
- of the capitals of Europe as they had looked about 1780, by means
- of several pig iron-moulded books of views. There was also a broad
- eighteenth century atlas with huge wandering maps that instructed me
- mightily. It had splendid adornments about each map title; Holland
- showed a fisherman and his boat; Russia a Cossack; Japan, remarkable
- people attired in pagodas--I say it deliberately, “pagodas.” There were
- Terrae Incognitae in every continent then, Poland, Sarmatia, lands since
- lost; and many a voyage I made with a blunted pin about that large,
- incorrect and dignified world. The books in that little old closet had
- been banished, I suppose, from the saloon during the Victorian revival
- of good taste and emasculated orthodoxy, but my mother had no suspicion
- of their character. So I read and understood the good sound rhetoric of
- Tom Paine’s “Rights of Man,” and his “Common Sense,” excellent books,
- once praised by bishops and since sedulously lied about. Gulliver was
- there unexpurgated, strong meat for a boy perhaps but not too strong I
- hold--I have never regretted that I escaped niceness in these affairs.
- The satire of Traldragdubh made my blood boil as it was meant to do,
- but I hated Swift for the Houyhnhnms and never quite liked a horse
- afterwards. Then I remember also a translation of Voltaire’s “Candide,”
- and “Rasselas;” and, vast book though it was, I really believe I read,
- in a muzzy sort of way of course, from end to end, and even with some
- reference now and then to the Atlas, Gibbon--in twelve volumes.
- These readings whetted my taste for more, and surreptitiously I raided
- the bookcases in the big saloon. I got through quite a number of
- books before my sacrilegious temerity was discovered by Ann, the old
- head-housemaid. I remember that among others I tried a translation of
- Plato’s “Republic” then, and found extraordinarily little interest in
- it; I was much too young for that; but “Vathek”--“Vathek” was glorious
- stuff. That kicking affair! When everybody HAD to kick!
- The thought of “Vathek” always brings back with it my boyish memory of
- the big saloon at Bladesover.
- It was a huge long room with many windows opening upon the park, and
- each window--there were a dozen or more reaching from the floor up--had
- its elaborate silk or satin curtains, heavily fringed, a canopy (is it?)
- above, its completely white shutters folding into the deep thickness of
- the wall. At either end of that great still place was an immense marble
- chimney-piece; the end by the bookcase showed the wolf and Romulus and
- Remus, with Homer and Virgil for supporters; the design of the other end
- I have forgotten. Frederick, Prince of Wales, swaggered flatly over the
- one, twice life-size, but mellowed by the surface gleam of oil; and
- over the other was an equally colossal group of departed Drews as sylvan
- deities, scantily clad, against a storm-rent sky. Down the centre of the
- elaborate ceiling were three chandeliers, each bearing some hundreds of
- dangling glass lustres, and over the interminable carpet--it impressed
- me as about as big as Sarmatia in the store-room Atlas--were islands and
- archipelagoes of chintz-covered chairs and couches, tables, great Sevres
- vases on pedestals, a bronze man and horse. Somewhere in this wilderness
- one came, I remember, upon--a big harp beside a lyre-shaped music stand,
- and a grand piano....
- The book-borrowing raid was one of extraordinary dash and danger.
- One came down the main service stairs--that was legal, and illegality
- began in a little landing when, very cautiously, one went through a red
- baize door. A little passage led to the hall, and here one reconnoitered
- for Ann, the old head-housemaid--the younger housemaids were friendly
- and did not count. Ann located, came a dash across the open space at
- the foot of that great staircase that has never been properly descended
- since powder went out of fashion, and so to the saloon door. A beast
- of an oscillating Chinaman in china, as large as life, grimaced and
- quivered to one’s lightest steps. That door was the perilous place; it
- was double with the thickness of the wall between, so that one could not
- listen beforehand for the whisk of the feather-brush on the other side.
- Oddly rat-like, is it not, this darting into enormous places in pursuit
- of the abandoned crumbs of thought?
- And I found Langhorne’s “Plutarch” too, I remember, on those shelves. It
- seems queer to me now to think that I acquired pride and self-respect,
- the idea of a state and the germ of public spirit, in such a furtive
- fashion; queer, too, that it should rest with an old Greek, dead these
- eighteen hundred years to teach that.
- VI
- The school I went to was the sort of school the Bladesover system
- permitted. The public schools that add comic into existence in the brief
- glow of the Renascence had been taken possession of by the ruling class;
- the lower classes were not supposed to stand in need of schools, and our
- middle stratum got the schools it deserved, private schools, schools any
- unqualified pretender was free to establish. Mine was kept by a man who
- had had the energy to get himself a College of Preceptors diploma, and
- considering how cheap his charges were, I will readily admit the place
- might have been worse. The building was a dingy yellow-brick residence
- outside the village, with the schoolroom as an outbuilding of lath and
- plaster.
- I do not remember that my school-days were unhappy--indeed I recall a
- good lot of fine mixed fun in them--but I cannot without grave risk
- of misinterpretation declare that we were at all nice and refined. We
- fought much, not sound formal fighting, but “scrapping” of a sincere and
- murderous kind, into which one might bring one’s boots--it made us tough
- at any rate--and several of us were the sons of London publicans, who
- distinguished “scraps” where one meant to hurt from ordered pugilism,
- practising both arts, and having, moreover, precocious linguistic gifts.
- Our cricket-field was bald about the wickets, and we played without
- style and disputed with the umpire; and the teaching was chiefly in
- the hands of a lout of nineteen, who wore ready-made clothes and
- taught despicably. The head-master and proprietor taught us arithmetic,
- algebra, and Euclid, and to the older boys even trigonometry, himself;
- he had a strong mathematical bias, and I think now that by the standard
- of a British public school he did rather well by us.
- We had one inestimable privilege at that school, and that was spiritual
- neglect. We dealt with one another with the forcible simplicity of
- natural boys, we “cheeked,” and “punched” and “clouted”; we thought
- ourselves Red Indians and cowboys and such-like honourable things,
- and not young English gentlemen; we never felt the strain of “Onward
- Christian soldiers,” nor were swayed by any premature piety in the cold
- oak pew of our Sunday devotions. All that was good. We spent our rare
- pennies in the uncensored reading matter of the village dame’s shop, on
- the Boys of England, and honest penny dreadfuls--ripping stuff, stuff
- that anticipated Haggard and Stevenson, badly printed and queerly
- illustrated, and very very good for us. On our half-holidays we were
- allowed the unusual freedom of rambling in twos and threes wide and far
- about the land, talking experimentally, dreaming wildly. There was much
- in those walks! To this day the landscape of the Kentish world, with its
- low broad distances, its hop gardens and golden stretches of wheat, its
- oasts and square church towers, its background of downland and hangers,
- has for me a faint sense of adventure added to the pleasure of its
- beauty. We smoked on occasion, but nobody put us up to the proper
- “boyish” things to do; we never “robbed an orchard” for example, though
- there were orchards all about us, we thought stealing was sinful, we
- stole incidental apples and turnips and strawberries from the fields
- indeed, but in a criminal inglorious fashion, and afterwards we were
- ashamed. We had our days of adventure, but they were natural accidents,
- our own adventures. There was one hot day when several of us, walking
- out towards Maidstone, were incited by the devil to despise ginger beer,
- and we fuddled ourselves dreadfully with ale; and a time when our young
- minds were infected to the pitch of buying pistols, by the legend of
- the Wild West. Young Roots from Highbury came back with a revolver and
- cartridges, and we went off six strong to live a free wild life one
- holiday afternoon. We fired our first shot deep in the old flint mine at
- Chiselstead, and nearly burst our ear drums; then we fired in a primrose
- studded wood by Pickthorn Green, and I gave a false alarm of “keeper,”
- and we fled in disorder for a mile. After which Roots suddenly shot at
- a pheasant in the high road by Chiselstead, and then young Barker told
- lies about the severity of the game laws and made Roots sore afraid, and
- we hid the pistol in a dry ditch outside the school field. A day or so
- after we got in again, and ignoring a certain fouling and rusting of the
- barrel, tried for a rabbit at three hundred yards. Young Roots blew
- a molehill at twenty paces into a dust cloud, burnt his fingers, and
- scorched his face; and the weapon having once displayed this strange
- disposition to flame back upon the shooter, was not subsequently fired.
- One main source of excitement for us was “cheeking” people in vans and
- carts upon the Goudhurst road; and getting myself into a monstrous white
- mess in the chalk pits beyond the village, and catching yellow jaundice
- as a sequel to bathing stark naked with three other Adamites, old Ewart
- leading that function, in the rivulet across Hickson’s meadows, are
- among my memorabilia. Those free imaginative afternoons! how much they
- were for us! how much they did for us! All streams came from the then
- undiscovered “sources of the Nile” in those days, all thickets were
- Indian jungles, and our best game, I say it with pride, I invented. I
- got it out of the Bladesover saloon. We found a wood where “Trespassing”
- was forbidden, and did the “Retreat of the Ten Thousand” through it from
- end to end, cutting our way bravely through a host of nettle beds that
- barred our path, and not forgetting to weep and kneel when at last we
- emerged within sight of the High Road Sea. So we have burst at times,
- weeping and rejoicing, upon startled wayfarers. Usually I took the part
- of that distinguished general Xenophen--and please note the quantity of
- the o. I have all my classical names like that,--Socrates rhymes with
- Bates for me, and except when the bleak eye of some scholar warns me of
- his standards of judgment, I use those dear old mispronunciations still.
- The little splash into Latin made during my days as a chemist washed off
- nothing of the habit. Well,--if I met those great gentlemen of the past
- with their accents carelessly adjusted I did at least meet them alive,
- as an equal, and in a living tongue. Altogether my school might easily
- have been worse for me, and among other good things it gave me a friend
- who has lasted my life out.
- This was Ewart, who is now a monumental artist at Woking, after many
- vicissitudes. Dear chap, how he did stick out of his clothes to be sure!
- He was a longlimbed lout, ridiculously tall beside my more youth full
- compactness, and, except that there was no black moustache under his
- nose blob, he had the same round knobby face as he has to-day, the same
- bright and active hazel brown eyes, the stare, the meditative moment,
- the insinuating reply. Surely no boy ever played the fool as Bob Ewart
- used to play it, no boy had a readier knack of mantling the world with
- wonder. Commonness vanished before Ewart, at his expository touch all
- things became memorable and rare. From him I first heard tell of love,
- but only after its barbs were already sticking in my heart. He was, I
- know now the bastard of that great improvident artist, Rickmann Ewart;
- he brought the light of a lax world that at least had not turned its
- back upon beauty, into the growing fermentation of my mind.
- I won his heart by a version of Vathek, and after that we were
- inseparable yarning friends. We merged our intellectual stock so
- completely that I wonder sometimes how much I did not become Ewart, how
- much Ewart is not vicariously and derivatively me.
- VII
- And then when I had newly passed my fourteenth birthday, came my tragic
- disgrace.
- It was in my midsummer holidays that the thing happened, and it was
- through the Honourable Beatrice Normandy. She had “come into my life,”
- as they say, before I was twelve.
- She descended unexpectedly into a peaceful interlude that followed the
- annual going of those Three Great Women. She came into the old nursery
- upstairs, and every day she had tea with us in the housekeeper’s room.
- She was eight, and she came with a nurse called Nannie; and to begin
- with, I did not like her at all.
- Nobody liked this irruption into the downstairs rooms; the two “gave
- trouble,”--a dire offence; Nannie’s sense of duty to her charge led to
- requests and demands that took my mother’s breath away. Eggs at unusual
- times, the reboiling of milk, the rejection of an excellent milk
- pudding--not negotiated respectfully but dictated as of right. Nannie
- was a dark, longfeatured, taciturn woman in a grey dress; she had a
- furtive inflexibility of manner that finally dismayed and crushed and
- overcame. She conveyed she was “under orders”--like a Greek tragedy. She
- was that strange product of the old time, a devoted, trusted servant;
- she had, as it were, banked all her pride and will with the greater,
- more powerful people who employed her, in return for a life-long
- security of servitude--the bargain was nonetheless binding for being
- implicit. Finally they were to pension her, and she would die the hated
- treasure of a boarding-house. She had built up in herself an enormous
- habit of reference to these upstairs people, she had curbed down all
- discordant murmurings of her soul, her very instincts were perverted or
- surrendered. She was sexless, her personal pride was all transferred,
- she mothered another woman’s child with a hard, joyless devotion that
- was at least entirely compatible with a stoical separation. She treated
- us all as things that counted for nothing save to fetch and carry for
- her charge. But the Honourable Beatrice could condescend.
- The queer chances of later years come between me and a distinctly
- separated memory of that childish face. When I think of Beatrice, I
- think of her as I came to know her at a later time, when at last I came
- to know her so well that indeed now I could draw her, and show a hundred
- little delicate things you would miss in looking at her. But even then I
- remember how I noted the infinite delicacy of her childish skin and the
- fine eyebrow, finer than the finest feather that ever one felt on the
- breast of a bird. She was one of those elfin, rather precocious little
- girls, quick coloured, with dark hair, naturally curling dusky hair
- that was sometimes astray over her eyes, and eyes that were sometimes
- impishly dark, and sometimes a clear brown yellow. And from the very
- outset, after a most cursory attention to Rabbits, she decided that the
- only really interesting thing at the tea-table was myself.
- The elders talked in their formal dull way--telling Nannie the trite
- old things about the park and the village that they told every one, and
- Beatrice watched me across the table with a pitiless little curiosity
- that made me uncomfortable.
- “Nannie,” she said, pointing, and Nannie left a question of my mother’s
- disregarded to attend to her; “is he a servant boy?”
- “S-s-sh,” said Nannie. “He’s Master Ponderevo.”
- “Is he a servant boy?” repeated Beatrice.
- “He’s a schoolboy,” said my mother.
- “Then may I talk to him, Nannie?”
- Nannie surveyed me with brutal inhumanity. “You mustn’t talk too much,”
- she said to her charge, and cut cake into fingers for her.
- “No,” she added decisively, as Beatrice made to speak.
- Beatrice became malignant. Her eyes explored me with unjustifiable
- hostility. “He’s got dirty hands,” she said, stabbing at the forbidden
- fruit. “And there’s a fray to his collar.”
- Then she gave herself up to cake with an appearance of entire
- forgetfulness of me that filled me with hate and a passionate desire to
- compel her to admire me.... And the next day before tea, I did for the
- first time in my life, freely, without command or any compulsion, wash
- my hands.
- So our acquaintance began, and presently was deepened by a whim of hers.
- She had a cold and was kept indoors, and confronted Nannie suddenly with
- the alternative of being hopelessly naughty, which in her case involved
- a generous amount of screaming unsuitable for the ears of an elderly,
- shaky, rich aunt, or having me up to the nursery to play with her all
- the afternoon. Nannie came downstairs and borrowed me in a careworn
- manner; and I was handed over to the little creature as if I was some
- large variety of kitten. I had never had anything to do with a little
- girl before, I thought she was more beautiful and wonderful and bright
- than anything else could possibly be in life, and she found me the
- gentlest of slaves--though at the same time, as I made evident, fairly
- strong. And Nannie was amazed to find the afternoon slip cheerfully and
- rapidly away. She praised my manners to Lady Drew and to my mother,
- who said she was glad to hear well of me, and after that I played with
- Beatrice several times. The toys she had remain in my memory still as
- great splendid things, gigantic to all my previous experience of toys,
- and we even went to the great doll’s house on the nursery landing to
- play discreetly with that, the great doll’s house that the Prince Regent
- had given Sir Harry Drew’s first-born (who died at five), that was a not
- ineffectual model of Bladesover itself, and contained eighty-five dolls
- and had cost hundreds of pounds. I played under imperious direction with
- that toy of glory.
- I went back to school when that holiday was over, dreaming of beautiful
- things, and got Ewart to talk to me of love; and I made a great story
- out of the doll’s house, a story that, taken over into Ewart’s hands,
- speedily grew to an island doll’s city all our own.
- One of the dolls, I privately decided, was like Beatrice.
- One other holiday there was when I saw something of her--oddly enough my
- memory of that second holiday in which she played a part is vague--and
- then came a gap of a year, and then my disgrace.
- VIII
- Now I sit down to write my story and tell over again things in their
- order, I find for the first time how inconsecutive and irrational a
- thing the memory can be. One recalls acts and cannot recall motives;
- one recalls quite vividly moments that stand out inexplicably--things
- adrift, joining on to nothing, leading nowhere. I think I must have seen
- Beatrice and her half-brother quite a number of times in my last holiday
- at Bladesover, but I really cannot recall more than a little of the
- quality of the circumstances. That great crisis of my boyhood stands out
- very vividly as an effect, as a sort of cardinal thing for me, but when
- I look for details, particularly details that led up to the crisis--I
- cannot find them in any developing order at all. This halfbrother,
- Archie Garvell, was a new factor in the affair. I remember him clearly
- as a fair-haired, supercilious looking, weedily-lank boy, much taller
- than I, but I should imagine very little heavier, and that we hated
- each other by a sort of instinct from the beginning; and yet I cannot
- remember my first meeting with him at all.
- Looking back into these past things--it is like rummaging in a neglected
- attic that has experienced the attentions of some whimsical robber--I
- cannot even account for the presence of these children at Bladesover.
- They were, I know, among the innumerable cousins of Lady Drew, and
- according to the theories of downstairs candidates for the ultimate
- possession of Bladesover. If they were, their candidature was
- unsuccessful. But that great place, with all its faded splendour, its
- fine furniture, its large traditions, was entirely at the old lady’s
- disposition; and I am inclined to think it is true that she used this
- fact to torment and dominate a number of eligible people. Lord Osprey
- was among the number of these, and she showed these hospitalities to his
- motherless child and step-child, partly, no doubt, because he was poor,
- but quite as much, I nowadays imagine, in the dim hope of finding some
- affectionate or imaginative outcome of contact with them. Nannie had
- dropped out of the world this second time, and Beatrice was in the
- charge of an extremely amiable and ineffectual poor army-class young
- woman whose name I never knew. They were, I think, two remarkably
- illmanaged and enterprising children. I seem to remember too, that it
- was understood that I was not a fit companion for them, and that our
- meetings had to be as unostentatious as possible. It was Beatrice who
- insisted upon our meeting.
- I am certain I knew quite a lot about love at fourteen and that I was
- quite as much in love with Beatrice then as any impassioned adult could
- be, and that Beatrice was, in her way, in love with me. It is part of
- the decent and useful pretences of our world that children of the age at
- which we were, think nothing, feel nothing, know nothing of love. It
- is wonderful what people the English are for keeping up pretences. But
- indeed I cannot avoid telling that Beatrice and I talked of love and
- kissed and embraced one another.
- I recall something of one talk under the overhanging bushes of the
- shrubbery--I on the park side of the stone wall, and the lady of my
- worship a little inelegantly astride thereon. Inelegantly do I say? you
- should have seen the sweet imp as I remember her. Just her poise on the
- wall comes suddenly clear before me, and behind her the light various
- branches of the bushes of the shrubbery that my feet might not profane,
- and far away and high behind her, dim and stately, the cornice of the
- great facade of Bladesover rose against the dappled sky. Our talk must
- have been serious and business-like, for we were discussing my social
- position.
- “I don’t love Archie,” she had said, apropos of nothing; and then in a
- whisper, leaning forward with the hair about her face, “I love YOU!”
- But she had been a little pressing to have it clear that I was not and
- could not be a servant.
- “You’ll never be a servant--ever!”
- I swore that very readily, and it is a vow I have kept by nature.
- “What will you be?” said she.
- I ran my mind hastily over the professions.
- “Will you be a soldier?” she asked.
- “And be bawled at by duffers? No fear!” said I. “Leave that to the
- plough-boys.”
- “But an officer?”
- “I don’t know,” I said, evading a shameful difficulty.
- “I’d rather go into the navy.”
- “Wouldn’t you like to fight?”
- “I’d like to fight,” I said. “But a common soldier it’s no honour to
- have to be told to fight and to be looked down upon while you do it, and
- how could I be an officer?”
- “Couldn’t you be?” she said, and looked at me doubtfully; and the spaces
- of the social system opened between us.
- Then, as became a male of spirit, I took upon myself to brag and lie
- my way through this trouble. I said I was a poor man, and poor men went
- into the navy; that I “knew” mathematics, which no army officer did; and
- I claimed Nelson for an exemplar, and spoke very highly of my outlook
- upon blue water. “He loved Lady Hamilton,” I said, “although she was a
- lady--and I will love you.”
- We were somewhere near that when the egregious governess became audible,
- calling “Beeee-atrice! Beeee-e-atrice!”
- “Snifty beast!” said my lady, and tried to get on with the conversation;
- but that governess made things impossible.
- “Come here!” said my lady suddenly, holding out a grubby hand; and I
- went very close to her, and she put her little head down upon the wall
- until her black fog of hair tickled my cheek.
- “You are my humble, faithful lover,” she demanded in a whisper, her warm
- flushed face near touching mine, and her eyes very dark and lustrous.
- “I am your humble, faithful lover,” I whispered back.
- And she put her arm about my head and put out her lips and we kissed,
- and boy though I was, I was all atremble. So we two kissed for the first
- time.
- “Beeee-e-e-a-trice!” fearfully close.
- My lady had vanished, with one wild kick of her black-stocking leg. A
- moment after, I heard her sustaining the reproaches of her governess,
- and explaining her failure to answer with an admirable lucidity and
- disingenuousness.
- I felt it was unnecessary for me to be seen just then, and I vanished
- guiltily round the corner into the West Wood, and so to love-dreams
- and single-handed play, wandering along one of those meandering bracken
- valleys that varied Bladesover park. And that day and for many days that
- kiss upon my lips was a seal, and by night the seed of dreams.
- Then I remember an expedition we made--she, I, and her
- half-brother--into those West Woods--they two were supposed to be
- playing in the shrubbery--and how we were Indians there, and made a
- wigwam out of a pile of beech logs, and how we stalked deer, crept near
- and watched rabbits feeding in a glade, and almost got a squirrel. It
- was play seasoned with plentiful disputing between me and young Garvell,
- for each firmly insisted upon the leading roles, and only my wider
- reading--I had read ten stories to his one--gave me the ascendency
- over him. Also I scored over him by knowing how to find the eagle in a
- bracken stem. And somehow--I don’t remember what led to it at all--I and
- Beatrice, two hot and ruffled creatures, crept in among the tall bracken
- and hid from him. The great fronds rose above us, five feet or more, and
- as I had learnt how to wriggle through that undergrowth with the minimum
- of betrayal by tossing greenery above, I led the way. The ground under
- bracken is beautifully clear and faintly scented in warm weather; the
- stems come up black and then green; if you crawl flat, it is a tropical
- forest in miniature. I led the way and Beatrice crawled behind, and then
- as the green of the further glade opened before us, stopped. She crawled
- up to me, her hot little face came close to mine; once more she looked
- and breathed close to me, and suddenly she flung her arm about my neck
- and dragged me to earth beside her, and kissed me and kissed me
- again. We kissed, we embraced and kissed again, all without a word; we
- desisted, we stared and hesitated--then in a suddenly damped mood and a
- little perplexed at ourselves, crawled out, to be presently run down and
- caught in the tamest way by Archie.
- That comes back very clearly to me, and other vague memories--I know
- old Hall and his gun, out shooting at jackdaws, came into our common
- experiences, but I don’t remember how; and then at last, abruptly, our
- fight in the Warren stands out. The Warren, like most places in England
- that have that name, was not particularly a warren, it was a long slope
- of thorns and beeches through which a path ran, and made an alternative
- route to the downhill carriage road between Bladesover and Ropedean. I
- don’t know how we three got there, but I have an uncertain fancy it was
- connected with a visit paid by the governess to the Ropedean vicarage
- people. But suddenly Archie and I, in discussing a game, fell into a
- dispute for Beatrice. I had made him the fairest offer: I was to be a
- Spanish nobleman, she was to be my wife, and he was to be a tribe of
- Indians trying to carry her off. It seems to me a fairly attractive
- offer to a boy to be a whole tribe of Indians with a chance of such a
- booty. But Archie suddenly took offence.
- “No,” he said; “we can’t have that!”
- “Can’t have what?”
- “You can’t be a gentleman, because you aren’t. And you can’t play
- Beatrice is your wife. It’s--it’s impertinent.”
- “But” I said, and looked at her.
- Some earlier grudge in the day’s affairs must have been in Archie’s
- mind. “We let you play with us,” said Archie; “but we can’t have things
- like that.”
- “What rot!” said Beatrice. “He can if he likes.”
- But he carried his point. I let him carry it, and only began to grow
- angry three or four minutes later. Then we were still discussing play
- and disputing about another game. Nothing seemed right for all of us.
- “We don’t want you to play with us at all,” said Archie.
- “Yes, we do,” said Beatrice.
- “He drops his aitches like anything.”
- “No, ‘e doesn’t,” said I, in the heat of the moment.
- “There you go!” he cried. “E, he says. E! E! E!”
- He pointed a finger at me. He had struck to the heart of my shame. I
- made the only possible reply by a rush at him. “Hello!” he cried, at my
- blackavised attack. He dropped back into an attitude that had some style
- in it, parried my blow, got back at my cheek, and laughed with surprise
- and relief at his own success. Whereupon I became a thing of murderous
- rage. He could box as well or better than I--he had yet to realise I
- knew anything of that at all--but I had fought once or twice to a finish
- with bare fists. I was used to inflicting and enduring savage hurting,
- and I doubt if he had ever fought. I hadn’t fought ten seconds before
- I felt this softness in him, realised all that quality of modern
- upper-class England that never goes to the quick, that hedges about
- rules and those petty points of honour that are the ultimate comminution
- of honour, that claims credit for things demonstrably half done. He
- seemed to think that first hit of his and one or two others were going
- to matter, that I ought to give in when presently my lip bled and
- dripped blood upon my clothes. So before we had been at it a minute
- he had ceased to be aggressive except in momentary spurts, and I was
- knocking him about almost as I wanted to do; and demanding breathlessly
- and fiercely, after our school manner, whether he had had enough, not
- knowing that by his high code and his soft training it was equally
- impossible for him to either buck-up and beat me, or give in.
- I have a very distinct impression of Beatrice dancing about us during
- the affair in a state of unladylike appreciation, but I was too
- preoccupied to hear much of what she was saying. But she certainly
- backed us both, and I am inclined to think now--it may be the
- disillusionment of my ripened years--whichever she thought was winning.
- Then young Garvell, giving way before my slogging, stumbled and fell
- over a big flint, and I, still following the tradition of my class and
- school, promptly flung myself on him to finish him. We were busy
- with each other on the ground when we became aware of a dreadful
- interruption.
- “Shut up, you FOOL!” said Archie.
- “Oh, Lady Drew!” I heard Beatrice cry. “They’re fighting! They’re
- fighting something awful!”
- I looked over my shoulder. Archie’s wish to get up became irresistible,
- and my resolve to go on with him vanished altogether.
- I became aware of the two old ladies, presences of black and purple silk
- and fur and shining dark things; they had walked up through the Warren,
- while the horses took the hill easily, and so had come upon us. Beatrice
- had gone to them at once with an air of taking refuge, and stood beside
- and a little behind them. We both rose dejectedly. The two old ladies
- were evidently quite dreadfully shocked, and peering at us with their
- poor old eyes; and never had I seen such a tremblement in Lady Drew’s
- lorgnettes.
- “You’ve never been fighting?” said Lady Drew.
- “You have been fighting.”
- “It wasn’t proper fighting,” snapped Archie, with accusing eyes on me.
- “It’s Mrs. Ponderevo’s George!” said Miss Somerville, so adding a
- conviction for ingratitude to my evident sacrilege.
- “How could he DARE?” cried Lady Drew, becoming very awful.
- “He broke the rules” said Archie, sobbing for breath. “I slipped,
- and--he hit me while I was down. He knelt on me.”
- “How could you DARE?” said Lady Drew.
- I produced an experienced handkerchief rolled up into a tight ball, and
- wiped the blood from my chin, but I offered no explanation of my daring.
- Among other things that prevented that, I was too short of breath.
- “He didn’t fight fair,” sobbed Archie.
- Beatrice, from behind the old ladies, regarded me intently and without
- hostility. I am inclined to think the modification of my face through
- the damage to my lip interested her. It became dimly apparent to my
- confused intelligence that I must not say these two had been playing
- with me. That would not be after the rules of their game. I resolved
- in this difficult situation upon a sulky silence, and to take whatever
- consequences might follow.
- IX
- The powers of justice in Bladesover made an extraordinary mess of my
- case.
- I have regretfully to admit that the Honourable Beatrice Normandy did,
- at the age of ten, betray me, abandon me, and lie most abominably about
- me. She was, as a matter of fact, panic-stricken about me, conscience
- stricken too; she bolted from the very thought of my being her affianced
- lover and so forth, from the faintest memory of kissing; she was
- indeed altogether disgraceful and human in her betrayal. She and her
- half-brother lied in perfect concord, and I was presented as a wanton
- assailant of my social betters. They were waiting about in the Warren,
- when I came up and spoke to them, etc.
- On the whole, I now perceive Lady Drew’s decisions were, in the light of
- the evidence, reasonable and merciful.
- They were conveyed to me by my mother, who was, I really believe, even
- more shocked by the grossness of my social insubordination than Lady
- Drew. She dilated on her ladyship’s kindnesses to me, on the effrontery
- and wickedness of my procedure, and so came at last to the terms of my
- penance. “You must go up to young Mr. Garvell, and beg his pardon.”
- “I won’t beg his pardon,” I said, speaking for the first time.
- My mother paused, incredulous.
- I folded my arms on her table-cloth, and delivered my wicked little
- ultimatum. “I won’t beg his pardon nohow,” I said. “See?”
- “Then you will have to go off to your uncle Frapp at Chatham.”
- “I don’t care where I have to go or what I have to do, I won’t beg his
- pardon,” I said.
- And I didn’t.
- After that I was one against the world. Perhaps in my mother’s heart
- there lurked some pity for me, but she did not show it. She took the
- side of the young gentleman; she tried hard, she tried very hard, to
- make me say I was sorry I had struck him. Sorry!
- I couldn’t explain.
- So I went into exile in the dog-cart to Redwood station, with Jukes the
- coachman, coldly silent, driving me, and all my personal belongings in a
- small American cloth portmanteau behind.
- I felt I had much to embitter me; the game had and the beginnings of
- fairness by any standards I knew.... But the thing that embittered me
- most was that the Honourable Beatrice Normandy should have repudiated
- and fled from me as though I was some sort of leper, and not even have
- taken a chance or so, to give me a good-bye. She might have done that
- anyhow! Supposing I had told on her! But the son of a servant counts as
- a servant. She had forgotten and now remembered.
- I solaced myself with some extraordinary dream of coming back to
- Bladesover, stern, powerful, after the fashion of Coriolanus. I do not
- recall the details, but I have no doubt I displayed great magnanimity...
- Well, anyhow I never said I was sorry for pounding young Garvell, and I
- am not sorry to this day.
- CHAPTER THE SECOND
- OF MY LAUNCH INTO THE WORLD AND THE LAST I SAW OF BLADESOVER
- I
- When I was thus banished from Bladesover House, as it was then thought
- for good and all, I was sent by my mother in a vindictive spirit,
- first to her cousin Nicodemus Frapp, and then, as a fully indentured
- apprentice, to my uncle Ponderevo.
- I ran away from the care of my cousin Nicodemus back to Bladesover
- House.
- My cousin Nicodemus Frapp was a baker in a back street--a slum
- rather--just off that miserable narrow mean high road that threads those
- exquisite beads, Rochester and Chatham. He was, I must admit, a shock
- to me, much dominated by a young, plump, prolific, malingering wife;
- a bent, slow-moving, unwilling dark man with flour in his hair and
- eyelashes, in the lines of his face and the seams of his coat. I’ve
- never had a chance to correct my early impression of him, and he still
- remains an almost dreadful memory, a sort of caricature of incompetent
- simplicity. As I remember him, indeed, he presented the servile
- tradition perfected. He had no pride in his person; fine clothes and
- dressing up wasn’t “for the likes of” him, so that he got his wife, who
- was no artist at it, to cut his black hair at irregular intervals, and
- let his nails become disagreeable to the fastidious eye; he had no pride
- in his business nor any initiative; his only virtues were not doing
- certain things and hard work. “Your uncle,” said my mother--all grown-up
- cousins were uncles by courtesy among the Victorian middle-class--“isn’t
- much to look at or talk to, but he’s a Good Hard-Working Man.” There
- was a sort of base honourableness about toil, however needless, in that
- system of inversion. Another point of honour was to rise at or before
- dawn, and then laboriously muddle about.
- It was very distinctly impressed on my mind that the Good Hard-Working
- Man would have thought it “fal-lallish” to own a pocket handkerchief.
- Poor old Frapp--dirty and crushed by, product of, Bladesover’s
- magnificence! He made no fight against the world at all, he was
- floundering in small debts that were not so small but that finally they
- overwhelmed him, whenever there was occasion for any exertion his
- wife fell back upon pains and her “condition,” and God sent them many
- children, most of whom died, and so, by their coming and going, gave a
- double exercise in the virtues of submission.
- Resignation to God’s will was the common device of these people in
- the face of every duty and every emergency. There were no books in the
- house; I doubt if either of them had retained the capacity for reading
- consecutively for more than a minute or so, and it was with amazement
- that day after day, over and above stale bread, one beheld food and
- again more food amidst the litter that held permanent session on the
- living-room table.
- One might have doubted if either of them felt discomfort in this
- dusty darkness of existence, if it was not that they did visibly seek
- consolation. They sought this and found it of a Sunday, not in strong
- drink and raving, but in imaginary draughts of blood. They met with
- twenty or thirty other darkened and unclean people, all dressed in dingy
- colours that would not show the dirt, in a little brick-built chapel
- equipped with a spavined roarer of a harmonium, and there solaced their
- minds on the thought that all that was fair and free in life, all that
- struggled, all that planned and made, all pride and beauty and honour,
- all fine and enjoyable things, were irrevocably damned to everlasting
- torments. They were the self-appointed confidants of God’s mockery of
- his own creation. So at any rate they stick in my mind. Vaguer, and yet
- hardly less agreeable than this cosmic jest, this coming “Yah, clever!”
- and general serving out and “showing up” of the lucky, the bold, and the
- cheerful, was their own predestination to Glory.
- “There is a Fountain, filled with Blood
- Drawn from Emmanuel’s Veins,”
- so they sang. I hear the drone and wheeze of that hymn now. I hated them
- with the bitter uncharitable condemnation of boyhood, and a twinge of
- that hate comes back to me. As I write the words, the sounds and then
- the scene return, these obscure, undignified people, a fat woman with
- asthma, an old Welsh milk-seller with a tumour on his bald head, who was
- the intellectual leader of the sect, a huge-voiced haberdasher with
- a big black beard, a white-faced, extraordinarily pregnant woman, his
- wife, a spectacled rate collector with a bent back.... I hear the talk
- about souls, the strange battered old phrases that were coined ages ago
- in the seaports of the sun-dry Levant, of balm of Gilead and manna in
- the desert, of gourds that give shade and water in a thirsty land; I
- recall again the way in which at the conclusion of the service the talk
- remained pious in form but became medical in substance, and how the
- women got together for obstetric whisperings. I, as a boy, did not
- matter, and might overhear.
- If Bladesover is my key for the explanation of England, I think my
- invincible persuasion that I understand Russia was engendered by the
- circle of Uncle Frapp.
- I slept in a dingy sheeted bed with the two elder survivors of Frapp
- fecundity, and spent my week days in helping in the laborious disorder
- of the shop and bakehouse, in incidental deliveries of bread and so
- forth, and in parrying the probings of my uncle into my relations
- with the Blood, and his confidential explanations that ten shillings
- a week--which was what my mother paid him--was not enough to cover my
- accommodation. He was very anxious to keep that, but also he wanted
- more. There were neither books nor any seat nor corner in that house
- where reading was possible, no newspaper ever brought the clash of
- worldly things into its heavenward seclusion; horror of it all grew in
- me daily, and whenever I could I escaped into the streets and tramped
- about Chatham. The news shops appealed to me particularly. One saw
- there smudgy illustrated sheets, the Police News in particular, in
- which vilely drawn pictures brought home to the dullest intelligence an
- interminable succession of squalid crimes, women murdered and put into
- boxes, buried under floors, old men bludgeoned at midnight by robbers,
- people thrust suddenly out of trains, happy lovers shot, vitrioled and
- so forth by rivals. I got my first glimpse of the life of pleasure in
- foully drawn pictures of “police raids” on this and that. Interspersed
- with these sheets were others in which Sloper, the urban John Bull, had
- his fling with gin bottle and obese umbrella, or the kindly empty faces
- of the Royal Family appeared and reappeared, visiting this, opening
- that, getting married, getting offspring, lying in state, doing
- everything but anything, a wonderful, good-meaning, impenetrable race
- apart.
- I have never revisited Chatham; the impression it has left on my mind is
- one of squalid compression, unlit by any gleam of a maturer charity.
- All its effects arranged themselves as antithetical to the Bladesover
- effects. They confirmed and intensified all that Bladesover suggested.
- Bladesover declared itself to be the land, to be essentially England; I
- have already told how its airy spaciousness, its wide dignity, seemed to
- thrust village, church, and vicarage into corners, into a secondary and
- conditional significance. Here one gathered the corollary of that. Since
- the whole wide country of Kent was made up of contiguous Bladesovers
- and for the gentlefolk, the surplus of population, all who were not
- good tenants nor good labourers, Church of England, submissive and
- respectful, were necessarily thrust together, jostled out of sight, to
- fester as they might in this place that had the colours and even the
- smells of a well-packed dustbin. They should be grateful even for that;
- that, one felt, was the theory of it all.
- And I loafed about this wilderness of crowded dinginess, with young,
- receptive, wide-open eyes, and through the blessing (or curse) of some
- fairy godmother of mine, asking and asking again: “But after all, WHY--”
- I wandered up through Rochester once, and had a glimpse of the Stour
- valley above the town, all horrible with cement works and foully smoking
- chimneys and rows of workmen’s cottages, minute, ugly, uncomfortable,
- and grimy. So I had my first intimation of how industrialism must live
- in a landlord’s land. I spent some hours, too, in the streets that give
- upon the river, drawn by the spell of the sea. But I saw barges and
- ships stripped of magic and mostly devoted to cement, ice, timber, and
- coal. The sailors looked to me gross and slovenly men, and the shipping
- struck me as clumsy, ugly, old, and dirty. I discovered that most sails
- don’t fit the ships that hoist them, and that there may be as pitiful
- and squalid a display of poverty with a vessel as with a man. When I
- saw colliers unloading, watched the workers in the hold filling up silly
- little sacks and the succession of blackened, half-naked men that ran to
- and fro with these along a plank over a thirty-foot drop into filth and
- mud, I was first seized with admiration of their courage and toughness
- and then, “But after all, WHY--?” and the stupid ugliness of all this
- waste of muscle and endurance came home to me. Among other things it
- obviously wasted and deteriorated the coal.... And I had imagined great
- things of the sea!
- Well, anyhow, for a time that vocation was stilled.
- But such impressions came into my leisure, and of that I had no excess.
- Most of my time was spent doing things for Uncle Frapp, and my evenings
- and nights perforce in the company of the two eldest of my cousins.
- He was errand boy at an oil shop and fervently pious, and of him I saw
- nothing until the evening except at meals; the other was enjoying the
- midsummer holidays without any great elation; a singularly thin and
- abject, stunted creature he was, whose chief liveliness was to pretend
- to be a monkey, and who I am now convinced had some secret disease that
- drained his vitality away. If I met him now I should think him a pitiful
- little creature and be extremely sorry for him. Then I felt only a
- wondering aversion. He sniffed horribly, he was tired out by a couple
- of miles of loafing, he never started any conversation, and he seemed to
- prefer his own company to mine. His mother, poor woman, said he was the
- “thoughtful one.”
- Serious trouble came suddenly out of a conversation we held in bed one
- night. Some particularly pious phrase of my elder cousin’s irritated me
- extremely, and I avowed outright my entire disbelief in the whole scheme
- of revealed religion. I had never said a word about my doubts to any one
- before, except to Ewart who had first evolved them. I had never settled
- my doubts until at this moment when I spoke. But it came to me then that
- the whole scheme of salvation of the Frappes was not simply doubtful,
- but impossible. I fired this discovery out into the darkness with the
- greatest promptitude.
- My abrupt denials certainly scared my cousin amazingly.
- At first they could not understand what I was saying, and when they
- did I fully believe they expected an instant answer in thunderbolts and
- flames. They gave me more room in the bed forthwith, and then the elder
- sat up and expressed his sense of my awfulness. I was already a little
- frightened at my temerity, but when he asked me categorically to unsay
- what I had said, what could I do but confirm my repudiation?
- “There’s no hell,” I said, “and no eternal punishment. No God would be
- such a fool as that.”
- My elder cousin cried aloud in horror, and the younger lay scared, but
- listening. “Then you mean,” said my elder cousin, when at last he could
- bring himself to argue, “you might do just as you liked?”
- “If you were cad enough,” said I.
- Our little voices went on interminably, and at one stage my cousin got
- out of bed and made his brother do likewise, and knelt in the night
- dimness and prayed at me. That I found trying, but I held out valiantly.
- “Forgive him,” said my cousin, “he knows not what he sayeth.”
- “You can pray if you like,” I said, “but if you’re going to cheek me in
- your prayers I draw the line.”
- The last I remember of that great discussion was my cousin deploring the
- fact that he “should ever sleep in the same bed with an Infidel!”
- The next day he astonished me by telling the whole business to his
- father. This was quite outside all my codes. Uncle Nicodemus sprang it
- upon me at the midday meal.
- “You been sayin’ queer things, George,” he said abruptly. “You better
- mind what you’re saying.”
- “What did he say, father?” said Mrs. Frapp.
- “Things I couldn’t’ repeat,” said he.
- “What things?” I asked hotly.
- “Ask ‘IM,” said my uncle, pointing with his knife to his informant,
- and making me realise the nature of my offence. My aunt looked at the
- witness. “Not--?” she framed a question.
- “Wuss,” said my uncle. “Blarsphemy.”
- My aunt couldn’t touch another mouthful. I was already a little troubled
- in my conscience by my daring, and now I began to feel the black
- enormity of the course upon which I had embarked.
- “I was only talking sense,” I said.
- I had a still more dreadful moment when presently I met my cousin in the
- brick alley behind the yard, that led back to his grocer’s shop.
- “You sneak!” I said, and smacked his face hard forthwith. “Now then,”
- said I.
- He started back, astonished and alarmed. His eyes met mine, and I saw a
- sudden gleam of resolution. He turned his other cheek to me.
- “‘It ‘it,” he said. ““It ‘it. I’LL forgive you.”
- I felt I had never encountered a more detestable way of evading a
- licking. I shoved him against the wall and left him there, forgiving me,
- and went back into the house.
- “You better not speak to your cousins, George,” said my aunt, “till
- you’re in a better state of mind.”
- I became an outcast forthwith. At supper that night a gloomy silence was
- broken by my cousin saying,
- “‘E ‘it me for telling you, and I turned the other cheek, muvver.”
- “‘E’s got the evil one be’ind ‘im now, a ridin’ on ‘is back,” said my
- aunt, to the grave discomfort of the eldest girl, who sat beside me.
- After supper my uncle, in a few ill-chosen words, prayed me to repent
- before I slept.
- “Suppose you was took in your sleep, George,” he said; “where’d you
- be then? You jest think of that me boy.” By this time I was thoroughly
- miserable and frightened, and this suggestion unnerved me dreadfully but
- I kept up an impenitent front. “To wake in ‘ell,” said Uncle Nicodemus,
- in gentle tones. “You don’t want to wake in ‘ell, George, burnin’ and
- screamin’ for ever, do you? You wouldn’t like that?”
- He tried very hard to get me to “jest ‘ave a look at the bake’ouse fire”
- before I retired. “It might move you,” he said.
- I was awake longest that night. My cousins slept, the sleep of faith
- on either side of me. I decided I would whisper my prayers, and stopped
- midway because I was ashamed, and perhaps also because I had an idea one
- didn’t square God like that.
- “No,” I said, with a sudden confidence, “damn me if you’re coward
- enough.... But you’re not. No! You couldn’t be!”
- I woke my cousins up with emphatic digs, and told them as much,
- triumphantly, and went very peacefully to sleep with my act of faith
- accomplished.
- I slept not only through that night, but for all my nights since then.
- So far as any fear of Divine injustice goes, I sleep soundly, and
- shall, I know, to the end of things. That declaration was an epoch in my
- spiritual life.
- II
- But I didn’t expect to have the whole meeting on Sunday turned on to me.
- It was. It all comes back to me, that convergence of attention, even the
- faint leathery smell of its atmosphere returns, and the coarse feel of
- my aunt’s black dress beside me in contact with my hand. I see again
- the old Welsh milkman “wrestling” with me, they all wrestled with me, by
- prayer or exhortation. And I was holding out stoutly, though convinced
- now by the contagion of their universal conviction that by doing so I
- was certainly and hopelessly damned. I felt that they were right, that
- God was probably like them, and that on the whole it didn’t matter.
- And to simplify the business thoroughly I had declared I didn’t believe
- anything at all. They confuted me by texts from Scripture which I now
- perceive was an illegitimate method of reply. When I got home, still
- impenitent and eternally lost and secretly very lonely and miserable and
- alarmed, Uncle Nicodemus docked my Sunday pudding.
- One person only spoke to me like a human being on that day of wrath, and
- that was the younger Frapp. He came up to me in the afternoon while I
- was confined upstairs with a Bible and my own thoughts.
- “‘Ello,” he said, and fretted about.
- “D’you mean to say there isn’t--no one,” he said, funking the word.
- “No one?”
- “No one watching yer--always.”
- “Why should there be?” I asked.
- “You can’t ‘elp thoughts,” said my cousin, “anyhow. You mean--” He
- stopped hovering. “I s’pose I oughtn’t to be talking to you.”
- He hesitated and flitted away with a guilty back glance over his
- shoulder....
- The following week made life quite intolerable for me; these people
- forced me at last into an Atheism that terrified me. When I learnt
- that next Sunday the wrestling was to be resumed, my courage failed me
- altogether.
- I happened upon a map of Kent in a stationer’s window on Saturday, and
- that set me thinking of one form of release. I studied it intently for
- half an hour perhaps, on Saturday night, got a route list of villages
- well fixed in my memory, and got up and started for Bladesover about
- five on Sunday morning while my two bed mates were still fast asleep.
- III
- I remember something, but not so much of it as I should like to recall,
- of my long tramp to Bladesover House. The distance from Chatham is
- almost exactly seventeen miles, and it took me until nearly one. It was
- very interesting and I do not think I was very fatigued, though I got
- rather pinched by one boot.
- The morning must have been very clear, because I remember that near
- Itchinstow Hall I looked back and saw the estuary of the Thames, that
- river that has since played so large a part in my life. But at the time
- I did not know it was the Thames, I thought this great expanse of mud
- flats and water was the sea, which I had never yet seen nearly. And
- out upon it stood ships, sailing ships and a steamer or so, going up to
- London or down out into the great seas of the world. I stood for a long
- time watching these and thinking whether after all I should not have
- done better to have run away to sea.
- The nearer I drew to Bladesover, the more doubtful I grew of the duality
- of my reception, and the more I regretted that alternative. I suppose it
- was the dirty clumsiness of the shipping I had seen nearly, that put me
- out of mind of that. I took a short cut through the Warren across the
- corner of the main park to intercept the people from the church. I
- wanted to avoid meeting any one before I met my mother, and so I went to
- a place where the path passed between banks, and without exactly hiding,
- stood up among the bushes. This place among other advantages eliminated
- any chance of seeing Lady Drew, who would drive round by the carriage
- road.
- Standing up to waylay in this fashion I had a queer feeling of
- brigandage, as though I was some intrusive sort of bandit among these
- orderly things. It is the first time I remember having that outlaw
- feeling distinctly, a feeling that has played a large part in my
- subsequent life. I felt there existed no place for me that I had to
- drive myself in.
- Presently, down the hill, the servants appeared, straggling by twos and
- threes, first some of the garden people and the butler’s wife with them,
- then the two laundry maids, odd inseparable old creatures, then the
- first footman talking to the butler’s little girl, and at last, walking
- grave and breathless beside old Ann and Miss Fison, the black figure of
- my mother.
- My boyish mind suggested the adoption of a playful form of appearance.
- “Coo-ee, mother” said I, coming out against the sky, “Coo-ee!”
- My mother looked up, went very white, and put her hand to her bosom.
- I suppose there was a fearful fuss about me. And of course I was quite
- unable to explain my reappearance. But I held out stoutly, “I won’t
- go back to Chatham; I’ll drown myself first.” The next day my mother
- carried me off to Wimblehurst, took me fiercely and aggressively to an
- uncle I had never heard of before, near though the place was to us. She
- gave me no word as to what was to happen, and I was too subdued by
- her manifest wrath and humiliation at my last misdemeanour to demand
- information. I don’t for one moment think Lady Drew was “nice” about me.
- The finality of my banishment was endorsed and underlined and stamped
- home. I wished very much now that I had run away to sea, in spite of the
- coal dust and squalour Rochester had revealed to me. Perhaps over seas
- one came to different lands.
- IV
- I do not remember much of my journey to Wimblehurst with my mother
- except the image of her as sitting bolt upright, as rather disdaining
- the third-class carriage in which we traveled, and how she looked away
- from me out of the window when she spoke of my uncle. “I have not seen
- your uncle,” she said, “since he was a boy....” She added grudgingly,
- “Then he was supposed to be clever.”
- She took little interest in such qualities as cleverness.
- “He married about three years ago, and set up for himself in
- Wimblehurst.... So I suppose she had some money.”
- She mused on scenes she had long dismissed from her mind. “Teddy,” she
- said at last in the tone of one who has been feeling in the dark
- and finds. “He was called Teddy... about your age.... Now he must be
- twenty-six or seven.”
- I thought of my uncle as Teddy directly I saw him; there was something
- in his personal appearance that in the light of that memory phrased
- itself at once as Teddiness--a certain Teddidity. To describe it in
- and other terms is more difficult. It is nimbleness without grace, and
- alertness without intelligence. He whisked out of his shop upon the
- pavement, a short figure in grey and wearing grey carpet slippers; one
- had a sense of a young fattish face behind gilt glasses, wiry hair that
- stuck up and forward over the forehead, an irregular nose that had its
- aquiline moments, and that the body betrayed an equatorial laxity, an
- incipient “bow window” as the image goes. He jerked out of the shop,
- came to a stand on the pavement outside, regarded something in the
- window with infinite appreciation, stroked his chin, and, as abruptly,
- shot sideways into the door again, charging through it as it were behind
- an extended hand.
- “That must be him,” said my mother, catching at her breath.
- We came past the window whose contents I was presently to know by heart,
- a very ordinary chemist’s window except that there was a frictional
- electrical machine, an air pump and two or three tripods and retorts
- replacing the customary blue, yellow, and red bottles above. There was
- a plaster of Paris horse to indicate veterinary medicines among these
- breakables, and below were scent packets and diffusers and sponges and
- soda-water syphons and such-like things. Only in the middle there was a
- rubricated card, very neatly painted by hand, with these words--
- Buy Ponderevo’s Cough Linctus NOW.
- NOW!
- WHY?
- Twopence Cheaper than in Winter.
- You Store apples! why not the Medicine
- You are Bound to Need?
- in which appeal I was to recognise presently my uncle’s distinctive
- note.
- My uncle’s face appeared above a card of infant’s comforters in the
- glass pane of the door. I perceived his eyes were brown, and that his
- glasses creased his nose. It was manifest he did not know us from Adam.
- A stare of scrutiny allowed an expression of commercial deference to
- appear in front of it, and my uncle flung open the door.
- “You don’t know me?” panted my mother.
- My uncle would not own he did not, but his curiosity was manifest. My
- mother sat down on one of the little chairs before the soap and patent
- medicine-piled counter, and her lips opened and closed.
- “A glass of water, madam,” said my uncle, waved his hand in a sort of
- curve and shot away.
- My mother drank the water and spoke. “That boy,” she said, “takes after
- his father. He grows more like him every day.... And so I have brought
- him to you.”
- “His father, madam?”
- “George.”
- For a moment the chemist was still at a loss. He stood behind the
- counter with the glass my mother had returned to him in his hand. Then
- comprehension grew.
- “By Gosh!” he said. “Lord!” he cried. His glasses fell off. He
- disappeared replacing them, behind a pile of boxed-up bottles of blood
- mixture. “Eleven thousand virgins!” I heard him cry. The glass was
- banged down. “O-ri-ental Gums!”
- He shot away out of the shop through some masked door. One heard his
- voice. “Susan! Susan!”
- Then he reappeared with an extended hand. “Well, how are you?” he said.
- “I was never so surprised in my life. Fancy!... You!”
- He shook my mother’s impassive hand and then mine very warmly holding
- his glasses on with his left forefinger.
- “Come right in!” he cried--“come right in! Better late than never!” and
- led the way into the parlour behind the shop.
- After Bladesover that apartment struck me as stuffy and petty, but it
- was very comfortable in comparison with the Frapp living-room. It had
- a faint, disintegrating smell of meals about it, and my most immediate
- impression was of the remarkable fact that something was hung about
- or wrapped round or draped over everything. There was bright-patterned
- muslin round the gas-bracket in the middle of the room, round the mirror
- over the mantel, stuff with ball-fringe along the mantel and casing in
- the fireplace,--I first saw ball-fringe here--and even the lamp on the
- little bureau wore a shade like a large muslin hat. The table-cloth had
- ball-fringe and so had the window curtains, and the carpet was a bed of
- roses. There were little cupboards on either side of the fireplace, and
- in the recesses, ill-made shelves packed with books, and enriched with
- pinked American cloth. There was a dictionary lying face downward on
- the table, and the open bureau was littered with foolscap paper and
- the evidences of recently abandoned toil. My eye caught “The Ponderevo
- Patent Flat, a Machine you can Live in,” written in large firm letters.
- My uncle opened a little door like a cupboard door in the corner of this
- room, and revealed the narrowest twist of staircase I had ever set
- eyes upon. “Susan!” he bawled again. “Wantje. Some one to see you.
- Surprisin’.”
- There came an inaudible reply, and a sudden loud bump over our heads
- as of some article of domestic utility pettishly flung aside, then
- the cautious steps of someone descending the twist, and then my aunt
- appeared in the doorway with her hand upon the jamb.
- “It’s Aunt Ponderevo,” cried my uncle. “George’s wife--and she’s brought
- over her son!” His eye roamed about the room. He darted to the bureau
- with a sudden impulse, and turned the sheet about the patent flat
- face down. Then he waved his glasses at us, “You know, Susan, my elder
- brother George. I told you about ‘im lots of times.”
- He fretted across to the hearthrug and took up a position there,
- replaced his glasses and coughed.
- My aunt Susan seemed to be taking it in. She was then rather a pretty
- slender woman of twenty-three or four, I suppose, and I remember being
- struck by the blueness of her eyes and the clear freshness of her
- complexion. She had little features, a button nose, a pretty chin and a
- long graceful neck that stuck out of her pale blue cotton morning
- dress. There was a look of half-assumed perplexity on her face, a little
- quizzical wrinkle of the brow that suggested a faintly amused attempt
- to follow my uncle’s mental operations, a vain attempt and a certain
- hopelessness that had in succession become habitual. She seemed to be
- saying, “Oh Lord! What’s he giving me THIS time?” And as came to know
- her better I detected, as a complication of her effort of apprehension,
- a subsidiary riddle to “What’s he giving me?” and that was--to borrow a
- phrase from my schoolboy language “Is it keeps?” She looked at my mother
- and me, and back to her husband again.
- “You know,” he said. “George.”
- “Well,” she said to my mother, descending the last three steps of the
- staircase and holding out her hand! “you’re welcome. Though it’s a
- surprise.... I can’t ask you to HAVE anything, I’m afraid, for there
- isn’t anything in the house.” She smiled, and looked at her husband
- banteringly. “Unless he makes up something with his old chemicals, which
- he’s quite equal to doing.”
- My mother shook hands stiffly, and told me to kiss my aunt....
- “Well, let’s all sit down,” said my uncle, suddenly whistling through
- his clenched teeth, and briskly rubbing his hands together. He put up a
- chair for my mother, raised the blind of the little window, lowered it
- again, and returned to his hearthrug. “I’m sure,” he said, as one who
- decides, “I’m very glad to see you.”
- V
- As they talked I gave my attention pretty exclusively to my uncle.
- I noted him in great detail. I remember now his partially unbuttoned
- waistcoat, as though something had occurred to distract him as he did
- it up, and a little cut upon his chin. I liked a certain humour in
- his eyes. I watched, too, with the fascination that things have for an
- observant boy, the play of his lips--they were a little oblique, and
- there was something “slipshod,” if one may strain a word so far, about
- his mouth, so that he lisped and sibilated ever and again and the coming
- and going of a curious expression, triumphant in quality it was, upon
- his face as he talked. He fingered his glasses, which did not seem to
- fit his nose, fretted with things in his waistcoat pockets or put his
- hands behind him, looked over our heads, and ever and again rose to his
- toes and dropped back on his heels. He had a way of drawing air in at
- times through his teeth that gave a whispering zest to his speech It’s a
- sound I can only represent as a soft Zzzz.
- He did most of the talking. My mother repeated what she had already said
- in the shop, “I have brought George over to you,” and then desisted
- for a time from the real business in hand. “You find this a
- comfortable house?” she asked; and this being affirmed: “It looks--very
- convenient.... Not too big to be a trouble--no. You like Wimblehurst, I
- suppose?”
- My uncle retorted with some inquiries about the great people of
- Bladesover, and my mother answered in the character of a personal friend
- of Lady Drew’s. The talk hung for a time, and then my uncle embarked
- upon a dissertation upon Wimblehurst.
- “This place,” he began, “isn’t of course quite the place I ought to be
- in.”
- My mother nodded as though she had expected that.
- “It gives me no Scope,” he went on. “It’s dead-and-alive. Nothing
- happens.”
- “He’s always wanting something to happen,” said my aunt Susan. “Some day
- he’ll get a shower of things and they’ll be too much for him.”
- “Not they,” said my uncle, buoyantly.
- “Do you find business--slack?” asked my mother.
- “Oh! one rubs along. But there’s no Development--no growth. They just
- come along here and buy pills when they want ‘em--and a horseball or
- such. They’ve got to be ill before there’s a prescription. That sort
- they are. You can’t get ‘em to launch out, you can’t get ‘em to take up
- anything new. For instance, I’ve been trying lately--induce them to buy
- their medicines in advance, and in larger quantities. But they won’t
- look for it! Then I tried to float a little notion of mine, sort of an
- insurance scheme for colds; you pay so much a week, and when you’ve got
- a cold you get a bottle of Cough Linctus so long as you can produce a
- substantial sniff. See? But Lord! they’ve no capacity for ideas, they
- don’t catch on; no Jump about the place, no Life. Live!--they trickle,
- and what one has to do here is to trickle too--Zzzz.”
- “Ah!” said my mother.
- “It doesn’t suit me,” said my uncle. “I’m the cascading sort.”
- “George was that,” said my mother after a pondering moment.
- My aunt Susan took up the parable with an affectionate glance at her
- husband.
- “He’s always trying to make his old business jump,” she said. “Always
- putting fresh cards in the window, or getting up to something. You’d
- hardly believe. It makes ME jump sometimes.”
- “But it does no good,” said my uncle.
- “It does no good,” said his wife. “It’s not his miloo...”
- Presently they came upon a wide pause.
- From the beginning of their conversation there had been the promise of
- this pause, and I pricked my ears. I knew perfectly what was bound
- to come; they were going to talk of my father. I was enormously
- strengthened in my persuasion when I found my mother’s eyes resting
- thoughtfully upon me in the silence, and than my uncle looked at me and
- then my aunt. I struggled unavailingly to produce an expression of meek
- stupidity.
- “I think,” said my uncle, “that George will find it more amusing to have
- a turn in the market-place than to sit here talking with us. There’s a
- pair of stocks there, George--very interesting. Old-fashioned stocks.”
- “I don’t mind sitting here,” I said.
- My uncle rose and in the most friendly way led me through the shop. He
- stood on his doorstep and jerked amiable directions to me.
- “Ain’t it sleepy, George, eh? There’s the butcher’s dog over there,
- asleep in the road-half an hour from midday! If the last Trump sounded
- I don’t believe it would wake. Nobody would wake! The chaps up there in
- the churchyard--they’d just turn over and say: ‘Naar--you don’t catch
- us, you don’t! See?’.... Well, you’ll find the stocks just round that
- corner.”
- He watched me out of sight.
- So I never heard what they said about my father after all.
- VI
- When I returned, my uncle had in some remarkable way become larger and
- central. “Tha’chu, George?” he cried, when the shop-door bell sounded.
- “Come right through”; and I found him, as it were, in the chairman’s
- place before the draped grate.
- The three of them regarded me.
- “We have been talking of making you a chemist, George,” said my uncle.
- My mother looked at me. “I had hoped,” she said, “that Lady Drew would
- have done something for him--” She stopped.
- “In what way?” said my uncle.
- “She might have spoken to some one, got him into something perhaps....”
- She had the servant’s invincible persuasion that all good things are
- done by patronage.
- “He is not the sort of boy for whom things are done,” she added,
- dismissing these dreams. “He doesn’t accommodate himself. When he thinks
- Lady Drew wishes a thing, he seems not to wish it. Towards Mr. Redgrave,
- too, he has been--disrespectful--he is like his father.”
- “Who’s Mr. Redgrave?”
- “The Vicar.”
- “A bit independent?” said my uncle, briskly.
- “Disobedient,” said my mother. “He has no idea of his place. He seems to
- think he can get on by slighting people and flouting them. He’ll learn
- perhaps before it is too late.”
- My uncle stroked his cut chin and me. “Have you learnt any Latin?” he
- asked abruptly.
- I said I had not.
- “He’ll have to learn a little Latin,” he explained to my mother,
- “to qualify. H’m. He could go down to the chap at the grammar school
- here--it’s just been routed into existence again by the Charity
- Commissioners and have lessons.”
- “What, me learn Latin!” I cried, with emotion.
- “A little,” he said.
- “I’ve always wanted” I said and; “LATIN!”
- I had long been obsessed by the idea that having no Latin was a
- disadvantage in the world, and Archie Garvell had driven the point of
- this pretty earnestly home. The literature I had read at Bladesover had
- all tended that way. Latin had had a quality of emancipation for me that
- I find it difficult to convey. And suddenly, when I had supposed all
- learning was at an end for me, I heard this!
- “It’s no good to you, of course,” said my uncle, “except to pass exams
- with, but there you are!”
- “You’ll have to learn Latin because you have to learn Latin,” said my
- mother, “not because you want to. And afterwards you will have to learn
- all sorts of other things....”
- The idea that I was to go on learning, that to read and master the
- contents of books was still to be justifiable as a duty, overwhelmed all
- other facts. I had had it rather clear in my mind for some weeks that
- all that kind of opportunity might close to me for ever. I began to take
- a lively interest in this new project.
- “Then shall I live here?” I asked, “with you, and study... as well as
- work in the shop?”
- “That’s the way of it,” said my uncle.
- I parted from my mother that day in a dream, so sudden and important
- was this new aspect of things to me. I was to learn Latin! Now that the
- humiliation of my failure at Bladesover was past for her, now that she
- had a little got over her first intense repugnance at this resort to my
- uncle and contrived something that seemed like a possible provision for
- my future, the tenderness natural to a parting far more significant than
- any of our previous partings crept into her manner.
- She sat in the train to return, I remember, and I stood at the open door
- of her compartment, and neither of us knew how soon we should cease for
- ever to be a trouble to one another.
- “You must be a good boy, George,” she said. “You must learn.... And you
- mustn’t set yourself up against those who are above you and better than
- you.... Or envy them.”
- “No, mother,” I said.
- I promised carelessly. Her eyes were fixed upon me. I was wondering
- whether I could by any means begin Latin that night.
- Something touched her heart then, some thought, some memory; perhaps
- some premonition.... The solitary porter began slamming carriage doors.
- “George” she said hastily, almost shamefully, “kiss me!”
- I stepped up into her compartment as she bent downward.
- She caught me in her arms quite eagerly, she pressed me to her--a
- strange thing for her to do. I perceived her eyes were extraordinarily
- bright, and then this brightness burst along the lower lids and rolled
- down her cheeks.
- For the first and last time in my life I saw my mother’s tears. Then she
- had gone, leaving me discomforted and perplexed, forgetting for a time
- even that I was to learn Latin, thinking of my mother as of something
- new and strange.
- The thing recurred though I sought to dismiss it, it stuck itself
- into my memory against the day of fuller understanding. Poor, proud,
- habitual, sternly narrow soul! poor difficult and misunderstanding son!
- it was the first time that ever it dawned upon me that my mother also
- might perhaps feel.
- VII
- My mother died suddenly and, it was thought by Lady Drew,
- inconsiderately, the following spring. Her ladyship instantly fled to
- Folkestone with Miss Somerville and Fison, until the funeral should be
- over and my mother’s successor installed.
- My uncle took me over to the funeral. I remember there was a sort of
- prolonged crisis in the days preceding this because, directly he heard
- of my loss, he had sent a pair of check trousers to the Judkins people
- in London to be dyed black, and they did not come back in time. He
- became very excited on the third day, and sent a number of increasingly
- fiery telegrams without any result whatever, and succumbed next morning
- with a very ill grace to my aunt Susan’s insistence upon the resources
- of his dress-suit. In my memory those black legs of his, in a
- particularly thin and shiny black cloth--for evidently his dress-suit
- dated from adolescent and slenderer days--straddle like the Colossus
- of Rhodes over my approach to my mother’s funeral. Moreover, I was
- inconvenienced and distracted by a silk hat he had bought me, my first
- silk hat, much ennobled, as his was also, by a deep mourning band.
- I remember, but rather indistinctly, my mother’s white paneled
- housekeeper’s room and the touch of oddness about it that she was not
- there, and the various familiar faces made strange by black, and I seem
- to recall the exaggerated self-consciousness that arose out of their
- focussed attention. No doubt the sense of the new silk hat came and went
- and came again in my emotional chaos. Then something comes out clear and
- sorrowful, rises out clear and sheer from among all these rather base
- and inconsequent things, and once again I walk before all the other
- mourners close behind her coffin as it is carried along the churchyard
- path to her grave, with the old vicar’s slow voice saying regretfully
- and unconvincingly above me, triumphant solemn things.
- “I am the resurrection and the life, saith the Lord; he that believeth
- in me, though he were dead, yet shall he live: and whosoever liveth and
- believeth in me shall never die.”
- Never die! The day was a high and glorious morning in spring, and all
- the trees were budding and bursting into green. Everywhere there were
- blossoms and flowers; the pear trees and cherry trees in the sexton’s
- garden were sunlit snow, there were nodding daffodils and early tulips
- in the graveyard beds, great multitudes of daisies, and everywhere
- the birds seemed singing. And in the middle was the brown coffin end,
- tilting on men’s shoulders and half occluded by the vicar’s Oxford hood.
- And so we came to my mother’s waiting grave.
- For a time I was very observant, watching the coffin lowered, hearing
- the words of the ritual. It seemed a very curious business altogether.
- Suddenly as the service drew to its end, I felt something had still
- to be said which had not been said, realised that she had withdrawn
- in silence, neither forgiving me nor hearing from me--those now lost
- assurances. Suddenly I knew I had not understood. Suddenly I saw her
- tenderly; remembered not so much tender or kindly things of her as her
- crossed wishes and the ways in which I had thwarted her. Surprisingly
- I realised that behind all her hardness and severity she had loved me,
- that I was the only thing she had ever loved and that until this moment
- I had never loved her. And now she was there and deaf and blind to me,
- pitifully defeated in her designs for me, covered from me so that she
- could not know....
- I dug my nails into the palms of my hands, I set my teeth, but tears
- blinded me, sobs would have choked me had speech been required of me.
- The old vicar read on, there came a mumbled response--and so on to the
- end. I wept as it were internally, and only when we had come out of the
- churchyard could I think and speak calmly again.
- Stamped across this memory are the little black figures of my uncle and
- Rabbits, telling Avebury, the sexton and undertaker, that “it had all
- passed off very well--very well indeed.”
- VIII
- That is the last I shall tell of Bladesover. The dropscene falls on
- that, and it comes no more as an actual presence into this novel. I
- did indeed go back there once again, but under circumstances quite
- immaterial to my story. But in a sense Bladesover has never left me;
- it is, as I said at the outset, one of those dominant explanatory
- impressions that make the framework of my mind. Bladesover illuminates
- England; it has become all that is spacious, dignified pretentious, and
- truly conservative in English life. It is my social datum. That is why I
- have drawn it here on so large a scale.
- When I came back at last to the real Bladesover on an inconsequent
- visit, everything was far smaller than I could have supposed possible.
- It was as though everything had shivered and shrivelled a little at the
- Lichtenstein touch. The harp was still in the saloon, but there was a
- different grand piano with a painted lid and a metrostyle pianola, and
- an extraordinary quantity of artistic litter and bric-a-brac scattered
- about. There was the trail of the Bond Street showroom over it all. The
- furniture was still under chintz, but it wasn’t the same sort of chintz
- although it pretended to be, and the lustre-dangling chandeliers had
- passed away. Lady Lichtenstein’s books replaced the brown volumes I
- had browsed among--they were mostly presentation copies of contemporary
- novels and the National Review and the Empire Review, and the Nineteenth
- Century and after jostled current books on the tables--English new books
- in gaudy catchpenny “artistic” covers, French and Italian novels in
- yellow, German art handbooks of almost incredible ugliness. There
- were abundant evidences that her ladyship was playing with the
- Keltic renascence, and a great number of ugly cats made of china--she
- “collected” china and stoneware cats--stood about everywhere--in all
- colours, in all kinds of deliberately comic, highly glazed distortion.
- It is nonsense to pretend that finance makes any better aristocrats than
- rent. Nothing can make an aristocrat but pride, knowledge, training, and
- the sword. These people were no improvement on the Drews, none whatever.
- There was no effect of a beneficial replacement of passive unintelligent
- people by active intelligent ones. One felt that a smaller but more
- enterprising and intensely undignified variety of stupidity had replaced
- the large dullness of the old gentry, and that was all. Bladesover, I
- thought, had undergone just the same change between the seventies and
- the new century that had overtaken the dear old Times, and heaven knows
- how much more of the decorous British fabric. These Lichtensteins and
- their like seem to have no promise in them at all of any fresh vitality
- for the kingdom. I do not believe in their intelligence or their
- power--they have nothing new about them at all, nothing creative nor
- rejuvenescent, no more than a disorderly instinct of acquisition; and
- the prevalence of them and their kind is but a phase in the broad slow
- decay of the great social organism of England. They could not have made
- Bladesover they cannot replace it; they just happen to break out over
- it--saprophytically.
- Well--that was my last impression of Bladesover.
- CHAPTER THE THIRD
- THE WIMBLEHURST APPRENTICESHIP
- I
- So far as I can remember now, except for that one emotional phase by the
- graveside, I passed through all these experiences rather callously. I
- had already, with the facility of youth, changed my world, ceased to
- think at all of the old school routine and put Bladesover aside for
- digestion at a latter stage. I took up my new world in Wimblehurst with
- the chemist’s shop as its hub, set to work at Latin and materia medica,
- and concentrated upon the present with all my heart. Wimblehurst is an
- exceptionally quiet and grey Sussex town rare among south of England
- towns in being largely built of stone. I found something very agreeable
- and picturesque in its clean cobbled streets, its odd turnings and
- abrupt corners; and in the pleasant park that crowds up one side of the
- town. The whole place is under the Eastry dominion and it was the
- Eastry influence and dignity that kept its railway station a mile and
- three-quarters away. Eastry House is so close that it dominates the
- whole; one goes across the marketplace (with its old lock-up and
- stocks), past the great pre-reformation church, a fine grey shell, like
- some empty skull from which the life has fled, and there at once are the
- huge wrought-iron gates, and one peeps through them to see the facade of
- this place, very white and large and fine, down a long avenue of yews.
- Eastry was far greater than Bladesover and an altogether completer
- example of the eighteenth century system. It ruled not two villages, but
- a borough, that had sent its sons and cousins to parliament almost as a
- matter of right so long as its franchise endured. Every one was in the
- system, every one--except my uncle. He stood out and complained.
- My uncle was the first real breach I found in the great front of
- Bladesover the world had presented me, for Chatham was not so much a
- breach as a confirmation. But my uncle had no respect for Bladesover and
- Eastry--none whatever. He did not believe in them. He was blind even to
- what they were. He propounded strange phrases about them, he exfoliated
- and wagged about novel and incredible ideas.
- “This place,” said my uncle, surveying it from his open doorway in the
- dignified stillness of a summer afternoon, “wants Waking Up!”
- I was sorting up patent medicines in the corner.
- “I’d like to let a dozen young Americans loose into it,” said my uncle.
- “Then we’d see.”
- I made a tick against Mother Shipton’s Sleeping Syrup. We had cleared
- our forward stock.
- “Things must be happening SOMEWHERE, George,” he broke out in a
- querulously rising note as he came back into the little shop. He fiddled
- with the piled dummy boxes of fancy soap and scent and so forth that
- adorned the end of the counter, then turned about petulantly, stuck his
- hands deeply into his pockets and withdrew one to scratch his head. “I
- must do SOMETHING,” he said. “I can’t stand it.
- “I must invent something. And shove it.... I could.
- “Or a play. There’s a deal of money in a play, George. What would you
- think of me writing a play eh?... There’s all sorts of things to be
- done.
- “Or the stog-igschange.”
- He fell into that meditative whistling of his.
- “Sac-ramental wine!” he swore, “this isn’t the world--it’s Cold Mutton
- Fat! That’s what Wimblehurst is! Cold Mutton Fat!--dead and stiff! And
- I’m buried in it up to the arm pits. Nothing ever happens, nobody
- wants things to happen ‘scept me! Up in London, George, things happen.
- America! I wish to Heaven, George, I’d been born American--where things
- hum.
- “What can one do here? How can one grow? While we’re sleepin’ here with
- our Capital oozing away into Lord Eastry’s pockets for rent-men are
- up there....” He indicated London as remotely over the top of the
- dispensing counter, and then as a scene of great activity by a whirl of
- the hand and a wink and a meaning smile at me.
- “What sort of things do they do?” I asked.
- “Rush about,” he said. “Do things! Somethin’ glorious. There’s cover
- gambling. Ever heard of that, George?” He drew the air in through his
- teeth. “You put down a hundred say, and buy ten thousand pounds worth.
- See? That’s a cover of one per cent. Things go up one, you sell, realise
- cent per cent; down, whiff, it’s gone! Try again! Cent per cent, George,
- every day. Men are made or done for in an hour. And the shoutin’!
- Zzzz.... Well, that’s one way, George. Then another way--there’s
- Corners!”
- “They’re rather big things, aren’t they?” I ventured.
- “Oh, if you go in for wheat or steel--yes. But suppose you tackled a
- little thing, George. Just some little thing that only needed a few
- thousands. Drugs for example. Shoved all you had into it--staked your
- liver on it, so to speak. Take a drug--take ipecac, for example. Take
- a lot of ipecac. Take all there is! See? There you are! There aren’t
- unlimited supplies of ipecacuanha--can’t be!--and it’s a thing people
- must have. Then quinine again! You watch your chance, wait for a
- tropical war breaking out, let’s say, and collar all the quinine. Where
- ARE they? Must have quinine, you know. Eh? Zzzz.
- “Lord! there’s no end of things--no end of little things.
- Dill-water--all the suffering babes yowling for it. Eucalyptus
- again--cascara--witch hazel--menthol--all the toothache things. Then
- there’s antiseptics, and curare, cocaine....”
- “Rather a nuisance to the doctors,” I reflected.
- “They got to look out for themselves. By Jove, yes. They’ll do you if
- they can, and you do them. Like brigands. That makes it romantic. That’s
- the Romance of Commerce, George. You’re in the mountains there! Think
- of having all the quinine in the world, and some millionaire’s pampered
- wife gone ill with malaria, eh? That’s a squeeze, George, eh? Eh?
- Millionaire on his motor car outside, offering you any price you liked.
- That ‘ud wake up Wimblehurst.... Lord! You haven’t an Idea down here.
- Not an idea. Zzzz.”
- He passed into a rapt dream, from which escaped such fragments as:
- “Fifty per cent. advance sir; security--to-morrow. Zzzz.”
- The idea of cornering a drug struck upon my mind then as a sort of
- irresponsible monkey trick that no one would ever be permitted to do in
- reality. It was the sort of nonsense one would talk to make Ewart laugh
- and set him going on to still odder possibilities. I thought it was part
- of my uncle’s way of talking. But I’ve learnt differently since. The
- whole trend of modern money-making is to foresee something that will
- presently be needed and put it out of reach, and then to haggle yourself
- wealthy. You buy up land upon which people will presently want to build
- houses, you secure rights that will bar vitally important developments,
- and so on, and so on. Of course the naive intelligence of a boy does not
- grasp the subtler developments of human inadequacy. He begins life with
- a disposition to believe in the wisdom of grown-up people, he does not
- realise how casual and disingenuous has been the development of law and
- custom, and he thinks that somewhere in the state there is a power
- as irresistible as a head master’s to check mischievous and foolish
- enterprises of every sort. I will confess that when my uncle talked of
- cornering quinine, I had a clear impression that any one who contrived
- to do that would pretty certainly go to jail. Now I know that any one
- who could really bring it off would be much more likely to go to the
- House of Lords!
- My uncle ranged over the gilt labels of his bottles and drawers for a
- while, dreaming of corners in this and that. But at last he reverted to
- Wimblehurst again.
- “You got to be in London when these things are in hand. Down here--!
- “Jee-rusalem!” he cried. “Why did I plant myself here? Everything’s
- done. The game’s over. Here’s Lord Eastry, and he’s got everything,
- except what his lawyers get, and before you get any more change this way
- you’ll have to dynamite him--and them. HE doesn’t want anything more
- to happen. Why should he? Any chance ‘ud be a loss to him. He wants
- everything to burble along and burble along and go on as it’s going
- for the next ten thousand years, Eastry after Eastry, one parson down
- another come, one grocer dead, get another! Any one with any ideas
- better go away. They HAVE gone away! Look at all these blessed people
- in this place! Look at ‘em! All fast asleep, doing their business out
- of habit--in a sort of dream, Stuffed men would do just as well--just.
- They’ve all shook down into their places. THEY don’t want anything to
- happen either. They’re all broken in. There you are! Only what are they
- all alive for?...
- “Why can’t they get a clockwork chemist?”
- He concluded as he often concluded these talks. “I must invent
- something,--that’s about what I must do. Zzzz. Some convenience.
- Something people want.... Strike out.... You can’t think, George, of
- anything everybody wants and hasn’t got? I mean something you could turn
- out retail under a shilling, say? Well, YOU think, whenever you haven’t
- got anything better to do. See?”
- II
- So I remember my uncle in that first phase, young, but already a little
- fat, restless, fretful, garrulous, putting in my fermenting head all
- sorts of discrepant ideas. Certainly he was educational....
- For me the years at Wimblehurst were years of pretty active growth.
- Most of my leisure and much of my time in the shop I spent in study.
- I speedily mastered the modicum of Latin necessary for my qualifying
- examinations, and--a little assisted by the Government Science and Art
- Department classes that were held in the Grammar School--went on with my
- mathematics. There were classes in physics, in chemistry, in mathematics
- and machine drawing, and I took up these subjects with considerable
- avidity. Exercise I got chiefly in the form of walks. There was some
- cricket in the summer and football in the winter sustained by young
- men’s clubs that levied a parasitic blackmail of the big people and the
- sitting member, but I was never very keen at these games. I didn’t find
- any very close companions among the youths of Wimblehurst. They struck
- me, after my cockney schoolmates, as loutish and slow, servile and
- furtive, spiteful and mean. WE used to swagger, but these countrymen
- dragged their feet and hated an equal who didn’t; we talked loud, but
- you only got the real thoughts of Wimblehurst in a knowing undertone
- behind its hand. And even then they weren’t much in the way of thoughts.
- No, I didn’t like those young countrymen, and I’m no believer in the
- English countryside under the Bladesover system as a breeding ground for
- honourable men. One hears a frightful lot of nonsense about the Rural
- Exodus and the degeneration wrought by town life upon our population. To
- my mind, the English townsman, even in the slums, is infinitely better
- spiritually, more courageous, more imaginative and cleaner, than his
- agricultural cousin. I’ve seen them both when they didn’t think
- they were being observed, and I know. There was something about my
- Wimblehurst companions that disgusted me. It’s hard to define. Heaven
- knows that at that cockney boarding-school at Goudhurst we were coarse
- enough; the Wimblehurst youngsters had neither words nor courage for the
- sort of thing we used to do--for our bad language, for example; but,
- on the other hand, they displayed a sort of sluggish, real lewdness,
- lewdness is the word--a baseness of attitude. Whatever we exiled urbans
- did at Goudhurst was touched with something, however coarse, of romantic
- imagination. We had read the Boys of England, and told each other
- stories. In the English countryside there are no books at all, no songs,
- no drama, no valiant sin even; all these things have never come or they
- were taken away and hidden generations ago, and the imagination aborts
- and bestialises. That, I think, is where the real difference against the
- English rural man lies. It is because I know this that I do not share
- in the common repinings because our countryside is being depopulated,
- because our population is passing through the furnace of the towns. They
- starve, they suffer, no doubt, but they come out of it hardened, they
- come out of it with souls.
- Of an evening the Wimblehurst blade, shiny-faced from a wash and with
- some loud finery, a coloured waistcoat or a vivid tie, would betake
- himself to the Eastry Arms billiard-room, or to the bar parlour of
- some minor pub where nap could be played. One soon sickened of his slow
- knowingness, the cunning observation of his deadened eyes, his idea of
- a “good story,” always, always told in undertones, poor dirty worm! his
- shrewd, elaborate maneuvers for some petty advantage, a drink to the
- good or such-like deal. There rises before my eyes as I write, young
- Hopley Dodd, the son of the Wimblehurst auctioneer, the pride of
- Wimblehurst, its finest flower, with his fur waistcoat and his bulldog
- pipe, his riding breeches--he had no horse--and his gaiters, as he used
- to sit, leaning forward and watching the billiard-table from under the
- brim of his artfully tilted hat. A half-dozen phrases constituted his
- conversation: “hard lines!” he used to say, and “Good baazness,” in a
- bass bleat. Moreover, he had a long slow whistle that was esteemed the
- very cream of humorous comment. Night after night he was there.
- Also you knew he would not understand that _I_ could play billiards, and
- regarded every stroke I made as a fluke. For a beginner I didn’t play so
- badly, I thought. I’m not so sure now; that was my opinion at the time.
- But young Dodd’s scepticism and the “good baazness” finally cured me
- of my disposition to frequent the Eastry Arms, and so these noises had
- their value in my world.
- I made no friends among the young men of the place at all, and though I
- was entering upon adolescence I have no love-affair to tell of here.
- Not that I was not waking up to that aspect of life in my middle teens I
- did, indeed, in various slightly informal ways scrape acquaintance with
- casual Wimblehurst girls; with a little dressmaker’s apprentice I got
- upon shyly speaking terms, and a pupil teacher in the National School
- went further and was “talked about” in connection with me but I was not
- by any means touched by any reality of passion for either of these young
- people; love--love as yet came to me only in my dreams. I only kissed
- these girls once or twice. They rather disconcerted than developed those
- dreams. They were so clearly not “it.” I shall have much to say of love
- in this story, but I may break it to the reader now that it is my role
- to be a rather ineffectual lover. Desire I knew well enough--indeed, too
- well; but love I have been shy of. In all my early enterprises in the
- war of the sexes, I was torn between the urgency of the body and a
- habit of romantic fantasy that wanted every phase of the adventure to
- be generous and beautiful. And I had a curiously haunting memory of
- Beatrice, of her kisses in the bracken and her kiss upon the wall, that
- somehow pitched the standard too high for Wimblehurst’s opportunities. I
- will not deny I did in a boyish way attempt a shy, rude adventure or so
- in love-making at Wimblehurst; but through these various influences,
- I didn’t bring things off to any extent at all. I left behind me no
- devastating memories, no splendid reputation. I came away at last,
- still inexperienced and a little thwarted, with only a natural growth of
- interest and desire in sexual things.
- If I fell in love with any one in Wimblehurst it was with my aunt. She
- treated me with a kindliness that was only half maternal--she petted my
- books, she knew about my certificates, she made fun of me in a way that
- stirred my heart to her. Quite unconsciously I grew fond of her....
- My adolescent years at Wimblehurst were on the whole laborious,
- uneventful years that began in short jackets and left me in many ways
- nearly a man, years so uneventful that the Calculus of Variations is
- associated with one winter, and an examination in Physics for Science
- and Art department Honours marks an epoch. Many divergent impulses
- stirred within me, but the master impulse was a grave young disposition
- to work and learn and thereby in some not very clearly defined way get
- out of the Wimblehurst world into which I had fallen. I wrote with
- some frequency to Ewart, self-conscious, but, as I remember them, not
- intelligent letters, dated in Latin and with lapses into Latin quotation
- that roused Ewart to parody. There was something about me in those days
- more than a little priggish. But it was, to do myself justice, something
- more than the petty pride of learning. I had a very grave sense of
- discipline and preparation that I am not ashamed at all to remember. I
- was serious. More serious than I am at the present time. More serious,
- indeed, than any adult seems to be. I was capable then of efforts--of
- nobilities.... They are beyond me now. I don’t see why, at forty, I
- shouldn’t confess I respect my own youth. I had dropped being a boy
- quite abruptly. I thought I was presently to go out into a larger and
- quite important world and do significant things there. I thought I
- was destined to do something definite to a world that had a definite
- purpose. I did not understand then, as I do now, that life was to
- consist largely in the world’s doing things to me. Young people never
- do seem to understand that aspect of things. And, as I say, among my
- educational influences my uncle, all unsuspected, played a leading part,
- and perhaps among other things gave my discontent with Wimblehurst, my
- desire to get away from that clean and picturesque emptiness, a form and
- expression that helped to emphasise it. In a way that definition made me
- patient. “Presently I shall get to London,” I said, echoing him.
- I remember him now as talking, always talking, in those days. He talked
- to me of theology, he talked of politics, of the wonders of science
- and the marvels of art, of the passions and the affections, of
- the immortality of the soul and the peculiar actions of drugs; but
- predominantly and constantly he talked of getting on, of enterprises,
- of inventions and great fortunes, of Rothschilds, silver kings,
- Vanderbilts, Goulds, flotations, realisations and the marvelous ways
- of Chance with men--in all localities, that is to say, that are not
- absolutely sunken to the level of Cold Mutton Fat.
- When I think of those early talks, I figure him always in one of three
- positions. Either we were in the dispensing lair behind a high barrier,
- he pounding up things in a mortar perhaps, and I rolling pill-stuff into
- long rolls and cutting it up with a sort of broad, fluted knife, or
- he stood looking out of the shop door against the case of sponges and
- spray-diffusers, while I surveyed him from behind the counter, or he
- leant against the little drawers behind the counter, and I hovered
- dusting in front. The thought of those early days brings back to my
- nostrils the faint smell of scent that was always in the air, marbled
- now with streaks of this drug and now of that, and to my eyes the rows
- of jejune glass bottles with gold labels, mirror-reflected, that stood
- behind him. My aunt, I remember, used sometimes to come into the shop
- in a state of aggressive sprightliness, a sort of connubial ragging
- expedition, and get much fun over the abbreviated Latinity of those gilt
- inscriptions. “Ol Amjig, George,” she would read derisively, “and he
- pretends it’s almond oil! Snap!--and that’s mustard. Did you ever,
- George?
- “Look at him, George, looking dignified. I’d like to put an old label
- on to him round the middle like his bottles are, with Ol Pondo on it.
- That’s Latin for Impostor, George MUST be. He’d look lovely with a
- stopper.”
- “YOU want a stopper,” said my uncle, projecting his face....
- My aunt, dear soul, was in those days quite thin and slender, with a
- delicate rosebud completion and a disposition to connubial badinage, to
- a sort of gentle skylarking. There was a silvery ghost of lisping in her
- speech. She was a great humourist, and as the constraint of my presence
- at meals wore off, I became more and more aware of a filmy but extensive
- net of nonsense she had woven about her domestic relations until it had
- become the reality of her life. She affected a derisive attitude to the
- world at large and applied the epithet “old” to more things than I have
- ever heard linked to it before or since. “Here’s the old news-paper,”
- she used to say--to my uncle. “Now don’t go and get it in the butter,
- you silly old Sardine!”
- “What’s the day of the week, Susan?” my uncle would ask.
- “Old Monday, Sossidge,” she would say, and add, “I got all my Old
- Washing to do. Don’t I KNOW it!”...
- She had evidently been the wit and joy of a large circle of
- schoolfellows, and this style had become a second nature with her. It
- made her very delightful to me in that quiet place. Her customary walk
- even had a sort of hello! in it. Her chief preoccupation in life was, I
- believe, to make my uncle laugh, and when by some new nickname, some new
- quaintness or absurdity, she achieved that end, she was, behind a mask
- of sober amazement, the happiest woman on earth. My uncle’s laugh when
- it did come, I must admit was, as Baedeker says, “rewarding.” It began
- with gusty blowings and snortings, and opened into a clear “Ha ha!”
- but in fullest development it included, in those youthful days, falling
- about anyhow and doubling up tightly, and whackings of the stomach, and
- tears and cries of anguish. I never in my life heard my uncle laugh to
- his maximum except at her; he was commonly too much in earnest for that,
- and he didn’t laugh much at all, to my knowledge, after those early
- years. Also she threw things at him to an enormous extent in her resolve
- to keep things lively in spite of Wimblehurst; sponges out of stock she
- threw, cushions, balls of paper, clean washing, bread; and once up the
- yard when they thought that I and the errand boy and the diminutive
- maid of all work were safely out of the way, she smashed a boxful of
- eight-ounce bottles I had left to drain, assaulting my uncle with a new
- soft broom. Sometimes she would shy things at me--but not often. There
- seemed always laughter round and about her--all three of us would share
- hysterics at times--and on one occasion the two of them came home from
- church shockingly ashamed of themselves, because of a storm of mirth
- during the sermon. The vicar, it seems, had tried to blow his nose
- with a black glove as well as the customary pocket-handkerchief. And
- afterwards she had picked up her own glove by the finger, and looking
- innocently but intently sideways, had suddenly by this simple expedient
- exploded my uncle altogether. We had it all over again at dinner.
- “But it shows you,” cried my uncle, suddenly becoming grave, “what
- Wimblehurst is, to have us all laughing at a little thing like that! We
- weren’t the only ones that giggled. Not by any means! And, Lord! it was
- funny!”
- Socially, my uncle and aunt were almost completely isolated. In places
- like Wimblehurst the tradesmen’s lives always are isolated socially,
- all of them, unless they have a sister or a bosom friend among the
- other wives, but the husbands met in various bar-parlours or in the
- billiard-room of the Eastry Arms. But my uncle, for the most part, spent
- his evenings at home. When first he arrived in Wimblehurst I think
- he had spread his effect of abounding ideas and enterprise rather
- too aggressively; and Wimblehurst, after a temporary subjugation, had
- rebelled and done its best to make a butt of him. His appearance in a
- public-house led to a pause in any conversation that was going on.
- “Come to tell us about everything, Mr. Pond’revo?” some one would say
- politely.
- “You wait,” my uncle used to answer, disconcerted, and sulk for the rest
- of his visit.
- Or some one with an immense air of innocence would remark to the world
- generally, “They’re talkin’ of rebuildin’ Wimblehurst all over again,
- I’m told. Anybody heard anything of it? Going to make it a reg’lar
- smartgoin’, enterprisin’ place--kind of Crystal Pallas.”
- “Earthquake and a pestilence before you get that,” my uncle would
- mutter, to the infinite delight of every one, and add something
- inaudible about “Cold Mutton Fat.”...
- III
- We were torn apart by a financial accident to my uncle of which I did
- not at first grasp the full bearings. He had developed what I regarded
- as an innocent intellectual recreation which he called stock-market
- meteorology. I think he got the idea from one use of curves in the
- graphic presentation of associated variations that he saw me plotting.
- He secured some of my squared paper and, having cast about for a time,
- decided to trace the rise and fall of certain lines and railways.
- “There’s something in this, George,” he said, and I little dreamt that
- among other things that were in it, was the whole of his spare money and
- most of what my mother had left to him in trust for me.
- “It’s as plain as can be,” he said. “See, here’s one system of waves and
- here’s another! These are prices for Union Pacifics--extending over a
- month. Now next week, mark my words, they’ll be down one whole point.
- We’re getting near the steep part of the curve again. See? It’s
- absolutely scientific. It’s verifiable. Well, and apply it! You buy in
- the hollow and sell on the crest, and there you are!”
- I was so convinced of the triviality of this amusement that to find at
- last that he had taken it in the most disastrous earnest overwhelmed me.
- He took me for a long walk to break it to me, over the hills towards
- Yare and across the great gorse commons by Hazelbrow.
- “There are ups and downs in life, George,” he said--halfway across that
- great open space, and paused against the sky.... “I left out one factor
- in the Union Pacific analysis.”
- “DID you?” I said, struck by the sudden chance in his voice. “But you
- don’t mean?”
- I stopped and turned on him in the narrow sandy rut of pathway and he
- stopped likewise.
- “I do, George. I DO mean. It’s bust me! I’m a bankrupt here and now.”
- “Then--?”
- “The shop’s bust too. I shall have to get out of that.”
- “And me?”
- “Oh, you!--YOU’RE all right. You can transfer your apprenticeship,
- and--er--well, I’m not the sort of man to be careless with trust funds,
- you can be sure. I kept that aspect in mind. There’s some of it left
- George--trust me!--quite a decent little sum.”
- “But you and aunt?”
- “It isn’t QUITE the way we meant to leave Wimblehurst, George; but we
- shall have to go. Sale; all the things shoved about and ticketed--lot
- a hundred and one. Ugh!... It’s been a larky little house in some ways.
- The first we had. Furnishing--a spree in its way.... Very happy...” His
- face winced at some memory. “Let’s go on, George,” he said shortly, near
- choking, I could see.
- I turned my back on him, and did not look round again for a little
- while.
- “That’s how it is, you see, George.” I heard him after a time.
- When we were back in the high road again he came alongside, and for a
- time we walked in silence.
- “Don’t say anything home yet,” he said presently. “Fortunes of War. I
- got to pick the proper time with Susan--else she’ll get depressed. Not
- that she isn’t a first-rate brick whatever comes along.”
- “All right,” I said, “I’ll be careful”; and it seemed to me for the time
- altogether too selfish to bother him with any further inquiries about
- his responsibility as my trustee. He gave a little sigh of relief at
- my note of assent, and was presently talking quite cheerfully of his
- plans.... But he had, I remember, one lapse into moodiness that came and
- went suddenly. “Those others!” he said, as though the thought had stung
- him for the first time.
- “What others?” I asked.
- “Damn them!” said he.
- “But what others?”
- “All those damned stick-in-the-mud-and-die-slowly tradespeople: Ruck,
- the butcher, Marbel, the grocer. Snape! Gord! George, HOW they’ll grin!”
- I thought him over in the next few weeks, and I remember now in great
- detail the last talk we had together before he handed over the shop
- and me to his successor. For he had the good luck to sell his business,
- “lock, stock, and barrel”--in which expression I found myself and my
- indentures included. The horrors of a sale by auction of the furniture
- even were avoided.
- I remember that either coming or going on that occasion, Ruck, the
- butcher, stood in his doorway and regarded us with a grin that showed
- his long teeth.
- “You half-witted hog!” said my uncle. “You grinning hyaena”; and then,
- “Pleasant day, Mr. Ruck.”
- “Goin’ to make your fortun’ in London, then?” said Mr. Ruck, with slow
- enjoyment.
- That last excursion took us along the causeway to Beeching, and so up
- the downs and round almost as far as Steadhurst, home. My moods, as we
- went, made a mingled web. By this time I had really grasped the fact
- that my uncle had, in plain English, robbed me; the little accumulations
- of my mother, six hundred pounds and more, that would have educated me
- and started me in business, had been eaten into and was mostly gone
- into the unexpected hollow that ought to have been a crest of the Union
- Pacific curve, and of the remainder he still gave no account. I was too
- young and inexperienced to insist on this or know how to get it, but the
- thought of it all made streaks of decidedly black anger in that scheme
- of interwoven feelings. And you know, I was also acutely sorry for
- him--almost as sorry as I was for my aunt Susan. Even then I had quite
- found him out. I knew him to be weaker than myself; his incurable,
- irresponsible childishness was as clear to me then as it was on his
- deathbed, his redeeming and excusing imaginative silliness. Through some
- odd mental twist perhaps I was disposed to exonerate him even at
- the cost of blaming my poor old mother who had left things in his
- untrustworthy hands.
- I should have forgiven him altogether, I believe, if he had been in any
- manner apologetic to me; but he wasn’t that. He kept reassuring me in
- a way I found irritating. Mostly, however, his solicitude was for Aunt
- Susan and himself.
- “It’s these Crises, George,” he said, “try Character. Your aunt’s come
- out well, my boy.”
- He made meditative noises for a space.
- “Had her cry of course,”--the thing had been only too painfully evident
- to me in her eyes and swollen face--“who wouldn’t? But now--buoyant
- again!... She’s a Corker.
- “We’ll be sorry to leave the little house of course. It’s a bit like
- Adam and Eve, you know. Lord! what a chap old Milton was!
- “‘The world was all before them, where to choose
- Their place of rest, and Providence their guide.’
- “It sounds, George.... Providence their guide!... Well--thank goodness
- there’s no imeedgit prospect of either Cain or Abel!”
- “After all, it won’t be so bad up there. Not the scenery, perhaps, or
- the air we get here, but--LIFE! We’ve got very comfortable little rooms,
- very comfortable considering, and I shall rise. We’re not done yet,
- we’re not beaten; don’t think that, George. I shall pay twenty shillings
- in the pound before I’ve done--you mark my words, George,--twenty--five
- to you.... I got this situation within twenty-four hours--others
- offered. It’s an important firm--one of the best in London. I looked to
- that. I might have got four or five shillings a week more--elsewhere.
- Quarters I could name. But I said to them plainly, wages to go on with,
- but opportunity’s my game--development. We understood each other.”
- He threw out his chest, and the little round eyes behind his glasses
- rested valiantly on imaginary employers.
- We would go on in silence for a space while he revised and restated that
- encounter. Then he would break out abruptly with some banal phrase.
- “The Battle of Life, George, my boy,” he would cry, or “Ups and Downs!”
- He ignored or waived the poor little attempts I made to ascertain my own
- position. “That’s all right,” he would say; or, “Leave all that to me.
- I’LL look after them.” And he would drift away towards the philosophy
- and moral of the situation. What was I to do?
- “Never put all your resources into one chance, George; that’s the lesson
- I draw from this. Have forces in reserve. It was a hundred to one,
- George, that I was right--a hundred to one. I worked it out afterwards.
- And here we are spiked on the off-chance. If I’d have only kept back a
- little, I’d have had it on U.P. next day, like a shot, and come out on
- the rise. There you are!”
- His thoughts took a graver turn.
- “It’s where you’ll bump up against Chance like this, George, that you
- feel the need of religion. Your hard-and-fast scientific men--your
- Spencers and Huxleys--they don’t understand that. I do. I’ve thought
- of it a lot lately--in bed and about. I was thinking of it this morning
- while I shaved. It’s not irreverent for me to say it, I hope--but God
- comes in on the off-chance, George. See? Don’t you be too cocksure of
- anything, good or bad. That’s what I make out of it. I could have sworn.
- Well, do you think I--particular as I am--would have touched those Union
- Pacifics with trust money at all, if I hadn’t thought it a thoroughly
- good thing--good without spot or blemish?... And it was bad!
- “It’s a lesson to me. You start in to get a hundred percent. and you
- come out with that. It means, in a way, a reproof for Pride. I’ve
- thought of that, George--in the Night Watches. I was thinking this
- morning when I was shaving, that that’s where the good of it all comes
- in. At the bottom I’m a mystic in these affairs. You calculate you’re
- going to do this or that, but at bottom who knows at all WHAT he’s
- doing? When you most think you’re doing things, they’re being done right
- over your head. YOU’RE being done--in a sense. Take a hundred-to one
- chance, or one to a hundred--what does it matter? You’re being Led.”
- It’s odd that I heard this at the time with unutterable contempt, and
- now that I recall it--well, I ask myself, what have I got better?
- “I wish,” said I, becoming for a moment outrageous, “YOU were being Led
- to give me some account of my money, uncle.”
- “Not without a bit of paper to figure on, George, I can’t. But you trust
- me about that never fear. You trust me.”
- And in the end I had to.
- I think the bankruptcy hit my aunt pretty hard. There was, so far as I
- can remember now, a complete cessation of all those cheerful outbreaks
- of elasticity, no more skylarking in the shop nor scampering about the
- house. But there was no fuss that I saw, and only little signs in her
- complexion of the fits of weeping that must have taken her. She didn’t
- cry at the end, though to me her face with its strain of self-possession
- was more pathetic than any weeping. “Well” she said to me as she came
- through the shop to the cab, “Here’s old orf, George! Orf to Mome number
- two! Good-bye!” And she took me in her arms and kissed me and pressed me
- to her. Then she dived straight for the cab before I could answer her.
- My uncle followed, and he seemed to me a trifle too valiant and
- confident in his bearing for reality. He was unusually white in the
- face. He spoke to his successor at the counter. “Here we go!” he said.
- “One down, the other up. You’ll find it a quiet little business so long
- as you run it on quiet lines--a nice quiet little business. There’s
- nothing more? No? Well, if you want to know anything write to me. I’ll
- always explain fully. Anything--business, place or people. You’ll find
- Pil Antibil. a little overstocked by-the-by, I found it soothed my mind
- the day before yesterday making ‘em, and I made ‘em all day. Thousands!
- And where’s George? Ah! there you are! I’ll write to you, George, FULLY,
- about all that affair. Fully!”
- It became clear to me as if for the first time, that I was really
- parting from my aunt Susan. I went out on to the pavement and saw her
- head craned forward, her wide-open blue eyes and her little face intent
- on the shop that had combined for her all the charms of a big doll’s
- house and a little home of her very own. “Good-bye!” she said to it and
- to me. Our eyes met for a moment--perplexed. My uncle bustled out and
- gave a few totally unnecessary directions to the cabman and got in
- beside her. “All right?” asked the driver. “Right,” said I; and he woke
- up the horse with a flick of his whip. My aunt’s eyes surveyed me again.
- “Stick to your old science and things, George, and write and tell me
- when they make you a Professor,” she said cheerfully.
- She stared at me for a second longer with eyes growing wider and
- brighter and a smile that had become fixed, glanced again at the bright
- little shop still saying “Ponderevo” with all the emphasis of its
- fascia, and then flopped back hastily out of sight of me into the
- recesses of the cab. Then it had gone from before me and I beheld Mr.
- Snape, the hairdresser, inside his store regarding its departure with a
- quiet satisfaction and exchanging smiles and significant headshakes with
- Mr. Marbel.
- IV
- I was left, I say, as part of the lock, stock, and barrel, at
- Wimblehurst with my new master, a Mr. Mantell; who plays no part in the
- progress of this story except in so far as he effaced my uncle’s traces.
- So soon as the freshness of this new personality faded, I began to find
- Wimblehurst not only a dull but a lonely place, and to miss my aunt
- Susan immensely. The advertisements of the summer terms for Cough
- Linctus were removed; the bottles of coloured water--red, green, and
- yellow--restored to their places; the horse announcing veterinary
- medicine, which my uncle, sizzling all the while, had coloured in
- careful portraiture of a Goodwood favourite, rewhitened; and I turned
- myself even more resolutely than before to Latin (until the passing
- of my preliminary examination enabled me to drop that), and then to
- mathematics and science.
- There were classes in Electricity and Magnetism at the Grammar School. I
- took a little “elementary” prize in that in my first year and a medal
- in my third; and in Chemistry and Human Physiology and Sound, Light
- and Heat, I did well. There was also a lighter, more discursive
- subject called Physiography, in which one ranged among the sciences
- and encountered Geology as a process of evolution from Eozoon to Eastry
- House, and Astronomy as a record of celestial movements of the most
- austere and invariable integrity. I learnt out of badly-written,
- condensed little text-books, and with the minimum of experiment, but
- still I learnt. Only thirty years ago it was, and I remember I learnt of
- the electric light as an expensive, impracticable toy, the telephone as
- a curiosity, electric traction as a practical absurdity. There was no
- argon, no radium, no phagocytes--at least to my knowledge, and aluminium
- was a dear, infrequent metal. The fastest ships in the world went then
- at nineteen knots, and no one but a lunatic here and there ever thought
- it possible that men might fly.
- Many things have happened since then, but the last glance I had of
- Wimblehurst two years ago remarked no change whatever in its pleasant
- tranquillity. They had not even built any fresh houses--at least not
- actually in the town, though about the station there had been some
- building. But it was a good place to do work in, for all its quiescence.
- I was soon beyond the small requirements of the Pharmaceutical Society’s
- examination, and as they do not permit candidates to sit for that until
- one and twenty, I was presently filling up my time and preventing my
- studies becoming too desultory by making an attack upon the London
- University degree of Bachelor of Science, which impressed me then as
- a very splendid but almost impossible achievement. The degree
- in mathematics and chemistry appealed to me as particularly
- congenial--albeit giddily inaccessible. I set to work. I had presently
- to arrange a holiday and go to London to matriculate, and so it was I
- came upon my aunt and uncle again. In many ways that visit marked an
- epoch. It was my first impression of London at all. I was then nineteen,
- and by a conspiracy of chances my nearest approach to that human
- wilderness had been my brief visit to Chatham. Chatham too had been my
- largest town. So that I got London at last with an exceptional freshness
- of effect, as the sudden revelation of a whole unsuspected other side to
- life.
- I came to it on a dull and smoky day by the South Eastern Railway, and
- our train was half an hour late, stopping and going on and stopping
- again. I marked beyond Chiselhurst the growing multitude of villas,
- and so came stage by stage through multiplying houses and diminishing
- interspaces of market garden and dingy grass to regions of interlacing
- railway lines, big factories, gasometers and wide reeking swamps of
- dingy little homes, more of them and more and more. The number of these
- and their dinginess and poverty increased, and here rose a great public
- house and here a Board School and there a gaunt factory; and away to the
- east there loomed for a time a queer, incongruous forest of masts and
- spars. The congestion of houses intensified and piled up presently into
- tenements; I marveled more and more at this boundless world of dingy
- people; whiffs of industrial smell, of leather, of brewing, drifted into
- the carriage; the sky darkened, I rumbled thunderously over bridges,
- van-crowded streets, peered down on and crossed the Thames with an
- abrupt eclat of sound. I got an effect of tall warehouses, of grey
- water, barge crowded, of broad banks of indescribable mud, and then
- I was in Cannon Street Station--a monstrous dirty cavern with trains
- packed across its vast floor and more porters standing along the
- platform than I had ever been in my life before. I alighted with my
- portmanteau and struggled along, realising for the first time just how
- small and weak I could still upon occasion feel. In this world, I felt,
- an Honours medal in Electricity and magnetism counted for nothing at
- all.
- Afterwards I drove in a cab down a canon of rushing street between high
- warehouses, and peeped up astonished at the blackened greys of Saint
- Paul’s. The traffic of Cheapside--it was mostly in horse omnibuses in
- those days--seemed stupendous, its roar was stupendous; I wondered where
- the money came from to employ so many cabs, what industry could support
- the endless jostling stream of silk-hatted, frock-coated, hurrying men.
- Down a turning I found the Temperance Hotel Mr. Mantell had recommended
- to me. The porter in a green uniform who took over my portmanteau,
- seemed, I thought, to despise me a good deal.
- V
- Matriculation kept me for four full days and then came an afternoon
- to spare, and I sought out Tottenham Court Road through a perplexing
- network of various and crowded streets. But this London was vast! it was
- endless! it seemed the whole world had changed into packed frontages and
- hoardings and street spaces. I got there at last and made inquiries,
- and I found my uncle behind the counter of the pharmacy he managed, an
- establishment that did not impress me as doing a particularly high-class
- trade. “Lord!” he said at the sight of me, “I was wanting something to
- happen!”
- He greeted me warmly. I had grown taller, and he, I thought, had grown
- shorter and smaller and rounder but otherwise he was unchanged. He
- struck me as being rather shabby, and the silk hat he produced and put
- on, when, after mysterious negotiations in the back premises he achieved
- his freedom to accompany me, was past its first youth; but he was as
- buoyant and confident as ever.
- “Come to ask me about all THAT,” he cried. “I’ve never written yet.”
- “Oh, among other things,” said I, with a sudden regrettable politeness,
- and waived the topic of his trusteeship to ask after my aunt Susan.
- “We’ll have her out of it,” he said suddenly; “we’ll go somewhere. We
- don’t get you in London every day.”
- “It’s my first visit,” I said, “I’ve never seen London before”; and
- that made him ask me what I thought of it, and the rest of the talk was
- London, London, to the exclusion of all smaller topics. He took me up
- the Hampstead Road almost to the Cobden statue, plunged into some back
- streets to the left, and came at last to a blistered front door that
- responded to his latch-key, one of a long series of blistered front
- doors with fanlights and apartment cards above. We found ourselves in
- a drab-coloured passage that was not only narrow and dirty but
- desolatingly empty, and then he opened a door and revealed my aunt
- sitting at the window with a little sewing-machine on a bamboo
- occasional table before her, and “work”--a plum-coloured walking dress
- I judged at its most analytical stage--scattered over the rest of the
- apartment.
- At the first glance I judged my aunt was plumper than she had been, but
- her complexion was just as fresh and her China blue eye as bright as in
- the old days.
- “London,” she said, didn’t “get blacks” on her.
- She still “cheeked” my uncle, I was pleased to find. “What are you old
- Poking in for at THIS time--Gubbitt?” she said when he appeared, and
- she still looked with a practised eye for the facetious side of things.
- When she saw me behind him, she gave a little cry and stood up radiant.
- Then she became grave.
- I was surprised at my own emotion in seeing her. She held me at arm’s
- length for a moment, a hand on each shoulder, and looked at me with a
- sort of glad scrutiny. She seemed to hesitate, and then pecked little
- kiss off my cheek.
- “You’re a man, George,” she said, as she released me, and continued to
- look at me for a while.
- Their menage was one of a very common type in London. They occupied what
- is called the dining-room floor of a small house, and they had the use
- of a little inconvenient kitchen in the basement that had once been
- scullery. The two rooms, bedroom behind and living room in front, were
- separated by folding-doors that were never now thrown back, and indeed,
- in the presence of a visitor, not used at all. There was of course no
- bathroom or anything of that sort available, and there was no water
- supply except to the kitchen below. My aunt did all the domestic work,
- though she could have afforded to pay for help if the build of the place
- had not rendered that inconvenient to the pitch of impossibility. There
- was no sort of help available except that of indoor servants, for whom
- she had no accommodation. The furniture was their own; it was partly
- secondhand, but on the whole it seemed cheerful to my eye, and my aunt’s
- bias for cheap, gay-figured muslin had found ample score. In many ways
- I should think it must have been an extremely inconvenient and cramped
- sort of home, but at the time I took it, as I was taking everything, as
- being there and in the nature of things. I did not see the oddness of
- solvent decent people living in a habitation so clearly neither designed
- nor adapted for their needs, so wasteful of labour and so devoid of
- beauty as this was, and it is only now as I describe this that I find
- myself thinking of the essential absurdity of an intelligent community
- living in such makeshift homes. It strikes me now as the next thing to
- wearing second-hand clothes.
- You see it was a natural growth, part of that system to which
- Bladesover, I hold, is the key. There are wide regions of London, miles
- of streets of houses, that appear to have been originally designed for
- prosperous-middle-class homes of the early Victorian type. There must
- have been a perfect fury of such building in the thirties, forties, and
- fifties. Street after street must have been rushed into being, Campden
- Town way, Pentonville way, Brompton way, West Kensington way in the
- Victoria region and all over the minor suburbs of the south side.
- I am doubtful if many of these houses had any long use as the residences
- of single families if from the very first almost their tenants did not
- makeshift and take lodgers and sublet. They were built with basements,
- in which their servants worked and lived--servants of a more submissive
- and troglodytic generation who did not mind stairs. The dining-room
- (with folding doors) was a little above the ground level, and in that
- the wholesome boiled and roast with damp boiled potatoes and then pie
- to follow, was consumed and the numerous family read and worked in the
- evening, and above was the drawing-room (also with folding doors), where
- the infrequent callers were received. That was the vision at which those
- industrious builders aimed. Even while these houses were being run up,
- the threads upon the loom of fate were shaping to abolish altogether
- the type of household that would have fitted them. Means of transit were
- developing to carry the moderately prosperous middle-class families out
- of London, education and factory employment were whittling away at
- the supply of rough, hardworking, obedient girls who would stand
- the subterranean drudgery of these places, new classes of hard-up
- middle-class people such as my uncle, employees of various types, were
- coming into existence, for whom no homes were provided. None of these
- classes have ideas of what they ought to be, or fit in any legitimate
- way into the Bladesover theory that dominates our minds. It was nobody’s
- concern to see them housed under civilised conditions, and the beautiful
- laws of supply and demand had free play. They had to squeeze in. The
- landlords came out financially intact from their blundering enterprise.
- More and more these houses fell into the hands of married artisans, or
- struggling widows or old servants with savings, who became responsible
- for the quarterly rent and tried to sweat a living by sub-letting
- furnished or unfurnished apartments.
- I remember now that a poor grey-haired old woman who had an air of
- having been roused from a nap in the dust bin, came out into the area
- and looked up at us as we three went out from the front door to “see
- London” under my uncle’s direction. She was the sub-letting occupier;
- she squeezed out a precarious living by taking the house whole and
- sub-letting it in detail and she made her food and got the shelter of an
- attic above and a basement below by the transaction. And if she didn’t
- chance to “let” steadily, out she went to pauperdom and some other poor,
- sordid old adventurer tried in her place....
- It is a foolish community that can house whole classes, useful and
- helpful, honest and loyal classes, in such squalidly unsuitable
- dwellings. It is by no means the social economy it seems, to use up old
- women, savings and inexperience in order to meet the landlord’s demands.
- But any one who doubts this thing is going on right up to to-day need
- only spend an afternoon in hunting for lodgings in any of the regions of
- London I have named.
- But where has my story got to? My uncle, I say, decided I must be shown
- London, and out we three went as soon as my aunt had got her hat on, to
- catch all that was left of the day.
- VI
- It pleased my uncle extremely to find I had never seen London before. He
- took possession of the metropolis forthwith. “London, George,” he said,
- “takes a lot of understanding. It’s a great place. Immense. The richest
- town in the world, the biggest port, the greatest manufacturing town,
- the Imperial city--the centre of civilisation, the heart of the world!
- See those sandwich men down there! That third one’s hat! Fair treat! You
- don’t see poverty like that in Wimblehurst George! And many of them high
- Oxford honour men too. Brought down by drink! It’s a wonderful place,
- George--a whirlpool, a maelstrom! whirls you up and whirls you down.”
- I have a very confused memory of that afternoon’s inspection of
- London. My uncle took us to and fro showing us over his London, talking
- erratically, following a route of his own. Sometimes we were walking,
- sometimes we were on the tops of great staggering horse omnibuses in
- a heaving jumble of traffic, and at one point we had tea in an Aerated
- Bread Shop. But I remember very distinctly how we passed down Park Lane
- under an overcast sky, and how my uncle pointed out the house of this
- child of good fortune and that with succulent appreciation.
- I remember, too, that as he talked I would find my aunt watching my face
- as if to check the soundness of his talk by my expression.
- “Been in love yet, George?” she asked suddenly, over a bun in the
- tea-shop.
- “Too busy, aunt,” I told her.
- She bit her bun extensively, and gesticulated with the remnant to
- indicate that she had more to say.
- “How are YOU going to make your fortune?” she said so soon as she could
- speak again. “You haven’t told us that.”
- “‘Lectricity,” said my uncle, taking breath after a deep draught of tea.
- “If I make it at all,” I said. “For my part I think shall be satisfied
- with something less than a fortune.”
- “We’re going to make ours--suddenly,” she said.
- “So HE old says.” She jerked her head at my uncle.
- “He won’t tell me when--so I can’t get anything ready. But it’s
- coming. Going to ride in our carriage and have a garden. Garden--like a
- bishop’s.”
- She finished her bun and twiddled crumbs from her fingers. “I shall be
- glad of the garden,” she said. “It’s going to be a real big one with
- rosaries and things. Fountains in it. Pampas grass. Hothouses.”
- “You’ll get it all right,” said my uncle, who had reddened a little.
- “Grey horses in the carriage, George,” she said. “It’s nice to think
- about when one’s dull. And dinners in restaurants often and often. And
- theatres--in the stalls. And money and money and money.”
- “You may joke,” said my uncle, and hummed for a moment.
- “Just as though an old Porpoise like him would ever make money,”
- she said, turning her eyes upon his profile with a sudden lapse to
- affection. “He’ll just porpoise about.”
- “I’ll do something,” said my uncle, “you bet! Zzzz!” and rapped with a
- shilling on the marble table.
- “When you do you’ll have to buy me a new pair of gloves,” she said,
- “anyhow. That finger’s past mending. Look! you Cabbage--you.” And she
- held the split under his nose, and pulled a face of comical fierceness.
- My uncle smiled at these sallies at the time, but afterwards, when I
- went back with him to the Pharmacy--the low-class business grew brisker
- in the evening and they kept open late--he reverted to it in a low
- expository tone. “Your aunt’s a bit impatient, George. She gets at me.
- It’s only natural.... A woman doesn’t understand how long it takes
- to build up a position. No.... In certain directions now--I
- am--quietly--building up a position. Now here.... I get this room. I
- have my three assistants. Zzzz. It’s a position that, judged by the
- criterion of imeedjit income, isn’t perhaps so good as I deserve,
- but strategically--yes. It’s what I want. I make my plans. I rally my
- attack.”
- “What plans,” I said, “are you making?”
- “Well, George, there’s one thing you can rely upon, I’m doing nothing in
- a hurry. I turn over this one and that, and I don’t talk--indiscreetly.
- There’s--No! I don’t think I can tell you that. And yet, why NOT?”
- He got up and closed the door into the shop. “I’ve told no one,” he
- remarked, as he sat down again. “I owe you something.”
- His face flushed slightly, he leant forward over the little table
- towards me.
- “Listen!” he said.
- I listened.
- “Tono-Bungay,” said my uncle very slowly and distinctly.
- I thought he was asking me to hear some remote, strange noise. “I don’t
- hear anything,” I said reluctantly to his expectant face. He smiled
- undefeated. “Try again,” he said, and repeated, “Tono-Bungay.”
- “Oh, THAT!” I said.
- “Eh?” said he.
- “But what is it?”
- “Ah!” said my uncle, rejoicing and expanding. “What IS it? That’s
- what you got to ask? What won’t it be?” He dug me violently in what he
- supposed to be my ribs. “George,” he cried--“George, watch this place!
- There’s more to follow.”
- And that was all I could get from him.
- That, I believe, was the very first time that the words Tono-Bungay ever
- heard on earth--unless my uncle indulged in monologues in his chamber--a
- highly probable thing. Its utterance certainly did not seem to me at the
- time to mark any sort of epoch, and had I been told this word was the
- Open Sesame to whatever pride and pleasure the grimy front of London hid
- from us that evening, I should have laughed aloud.
- “Coming now to business,” I said after a pause, and with a chill sense
- of effort; and I opened the question of his trust.
- My uncle sighed, and leant back in his chair. “I wish I could make all
- this business as clear to you as it is to me,” he said. “However--Go on!
- Say what you have to say.”
- VII
- After I left my uncle that evening I gave way to a feeling of profound
- depression. My uncle and aunt seemed to me to be leading--I have already
- used the word too often, but I must use it again--DINGY lives. They
- seemed to be adrift in a limitless crowd of dingy people, wearing shabby
- clothes, living uncomfortably in shabby second-hand houses, going to and
- fro on pavements that had always a thin veneer of greasy, slippery mud,
- under grey skies that showed no gleam of hope of anything for them but
- dinginess until they died. It seemed absolutely clear to me that my
- mother’s little savings had been swallowed up and that my own prospect
- was all too certainly to drop into and be swallowed up myself sooner
- or later by this dingy London ocean. The London that was to be an
- adventurous escape from the slumber of Wimblehurst, had vanished from my
- dreams. I saw my uncle pointing to the houses in Park Lane and showing
- a frayed shirt-cuff as he did so. I heard my aunt: “I’m to ride in my
- carriage then. So he old says.”
- My feelings towards my uncle were extraordinarily mixed. I was intensely
- sorry not only for my aunt Susan but for him--for it seemed indisputable
- that as they were living then so they must go on--and at the same time I
- was angry with the garrulous vanity and illness that had elipped all
- my chance of independent study, and imprisoned her in those grey
- apartments. When I got back to Wimblehurst I allowed myself to write
- him a boyishly sarcastic and sincerely bitter letter. He never replied.
- Then, believing it to be the only way of escape for me, I set myself far
- more grimly and resolutely to my studies than I had ever done before.
- After a time I wrote to him in more moderate terms, and he answered
- me evasively. And then I tried to dismiss him from my mind and went on
- working.
- Yes, that first raid upon London under the moist and chilly depression
- of January had an immense effect upon me. It was for me an epoch-making
- disappointment. I had thought of London as a large, free, welcoming,
- adventurous place, and I saw it slovenly and harsh and irresponsive.
- I did not realise at all what human things might be found behind
- those grey frontages, what weakness that whole forbidding facade might
- presently confess. It is the constant error of youth to over-estimate
- the Will in things. I did not see that the dirt, the discouragement, the
- discomfort of London could be due simply to the fact that London was
- a witless old giantess of a town, too slack and stupid to keep herself
- clean and maintain a brave face to the word. No! I suffered from the
- sort of illusion that burnt witches in the seventeenth century. I
- endued her grubby disorder with a sinister and magnificent quality of
- intention.
- And my uncle’s gestures and promises filled me with doubt and a sort of
- fear for him. He seemed to me a lost little creature, too silly to be
- silent, in a vast implacable condemnation. I was full of pity and a sort
- of tenderness for my aunt Susan, who was doomed to follow his erratic
- fortunes mocked by his grandiloquent promises.
- I was to learn better. But I worked with the terror of the grim
- underside of London in my soul during all my last year at Wimblehurst.
- BOOK THE SECOND
- THE RISE OF TONO-BUNGAY
- CHAPTER THE FIRST
- HOW I BECAME A LONDON STUDENT AND WENT ASTRAY
- I came to live in London, as I shall tell you, when I was nearly
- twenty-two. Wimblehurst dwindles in perspective, is now in this book a
- little place far off, Bladesover no more than a small pinkish speck
- of frontage among the distant Kentish hills; the scene broadens
- out, becomes multitudinous and limitless, full of the sense of vast
- irrelevant movement. I do not remember my second coming to London as I
- do my first, for my early impressions, save that an October memory of
- softened amber sunshine stands out, amber sunshine falling on grey house
- fronts I know not where. That, and a sense of a large tranquillity.
- I could fill a book, I think, with a more or less imaginary account
- of how I came to apprehend London, how first in one aspect and then in
- another it grew in my mind. Each day my accumulating impressions were
- added to and qualified and brought into relationship with new ones; they
- fused inseparably with others that were purely personal and accidental.
- I find myself with a certain comprehensive perception of London,
- complete indeed, incurably indistinct in places and yet in some way a
- whole that began with my first visit and is still being mellowed and
- enriched.
- London!
- At first, no doubt, it was a chaos of streets and people and buildings
- and reasonless going to and fro. I do not remember that I ever struggled
- very steadily to understand it, or explored it with any but a personal
- and adventurous intention. Yet in time there has grown up in me a kind
- of theory of London; I do think I see lines of an ordered structure out
- of which it has grown, detected a process that is something more than
- a confusion of casual accidents though indeed it may be no more than a
- process of disease.
- I said at the outset of my first book that I find in Bladesover the
- clue to all England. Well, I certainly imagine it is the clue to the
- structure of London. There have been no revolutions no deliberate
- restatements or abandonments of opinion in England since the days of
- the fine gentry, since 1688 or thereabouts, the days when Bladesover was
- built; there have been changes, dissolving forest replacing forest, if
- you will; but then it was that the broad lines of the English system
- set firmly. And as I have gone to and fro in London in certain regions
- constantly the thought has recurred this is Bladesover House, this
- answers to Bladesover House. The fine gentry may have gone; they have
- indeed largely gone, I think; rich merchants may have replaced them,
- financial adventurers or what not. That does not matter; the shape is
- still Bladesover.
- I am most reminded of Bladesover and Eastry by all those regions round
- about the West End parks; for example, estate parks, each more or less
- in relation to a palace or group of great houses. The roads and back
- ways of Mayfair and all about St. James’s again, albeit perhaps of a
- later growth in point of time, were of the very spirit and architectural
- texture of the Bladesover passages and yards; they had the same smells,
- the space, the large cleanest and always going to and fro where one
- met unmistakable Olympians and even more unmistakable valets, butlers,
- footmen in mufti. There were moments when I seemed to glimpse down areas
- the white panelling, the very chintz of my mother’s room again.
- I could trace out now on a map what I would call the Great-House region;
- passing south-westward into Belgravia, becoming diffused and sporadic
- westward, finding its last systematic outbreak round and about Regent’s
- Park. The Duke of Devonshire’s place in Piccadilly, in all its insolent
- ugliness, pleases me particularly; it is the quintessence of the thing;
- Apsley House is all in the manner of my theory, Park Lane has its quite
- typical mansions, and they run along the border of the Green Park and
- St. James’s. And I struck out a truth one day in Cromwell Road quite
- suddenly, as I looked over the Natural History Museum “By Jove,” said I
- “but this is the little assemblage of cases of stuffed birds and
- animals upon the Bladesover staircase grown enormous, and yonder as the
- corresponding thing to the Bladesover curios and porcelain is the Art
- Museume and there in the little observatories in Exhibition Road is old
- Sir Cuthbert’s Gregorian telescope that I hunted out in the storeroom
- and put together.” And diving into the Art Museum under this
- inspiration, I came to a little reading-room and found as I had
- inferred, old brown books!
- It was really a good piece of social comparative anatomy I did that
- day; all these museums and libraries that are dotted over London between
- Piccadilly and West Kensington, and indeed the museum and library
- movement throughout the world, sprang from the elegant leisure of the
- gentlemen of taste. Theirs were the first libraries, the first houses
- of culture; by my rat-like raids into the Bladesover saloon I became,
- as it were, the last dwindled representative of such a man of letters
- as Swift. But now these things have escaped out of the Great House
- altogether, and taken on a strange independent life of their own.
- It is this idea of escaping parts from the seventeenth century system of
- Bladesover, of proliferating and overgrowing elements from the Estates,
- that to this day seems to me the best explanation, not simply of London,
- but of all England. England is a country of great Renascence landed
- gentlefolk who have been unconsciously outgrown and overgrown. The
- proper shops for Bladesover custom were still to be found in Regent
- Street and Bond Street in my early London days in those days they
- had been but lightly touched by the American’s profaning hand--and in
- Piccadilly. I found the doctor’s house of the country village or country
- town up and down Harley Street, multiplied but not otherwise different,
- and the family solicitor (by the hundred) further eastward in the
- abandoned houses of a previous generation of gentlepeople, and down in
- Westminster, behind Palladian fronts, the public offices sheltered
- in large Bladesoverish rooms and looked out on St. James’s Park. The
- Parliament Houses of lords and gentlemen, the parliament house that was
- horrified when merchants and brewers came thrusting into it a hundred
- years ago, stood out upon its terrace gathering the whole system
- together into a head.
- And the more I have paralleled these things with my Bladesover-Eastry
- model, the more evident it has become to me that the balance is not the
- same, and the more evident is the presence of great new forces, blind
- forces of invasion, of growth. The railway termini on the north side of
- London have been kept as remote as Eastry had kept the railway-station
- from Wimblehurst, they stop on the very outskirts of the estates, but
- from the south, the South Eastern railway had butted its great stupid
- rusty iron head of Charing Cross station, that great head that came
- smashing down in 1905--clean across the river, between Somerset House
- and Whitehall. The south side had no protecting estate. Factory chimneys
- smoke right over against Westminster with an air of carelessly not
- having permission, and the whole effect of industrial London and of all
- London east of Temple Bar and of the huge dingy immensity of London
- port is to me of something disproportionately large, something morbidly
- expanded, without plan or intention, dark and sinister toward the
- clean clear social assurance of the West End. And south of this central
- London, south-east, south-west, far west, north-west, all round the
- northern hills, are similar disproportionate growths, endless streets
- of undistinguished houses, undistinguished industries, shabby families,
- second-rate shops, inexplicable people who in a once fashionable phrase
- do not “exist.” All these aspects have suggested to my mind at times,
- do suggest to this day, the unorganised, abundant substance of some
- tumorous growth-process, a process which indeed bursts all the outlines
- of the affected carcass and protrudes such masses as ignoble comfortable
- Croydon, as tragic impoverished West Ham. To this day I ask myself
- will those masses ever become structural, will they indeed shape
- into anything new whatever, or is that cancerous image their true and
- ultimate diagnosis?...
- Moreover, together with this hypertrophy there is an immigration of
- elements that have never understood and never will understand the great
- tradition, wedges of foreign settlement embedded in the heart of this
- yeasty English expansion. One day I remember wandering eastward out
- of pure curiosity--it must have been in my early student days--and
- discovering a shabbily bright foreign quarter, shops displaying
- Hebrew placards and weird, unfamiliar commodities and a concourse of
- bright-eyed, eagle-nosed people talking some incomprehensible gibberish
- between the shops and the barrows. And soon I became quite familiar with
- the devious, vicious, dirtily-pleasant eroticism of Soho. I found those
- crowded streets a vast relief from the dull grey exterior of Brompton
- where I lodged and lived my daily life. In Soho, indeed, I got my first
- inkling of the factor of replacement that is so important in both the
- English and the American process.
- Even in the West End, in Mayfair and the square, about Pall Mall, Ewart
- was presently to remind me the face of the old aristocratic dignity was
- fairer than its substance; here were actors and actresses, here money
- lenders and Jews, here bold financial adventurers, and I thought of my
- uncle’s frayed cuff as he pointed out this house in Park Lane and
- that. That was so and so’s who made a corner in borax, and that palace
- belonged to that hero among modern adventurers, Barmentrude, who used
- to be an I.D.B.,--an illicit diamond buyer that is to say. A city of
- Bladesovers, the capital of a kingdom of Bladesovers, all much shaken
- and many altogether in decay, parasitically occupied, insidiously
- replaced by alien, unsympathetic and irresponsible elements; and with
- a ruling an adventitious and miscellaneous empire of a quarter of this
- daedal earth complex laws, intricate social necessities, disturbing
- insatiable suggestions, followed from this. Such was the world into
- which I had come, into which I had in some way to thrust myself and fit
- my problem, my temptations, my efforts, my patriotic instinct, all my
- moral instincts, my physical appetites, my dreams and my sanity.
- London! I came up to it, young and without advisers, rather
- priggish, rather dangerously open-minded and very open-eyed, and with
- something--it is, I think, the common gift of imaginative youth, and I
- claim it unblushingly--fine in me, finer than the world and seeking fine
- responses. I did not want simply to live or simply to live happily or
- well; I wanted to serve and do and make--with some nobility. It was in
- me. It is in half the youth of the world.
- II
- I had come to London as a scholar. I had taken the Vincent Bradley
- scholarship of the Pharmaceutical Society, but I threw this up when I
- found that my work of the Science and Art Department in mathematics,
- physics and chemistry had given me one of the minor Technical Board
- Scholarships at the Consolidated Technical Schools at South Kensington.
- This latter was in mechanics and metallurgy; and I hesitated between the
- two. The Vincent Bradley gave me L70 a year and quite the best start-off
- a pharmaceutical chemist could have; the South Kensington thing was
- worth about twenty-two shillings a week, and the prospects it opened
- were vague. But it meant far more scientific work than the former, and I
- was still under the impulse of that great intellectual appetite that is
- part of the adolescence of men of my type. Moreover it seemed to lead
- towards engineering, in which I imagined--I imagine to this day--my
- particular use is to be found. I took its greater uncertainty as a fair
- risk. I came up very keen, not doubting that the really hard and steady
- industry that had carried me through Wimblehurst would go on still in
- the new surroundings.
- Only from the very first it didn’t....
- When I look back now at my Wimblehurst days, I still find myself
- surprised at the amount of steady grinding study, of strenuous
- self-discipline that I maintained throughout my apprenticeship. In many
- ways I think that time was the most honourable period in my life. I wish
- I could say with a certain mind that my motives in working so well were
- large and honourable too. To a certain extent they were so; there was
- a fine sincere curiosity, a desire for the strength and power of
- scientific knowledge and a passion for intellectual exercise; but I
- do not think those forces alone would have kept me at it so grimly
- and closely if Wimblehurst had not been so dull, so limited and so
- observant. Directly I came into the London atmosphere, tasting freedom,
- tasting irresponsibility and the pull of new forces altogether, my
- discipline fell from me like a garment. Wimblehurst to a youngster in my
- position offered no temptations worth counting, no interests to conflict
- with study, no vices--such vices as it offered were coarsely stripped of
- any imaginative glamourfull drunkenness, clumsy leering shameful lust,
- no social intercourse even to waste one’s time, and on the other hand it
- would minister greatly to the self-esteem of a conspicuously industrious
- student. One was marked as “clever,” one played up to the part, and
- one’s little accomplishment stood out finely in one’s private reckoning
- against the sunlit small ignorance of that agreeable place. One went
- with an intent rush across the market square, one took one’s exercise
- with as dramatic a sense of an ordered day as an Oxford don, one burnt
- the midnight oil quite consciously at the rare respectful, benighted
- passer-by. And one stood out finely in the local paper with one’s
- unapproachable yearly harvest of certificates. Thus I was not only a
- genuinely keen student, but also a little of a prig and poseur in those
- days--and the latter kept the former at it, as London made clear.
- Moreover Wimblehurst had given me no outlet in any other direction.
- But I did not realise all this when I came to London, did not perceive
- how the change of atmosphere began at once to warp and distribute my
- energies. In the first place I became invisible. If I idled for a day,
- no one except my fellow-students (who evidently had no awe for me)
- remarked it. No one saw my midnight taper; no one pointed me out as I
- crossed the street as an astonishing intellectual phenomenon. In the
- next place I became inconsiderable. In Wimblehurst I felt I stood for
- Science; nobody there seemed to have so much as I and to have it so
- fully and completely. In London I walked ignorant in an immensity, and
- it was clear that among my fellow-students from the midlands and the
- north I was ill-equipped and under-trained. With the utmost exertion I
- should only take a secondary position among them. And finally, in the
- third place, I was distracted by voluminous new interests; London took
- hold of me, and Science, which had been the universe, shrank back to the
- dimensions of tiresome little formulae compacted in a book. I came to
- London in late September, and it was a very different London from
- that great greyly-overcast, smoke-stained house-wilderness of my first
- impressions. I reached it by Victoria and not by Cannon Street, and its
- centre was now in Exhibition Road. It shone, pale amber, blue-grey
- and tenderly spacious and fine under clear autumnal skies, a London of
- hugely handsome buildings and vistas and distances, a London of gardens
- and labyrinthine tall museums, of old trees and remote palaces and
- artificial waters. I lodged near by in West Brompton at a house in a
- little square.
- So London faced me the second time, making me forget altogether for a
- while the grey, drizzling city visage that had first looked upon me. I
- settled down and went to and fro to my lectures and laboratory; in
- the beginning I worked hard, and only slowly did the curiosity that
- presently possessed me to know more of this huge urban province arise,
- the desire to find something beyond mechanism that I could serve, some
- use other than learning. With this was a growing sense of loneliness,
- a desire for adventure and intercourse. I found myself in the evenings
- poring over a map of London I had bought, instead of copying out lecture
- notes--and on Sundays I made explorations, taking omnibus rides east and
- west and north and south, and to enlarging and broadening the sense of
- great swarming hinterlands of humanity with whom I had no dealings, of
- whom I knew nothing....
- The whole illimitable place teemed with suggestions of indefinite and
- sometimes outrageous possibility, of hidden but magnificent meanings.
- It wasn’t simply that I received a vast impression of space and
- multitude and opportunity; intimate things also were suddenly dragged
- from neglected, veiled and darkened corners into an acute vividness of
- perception. Close at hand in the big art museum I came for the first
- time upon the beauty of nudity, which I had hitherto held to be a
- shameful secret, flaunted and gloried in; I was made aware of beauty
- as not only permissible, but desirable and frequent and of a thousand
- hitherto unsuspected rich aspects of life. One night in a real rapture,
- I walked round the upper gallery of the Albert Hall and listened for
- the first time to great music; I believe now that it was a rendering of
- Beethoven’s Ninth Symphony....
- My apprehension of spaces and places was reinforced by a quickened
- apprehension of persons. A constant stream of people passed by me,
- eyes met and challenged mine and passed--more and more I wanted then to
- stay--if I went eastward towards Piccadilly, women who seemed then to my
- boyish inexperience softly splendid and alluring, murmured to me as
- they passed. Extraordinarily life unveiled. The very hoardings clamoured
- strangely at one’s senses and curiosities. One bought pamphlets and
- papers full of strange and daring ideas transcending one’s boldest; in
- the parks one heard men discussing the very existence of God, denying
- the rights of property, debating a hundred things that one dared not
- think about in Wimblehurst. And after the ordinary overcast day, after
- dull mornings, came twilight, and London lit up and became a thing of
- white and yellow and red jewels of light and wonderful floods of golden
- illumination and stupendous and unfathomable shadows--and there were
- no longer any mean or shabby people--but a great mysterious movement of
- unaccountable beings....
- Always I was coming on the queerest new aspects. Late one Saturday night
- I found myself one of a great slow-moving crowd between the blazing
- shops and the flaring barrows in the Harrow Road; I got into
- conversation with two bold-eyed girls, bought them boxes of chocolate,
- made the acquaintance of father and mother and various younger brothers
- and sisters, sat in a public-house hilariously with them all, standing
- and being stood drinks, and left them in the small hours at the door
- of “home,” never to see them again. And once I was accosted on
- the outskirts of a Salvation Army meeting in one of the parks by a
- silk-hatted young man of eager and serious discourse, who argued against
- scepticism with me, invited me home to tea into a clean and cheerful
- family of brothers and sisters and friends, and there I spent
- the evening singing hymns to the harmonium (which reminded me of
- half-forgotten Chatham), and wishing all the sisters were not so
- obviously engaged....
- Then on the remote hill of this boundless city-world I found Ewart.
- III
- How well I remember the first morning, a bright Sunday morning in early
- October, when I raided in upon Ewart! I found my old schoolfellow in
- bed in a room over an oil-shop in a back street at the foot of Highgate
- Hill. His landlady, a pleasant, dirty young woman with soft-brown eyes,
- brought down his message for me to come up; and up I went. The room
- presented itself as ample and interesting in detail and shabby with a
- quite commendable shabbiness. I had an impression of brown walls--they
- were papered with brown paper--of a long shelf along one side of the
- room, with dusty plaster casts and a small cheap lay figure of a horse,
- of a table and something of grey wax partially covered with a cloth,
- and of scattered drawings. There was a gas stove in one corner, and some
- enameled ware that had been used for overnight cooking. The oilcloth on
- the floor was streaked with a peculiar white dust. Ewart himself was not
- in the first instance visible, but only a fourfold canvas screen at the
- end of the room from which shouts proceeded of “Come on!” then his wiry
- black hair, very much rumpled, and a staring red-brown eye and his stump
- of a nose came round the edge of this at a height of about three feet
- from the ground “It’s old Ponderevo!” he said, “the Early bird! And he’s
- caught the worm! By Jove, but it’s cold this morning! Come round here
- and sit on the bed!”
- I walked round, wrung his hand, and we surveyed one another.
- He was lying on a small wooden fold-up bed, the scanty covering of which
- was supplemented by an overcoat and an elderly but still cheerful pair
- of check trousers, and he was wearing pajamas of a virulent pink and
- green. His neck seemed longer and more stringy than it had been even in
- our schooldays, and his upper lip had a wiry black moustache. The rest
- of his ruddy, knobby countenance, his erratic hair and his general hairy
- leanness had not even--to my perceptions grown.
- “By Jove!” he said, “you’ve got quite decent-looking, Ponderevo! What do
- you think of me?”
- “You’re all right. What are you doing here?”
- “Art, my son--sculpture! And incidentally--” He hesitated. “I ply a
- trade. Will you hand me that pipe and those smoking things? So!
- You can’t make coffee, eh? Well, try your hand. Cast down this
- screen--no--fold it up and so we’ll go into the other room. I’ll keep
- in bed all the same. The fire’s a gas stove. Yes. Don’t make it bang.
- too loud as you light it--I can’t stand it this morning. You won’t smoke
- ... Well, it does me good to see you again, Ponderevo. Tell me what
- you’re doing, and how you’re getting on.”
- He directed me in the service of his simple hospitality, and presently
- I came back to his bed and sat down and smiled at him there, smoking
- comfortably, with his hands under his head, surveying me.
- “How’s Life’s Morning, Ponderevo? By Jove, it must be nearly six years
- since we met! They’ve got moustaches. We’ve fleshed ourselves a bit, eh?
- And you?”
- I felt a pipe was becoming after all, and that lit, I gave him a
- favourable sketch of my career.
- “Science! And you’ve worked like that! While I’ve been potting round
- doing odd jobs for stone-masons and people, and trying to get to
- sculpture. I’ve a sort of feeling that the chisel--I began with
- painting, Ponderevo, and found I was colour-blind, colour-blind
- enough to stop it. I’ve drawn about and thought about--thought more
- particularly. I give myself three days a week as an art student, and the
- rest of the time I’ve a sort of trade that keeps me. And we’re still
- in the beginning of things, young men starting. Do you remember the
- old times at Goudhurst, our doll’s-house island, the Retreat of the Ten
- Thousand Young Holmes and the rabbits, eh? It’s surprising, if you think
- of it, to find we are still young. And we used to talk of what we would
- be, and we used to talk of love! I suppose you know all about that now,
- Ponderevo?”
- I finished and hesitated on some vague foolish lie, “No,” I said, a
- little ashamed of the truth. “Do you? I’ve been too busy.”
- “I’m just beginning--just as we were then. Things happen.”
- He sucked at his pipe for a space and stared at the plaster cast of a
- flayed hand that hung on the wall.
- “The fact is, Ponderevo, I’m beginning to find life a most extraordinary
- queer set-out; the things that pull one, the things that don’t. The
- wants--This business of sex. It’s a net. No end to it, no way out of it,
- no sense in it. There are times when women take possession of me, when
- my mind is like a painted ceiling at Hampton Court with the pride of
- the flesh sprawling all over it. WHY?... And then again sometimes when
- I have to encounter a woman, I am overwhelmed by a terror of tantalising
- boredom--I fly, I hide, I do anything. You’ve got your scientific
- explanations perhaps; what’s Nature and the universe up to in that
- matter?”
- “It’s her way, I gather, of securing the continuity of the species.”
- “But it doesn’t,” said Ewart. “That’s just it! No. I have succumbed
- to--dissipation--down the hill there. Euston Road way. And it was damned
- ugly and mean, and I hate having done it. And the continuity of the
- species--Lord!... And why does Nature make a man so infernally ready for
- drinks? There’s no sense in that anyhow.” He sat up in bed, to put this
- question with the greater earnestness. “And why has she given me a most
- violent desire towards sculpture and an equally violent desire to leave
- off work directly I begin it, eh?... Let’s have some more coffee. I put
- it to you, these things puzzle me, Ponderevo. They dishearten me. They
- keep me in bed.”
- He had an air of having saved up these difficulties for me for some
- time. He sat with his chin almost touching his knees, sucking at his
- pipe.
- “That’s what I mean,” he went on, “when I say life is getting on to me
- as extraordinarily queer, I don’t see my game, nor why I was invited.
- And I don’t make anything of the world outside either. What do you make
- of it?”
- “London,” I began. “It’s--so enormous!”
- “Isn’t it! And it’s all up to nothing. You find chaps keeping grocers’
- shops--why the DEVIL, Ponderevo, do they keep grocers’ shops? They
- all do it very carefully, very steadily, very meanly. You find people
- running about and doing the most remarkable things being policemen, for
- example, and burglars. They go about these businesses quite gravely and
- earnestly. I somehow--can’t go about mine. Is there any sense in it at
- all--anywhere?”
- “There must be sense in it,” I said. “We’re young.”
- “We’re young--yes. But one must inquire. The grocer’s a grocer because,
- I suppose, he sees he comes in there. Feels that on the whole it amounts
- to a call.... But the bother is I don’t see where I come in at all. Do
- you?”
- “Where you come in?”
- “No, where you come in.”
- “Not exactly, yet,” I said. “I want to do some good in the
- world--something--something effectual, before I die. I have a sort of
- idea my scientific work--I don’t know.”
- “Yes,” he mused. “And I’ve got a sort of idea my sculpture,--but now it
- is to come in and WHY,--I’ve no idea at all.” He hugged his knees for a
- space. “That’s what puzzles me, Ponderevo, no end.”
- He became animated. “If you will look in that cupboard,” he said,
- “you will find an old respectable looking roll on a plate and a knife
- somewhere and a gallipot containing butter. You give them me and I’ll
- make my breakfast, and then if you don’t mind watching me paddle about
- at my simple toilet I’ll get up. Then we’ll go for a walk and talk about
- this affair of life further. And about Art and Literature and anything
- else that crops up on the way.... Yes, that’s the gallipot. Cockroach
- got in it? Chuck him out--damned interloper....”
- So in the first five minutes of our talk, as I seem to remember it
- now, old Ewart struck the note that ran through all that morning’s
- intercourse....
- To me it was a most memorable talk because it opened out quite new
- horizons of thought. I’d been working rather close and out of touch
- with Ewart’s free gesticulating way. He was pessimistic that day and
- sceptical to the very root of things. He made me feel clearly, what
- I had not felt at all before, the general adventurousness of life,
- particularly of life at the stage we had reached, and also the absence
- of definite objects, of any concerted purpose in the lives that were
- going on all round us. He made me feel, too, how ready I was to take up
- commonplace assumptions. Just as I had always imagined that somewhere
- in social arrangements there was certainly a Head-Master who would
- intervene if one went too far, so I had always had a sort of implicit
- belief that in our England there were somewhere people who understood
- what we were all, as a nation, about. That crumpled into his pit of
- doubt and vanished.
- He brought out, sharply cut and certain, the immense effect of
- purposelessness in London that I was already indistinctly feeling. We
- found ourselves at last returning through Highgate Cemetery and Waterlow
- Park--and Ewart was talking.
- “Look at it there,” he said, stopping and pointing to the great vale of
- London spreading wide and far. “It’s like a sea--and we swim in it. And
- at last down we go, and then up we come--washed up here.” He swung
- his arms to the long slopes about us, tombs and headstones in long
- perspectives, in limitless rows.
- “We’re young, Ponderevo, but sooner or later our whitened memories will
- wash up on one of these beaches, on some such beach as this. George
- Ponderevo, F.R.S., Sidney Ewart, R.I.P. Look at the rows of ‘em!”
- He paused. “Do you see that hand? The hand, I mean, pointing upward,
- on the top of a blunted obelisk. Yes. Well, that’s what I do for a
- living--when I’m not thinking, or drinking, or prowling, or making love,
- or pretending I’m trying to be a sculptor without either the money
- or the morals for a model. See? And I do those hearts afire and those
- pensive angel guardians with the palm of peace. Damned well I do ‘em and
- damned cheap! I’m a sweated victim, Ponderevo...”
- That was the way of it, anyhow. I drank deep of talk that day; we went
- into theology, into philosophy; I had my first glimpse of socialism. I
- felt as though I had been silent in a silence since I and he had parted.
- At the thought of socialism Ewart’s moods changed for a time to a sort
- of energy. “After all, all this confounded vagueness might be altered.
- If you could get men to work together...”
- It was a good talk that rambled through all the universe. I thought I
- was giving my mind refreshment, but indeed it was dissipation. All sorts
- of ideas, even now, carry me back as it were to a fountain-head, to
- Waterlow Park and my resuscitated Ewart. There stretches away south
- of us long garden slopes and white gravestones and the wide expanse of
- London, and somewhere in the picture is a red old wall, sun-warmed, and
- a great blaze of Michaelmas daisies set off with late golden sunflowers
- and a drift of mottled, blood-red, fallen leaves. It was with me that
- day as though I had lifted my head suddenly out of dull and immediate
- things and looked at life altogether.... But it played the very devil
- with the copying up of my arrears of notes to which I had vowed the
- latter half of that day.
- After that reunion Ewart and I met much and talked much, and in our
- subsequent encounters his monologue was interrupted and I took my share.
- He had exercised me so greatly that I lay awake at nights thinking
- him over, and discoursed and answered him in my head as I went in the
- morning to the College. I am by nature a doer and only by the way a
- critic; his philosophical assertion of the incalculable vagueness of
- life which fitted his natural indolence roused my more irritable and
- energetic nature to active protests. “It’s all so pointless,” I said,
- “because people are slack and because it’s in the ebb of an age. But
- you’re a socialist. Well, let’s bring that about! And there’s a purpose.
- There you are!”
- Ewart gave me all my first conceptions of socialism; in a little while
- I was an enthusiastic socialist and he was a passive resister to the
- practical exposition of the theories he had taught me. “We must join
- some organisation,” I said. “We ought to do things.... We ought to go
- and speak at street corners. People don’t know.”
- You must figure me a rather ill-dressed young man in a state of great
- earnestness, standing up in that shabby studio of his and saying these
- things, perhaps with some gesticulations, and Ewart with a clay-smudged
- face, dressed perhaps in a flannel shirt and trousers, with a pipe in
- his mouth, squatting philosophically at a table, working at some chunk
- of clay that never got beyond suggestion.
- “I wonder why one doesn’t want to,” he said.
- It was only very slowly I came to gauge Ewart’s real position in the
- scheme of things, to understand how deliberate and complete was this
- detachment of his from the moral condemnation and responsibilities that
- played so fine a part in his talk. His was essentially the nature of
- an artistic appreciator; he could find interest and beauty in endless
- aspects of things that I marked as evil, or at least as not negotiable;
- and the impulse I had towards self-deception, to sustained and
- consistent self-devotion, disturbed and detached and pointless as it was
- at that time, he had indeed a sort of admiration for but no sympathy.
- Like many fantastic and ample talkers he was at bottom secretive, and
- he gave me a series of little shocks of discovery throughout our
- intercourse.
- The first of these came in the realisation that he quite seriously meant
- to do nothing in the world at all towards reforming the evils he laid
- bare in so easy and dexterous a manner. The next came in the sudden
- appearance of a person called “Milly”--I’ve forgotten her surname--whom
- I found in his room one evening, simply attired in a blue wrap--the
- rest of her costume behind the screen--smoking cigarettes and sharing
- a flagon of an amazingly cheap and self-assertive grocer’s wine Ewart
- affected, called “Canary Sack.” “Hullo!” said Ewart, as I came in. “This
- is Milly, you know. She’s been being a model--she IS a model really....
- (keep calm, Ponderevo!) Have some sack?”
- Milly was a woman of thirty, perhaps, with a broad, rather pretty face,
- a placid disposition, a bad accent and delightful blond hair that waved
- off her head with an irrepressible variety of charm; and whenever Ewart
- spoke she beamed at him. Ewart was always sketching this hair of hers
- and embarking upon clay statuettes of her that were never finished. She
- was, I know now, a woman of the streets, whom Ewart had picked up in
- the most casual manner, and who had fallen in love with him, but my
- inexperience in those days was too great for me to place her then, and
- Ewart offered no elucidations. She came to him, he went to her, they
- took holidays together in the country when certainly she sustained her
- fair share of their expenditure. I suspect him now even of taking money
- from her. Odd old Ewart! It was a relationship so alien to my orderly
- conceptions of honour, to what I could imagine any friend of mine doing,
- that I really hardly saw it with it there under my nose. But I see it
- and I think I understand it now....
- Before I fully grasped the discursive manner in which Ewart was
- committed to his particular way in life, I did, I say, as the broad
- constructive ideas of socialism took hold of me, try to get him to work
- with me in some definite fashion as a socialist.
- “We ought to join on to other socialists,” I said.
- “They’ve got something.”
- “Let’s go and look at some first.”
- After some pains we discovered the office of the Fabian Society, lurking
- in a cellar in Clement’s Inn; and we went and interviewed a rather
- discouraging secretary who stood astraddle in front of a fire and
- questioned us severely and seemed to doubt the integrity of our
- intentions profoundly. He advised us to attend the next open meeting in
- Clifford’s Inn and gave us the necessary data. We both contrived to get
- to the affair, and heard a discursive gritty paper on Trusts and one of
- the most inconclusive discussions you can imagine. Three-quarters of
- the speakers seemed under some jocular obsession which took the form
- of pretending to be conceited. It was a sort of family joke, and as
- strangers to the family we did not like it.... As we came out through
- the narrow passage from Clifford’s Inn to the Strand, Ewart suddenly
- pitched upon a wizened, spectacled little man in a vast felt hat and a
- large orange tie.
- “How many members are there in this Fabian Society of yours?” he asked.
- The little man became at once defensive in his manner.
- “About seven hundred,” he said; “perhaps eight.”
- “Like--like the ones here?”
- The little man gave a nervous self-satisfied laugh. “I suppose they’re
- up to sample,” he said.
- The little man dropped out of existence and we emerged upon the Strand.
- Ewart twisted his arm into a queerly eloquent gesture that gathered up
- all the tall facades of the banks, the business places, the projecting
- clock and towers of the Law Courts, the advertisements, the luminous
- signs, into one social immensity, into a capitalistic system gigantic
- and invincible.
- “These socialists have no sense of proportion,” he said. “What can you
- expect of them?”
- IV
- Ewart, as the embodiment of talk, was certainly a leading factor in my
- conspicuous failure to go on studying. Social theory in its first crude
- form of Democratic Socialism gripped my intelligence more and more
- powerfully. I argued in the laboratory with the man who shared my bench
- until we quarreled and did not speak and also I fell in love.
- The ferment of sex had been creeping into my being like a slowly
- advancing tide through all my Wimblehurst days, the stimulus of London
- was like the rising of a wind out of the sea that brings the waves in
- fast and high. Ewart had his share in that. More and more acutely and
- unmistakably did my perception of beauty, form and sound, my desire
- for adventure, my desire for intercourse, converge on this central and
- commanding business of the individual life. I had to get me a mate.
- I began to fall in love faintly with girls I passed in the street,
- with women who sat before me in trains, with girl fellow-students,
- with ladies in passing carriages, with loiterers at the corners, with
- neat-handed waitresses in shops and tea-rooms, with pictures even
- of girls and women. On my rare visits to the theatre I always became
- exalted, and found the actresses and even the spectators about me
- mysterious, attractive, creatures of deep interest and desire. I had
- a stronger and stronger sense that among these glancing, passing
- multitudes there was somewhere one who was for me. And in spite of every
- antagonistic force in the world, there was something in my very marrow
- that insisted: “Stop! Look at this one! Think of her! Won’t she do?
- This signifies--this before all things signifies! Stop! Why are you
- hurrying by? This may be the predestined person--before all others.”
- It is odd that I can’t remember when first I saw Marion, who became my
- wife--whom I was to make wretched, who was to make me wretched, who
- was to pluck that fine generalised possibility of love out of my early
- manhood and make it a personal conflict. I became aware of her as one of
- a number of interesting attractive figures that moved about in my world,
- that glanced back at my eyes, that flitted by with a kind of averted
- watchfulness. I would meet her coming through the Art Museum, which
- was my short cut to the Brompton Road, or see her sitting, reading as I
- thought, in one of the bays of the Education Library. But really, as I
- found out afterwards, she never read. She used to come there to eat a
- bun in quiet. She was a very gracefully-moving figure of a girl then,
- very plainly dressed, with dark brown hair I remember, in a knot low
- on her neck behind that confessed the pretty roundness of her head
- and harmonised with the admirable lines of ears and cheek, the grave
- serenity of mouth and brow.
- She stood out among the other girls very distinctly because they dressed
- more than she did, struck emphatic notes of colour, startled one by
- novelties in hats and bows and things. I’ve always hated the rustle, the
- disconcerting colour boundaries, the smart unnatural angles of women’s
- clothes. Her plain black dress gave her a starkness....
- I do remember, though, how one afternoon I discovered the peculiar
- appeal of her form for me. I had been restless with my work and had
- finally slipped out of the Laboratory and come over to the Art Museum
- to lounge among the pictures. I came upon her in an odd corner of the
- Sheepshanks gallery, intently copying something from a picture that hung
- high. I had just been in the gallery of casts from the antique, my mind
- was all alive with my newly awakened sense of line, and there she stood
- with face upturned, her body drooping forward from the hips just a
- little--memorably graceful--feminine.
- After that I know I sought to see her, felt a distinctive emotion at
- her presence, began to imagine things about her. I no longer thought
- of generalised womanhood or of this casual person or that. I thought of
- her.
- An accident brought us together. I found myself one Monday morning in an
- omnibus staggering westward from Victoria--I was returning from a Sunday
- I’d spent at Wimblehurst in response to a unique freak of hospitality
- on the part of Mr. Mantell. She was the sole other inside passenger.
- And when the time came to pay her fare, she became an extremely scared,
- disconcerted and fumbling young woman; she had left her purse at home.
- Luckily I had some money.
- She looked at me with startled, troubled brown eyes; she permitted my
- proffered payment to the conductor with a certain ungraciousness that
- seemed a part of her shyness, and then as she rose to go, she thanked me
- with an obvious affectation of ease.
- “Thank you so much,” she said in a pleasant soft voice; and then less
- gracefully, “Awfully kind of you, you know.”
- I fancy I made polite noises. But just then I wasn’t disposed to be
- critical. I was full of the sense of her presence; her arm was stretched
- out over me as she moved past me, the gracious slenderness of her body
- was near me. The words we used didn’t seem very greatly to matter. I had
- vague ideas of getting out with her--and I didn’t.
- That encounter, I have no doubt, exercised me enormously. I lay awake
- at night rehearsing it, and wondering about the next phase of our
- relationship. That took the form of the return of my twopence. I was
- in the Science Library, digging something out of the Encyclopedia
- Britannica, when she appeared beside me and placed on the open page an
- evidently premeditated thin envelope, bulgingly confessing the coins
- within.
- “It was so very kind of you,” she said, “the other day. I don’t know
- what I should have done, Mr.--”
- I supplied my name. “I knew,” I said, “you were a student here.”
- “Not exactly a student. I--”
- “Well, anyhow, I knew you were here frequently. And I’m a student myself
- at the Consolidated Technical Schools.”
- I plunged into autobiography and questionings, and so entangled her in
- a conversation that got a quality of intimacy through the fact that,
- out of deference to our fellow-readers, we were obliged to speak in
- undertones. And I have no doubt that in substance it was singularly
- banal. Indeed I have an impression that all our early conversations were
- incredibly banal. We met several times in a manner half-accidental, half
- furtive and wholly awkward. Mentally I didn’t take hold of her. I never
- did take hold of her mentally. Her talk, I now know all too clearly, was
- shallow, pretentious, evasive. Only--even to this day--I don’t remember
- it as in any way vulgar. She was, I could see quite clearly, anxious
- to overstate or conceal her real social status, a little desirous to
- be taken for a student in the art school and a little ashamed that she
- wasn’t. She came to the museum to “copy things,” and this, I gathered,
- had something to do with some way of partially earning her living that I
- wasn’t to inquire into. I told her things about myself, vain things that
- I felt might appeal to her, but that I learnt long afterwards made her
- think me “conceited.” We talked of books, but there she was very much on
- her guard and secretive, and rather more freely of pictures. She “liked”
- pictures. I think from the outset I appreciated and did not for a moment
- resent that hers was a commonplace mind, that she was the unconscious
- custodian of something that had gripped my most intimate instinct, that
- she embodied the hope of a possibility, was the careless proprietor of a
- physical quality that had turned my head like strong wine. I felt I had
- to stick to our acquaintance, flat as it was. Presently we should get
- through these irrelevant exterior things, and come to the reality of
- love beneath.
- I saw her in dreams released, as it were, from herself, beautiful,
- worshipful, glowing. And sometimes when we were together, we would come
- on silences through sheer lack of matter, and then my eyes would feast
- on her, and the silence seemed like the drawing back of a curtain--her
- superficial self. Odd, I confess. Odd, particularly, the enormous hold
- of certain things about her upon me, a certain slight rounded duskiness
- of skin, a certain perfection of modelling in her lips, her brow, a
- certain fine flow about the shoulders. She wasn’t indeed beautiful
- to many people--these things are beyond explaining. She had manifest
- defects of form and feature, and they didn’t matter at all. Her
- complexion was bad, but I don’t think it would have mattered if it
- had been positively unwholesome. I had extraordinarily limited,
- extraordinarily painful, desires. I longed intolerably to kiss her lips.
- V
- The affair was immensely serious and commanding to me. I don’t remember
- that in these earlier phases I had any thought of turning back at
- all. It was clear to me that she regarded me with an eye entirely
- more critical than I had for her, that she didn’t like my scholarly
- untidiness, my want of even the most commonplace style. “Why do you
- wear collars like that?” she said, and sent me in pursuit of gentlemanly
- neckwear. I remember when she invited me a little abruptly one day to
- come to tea at her home on the following Sunday and meet her father
- and mother and aunt, that I immediately doubted whether my hitherto
- unsuspected best clothes would create the impression she desired me to
- make on her belongings. I put off the encounter until the Sunday after,
- to get myself in order. I had a morning coat made and I bought a silk
- hat, and had my reward in the first glance of admiration she ever gave
- me. I wonder how many of my sex are as preposterous. I was, you see,
- abandoning all my beliefs, my conventions unasked. I was forgetting
- myself immensely. And there was a conscious shame in it all. Never a
- word--did I breathe to Ewart--to any living soul of what was going on.
- Her father and mother and aunt struck me as the dismalest of people,
- and her home in Walham Green was chiefly notable for its black and
- amber tapestry carpets and curtains and table-cloths, and the age and
- irrelevance of its books, mostly books with faded gilt on the covers.
- The windows were fortified against the intrusive eye by cheap lace
- curtains and an “art pot” upon an unstable octagonal table. Several
- framed Art School drawings of Marion’s, bearing official South
- Kensington marks of approval, adorned the room, and there was a black
- and gilt piano with a hymn-book on the top of it. There were draped
- mirrors over all the mantels, and above the sideboard in the dining-room
- in which we sat at tea was a portrait of her father, villainously
- truthful after the manner of such works. I couldn’t see a trace of the
- beauty I found in her in either parent, yet she somehow contrived to be
- like them both.
- These people pretended in a way that reminded me of the Three Great
- Women in my mother’s room, but they had not nearly so much social
- knowledge and did not do it nearly so well. Also, I remarked, they did
- it with an eye on Marion. They had wanted to thank me, they said, for
- the kindness to their daughter in the matter of the ‘bus fare, and so
- accounted for anything unusual in their invitation. They posed as simple
- gentlefolk, a little hostile to the rush and gadding-about of London,
- preferring a secluded and unpretentious quiet.
- When Marion got out the white table-cloth from the sideboard-drawer for
- tea, a card bearing the word “APARTMENTS” fell to the floor. I picked it
- up and gave it to her before I realised from her quickened colour that I
- should not have seen it; that probably had been removed from the window
- in honour of my coming.
- Her father spoke once in a large remote way of he claims of business
- engagements, and it was only long afterwards I realised that he was a
- supernumerary clerk in the Walham Green Gas Works and otherwise a useful
- man at home. He was a large, loose, fattish man with unintelligent brown
- eyes magnified by spectacles; he wore an ill-fitting frock-coat and a
- paper collar, and he showed me, as his great treasure and interest, a
- large Bible which he had grangerised with photographs of pictures. Also
- he cultivated the little garden-yard behind the house, and he had a
- small greenhouse with tomatoes. “I wish I ‘ad ‘eat,” he said. “One can
- do such a lot with ‘eat. But I suppose you can’t ‘ave everything you
- want in this world.”
- Both he and Marion’s mother treated her with a deference that struck me
- as the most natural thing in the world. Her own manner changed, became
- more authoritative and watchful, her shyness disappeared. She had taken
- a line of her own I gathered, draped the mirror, got the second-hand
- piano, and broken her parents in.
- Her mother must once have been a pretty woman; she had regular features
- and Marion’s hair without its lustre, but she was thin and careworn.
- The aunt, Miss Ramboat, was a large, abnormally shy person very like her
- brother, and I don’t recall anything she said on this occasion.
- To begin with there was a good deal of tension, Marion was frightfully
- nervous and every one was under the necessity of behaving in a
- mysteriously unreal fashion until I plunged, became talkative and made
- a certain ease and interest. I told them of the schools, of my lodgings,
- of Wimblehurst and my apprenticeship days. “There’s a lot of this
- Science about nowadays,” Mr. Ramboat reflected; “but I sometimes wonder
- a bit what good it is?”
- I was young enough to be led into what he called “a bit of a
- discussion,” which Marion truncated before our voices became unduly
- raised. “I dare say,” she said, “there’s much to be said on both sides.”
- I remember Marion’s mother asked me what church I attended, and that
- I replied evasively. After tea there was music and we sang hymns. I
- doubted if I had a voice when this was proposed, but that was held to be
- a trivial objection, and I found sitting close beside the sweep of
- hair from Marion’s brow had many compensations. I discovered her mother
- sitting in the horsehair armchair and regarding us sentimentally. I went
- for a walk with Marion towards Putney Bridge, and then there was more
- singing and a supper of cold bacon and pie, after which Mr. Ramboat and
- I smoked. During that walk, I remember, she told me the import of her
- sketchings and copyings in the museum. A cousin of a friend of hers whom
- she spoke of as Smithie, had developed an original business in a sort of
- tea-gown garment which she called a Persian Robe, a plain sort of wrap
- with a gaily embroidered yoke, and Marion went there and worked in the
- busy times. In the times that weren’t busy she designed novelties in
- yokes by an assiduous use of eyes and note-book in the museum, and went
- home and traced out the captured forms on the foundation material. “I
- don’t get much,” said Marion, “but it’s interesting, and in the busy
- times we work all day. Of course the workgirls are dreadfully common,
- but we don’t say much to them. And Smithie talks enough for ten.”
- I quite understood the workgirls were dreadfully common.
- I don’t remember that the Walham Green menage and the quality of these
- people, nor the light they threw on Marion, detracted in the slightest
- degree at that time from the intent resolve that held me to make her
- mine. I didn’t like them. But I took them as part of the affair. Indeed,
- on the whole, I think they threw her up by an effect of contrast; she
- was so obviously controlling them, so consciously superior to them.
- More and more of my time did I give to this passion that possessed me. I
- began to think chiefly of ways of pleasing Marion, of acts of devotion,
- of treats, of sumptuous presents for her, of appeals she would
- understand. If at times she was manifestly unintelligent, in her
- ignorance became indisputable, I told myself her simple instincts were
- worth all the education and intelligence in the world. And to this day
- I think I wasn’t really wrong about her. There was something
- extraordinarily fine about her, something simple and high, that
- flickered in and out of her ignorance and commonness and limitations
- like the tongue from the mouth of a snake....
- One night I was privileged to meet her and bring her home from an
- entertainment at the Birkbeck Institute. We came back on the underground
- railway and we travelled first-class--that being the highest class
- available. We were alone in the carriage, and for the first time I
- ventured to put my arm about her.
- “You mustn’t,” she said feebly.
- “I love you,” I whispered suddenly with my heart beating wildly, drew
- her to me, drew all her beauty to me and kissed her cool and unresisting
- lips.
- “Love me?” she said, struggling away from me, “Don’t!” and then, as the
- train ran into a station, “You must tell no one.... I don’t know.... You
- shouldn’t have done that....”
- Then two other people got in with us and terminated my wooing for a
- time.
- When we found ourselves alone together, walking towards Battersea, she
- had decided to be offended. I parted from her unforgiven and terribly
- distressed.
- When we met again, she told me I must never say “that” again.
- I had dreamt that to kiss her lips was ultimate satisfaction. But it was
- indeed only the beginning of desires. I told her my one ambition was to
- marry her.
- “But,” she said, “you’re not in a position--What’s the good of talking
- like that?”
- I stared at her. “I mean to,” I said.
- “You can’t,” she answered. “It will be years”
- “But I love you,” I insisted.
- I stood not a yard from the sweet lips I had kissed; I stood within
- arm’s length of the inanimate beauty I desired to quicken, and I saw
- opening between us a gulf of years, toil, waiting, disappointments and
- an immense uncertainty.
- “I love you,” I said. “Don’t you love me?”
- She looked me in the face with grave irresponsive eyes.
- “I don’t know,” she said. “I LIKE you, of course.... One has to be
- sensibl...”
- I can remember now my sense of frustration by her unresilient reply.
- I should have perceived then that for her my ardour had no quickening
- fire. But how was I to know? I had let myself come to want her, my
- imagination endowed her with infinite possibilities. I wanted her and
- wanted her, stupidly and instinctively....
- “But,” I said “Love--!”
- “One has to be sensible,” she replied. “I like going about with you.
- Can’t we keep as we are?’”
- VI
- Well, you begin to understand my breakdown now, I have been copious
- enough with these apologia. My work got more and more spiritless, my
- behaviour degenerated, my punctuality declined; I was more and more
- outclassed in the steady grind by my fellow-students. Such supplies of
- moral energy as I still had at command shaped now in the direction of
- serving Marion rather than science.
- I fell away dreadfully, more and more I shirked and skulked; the humped
- men from the north, the pale men with thin, clenched minds, the intent,
- hard-breathing students I found against me, fell at last from keen
- rivalry to moral contempt. Even a girl got above me upon one of the
- lists. Then indeed I made it a point of honour to show by my public
- disregard of every rule that I really did not even pretend to try.
- So one day I found myself sitting in a mood of considerable astonishment
- in Kensington Gardens, reacting on a recent heated interview with the
- school Registrar in which I had displayed more spirit than sense. I was
- astonished chiefly at my stupendous falling away from all the militant
- ideals of unflinching study I had brought up from Wimblehurst. I had
- displayed myself, as the Registrar put it, “an unmitigated rotter.” My
- failure to get marks in the written examination had only been equalled
- by the insufficiency of my practical work.
- “I ask you,” the Registrar had said, “what will become of you when your
- scholarship runs out?”
- It certainly was an interesting question. What was going to become of
- me?
- It was clear there would be nothing for me in the schools as I had once
- dared to hope; there seemed, indeed, scarcely anything in the world
- except an illpaid assistantship in some provincial organized Science
- School or grammar school. I knew that for that sort of work, without
- a degree or any qualification, one earned hardly a bare living and had
- little leisure to struggle up to anything better. If only I had even
- as little as fifty pounds I might hold out in London and take my
- B.Sc. degree, and quadruple my chances! My bitterness against my uncle
- returned at the thought. After all, he had some of my money still, or
- ought to have. Why shouldn’t I act within my rights, threaten to ‘take
- proceedings’? I meditated for a space on the idea, and then returned to
- the Science Library and wrote him a very considerable and occasionally
- pungent letter.
- That letter to my uncle was the nadir of my failure. Its remarkable
- consequences, which ended my student days altogether, I will tell in the
- next chapter.
- I say “my failure.” Yet there are times when I can even doubt whether
- that period was a failure at all, when I become defensively critical of
- those exacting courses I did not follow, the encyclopaedic process
- of scientific exhaustion from which I was distracted. My mind was not
- inactive, even if it fed on forbidden food. I did not learn what my
- professors and demonstrators had resolved I should learn, but I learnt
- many things. My mind learnt to swing wide and to swing by itself.
- After all, those other fellows who took high places in the College
- examinations and were the professor’s model boys haven’t done so
- amazingly. Some are professors themselves, some technical experts; not
- one can show things done such as I, following my own interest, have
- achieved. For I have built boats that smack across the water like
- whiplashes; no one ever dreamt of such boats until I built them; and I
- have surprised three secrets that are more than technical discoveries,
- in the unexpected hiding-places of Nature. I have come nearer flying
- than any man has done. Could I have done as much if I had had a turn for
- obeying those rather mediocre professors at the college who proposed
- to train my mind? If I had been trained in research--that ridiculous
- contradiction in terms--should I have done more than produce additions
- to the existing store of little papers with blunted conclusions, of
- which there are already too many? I see no sense in mock modesty upon
- this matter. Even by the standards of worldly success I am, by the side
- of my fellow-students, no failure. I had my F.R.S. by the time I was
- thirty-seven, and if I am not very wealthy poverty is as far from me as
- the Spanish Inquisition. Suppose I had stamped down on the head of my
- wandering curiosity, locked my imagination in a box just when it wanted
- to grow out to things, worked by so-and-so’s excellent method and
- so-and-so’s indications, where should I be now?
- I may be all wrong in this. It may be I should be a far more efficient
- man than I am if I had cut off all those divergent expenditures of
- energy, plugged up my curiosity about society with more currently
- acceptable rubbish or other, abandoned Ewart, evaded Marion instead of
- pursuing her, concentrated. But I don’t believe it!
- However, I certainly believed it completely and was filled with remorse
- on that afternoon when I sat dejectedly in Kensington Gardens and
- reviewed, in the light of the Registrar’s pertinent questions my first
- two years in London.
- CHAPTER THE SECOND
- THE DAWN COMES, AND MY UNCLE APPEARS IN A NEW SILK HAT
- I
- Throughout my student days I had not seen my uncle. I refrained from
- going to him in spite of an occasional regret that in this way I
- estranged myself from my aunt Susan, and I maintained a sulky attitude
- of mind towards him. And I don’t think that once in all that time I gave
- a thought to that mystic word of his that was to alter all the world
- for us. Yet I had not altogether forgotten it. It was with a touch of
- memory, dim transient perplexity if no more--why did this thing seem in
- some way personal?--that I read a new inscription upon the hoardings:
- THE SECRET OF VIGOUR,
- TONO-BUNGAY.
- That was all. It was simple and yet in some way arresting. I found
- myself repeating the word after I had passed; it roused one’s attention
- like the sound of distant guns. “Tono”--what’s that? and deep, rich,
- unhurrying;--“BUN--gay!”
- Then came my uncle’s amazing telegram, his answer to my hostile
- note: “Come to me at once you are wanted three hundred a year certain
- tono-bungay.”
- “By Jove!” I cried, “of course!
- “It’s something--. A patent-medicine! I wonder what he wants with me.”
- In his Napoleonic way my uncle had omitted to give an address. His
- telegram had been handed in at Farringdon Road, and after complex
- meditations I replied to Ponderevo, Farringdon Road, trusting to the
- rarity of our surname to reach him.
- “Where are you?” I asked.
- His reply came promptly:
- “192A, Raggett Street, E.C.”
- The next day I took an unsanctioned holiday after the morning’s lecture.
- I discovered my uncle in a wonderfully new silk hat--oh, a splendid
- hat! with a rolling brim that went beyond the common fashion. It was
- decidedly too big for him--that was its only fault. It was stuck on the
- back of his head, and he was in a white waistcoat and shirt sleeves.
- He welcomed me with a forgetfulness of my bitter satire and my hostile
- abstinence that was almost divine. His glasses fell off at the sight of
- me. His round inexpressive eyes shone brightly. He held out his plump
- short hand.
- “Here we are, George! What did I tell you? Needn’t whisper it now, my
- boy. Shout it--LOUD! spread it about! Tell every one! Tono--TONO--,
- TONO-BUNGAY!”
- Raggett Street, you must understand, was a thoroughfare over which some
- one had distributed large quantities of cabbage stumps and leaves. It
- opened out of the upper end of Farringdon Street, and 192A was a shop
- with the plate-glass front coloured chocolate, on which several of the
- same bills I had read upon the hoardings had been stuck. The floor was
- covered by street mud that had been brought in on dirty boots, and three
- energetic young men of the hooligan type, in neck-wraps and caps, were
- packing wooden cases with papered-up bottles, amidst much straw and
- confusion. The counter was littered with these same swathed bottles, of
- a pattern then novel but now amazingly familiar in the world, the blue
- paper with the coruscating figure of a genially nude giant, and the
- printed directions of how under practically all circumstances to take
- Tono-Bungay. Beyond the counter on one side opened a staircase down
- which I seem to remember a girl descending with a further consignment
- of bottles, and the rest of the background was a high partition, also
- chocolate, with “Temporary Laboratory” inscribed upon it in white
- letters, and over a door that pierced it, “Office.” Here I rapped,
- inaudible amid much hammering, and then entered unanswered to find
- my uncle, dressed as I have described, one hand gripping a sheath of
- letters, and the other scratching his head as he dictated to one of
- three toiling typewriter girls. Behind him was a further partition and
- a door inscribed “ABSOLUTELY PRIVATE--NO ADMISSION,” thereon. This
- partition was of wood painted the universal chocolate, up to about eight
- feet from the ground, and then of glass. Through the glass I saw dimly
- a crowded suggestion of crucibles and glass retorts, and--by
- Jove!--yes!--the dear old Wimblehurst air-pump still! It gave me quite
- a little thrill--that air-pump! And beside it was the electrical
- machine--but something--some serious trouble--had happened to that. All
- these were evidently placed on a shelf just at the level to show.
- “Come right into the sanctum,” said my uncle, after he had finished
- something about “esteemed consideration,” and whisked me through the
- door into a room that quite amazingly failed to verify the promise of
- that apparatus. It was papered with dingy wall-paper that had peeled in
- places; it contained a fireplace, an easy-chair with a cushion, a table
- on which stood two or three big bottles, a number of cigar-boxes on
- the mantel, whisky Tantalus and a row of soda syphons. He shut the door
- after me carefully.
- “Well, here we are!” he said. “Going strong! Have a whisky, George?
- No!--Wise man! Neither will I! You see me at it! At it--hard!”
- “Hard at what?”
- “Read it,” and he thrust into my hand a label--that label that has
- now become one of the most familiar objects of the chemist’s shop, the
- greenish-blue rather old-fashioned bordering, the legend, the name
- in good black type, very clear, and the strong man all set about with
- lightning flashes above the double column of skilful lies in red--the
- label of Tono-Bungay. “It’s afloat,” he said, as I stood puzzling at
- this. “It’s afloat. I’m afloat!” And suddenly he burst out singing in
- that throaty tenor of his--
- “I’m afloat, I’m afloat on the fierce flowing tide, The ocean’s my home
- and my bark is my bride!
- “Ripping song that is, George. Not so much a bark as a solution, but
- still--it does! Here we are at it! By-the-by! Half a mo’! I’ve thought
- of a thing.” He whisked out, leaving me to examine this nuclear spot at
- leisure while his voice became dictatorial without. The den struck me as
- in its large grey dirty way quite unprecedented and extraordinary. The
- bottles were all labelled simply A, B, C, and so forth, and that dear
- old apparatus above, seen from this side, was even more patiently “on
- the shelf” than when it had been used to impress Wimblehurst. I saw
- nothing for it but to sit down in the chair and await my uncle’s
- explanations. I remarked a frock-coat with satin lapels behind the door;
- there was a dignified umbrella in the corner and a clothes-brush and
- a hat-brush stood on a side-table. My uncle returned in five minutes
- looking at his watch--a gold watch--“Gettin’ lunch-time, George,” he
- said. “You’d better come and have lunch with me!”
- “How’s Aunt Susan?” I asked.
- “Exuberant. Never saw her so larky. This has bucked her up something
- wonderful--all this.”
- “All what?”
- “Tono-Bungay.”
- “What is Tono-Bungay?” I asked.
- My uncle hesitated. “Tell you after lunch, George,” he said. “Come
- along!” and having locked up the sanctum after himself, led the way
- along a narrow dirty pavement, lined with barrows and swept at times by
- avalanche-like porters bearing burthens to vans, to Farringdon Street.
- He hailed a passing cab superbly, and the cabman was infinitely
- respectful. “Schafer’s,” he said, and off we went side by side--and with
- me more and more amazed at all these things--to Schafer’s Hotel, the
- second of the two big places with huge lace curtain-covered windows,
- near the corner of Blackfriars Bridge.
- I will confess I felt a magic charm in our relative proportions as the
- two colossal, pale-blue-and-red liveried porters of Schafers’ held open
- the inner doors for us with a respectful salutation that in some manner
- they seemed to confine wholly to my uncle. Instead of being about
- four inches taller, I felt at least the same size as he, and very much
- slenderer. Still more respectful--waiters relieved him of the new hat
- and the dignified umbrella, and took his orders for our lunch. He gave
- them with a fine assurance.
- He nodded to several of the waiters.
- “They know me, George, already,” he said. “Point me out. Live place! Eye
- for coming men!”
- The detailed business of the lunch engaged our attention for a while,
- and then I leant across my plate. “And NOW?” said I.
- “It’s the secret of vigour. Didn’t you read that label?”
- “Yes, but--”
- “It’s selling like hot cakes.”
- “And what is it?” I pressed.
- “Well,” said my uncle, and then leant forward and spoke softly under
- cover of his hand, “It’s nothing more or less than...”
- (But here an unfortunate scruple intervenes. After all, Tono-Bungay is
- still a marketable commodity and in the hands of purchasers, who bought
- it from--among other vendors--me. No! I am afraid I cannot give it
- away--)
- “You see,” said my uncle in a slow confidential whisper, with eyes
- very wide and a creased forehead, “it’s nice because of the” (here he
- mentioned a flavouring matter and an aromatic spirit), “it’s stimulating
- because of” (here he mentioned two very vivid tonics, one with a
- marked action on the kidney.) “And the” (here he mentioned two other
- ingredients) “makes it pretty intoxicating. Cocks their tails. Then
- there’s” (but I touch on the essential secret.) “And there you are. I
- got it out of an old book of recipes--all except the” (here he mentioned
- the more virulent substance, the one that assails the kidneys), “which
- is my idea! Modern touch! There you are!”
- He reverted to the direction of our lunch.
- Presently he was leading the way to the lounge--sumptuous piece in red
- morocco and yellow glazed crockery, with incredible vistas of settees
- and sofas and things, and there I found myself grouped with him in two
- excessively upholstered chairs with an earthenware Moorish table between
- us bearing coffee and Benedictine, and I was tasting the delights of a
- tenpenny cigar. My uncle smoked a similar cigar in an habituated manner,
- and he looked energetic and knowing and luxurious and most unexpectedly
- a little bounder, round the end of it. It was just a trivial flaw
- upon our swagger, perhaps that we both were clear our cigars had to be
- “mild.” He got obliquely across the spaces of his great armchair so as
- to incline confidentially to my ear, he curled up his little legs, and
- I, in my longer way, adopted a corresponding receptive obliquity. I felt
- that we should strike an unbiased observer as a couple of very deep and
- wily and developing and repulsive persons.
- “I want to let you into this”--puff--“George,” said my uncle round the
- end of his cigar. “For many reasons.”
- His voice grew lower and more cunning. He made explanations that to my
- inexperience did not completely explain. I retain an impression of a
- long credit and a share with a firm of wholesale chemists, of a credit
- and a prospective share with some pirate printers, of a third share for
- a leading magazine and newspaper proprietor.
- “I played ‘em off one against the other,” said my uncle. I took his
- point in an instant. He had gone to each of them in turn and said the
- others had come in.
- “I put up four hundred pounds,” said my uncle, “myself and my all. And
- you know--”
- He assumed a brisk confidence. “I hadn’t five hundred pence. At least--”
- For a moment he really was just a little embarrassed. “I DID” he said,
- “produce capital. You see, there was that trust affair of yours--I
- ought, I suppose--in strict legality--to have put that straight first.
- Zzzz....
- “It was a bold thing to do,” said my uncle, shifting the venue from
- the region of honour to the region of courage. And then with a
- characteristic outburst of piety, “Thank God it’s all come right!
- “And now, I suppose, you ask where do YOU come in? Well, fact is I’ve
- always believed in you, George. You’ve got--it’s a sort of dismal grit.
- Bark your shins, rouse you, and you’ll go! You’d rush any position you
- had a mind to rush. I know a bit about character, George--trust me.
- You’ve got--” He clenched his hands and thrust them out suddenly, and at
- the same time said, with explosive violence, “Wooosh! Yes. You have! The
- way you put away that Latin at Wimblehurst; I’ve never forgotten it.
- “Wo-oo-oo-osh! Your science and all that! Wo-oo-oo-osh! I know my
- limitations. There’s things I can do, and” (he spoke in a whisper, as
- though this was the first hint of his life’s secret) “there’s things I
- can’t. Well, I can create this business, but I can’t make it go. I’m too
- voluminous--I’m a boiler-over, not a simmering stick-at-it. You keep on
- HOTTING UP AND HOTTING UP. Papin’s digester. That’s you, steady and
- long and piling up,--then, wo-oo-oo-oo-osh. Come in and stiffen these
- niggers. Teach them that wo-oo-oo-oo-osh. There you are! That’s what I’m
- after. You! Nobody else believes you’re more than a boy. Come right in
- with me and be a man. Eh, George? Think of the fun of it--a thing on
- the go--a Real Live Thing! Wooshing it up! Making it buzz and spin!
- Whoo-oo-oo.”--He made alluring expanding circles in the air with his
- hand. “Eh?”
- His proposal, sinking to confidential undertones again, took more
- definite shape. I was to give all my time and energy to developing and
- organising. “You shan’t write a single advertisement, or give a single
- assurance” he declared. “I can do all that.” And the telegram was no
- flourish; I was to have three hundred a year. Three hundred a year.
- (“That’s nothing,” said my uncle, “the thing to freeze on to, when the
- time comes, is your tenth of the vendor’s share.”)
- Three hundred a year certain, anyhow! It was an enormous income to me.
- For a moment I was altogether staggered. Could there be that much money
- in the whole concern? I looked about me at the sumptuous furniture of
- Schafer’s Hotel. No doubt there were many such incomes.
- My head was spinning with unwonted Benedictine and Burgundy.
- “Let me go back and look at the game again,” I said. “Let me see
- upstairs and round about.”
- I did.
- “What do you think of it all?” my uncle asked at last.
- “Well, for one thing,” I said, “why don’t you have those girls working
- in a decently ventilated room? Apart from any other consideration,
- they’d work twice as briskly. And they ought to cover the corks before
- labelling round the bottle.”
- “Why?” said my uncle.
- “Because--they sometimes make a mucker of the cork job, and then the
- label’s wasted.”
- “Come and change it, George,” said my uncle, with sudden fervour “Come
- here and make a machine of it. You can. Make it all slick, and then make
- it woosh. I know you can. Oh! I know you can.”
- II
- I seem to remember very quick changes of mind after that lunch. The
- muzzy exaltation of the unaccustomed stimulants gave way very rapidly
- to a model of pellucid and impartial clairvoyance which is one of my
- habitual mental states. It is intermittent; it leaves me for weeks
- together, I know, but back it comes at last like justice on circuit,
- and calls up all my impression, all my illusions, all my willful and
- passionate proceedings. We came downstairs again into that inner room
- which pretended to be a scientific laboratory through its high glass
- lights, and indeed was a lurking place. My uncle pressed a cigarette on
- me, and I took it and stood before the empty fireplace while he propped
- his umbrella in the corner, deposited the new silk hat that was a little
- too big for him on the table, blew copiously and produced a second
- cigar.
- It came into my head that he had shrunken very much in size since the
- Wimblehurst days, that the cannon ball he had swallowed was rather more
- evident and shameless than it had been, his skin less fresh and the nose
- between his glasses, which still didn’t quite fit, much redder. And just
- then he seemed much laxer in his muscles and not quite as alertly quick
- in his movements. But he evidently wasn’t aware of the degenerative
- nature of his changes as he sat there, looking suddenly quite little
- under my eyes.
- “Well, George!” he said, quite happily unconscious of my silent
- criticism, “what do you think of it all?”
- “Well,” I said, “in the first place--it’s a damned swindle!”
- “Tut! tut!” said my uncle. “It’s as straight as--It’s fair trading!”
- “So much the worse for trading,” I said.
- “It’s the sort of thing everybody does. After all, there’s no harm in
- the stuff--and it may do good. It might do a lot of good--giving people
- confidence, f’rinstance, against an epidemic. See? Why not? don’t see
- where your swindle comes in.”
- “H’m,” I said. “It’s a thing you either see or don’t see.”
- “I’d like to know what sort of trading isn’t a swindle in its way.
- Everybody who does a large advertised trade is selling something common
- on the strength of saying it’s uncommon. Look at Chickson--they made him
- a baronet. Look at Lord Radmore, who did it on lying about the alkali in
- soap! Rippin’ ads those were of his too!”
- “You don’t mean to say you think doing this stuff up in bottles and
- swearing it’s the quintessence of strength and making poor devils buy it
- at that, is straight?”
- “Why not, George? How do we know it mayn’t be the quintessence to them
- so far as they’re concerned?”
- “Oh!” I said, and shrugged my shoulders.
- “There’s Faith. You put Faith in ‘em.... I grant our labels are a bit
- emphatic. Christian Science, really. No good setting people against the
- medicine. Tell me a solitary trade nowadays that hasn’t to be--emphatic.
- It’s the modern way! Everybody understands it--everybody allows for it.”
- “But the world would be no worse and rather better, if all this stuff of
- yours was run down a conduit into the Thames.”
- “Don’t see that, George, at all. ‘Mong other things, all our people
- would be out of work. Unemployed! I grant you Tono-Bungay MAY be--not
- QUITE so good a find for the world as Peruvian bark, but the point
- is, George--it MAKES TRADE! And the world lives on trade. Commerce! A
- romantic exchange of commodities and property. Romance. ‘Magination.
- See? You must look at these things in a broad light. Look at the
- wood--and forget the trees! And hang it, George! we got to do these
- things! There’s no way unless you do. What do YOU mean to do--anyhow?”
- “There’s ways of living,” I said, “Without either fraud or lying.”
- “You’re a bit stiff, George. There’s no fraud in this affair, I’ll bet
- my hat. But what do you propose to do? Go as chemist to some one who IS
- running a business, and draw a salary without a share like I offer you.
- Much sense in that! It comes out of the swindle as you call it--just the
- same.”
- “Some businesses are straight and quiet, anyhow; supply a sound article
- that is really needed, don’t shout advertisements.”
- “No, George. There you’re behind the times. The last of that sort was
- sold up ‘bout five years ago.”
- “Well, there’s scientific research.”
- “And who pays for that? Who put up that big City and Guilds place at
- South Kensington? Enterprising business men! They fancy they’ll have a
- bit of science going on, they want a handy Expert ever and again, and
- there you are! And what do you get for research when you’ve done
- it? Just a bare living and no outlook. They just keep you to make
- discoveries, and if they fancy they’ll use ‘em they do.”
- “One can teach.”
- “How much a year, George? How much a year? I suppose you must respect
- Carlyle! Well, you take Carlyle’s test--solvency. (Lord! what a book
- that French Revolution of his is!) See what the world pays teachers and
- discoverers and what it pays business men! That shows the ones it really
- wants. There’s a justice in these big things, George, over and above the
- apparent injustice. I tell you it wants trade. It’s Trade that makes the
- world go round! Argosies! Venice! Empire!”
- My uncle suddenly rose to his feet.
- “You think it over, George. You think it over! And come up on Sunday
- to the new place--we got rooms in Gower Street now--and see your aunt.
- She’s often asked for you, George often and often, and thrown it up at
- me about that bit of property--though I’ve always said and always
- will, that twenty-five shillings in the pound is what I’ll pay you and
- interest up to the nail. And think it over. It isn’t me I ask you to
- help. It’s yourself. It’s your aunt Susan. It’s the whole concern.
- It’s the commerce of your country. And we want you badly. I tell you
- straight, I know my limitations. You could take this place, you could
- make it go! I can see you at it--looking rather sour. Woosh is the word,
- George.”
- And he smiled endearingly.
- “I got to dictate a letter,” he said, ending the smile, and vanished
- into the outer room.
- III
- I didn’t succumb without a struggle to my uncle’s allurements. Indeed, I
- held out for a week while I contemplated life and my prospects. It was a
- crowded and muddled contemplation. It invaded even my sleep.
- My interview with the Registrar, my talk with my uncle, my abrupt
- discovery of the hopeless futility of my passion for Marion, had
- combined to bring me to sense of crisis. What was I going to do with
- life?
- I remember certain phases of my indecisions very well.
- I remember going home from our talk. I went down Farringdon Street to
- the Embankment because I thought to go home by Holborn and Oxford Street
- would be too crowded for thinking.... That piece of Embankment
- from Blackfriars to Westminster still reminds me of that momentous
- hesitation.
- You know, from first to last, I saw the business with my eyes open, I
- saw its ethical and moral values quite clearly. Never for a moment do
- I remember myself faltering from my persuasion that the sale of
- Tono-Bungay was a thoroughly dishonest proceeding. The stuff was, I
- perceived, a mischievous trash, slightly stimulating, aromatic and
- attractive, likely to become a bad habit and train people in the
- habitual use of stronger tonics and insidiously dangerous to people with
- defective kidneys. It would cost about sevenpence the large bottle to
- make, including bottling, and we were to sell it at half a crown plus
- the cost of the patent medicine stamp. A thing that I will confess
- deterred me from the outset far more than the sense of dishonesty in
- this affair, was the supreme silliness of the whole concern. I still
- clung to the idea that the world of men was or should be a sane and just
- organisation, and the idea that I should set myself gravely, just at
- the fine springtime of my life, to developing a monstrous bottling and
- packing warehouse, bottling rubbish for the consumption of foolish,
- credulous and depressed people, had in it a touch of insanity. My early
- beliefs still clung to me. I felt assured that somewhere there must be
- a hitch in the fine prospect of ease and wealth under such conditions;
- that somewhere, a little overgrown, perhaps, but still traceable, lay a
- neglected, wasted path of use and honour for me.
- My inclination to refuse the whole thing increased rather than
- diminished at first as I went along the Embankment. In my uncle’s
- presence there had been a sort of glamour that had prevented an outright
- refusal. It was a revival of affection for him I felt in his presence, I
- think, in part, and in part an instinctive feeling that I must consider
- him as my host. But much more was it a curious persuasion he had the
- knack of inspiring--a persuasion not so much of his integrity and
- capacity as of the reciprocal and yielding foolishness of the world. One
- felt that he was silly and wild, but in some way silly and wild after
- the fashion of the universe. After all, one must live somehow. I
- astonished him and myself by temporising.
- “No,” said I, “I’ll think it over!”
- And as I went along the embankment the first effect was all against
- my uncle. He shrank--for a little while he continued to shrink--in
- perspective until he was only a very small shabby little man in a dirty
- back street, sending off a few hundred bottles of rubbish to foolish
- buyers. The great buildings on the right of us, the Inns and the School
- Board place--as it was then--Somerset House, the big hotels, the great
- bridges, Westminster’s outlines ahead, had an effect of grey largeness
- that reduced him to the proportions of a busy black beetle in a crack in
- the floor.
- And then my eye caught the advertisements on the south side of “Sorber’s
- Food,” of “Cracknell’s Ferric Wine,” very bright and prosperous signs,
- illuminated at night, and I realised how astonishingly they looked at
- home there, how evidently part they were in the whole thing.
- I saw a man come charging out of Palace Yard--the policeman touched his
- helmet to him--with a hat and a bearing astonishingly like my uncle’s.
- After all,--didn’t Cracknell himself sit in the House?
- Tono-Bungay shouted at me from a hoarding near Adelphi Terrace; I saw
- it afar off near Carfax Street; it cried out again upon me in Kensington
- High Street, and burst into a perfect clamour; six or seven times I
- saw it as I drew near my diggings. It certainly had an air of being
- something more than a dream.
- Yes, I thought it over--thoroughly enough.... Trade rules the world.
- Wealth rather than trade! The thing was true, and true too was my
- uncle’s proposition that the quickest way to get wealth is to sell the
- cheapest thing possible in the dearest bottle. He was frightfully right
- after all. Pecunnia non olet,--a Roman emperor said that. Perhaps my
- great heroes in Plutarch were no more than such men, fine now only
- because they are distant; perhaps after all this Socialism to which I
- had been drawn was only a foolish dream, only the more foolish because
- all its promises were conditionally true. Morris and these others
- played with it wittingly; it gave a zest, a touch of substance, to their
- aesthetic pleasures. Never would there be good faith enough to bring
- such things about. They knew it; every one, except a few young fools,
- knew it. As I crossed the corner of St. James’s Park wrapped in thought,
- I dodged back just in time to escape a prancing pair of greys. A stout,
- common-looking woman, very magnificently dressed, regarded me from the
- carriage with a scornful eye. “No doubt,” thought I, “a pill-vendor’s
- wife....”
- Running through all my thoughts, surging out like a refrain, was my
- uncle’s master-stroke, his admirable touch of praise: “Make it all
- slick--and then make it go Woosh. I know you can! Oh! I KNOW you can!”
- IV
- Ewart as a moral influence was unsatisfactory. I had made up my mind to
- put the whole thing before him, partly to see how he took it, and partly
- to hear how it sounded when it was said. I asked him to come and eat
- with me in an Italian place near Panton Street where one could get a
- curious, interesting, glutting sort of dinner for eighteen-pence. He
- came with a disconcerting black-eye that he wouldn’t explain. “Not so
- much a black-eye,” he said, “as the aftermath of a purple patch....
- What’s your difficulty?”
- “I’ll tell you with the salad,” I said.
- But as a matter of fact I didn’t tell him. I threw out that I was
- doubtful whether I ought to go into trade, or stick to teaching in
- view of my deepening socialist proclivities; and he, warming with the
- unaccustomed generosity of a sixteen-penny Chianti, ran on from that
- without any further inquiry as to my trouble.
- His utterances roved wide and loose.
- “The reality of life, my dear Ponderevo,” I remember him saying very
- impressively and punctuating with the nut-crackers as he spoke, “is
- Chromatic Conflict ... and Form. Get hold of that and let all these
- other questions go. The Socialist will tell you one sort of colour and
- shape is right, the Individualist another. What does it all amount
- to? What DOES it all amount to? NOTHING! I have no advice to give
- anyone,--except to avoid regrets. Be yourself, seek after such beautiful
- things as your own sense determines to be beautiful. And don’t mind
- the headache in the morning.... For what, after all, is a morning,
- Ponderevo? It isn’t like the upper part of a day!”
- He paused impressively.
- “What Rot!” I cried, after a confused attempt to apprehend him.
- “Isn’t it! And it’s my bedrock wisdom in the matter! Take it or
- leave it, my dear George; take it or leave it.”... He put down the
- nut-crackers out of my reach and lugged a greasy-looking note-book from
- his pocket. “I’m going to steal this mustard pot,” he said.
- I made noises of remonstrance.
- “Only as a matter of design. I’ve got to do an old beast’s tomb.
- “Wholesale grocer. I’ll put it on his corners,--four mustard pots. I dare
- say he’d be glad of a mustard plaster now to cool him, poor devil, where
- he is. But anyhow,--here goes!”
- V
- It came to me in the small hours that the real moral touchstone for
- this great doubting of mind was Marion. I lay composing statements of
- my problem and imagined myself delivering them to her--and she,
- goddess-like and beautiful; giving her fine, simply-worded judgment.
- “You see, it’s just to give one’s self over to the Capitalistic System,”
- I imagined myself saying in good Socialist jargon; “it’s surrendering
- all one’s beliefs. We MAY succeed, we MAY grow rich, but where would the
- satisfaction be?”
- Then she would say, “No! That wouldn’t be right.”
- “But the alternative is to wait!”
- Then suddenly she would become a goddess. She would turn upon me frankly
- and nobly, with shining eyes, with arms held out. “No,” she would say,
- “we love one another. Nothing ignoble shall ever touch us. We love one
- another. Why wait to tell each other that, dear? What does it matter
- that we are poor and may keep poor?”
- But indeed the conversation didn’t go at all in that direction. At the
- sight of her my nocturnal eloquence became preposterous and all the
- moral values altered altogether. I had waited for her outside the door
- of the Parsian-robe establishment in Kensington High Street and walked
- home with her thence. I remember how she emerged into the warm evening
- light and that she wore a brown straw hat that made her, for once not
- only beautiful but pretty.
- “I like that hat,” I said by way of opening; and she smiled her rare
- delightful smile at me.
- “I love you,” I said in an undertone, as we jostled closer on the
- pavement.
- She shook her head forbiddingly, but she still smiled. Then--“Be
- sensible!”
- The High Street pavement is too narrow and crowded for conversation and
- we were some way westward before we spoke again.
- “Look here,” I said; “I want you, Marion. Don’t you understand? I want
- you.”
- “Now!” she cried warningly.
- I do not know if the reader will understand how a passionate lover,
- an immense admiration and desire, can be shot with a gleam of positive
- hatred. Such a gleam there was in me at the serene self-complacency of
- that “NOW!” It vanished almost before I felt it. I found no warning in
- it of the antagonisms latent between us.
- “Marion,” I said, “this isn’t a trifling matter to me. I love you; I
- would die to get you.... Don’t you care?”
- “But what is the good?”
- “You don’t care,” I cried. “You don’t care a rap!”
- “You know I care,” she answered. “If I didn’t--If I didn’t like you very
- much, should I let you come and meet me--go about with you?”
- “Well then,” I said, “promise to marry me!”
- “If I do, what difference will it make?”
- We were separated by two men carrying a ladder who drove between us
- unawares.
- “Marion,” I asked when we got together again, “I tell you I want you to
- marry me.”
- “We can’t.”
- “Why not?”
- “We can’t marry--in the street.”
- “We could take our chance!”
- “I wish you wouldn’t go on talking like this. What is the good?”
- She suddenly gave way to gloom. “It’s no good marrying” she said. “One’s
- only miserable. I’ve seen other girls. When one’s alone one has a little
- pocket-money anyhow, one can go about a little. But think of being
- married and no money, and perhaps children--you can’t be sure....”
- She poured out this concentrated philosophy of her class and type in
- jerky uncompleted sentences, with knitted brows, with discontented eyes
- towards the westward glow--forgetful, it seemed, for a moment even of
- me.
- “Look here, Marion,” I said abruptly, “what would you marry on?”
- “What IS the good?” she began.
- “Would you marry on three hundred a year?”
- She looked at me for a moment. “That’s six pounds a week,” she said.
- “One could manage on that, easily. Smithie’s brother--No, he only gets
- two hundred and fifty. He married a typewriting girl.”
- “Will you marry me if I get three hundred a year?”
- She looked at me again, with a curious gleam of hope.
- “IF!” she said.
- I held out my hand and looked her in the eyes. “It’s a bargain,” I said.
- She hesitated and touched my hand for an instant. “It’s silly,” she
- remarked as she did so. “It means really we’re--” She paused.
- “Yes?” said I.
- “Engaged. You’ll have to wait years. What good can it do you?”
- “Not so many years.” I answered.
- For a moment she brooded.
- Then she glanced at me with a smile, half-sweet, half-wistful, that has
- stuck in my memory for ever.
- “I like you!” she said. “I shall like to be engaged to you.”
- And, faint on the threshold of hearing, I caught her ventured “dear!”
- It’s odd that in writing this down my memory passed over all that
- intervened and I feel it all again, and once again I’m Marion’s boyish
- lover taking great joy in such rare and little things.
- VI
- At last I went to the address my uncle had given me in Gower Street, and
- found my aunt Susan waiting tea for him.
- Directly I came into the room I appreciated the change in outlook that
- the achievement of Tono-Bungay had made almost as vividly as when I
- saw my uncle’s new hat. The furniture of the room struck upon my eye as
- almost stately. The chairs and sofa were covered with chintz which gave
- it a dim, remote flavour of Bladesover; the mantel, the cornice, the
- gas pendant were larger and finer than the sort of thing I had grown
- accustomed to in London. And I was shown in by a real housemaid with
- real tails to her cap, and great quantities of reddish hair. There was
- my aunt too looking bright and pretty, in a blue-patterned tea-wrap with
- bows that seemed to me the quintessence of fashion. She was sitting in
- a chair by the open window with quite a pile of yellow-labelled books
- on the occasional table beside her. Before the large, paper-decorated
- fireplace stood a three-tiered cake-stand displaying assorted cakes,
- and a tray with all the tea equipage except the teapot, was on the large
- centre-table. The carpet was thick, and a spice of adventure was given
- it by a number of dyed sheep-skin mats.
- “Hello!” said my aunt as I appeared. “It’s George!”
- “Shall I serve the tea now, Mem?” said the real housemaid, surveying our
- greeting coldly.
- “Not till Mr. Ponderevo comes, Meggie,” said my aunt, and grimaced with
- extraordinary swiftness and virulence as the housemaid turned her back.
- “Meggie she calls herself,” said my aunt as the door closed, and left me
- to infer a certain want of sympathy.
- “You’re looking very jolly, aunt,” said I.
- “What do you think of all this old Business he’s got?” asked my aunt.
- “Seems a promising thing,” I said.
- “I suppose there is a business somewhere?”
- “Haven’t you seen it?”
- “‘Fraid I’d say something AT it George, if I did. So he won’t let me. It
- came on quite suddenly. Brooding he was and writing letters and sizzling
- something awful--like a chestnut going to pop. Then he came home one
- day saying Tono-Bungay till I thought he was clean off his onion, and
- singing--what was it?”
- “‘I’m afloat, I’m afloat,’” I guessed.
- “The very thing. You’ve heard him. And saying our fortunes were made.
- Took me out to the Ho’burm Restaurant, George,--dinner, and we had
- champagne, stuff that blows up the back of your nose and makes you go
- SO, and he said at last he’d got things worthy of me--and we moved here
- next day. It’s a swell house, George. Three pounds a week for the rooms.
- And he says the Business’ll stand it.”
- She looked at me doubtfully.
- “Either do that or smash,” I said profoundly.
- We discussed the question for a moment mutely with our eyes. My aunt
- slapped the pile of books from Mudie’s.
- “I’ve been having such a Go of reading, George. You never did!”
- “What do you think of the business?” I asked.
- “Well, they’ve let him have money,” she said, and thought and raised her
- eyebrows.
- “It’s been a time,” she went on. “The flapping about! Me sitting doing
- nothing and him on the go like a rocket. He’s done wonders. But he wants
- you, George--he wants you. Sometimes he’s full of hope--talks of when
- we’re going to have a carriage and be in society--makes it seem so
- natural and topsy-turvy, I hardly know whether my old heels aren’t up
- here listening to him, and my old head on the floor.... Then he gets
- depressed. Says he wants restraint. Says he can make a splash but can’t
- keep on. Says if you don’t come in everything will smash--But you are
- coming in?”
- She paused and looked at me.
- “Well--”
- “You don’t say you won’t come in!”
- “But look here, aunt,” I said, “do you understand quite?... It’s a quack
- medicine. It’s trash.”
- “There’s no law against selling quack medicine that I know of,” said
- my aunt. She thought for a minute and became unusually grave. “It’s our
- only chance, George,” she said. “If it doesn’t go...”
- There came the slamming of a door, and a loud bellowing from the next
- apartment through the folding doors. “Here-er Shee Rulk lies Poo Tom
- Bo--oling.”
- “Silly old Concertina! Hark at him, George!” She raised her voice.
- “Don’t sing that, you old Walrus, you! Sing ‘I’m afloat!’”
- One leaf of the folding doors opened and my uncle appeared.
- “Hullo, George! Come along at last? Gossome tea-cake, Susan?”
- “Thought it over George?” he said abruptly.
- “Yes,” said I.
- “Coming in?”
- I paused for a last moment and nodded yes.
- “Ah!” he cried. “Why couldn’t you say that a week ago?”
- “I’ve had false ideas about the world,” I said. “Oh! they don’t matter
- now! Yes, I’ll come, I’ll take my chance with you, I won’t hesitate
- again.”
- And I didn’t. I stuck to that resolution for seven long years.
- CHAPTER THE THIRD
- HOW WE MADE TONO-BUNGAY HUM
- I
- So I made my peace with my uncle, and we set out upon this
- bright enterprise of selling slightly injurious rubbish at
- one-and-three-halfpence and two-and-nine a bottle, including the
- Government stamp. We made Tono-Bungay hum! It brought us wealth,
- influence, respect, the confidence of endless people. All that my uncle
- promised me proved truth and understatement; Tono-Bungay carried me to
- freedoms and powers that no life of scientific research, no passionate
- service of humanity could ever have given me....
- It was my uncle’s genius that did it. No doubt he needed me,--I was,
- I will admit, his indispensable right hand; but his was the brain to
- conceive. He wrote every advertisement; some of them even he sketched.
- You must remember that his were the days before the Time took to
- enterprise and the vociferous hawking of that antiquated
- Encyclopedia. That alluring, button-holing, let-me
- -just-tell-you-quite-soberly-something-you-ought-to-know style of
- newspaper advertisement, with every now and then a convulsive jump of
- some attractive phrase into capitals, was then almost a novelty. “Many
- people who are MODERATELY well think they are QUITE well,” was one of
- his early efforts. The jerks in capitals were, “DO NOT NEED DRUGS OR
- MEDICINE,” and “SIMPLY A PROPER REGIMEN TO GET YOU IN TONE.” One was
- warned against the chemist or druggist who pushed “much-advertised
- nostrums” on one’s attention. That trash did more harm than good. The
- thing needed was regimen--and Tono-Bungay!
- Very early, too, was that bright little quarter column, at least it was
- usually a quarter column in the evening papers: “HILARITY--Tono-Bungay.
- Like Mountain Air in the Veins.” The penetrating trio of questions: “Are
- you bored with your Business? Are you bored with your Dinner. Are you
- bored with your Wife?”--that, too, was in our Gower Street days. Both
- these we had in our first campaign when we worked London south central,
- and west; and then, too, we had our first poster--the HEALTH, BEAUTY,
- AND STRENGTH one. That was his design; I happen still to have got by me
- the first sketch he made for it. I have reproduced it here with one or
- two others to enable the reader to understand the mental quality that
- initiated these familiar ornaments of London.
- (The second one is about eighteen months later, the germ of the
- well-known “Fog” poster; the third was designed for an influenza
- epidemic, but never issued.)
- These things were only incidental in my department.
- I had to polish them up for the artist and arrange the business of
- printing and distribution, and after my uncle had had a violent and
- needless quarrel with the advertising manager of the Daily Regulator
- about the amount of display given to one of his happy thoughts, I also
- took up the negotiations of advertisements for the press.
- We discussed and worked out distribution together first in the
- drawing-room floor in Gower Street with my aunt sometimes helping very
- shrewdly, and then, with a steadily improving type of cigar and older
- and older whisky, in his smuggery at their first house, the one in
- Beckenham. Often we worked far into the night sometimes until dawn.
- We really worked infernally hard, and, I recall, we worked with a very
- decided enthusiasm, not simply on my uncle’s part but mine, It was
- a game, an absurd but absurdly interesting game, and the points were
- scored in cases of bottles. People think a happy notion is enough to
- make a man rich, that fortunes can be made without toil. It’s a dream,
- as every millionaire (except one or two lucky gamblers) can testify;
- I doubt if J.D. Rockefeller in the early days of Standard Oil, worked
- harder than we did. We worked far into the night--and we also worked all
- day. We made a rule to be always dropping in at the factory unannounced
- to keep things right--for at first we could afford no properly
- responsible underlings--and we traveled London, pretending to be our own
- representatives and making all sorts of special arrangements.
- But none of this was my special work, and as soon as we could get other
- men in, I dropped the traveling, though my uncle found it particularly
- interesting and kept it up for years. “Does me good, George, to see the
- chaps behind their counters like I was once,” he explained. My special
- and distinctive duty was to give Tono-Bungay substance and an outward
- and visible bottle, to translate my uncle’s great imaginings into the
- creation of case after case of labelled bottles of nonsense, and the
- punctual discharge of them by railway, road and steamer towards
- their ultimate goal in the Great Stomach of the People. By all modern
- standards the business was, as my uncle would say, “absolutely bona
- fide.” We sold our stuff and got the money, and spent the money honestly
- in lies and clamour to sell more stuff. Section by section we spread
- it over the whole of the British Isles; first working the middle-class
- London suburbs, then the outer suburbs, then the home counties, then
- going (with new bills and a more pious style of “ad”) into Wales, a
- great field always for a new patent-medicine, and then into Lancashire.
- My uncle had in his inner office a big map of England, and as we took
- up fresh sections of the local press and our consignments invaded new
- areas, flags for advertisements and pink underlines for orders showed
- our progress.
- “The romance of modern commerce, George!” my uncle would say, rubbing
- his hands together and drawing in air through his teeth. “The romance of
- modern commerce, eh? Conquest. Province by province. Like sogers.”
- We subjugated England and Wales; we rolled over the Cheviots with a
- special adaptation containing eleven per cent. of absolute alcohol;
- “Tono-Bungay: Thistle Brand.” We also had the Fog poster adapted to a
- kilted Briton in a misty Highland scene.
- Under the shadow of our great leading line we were presently taking
- subsidiary specialties into action; “Tono-Bungay Hair Stimulant” was
- our first supplement. Then came “Concentrated Tono-Bungay” for the
- eyes. That didn’t go, but we had a considerable success with the Hair
- Stimulant. We broached the subject, I remember, in a little catechism
- beginning: “Why does the hair fall out? Because the follicles are
- fagged. What are the follicles?...” So it went on to the climax that
- the Hair Stimulant contained all “The essential principles of that most
- reviving tonic, Tono-Bungay, together with an emollient and nutritious
- oil derived from crude Neat’s Foot Oil by a process of refinement,
- separation and deodorization.... It will be manifest to any one of
- scientific attainments that in Neat’s Foot Oil derived from the hoofs
- and horns of beasts, we must necessarily have a natural skin and hair
- lubricant.”
- And we also did admirable things with our next subsidiaries,
- “Tono-Bungay Lozenges,” and “Tono-Bungay Chocolate.” These we urged upon
- the public for their extraordinary nutritive and recuperative value
- in cases of fatigue and strain. We gave them posters and illustrated
- advertisements showing climbers hanging from marvelously vertical
- cliffs, cyclist champions upon the track, mounted messengers engaged in
- Aix-to-Ghent rides, soldiers lying out in action under a hot sun. “You
- can GO for twenty-four hours,” we declared, “on Tono-Bungay Chocolate.”
- We didn’t say whether you could return on the same commodity. We also
- showed a dreadfully barristerish barrister, wig, side-whiskers, teeth,
- a horribly life-like portrait of all existing barristers, talking at a
- table, and beneath, this legend: “A Four Hours’ Speech on Tono-Bungay
- Lozenges, and as fresh as when he began.” Then brought in regiments
- of school-teachers, revivalist ministers, politicians and the like. I
- really do believe there was an element of “kick” in the strychnine
- in these lozenges, especially in those made according to our earlier
- formula. For we altered all our formulae--invariably weakening them
- enormously as sales got ahead.
- In a little while--so it seems to me now--we were employing travelers
- and opening up Great Britain at the rate of a hundred square miles a
- day. All the organisation throughout was sketched in a crude, entangled,
- half-inspired fashion by my uncle, and all of it had to be worked out
- into a practicable scheme of quantities and expenditure by me. We had a
- lot of trouble finding our travelers; in the end at least half of them
- were Irish-Americans, a wonderful breed for selling medicine. We had
- still more trouble over our factory manager, because of the secrets of
- the inner room, and in the end we got a very capable woman, Mrs. Hampton
- Diggs, who had formerly managed a large millinery workroom, whom we
- could trust to keep everything in good working order without finding out
- anything that wasn’t put exactly under her loyal and energetic nose.
- She conceived a high opinion of Tono-Bungay and took it in all forms
- and large quantities so long as I knew her. It didn’t seem to do her any
- harm. And she kept the girls going quite wonderfully.
- My uncle’s last addition to the Tono-Bungay group was the Tono-Bungay
- Mouthwash. The reader has probably read a hundred times that inspiring
- inquiry of his, “You are Young Yet, but are you Sure Nothing has Aged
- your Gums?”
- And after that we took over the agency for three or four good American
- lines that worked in with our own, and could be handled with it; Texan
- Embrocation, and “23--to clear the system” were the chief....
- I set down these bare facts. To me they are all linked with the figure
- of my uncle. In some of the old seventeenth and early eighteenth century
- prayerbooks at Bladesover there used to be illustrations with long
- scrolls coming out of the mouths of the wood-cut figures. I wish I could
- write all this last chapter on a scroll coming out of the head of my
- uncle, show it all the time as unfolding and pouring out from a short,
- fattening, small-legged man with stiff cropped hair, disobedient glasses
- on a perky little nose, and a round stare behind them. I wish I could
- show you him breathing hard and a little through his nose as his pen
- scrabbled out some absurd inspiration for a poster or a picture page,
- and make you hear his voice, charged with solemn import like the voice
- of a squeaky prophet, saying, “George! list’n! I got an ideer. I got a
- notion! George!”
- I should put myself into the same picture. Best setting for us, I think,
- would be the Beckenham snuggery, because there we worked hardest. It
- would be the lamplit room of the early nineties, and the clock upon the
- mantel would indicate midnight or later. We would be sitting on either
- side of the fire, I with a pipe, my uncle with a cigar or cigarette.
- There would be glasses standing inside the brass fender. Our expressions
- would be very grave. My uncle used to sit right back in his armchair;
- his toes always turned in when he was sitting down and his legs had a
- way of looking curved, as though they hadn’t bones or joints but were
- stuffed with sawdust.
- “George, whad’yer think of T.B. for sea-sickness?” he would say.
- “No good that I can imagine.”
- “Oom! No harm TRYING, George. We can but try.”
- I would suck my pipe. “Hard to get at. Unless we sold our stuff
- specially at the docks. Might do a special at Cook’s office, or in the
- Continental Bradshaw.”
- “It ‘ud give ‘em confidence, George.”
- He would Zzzz, with his glasses reflecting the red of the glowing coals.
- “No good hiding our light under a Bushel,” he would remark.
- I never really determined whether my uncle regarded Tono-Bungay as a
- fraud, or whether he didn’t come to believe in it in a kind of way by
- the mere reiteration of his own assertions. I think that his average
- attitude was one of kindly, almost parental, toleration. I remember
- saying on one occasion, “But you don’t suppose this stuff ever did a
- human being the slightest good all?” and how his face assumed a look of
- protest, as of one reproving harshness and dogmatism.
- “You’ve a hard nature, George,” he said. “You’re too ready to run things
- down. How can one TELL? How can one venture to TELL!...”
- I suppose any creative and developing game would have interested me
- in those years. At any rate, I know I put as much zeal into this
- Tono-Bungay as any young lieutenant could have done who suddenly found
- himself in command of a ship. It was extraordinarily interesting to me
- to figure out the advantage accruing from this shortening of the process
- or that, and to weigh it against the capital cost of the alteration. I
- made a sort of machine for sticking on the labels, that I patented; to
- this day there is a little trickle of royalties to me from that. I also
- contrived to have our mixture made concentrated, got the bottles, which
- all came sliding down a guarded slant-way, nearly filled with distilled
- water at one tap, and dripped our magic ingredients in at the next. This
- was an immense economy of space for the inner sanctum. For the bottling
- we needed special taps, and these, too, I invented and patented.
- We had a sort of endless band of bottles sliding along an inclined glass
- trough made slippery with running water. At one end a girl held them up
- to the light, put aside any that were imperfect and placed the others in
- the trough; the filling was automatic; at the other end a girl slipped
- in the cork and drove it home with a little mallet. Each tank, the
- little one for the vivifying ingredients and the big one for distilled
- water, had a level indicator, and inside I had a float arrangement that
- stopped the slide whenever either had sunk too low. Another girl stood
- ready with my machine to label the corked bottles and hand them to the
- three packers, who slipped them into their outer papers and put them,
- with a pad of corrugated paper between each pair, into a little groove
- from which they could be made to slide neatly into position in our
- standard packing-case. It sounds wild, I know, but I believe I was the
- first man in the city of London to pack patent medicines through the
- side of the packing-case, to discover there was a better way in than by
- the lid. Our cases packed themselves, practically; had only to be put
- into position on a little wheeled tray and when full pulled to the lift
- that dropped them to the men downstairs, who padded up the free space
- and nailed on top and side. Our girls, moreover, packed with corrugated
- paper and matchbook-wood box partitions when everybody else was using
- expensive young men to pack through the top of the box with straw, many
- breakages and much waste and confusion.
- II
- As I look back at them now, those energetic years seem all compacted
- to a year or so; from the days of our first hazardous beginning in
- Farringdon Street with barely a thousand pounds’ worth of stuff or
- credit all told--and that got by something perilously like snatching--to
- the days when my uncle went to the public on behalf of himself and me
- (one-tenth share) and our silent partners, the drug wholesalers and the
- printing people and the owner of that group of magazines and newspapers,
- to ask with honest confidence for L150,000. Those silent partners were
- remarkably sorry, I know, that they had not taken larger shares and
- given us longer credit when the subscriptions came pouring in. My uncle
- had a clear half to play with (including the one-tenth understood to be
- mine).
- L150,000--think of it!--for the goodwill in a string of lies and a trade
- in bottles of mitigated water! Do you realise the madness of the world
- that sanctions such a thing? Perhaps you don’t. At times use and wont
- certainly blinded me. If it had not been for Ewart, I don’t think I
- should have had an inkling of the wonderfulness of this development of
- my fortunes; I should have grown accustomed to it, fallen in with all
- its delusions as completely as my uncle presently did. He was immensely
- proud of the flotation. “They’ve never been given such value,” he said,
- “for a dozen years.” But Ewart, with his gesticulating hairy hands and
- bony wrists, his single-handed chorus to all this as it played
- itself over again in my memory, and he kept my fundamental absurdity
- illuminated for me during all this astonishing time.
- “It’s just on all fours with the rest of things,” he remarked; “only
- more so. You needn’t think you’re anything out of the way.”
- I remember one disquisition very distinctly. It was just after Ewart had
- been to Paris on a mysterious expedition to “rough in” some work for
- a rising American sculptor. This young man had a commission for an
- allegorical figure of Truth (draped, of course) for his State Capitol,
- and he needed help. Ewart had returned with his hair cut en brosse and
- with his costume completely translated into French. He wore, I remember,
- a bicycling suit of purplish-brown, baggy beyond ageing--the only
- creditable thing about it was that it had evidently not been made for
- him--a voluminous black tie, a decadent soft felt hat and several French
- expletives of a sinister description. “Silly clothes, aren’t they?” he
- said at the sight of my startled eye. “I don’t know why I got’m. They
- seemed all right over there.”
- He had come down to our Raggett Street place to discuss a benevolent
- project of mine for a poster by him, and he scattered remarkable
- discourse over the heads (I hope it was over the heads) of our bottlers.
- “What I like about it all, Ponderevo, is its poetry.... That’s where
- we get the pull of the animals. No animal would ever run a factory
- like this. Think!... One remembers the Beaver, of course. He might very
- possibly bottle things, but would he stick a label round ‘em and sell
- ‘em? The Beaver is a dreamy fool, I’ll admit, him and his dams, but
- after all there’s a sort of protection about ‘em, a kind of muddy
- practicality! They prevent things getting at him. And it’s not your
- poetry only. It’s the poetry of the customer too. Poet answering to
- poet--soul to soul. Health, Strength and Beauty--in a bottle--the magic
- philtre! Like a fairy tale....
- “Think of the people to whom your bottles of footle go! (I’m calling it
- footle, Ponderevo, out of praise,” he said in parenthesis.)
- “Think of the little clerks and jaded women and overworked people.
- People overstrained with wanting to do, people overstrained with wanting
- to be.... People, in fact, overstrained.... The real trouble of life,
- Ponderevo, isn’t that we exist--that’s a vulgar error; the real trouble
- is that we DON’T really exist and we want to. That’s what this--in
- the highest sense--just stands for! The hunger to be--for once--really
- alive--to the finger tips!...
- “Nobody wants to do and be the things people are--nobody. YOU don’t want
- to preside over this--this bottling; I don’t want to wear these beastly
- clothes and be led about by you; nobody wants to keep on sticking labels
- on silly bottles at so many farthings a gross. That isn’t existing!
- That’s--sus--substratum. None of us want to be what we are, or to do
- what we do. Except as a sort of basis. What do we want? You know. I
- know. Nobody confesses. What we all want to be is something perpetually
- young and beautiful--young Joves--young Joves, Ponderevo”--his voice
- became loud, harsh and declamatory--“pursuing coy half-willing nymphs
- through everlasting forests.”...
- There was a just-perceptible listening hang in the work about us.
- “Come downstairs,” I interrupted, “we can talk better there.”
- “I can talk better here,” he answered.
- He was just going on, but fortunately the implacable face of Mrs.
- Hampton Diggs appeared down the aisle of bottling machines.
- “All right,” he said, “I’ll come.”
- In the little sanctum below, my uncle was taking a digestive pause after
- his lunch and by no means alert. His presence sent Ewart back to the
- theme of modern commerce, over the excellent cigar my uncle gave him. He
- behaved with the elaborate deference due to a business magnate from an
- unknown man.
- “What I was pointing out to your nephew, sir,” said Ewart, putting both
- elbows on the table, “was the poetry of commerce. He doesn’t, you know,
- seem to see it at all.”
- My uncle nodded brightly. “Whad I tell ‘im,” he said round his cigar.
- “We are artists. You and I, sir, can talk, if you will permit me, as one
- artist to another. It’s advertisement has--done it. Advertisement has
- revolutionised trade and industry; it is going to revolutionise the
- world. The old merchant used to tote about commodities; the new one
- creates values. Doesn’t need to tote. He takes something that isn’t
- worth anything--or something that isn’t particularly worth anything--and
- he makes it worth something. He takes mustard that is just like anybody
- else’s mustard, and he goes about saying, shouting, singing, chalking
- on walls, writing inside people’s books, putting it everywhere, ‘Smith’s
- Mustard is the Best.’ And behold it is the best!”
- “True,” said my uncle, chubbily and with a dreamy sense of mysticism;
- “true!”
- “It’s just like an artist; he takes a lump of white marble on the verge
- of a lime-kiln, he chips it about, he makes--he makes a monument to
- himself--and others--a monument the world will not willingly let die.
- Talking of mustard, sir, I was at Clapham Junction the other day, and
- all the banks are overgrown with horse radish that’s got loose from
- a garden somewhere. You know what horseradish is--grows like
- wildfire--spreads--spreads. I stood at the end of the platform looking
- at the stuff and thinking about it. ‘Like fame,’ I thought, ‘rank and
- wild where it isn’t wanted. Why don’t the really good things in life
- grow like horseradish?’ I thought. My mind went off in a peculiar way
- it does from that to the idea that mustard costs a penny a tin--I bought
- some the other day for a ham I had. It came into my head that it would
- be ripping good business to use horseradish to adulterate mustard. I had
- a sort of idea that I could plunge into business on that, get rich and
- come back to my own proper monumental art again. And then I said, ‘But
- why adulterate? I don’t like the idea of adulteration.’”
- “Shabby,” said my uncle, nodding his head. “Bound to get found out!”
- “And totally unnecessary, too! Why not do up a mixture--three-quarters
- pounded horseradish and a quarter mustard--give it a fancy name--and
- sell it at twice the mustard price. See? I very nearly started the
- business straight away, only something happened. My train came along.”
- “Jolly good ideer,” said my uncle. He looked at me. “That really is an
- ideer, George,” he said.
- “Take shavin’s, again! You know that poem of Longfellow’s, sir, that
- sounds exactly like the first declension. What is it?--‘Marr’s a maker,
- men say!’”
- My uncle nodded and gurgled some quotation that died away.
- “Jolly good poem, George,” he said in an aside to me.
- “Well, it’s about a carpenter and a poetic Victorian child, you know,
- and some shavin’s. The child made no end out of the shavin’s. So
- might you. Powder ‘em. They might be anything. Soak ‘em in
- jipper,--Xylo-tobacco! Powder’em and get a little tar and turpentinous
- smell in,--wood-packing for hot baths--a Certain Cure for the scourge
- of Influenza! There’s all these patent grain foods,--what Americans call
- cereals. I believe I’m right, sir, in saying they’re sawdust.”
- “No!” said my uncle, removing his cigar; “as far as I can find out it’s
- really grain,--spoilt grain.... I’ve been going into that.”
- “Well, there you are!” said Ewart. “Say it’s spoilt grain. It carried
- out my case just as well. Your modern commerce is no more buying and
- selling than sculpture. It’s mercy--it’s salvation. It’s rescue work! It
- takes all sorts of fallen commodities by the hand and raises them. Cana
- isn’t in it. You turn water--into Tono-Bungay.”
- “Tono-Bungay’s all right,” said my uncle, suddenly grave. “We aren’t
- talking of Tono-Bungay.”
- “Your nephew, sir, is hard; he wants everything to go to a sort of
- predestinated end; he’s a Calvinist of Commerce. Offer him a dustbin
- full of stuff; he calls it refuse--passes by on the other side. Now YOU,
- sir you’d make cinders respect themselves.”
- My uncle regarded him dubiously for a moment. But there was a touch of
- appreciation in his eye.
- “Might make ‘em into a sort of sanitary brick,” he reflected over his
- cigar end.
- “Or a friable biscuit. Why NOT? You might advertise: ‘Why are Birds so
- Bright? Because they digest their food perfectly! Why do they digest
- their food so perfectly? Because they have a gizzard! Why hasn’t man
- a gizzard? Because he can buy Ponderevo’s Asphalt Triturating, Friable
- Biscuit--Which is Better.’”
- He delivered the last words in a shout, with his hairy hand flourished
- in the air....
- “Damn clever fellow,” said my uncle, after he had one. “I know a man
- when I see one. He’d do. But drunk, I should say. But that only makes
- some chap brighter. If he WANTS to do that poster, he can. Zzzz. That
- ideer of his about the horseradish. There’s something in that, George.
- I’m going to think over that....”
- I may say at once that my poster project came to nothing in the end,
- though Ewart devoted an interesting week to the matter. He let his
- unfortunate disposition to irony run away with him. He produced a
- picture of two beavers with a subtle likeness, he said, to myself and my
- uncle--the likeness to my uncle certainly wasn’t half bad--and they
- were bottling rows and rows of Tono-Bungay, with the legend “Modern
- commerce.” It certainly wouldn’t have sold a case, though he urged it on
- me one cheerful evening on the ground that it would “arouse curiosity.”
- In addition he produced a quite shocking study of my uncle, excessively
- and needlessly nude, but, so far as I was able to judge, an admirable
- likeness, engaged in feats of strength of a Gargantuan type before an
- audience of deboshed and shattered ladies. The legend, “Health, Beauty,
- Strength,” below, gave a needed point to his parody. This he hung up in
- the studio over the oil shop, with a flap of brown paper; by way of a
- curtain over it to accentuate its libellous offence.
- CHAPTER THE FOURTH
- MARION I
- As I look back on those days in which we built up the great Tono-Bungay
- property out of human hope and credit for bottles and rent and printing,
- I see my life as it were arranged in two parallel columns of unequal
- width, a wider, more diffused, eventful and various one which
- continually broadens out, the business side of my life, and a narrow,
- darker and darkling one shot ever and again with a gleam of happiness,
- my home-life with Marion. For, of course, I married Marion.
- I didn’t, as a matter of fact, marry her until a year after Tono-Bungay
- was thoroughly afloat, and then only after conflicts and discussions
- of a quite strenuous sort. By that time I was twenty-four. It seems
- the next thing to childhood now. We were both in certain directions
- unusually ignorant and simple; we were temperamentally antagonistic, and
- we hadn’t--I don’t think we were capable of--an idea in common. She was
- young and extraordinarily conventional--she seemed never to have an
- idea of her own but always the idea of her class--and I was young and
- sceptical, enterprising and passionate; the two links that held us
- together were the intense appeal her physical beauty had for me, and her
- appreciation of her importance in my thoughts. There can be no doubt of
- my passion for her. In her I had discovered woman desired. The nights I
- have lain awake on account of her, writhing, biting my wrists in a fever
- of longing! ...
- I have told how I got myself a silk hat and black coat to please her
- on Sunday--to the derision of some of my fellow-students who charged to
- meet me, and how we became engaged. But that was only the beginning
- of our difference. To her that meant the beginning of a not unpleasant
- little secrecy, an occasional use of verbal endearments, perhaps even
- kisses. It was something to go on indefinitely, interfering in no way
- with her gossiping spells of work at Smithie’s. To me it was a pledge
- to come together into the utmost intimacy of soul and body so soon as we
- could contrive it....
- I don’t know if it will strike the reader that I am setting out to
- discuss the queer, unwise love relationship and my bungle of a marriage
- with excessive solemnity. But to me it seems to reach out to vastly
- wider issues than our little personal affair. I’ve thought over my life.
- In these last few years I’ve tried to get at least a little wisdom out
- of it. And in particular I’ve thought over this part of my life. I’m
- enormously impressed by the ignorant, unguided way in which we two
- entangled ourselves with each other. It seems to me the queerest thing
- in all this network of misunderstandings and misstatements and faulty
- and ramshackle conventions which makes up our social order as the
- individual meets it, that we should have come together so accidentally
- and so blindly. Because we were no more than samples of the common fate.
- Love is not only the cardinal fact in the individual life, but the most
- important concern of the community; after all, the way in which the
- young people of this generation pair off determines the fate of the
- nation; all the other affairs of the State are subsidiary to that.
- And we leave it to flushed and blundering youth to stumble on its own
- significance, with nothing to guide in but shocked looks and sentimental
- twaddle and base whisperings and cant-smeared examples.
- I have tried to indicate something of my own sexual development in the
- preceding chapter. Nobody was ever frank and decent with me in this
- relation; nobody, no book, ever came and said to me thus and thus is
- the world made, and so and so is necessary. Everything came obscurely,
- indefinitely, perplexingly; and all I knew of law or convention in the
- matter had the form of threatenings and prohibitions. Except through the
- furtive, shameful talk of my coevals at Goudhurst and Wimblehurst, I
- was not even warned against quite horrible dangers. My ideas were made
- partly of instinct, partly of a romantic imagination, partly woven out
- of a medley of scraps of suggestion that came to me haphazard. I had
- read widely and confusedly “Vathek,” Shelley, Tom Paine, Plutarch,
- Carlyle, Haeckel, William Morris, the Bible, the Freethinker, the
- Clarion, “The Woman Who Did,”--I mention the ingredients that come first
- to mind. All sorts of ideas were jumbled up in me and never a lucid
- explanation. But it was evident to me that the world regarded Shelley,
- for example, as a very heroic as well as beautiful person; and that
- to defy convention and succumb magnificently to passion was the proper
- thing to do to gain the respect and affection of all decent people.
- And the make-up of Marion’s mind in the matter was an equally irrational
- affair. Her training had been one, not simply of silences, but
- suppressions. An enormous force of suggestion had so shaped her that
- the intense natural fastidiousness of girlhood had developed into
- an absolute perversion of instinct. For all that is cardinal in this
- essential business of life she had one inseparable epithet--“horrid.”
- Without any such training she would have been a shy lover, but now she
- was an impossible one. For the rest she had derived, I suppose, partly
- from the sort of fiction she got from the Public Library, and partly
- from the workroom talk at Smithie’s. So far as the former origin went,
- she had an idea of love as a state of worship and service on the part of
- the man and of condescension on the part of the woman. There was nothing
- “horrid” about it in any fiction she had read. The man gave presents,
- did services, sought to be in every way delightful. The woman “went out”
- with him, smiled at him, was kissed by him in decorous secrecy, and if
- he chanced to offend, denied her countenance and presence. Usually she
- did something “for his good” to him, made him go to church, made him
- give up smoking or gambling, smartened him up. Quite at the end of the
- story came a marriage, and after that the interest ceased.
- That was the tenor of Marion’s fiction; but I think the work-table
- conversation at Smithie’s did something to modify that. At Smithie’s it
- was recognised, I think, that a “fellow” was a possession to be desired;
- that it was better to be engaged to a fellow than not; that fellows had
- to be kept--they might be mislaid, they might even be stolen. There was
- a case of stealing at Smithie’s, and many tears.
- Smithie I met before we were married, and afterwards she became a
- frequent visitor to our house at Ealing. She was a thin, bright-eyed,
- hawk-nosed girl of thirtyodd, with prominent teeth, a high-pitched,
- eager voice and a disposition to be urgently smart in her dress. Her
- hats were startling and various, but invariably disconcerting, and she
- talked in a rapid, nervous flow that was hilarious rather than witty,
- and broken by little screams of “Oh, my dear!” and “you never did!” She
- was the first woman I ever met who used scent. Poor old Smithie! What a
- harmless, kindly soul she really was, and how heartily I detested her!
- Out of the profits on the Persian robes she supported a sister’s family
- of three children, she “helped” a worthless brother, and overflowed
- in help even to her workgirls, but that didn’t weigh with me in those
- youthfully-narrow times. It was one of the intense minor irritations of
- my married life that Smithie’s whirlwind chatter seemed to me to have
- far more influence with Marion than anything I had to say. Before all
- things I coveted her grip upon Marion’s inaccessible mind.
- In the workroom at Smithie’s, I gathered, they always spoke of me
- demurely as “A Certain Person.” I was rumoured to be dreadfully
- “clever,” and there were doubts--not altogether without
- justification--of the sweetness of my temper.
- II
- Well, these general explanations will enable the reader to understand
- the distressful times we two had together when presently I began to feel
- on a footing with Marion and to fumble conversationally for the mind and
- the wonderful passion I felt, obstinately and stupidity, must be in her.
- I think she thought me the maddest of sane men; “clever,” in fact,
- which at Smithie’s was, I suppose, the next thing to insanity, a word
- intimating incomprehensible and incalculable motives.... She could be
- shocked at anything, she misunderstood everything, and her weapon was
- a sulky silence that knitted her brows, spoilt her mouth and robbed her
- face of beauty. “Well, if we can’t agree, I don’t see why you should
- go on talking,” she used to say. That would always enrage me beyond
- measure. Or, “I’m afraid I’m not clever enough to understand that.”
- Silly little people! I see it all now, but then I was no older than
- she and I couldn’t see anything but that Marion, for some inexplicable
- reason, wouldn’t come alive.
- We would contrive semi-surreptitious walks on Sunday, and part
- speechless with the anger of indefinable offences. Poor Marion! The
- things I tried to put before her, my fermenting ideas about theology,
- about Socialism, about aesthetics--the very words appalled her, gave her
- the faint chill of approaching impropriety, the terror of a very present
- intellectual impossibility. Then by an enormous effort I would suppress
- myself for a time and continue a talk that made her happy, about
- Smithie’s brother, about the new girl who had come to the workroom,
- about the house we would presently live in. But there we differed
- a little. I wanted to be accessible to St. Paul’s or Cannon Street
- Station, and she had set her mind quite resolutely upon Eating.... It
- wasn’t by any means quarreling all the time, you understand. She liked
- me to play the lover “nicely”; she liked the effect of going about--we
- had lunches, we went to Earl’s Court, to Kew, to theatres and concerts,
- but not often to concerts, because, though Marion “liked” music,
- she didn’t like “too much of it,” to picture shows--and there was a
- nonsensical sort of babytalk I picked up--I forget where now--that
- became a mighty peacemaker.
- Her worst offence for me was an occasional excursion into the Smithie
- style of dressing, debased West Kensington. For she had no sense at all
- of her own beauty. She had no comprehension whatever of beauty of the
- body, and she could slash her beautiful lines to rags with hat-brims and
- trimmings. Thank Heaven! a natural refinement, a natural timidity,
- and her extremely slender purse kept her from the real Smithie
- efflorescence! Poor, simple, beautiful, kindly limited Marion! Now that
- I am forty-five, I can look back at her with all my old admiration
- and none of my old bitterness with a new affection and not a scrap
- of passion, and take her part against the equally stupid,
- drivingly-energetic, sensuous, intellectual sprawl I used to be. I was
- a young beast for her to have married--a hound beast. With her it was
- my business to understand and control--and I exacted fellowship,
- passion....
- We became engaged, as I have told; we broke it off and joined again. We
- went through a succession of such phases. We had no sort of idea what
- was wrong with us. Presently we were formally engaged. I had a wonderful
- interview with her father, in which he was stupendously grave
- and H--less, wanted to know about my origins and was tolerant
- (exasperatingly tolerant) because my mother was a servant, and
- afterwards her mother took to kissing me, and I bought a ring. But
- the speechless aunt, I gathered, didn’t approve--having doubts of my
- religiosity. Whenever we were estranged we could keep apart for days;
- and to begin with, every such separation was a relief. And then I would
- want her; a restless longing would come upon me. I would think of the
- flow of her arms, of the soft, gracious bend of her body. I would lie
- awake or dream of a transfigured Marion of light and fire. It was indeed
- Dame Nature driving me on to womankind in her stupid, inexorable way;
- but I thought it was the need of Marion that troubled me. So I always
- went back to Marion at last and made it up and more or less conceded or
- ignored whatever thing had parted us, and more and more I urged her to
- marry me....
- In the long run that became a fixed idea. It entangled my will and my
- pride; I told myself I was not going to be beaten. I hardened to the
- business. I think, as a matter of fact, my real passion for Marion had
- waned enormously long before we were married, that she had lived it down
- by sheer irresponsiveness. When I felt sure of my three hundred a year
- she stipulated for delay, twelve months’ delay, “to see how things would
- turn out.” There were times when she seemed simply an antagonist holding
- out irritatingly against something I had to settle. Moreover, I began
- to be greatly distracted by the interest and excitement of Tono-Bungay’s
- success, by the change and movement in things, the going to and fro.
- I would forget her for days together, and then desire her with an
- irritating intensity at last, one Saturday afternoon, after a brooding
- morning, I determined almost savagely that these delays must end.
- I went off to the little home at Walham Green, and made Marion come with
- me to Putney Common. Marion wasn’t at home when I got there and I had
- to fret for a time and talk to her father, who was just back from
- his office, he explained, and enjoying himself in his own way in the
- greenhouse.
- “I’m going to ask your daughter to marry me!” I said. “I think we’ve
- been waiting long enough.”
- “I don’t approve of long engagements either,” said her father. “But
- Marion will have her own way about it, anyhow. Seen this new powdered
- fertiliser?”
- I went in to talk to Mrs. Ramboat. “She’ll want time to get her things,”
- said Mrs. Ramboat....
- I and Marion sat down together on a little seat under some trees at the
- top of Putney Hill, and I came to my point abruptly.
- “Look here, Marion,” I said, “are you going to marry me or are you not?”
- She smiled at me. “Well,” she said, “we’re engaged--aren’t we?”
- “That can’t go on for ever. Will you marry me next week?”
- She looked me in the face. “We can’t,” she said.
- “You promised to marry me when I had three hundred a year.”
- She was silent for a space. “Can’t we go on for a time as we are? We
- COULD marry on three hundred a year. But it means a very little house.
- There’s Smithie’s brother. They manage on two hundred and fifty, but
- that’s very little. She says they have a semi-detached house almost on
- the road, and hardly a bit of garden. And the wall to next-door is so
- thin they hear everything. When her baby cries--they rap. And people
- stand against the railings and talk.... Can’t we wait? You’re doing so
- well.”
- An extraordinary bitterness possessed me at this invasion of the
- stupendous beautiful business of love by sordid necessity. I answered
- her with immense restraint.
- “If,” I said, “we could have a double-fronted, detached house--at
- Ealing, say--with a square patch of lawn in front and a garden
- behind--and--and a tiled bathroom.”
- “That would be sixty pounds a year at least.”
- “Which means five hundred a year.... Yes, well, you see, I told my uncle
- I wanted that, and I’ve got it.”
- “Got what?”
- “Five hundred pounds a year.”
- “Five hundred pounds!”
- I burst into laughter that had more than a taste of bitterness.
- “Yes,” I said, “really! and NOW what do you think?”
- “Yes,” she said, a little flushed; “but be sensible! Do you really mean
- you’ve got a Rise, all at once, of two hundred a year?”
- “To marry on--yes.”
- She scrutinised me a moment. “You’ve done this as a surprise!” she said,
- and laughed at my laughter. She had become radiant, and that made me
- radiant, too.
- “Yes,” I said, “yes,” and laughed no longer bitterly.
- She clasped her hands and looked me in the eyes.
- She was so pleased that I forgot absolutely my disgust of a moment
- before. I forgot that she had raised her price two hundred pounds a year
- and that I had bought her at that.
- “Come!” I said, standing up; “let’s go towards the sunset, dear, and
- talk about it all. Do you know--this is a most beautiful world, an
- amazingly beautiful world, and when the sunset falls upon you it
- makes you into shining gold. No, not gold--into golden glass.... Into
- something better that either glass or gold.”...
- And for all that evening I wooed her and kept her glad. She made me
- repeat my assurances over again and still doubted a little.
- We furnished that double-fronted house from attic--it ran to an
- attic--to cellar, and created a garden.
- “Do you know Pampas Grass?” said Marion. “I love Pampas Grass... if
- there is room.”
- “You shall have Pampas Grass,” I declared. And there were moments as we
- went in imagination about that house together, when my whole being cried
- out to take her in my arms--now. But I refrained. On that aspect of life
- I touched very lightly in that talk, very lightly because I had had
- my lessons. She promised to marry me within two months’ time. Shyly,
- reluctantly, she named a day, and next afternoon, in heat and wrath,
- we “broke it off” again for the last time. We split upon procedure.
- I refused flatly to have a normal wedding with wedding cake, in white
- favours, carriages and the rest of it. It dawned upon me suddenly in
- conversation with her and her mother, that this was implied. I blurted
- out my objection forthwith, and this time it wasn’t any ordinary
- difference of opinion; it was a “row.” I don’t remember a quarter of the
- things we flung out in that dispute. I remember her mother reiterating
- in tones of gentle remonstrance: “But, George dear, you must have
- a cake--to send home.” I think we all reiterated things. I seem to
- remember a refrain of my own: “A marriage is too sacred a thing, too
- private a thing, for this display. Her father came in and stood behind
- me against the wall, and her aunt appeared beside the sideboard and
- stood with arms, looking from speaker to speaker, a sternly gratified
- prophetess. It didn’t occur to me then! How painful it was to Marion for
- these people to witness my rebellion.
- “But, George,” said her father, “what sort of marriage do you want? You
- don’t want to go to one of those there registry offices?”
- “That’s exactly what I’d like to do. Marriage is too private a thing--”
- “I shouldn’t feel married,” said Mrs. Ramboat.
- “Look here, Marion,” I said; “we are going to be married at a registry
- office. I don’t believe in all these fripperies and superstitions, and I
- won’t submit to them. I’ve agreed to all sorts of things to please you.”
- “What’s he agreed to?” said her father--unheeded.
- “I can’t marry at a registry office,” said Marion, sallow-white.
- “Very well,” I said. “I’ll marry nowhere else.”
- “I can’t marry at a registry office.”
- “Very well,” I said, standing up, white and tense and it amazed me, but
- I was also exultant; “then we won’t marry at all.”
- She leant forward over the table, staring blankly. But presently her
- half-averted face began to haunt me as she had sat at the table, and her
- arm and the long droop of her shoulder.
- III
- The next day I did an unexampled thing. I sent a telegram to my uncle,
- “Bad temper not coming to business,” and set off for Highgate and Ewart.
- He was actually at work--on a bust of Millie, and seemed very glad for
- any interruption.
- “Ewart, you old Fool,” I said, “knock off and come for a day’s gossip.
- I’m rotten. There’s a sympathetic sort of lunacy about you. Let’s go to
- Staines and paddle up to Windsor.”
- “Girl?” said Ewart, putting down a chisel.
- “Yes.”
- That was all I told him of my affair.
- “I’ve got no money,” he remarked, to clear up ambiguity in my
- invitation.
- We got a jar of shandy-gaff, some food, and, on Ewart’s suggestion,
- two Japanese sunshades in Staines; we demanded extra cushions at the
- boathouse and we spent an enormously soothing day in discourse and
- meditation, our boat moored in a shady place this side of Windsor.
- I seem to remember Ewart with a cushion forward, only his heels and
- sunshade and some black ends of hair showing, a voice and no more,
- against the shining, smoothly-streaming mirror of the trees and bushes.
- “It’s not worth it,” was the burthen of the voice. “You’d better get
- yourself a Millie, Ponderevo, and then you wouldn’t feel so upset.”
- “No,” I said decidedly, “that’s not my way.”
- A thread of smoke ascended from Ewart for a while, like smoke from an
- altar.
- “Everything’s a muddle, and you think it isn’t. Nobody knows where
- we are--because, as a matter of fact we aren’t anywhere. Are women
- property--or are they fellow-creatures? Or a sort of proprietary
- goddesses? They’re so obviously fellow-creatures. You believe in the
- goddess?”
- “No,” I said, “that’s not my idea.”
- “What is your idea?”
- “Well”
- “H’m,” said Ewart, in my pause.
- “My idea,” I said, “is to meet one person who will belong to me--to whom
- I shall belong--body and soul. No half-gods! Wait till she comes. If she
- comes at all.... We must come to each other young and pure.”
- “There’s no such thing as a pure person or an impure person.... Mixed to
- begin with.”
- This was so manifestly true that it silenced me altogether.
- “And if you belong to her and she to you, Ponderevo--which end’s the
- head?”
- I made no answer except an impatient “oh!”
- For a time we smoked in silence....
- “Did I tell you, Ponderevo, of a wonderful discovery I’ve made?” Ewart
- began presently.
- “No,” I said, “what is it?”
- “There’s no Mrs. Grundy.”
- “No?”
- “No! Practically not. I’ve just thought all that business out. She’s
- merely an instrument, Ponderevo. She’s borne the blame. Grundy’s a man.
- Grundy unmasked. Rather lean and out of sorts. Early middle age. With
- bunchy black whiskers and a worried eye. Been good so far, and it’s
- fretting him! Moods! There’s Grundy in a state of sexual panic, for
- example,--‘For God’s sake cover it up! They get together--they get
- together! It’s too exciting! The most dreadful things are happening!’
- Rushing about--long arms going like a windmill. ‘They must be kept
- apart!’ Starts out for an absolute obliteration of everything absolute
- separations. One side of the road for men, and the other for women, and
- a hoarding--without posters between them. Every boy and girl to be sewed
- up in a sack and sealed, just the head and hands and feet out until
- twenty-one. Music abolished, calico garments for the lower animals!
- Sparrows to be suppressed--ab-so-lutely.”
- I laughed abruptly.
- “Well, that’s Mr. Grundy in one mood--and it puts Mrs. Grundy--She’s a
- much-maligned person, Ponderevo--a rake at heart--and it puts her in a
- most painful state of fluster--most painful! She’s an amenable creature.
- When Grundy tells her things are shocking, she’s shocked--pink and
- breathless. She goes about trying to conceal her profound sense of guilt
- behind a haughty expression....
- “Grundy, meanwhile, is in a state of complete whirlabout. Long lean
- knuckly hands pointing and gesticulating! ‘They’re still thinking of
- things--thinking of things! It’s dreadful. They get it out of books.
- I can’t imagine where they get it! I must watch! There’re people over
- there whispering! Nobody ought to whisper!--There’s something suggestive
- in the mere act! Then, pictures! In the museum--things too dreadful for
- words. Why can’t we have pure art--with the anatomy all wrong and pure
- and nice--and pure fiction pure poetry, instead of all this stuff with
- allusions--allusions?... Excuse me! There’s something up behind that
- locked door! The keyhole! In the interests of public morality--yes, Sir,
- as a pure good man--I insist--I’LL look--it won’t hurt me--I insist on
- looking my duty--M’m’m--the keyhole!’”
- He kicked his legs about extravagantly, and I laughed again.
- “That’s Grundy in one mood, Ponderevo. It isn’t Mrs. Grundy. That’s one
- of the lies we tell about women. They’re too simple. Simple! Woman ARE
- simple! They take on just what men tell ‘em.”
- Ewart meditated for a space. “Just exactly as it’s put to them,” he
- said, and resumed the moods of Mr. Grundy.
- “Then you get old Grundy in another mood. Ever caught him nosing,
- Ponderevo? Mad with the idea of mysterious, unknown, wicked, delicious
- things. Things that aren’t respectable. Wow! Things he mustn’t do!...
- Any one who knows about these things, knows there’s just as much mystery
- and deliciousness about Grundy’s forbidden things as there is about
- eating ham. Jolly nice if it’s a bright morning and you’re well and
- hungry and having breakfast in the open air. Jolly unattractive if
- you’re off colour. But Grundy’s covered it all up and hidden it and
- put mucky shades and covers over it until he’s forgotten it. Begins to
- fester round it in his mind. Has dreadful struggles--with himself about
- impure thoughts.... Then you set Grundy with hot ears,--curious in
- undertones. Grundy on the loose, Grundy in a hoarse whisper and
- with furtive eyes and convulsive movements--making things indecent.
- Evolving--in dense vapours--indecency!
- “Grundy sins. Oh, yes, he’s a hypocrite. Sneaks round a corner and
- sins ugly. It’s Grundy and his dark corners that make vice, vice! We
- artists--we have no vices.
- “And then he’s frantic with repentance. And wants to be cruel to fallen
- women and decent harmless sculptors of the simple nude--like me--and so
- back to his panic again.”
- “Mrs. Grundy, I suppose, doesn’t know he sins,” I remarked.
- “No? I’m not so sure.... But, bless her heart she’s a woman.... She’s
- a woman. Then again you get Grundy with a large greasy smile--like
- an accident to a butter tub--all over his face, being Liberal
- Minded--Grundy in his Anti-Puritan moments, ‘trying not to see Harm in
- it’--Grundy the friend of innocent pleasure. He makes you sick with the
- Harm he’s trying not to see in it...
- “And that’s why everything’s wrong, Ponderevo. Grundy, damn him! stands
- in the light, and we young people can’t see. His moods affect us. We
- catch his gusts of panic, his disease of nosing, his greasiness. We
- don’t know what we may think, what we may say, he does his silly
- utmost to prevent our reading and seeing the one thing, the one sort of
- discussion we find--quite naturally and properly--supremely interesting.
- So we don’t adolescence; we blunder up to sex. Dare--dare to look--and
- he may dirt you for ever! The girls are terror-stricken to silence by
- his significant whiskers, by the bleary something in his eyes.”
- Suddenly Ewart, with an almost Jack-in-the-box effect, sat up.
- “He’s about us everywhere, Ponderevo,” he said, very solemnly.
- “Sometimes--sometimes I think he is--in our blood. In MINE.”
- He regarded me for my opinion very earnestly, with his pipe in the
- corner of his mouth.
- “You’re the remotest cousin he ever had,” I said.
- I reflected. “Look here, Ewart,” I asked, “how would you have things
- different?”
- He wrinkled up his queer face, regarded the wait and made his pipe
- gurgle for a space, thinking deeply.
- “There are complications, I admit. We’ve grown up under the terror of
- Grundy and that innocent but docile and--yes--formidable lady, his
- wife. I don’t know how far the complications aren’t a disease, a sort of
- bleaching under the Grundy shadow.... It is possible there are things
- I have still to learn about women.... Man has eaten of the Tree of
- Knowledge. His innocence is gone. You can’t have your cake and eat
- it. We’re in for knowledge; let’s have it plain and straight. I should
- begin, I think, by abolishing the ideas of decency and indecency....”
- “Grundy would have fits!” I injected.
- “Grundy, Ponderevo, would have cold douches--publicly--if the sight was
- not too painful--three times a day.... But I don’t think, mind you,
- that I should let the sexes run about together. No. The fact behind the
- sexes--is sex. It’s no good humbugging. It trails about--even in the
- best mixed company. Tugs at your ankle. The men get showing off and
- quarrelling--and the women. Or they’re bored. I suppose the ancestral
- males have competed for the ancestral females ever since they were both
- some sort of grubby little reptile. You aren’t going to alter that in
- a thousand years or so.... Never should you have a mixed company,
- never--except with only one man or only one woman. How would that be?...
- “Or duets only?...
- “How to manage it? Some rule of etiquette, perhaps.”... He became
- portentously grave.
- Then his long hand went out in weird gestures.
- “I seem to see--I seem to see--a sort of City of Women, Ponderevo.
- Yes.... A walled enclosure--good stone-mason’s work--a city wall, high
- as the walls of Rome, going about a garden. Dozens of square miles of
- garden--trees--fountains--arbours--lakes. Lawns on which the women play,
- avenues in which they gossip, boats.... Women like that sort of thing.
- Any woman who’s been to a good eventful girls’ school lives on the
- memory of it for the rest of her life. It’s one of the pathetic things
- about women--the superiority of school and college--to anything they get
- afterwards. And this city-garden of women will have beautiful places
- for music, places for beautiful dresses, places for beautiful work.
- Everything a woman can want. Nurseries. Kindergartens. Schools. And no
- man--except to do rough work, perhaps--ever comes in. The men live in a
- world where they can hunt and engineer, invent and mine and manufacture,
- sail ships, drink deep and practice the arts, and fight--”
- “Yes,” I said, “but--”
- He stilled me with a gesture.
- “I’m coming to that. The homes of the women, Ponderevo, will be set in
- the wall of their city; each woman will have her own particular house
- and home, furnished after her own heart in her own manner--with a little
- balcony on the outside wall. Built into the wall--and a little balcony.
- And there she will go and look out, when the mood takes her, and all
- round the city there will be a broad road and seats and great shady
- trees. And men will stroll up and down there when they feel the need
- of feminine company; when, for instance, they want to talk about their
- souls or their characters or any of the things that only women will
- stand.... The women will lean over and look at the men and smile and
- talk to them as they fancy. And each woman will have this; she will have
- a little silken ladder she can let down if she chooses--if she wants to
- talk closer...”
- “The men would still be competing.”
- “There perhaps--yes. But they’d have to abide by the women’s decisions.”
- I raised one or two difficulties, and for a while we played with this
- idea.
- “Ewart,” I said, “this is like Doll’s Island.
- “Suppose,” I reflected, “an unsuccessful man laid siege to a balcony and
- wouldn’t let his rival come near it?”
- “Move him on,” said Ewart, “by a special regulation. As one does
- organ-grinders. No difficulty about that. And you could forbid it--make
- it against the etiquette. No life is decent without etiquette.... And
- people obey etiquette sooner than laws...”
- “H’m,” I said, and was struck by an idea that is remote in the world of
- a young man. “How about children?” I asked; “in the City? Girls are all
- very well. But boys, for example--grow up.”
- “Ah!” said Ewart. “Yes. I forgot. They mustn’t grow up inside.... They’d
- turn out the boys when they were seven. The father must come with a
- little pony and a little gun and manly wear, and take the boy away. Then
- one could come afterwards to one’s mother’s balcony.... It must be fine
- to have a mother. The father and the son...”
- “This is all very pretty in its way,” I said at last, “but it’s a dream.
- Let’s come back to reality. What I want to know is, what are you going
- to do in Brompton, let us say, or Walham Green NOW?”
- “Oh! damn it!” he remarked, “Walham Green! What a chap you are,
- Ponderevo!” and he made an abrupt end to his discourse. He wouldn’t even
- reply to my tentatives for a time.
- “While I was talking just now,” he remarked presently,
- “I had a quite different idea.”
- “What?”
- “For a masterpiece. A series. Like the busts of the Caesars. Only
- not heads, you know. We don’t see the people who do things to us
- nowadays...”
- “How will you do it, then?”
- “Hands--a series of hands! The hands of the Twentieth Century. I’ll do
- it. Some day some one will discover it--go there--see what I have done,
- and what is meant by it.”
- “See it where?”
- “On the tombs. Why not? The Unknown Master of the Highgate Slope! All
- the little, soft feminine hands, the nervous ugly males, the hands of
- the flops, and the hands of the snatchers! And Grundy’s loose, lean,
- knuckly affair--Grundy the terror!--the little wrinkles and the thumb!
- Only it ought to hold all the others together--in a slightly disturbing
- squeeze....Like Rodin’s great Hand--you know the thing!”
- IV
- I forget how many days intervened between that last breaking off of our
- engagement and Marion’s surrender. But I recall now the sharpness of my
- emotion, the concentrated spirit of tears and laughter in my throat as
- I read the words of her unexpected letter--“I have thought over
- everything, and I was selfish....” I rushed off to Walham Green that
- evening to give back all she had given me, to beat her altogether
- at giving. She was extraordinarily gentle and generous that time, I
- remember, and when at last I left her, she kissed me very sweetly.
- So we were married.
- We were married with all the customary incongruity. I gave--perhaps
- after a while not altogether ungrudgingly--and what I gave, Marion took,
- with a manifest satisfaction. After all, I was being sensible. So that
- we had three livery carriages to the church (one of the pairs of horses
- matched) and coachmen--with improvised flavour and very shabby silk
- hats--bearing white favours on their whips, and my uncle intervened with
- splendour and insisted upon having a wedding breakfast sent in from
- a caterer’s in Hammersmith. The table had a great display of
- chrysanthemums, and there was orange blossom in the significant place
- and a wonderful cake. We also circulated upwards of a score of wedges
- of that accompanied by silver-printed cards in which Marion’s name of
- Ramboat was stricken out by an arrow in favour of Ponderevo. We had a
- little rally of Marion’s relations, and several friends and friends’
- friends from Smithie’s appeared in the church and drifted vestry-ward.
- I produced my aunt and uncle a select group of two. The effect in that
- shabby little house was one of exhilarating congestion. The side-board,
- in which lived the table-cloth and the “Apartments” card, was used for
- a display of the presents, eked out by the unused balance of the
- silver-printed cards.
- Marion wore the white raiment of a bride, white silk and satin, that did
- not suit her, that made her seem large and strange to me; she obtruded
- bows and unfamiliar contours. She went through all this strange ritual
- of an English wedding with a sacramental gravity that I was altogether
- too young and egotistical to comprehend. It was all extraordinarily
- central and important to her; it was no more than an offensive,
- complicated, and disconcerting intrusion of a world I was already
- beginning to criticise very bitterly, to me. What was all this fuss for?
- The mere indecent advertisement that I had been passionately in love
- with Marion! I think, however, that Marion was only very remotely aware
- of my smouldering exasperation at having in the end behaved “nicely.” I
- had played--up to the extent of dressing my part; I had an admirably
- cut frock--coat, a new silk hat, trousers as light as I could endure
- them--lighter, in fact--a white waistcoat, night tie, light gloves.
- Marion, seeing me despondent had the unusual enterprise to whisper to
- me that I looked lovely; I knew too well I didn’t look myself. I looked
- like a special coloured supplement to Men’s Wear, or The Tailor
- and Cutter, Full Dress For Ceremonial Occasions. I had even the
- disconcerting sensations of an unfamiliar collar. I felt lost--in
- a strange body, and when I glanced down myself for reassurance, the
- straight white abdomen, the alien legs confirmed that impression.
- My uncle was my best man, and looked like a banker--a little banker--in
- flower. He wore a white rose in his buttonhole. He wasn’t, I think,
- particularly talkative. At least I recall very little from him.
- “George” he said once or twice, “this is a great occasion for you--a
- very great occasion.” He spoke a little doubtfully.
- You see I had told him nothing about Marion until about a week before
- the wedding; both he and my aunt had been taken altogether by surprise.
- They couldn’t, as people say, “make it out.” My aunt was intensely
- interested, much more than my uncle; it was then, I think, for the
- first time that I really saw that she cared for me. She got me alone,
- I remember, after I had made my announcement. “Now, George,” she
- said, “tell me everything about her. Why didn’t you tell--ME at
- least--before?”
- I was surprised to find how difficult it was to tell her about Marion. I
- perplexed her.
- “Then is she beautiful?” she asked at last.
- “I don’t know what you’ll think of her,” I parried. “I think--”
- “Yes?”
- “I think she might be the most beautiful person in the world.”
- “And isn’t she? To you?”
- “Of course,” I said, nodding my head. “Yes. She IS...”
- And while I don’t remember anything my uncle said or did at the
- wedding, I do remember very distinctly certain little things, scrutiny,
- solicitude, a curious rare flash of intimacy in my aunt’s eyes. It
- dawned on me that I wasn’t hiding anything from her at all. She was
- dressed very smartly, wearing a big-plumed hat that made her neck seem
- longer and slenderer than ever, and when she walked up the aisle with
- that rolling stride of hers and her eye all on Marion, perplexed into
- self-forgetfulness, it wasn’t somehow funny. She was, I do believe,
- giving my marriage more thought than I had done, she was concerned
- beyond measure at my black rage and Marion’s blindness, she was looking
- with eyes that knew what loving is--for love.
- In the vestry she turned away as we signed, and I verily believe she was
- crying, though to this day I can’t say why she should have cried, and
- she was near crying too when she squeezed my hand at parting--and she
- never said a word or looked at me, but just squeezed my hand....
- If I had not been so grim in spirit, I think I should have found much
- of my wedding amusing. I remember a lot of ridiculous detail that still
- declines to be funny in my memory. The officiating clergyman had a
- cold, and turned his “n’s” to “d’s,” and he made the most mechanical
- compliment conceivable about the bride’s age when the register was
- signed. Every bride he had ever married had had it, one knew. And two
- middle-aged spinsters, cousins of Marion’s and dressmakers at Barking,
- stand out. They wore marvellously bright and gay blouses and dim old
- skirts, and had an immense respect for Mr. Ramboat. They threw rice;
- they brought a whole bag with them and gave handfuls away to unknown
- little boys at the church door and so created a Lilliputian riot; and
- one had meant to throw a slipper. It was a very warm old silk slipper,
- I know, because she dropped it out of a pocket in the aisle--there was
- a sort of jumble in the aisle--and I picked it up for her. I don’t think
- she actually threw it, for as we drove away from the church I saw her
- in a dreadful, and, it seemed to me, hopeless, struggle with her pocket;
- and afterwards my eye caught the missile of good fortune lying, it or
- its fellow, most obviously mislaid, behind the umbrella-stand in the
- hall....
- The whole business was much more absurd, more incoherent, more human
- than I had anticipated, but I was far too young and serious to let the
- latter quality atone for its shortcomings. I am so remote from this
- phase of my youth that I can look back at it all as dispassionately as
- one looks at a picture--at some wonderful, perfect sort of picture
- that is inexhaustible; but at the time these things filled me with
- unspeakable resentment. Now I go round it all, look into its details,
- generalise about its aspects. I’m interested, for example, to square it
- with my Bladesover theory of the British social scheme. Under stress of
- tradition we were all of us trying in the fermenting chaos of London to
- carry out the marriage ceremonies of a Bladesover tenant or one of the
- chubby middling sort of people in some dependent country town. There
- a marriage is a public function with a public significance. There the
- church is to a large extent the gathering-place of the community, and
- your going to be married a thing of importance to every one you pass on
- the road. It is a change of status that quite legitimately interests
- the whole neighbourhood. But in London there are no neighbours, nobody
- knows, nobody cares. An absolute stranger in an office took my notice,
- and our banns were proclaimed to ears that had never previously heard
- our names. The clergyman, even, who married us had never seen us before,
- and didn’t in any degree intimate that he wanted to see us again.
- Neighbours in London! The Ramboats did not know the names of the people
- on either side of them. As I waited for Marion before we started off
- upon our honeymoon flight, Mr. Ramboat, I remember, came and stood
- beside me and stared out of the window.
- “There was a funeral over there yesterday,” he said, by way of making
- conversation, and moved his head at the house opposite. “Quite a smart
- affair it was with a glass ‘earse....”
- And our little procession of three carriages with white-favour-adorned
- horses and drivers, went through all the huge, noisy, indifferent
- traffic like a lost china image in the coal-chute of an ironclad. Nobody
- made way for us, nobody cared for us; the driver of an omnibus jeered;
- for a long time we crawled behind an unamiable dust-cart. The irrelevant
- clatter and tumult gave a queer flavour of indecency to this public
- coming together of lovers. We seemed to have obtruded ourselves
- shamelessly. The crowd that gathered outside the church would have
- gathered in the same spirit and with greater alacrity for a street
- accident....
- At Charing Cross--we were going to Hastings--the experienced eye of the
- guard detected the significance of our unusual costume and he secured us
- a compartment.
- “Well,” said I, as the train moved out of the station, “That’s all
- over!” And I turned to Marion--a little unfamiliar still, in her
- unfamiliar clothes--and smiled.
- She regarded me gravely, timidly.
- “You’re not cross?” she asked.
- “Cross! Why?”
- “At having it all proper.”
- “My dear Marion!” said I, and by way of answer took and kissed her
- white-gloved, leather-scented hand....
- I don’t remember much else about the journey, an hour or so it was of
- undistinguished time--for we were both confused and a little fatigued
- and Marion had a slight headache and did not want caresses. I fell into
- a reverie about my aunt, and realised as if it were a new discovery,
- that I cared for her very greatly. I was acutely sorry I had not told
- her earlier of my marriage.
- But you will not want to hear the history of my honeymoon. I have told
- all that was needed to serve my present purpose. Thus and thus it was
- the Will in things had its way with me. Driven by forces I did not
- understand, diverted altogether from the science, the curiosities and
- work to which I had once given myself, I fought my way through a tangle
- of traditions, customs, obstacles and absurdities, enraged myself,
- limited myself, gave myself to occupations I saw with the clearest
- vision were dishonourable and vain, and at last achieved the end of
- purblind Nature, the relentless immediacy of her desire, and held, far
- short of happiness, Marion weeping and reluctant in my arms.
- V
- Who can tell the story of the slow estrangement of two married people,
- the weakening of first this bond and then that of that complex contact?
- Least of all can one of the two participants. Even now, with an
- interval of fifteen years to clear it up for me, I still find a mass of
- impressions of Marion as confused, as discordant, as unsystematic and
- self-contradictory as life. I think of this thing and love her, of that
- and hate her--of a hundred aspects in which I can now see her with an
- unimpassioned sympathy. As I sit here trying to render some vision of
- this infinitely confused process, I recall moments of hard and fierce
- estrangement, moments of clouded intimacy, the passage of transition all
- forgotten. We talked a little language together whence were “friends,”
- and I was “Mutney” and she was “Ming,” and we kept up such an outward
- show that till the very end Smithie thought our household the most
- amiable in the world.
- I cannot tell to the full how Marion thwarted me and failed in that life
- of intimate emotions which is the kernel of love. That life of intimate
- emotions is made up of little things. A beautiful face differs from an
- ugly one by a difference of surfaces and proportions that are sometimes
- almost infinitesimally small. I find myself setting down little things
- and little things; none of them do more than demonstrate those essential
- temperamental discords I have already sought to make clear. Some readers
- will understand--to others I shall seem no more than an unfeeling brute
- who couldn’t make allowances.... It’s easy to make allowances now; but
- to be young and ardent and to make allowances, to see one’s married life
- open before one, the life that seemed in its dawn a glory, a garden of
- roses, a place of deep sweet mysteries and heart throbs and wonderful
- silences, and to see it a vista of tolerations and baby-talk; a
- compromise, the least effectual thing in all one’s life.
- Every love romance I read seemed to mock our dull intercourse, every
- poem, every beautiful picture reflected upon the uneventful succession
- of grey hours we had together. I think our real difference was one of
- aesthetic sensibility.
- I do still recall as the worst and most disastrous aspect of all that
- time, her absolute disregard of her own beauty. It’s the pettiest thing
- to record, I know, but she could wear curl-papers in my presence. It was
- her idea, too, to “wear out” her old clothes and her failures at home
- when “no one was likely to see her”--“no one” being myself. She allowed
- me to accumulate a store of ungracious and slovenly memories....
- All our conceptions of life differed. I remember how we differed about
- furniture. We spent three or four days in Tottenham Court Road, and she
- chose the things she fancied with an inexorable resolution,--sweeping
- aside my suggestions with--“Oh, YOU want such queer things.” She pursued
- some limited, clearly seen and experienced ideal--that excluded all
- other possibilities. Over every mantel was a mirror that was draped, our
- sideboard was wonderfully good and splendid with beveled glass, we had
- lamps on long metal stalks and cozy corners and plants in grog-tubs.
- Smithie approved it all. There wasn’t a place where one could sit and
- read in the whole house. My books went upon shelves in the dining-room
- recess. And we had a piano though Marion’s playing was at an elementary
- level.
- You know, it was the cruelest luck for Marion that I, with my
- restlessness, my scepticism, my constantly developing ideas, had
- insisted on marriage with her. She had no faculty of growth or change;
- she had taken her mould, she had set in the limited ideas of her
- peculiar class. She preserved her conception of what was right in
- drawing-room chairs and in marriage ceremonial and in every relation of
- life with a simple and luminous honesty and conviction, with an immense
- unimaginative inflexibility--as a tailor-bird builds its nest or a
- beaver makes its dam.
- Let me hasten over this history of disappointments and separation. I
- might tell of waxings and waning of love between us, but the whole was
- waning. Sometimes she would do things for me, make me a tie or a pair
- of slippers, and fill me with none the less gratitude because the things
- were absurd. She ran our home and our one servant with a hard, bright
- efficiency. She was inordinately proud of house and garden. Always, by
- her lights, she did her duty by me.
- Presently the rapid development of Tono-Bungay began to take me into the
- provinces, and I would be away sometimes for a week together. This she
- did not like; it left her “dull,” she said, but after a time she began
- to go to Smithie’s again and to develop an independence of me. At
- Smithie’s she was now a woman with a position; she had money to
- spend. She would take Smithie to theatres and out to lunch and talk
- interminably of the business, and Smithie became a sort of permanent
- weekender with us. Also Marion got a spaniel and began to dabble with
- the minor arts, with poker-work and a Kodak and hyacinths in glasses.
- She called once on a neighbour. Her parents left Walham Green--her
- father severed his connection with the gas-works--and came to live in a
- small house I took for them near us, and they were much with us.
- Odd the littleness of the things that exasperate when the fountains of
- life are embittered! My father-in-law was perpetually catching me in
- moody moments and urging me to take to gardening. He irritated me beyond
- measure.
- “You think too much,” he would say. “If you was to let in a bit with
- a spade, you might soon ‘ave that garden of yours a Vision of Flowers.
- That’s better than thinking, George.”
- Or in a torrent of exasperation, “I CARN’T think, George, why you don’t
- get a bit of glass ‘ere. This sunny corner you c’d do wonders with a bit
- of glass.”
- And in the summer time he never came in without performing a sort of
- conjuring trick in the hall, and taking cucumbers and tomatoes from
- unexpected points of his person. “All out o’ MY little bit,” he’d say
- in exemplary tones. He left a trail of vegetable produce in the most
- unusual places, on mantel boards, sideboards, the tops of pictures.
- Heavens! how the sudden unexpected tomato could annoy me!...
- It did much to widen our estrangement that Marion and my aunt failed to
- make friends, became, by a sort of instinct, antagonistic.
- My aunt, to begin with, called rather frequently, for she was really
- anxious to know Marion. At first she would arrive like a whirlwind and
- pervade the house with an atmosphere of hello! She dressed already with
- that cheerfully extravagant abandon that signalised her accession to
- fortune, and dressed her best for these visits.
- She wanted to play the mother to me, I fancy, to tell Marion occult
- secrets about the way I wore out my boots and how I never could think to
- put on thicker things in cold weather. But Marion received her with
- that defensive suspiciousness of the shy person, thinking only of the
- possible criticism of herself; and my aunt, perceiving this, became
- nervous and slangy...
- “She says such queer things,” said Marion once, discussing her. “But I
- suppose it’s witty.”
- “Yes,” I said; “it IS witty.”
- “If I said things like she does--”
- The queer things my aunt said were nothing to the queer things she
- didn’t say. I remember her in our drawing-room one day, and how she
- cocked her eye--it’s the only expression--at the India-rubber plant in a
- Doulton-ware pot which Marion had placed on the corner of the piano.
- She was on the very verge of speech. Then suddenly she caught my
- expression, and shrank up like a cat that has been discovered looking at
- the milk.
- Then a wicked impulse took her.
- “Didn’t say an old word, George,” she insisted, looking me full in the
- eye.
- I smiled. “You’re a dear,” I said, “not to,” as Marion came lowering
- into the room to welcome her. But I felt extraordinarily like a
- traitor--to the India-rubber plant, I suppose--for all that nothing had
- been said...
- “Your aunt makes Game of people,” was Marion’s verdict, and,
- open-mindedly: “I suppose it’s all right... for her.”
- Several times we went to the house in Beckenham for lunch, and once or
- twice to dinner. My aunt did her peculiar best to be friends, but Marion
- was implacable. She was also, I know, intensely uncomfortable, and she
- adopted as her social method, an exhausting silence, replying compactly
- and without giving openings to anything that was said to her.
- The gaps between my aunt’s visits grew wider and wider.
- My married existence became at last like a narrow deep groove in the
- broad expanse of interests in which I was living. I went about the
- world; I met a great number of varied personalities; I read endless
- books in trains as I went to and fro. I developed social relationships
- at my uncle’s house that Marion did not share. The seeds of new ideas
- poured in upon me and grew in me. Those early and middle years of one’s
- third decade are, I suppose, for a man the years of greatest mental
- growth. They are restless years and full of vague enterprise.
- Each time I returned to Ealing, life there seemed more alien, narrow,
- and unattractive--and Marion less beautiful and more limited and
- difficult--until at last she was robbed of every particle of her magic.
- She gave me always a cooler welcome, I think, until she seemed entirely
- apathetic. I never asked myself then what heartaches she might hide or
- what her discontents might be.
- I would come home hoping nothing, expecting nothing.
- This was my fated life, and I had chosen it. I became more sensitive to
- the defects I had once disregarded altogether; I began to associate her
- sallow complexion with her temperamental insufficiency, and the heavier
- lines of her mouth and nostril with her moods of discontent. We
- drifted apart; wider and wider the gap opened. I tired of baby-talk and
- stereotyped little fondlings; I tired of the latest intelligence from
- those wonderful workrooms, and showed it all too plainly; we hardly
- spoke when we were alone together. The mere unreciprocated physical
- residue of my passion remained--an exasperation between us.
- No children came to save us. Marion had acquired at Smithie’s a disgust
- and dread of maternity. All that was the fruition and quintessence of
- the “horrid” elements in life, a disgusting thing, a last indignity that
- overtook unwary women. I doubt indeed a little if children would have
- saved us; we should have differed so fatally about their upbringing.
- Altogether, I remember my life with Marion as a long distress, now hard,
- now tender. It was in those days that I first became critical of my life
- and burdened with a sense of error and maladjustment. I would lie
- awake in the night, asking myself the purpose of things, reviewing my
- unsatisfying, ungainly home-life, my days spent in rascal enterprise
- and rubbish-selling, contrasting all I was being and doing with my
- adolescent ambitions, my Wimblehurst dreams. My circumstances had an
- air of finality, and I asked myself in vain why I had forced myself into
- them.
- VI
- The end of our intolerable situation came suddenly and unexpectedly, but
- in a way that I suppose was almost inevitable.
- My alienated affections wandered, and I was unfaithful to Marion.
- I won’t pretend to extenuate the quality of my conduct. I was a young
- and fairly vigorous male; all my appetite for love had been roused
- and whetted and none of it had been satisfied by my love affair and my
- marriage. I had pursued an elusive gleam of beauty to the disregard of
- all else, and it had failed me. It had faded when I had hoped it would
- grow brighter. I despaired of life and was embittered. And things
- happened as I am telling. I don’t draw any moral at all in the matter,
- and as for social remedies, I leave them to the social reformer. I’ve
- got to a time of life when the only theories that interest me are
- generalisations about realities.
- To go to our inner office in Raggett Street I had to walk through a room
- in which the typists worked. They were the correspondence typists; our
- books and invoicing had long since overflowed into the premises we had
- had the luck to secure on either side of us. I was, I must confess,
- always in a faintly cloudily-emotional way aware of that collection of
- for the most part round-shouldered femininity, but presently one of
- the girls detached herself from the others and got a real hold upon
- my attention. I appreciated her at first as a straight little back,
- a neater back than any of the others; as a softly rounded neck with a
- smiling necklace of sham pearls; as chestnut hair very neatly done--and
- as a side-long glance; presently as a quickly turned face that looked
- for me.
- My eye would seek her as I went through on business things--I dictated
- some letters to her and so discovered she had pretty, soft-looking hands
- with pink nails. Once or twice, meeting casually, we looked one another
- for the flash of a second in the eyes.
- That was all. But it was enough in the mysterious free-masonry of sex to
- say essential things. We had a secret between us.
- One day I came into Raggett Street at lunch time and she was alone,
- sitting at her desk. She glanced up as I entered, and then became very
- still, with a downcast face and her hands clenched on the table. I
- walked right by her to the door of the inner office, stopped, came back
- and stood over her.
- We neither of us spoke for quite a perceptible time. I was trembling
- violently.
- “Is that one of the new typewriters?” I asked at last for the sake of
- speaking.
- She looked up at me without a word, with her face flushed and her eyes
- alight, and I bent down and kissed her lips. She leant back to put
- an arm about me, drew my face to her and kissed me again and again. I
- lifted her and held her in my arms. She gave a little smothered cry to
- feel herself so held.
- Never before had I known the quality of passionate kisses.
- Somebody became audible in the shop outside.
- We started back from one another with flushed faces and bright and
- burning eyes.
- “We can’t talk here,” I whispered with a confident intimacy. “Where do
- you go at five?”
- “Along the Embankment to Charing Cross,” she answered as intimately.
- “None of the others go that way...”
- “About half-past five?”
- “Yes, half-past five...”
- The door from the shop opened, and she sat down very quickly.
- “I’m glad,” I said in a commonplace voice, “that these new typewriters
- are all right.”
- I went into the inner office and routed out the paysheet in order to
- find her name--Effie Rink. And did no work at all that afternoon. I
- fretted about that dingy little den like a beast in a cage.
- When presently I went out, Effie was working with an extraordinary
- appearance of calm--and there was no look for me at all....
- We met and had our talk that evening, a talk in whispers when there was
- none to overhear; we came to an understanding. It was strangely unlike
- any dream of romance I had ever entertained.
- VII
- I came back after a week’s absence to my home again--a changed man.
- I had lived out my first rush of passion for Effie, had come to a
- contemplation of my position. I had gauged Effie’s place in the scheme
- of things, and parted from her for a time. She was back in her place at
- Raggett Street after a temporary indisposition. I did not feel in any
- way penitent or ashamed, I know, as I opened the little cast-iron gate
- that kept Marion’s front grader and Pampas Grass from the wandering dog.
- Indeed, if anything, I felt as if I had vindicated some right that had
- been in question. I came back to Marion with no sense of wrong-doing at
- all with, indeed, a new friendliness towards her. I don’t know how it
- may be proper to feel on such occasions; that is how I felt.
- I followed her in our drawing-room, standing beside the tall lamp-stand
- that half filled the bay as though she had just turned from watching for
- me at the window. There was something in her pale face that arrested me.
- She looked as if she had not been sleeping. She did not come forward to
- greet me.
- “You’ve come home,” she said.
- “As I wrote to you.”
- She stood very still, a dusky figure against the bright window.
- “Where have you been?” she asked.
- “East Coast,” I said easily.
- She paused for a moment. “I KNOW,” she said.
- I stared at her. It was the most amazing moment in any life....
- “By Jove!” I said at last, “I believe you do!”
- “And then you come home to me!”
- I walked to the hearthrug and stood quite still there regarding this new
- situation.
- “I didn’t dream,” she began. “How could you do such a thing?”
- It seemed a long interval before either of us spoke another word.
- “Who knows about it?” I asked at last.
- “Smithie’s brother. They were at Cromer.”
- “Confound Cromer! Yes!”
- “How could you bring yourself”
- I felt a spasm of petulant annoyance at this unexpected catastrophe.
- “I should like to wring Smithie’s brother’s neck,” I said....
- Marion spoke in dry, broken fragments of sentences. “You... I’d always
- thought that anyhow you couldn’t deceive me... I suppose all men are
- horrid--about this.”
- “It doesn’t strike me as horrid. It seems to me the most necessary
- consequence--and natural thing in the world.”
- I became aware of some one moving about in the passage, and went and
- shut the door of the room, then I walked back to the hearthrug and
- turned.
- “It’s rough on you,” I said. “But I didn’t mean you to know. You’ve
- never cared for me. I’ve had the devil of a time. Why should you mind?”
- She sat down in a draped armchair. “I HAVE cared for you,” she said.
- I shrugged my shoulders.
- “I suppose,” she said, “SHE cares for you?”
- I had no answer.
- “Where is she now?”
- “Oh! does it matter to you?... Look here, Marion! This--this I didn’t
- anticipate. I didn’t mean this thing to smash down on you like this.
- But, you know, something had to happen. I’m sorry--sorry to the bottom
- of my heart that things have come to this between us. But indeed, I’m
- taken by surprise. I don’t know where I am--I don’t know how we got
- here. Things took me by surprise. I found myself alone with her one day.
- I kissed her. I went on. It seemed stupid to go back. And besides--why
- should I have gone back? Why should I? From first to last, I’ve hardly
- thought of it as touching you.... Damn!”
- She scrutinised my face, and pulled at the ball-fringe of the little
- table beside her.
- “To think of it,” she said. “I don’t believe I can ever touch you
- again.”
- We kept a long silence. I was only beginning to realise in the most
- superficial way the immense catastrophe that had happened between us.
- Enormous issues had rushed upon us. I felt unprepared and altogether
- inadequate. I was unreasonably angry. There came a rush of stupid
- expressions to my mind that my rising sense of the supreme importance
- of the moment saved me from saying. The gap of silence widened until
- it threatened to become the vast memorable margin of some one among a
- thousand trivial possibilities of speech that would vex our relations
- for ever.
- Our little general servant tapped at the door--Marion always liked the
- servant to tap--and appeared.
- “Tea, M’m,” she said--and vanished, leaving the door open.
- “I will go upstairs,” said I, and stopped. “I will go upstairs” I
- repeated, “and put my bag in the spare room.”
- We remained motionless and silent for a few seconds.
- “Mother is having tea with us to-day,” Marion remarked at last, and
- dropped the worried end of ball-fringe and stood up slowly....
- And so, with this immense discussion of our changed relations hanging
- over us, we presently had tea with the unsuspecting Mrs. Ramboat and
- the spaniel. Mrs. Ramboat was too well trained in her position to remark
- upon our somber preoccupation. She kept a thin trickle of talk going,
- and told us, I remember, that Mr. Ramboat was “troubled” about his
- cannas.
- “They don’t come up and they won’t come up. He’s been round and had an
- explanation with the man who sold him the bulbs--and he’s very heated
- and upset.”
- The spaniel was a great bore, begging and doing small tricks first at
- one and then at the other of us. Neither of us used his name. You see
- we had called him Miggles, and made a sort of trio in the baby-talk of
- Mutney and Miggles and Ming.
- VIII
- Then presently we resumed our monstrous, momentous dialogue. I can’t now
- make out how long that dialogue went on. It spread itself, I know,
- in heavy fragments over either three days or four. I remember myself
- grouped with Marion, talking sitting on our bed in her room, talking
- standing in our dining-room, saving this thing or that. Twice we went
- for long walks. And we had a long evening alone together, with jaded
- nerves and hearts that fluctuated between a hard and dreary recognition
- of facts and, on my part at least, a strange unwonted tenderness;
- because in some extraordinary way this crisis had destroyed our mutual
- apathy and made us feel one another again.
- It was a dialogue that had discrepant parts that fell into lumps of
- talk that failed to join on to their predecessors, that began again at
- a different level, higher or lower, that assumed new aspects in the
- intervals and assimilated new considerations. We discussed the fact that
- we two were no longer lovers; never before had we faced that. It seems
- a strange thing to write, but as I look back, I see clearly that those
- several days were the time when Marion and I were closest together,
- looked for the first and last time faithfully and steadfastly into each
- other’s soul. For those days only, there were no pretences, I made no
- concessions to her nor she to me; we concealed nothing, exaggerated
- nothing. We had done with pretending. We had it out plainly and soberly
- with each other. Mood followed mood and got its stark expression.
- Of course there was quarreling between us, bitter quarreling, and we
- said things to one another--long pent-up things that bruised and crushed
- and cut. But over it all in my memory now is an effect of deliberate
- confrontation, and the figure of Marion stands up, pale, melancholy,
- tear-stained, injured, implacable and dignified.
- “You love her?” she asked once, and jerked that doubt into my mind.
- I struggled with tangled ideas and emotions. “I don’t know what love
- is. It’s all sorts of things--it’s made of a dozen strands twisted in a
- thousand ways.”
- “But you want her? You want her now--when you think of her?”
- “Yes,” I reflected. “I want her--right enough.”
- “And me? Where do I come in?”
- “I suppose you come in here.”
- “Well, but what are you going to do?”
- “Do!” I said with the exasperation of the situation growing upon me.
- “What do you want me to do?”
- As I look back upon all that time--across a gulf of fifteen active
- years--I find I see it with an understanding judgment. I see it as if
- it were the business of some one else--indeed of two other
- people--intimately known yet judged without passion. I see now that this
- shock, this sudden immense disillusionment, did in real fact bring out
- a mind and soul in Marion; that for the first time she emerged
- from habits, timidities, imitations, phrases and a certain narrow
- will-impulse, and became a personality.
- Her ruling motive at first was, I think, an indignant and outraged
- pride. This situation must end. She asked me categorically to give up
- Effie, and I, full of fresh and glowing memories, absolutely refused.
- “It’s too late, Marion,” I said. “It can’t be done like that.”
- “Then we can’t very well go on living together,” she said. “Can we?”
- “Very well,” I deliberated “if you must have it so.”
- “Well, can we?”
- “Can you stay in this house? I mean--if I go away?”
- “I don’t know.... I don’t think I could.”
- “Then--what do you want?”
- Slowly we worked our way from point to point, until at last the word
- “divorce” was before us.
- “If we can’t live together we ought to be free,” said Marion.
- “I don’t know anything of divorce,” I said--“if you mean that. I don’t
- know how it is done. I shall have to ask somebody--or look it up....
- Perhaps, after all, it is the thing to do. We may as well face it.”
- We began to talk ourselves into a realisation of what our divergent
- futures might be. I came back on the evening of that day with my
- questions answered by a solicitor.
- “We can’t as a matter of fact,” I said, “get divorced as things are.
- Apparently, so far as the law goes you’ve got to stand this sort of
- thing. It’s silly but that is the law. However, it’s easy to arrange a
- divorce. In addition to adultery there must be desertion or cruelty.
- To establish cruelty I should have to strike you, or something of that
- sort, before witnesses. That’s impossible--but it’s simple to desert you
- legally. I have to go away from you; that’s all. I can go on sending you
- money--and you bring a suit, what is it?--for Restitution of Conjugal
- Rights. The Court orders me to return. I disobey. Then you can go on to
- divorce me. You get a Decree Nisi, and once more the Court tries to make
- me come back. If we don’t make it up within six months and if you don’t
- behave scandalously the Decree is made absolute. That’s the end of the
- fuss. That’s how one gets unmarried. It’s easier, you see, to marry than
- unmarry.”
- “And then--how do I live? What becomes of me?”
- “You’ll have an income. They call it alimony. From a third to a half of
- my present income--more if you like--I don’t mind--three hundred a year,
- say. You’ve got your old people to keep and you’ll need all that.”
- “And then--then you’ll be free?”
- “Both of us.”
- “And all this life you’ve hated”
- I looked up at her wrung and bitter face. “I haven’t hated it,” I lied,
- my voice near breaking with the pain of it all. “Have you?”
- IX
- The perplexing thing about life is the irresolvable complexity of
- reality, of things and relations alike. Nothing is simple. Every wrong
- done has a certain justice in it, and every good deed has dregs of evil.
- As for us, young still, and still without self-knowledge, resounded
- a hundred discordant notes in the harsh angle of that shock. We were
- furiously angry with each other, tender with each other, callously
- selfish, generously self-sacrificing.
- I remember Marion saying innumerable detached things that didn’t hang
- together one with another, that contradicted one another, that were,
- nevertheless, all in their places profoundly true and sincere. I see
- them now as so many vain experiments in her effort to apprehend the
- crumpled confusions of our complex moral landslide. Some I found
- irritating beyond measure. I answered her--sometimes quite abominably.
- “Of course,” she would say again and again, “my life has been a
- failure.”
- “I’ve besieged you for three years,” I would retort “asking it not to
- be. You’ve done as you pleased. If I’ve turned away at last--”
- Or again she would revive all the stresses before our marriage.
- “How you must hate me! I made you wait. Well now--I suppose you have
- your revenge.”
- “REVENGE!” I echoed.
- Then she would try over the aspects of our new separated lives.
- “I ought to earn my own living,” she would insist.
- “I want to be quite independent. I’ve always hated London. Perhaps I
- shall try a poultry farm and bees. You won’t mind at first my being a
- burden. Afterwards--”
- “We’ve settled all that,” I said.
- “I suppose you will hate me anyhow...”
- There were times when she seemed to regard our separation with
- absolute complacency, when she would plan all sorts of freedoms and
- characteristic interests.
- “I shall go out a lot with Smithie,” she said.
- And once she said an ugly thing that I did indeed hate her for that I
- cannot even now quite forgive her.
- “Your aunt will rejoice at all this. She never cared for me...”
- Into my memory of these pains and stresses comes the figure of Smithie,
- full-charged with emotion, so breathless in the presence of the horrid
- villain of the piece that she could make no articulate sounds. She
- had long tearful confidences with Marion, I know, sympathetic close
- clingings. There were moments when only absolute speechlessness
- prevented her giving me a stupendous “talking-to”--I could see it in
- her eye. The wrong things she would have said! And I recall, too,
- Mrs. Ramboat’s slow awakening to something in, the air, the growing
- expression of solicitude in her eye, only her well-trained fear of
- Marion keeping her from speech.
- And at last through all this welter, like a thing fated and altogether
- beyond our control, parting came to Marion and me.
- I hardened my heart, or I could not have gone. For at the last it came
- to Marion that she was parting from me for ever. That overbore all other
- things, had turned our last hour to anguish. She forgot for a time
- the prospect of moving into a new house, she forgot the outrage on her
- proprietorship and pride. For the first time in her life she really
- showed strong emotions in regard to me, for the first time, perhaps,
- they really came to her. She began to weep slow, reluctant tears. I came
- into her room, and found her asprawl on the bed, weeping.
- “I didn’t know,” she cried. “Oh! I didn’t understand!”
- “I’ve been a fool. All my life is a wreck!
- “I shall be alone!...MUTNEY! Mutney, don’t leave me! Oh! Mutney! I
- didn’t understand.”
- I had to harden my heart indeed, for it seemed to me at moments in those
- last hours together that at last, too late, the longed-for thing had
- happened and Marion had come alive. A new-born hunger for me lit her
- eyes.
- “Don’t leave me!” she said, “don’t leave me!” She clung to me; she
- kissed me with tear-salt lips.
- I was promised now and pledged, and I hardened my heart against this
- impossible dawn. Yet it seems to me that there were moments when it
- needed but a cry, but one word to have united us again for all our
- lives. Could we have united again? Would that passage have enlightened
- us for ever or should we have fallen back in a week or so into the old
- estrangement, the old temperamental opposition?
- Of that there is now no telling. Our own resolve carried us on our
- predestined way. We behaved more and more like separating lovers,
- parting inexorably, but all the preparations we had set going worked on
- like a machine, and we made no attempt to stop them. My trunks and boxes
- went to the station. I packed my bag with Marion standing before me. We
- were like children who had hurt each other horribly in sheer stupidity,
- who didn’t know now how to remedy it. We belonged to each other
- immensely--immensely. The cab came to the little iron gate.
- “Good-bye!” I said.
- “Good-bye.”
- For a moment we held one another in each other’s arms and
- kissed--incredibly without malice. We heard our little servant in the
- passage going to open the door. For the last time we pressed ourselves
- to one another. We were not lovers nor enemies, but two human souls in a
- frank community of pain. I tore myself from her.
- “Go away,” I said to the servant, seeing that Marion had followed me
- down.
- I felt her standing behind me as I spoke to the cab man.
- I got into the cab, resolutely not looking back, and then as it started
- jumped up, craned out and looked at the door.
- It was wide open, but she had disappeared....
- I wonder--I suppose she ran upstairs.
- X
- So I parted from Marion at an extremity of perturbation and regret, and
- went, as I had promised and arranged, to Effie, who was waiting for me
- in apartments near Orpington. I remember her upon the station platform,
- a bright, flitting figure looking along the train for me, and our walk
- over the fields in the twilight. I had expected an immense sense of
- relief where at last the stresses of separation were over, but now
- I found I was beyond measure wretched and perplexed, full of the
- profoundest persuasion of irreparable error. The dusk and somber Marion
- were so alike, her sorrow seemed to be all about me. I had to hold
- myself to my own plans, to remember that I must keep faith with Effie,
- with Effie who had made no terms, exacted no guarantees, but flung
- herself into my hands.
- We went across the evening fields in silence, towards a sky of deepening
- gold and purple, and Effie was close beside me always, very close,
- glancing up ever and again at my face.
- Certainly she knew I grieved for Marion, that ours was now no joyful
- reunion. But she showed no resentment and no jealousy. Extraordinarily,
- she did not compete against Marion. Never once in all our time together
- did she say an adverse word of Marion....
- She set herself presently to dispel the shadow that brooded over me with
- the same instinctive skill that some women will show with the trouble
- of a child. She made herself my glad and pretty slave and handmaid; she
- forced me at last to rejoice in her. Yet at the back of it all Marion
- remained, stupid and tearful and infinitely distressful, so that I was
- almost intolerably unhappy for her--for her and the dead body of my
- married love.
- It is all, as I tell it now, unaccountable to me. I go back into these
- remote parts, these rarely visited uplands and lonely tares of memory,
- and it seems to me still a strange country. I had thought I might be
- going to some sensuous paradise with Effie, but desire which fills the
- universe before its satisfaction, vanishes utterly like the going of
- daylight--with achievement. All the facts and forms of life remain
- darkling and cold. It was an upland of melancholy questionings, a region
- from which I saw all the world at new angles and in new aspects; I had
- outflanked passion and romance.
- I had come into a condition of vast perplexities. For the first time in
- my life, at least so it seems to me now in this retrospect, I looked at
- my existence as a whole.
- Since this was nothing, what was I doing? What was I for?
- I was going to and fro about Tono-Bungay--the business I had taken up
- to secure Marion and which held me now in spite of our intimate
- separation--and snatching odd week-ends and nights for Orpington, and
- all the while I struggled with these obstinate interrogations. I used
- to fall into musing in the trains, I became even a little inaccurate and
- forgetful about business things. I have the clearest memory of myself
- sitting thoughtful in the evening sunlight on a grassy hillside that
- looked toward Seven Oaks and commanded a wide sweep of country, and that
- I was thinking out my destiny. I could almost write my thought down now,
- I believe, as they came to me that afternoon. Effie, restless little
- cockney that she was, rustled and struggled in a hedgerow below,
- gathering flowers, discovering flowers she had never seen before. I
- had. I remember, a letter from Marion in my pocket. I had even made some
- tentatives for return, for a reconciliation; Heaven knows now how I
- had put it! but her cold, ill-written letter repelled me. I perceived
- I could never face that old inconclusive dullness of life again, that
- stagnant disappointment. That, anyhow, wasn’t possible. But what was
- possible? I could see no way of honour or fine living before me at all.
- “What am I to do with life?” that was the question that besieged me.
- I wondered if all the world was even as I, urged to this by one motive
- and to that by another, creatures of chance and impulse and unmeaning
- traditions. Had I indeed to abide by what I had said and done and
- chosen? Was there nothing for me in honour but to provide for Effie, go
- back penitent to Marion and keep to my trade in rubbish--or find some
- fresh one--and so work out the residue of my days? I didn’t accept that
- for a moment. But what else was I to do? I wondered if my case was
- the case of many men, whether in former ages, too, men had been so
- guideless, so uncharted, so haphazard in their journey into life. In the
- Middle Ages, in the old Catholic days, one went to a priest, and he said
- with all the finality of natural law, this you are and this you must do.
- I wondered whether even in the Middle Ages I should have accepted that
- ruling without question.
- I remember too very distinctly how Effie came and sat beside me on a
- little box: that was before the casement window of our room.
- “Gloomkins,” said she.
- I smiled and remained head on hand, looking out of the window forgetful
- of her.
- “Did you love your wife so well?” she whispered softly.
- “Oh!” I cried, recalled again; “I don’t know. I don’t understand these
- things. Life is a thing that hurts, my dear! It hurts without logic or
- reason. I’ve blundered! I didn’t understand. Anyhow--there is no need to
- go hurting you, is there?”
- And I turned about and drew her to me, and kissed her ear....
- Yes, I had a very bad time--I still recall. I suffered, I suppose, from
- a sort of ennui of the imagination. I found myself without an object to
- hold my will together. I sought. I read restlessly and discursively.
- I tried Ewart and got no help from him. As I regard it all now in this
- retrospect, it seems to me as if in those days of disgust and abandoned
- aims I discovered myself for the first time. Before that I had seen only
- the world and things in it, had sought them self-forgetful of all but
- my impulse. Now I found myself GROUPED with a system of appetites and
- satisfactions, with much work to do--and no desire, it seemed, left in
- me.
- There were moments when I thought of suicide. At times my life appeared
- before me in bleak, relentless light, a series of ignorances, crude
- blunderings, degradation and cruelty. I had what the old theologians
- call a “conviction of sin.” I sought salvation--not perhaps in the
- formula a Methodist preacher would recognise but salvation nevertheless.
- Men find their salvation nowadays in many ways. Names and forms don’t, I
- think, matter very much; the real need is something that we can hold
- and that holds one. I have known a man find that determining factor in
- a dry-plate factory, and another in writing a history of the Manor. So
- long as it holds one, it does not matter. Many men and women nowadays
- take up some concrete aspect of Socialism or social reform. But
- Socialism for me has always been a little bit too human, too set about
- with personalities and foolishness. It isn’t my line. I don’t like
- things so human. I don’t think I’m blind to the fun, the surprises, the
- jolly little coarsenesses and insufficiency of life, to the “humour of
- it,” as people say, and to adventure, but that isn’t the root of the
- matter with me. There’s no humour in my blood. I’m in earnest in warp
- and woof. I stumble and flounder, but I know that over all these merry
- immediate things, there are other things that are great and serene, very
- high, beautiful things--the reality. I haven’t got it, but it’s there
- nevertheless. I’m a spiritual guttersnipe in love with unimaginable
- goddesses. I’ve never seen the goddesses nor ever shall--but it takes
- all the fun out of the mud--and at times I fear it takes all the
- kindliness, too.
- But I’m talking of things I can’t expect the reader to understand,
- because I don’t half understand them myself. There is something links
- things for me, a sunset or so, a mood or so, the high air, something
- there was in Marion’s form and colour, something I find and lose in
- Mantegna’s pictures, something in the lines of these boats I make. (You
- should see X2, my last and best!)
- I can’t explain myself, I perceive. Perhaps it all comes to this, that
- I am a hard and morally limited cad with a mind beyond my merits.
- Naturally I resist that as a complete solution. Anyhow, I had a sense of
- inexorable need, of distress and insufficiency that was unendurable, and
- for a time this aeronautical engineering allayed it....
- In the end of this particular crisis of which I tell so badly, I
- idealised Science. I decided that in power and knowledge lay the
- salvation of my life, the secret that would fill my need; that to these
- things I would give myself.
- I emerged at last like a man who has been diving in darkness, clutching
- at a new resolve for which he had groped desperately and long.
- I came into the inner office suddenly one day--it must have been just
- before the time of Marion’s suit for restitution--and sat down before my
- uncle.
- “Look here,” I said, “I’m sick of this.”
- “HulLO!” he answered, and put some papers aside.
- “What’s up, George?”
- “Things are wrong.”
- “As how?”
- “My life,” I said, “it’s a mess, an infinite mess.”
- “She’s been a stupid girl, George,” he said; “I partly understand. But
- you’re quit of her now, practically, and there’s just as good fish in
- the sea--”
- “Oh! it’s not that!” I cried. “That’s only the part that shows. I’m
- sick--I’m sick of all this damned rascality.”
- “Eh? Eh?” said my uncle. “WHAT--rascality?”
- “Oh, YOU know. I want some STUFF, man. I want something to hold on to. I
- shall go amok if I don’t get it. I’m a different sort of beast from
- you. You float in all this bunkum. _I_ feel like a man floundering in a
- universe of soapsuds, up and downs, east and west. I can’t stand it. I
- must get my foot on something solid or--I don’t know what.”
- I laughed at the consternation in his face.
- “I mean it,” I said. “I’ve been thinking it over. I’ve made up my mind.
- It’s no good arguing. I shall go in for work--real work. No! this isn’t
- work; it’s only laborious cheating. But I’ve got an idea! It’s an old
- idea--I thought of years ago, but it came back to me. Look here! Why
- should I fence about with you? I believe the time has come for flying to
- be possible. Real flying!”
- “Flying!”
- I stuck to that, and it helped me through the worst time in my life.
- My uncle, after some half-hearted resistance and a talk with my aunt,
- behaved like the father of a spoilt son. He fixed up an arrangement that
- gave me capital to play with, released me from too constant a solicitude
- for the newer business developments--this was in what I may call the
- later Moggs period of our enterprises--and I went to work at once with
- grim intensity.
- But I will tell of my soaring and flying machines in the proper place.
- I’ve been leaving the story of my uncle altogether too long. I
- wanted merely to tell how it was I took to this work. I took to these
- experiments after I had sought something that Marion in some indefinable
- way had seemed to promise. I toiled and forgot myself for a time, and
- did many things. Science too has been something of an irresponsive
- mistress since, though I’ve served her better than I served Marion. But
- at the time Science, with her order, her inhuman distance, yet steely
- certainties, saved me from despair.
- Well, I have still to fly; but incidentally I have invented the lightest
- engines in the world.
- I am trying to tell of all the things that happened to me. It’s hard
- enough simply to get it put down in the remotest degree right. But this
- is a novel, not a treatise. Don’t imagine that I am coming presently
- to any sort of solution of my difficulties. Here among my drawings and
- hammerings NOW, I still question unanswering problems. All my life has
- been at bottom, SEEKING, disbelieving always, dissatisfied always with
- the thing seen and the thing believed, seeking something in toil, in
- force, in danger, something whose name and nature I do not clearly
- understand, something beautiful, worshipful, enduring, mine profoundly
- and fundamentally, and the utter redemption of myself; I don’t know--all
- I can tell is that it is something I have ever failed to find.
- XI
- But before I finish this chapter and book altogether and go on with
- the great adventure of my uncle’s career. I may perhaps tell what else
- remains to tell of Marion and Effie, and then for a time set my private
- life behind me.
- For a time Marion and I corresponded with some regularity, writing
- friendly but rather uninforming letters about small business things. The
- clumsy process of divorce completed itself.
- She left the house at Ealing and went into the country with her aunt and
- parents, taking a small farm near Lewes in Sussex. She put up glass, she
- put in heat for her father, happy man! and spoke of figs and peaches.
- The thing seemed to promise well throughout a spring and summer, but the
- Sussex winter after London was too much for the Ramboats. They got very
- muddy and dull; Mr. Ramboat killed a cow by improper feeding, and that
- disheartened them all. A twelvemonth saw the enterprise in difficulties.
- I had to help her out of this, and then they returned to London and she
- went into partnership with Smithie at Streatham, and ran a business that
- was intimated on the firm’s stationery as “Robes.” The parents and aunt
- were stowed away in a cottage somewhere. After that the letters became
- infrequent. But in one I remember a postscript that had a little stab of
- our old intimacy: “Poor old Miggles is dead.”
- Nearly eight years slipped by. I grew up. I grew in experience, in
- capacity, until I was fully a man, but with many new interests, living
- on a larger scale in a wider world than I could have dreamt of in my
- Marion days. Her letters become rare and insignificant. At last came a
- gap of silence that made me curious. For eighteen months or more I had
- nothing from Marion save her quarterly receipts through the bank. Then I
- damned at Smithie, and wrote a card to Marion.
- “Dear Marion,” I said, “how goes it?”
- She astonished me tremendously by telling me she had married again--“a
- Mr. Wachorn, a leading agent in the paper-pattern trade.” But she still
- wrote on the Ponderevo and Smith (Robes) notepaper, from the Ponderevo
- and Smith address.
- And that, except for a little difference of opinion about the
- continuance of alimony which gave me some passages of anger, and the use
- of my name by the firm, which also annoyed me, is the end of Marion’s
- history for me, and she vanishes out of this story. I do not know where
- she is or what she is doing. I do not know whether she is alive or dead.
- It seems to me utterly grotesque that two people who have stood so close
- to one another as she and I should be so separated, but so it is between
- us.
- Effie, too, I have parted from, though I still see her at times. Between
- us there was never any intention of marriage nor intimacy of soul. She
- had a sudden, fierce, hot-blooded passion for me and I for her, but
- I was not her first lover nor her last. She was in another world from
- Marion. She had a queer, delightful nature; I’ve no memory of
- ever seeing her sullen or malicious. She was--indeed she was
- magnificently--eupeptic. That, I think, was the central secret of her
- agreeableness, and, moreover, that she was infinitely kind-hearted. I
- helped her at last into an opening she coveted, and she amazed me by a
- sudden display of business capacity. She has now a typewriting bureau
- in Riffle’s Inn, and she runs it with a brisk vigour and considerable
- success, albeit a certain plumpness has overtaken her. And she still
- loves her kind. She married a year or so ago a boy half her age--a
- wretch of a poet, a wretched poet, and given to drugs, a thing with lank
- fair hair always getting into his blue eyes, and limp legs. She did it,
- she said, because he needed nursing....
- But enough of this disaster of my marriage and of my early love affairs;
- I have told all that is needed for my picture to explain how I came to
- take up aeroplane experiments and engineering science; let me get back
- to my essential story, to Tono-Bungay and my uncle’s promotions and to
- the vision of the world these things have given me.
- BOOK THE THIRD
- THE GREAT DAYS OF TONO-BUNGAY
- CHAPTER THE FIRST
- THE HARDINGHAM HOTEL, AND HOW WE BECAME BIG PEOPLE
- I
- But now that I resume the main line of my story it may be well to
- describe the personal appearance of my uncle as I remember him during
- those magnificent years that followed his passage from trade to finance.
- The little man plumped up very considerably during the creation of the
- Tono-Bungay property, but with the increasing excitements that followed
- that first flotation came dyspepsia and a certain flabbiness and falling
- away. His abdomen--if the reader will pardon my taking his features
- in the order of their value--had at first a nice full roundness, but
- afterwards it lost tone without, however, losing size. He always went as
- though he was proud of it and would make as much of it as possible. To
- the last his movements remained quick and sudden, his short firm legs,
- as he walked, seemed to twinkle rather than display the scissors-stride
- of common humanity, and he never seemed to have knees, but instead, a
- dispersed flexibility of limb.
- There was, I seem to remember, a secular intensification of his
- features; his nose developed character, became aggressive, stuck out at
- the world more and more; the obliquity of his mouth, I think, increased.
- From the face that returns to my memory projects a long cigar that is
- sometimes cocked jauntily up from the higher corner, that sometimes
- droops from the lower;--it was as eloquent as a dog’s tail, and he
- removed it only for the more emphatic modes of speech. He assumed a
- broad black ribbon for his glasses, and wore them more and more askew as
- time went on. His hair seemed to stiffen with success, but towards the
- climax it thinned greatly over the crown, and he brushed it hard back
- over his ears where, however, it stuck out fiercely. It always stuck out
- fiercely over his forehead, up and forward.
- He adopted an urban style of dressing with the onset of Tono-Bungay and
- rarely abandoned it. He preferred silk hats with ample rich brims, often
- a trifle large for him by modern ideas, and he wore them at various
- angles to his axis; his taste in trouserings was towards fairly emphatic
- stripes and his trouser cut was neat; he liked his frock-coat long and
- full, although that seemed to shorten him. He displayed a number of
- valuable rings, and I remember one upon his left little finger with a
- large red stone bearing Gnostic symbols. “Clever chaps, those Gnostics,
- George,” he told me. “Means a lot. Lucky!” He never had any but a black
- mohair watch-chair. In the country he affected grey and a large
- grey cloth top-hat, except when motoring; then he would have a brown
- deer-stalker cap and a fur suit of esquimaux cut with a sort of boot-end
- to the trousers. Of an evening he would wear white waistcoats and plain
- gold studs. He hated diamonds. “Flashy,” he said they were. “Might as
- well wear--an income tax-receipt. All very well for Park Lane. Unsold
- stock. Not my style. Sober financier, George.”
- So much for his visible presence. For a time it was very familiar to
- the world, for at the crest of the boom he allowed quite a number
- of photographs and at least one pencil sketch to be published in the
- sixpenny papers.
- His voice declined during those years from his early tenor to a flat
- rich quality of sound that my knowledge of music is inadequate to
- describe. His Zzz-ing inrush of air became less frequent as he ripened,
- but returned in moments of excitement. Throughout his career, in spite
- of his increasing and at last astounding opulence, his more intimate
- habits remained as simple as they had been at Wimblehurst. He would
- never avail himself of the services of a valet; at the very climax of
- his greatness his trousers were folded by a housemaid and his shoulders
- brushed as he left his house or hotel. He became wary about breakfast
- as life advanced, and at one time talked much of Dr. Haig and uric acid.
- But for other meals he remained reasonably omnivorous. He was something
- of a gastronome, and would eat anything he particularly liked in an
- audible manner, and perspire upon his forehead. He was a studiously
- moderate drinker--except when the spirit of some public banquet or some
- great occasion caught him and bore him beyond his wariness--there
- he would, as it were, drink inadvertently and become flushed and
- talkative--about everything but his business projects.
- To make the portrait complete one wants to convey an effect of sudden,
- quick bursts of movement like the jumps of a Chinese-cracker to indicate
- that his pose whatever it is, has been preceded and will be followed
- by a rush. If I were painting him, I should certainly give him for
- a background that distressed, uneasy sky that was popular in the
- eighteenth century, and at a convenient distance a throbbing motor-car,
- very big and contemporary, a secretary hurrying with papers, and an
- alert chauffeur.
- Such was the figure that created and directed the great property of
- Tono-Bungay, and from the successful reconstruction of that company
- passed on to a slow crescendo of magnificent creations and promotions
- until the whole world of investors marveled. I have already I think,
- mentioned how, long before we offered Tono Bungay to the public, we took
- over the English agency of certain American specialties. To this was
- presently added our exploitation of Moggs’ Domestic Soap, and so he took
- up the Domestic Convenience Campaign that, coupled with his equatorial
- rotundity and a certain resolute convexity in his bearings won my uncle
- his Napoleonic title.
- II
- It illustrates the romantic element in modern commerce that my uncle
- met young Moggs at a city dinner--I think it was the Bottle-makers’
- Company--when both were some way advanced beyond the initial sobriety
- of the occasion. This was the grandson of the original Moggs, and a very
- typical instance of an educated, cultivated, degenerate plutocrat. His
- people had taken him about in his youth as the Ruskins took their John
- and fostered a passion for history in him, and the actual management of
- the Moggs’ industry had devolved upon a cousin and a junior partner.
- Mr. Moggs, being of a studious and refined disposition, had just
- decided--after a careful search for a congenial subject in which he
- would not be constantly reminded of soap--to devote himself to the
- History of the Thebaid, when this cousin died suddenly and precipitated
- responsibilities upon him. In the frankness of conviviality, Moggs
- bewailed the uncongenial task thus thrust into his hands, and my uncle
- offered to lighten his burden by a partnership then and there. They even
- got to terms--extremely muzzy terms, but terms nevertheless.
- Each gentleman wrote the name and address of the other on his cuff, and
- they separated in a mood of brotherly carelessness, and next morning
- neither seems to have thought to rescue his shirt from the wash until
- it was too late. My uncle made a painful struggle--it was one of my
- business mornings--to recall name and particulars.
- “He was an aquarium-faced, long, blond sort of chap, George, with
- glasses and a genteel accent,” he said.
- I was puzzled. “Aquarium-faced?”
- “You know how they look at you. His stuff was soap, I’m pretty
- nearly certain. And he had a name--And the thing was the straightest
- Bit-of-All-right you ever. I was clear enough to spot that...”
- We went out at last with knitted brows, and wandered up into Finsbury
- seeking a good, well-stocked looking grocer. We called first on a
- chemist for a pick-me-up for my uncle, and then we found the shop we
- needed.
- “I want,” said my uncle, “half a pound of every sort of soap you got.
- Yes, I want to take them now. Wait a moment, George.... Now what sort of
- soap d’you call THAT?”
- At the third repetition of that question the young man said, “Moggs’
- Domestic.”
- “Right,” said my uncle. “You needn’t guess again. Come along, George,
- let’s go to a telephone and get on to Moggs. Oh--the order? Certainly. I
- confirm it. Send it all--send it all to the Bishop of London; he’ll have
- some good use for it--(First-rate man, George, he is--charities and all
- that)--and put it down to me, here’s a card--Ponderevo--Tono-Bungay.”
- Then we went on to Moggs and found him in a camel-hair dressing-jacket
- in a luxurious bed, drinking China tea, and got the shape of everything
- but the figures fixed by lunch time.
- Young Moggs enlarged my mind considerably; he was a sort of thing
- I hadn’t met before; he seemed quite clean and well-informed and he
- assured me to never read newspapers nor used soap in any form at all,
- “Delicate skin,” he said.
- “No objection to our advertising you wide and free?” said my uncle.
- “I draw the line at railway stations,” said Moggs, “south-coast cliffs,
- theatre programmes, books by me and poetry generally--scenery--oh!--and
- the Mercure de France.”
- “We’ll get along,” said my uncle.
- “So long as you don’t annoy me,” said Moggs, lighting a cigarette, “you
- can make me as rich as you like.”
- We certainly made him no poorer. His was the first firm that was
- advertised by a circumstantial history; we even got to illustrated
- magazine articles telling of the quaint past of Moggs. We concocted
- Moggsiana. Trusting to our partner’s preoccupation with the uncommercial
- aspects of life, we gave graceful history--of Moggs the First, Moggs the
- Second, Moggs the Third, and Moggs the Fourth. You must, unless you are
- very young, remember some of them and our admirable block of a Georgian
- shop window. My uncle brought early nineteenth-century memoirs, soaked
- himself in the style, and devised stories about old Moggs the First and
- the Duke of Wellington, George the Third and the soap dealer (“almost
- certainly old Moggs”). Very soon we had added to the original Moggs’
- Primrose several varieties of scented and superfatted, a “special
- nurseries used in the household of the Duke of Kent and for the old
- Queen in Infancy,” a plate powder, “the Paragon,” and a knife powder.
- We roped in a good little second-rate black-lead firm, and carried their
- origins back into the mists of antiquity. It was my uncle’s own unaided
- idea that we should associate that commodity with the Black Prince. He
- became industriously curious about the past of black-lead. I remember
- his button-holing the president of the Pepys Society.
- “I say, is there any black-lead in Pepys? You know--black-lead--for
- grates! OR DOES HE PASS IT OVER AS A MATTER OF COURSE?”
- He became in those days the terror of eminent historians. “Don’t want
- your drum and trumpet history--no fear,” he used to say. “Don’t want
- to know who was who’s mistress, and why so-and-so devastated such a
- province; that’s bound to be all lies and upsy-down anyhow. Not my
- affair. Nobody’s affair now. Chaps who did it didn’t clearly know....
- What I want to know is, in the Middle Ages, did they do anything for
- Housemaid’s Knee? What did they put in their hot baths after jousting,
- and was the Black Prince--you know the Black Prince--was he enameled
- or painted, or what? I think myself, black-leaded--very likely--like
- pipe-clay--but DID they use blacking so early?”
- So it came about that in designing and writing those Moggs’ Soap
- Advertisements, that wrought a revolution in that department of
- literature, my uncle was brought to realise not only the lost history,
- but also the enormous field for invention and enterprise that lurked
- among the little articles, the dustpans and mincers, the mousetraps
- and carpet-sweepers that fringe the shops of the oilman and domestic
- ironmonger. He was recalled to one of the dreams of his youth, to his
- conception of the Ponderevo Patent Flat that had been in his mind so
- early as the days before I went to serve him at Wimblehurst. “The Home,
- George,” he said, “wants straightening up. Silly muddle! Things that get
- in the way. Got to organise it.”
- For a time he displayed something like the zeal of a genuine social
- reformer in relation to these matters.
- “We’ve got to bring the Home Up to Date? That’s my idee, George. We got
- to make a civilised domestic machine out of these relics of barbarism.
- I’m going to hunt up inventors, make a corner in d’mestic ideas.
- Everything. Balls of string that won’t dissolve into a tangle, and gum
- that won’t dry into horn. See? Then after conveniences--beauty. Beauty,
- George! All these few things ought to be made fit to look at; it’s your
- aunt’s idea, that. Beautiful jam-pots! Get one of those new art chaps
- to design all the things they make ugly now. Patent carpet-sweepers by
- these greenwood chaps, housemaid’s boxes it’ll be a pleasure to fall
- over--rich coloured house-flannels. Zzzz. Pails, f’rinstance. Hang ‘em
- up on the walls like warming-pans. All the polishes and things in such
- tins--you’ll want to cuddle ‘em, George! See the notion? ‘Sted of all
- the silly ugly things we got.”...
- We had some magnificent visions; they so affected me that when I passed
- ironmongers and oil-shops they seemed to me as full of promise as
- trees in late winter, flushed with the effort to burst into leaf and
- flower.... And really we did do much towards that very brightness these
- shops display. They were dingy things in the eighties compared to what
- our efforts have made them now, grey quiet displays.
- Well, I don’t intend to write down here the tortuous financial history
- of Moggs’ Limited, which was our first development of Moggs and Sons;
- nor will I tell very much of how from that we spread ourselves with
- a larger and larger conception throughout the chandlery and minor
- ironmongery, how we became agents for this little commodity, partners in
- that, got a tentacle round the neck of a specialised manufacturer or so,
- secured a pull upon this or that supply of raw material, and so prepared
- the way for our second flotation, Domestic Utilities; “Do it,”
- they reordered it in the city. And then came the reconstruction of
- Tono-Bungay, and then “Household services” and the Boom!
- That sort of development is not to be told in detail in a novel. I have,
- indeed, told much of it elsewhere. It is to be found set out at
- length, painfully at length, in my uncle’s examination and mine in
- the bankruptcy proceedings, and in my own various statements after his
- death. Some people know everything in that story, some know it all
- too well, most do not want the details, it is the story of a man of
- imagination among figures, and unless you are prepared to collate
- columns of pounds, shillings and pence, compare dates and check
- additions, you will find it very unmeaning and perplexing. And after
- all, you wouldn’t find the early figures so much wrong as STRAINED. In
- the matter of Moggs and Do Ut, as in the first Tono-Bungay promotion
- and in its reconstruction, we left the court by city standards without
- a stain on our characters. The great amalgamation of Household Services
- was my uncle’s first really big-scale enterprise and his first display
- of bolder methods: for this we bought back Do Ut, Moggs (going strong
- with a seven per cent. dividend) and acquired Skinnerton’s polishes, the
- Riffleshaw properties and the Runcorn’s mincer and coffee-mill business.
- To that Amalgamation I was really not a party; I left it to my uncle
- because I was then beginning to get keen upon the soaring experiments
- I had taken on from the results then to hand of Lilienthal, Pilcher and
- the Wright brothers. I was developing a glider into a flyer. I meant
- to apply power to this glider as soon as I could work out one or two
- residual problems affecting the longitudinal stability. I knew that I
- had a sufficiently light motor in my own modification of Bridger’s
- light turbine, but I knew too that until I had cured my aeroplane of a
- tendency demanding constant alertness from me, a tendency to jerk up its
- nose at unexpected moments and slide back upon me, the application of an
- engine would be little short of suicide.
- But that I will tell about later. The point I was coming to was that I
- did not realise until after the crash how recklessly my uncle had kept
- his promise of paying a dividend of over eight per cent. on the ordinary
- shares of that hugely over-capitalised enterprise, Household Services.
- I drifted out of business affairs into my research much more than either
- I or my uncle had contemplated. Finance was much less to my taste
- than the organisation of the Tono-Bungay factory. In the new field of
- enterprise there was a great deal of bluffing and gambling, of taking
- chances and concealing material facts--and these are hateful things to
- the scientific type of mind. It wasn’t fear I felt so much as an uneasy
- inaccuracy. I didn’t realise dangers, I simply disliked the sloppy,
- relaxing quality of this new sort of work. I was at last constantly
- making excuses not to come up to him in London. The latter part of his
- business career recedes therefore beyond the circle of any particular
- life. I lived more or less with him; I talked, I advised, I helped him
- at times to fight his Sunday crowd at Crest Hill, but I did not follow
- nor guide him. From the Do Ut time onward he rushed up the financial
- world like a bubble in water and left me like some busy water-thing down
- below in the deeps.
- Anyhow, he was an immense success. The public was, I think, particularly
- attracted by the homely familiarity of his field of work--you never lost
- sight of your investment they felt, with the name on the house-flannel
- and shaving-strop--and its allegiance was secured by the Egyptian
- solidity of his apparent results. Tono-Bungay, after its reconstruction,
- paid thirteen, Moggs seven, Domestic Utilities had been a safe-looking
- nine; here was Household Services with eight; on such a showing he had
- merely to buy and sell Roeburn’s Antiseptic fluid, Razor soaks and Bath
- crystals in three weeks to clear twenty thousand pounds.
- I do think that as a matter of fact Roeburn’s was good value at the
- price at which he gave it to the public, at least until it was strained
- by ill-conserved advertisement. It was a period of expansion and
- confidence; much money was seeking investment and “Industrials” were the
- fashion. Prices were rising all round. There remained little more for
- my uncle to do therefore, in his climb to the high unstable crest
- of Financial Greatness but, as he said, to “grasp the cosmic oyster,
- George, while it gaped,” which, being translated, meant for him to buy
- respectable businesses confidently and courageously at the vendor’s
- estimate, add thirty or forty thousand to the price and sell them again.
- His sole difficulty indeed was the tactful management of the load
- of shares that each of these transactions left upon his hands. But I
- thought so little of these later things that I never fully appreciated
- the peculiar inconveniences of that until it was too late to help him.
- III
- When I think of my uncle near the days of his Great Boom and in
- connection with the actualities of his enterprises, I think of him as
- I used to see him in the suite of rooms he occupied in the Hardingham
- Hotel, seated at a great old oak writing-table, smoking, drinking, and
- incoherently busy; that was his typical financial aspect--our evenings,
- our mornings, our holidays, our motor-car expeditions, Lady Grove and
- Crest Hill belong to an altogether different set of memories.
- These rooms in the Hardingham were a string of apartments along one
- handsome thick-carpeted corridor. All the doors upon the corridor were
- locked except the first; and my uncle’s bedroom, breakfast-room and
- private sanctum were the least accessible and served by an entrance from
- the adjacent passage, which he also used at times as a means of
- escape from importunate callers. The most eternal room was a general
- waiting-room and very business-like in quality; it had one or two uneasy
- sofas, a number of chairs, a green baize table, and a collection of the
- very best Moggs and Tone posters: and the plush carpets normal to the
- Hardingham had been replaced by a grey-green cork linoleum; Here I
- would always find a remarkable miscellany of people presided over by
- a peculiarly faithful and ferocious looking commissioner, Ropper, who
- guarded the door that led a step nearer my uncle. Usually there would
- be a parson or so, and one or two widows; hairy, eyeglassy, middle-aged
- gentlemen, some of them looking singularly like Edward Ponderevos
- who hadn’t come off, a variety of young and youngish men more or less
- attractively dressed, some with papers protruding from their pockets,
- others with their papers decently concealed. And wonderful, incidental,
- frowsy people.
- All these persons maintained a practically hopeless siege--sometimes for
- weeks together; they had better have stayed at home. Next came a room
- full of people who had some sort of appointment, and here one would find
- smart-looking people, brilliantly dressed, nervous women hiding behind
- magazines, nonconformist divines, clergy in gaiters, real business men,
- these latter for the most part gentlemen in admirable morning dress who
- stood up and scrutinised my uncle’s taste in water colours manfully and
- sometimes by the hour together. Young men again were here of various
- social origins, young Americans, treasonable clerks from other concerns,
- university young men, keen-looking, most of them, resolute, reserved,
- but on a sort of hair trigger, ready at any moment to be most voluble,
- most persuasive.
- This room had a window, too, looking out into the hotel courtyard with
- its fern-set fountains and mosaic pavement, and the young men would
- stand against this and sometimes even mutter. One day I heard one
- repeating in all urgent whisper as I passed “But you don’t quite see,
- Mr. Ponderevo, the full advantages, the FULL advantages--” I met his eye
- and he was embarrassed.
- Then came a room with a couple of secretaries--no typewriters, because
- my uncle hated the clatter--and a casual person or two sitting about,
- projectors whose projects were being entertained. Here and in a further
- room nearer the private apartments, my uncle’s correspondence underwent
- an exhaustive process of pruning and digestion before it reached him.
- Then the two little rooms in which my uncle talked; my magic uncle who
- had got the investing public--to whom all things were possible. As one
- came in we would find him squatting with his cigar up and an expression
- of dubious beatitude upon his face, while some one urged him to grow
- still richer by this or that.
- “That’ju, George?” he used to say. “Come in. Here’s a thing. Tell
- him--Mister--over again. Have a drink, George? No! Wise man! Liss’n.”
- I was always ready to listen. All sorts of financial marvels came out of
- the Hardingham, more particularly during my uncle’s last great flurry,
- but they were nothing to the projects that passed in. It was the little
- brown and gold room he sat in usually. He had had it redecorated by
- Bordingly and half a dozen Sussex pictures by Webster hung about it.
- Latterly he wore a velveteen jacket of a golden-brown colour in this
- apartment that I think over-emphasised its esthetic intention, and he
- also added some gross Chinese bronzes.
- He was, on the whole, a very happy man throughout all that wildly
- enterprising time. He made and, as I shall tell in its place, spent
- great sums of money. He was constantly in violent motion, constantly
- stimulated mentally and physically and rarely tired. About him was an
- atmosphere of immense deference much of his waking life was triumphal
- and all his dreams. I doubt if he had any dissatisfaction with himself
- at all until the crash bore him down. Things must have gone very rapidly
- with him.... I think he must have been very happy.
- As I sit here writing about all these things, jerking down notes and
- throwing them aside in my attempt to give some literary form to the tale
- of our promotions, the marvel of it all comes to me as if it came for
- the first time the supreme unreason of it. At the climax of his Boom, my
- uncle at the most sparing estimate must have possessed in substance and
- credit about two million pounds’-worth of property to set off against
- his vague colossal liabilities, and from first to last he must have had
- a controlling influence in the direction of nearly thirty millions.
- This irrational muddle of a community in which we live gave him that,
- paid him at that rate for sitting in a room and scheming and telling
- it lies. For he created nothing, he invented nothing, he economised
- nothing. I cannot claim that a single one of the great businesses
- we organised added any real value to human life at all. Several like
- Tono-Bungay were unmitigated frauds by any honest standard, the giving
- of nothing coated in advertisements for money. And the things the
- Hardingham gave out, I repeat, were nothing to the things that came
- in. I think of the long procession of people who sat down before us and
- propounded this and that. Now it was a device for selling bread under
- a fancy name and so escaping the laws as to weight--this was afterwards
- floated as the Decorticated Health-Bread Company and bumped against the
- law--now it was a new scheme for still more strident advertisement,
- now it was a story of unsuspected deposits of minerals, now a cheap and
- nasty substitute for this or that common necessity, now the treachery of
- a too well-informed employee, anxious to become our partner. It was
- all put to us tentatively, persuasively. Sometimes one had a large pink
- blusterous person trying to carry us off our feet by his pseudo-boyish
- frankness, now some dyspeptically yellow whisperer, now some earnest,
- specially dressed youth with an eye-glass and a buttonhole, now some
- homely-speaking, shrewd Manchester man or some Scotchman eager to be
- very clear and full.
- Many came in couples or trios, often in tow of an explanatory solicitor.
- Some were white and earnest, some flustered beyond measure at their
- opportunity. Some of them begged and prayed to be taken up. My uncle
- chose what he wanted and left the rest. He became very autocratic to
- these applicants.
- He felt he could make them, and they felt so too. He had but to say
- “No!” and they faded out of existence.... He had become a sort of vortex
- to which wealth flowed of its own accord. His possessions increased by
- heaps; his shares, his leaseholds and mortgages and debentures.
- Behind his first-line things he found it necessary at last, and
- sanctioned by all the precincts, to set up three general trading
- companies, the London and African Investment Company, the British
- Traders’ Loan Company, and Business Organisations Limited. This was in
- the culminating time when I had least to do with affairs. I don’t say
- that with any desire to exculpate myself; I admit I was a director
- of all three, and I will confess I was willfully incurious in that
- capacity. Each of these companies ended its financial year solvent by
- selling great holdings of shares to one or other of its sisters, and
- paying a dividend out of the proceeds. I sat at the table and agreed.
- That was our method of equilibrium at the iridescent climax of the
- bubble.
- You perceive now, however, the nature of the services for which this
- fantastic community have him unmanageable wealth and power and real
- respect. It was all a monstrous payment for courageous fiction, a
- gratuity in return for the one reality of human life--illusion. We gave
- them a feeling of hope and profit; we sent a tidal wave of water and
- confidence into their stranded affairs. “We mint Faith, George,” said my
- uncle one day. “That’s what we do. And by Jove we got to keep minting!
- We been making human confidence ever since I drove the first cork of
- Tono-Bungay.”
- “Coining” would have been a better word than minting! And yet, you
- know, in a sense he was right. Civilisation is possible only through
- confidence, so that we can bank our money and go unarmed about the
- streets. The bank reserve or a policeman keeping order in a jostling
- multitude of people, are only slightly less impudent bluffs than my
- uncle’s prospectuses. They couldn’t for a moment “make good” if the
- quarter of what they guarantee was demanded of them. The whole of this
- modern mercantile investing civilisation is indeed such stuff as dreams
- are made of. A mass of people swelters and toils, great railway systems
- grow, cities arise to the skies and spread wide and far, mines are
- opened, factories hum, foundries roar, ships plough the seas, countries
- are settled; about this busy striving world the rich owners go,
- controlling all, enjoying all, confident and creating the confidence
- that draws us all together into a reluctant, nearly unconscious
- brotherhood. I wonder and plan my engines. The flags flutter, the crowds
- cheer, the legislatures meet. Yet it seems to me indeed at times that
- all this present commercial civilisation is no more than my poor uncle’s
- career writ large, a swelling, thinning bubble of assurances; that
- its arithmetic is just as unsound, its dividends as ill-advised, its
- ultimate aim as vague and forgotten; that it all drifts on perhaps to
- some tremendous parallel to his individual disaster...
- Well, so it was we Boomed, and for four years and a half we lived a life
- of mingled substance and moonshine. Until our particular unsoundness
- overtook us we went about in the most magnificent of motor-cars upon
- tangible high roads, made ourselves conspicuous and stately in splendid
- houses, ate sumptuously and had a perpetual stream of notes and money
- trickling into our pockets; hundreds of thousands of men and women
- respected us, saluted us and gave us toil and honour; I asked, and my
- worksheets rose, my aeroplanes swooped out of nothingness to scare the
- downland pe-wits; my uncle waved his hand and Lady Grove and all its
- associations of chivalry and ancient peace were his; waved again, and
- architects were busy planning the great palace he never finished at
- Crest Hill and an army of folkmen gathered to do his bidding, blue
- marble came from Canada, and timber from New Zealand; and beneath it
- all, you know, there was nothing but fictitious values as evanescent as
- rainbow gold.
- IV
- I pass the Hardingham ever and again and glance aside through the great
- archway at the fountain and the ferns, and think of those receding days
- when I was so near the centre of our eddy of greed and enterprise. I see
- again my uncle’s face, white and intent, and hear him discourse, hear
- him make consciously Napoleonic decisions, “grip” his nettles, put
- his “finger on the spot,” “bluff,” say “snap.” He became particularly
- addicted to the last idiom. Towards the end every conceivable act took
- the form of saying “snap!”
- The odd fish that came to us! And among others came Gordon-Nasmyth, that
- queer blend of romance and illegality who was destined to drag me into
- the most irrelevant adventure in my life the Mordet Island affair; and
- leave me, as they say, with blood upon my hands. It is remarkable how
- little it troubles my conscience and how much it stirs my imagination,
- that particular memory of the life I took. The story of Mordet Island
- has been told in a government report and told all wrong; there are still
- excellent reasons for leaving it wrong in places, but the liveliest
- appeals of discretion forbid my leaving it out altogether.
- I’ve still the vividest memory of Gordon-Nasmyth’s appearance in the
- inner sanctum, a lank, sunburnt person in tweeds with a yellow-brown
- hatchet face and one faded blue eye--the other was a closed and sunken
- lid--and how he told us with a stiff affectation of ease his incredible
- story of this great heap of quap that lay abandoned or undiscovered
- on the beach behind Mordet’s Island among white dead mangroves and the
- black ooze of brackish water.
- “What’s quap?” said my uncle on the fourth repetition of the word.
- “They call it quap, or quab, or quabb,” said Gordon-Nasmyth; “but our
- relations weren’t friendly enough to get the accent right....
- “But there the stuff is for the taking. They don’t know about it.
- Nobody knows about it. I got down to the damned place in a canoe alone.
- The boys wouldn’t come. I pretended to be botanising.” ...
- To begin with, Gordon-Nasmyth was inclined to be dramatic.
- “Look here,” he said when he first came in, shutting the door rather
- carefully behind him as he spoke, “do you two men--yes or no--want to
- put up six thousand--for--a clear good chance of fifteen hundred per
- cent. on your money in a year?”
- “We’re always getting chances like that,” said my uncle, cocking his
- cigar offensively, wiping his glasses and tilting his chair back. “We
- stick to a safe twenty.”
- Gordon-Nasmyth’s quick temper showed in a slight stiffening of his
- attitude.
- “Don’t you believe him,” said I, getting up before he could reply.
- “You’re different, and I know your books. We’re very glad you’ve come
- to us. Confound it, uncle! Its Gordon-Nasmyth! Sit down. What is it?
- Minerals?”
- “Quap,” said Gordon-Nasmyth, fixing his eye on me, “in heaps.”
- “In heaps,” said my uncle softly, with his glasses very oblique.
- “You’re only fit for the grocery,” said Gordon-Nasmyth scornfully,
- sitting down and helping himself to one of my uncle’s cigars. “I’m sorry
- I came. But, still, now I’m here.... And first as to quap; quap, sir, is
- the most radio-active stuff in the world. That’s quap! It’s a festering
- mass of earths and heavy metals, polonium, radium, ythorium, thorium,
- carium, and new things, too. There’s a stuff called Xk--provisionally.
- There they are, mucked up together in a sort of rotting sand. What it
- is, how it got made, I don’t know. It’s like as if some young creator
- had been playing about there. There it lies in two heaps, one small,
- one great, and the world for miles about it is blasted and scorched and
- dead. You can have it for the getting. You’ve got to take it--that’s
- all!”
- “That sounds all right,” said I. “Have you samples?”
- “Well--should I? You can have anything--up to two ounces.”
- “Where is it?”...
- His blue eye smiled at me and scrutinised me. He smoked and was
- fragmentary for a time, fending off my questions; then his story began
- to piece itself together. He conjured up a vision of this strange
- forgotten kink in the world’s littoral, of the long meandering channels
- that spread and divaricate and spend their burden of mud and silt within
- the thunderbelt of Atlantic surf, of the dense tangled vegetation that
- creeps into the shimmering water with root and sucker. He gave a sense
- of heat and a perpetual reek of vegetable decay, and told how at last
- comes a break among these things, an arena fringed with bone-white dead
- trees, a sight of the hard-blue sea line beyond the dazzling surf and
- a wide desolation of dirty shingle and mud, bleached and scarred....
- A little way off among charred dead weeds stands the abandoned
- station,--abandoned because every man who stayed two months at that
- station stayed to die, eaten up mysteriously like a leper with its
- dismantled sheds and its decaying pier of wormrotten and oblique piles
- and planks, still insecurely possible.
- And in the midst, two clumsy heaps shaped like the backs of hogs, one
- small, one great, sticking out under a rib of rock that cuts the space
- across,--quap!
- “There it is,” said Gordon-Nasmyth, “worth three pounds an ounce, if
- it’s worth a penny; two great heaps of it, rotten stuff and soft, ready
- to shovel and wheel, and you may get it by the ton!”
- “How did it get there?”
- “God knows! ... There it is--for the taking! In a country where you
- mustn’t trade. In a country where the company waits for good kind men
- to find it riches and then take ‘em away from ‘em. There you have
- it--derelict.”
- “Can’t you do any sort of deal?”
- “They’re too damned stupid. You’ve got to go and take it. That’s all.”
- “They might catch you.”
- “They might, of course. But they’re not great at catching.”
- We went into the particulars of that difficulty. “They wouldn’t catch
- me, because I’d sink first. Give me a yacht,” said Gordon-Nasmyth;
- “that’s all I need.”
- “But if you get caught,” said my uncle.
- I am inclined to think Gordon-Nasmyth imagined we would give him a
- cheque for six thousand pounds on the strength of his talk. It was very
- good talk, but we didn’t do that. I stipulated for samples of his stuff
- for analysis, and he consented--reluctantly.
- I think, on the whole, he would rather I didn’t examine samples. He made
- a motion pocketwards, that gave us an invincible persuasion that he
- had a sample upon him, and that at the last instant he decided not to
- produce it prematurely.
- There was evidently a curious strain of secretiveness in him. He didn’t
- like to give us samples, and he wouldn’t indicate within three hundred
- miles the position of this Mordet Island of his. He had it clear in his
- mind that he had a secret of immense value, and he had no idea at all of
- just how far he ought to go with business people. And so presently,
- to gain time for these hesitations of his, he began to talk of other
- things. He talked very well. He talked of the Dutch East Indies and of
- the Congo, of Portuguese East Africa and Paraguay, of Malays and rich
- Chinese merchants, Dyaks and negroes and the spread of the Mahometan
- world in Africa to-day. And all this time he was trying to judge if
- we were good enough to trust with his adventure. Our cosy inner office
- became a little place, and all our business cold and lifeless exploits
- beside his glimpses of strange minglings of men, of slayings unavenged
- and curious customs, of trade where no writs run, and the dark
- treacheries of eastern ports and uncharted channels.
- We had neither of us gone abroad except for a few vulgar raids on Paris;
- our world was England, are the places of origin of half the raw material
- of the goods we sold had seemed to us as remote as fairyland or the
- forest of Arden. But Gordon-Nasmyth made it so real and intimate for us
- that afternoon--for me, at any rate--that it seemed like something seen
- and forgotten and now again remembered.
- And in the end he produced his sample, a little lump of muddy clay
- speckled with brownish grains, in a glass bottle wrapped about with lead
- and flannel--red flannel it was, I remember--a hue which is, I know,
- popularly supposed to double all the mystical efficacies of flannel.
- “Don’t carry it about on you,” said Gordon-Nasmyth. “It makes a sore.”
- I took the stuff to Thorold, and Thorold had the exquisite agony of
- discovering two new elements in what was then a confidential
- analysis. He has christened them and published since, but at the time
- Gordon-Nasmyth wouldn’t hear for a moment of our publication of any
- facts at all; indeed, he flew into a violent passion and abused me
- mercilessly even for showing the stuff to Thorold. “I thought you were
- going to analyse it yourself,” he said with the touching persuasion of
- the layman that a scientific man knows and practises at the sciences.
- I made some commercial inquiries, and there seemed even then much truth
- in Gordon-Nasmyth’s estimate of the value of the stuff. It was before
- the days of Capern’s discovery of the value of canadium and his use of
- it in the Capern filament, but the cerium and thorium alone were worth
- the money he extracted for the gas-mantles then in vogue. There were,
- however, doubts. Indeed, there were numerous doubts. What were the
- limits of the gas-mantle trade? How much thorium, not to speak of
- cerium, could they take at a maximum. Suppose that quantity was high
- enough to justify our shipload, came doubts in another quarter. Were
- the heaps up to sample? Were they as big as he said? Was
- Gordon-Nasmyth--imaginative? And if these values held, could we after
- all get the stuff? It wasn’t ours. It was on forbidden ground. You see,
- there were doubts of every grade and class in the way of this adventure.
- We went some way, nevertheless, in the discussion of his project, though
- I think we tried his patience. Then suddenly he vanished from London,
- and I saw no more of him for a year and a half.
- My uncle said that was what he had expected, and when at last
- Gordon-Nasmyth reappeared and mentioned in an incidental way that he
- had been to Paraguay on private (and we guessed passionate) affairs,
- the business of the “quap” expedition had to be begun again at the
- beginning. My uncle was disposed to be altogether sceptical, but I
- wasn’t so decided. I think I was drawn by its picturesque aspects.
- But we neither of us dreamt of touching it seriously until Capern’s
- discovery.
- Nasmyth’s story had laid hold of my imagination like one small, intense
- picture of tropical sunshine hung on a wall of grey business affairs.
- I kept it going during Gordon-Nasmyth’s intermittent appearances in
- England. Every now and then he and I would meet and reinforce its
- effect. We would lunch in London, or he would cone to see my gliders at
- Crest Hill, and make new projects for getting at those heaps again now
- with me, now alone.
- At times they became a sort of fairy-story with us, an imaginative
- exercise. And there came Capern’s discovery of what he called the ideal
- filament and with it an altogether less problematical quality about the
- business side of quap. For the ideal filament needed five per cent. of
- canadium, and canadium was known to the world only as a newly separated
- constituent of a variety of the rare mineral rutile. But to Thorold it
- was better known as an element in a mysterious sample brought to him
- by me, and to me it was known as one of the elements in quap. I told
- my uncle, and we jumped on to the process at once. We found that
- Gordon-Nasmyth, still unaware of the altered value of the stuff, and
- still thinking of the experimental prices of radium and the rarity
- value of cerium, had got hold of a cousin named Pollack, made some
- extraordinary transaction about his life insurance policy, and was
- buying a brig. We put in, put down three thousand pounds, and forthwith
- the life insurance transaction and the Pollack side of this finance
- vanished into thin air, leaving Pollack, I regret to say, in the brig
- and in the secret--except so far as canadium and the filament went--as
- residuum. We discussed earnestly whether we should charter a steamer or
- go on with the brig, but we decided on the brig as a less conspicuous
- instrument for an enterprise that was after all, to put it plainly,
- stealing.
- But that was one of our last enterprises before our great crisis, and I
- will tell of it in its place.
- So it was quap came into our affairs, came in as a fairy-tale and became
- real. More and more real it grew until at last it was real, until at
- last I saw with my eyes the heaps my imagination had seen for so long,
- and felt between my fingers again that half-gritty, half soft texture
- of quap, like sanded moist-sugar mixed with clay in which there stirs
- something--
- One must feel it to understand.
- V
- All sorts of things came to the Hardingham and offered themselves to my
- uncle. Gordon-Nasmyth stands but only because he played a part at last
- in the crisis of our fortunes. So much came to us that it seemed to
- me at times as though the whole world of human affairs was ready to
- prostitute itself to our real and imaginary millions. As I look back,
- I am still dazzled and incredulous to think of the quality of our
- opportunities.
- We did the most extraordinary things; things that it seems absurd to
- me to leave to any casual man of wealth and enterprise who cares to do
- them. I had some amazing perceptions of just how modern thought and the
- supply of fact to the general mind may be controlled by money. Among
- other things that my uncle offered for, he tried very hard to buy the
- British Medical Journal and the Lancet, and run them on what he called
- modern lines, and when they resisted him he talked very vigorously for a
- time of organising a rival enterprise. That was a very magnificent idea
- indeed in its way; it would have given a tremendous advantage in the
- handling of innumerable specialties and indeed I scarcely know how
- far it would not have put the medical profession in our grip. It still
- amazes me--I shall die amazed--that such a thing can be possible in the
- modern state. If my uncle failed to bring the thing off, some one
- else may succeed. But I doubt, even if he had got both these weeklies,
- whether his peculiar style would have suited them. The change of purpose
- would have shown. He would have found it difficult to keep up their
- dignity.
- He certainly did not keep up the dignity of the Sacred Grove,
- an important critical organ which he acquired one day--by saying
- “snap”--for eight hundred pounds. He got it “lock, stock and
- barrel”--under one or other of which three aspects the editor was
- included. Even at that price it didn’t pay. If you are a literary person
- you will remember the bright new cover he gave that representative organ
- of British intellectual culture, and how his sound business instincts
- jarred with the exalted pretensions of a vanishing age. One old wrapper
- I discovered the other day runs:--
- “THE SACRED GROVE.”
- Weekly Magazine of Art, Philosophy, Science and
- Belles Lettres.
- ----------------------------------------------
- HAVE YOU A NASTY TASTE IN YOUR MOUTH?
- IT IS LIVER.
- YOU NEED ONE TWENTY-THREE PILL.
- (JUST ONE.)
- NOT A DRUG BUT A LIVE AMERICAN REMEDY.
- -----------------------------------------------
- CONTENTS.
- A Hitherto Unpublished Letter from Walter Pater.
- Charlotte Bronte’s Maternal Great Aunt.
- A New Catholic History of England.
- The Genius of Shakespeare.
- Correspondence:--The Mendelian Hypothesis; The Split Infinitive;
- “Commence,” or “Begin;” Claverhouse; Socialism and the
- Individual; The Dignity of Letters.
- Folk-lore Gossip.
- The Stage; the Paradox of Acting.
- Travel Biography, Verse, Fiction, etc.
- ----------------------------------------------------
- THE BEST PILL IN THE WORLD FOR AN IRREGULAR LIVER
- I suppose it is some lingering traces of the Bladesover tradition to me
- that makes this combination of letters and pills seem so incongruous,
- just as I suppose it is a lingering trace of Plutarch and my
- ineradicable boyish imagination that at bottom our State should be
- wise, sane and dignified, that makes me think a country which leaves
- its medical and literary criticism, or indeed any such vitally important
- criticism, entirely to private enterprise and open to the advances of
- any purchaser must be in a frankly hopeless condition. These are ideal
- conceptions of mine.
- As a matter of fact, nothing would be more entirely natural and
- representative of the relations of learning, thought and the economic
- situation in the world at the present time than this cover of the
- Sacred Grove--the quiet conservatism of the one element embedded in
- the aggressive brilliance of the other; the contrasted notes of bold
- physiological experiment and extreme mental immobility.
- VI
- There comes back, too, among these Hardingham memories, an impression
- of a drizzling November day, and how we looked out of the windows upon a
- procession of the London unemployed.
- It was like looking down a well into some momentarily revealed nether
- world. Some thousands of needy ineffectual men had been raked together
- to trail their spiritless misery through the West Eire with an appeal
- that was also in its way a weak and insubstantial threat: “It is Work we
- need, not Charity.”
- There they were, half-phantom through the fog, a silent, foot-dragging,
- interminable, grey procession. They carried wet, dirty banners, they
- rattled boxes for pence; these men who had not said “snap” in the right
- place, the men who had “snapped” too eagerly, the men who had never
- said “snap,” the men who had never had a chance of saying “snap.” A
- shambling, shameful stream they made, oozing along the street, the
- gutter waste of competitive civilisation. And we stood high out of it
- all, as high as if we looked godlike from another world, standing in
- a room beautifully lit and furnished, skillfully warmed, filled with
- costly things.
- “There,” thought I, “but for the grace of God, go George and Edward
- Ponderevo.”
- But my uncle’s thoughts ran in a different channel, and he made that
- vision the test of a spirited but inconclusive harangue upon Tariff
- Reform.
- CHAPTER THE SECOND
- OUR PROGRESS FROM CAMDEN TOWN TO CREST HILL
- I
- So far my history of my aunt and uncle has dealt chiefly with his
- industrial and financial exploits. But side by side with that history of
- inflation from the infinitesimal to the immense is another development,
- the change year by year from the shabby impecuniosity of the Camden Town
- lodging to the lavish munificence of the Crest Hill marble staircase and
- my aunt’s golden bed, the bed that was facsimiled from Fontainebleau.
- And the odd thing is that as I come to this nearer part of my story I
- find it much more difficult to tell than the clear little perspective
- memories of the earlier days. Impressions crowd upon one another and
- overlap one another; I was presently to fall in love again, to be seized
- by a passion to which I still faintly respond, a passion that still
- clouds my mind. I came and went between Ealing and my aunt and uncle,
- and presently between Effie and clubland, and then between business
- and a life of research that became far more continuous, infinitely more
- consecutive and memorable than any of these other sets of experiences.
- I didn’t witness a regular social progress therefore; my aunt and
- uncle went up in the world, so far as I was concerned, as if they were
- displayed by an early cinematograph, with little jumps and flickers.
- As I recall this side of our life, the figure of my round-eyes,
- button-nosed, pink-and-white Aunt Susan tends always to the central
- position. We drove the car and sustained the car, she sat in it with
- a magnificent variety of headgear poised upon her delicate neck,
- and always with that faint ghost of a lisp no misspelling can
- render--commented on and illuminated the new aspects.
- I’ve already sketched the little home behind the Wimblehurst chemist’s
- shop, the lodging near the Cobden statue, and the apartments in Gower
- Street. Thence my aunt and uncle went into a flat in Redgauntlet
- Mansions. There they lived when I married. It was a compact flat, with
- very little for a woman to do in it In those days my aunt, I think,
- used to find the time heavy upon her hands, and so she took to books and
- reading, and after a time even to going to lectures in the afternoon.
- I began to find unexpected books upon her table: sociological books,
- travels, Shaw’s plays. “Hullo!” I said, at the sight of some volume of
- the latter.
- “I’m keeping a mind, George,” she explained.
- “Eh?”
- “Keeping a mind. Dogs I never cared for. It’s been a toss-up between
- setting up a mind and setting up a soul. It’s jolly lucky for Him and
- you it’s a mind. I’ve joined the London Library, and I’m going in for
- the Royal Institution and every blessed lecture that comes along next
- winter. You’d better look out.”...
- And I remember her coming in late one evening with a note-book in her
- hand.
- “Where ya been, Susan?” said my uncle.
- “Birkbeck--Physiology. I’m getting on.” She sat down and took off her
- gloves. “You’re just glass to me,” she sighed, and then in a note of
- grave reproach: “You old PACKAGE! I had no idea! The Things you’ve kept
- from me!”
- Presently they were setting; up the house at Beckengham, and my aunt
- intermitted her intellectual activities. The house at Beckengham was
- something of an enterprise for them at that time, a reasonably large
- place by the standards of the early years of Tono-Bungay. It was a big,
- rather gaunt villa, with a conservatory and a shrubbery, a tennis-lawn,
- a quite considerable vegetable garden, and a small disused coach-house.
- I had some glimpses of the excitements of its inauguration, but not many
- because of the estrangement between my aunt and Marion.
- My aunt went into that house with considerable zest, and my uncle
- distinguished himself by the thoroughness with which he did the
- repainting and replumbing. He had all the drains up and most of the
- garden with them, and stood administrative on heaps--administrating
- whisky to the workmen. I found him there one day, most Napoleonic, on
- a little Elba of dirt, in an atmosphere that defies print. He also, I
- remember, chose what he considered cheerful contrasts of colours for the
- painting of the woodwork. This exasperated my aunt extremely--she
- called him a “Pestilential old Splosher” with an unusual note of
- earnestness--and he also enraged her into novelties of abuse by giving
- each bedroom the name of some favourite hero--Cliff, Napoleon, Caesar,
- and so forth--and having it painted on the door in gilt letters on
- a black label. “Martin Luther” was kept for me. Only her respect for
- domestic discipline, she said, prevented her retaliating with “Old
- Pondo” on the housemaid’s cupboard.
- Also he went and ordered one of the completest sets of garden requisites
- I have ever seen--and had them all painted a hard clear blue. My aunt
- got herself large tins of a kindlier hued enamel and had everything
- secretly recoated, and this done, she found great joy in the garden and
- became an ardent rose grower and herbaceous borderer, leaving her Mind,
- indeed, to damp evenings and the winter months. When I think of her at
- Beckenham, I always think first of her as dressed in that blue cotton
- stuff she affected, with her arms in huge gauntleted gardening gloves, a
- trowel in one hand and a small but no doubt hardy and promising annual,
- limp and very young-looking and sheepish, in the other.
- Beckenham, in the persons of a vicar, a doctor’s wife, and a large proud
- lady called Hogberry, “called” on my uncle and aunt almost at once, so
- soon in fact as the lawn was down again, and afterwards my aunt made
- friends with a quiet gentlewoman next door, a propos of an overhanging
- cherry tree and the need of repairing the party fence. So she resumed
- her place in society from which she had fallen with the disaster of
- Wimblehurst. She made a partially facetious study of the etiquette of
- her position, had cards engraved and retaliated calls. And then she
- received a card for one of Mrs. Hogberry’s At Homes, gave an old garden
- party herself, participated in a bazaar and sale of work, and was really
- becoming quite cheerfully entangled in Beckenham society when she was
- suddenly taken up by the roots again by my uncle and transplanted to
- Chiselhurst.
- “Old Trek, George,” she said compactly, “Onward and Up,” when I found
- her superintending the loading of two big furniture vans. “Go up and say
- good-bye to ‘Martin Luther,’ and then I’ll see what you can do to help
- me.”
- II
- I look into the jumbled stores of the middle distance of memory, and
- Beckenham seems to me a quite transitory phase. But really they were
- there several years; through nearly all my married life, in fact,
- and far longer than the year and odd months we lived together at
- Wimblehurst. But the Wimblehurst time with them is fuller in my memory
- by far then the Beckenham period. There comes back to me with a quite
- considerable amount of detail the effect of that garden party of my
- aunt’s and of a little social misbehaviour of which I was guilty on that
- occasion. It’s like a scrap from another life. It’s all set in what is
- for me a kind of cutaneous feeling, the feeling of rather ill-cut city
- clothes, frock coat and grey trousers, and of a high collar and tie
- worn in sunshine among flowers. I have still a quite vivid memory of the
- little trapezoidal lawn, of the gathering, and particularly of the
- hats and feathers of the gathering, of the parlour-maid and the blue
- tea-cups, and of the magnificent presence of Mrs. Hogberry and of her
- clear, resonant voice. It was a voice that would have gone with a garden
- party on a larger scale; it went into adjacent premises; it included the
- gardener who was far up the vegetable patch and technically out of play.
- The only other men were my aunt’s doctor, two of the clergy, amiable
- contrasted men, and Mrs. Hogberry’s imperfectly grown-up son, a youth
- just bursting into collar. The rest were women, except for a young girl
- or so in a state of speechless good behaviour. Marion also was there.
- Marion and I had arrived a little estranged, and I remember her as
- a silent presence, a shadow across all that sunlit emptiness of
- intercourse. We had embittered each other with one of those miserable
- little disputes that seemed so unavoidable between us. She had, with the
- help of Smithie, dressed rather elaborately for the occasion, and when
- she saw me prepared to accompany her in, I think it was a grey suit,
- she protested that silk hat and frock coat were imperative. I was
- recalcitrant, she quoted an illustrated paper showing a garden party
- with the King present, and finally I capitulated--but after my evil
- habit, resentfully.... Eh, dear! those old quarrels, how pitiful they
- were, how trivial! And how sorrowful they are to recall! I think they
- grow more sorrowful as I grow older, and all the small passionate
- reasons for our mutual anger fade and fade out of memory.
- The impression that Beckenham company has left on my mind is one of
- a modest unreality; they were all maintaining a front of unspecified
- social pretension, and evading the display of the economic facts of the
- case. Most of the husbands were “in business” off stage, it would have
- been outrageous to ask what the business was--and the wives were
- giving their energies to produce, with the assistance of novels and the
- illustrated magazines, a moralised version of the afternoon life of the
- aristocratic class. They hadn’t the intellectual or moral enterprise
- of the upper-class woman, they had no political interests, they had no
- views about anything, and consequently they were, I remember, extremely
- difficult to talk to. They all sat about in the summer-house and in
- garden-chairs, and were very hatty and ruffley and sunshady. Three
- ladies and the curate played croquet with a general immense gravity,
- broken by occasional loud cries of feigned distress from the curate.
- “Oh! Whacking me about again! Augh!”
- The dominant social fact that afternoon was Mrs. Hogberry; she took up a
- certain position commanding the croquet and went on, as my aunt said to
- me in an incidental aside, “like an old Roundabout.” She talked of the
- way in which Beckenham society was getting mixed, and turned on to
- a touching letter she had recently received from her former nurse at
- Little Gossdean. Followed a loud account of Little Gossdean and how much
- she and her eight sisters had been looked up to there. “My poor mother
- was quite a little Queen there,” she said. “And such NICE Common people!
- People say the country labourers are getting disrespectful nowadays. It
- isn’t so--not if they’re properly treated. Here of course in Beckenham
- it’s different. I won’t call the people we get here a Poor--they’re
- certainly not a proper Poor. They’re Masses. I always tell Mr. Bugshoot
- they’re Masses, and ought to be treated as such.”...
- Dim memories of Mrs. Mackridge floated through my mind as I listened to
- her....
- I was whirled on this roundabout for a bit, and then had the fortune to
- fall off into a tete-a-tete with a lady whom my aunt introduced as
- Mrs. Mumble--but then she introduced everybody to me as Mumble that
- afternoon, either by way of humour or necessity.
- That must have been one of my earliest essays in the art of polite
- conversation, and I remember that I began by criticising the local
- railway service, and that at the third sentence or thereabouts Mrs.
- Mumble said in a distinctly bright and encouraging way that she feared I
- was a very “frivolous” person.
- I wonder now what it was I said that was “frivolous.”
- I don’t know what happened to end that conversation, or if it had
- an end. I remember talking to one of the clergy for a time rather
- awkwardly, and being given a sort of topographical history of Beckenham,
- which he assured me time after time was “Quite an old place. Quite an
- old place.” As though I had treated it as new and he meant to be very
- patient but very convincing. Then we hung up in a distinct pause, and my
- aunt rescued me. “George,” she said in a confidential undertone, “keep
- the pot a-boiling.” And then audibly, “I say, will you both old trot
- about with tea a bit?”
- “Only too delighted to TROT for you, Mrs. Ponderevo,” said the
- clergyman, becoming fearfully expert and in his elements; “only too
- delighted.”
- I found we were near a rustic table, and that the housemaid was behind
- us in a suitable position to catch us on the rebound with the tea
- things.
- “Trot!” repeated the clergyman to me, much amused; “excellent
- expression!” And I just saved him from the tray as he turned about.
- We handed tea for a while....
- “Give ‘em cakes,” said my aunt, flushed, but well in hand. “Helps ‘em to
- talk, George. Always talk best after a little nourishment. Like throwing
- a bit of turf down an old geyser.”
- She surveyed the gathering with a predominant blue eye and helped
- herself to tea.
- “They keep on going stiff,” she said in an undertone.... “I’ve done my
- best.”
- “It’s been a huge success,” I said encouragingly.
- “That boy has had his legs crossed in that position and hasn’t spoken
- for ten minutes. Stiffer and stiffer. Brittle. He’s beginning a dry
- cough--always a bad sign, George.... Walk ‘em about, shall I?--rub their
- noses with snow?”
- Happily she didn’t. I got myself involved with the gentlewoman from next
- door, a pensive, languid-looking little woman with a low voice, and fell
- talking; our topic, Cats and Dogs, and which it was we liked best.
- “I always feel,” said the pensive little woman, “that there’s something
- about a dog--A cat hasn’t got it.”
- “Yes,” I found myself admitting with great enthusiasm, “there is
- something. And yet again--”
- “Oh! I know there’s something about a cat, too. But it isn’t the same.”
- “Not quite the same,” I admitted; “but still it’s something.”
- “Ah! But such a different something!”
- “More sinuous.”
- “Much more.”
- “Ever so much more.”
- “It makes all the difference, don’t you think?”
- “Yes,” I said, “ALL.”
- She glanced at me gravely and sighed a long, deeply felt “Yes.” A long
- pause.
- The thing seemed to me to amount to a stale-mate. Fear came into my
- heart and much perplexity.
- “The--er--Roses,” I said. I felt like a drowning man. “Those
- roses--don’t you think they are--very beautiful flowers?”
- “Aren’t they!” she agreed gently. “There seems to be something in
- roses--something--I don’t know how to express it.”
- “Something,” I said helpfully.
- “Yes,” she said, “something. Isn’t there?”
- “So few people see it,” I said; “more’s the pity!”
- She sighed and said again very softly, “Yes.”...
- There was another long pause. I looked at her and she was thinking
- dreamily. The drowning sensation returned, the fear and enfeeblement. I
- perceived by a sort of inspiration that her tea-cup was empty.
- “Let me take your cup,” I said abruptly, and, that secured, made for the
- table by the summer-house. I had no intention then of deserting my
- aunt. But close at hand the big French window of the drawing-room
- yawned inviting and suggestive. I can feel all that temptation now, and
- particularly the provocation of my collar. In an instant I was lost. I
- would--Just for a moment!
- I dashed in, put down the cup on the keys of the grand piano and fled
- upstairs, softly, swiftly, three steps at a time, to the sanctuary of my
- uncle’s study, his snuggery. I arrived there breathless, convinced
- there was no return for me. I was very glad and ashamed of myself, and
- desperate. By means of a penknife I contrived to break open his cabinet
- of cigars, drew a chair to the window, took off my coat, collar and tie,
- and remained smoking guiltily and rebelliously, and peeping through the
- blind at the assembly on the lawn until it was altogether gone....
- The clergymen, I thought, were wonderful.
- III
- A few such pictures of those early days at Beckenham stand out, and then
- I find myself among the Chiselhurst memories. The Chiselhurst mansion
- had “grounds” rather than a mere garden, and there was a gardener’s
- cottage and a little lodge at the gate. The ascendant movement was
- always far more in evidence there than at Beckenham. The velocity was
- increasing.
- One night picks itself out as typical, as, in its way, marking an epoch.
- I was there, I think, about some advertisement stuff, on some sort of
- business anyhow, and my uncle and aunt had come back in a fly from a
- dinner at the Runcorns. (Even there he was nibbling at Runcorn with the
- idea of our great Amalgamation budding in his mind.) I got down there, I
- suppose, about eleven. I found the two of them sitting in the study, my
- aunt on a chair-arm with a whimsical pensiveness on her face, regarding
- my uncle, and he, much extended and very rotund, in the low arm-chair
- drawn up to the fender.
- “Look here, George,” said my uncle, after my first greetings. “I just
- been saying: We aren’t Oh Fay!”
- “Eh?”
- “Not Oh Fay! Socially!”
- “Old FLY, he means, George--French!”
- “Oh! Didn’t think of French. One never knows where to have him. What’s
- gone wrong to-night?”
- “I been thinking. It isn’t any particular thing. I ate too much of that
- fishy stuff at first, like salt frog spawn, and was a bit confused by
- olives; and--well, I didn’t know which wine was which. Had to say THAT
- each time. It puts your talk all wrong. And she wasn’t in evening dress,
- not like the others. We can’t go on in that style, George--not a proper
- ad.”
- “I’m not sure you were right,” I said, “in having a fly.”
- “We got to do it all better,” said my uncle, “we got to do it in Style.
- Smart business, smart men. She tries to pass it off as humorous”--my
- aunt pulled a grimace--“it isn’t humorous! See! We’re on the up-grade
- now, fair and square. We’re going to be big. We aren’t going to be
- laughed at as Poovenoos, see!”
- “Nobody laughed at you,” said my aunt. “Old Bladder!”
- “Nobody isn’t going to laugh at me,” said my uncle, glancing at his
- contours and suddenly sitting up.
- My aunt raised her eyebrows slightly, swung her foot, and said nothing.
- “We aren’t keeping pace with our own progress, George. We got to. We’re
- bumping against new people, and they set up to be gentlefolks--etiquette
- dinners and all the rest of it. They give themselves airs and expect
- us to be fish-out-of-water. We aren’t going to be. They think we’ve no
- Style. Well, we give them Style for our advertisements, and we’re going
- to give ‘em Style all through.... You needn’t be born to it to dance
- well on the wires of the Bond Street tradesmen. See?”
- I handed him the cigar-box.
- “Runcorn hadn’t cigars like these,” he said, truncating one lovingly.
- “We beat him at cigars. We’ll beat him all round.”
- My aunt and I regarded him, full of apprehensions.
- “I got idees,” he said darkly to the cigar, deepening our dread.
- He pocketed his cigar-cutter and spoke again.
- “We got to learn all the rotten little game first. See, F’rinstance, we
- got to get samples of all the blessed wines there are--and learn ‘em up.
- Stern, Smoor, Burgundy, all of ‘em! She took Stern to-night--and when
- she tasted it first--you pulled a face, Susan, you did. I saw you. It
- surprised you. You bunched your nose. We got to get used to wine and not
- do that. We got to get used to wearing evening dress--YOU, Susan, too.”
- “Always have had a tendency to stick out of my clothes,” said my aunt.
- “However--Who cares?” She shrugged her shoulders.
- I had never seen my uncle so immensely serious.
- “Got to get the hang of etiquette,” he went on to the fire. “Horses
- even. Practise everything. Dine every night in evening dress.... Get
- a brougham or something. Learn up golf and tennis and things. Country
- gentleman. Oh Fay. It isn’t only freedom from Goochery.”
- “Eh?” I said.
- “Oh!--Gawshery, if you like!”
- “French, George,” said my aunt. “But I’M not ol’ Gooch. I made that face
- for fun.”
- “It isn’t only freedom from Gawshery. We got to have Style. See! Style!
- Just all right and one better. That’s what I call Style. We can do it,
- and we will.”
- He mumbled his cigar and smoked for a space, leaning forward and looking
- into the fire.
- “What is it,” he asked, “after all? What is it? Tips about eating; tips
- about drinking. Clothes. How to hold yourself, and not say jes’ the
- few little things they know for certain are wrong--jes’ the shibboleth
- things.”
- He was silent again, and the cigar crept up from the horizontal towards
- the zenith as the confidence of his mouth increased.
- “Learn the whole bag of tricks in six months.” he said, becoming more
- cheerful. “Ah, Susan? Beat it out! George, you in particular ought to
- get hold of it. Ought to get into a good club, and all that.”
- “Always ready to learn!” I said. “Ever since you gave me the chance of
- Latin. So far we don’t seem to have hit upon any Latin-speaking stratum
- in the population.”
- “We’ve come to French,” said my aunt, “anyhow.”
- “It’s a very useful language,” said my uncle. “Put a point on things.
- Zzzz. As for accent, no Englishman has an accent. No Englishman
- pronounces French properly. Don’t you tell ME. It’s a Bluff.--It’s all a
- Bluff. Life’s a Bluff--practically. That’s why it’s so important, Susan,
- for us to attend to Style. Le Steel Say Lum. The Style it’s the man.
- Whad you laughing at, Susan? George, you’re not smoking. These cigars
- are good for the mind.... What do YOU think of it all? We got to adapt
- ourselves. We have--so far.... Not going to be beat by these silly
- things.”
- IV
- “What do you think of it, George?” he insisted.
- What I said I thought of it I don’t now recall. Only I have very
- distinctly the impression of meeting for a moment my aunt’s impenetrable
- eye. And anyhow he started in with his accustomed energy to rape the
- mysteries of the Costly Life, and become the calmest of its lords. On
- the whole, I think he did it--thoroughly. I have crowded memories,
- a little difficult to disentangle, of his experimental stages, his
- experimental proceedings. It’s hard at times to say which memory comes
- in front of which. I recall him as presenting on the whole a series of
- small surprises, as being again and again, unexpectedly, a little more
- self-confident, a little more polished, a little richer and finer, a
- little more aware of the positions and values of things and men.
- There was a time--it must have been very early--when I saw him deeply
- impressed by the splendours of the dining-room of the National Liberal
- Club. Heaven knows who our host was or what that particular little
- “feed” was about now!--all that sticks is the impression of our
- straggling entry, a string of six or seven guests, and my uncle looking
- about him at the numerous bright red-shaded tables, at the exotics in
- great Majolica jars, at the shining ceramic columns and pilasters, at
- the impressive portraits of Liberal statesmen and heroes, and all that
- contributes to the ensemble of that palatial spectacle. He was betrayed
- into a whisper to me, “This is all Right, George!” he said. That artless
- comment seems almost incredible as I set it down; there came a time
- so speedily when not even the clubs of New York could have overawed my
- uncle, and when he could walk through the bowing magnificence of the
- Royal Grand Hotel to his chosen table in that aggressively exquisite
- gallery upon the river, with all the easy calm of one of earth’s
- legitimate kings.
- The two of them learnt the new game rapidly and well; they experimented
- abroad, they experimented at home. At Chiselhurst, with the aid of
- a new, very costly, but highly instructive cook, they tried over
- everything they heard of that roused their curiosity and had any
- reputation for difficulty, from asparagus to plover’s eggs. They
- afterwards got a gardener who could wait at table--and he brought the
- soil home to one. Then there came a butler.
- I remember my aunt’s first dinner-gown very brightly, and how she stood
- before the fire in the drawing-room confessing once unsuspected pretty
- arms with all the courage she possessed, and looking over her shoulder
- at herself in a mirror.
- “A ham,” she remarked reflectively, “must feel like this. Just a
- necklace.”...
- I attempted, I think, some commonplace compliment.
- My uncle appeared at the door in a white waistcoat and with his hands in
- his trouser pockets; he halted and surveyed her critically.
- “Couldn’t tell you from a duchess, Susan,” he remarked. “I’d like
- to have you painted, standin’ at the fire like that. Sargent! You
- look--spirited, somehow. Lord!--I wish some of those damned tradesmen at
- Wimblehurst could see you.”...
- They did a lot of week-ending at hotels, and sometimes I went down with
- them. We seemed to fall into a vast drifting crowd of social learners. I
- don’t know whether it is due simply to my changed circumstances, but it
- seems to me there have been immensely disproportionate developments of
- the hotel-frequenting and restaurant-using population during the last
- twenty years. It is not only, I think, that there are crowds of people
- who, like we were, are in the economically ascendant phase, but whole
- masses of the prosperous section of the population must be altering its
- habits, giving up high-tea for dinner and taking to evening dress, using
- the week-end hotels as a practise-ground for these new social arts. A
- swift and systematic conversion to gentility has been going on, I am
- convinced, throughout the whole commercial upper-middle class since I
- was twenty-one. Curiously mixed was the personal quality of the
- people one saw in these raids. There were conscientiously refined
- and low-voiced people reeking with proud bashfulness; there were
- aggressively smart people using pet diminutives for each other loudly
- and seeking fresh occasions for brilliant rudeness; there were awkward
- husbands and wives quarrelling furtively about their manners and ill
- at ease under the eye of the winter; cheerfully amiable and often
- discrepant couples with a disposition to inconspicuous corners, and the
- jolly sort, affecting an unaffected ease; plump happy ladies who laughed
- too loud, and gentlemen in evening dress who subsequently “got their
- pipes.” And nobody, you knew, was anybody, however expensively they
- dressed and whatever rooms they took.
- I look back now with a curious remoteness of spirit to those crowded
- dining-rooms with their dispersed tables and their inevitable red-shaded
- lights and the unsympathetic, unskillful waiters, and the choice of
- “Thig or Glear, Sir?” I’ve not dined in that way, in that sort of place,
- now for five years--it must be quite five years, so specialised and
- narrow is my life becoming.
- My uncle’s earlier motor-car phases work in with these associations,
- and there stands out a little bright vignette of the hall of the
- Magnificent, Bexhill-on-Sea, and people dressed for dinner and sitting
- about amidst the scarlet furniture--satin and white-enameled woodwork
- until the gong should gather them; and my aunt is there, very
- marvelously wrapped about in a dust cloak and a cage-like veil, and
- there are hotel porters and under-porters very alert, and an obsequious
- manager; and the tall young lady in black from the office is surprised
- into admiration, and in the middle of the picture is my uncle, making
- his first appearance in that Esquimaux costume I have already mentioned,
- a short figure, compactly immense, hugely goggled, wearing a sort of
- brown rubber proboscis, and surmounted by a table-land of motoring cap.
- V
- So it was we recognised our new needs as fresh invaders of the upper
- levels of the social system, and set ourselves quite consciously to
- the acquisition of Style and Savoir Faire. We became part of what is
- nowadays quite an important element in the confusion of our world, that
- multitude of economically ascendant people who are learning how to spend
- money. It is made up of financial people, the owners of the businesses
- that are eating up their competitors, inventors of new sources of
- wealth, such as ourselves; it includes nearly all America as one sees
- it on the European stage. It is a various multitude having only this
- in common: they are all moving, and particularly their womankind are
- moving, from conditions in which means were insistently finite, things
- were few, and customs simple, towards a limitless expenditure and the
- sphere of attraction of Bond Street, Fifth Avenue, and Paris. Their
- general effect is one of progressive revolution, of limitless rope.
- They discover suddenly indulgences their moral code never foresaw and
- has no provision for, elaborations, ornaments, possessions beyond their
- wildest dreams. With an immense astonished zest they begin shopping
- begin a systematic adaptation to a new life crowded and brilliant
- with things shopped, with jewels, maids, butlers, coachmen, electric
- broughams, hired town and country houses. They plunge into it as
- one plunges into a career; as a class, they talk, think, and dream
- possessions. Their literature, their Press, turns all on that; immense
- illustrated weeklies of unsurpassed magnificence guide them in domestic
- architecture, in the art of owning a garden, in the achievement of the
- sumptuous in motor-cars, in an elaborate sporting equipment, in the
- purchase and control of their estates, in travel and stupendous hotels.
- Once they begin to move they go far and fast. Acquisition becomes the
- substance of their lives. They find a world organised to gratify that
- passion. In a brief year or so they are connoisseurs. They join in
- the plunder of the eighteenth century, buy rare old books, fine old
- pictures, good old furniture. Their first crude conception of dazzling
- suites of the newly perfect is replaced almost from the outset by a
- jackdaw dream of accumulating costly discrepant old things.
- I seem to remember my uncle taking to shopping quite suddenly. In
- the Beckenham days and in the early Chiselhurst days he was chiefly
- interested in getting money, and except for his onslaught on the
- Beckenham house, bothered very little about his personal surroundings
- and possessions. I forget now when the change came and he began to
- spend. Some accident must have revealed to him this new source of power,
- or some subtle shifting occurred in the tissues of his brain. He began
- to spend and “shop.” So soon as he began to shop, he began to shop
- violently. He began buying pictures, and then, oddly enough, old clocks.
- For the Chiselhurst house he bought nearly a dozen grandfather clocks
- and three copper warming pans. After that he bought much furniture. Then
- he plunged into art patronage, and began to commission pictures and to
- make presents to churches and institutions. His buying increased with a
- regular acceleration. Its development was a part of the mental changes
- that came to him in the wild excitements of the last four years of his
- ascent. Towards the climax he was a furious spender; he shopped with
- large unexpected purchases, he shopped like a mind seeking expression,
- he shopped to astonish and dismay; shopped crescendo, shopped
- fortissimo, con molto espressione until the magnificent smash of Crest
- Hill eroded his shopping for ever. Always it was he who shopped. My aunt
- did not shine as a purchaser. It is a curious thing, due to I know not
- what fine strain in her composition, that my aunt never set any great
- store upon possessions. She plunged through that crowded bazaar of
- Vanity Fair during those feverish years, spending no doubt freely and
- largely, but spending with detachment and a touch of humorous contempt
- for the things, even the “old” things, that money can buy. It came to
- me suddenly one afternoon just how detached she was, as I saw her going
- towards the Hardingham, sitting up, as she always did, rather stiffly
- in her electric brougham, regarding the glittering world with interested
- and ironically innocent blue eyes from under the brim of a hat that
- defied comment. “No one,” I thought, “would sit so apart if she hadn’t
- dreams--and what are her dreams?”
- I’d never thought.
- And I remember, too, an outburst of scornful description after she had
- lunched with a party of women at the Imperial Cosmic Club. She came
- round to my rooms on the chance of finding me there, and I gave her
- tea. She professed herself tired and cross, and flung herself into my
- chair....
- “George,” she cried, “the Things women are! Do _I_ stink of money?”
- “Lunching?” I asked.
- She nodded.
- “Plutocratic ladies?”
- “Yes.”
- “Oriental type?”
- “Oh! Like a burst hareem!... Bragging of possessions.... They feel you.
- They feel your clothes, George, to see if they are good!”
- I soothed her as well as I could. “They ARE Good aren’t they?” I said.
- “It’s the old pawnshop in their blood,” she said, drinking tea; and then
- in infinite disgust, “They run their hands over your clothes--they paw
- you.”
- I had a moment of doubt whether perhaps she had not been discovered in
- possession of unsuspected forgeries. I don’t know. After that my eyes
- were quickened, and I began to see for myself women running their hands
- over other women’s furs, scrutinising their lace, even demanding to
- handle jewelry, appraising, envying, testing. They have a kind of
- etiquette. The woman who feels says, “What beautiful sables?” “What
- lovely lace?” The woman felt admits proudly: “It’s Real, you know,”
- or disavows pretension modestly and hastily, “It’s Rot Good.” In
- each other’s houses they peer at the pictures, handle the selvage of
- hangings, look at the bottoms of china....
- I wonder if it IS the old pawnshop in the blood.
- I doubt if Lady Drew and the Olympians did that sort of thing, but
- here I may be only clinging to another of my former illusions about
- aristocracy and the State. Perhaps always possessions have been Booty,
- and never anywhere has there been such a thing as house and furnishings
- native and natural to the women and men who made use of them....
- VI
- For me, at least, it marked an epoch in my uncle’s career when I learnt
- one day that he had “shopped” Lady Grove. I realised a fresh, wide,
- unpreluded step. He took me by surprise with the sudden change of scale
- from such portable possessions as jewels and motor-cars to a stretch of
- countryside. The transaction was Napoleonic; he was told of the place;
- he said “snap”; there were no preliminary desirings or searchings. Then
- he came home and said what he had done. Even my aunt was for a day or
- so measurably awestricken by this exploit in purchase, and we both went
- down with him to see the house in a mood near consternation. It struck
- us then as a very lordly place indeed. I remember the three of
- us standing on the terrace that looked westward, surveying the
- sky-reflecting windows of the house, and a feeling of unwarrantable
- intrusion comes back to me.
- Lady Grove, you know, is a very beautiful house indeed, a still and
- gracious place, whose age-long seclusion was only effectively broken
- with the toot of the coming of the motor-car. An old Catholic family
- had died out in it, century by century, and was now altogether
- dead. Portions of the fabric are thirteenth century, and its last
- architectural revision was Tudor; within, it is for the most part dark
- and chilly, save for two or three favoured rooms and its tall-windowed,
- oak-galleried hall. Its terrace is its noblest feature; a very wide,
- broad lawn it is, bordered by a low stone battlement, and there is
- a great cedar in one corner under whose level branches one looks out
- across the blue distances of the Weald, blue distances that are made
- extraordinarily Italian in quality by virtue of the dark masses of that
- single tree. It is a very high terrace; southward one looks down upon
- the tops of wayfaring trees and spruces, and westward on a steep slope
- of beechwood, through which the road comes. One turns back to the still
- old house, and sees a grey and lichenous facade with a very finely
- arched entrance. It was warmed by the afternoon light and touched with
- the colour of a few neglected roses and a pyracanthus. It seemed to me
- that the most modern owner conceivable in this serene fine place
- was some bearded scholarly man in a black cassock, gentle-voiced and
- white-handed, or some very soft-robed, grey gentlewoman. And there was
- my uncle holding his goggles in a sealskin glove, wiping the glass with
- a pocket-handkerchief, and asking my aunt if Lady Grove wasn’t a “Bit of
- all Right.”
- My aunt made him no answer.
- “The man who built this,” I speculated, “wore armour and carried a
- sword.”
- “There’s some of it inside still,” said my uncle.
- We went inside. An old woman with very white hair was in charge of the
- place and cringed rather obviously to the new master. She evidently
- found him a very strange and frightful apparition indeed, and was
- dreadfully afraid of him. But if the surviving present bowed down to
- us, the past did not. We stood up to the dark, long portraits of the
- extinguished race--one was a Holbein--and looked them in their sidelong
- eyes. They looked back at us. We all, I know, felt the enigmatical
- quality in them. Even my uncle was momentarily embarrassed, I think, by
- that invincibly self-complacent expression. It was just as though, after
- all, he had not bought them up and replaced them altogether; as though
- that, secretly, they knew better and could smile at him.
- The spirit of the place was akin to Bladesover, but touched with
- something older and remoter. That armour that stood about had once
- served in tilt-yards, if indeed it had not served in battle, and this
- family had sent its blood and treasure, time after time, upon the most
- romantic quest in history, to Palestine. Dreams, loyalties, place and
- honour, how utterly had it all evaporated, leaving, at last, the final
- expression of its spirit, these quaint painted smiles, these smiles
- of triumphant completion! It had evaporated, indeed, long before the
- ultimate Durgan had died, and in his old age he had cumbered the place
- with Early Victorian cushions and carpets and tapestry table-cloths and
- invalid appliances of a type even more extinct, it seemed to us, than
- the crusades.... Yes, it was different from Bladesover.
- “Bit stuffy, George,” said my uncle. “They hadn’t much idea of
- ventilation when this was built.”
- One of the panelled rooms was half-filled with presses and a four-poster
- bed. “Might be the ghost room,” said my uncle; but it did not seem to
- me that so retiring a family as the Durgans, so old and completely
- exhausted a family as the Durgans, was likely to haunt anybody. What
- living thing now had any concern with their honour and judgments and
- good and evil deeds? Ghosts and witchcraft were a later innovation--that
- fashion came from Scotland with the Stuarts.
- Afterwards, prying for epitaphs, we found a marble crusader with a
- broken nose, under a battered canopy of fretted stone, outside the
- restricted limits of the present Duffield church, and half buried in
- nettles. “Ichabod,” said my uncle. “Eh? We shall be like that, Susan,
- some day.... I’m going to clean him up a bit and put a railing to keep
- off the children.”
- “Old saved at the eleventh hour,” said my aunt, quoting one of the less
- successful advertisements of Tono-Bungay.
- But I don’t think my uncle heard her.
- It was by our captured crusader that the vicar found us. He came round
- the corner at us briskly, a little out of breath. He had an air of
- having been running after us since the first toot of our horn had warned
- the village of our presence. He was an Oxford man, clean-shaven, with
- a cadaverous complexion and a guardedly respectful manner, a cultivated
- intonation, and a general air of accommodation to the new order of
- things. These Oxford men are the Greeks of our plutocratic empire. He
- was a Tory in spirit, and what one may call an adapted Tory by stress
- of circumstances; that is to say, he was no longer a legitimist; he was
- prepared for the substitution of new lords for old. We were pill vendors
- he knew, and no doubt horribly vulgar in soul; but then it might have
- been some polygamous Indian rajah, a great strain on a good man’s tact,
- or some Jew with an inherited expression of contempt. Anyhow, we were
- English, and neither Dissenters nor Socialists, and he was cheerfully
- prepared to do what he could to make gentlemen of both of us. He might
- have preferred Americans for some reasons; they are not so obviously
- taken from one part of the social system and dumped down in another, and
- they are more teachable; but in this world we cannot always be choosers.
- So he was very bright and pleasant with us, showed us the church,
- gossiped informingly about our neighbours on the countryside--Tux, the
- banker; Lord Boom, the magazine and newspaper proprietor; Lord Carnaby,
- that great sportsman, and old Lady Osprey. And finally he took us by
- way of a village lane--three children bobbed convulsively with eyes
- of terror for my uncle--through a meticulous garden to a big, slovenly
- Vicarage with faded Victorian furniture and a faded Victorian wife, who
- gave us tea and introduced us to a confusing family dispersed among a
- lot of disintegrating basket chairs upon the edge of a well-used tennis
- lawn.
- These people interested me. They were a common type, no doubt, but they
- were new to me. There were two lank sons who had been playing singles
- at tennis, red-eared youths growing black moustaches, and dressed in
- conscientiously untidy tweeds and unbuttoned and ungirt Norfolk jackets.
- There were a number of ill-nourished-looking daughters, sensible
- and economical in their costume, the younger still with long,
- brown-stockinged legs, and the eldest present--there were, we
- discovered, one or two hidden away--displaying a large gold cross
- and other aggressive ecclesiastical symbols; there were two or three
- fox-terriers, a retrieverish mongrel, and an old, bloody-eyed and very
- evil-smelling St. Bernard. There was a jackdaw. There was, moreover, an
- ambiguous, silent lady that my aunt subsequently decided must be a very
- deaf paying guest. Two or three other people had concealed themselves at
- our coming and left unfinished teas behind them. Rugs and cushions lay
- among the chairs, and two of the latter were, I noted, covered with
- Union Jacks.
- The vicar introduced us sketchily, and the faded Victorian wife regarded
- my aunt with a mixture of conventional scorn and abject respect,
- and talked to her in a languid, persistent voice about people in the
- neighbourhood whom my aunt could not possibly know.
- My aunt received these personalia cheerfully, with her blue eyes
- flitting from point to point, and coming back again and again to the
- pinched faces of the daughters and the cross upon the eldest’s breast.
- Encouraged by my aunt’s manner, the vicar’s wife grew patronising and
- kindly, and made it evident that she could do much to bridge the social
- gulf between ourselves and the people of family about us.
- I had just snatches of that conversation. “Mrs. Merridew brought him
- quite a lot of money. Her father, I believe, had been in the Spanish
- wine trade--quite a lady though. And after that he fell off his horse
- and cracked his brain pan and took to fishing and farming. I’m sure
- you’ll like to know them. He’s most amusing.... The daughter had a
- disappointment and went to China as a missionary and got mixed up in a
- massacre.”...
- “The most beautiful silks and things she brought back, you’d hardly
- believe!”
- “Yes, they gave them to propitiate her. You see, they didn’t understand
- the difference, and they thought that as they’d been massacring people,
- THEY’D be massacred. They didn’t understand the difference Christianity
- makes.”...
- “Seven bishops they’ve had in the family!”
- “Married a Papist and was quite lost to them.”...
- “He failed some dreadful examination and had to go into the militia.”...
- “So she bit his leg as hard as ever she could and he let go.”...
- “Had four of his ribs amputated.”...
- “Caught meningitis and was carried off in a week.”
- “Had to have a large piece of silver tube let into his throat, and if he
- wants to talk he puts his finger on it. It makes him so interesting, I
- think. You feel he’s sincere somehow. A most charming man in every way.”
- “Preserved them both in spirits very luckily, and there they are in his
- study, though of course he doesn’t show them to everybody.”
- The silent lady, unperturbed by these apparently exciting topics,
- scrutinised my aunt’s costume with a singular intensity, and was visibly
- moved when she unbuttoned her dust cloak and flung it wide. Meanwhile we
- men conversed, one of the more spirited daughters listened brightly, and
- the youths lay on the grass at our feet. My uncle offered them cigars,
- but they both declined,--out of bashfulness, it seemed to me, whereas
- the vicar, I think, accepted out of tact. When we were not looking at
- them directly, these young men would kick each other furtively.
- Under the influence of my uncle’s cigar, the vicar’s mind had soared
- beyond the limits of the district. “This Socialism,” he said, “seems
- making great headway.”
- My uncle shook his head. “We’re too individualistic in this country
- for that sort of nonsense,” he said “Everybody’s business is nobody’s
- business. That’s where they go wrong.”
- “They have some intelligent people in their ranks, I am told,” said
- the vicar, “writers and so forth. Quite a distinguished playwright, my
- eldest daughter was telling me--I forget his name.
- “Milly, dear! Oh! she’s not here. Painters, too, they have. This
- Socialist, it seems to me, is part of the Unrest of the Age.... But, as
- you say, the spirit of the people is against it. In the country, at any
- rate. The people down here are too sturdily independent in their small
- way--and too sensible altogether.”...
- “It’s a great thing for Duffield to have Lady Grove occupied again,” he
- was saying when my wandering attention came back from some attractive
- casualty in his wife’s discourse. “People have always looked up to
- the house and considering all things, old Mr. Durgan really was
- extraordinarily good--extraordinarily good. You intend to give us a good
- deal of your time here, I hope.”
- “I mean to do my duty by the Parish,” said my uncle.
- “I’m sincerely glad to hear it--sincerely. We’ve missed--the house
- influence. An English village isn’t complete--People get out of hand.
- Life grows dull. The young people drift away to London.”
- He enjoyed his cigar gingerly for a moment.
- “We shall look to you to liven things up,” he said, poor man!
- My uncle cocked his cigar and removed it from his mouth.
- “What you think the place wants?” he asked.
- He did not wait for an answer. “I been thinking while you been
- talking--things one might do. Cricket--a good English game--sports.
- Build the chaps a pavilion perhaps. Then every village ought to have a
- miniature rifle range.”
- “Ye-ees,” said the vicar. “Provided, of course, there isn’t a constant
- popping.”...
- “Manage that all right,” said my uncle. “Thing’d be a sort of long shed.
- Paint it red. British colour. Then there’s a Union Jack for the church
- and the village school. Paint the school red, too, p’raps. Not enough
- colour about now. Too grey. Then a maypole.”
- “How far our people would take up that sort of thing--” began the vicar.
- “I’m all for getting that good old English spirit back again,” said
- my uncle. “Merrymakings. Lads and lasses dancing on the village green.
- Harvest home. Fairings. Yule Log--all the rest of it.”
- “How would old Sally Glue do for a May Queen?” asked one of the sons in
- the slight pause that followed.
- “Or Annie Glassbound?” said the other, with the huge virile guffaw of a
- young man whose voice has only recently broken.
- “Sally Glue is eighty-five,” explained the vicar, “and Annie Glassbound
- is well--a young lady of extremely generous proportions. And not quite
- right, you know. Not quite right--here.” He tapped his brow.
- “Generous proportions!” said the eldest son, and the guffaws were
- renewed.
- “You see,” said the vicar, “all the brisker girls go into service in
- or near London. The life of excitement attracts them. And no doubt
- the higher wages have something to do with it. And the liberty to wear
- finery. And generally--freedom from restraint. So that there might be
- a little difficulty perhaps to find a May Queen here just at present who
- was really young and er--pretty.... Of course I couldn’t think of any of
- my girls--or anything of that sort.”
- “We got to attract ‘em back,” said my uncle. “That’s what I feel about
- it. We got to Buck-Up the country. The English country is a going
- concern still; just as the Established Church--if you’ll excuse me
- saying it, is a going concern. Just as Oxford is--or Cambridge. Or any
- of those old, fine old things. Only it wants fresh capital, fresh
- idees and fresh methods. Light railways, f’rinstance--scientific use of
- drainage. Wire fencing machinery--all that.”
- The vicar’s face for one moment betrayed dismay. Perhaps he was thinking
- of his country walks amids the hawthorns and honeysuckle.
- “There’s great things,” said my uncle, “to be done on Mod’un lines with
- Village Jam and Pickles--boiled in the country.”
- It was the reverberation of this last sentence in my mind, I think,
- that sharpened my sentimental sympathy as we went through the straggling
- village street and across the trim green on our way back to London.
- It seemed that afternoon the most tranquil and idyllic collection of
- creeper-sheltered homes you can imagine; thatch still lingered on a
- whitewashed cottage or two, pyracanthus, wall-flowers, and daffodils
- abounded, and an unsystematic orchard or so was white with blossom
- above and gay with bulbs below. I noted a row of straw beehives,
- beehive-shaped, beehives of the type long since condemned as inefficient
- by all progressive minds, and in the doctor’s acre of grass a flock of
- two whole sheep was grazing,--no doubt he’d taken them on account. Two
- men and one old woman made gestures of abject vassalage, and my uncle
- replied with a lordly gesture of his great motoring glove....
- “England’s full of Bits like this,” said my uncle, leaning over the
- front seat and looking back with great satisfaction. The black glare of
- his goggles rested for a time on the receding turrets of Lady Grove just
- peeping over the trees.
- “I shall have a flagstaff, I think,” he considered. “Then one could show
- when one is in residence. The villagers will like to know.”...
- I reflected. “They will” I said. “They’re used to liking to know.”...
- My aunt had been unusually silent. Suddenly she spoke. “He says Snap,”
- she remarked; “he buys that place. And a nice old job of Housekeeping he
- gives me! He sails through the village swelling like an old turkey. And
- who’ll have to scoot the butler? Me! Who’s got to forget all she ever
- knew and start again? Me! Who’s got to trek from Chiselhurst and be a
- great lady? Me! ... You old Bother! Just when I was settling down and
- beginning to feel at home.”
- My uncle turned his goggles to her. “Ah! THIS time it is home, Susan....
- We got there.”
- VII
- It seems to me now but a step from the buying of Lady Grove to the
- beginning of Crest Hill, from the days when the former was a stupendous
- achievement to the days when it was too small and dark and inconvenient
- altogether for a great financier’s use. For me that was a period of
- increasing detachment from our business and the great world of London; I
- saw it more and more in broken glimpses, and sometimes I was working in
- my little pavilion above Lady Grove for a fortnight together; even when
- I came up it was often solely for a meeting of the aeronautical society
- or for one of the learned societies or to consult literature or employ
- searchers or some such special business. For my uncle it was a period
- of stupendous inflation. Each time I met him I found him more confident,
- more comprehensive, more consciously a factor in great affairs. Soon he
- was no longer an associate of merely business men; he was big enough for
- the attentions of greater powers.
- I grew used to discovering some item of personal news about him in
- my evening paper, or to the sight of a full-page portrait of him in a
- sixpenny magazine. Usually the news was of some munificent act,
- some romantic piece of buying or giving or some fresh rumour of
- reconstruction. He saved, you will remember, the Parbury Reynolds
- for the country. Or at times, it would be an interview or my uncle’s
- contribution to some symposium on the “Secret of Success,” or such-like
- topic. Or wonderful tales of his power of work, of his wonderful
- organisation to get things done, of his instant decisions and remarkable
- power of judging his fellow-men. They repeated his great mot: “Eight
- hour working day--I want eighty hours!”
- He became modestly but resolutely “public.” They cartooned him in Vanity
- Fair. One year my aunt, looking indeed a very gracious, slender lady,
- faced the portrait of the King in the great room at Burlington House,
- and the next year saw a medallion of my uncle by Ewart, looking out upon
- the world, proud and imperial, but on the whole a trifle too prominently
- convex, from the walls of the New Gallery.
- I shared only intermittently in his social experiences. People knew of
- me, it is true, and many of them sought to make through me a sort of
- flank attack upon him, and there was a legend, owing, very unreasonably,
- partly to my growing scientific reputation and partly to an element of
- reserve in my manner, that I played a much larger share in planning
- his operations than was actually the case. This led to one or two very
- intimate private dinners, to my inclusion in one or two house parties
- and various odd offers of introductions and services that I didn’t for
- the most part accept. Among other people who sought me in this way
- was Archie Garvell, now a smart, impecunious soldier of no particular
- distinction, who would, I think, have been quite prepared to develop any
- sporting instincts I possessed, and who was beautifully unaware of our
- former contact. He was always offering me winners; no doubt in a
- spirit of anticipatory exchange for some really good thing in our more
- scientific and certain method of getting something for nothing....
- In spite of my preoccupation with my experiments, work, I did, I find
- now that I come to ransack my impressions, see a great deal of the great
- world during those eventful years; I had a near view of the machinery
- by which an astounding Empire is run, rubbed shoulders and exchanged
- experiences with bishops and statesmen, political women and women who
- were not political, physicians and soldiers, artists and authors, the
- directors of great journals, philanthropists and all sorts of eminent,
- significant people. I saw the statesmen without their orders and the
- bishops with but a little purple silk left over from their canonicals,
- inhaling, not incensen but cigar smoke. I could look at them all the
- better because, for the most part, they were not looking at me but at my
- uncle, and calculating consciously or unconsciously how they might use
- him and assimilate him to their system, the most unpremeditated, subtle,
- successful and aimless plutocracy that ever encumbered the destinies of
- mankind. Not one of them, so far as I could see, until disaster overtook
- him, resented his lies, his almost naked dishonesty of method, the
- disorderly disturbance of this trade and that, caused by his spasmodic
- operations. I can see them now about him, see them polite, watchful,
- various; his stiff compact little figure always a centre of
- attention, his wiry hair, his brief nose, his under-lip, electric with
- self-confidence. Wandering marginally through distinguished gatherings,
- I would catch the whispers: “That’s Mr. Ponderevo!”
- “The little man?”
- “Yes, the little bounder with the glasses.”
- “They say he’s made--”...
- Or I would see him on some parterre of a platform beside my aunt’s
- hurraying hat, amidst titles and costumes, “holding his end up,” as
- he would say, subscribing heavily to obvious charities, even at times
- making brief convulsive speeches in some good cause before the most
- exalted audiences. “Mr. Chairman, your Royal Highness, my Lords, Ladies
- and Gentlemen,B he would begin amidst subsiding applause and adjust
- those obstinate glasses and thrust back the wings of his frock-coat and
- rest his hands upon his hips and speak his fragment with ever and again
- an incidental Zzzz. His hands would fret about him as he spoke, fiddle
- his glasses, feel in his waistcoat pockets; ever and again he would rise
- slowly to his toes as a sentence unwound jerkily like a clockwork snake,
- and drop back on his heels at the end. They were the very gestures of
- our first encounter when he had stood before the empty fireplace in his
- minute draped parlour and talked of my future to my mother.
- In those measurelessly long hot afternoons in the little shop at
- Wimblehurst he had talked and dreamt of the Romance of Modern Commerce.
- Here, surely, was his romance come true.
- VIII
- People say that my uncle lost his head at the crest of his fortunes,
- but if one may tell so much truth of a man one has in a manner loved,
- he never had very much head to lose. He was always imaginative, erratic,
- inconsistent, recklessly inexact, and his inundation of wealth merely
- gave him scope for these qualities. It is true, indeed, that towards
- the climax he became intensely irritable at times and impatient of
- contradiction, but that, I think, was rather the gnawing uneasiness of
- sanity than any mental disturbance. But I find it hard either to judge
- him or convey the full development of him to the reader. I saw too much
- of him; my memory is choked with disarranged moods and aspects. Now
- he is distended with megalomania, now he is deflated, now he is
- quarrelsome, now impenetrably self-satisfied, but always he is sudden,
- jerky, fragmentary, energetic, and--in some subtle fundamental way that
- I find difficult to define--absurd.
- There stands out--because of the tranquil beauty of its setting
- perhaps--a talk we had in the veranda of the little pavilion near
- my worksheds behind Crest Hill in which my aeroplanes and navigable
- balloons were housed. It was one of many similar conversations, and I do
- not know why it in particular should survive its fellows. It happens
- so. He had come up to me after his coffee to consult me about a certain
- chalice which in a moment of splendour and under the importunity of
- a countess he had determined to give to a deserving church in the
- east-end. I, in a moment of even rasher generosity, had suggested Ewart
- as a possible artist. Ewart had produced at once an admirable sketch for
- the sacred vessel surrounded by a sort of wreath of Millies with open
- arms and wings and had drawn fifty pounds on the strength of it. After
- that came a series of vexatious delays. The chalice became less and
- less of a commercial man’s chalice, acquired more and more the elusive
- quality of the Holy Grail, and at last even the drawing receded.
- My uncle grew restive.... “You see, George, they’ll begin to want the
- blasted thing!”
- “What blasted thing?”
- “That chalice, damn it! They’re beginning to ask questions. It isn’t
- Business, George.”
- “It’s art,” I protested, “and religion.”
- “That’s all very well. But it’s not a good ad for us, George, to make a
- promise and not deliver the goods.... I’ll have to write off your
- friend Ewart as a bad debt, that’s what it comes to, and go to a decent
- firm.”...
- We sat outside on deck chairs in the veranda of the pavilion, smoked,
- drank whisky, and, the chalice disposed of, meditated. His temporary
- annoyance passed. It was an altogether splendid summer night, following
- a blazing, indolent day. Full moonlight brought out dimly the lines
- of the receding hills, one wave beyond another; far beyond were the
- pin-point lights of Leatherhead, and in the foreground the little stage
- from which I used to start upon my gliders gleamed like wet steel. The
- season must have been high June, for down in the woods that hid the
- lights of the Lady Grove windows, I remember the nightingales thrilled
- and gurgled....
- “We got here, George,” said my uncle, ending a long pause. “Didn’t I
- say?”
- “Say!--when?” I asked.
- “In that hole in the To’nem Court Road, eh? It’s been a Straight Square
- Fight, and here we are!”
- I nodded.
- “‘Member me telling you--Tono-Bungay?.... Well.... I’d just that
- afternoon thought of it!”
- “I’ve fancied at times;” I admitted.
- “It’s a great world, George, nowadays, with a fair chance for every
- one who lays hold of things. The career ouvert to the Talons--eh?
- Tono-Bungay. Think of it! It’s a great world and a growing world, and
- I’m glad we’re in it--and getting a pull. We’re getting big people,
- George. Things come to us. Eh? This Palestine thing.”...
- He meditated for a time and Zzzzed softly. Then he became still.
- His theme was taken up by a cricket in the grass until he himself was
- ready to resume it. The cricket too seemed to fancy that in some scheme
- of its own it had got there. “Chirrrrrrup” it said; “chirrrrrrup.”
- “Lord, what a place that was at Wimblehurst!” he broke out. “If ever
- I get a day off we’ll motor there, George, and run over that dog that
- sleeps in the High Street. Always was a dog asleep there--always.
- Always... I’d like to see the old shop again. I daresay old Ruck still
- stands between the sheep at his door, grinning with all his teeth, and
- Marbel, silly beggar! comes out with his white apron on and a pencil
- stuck behind his ear, trying to look awake... Wonder if they know it’s
- me? I’d like ‘em somehow to know it’s me.”
- “They’ll have had the International Tea Company and all sorts of people
- cutting them up,” I said. “And that dog’s been on the pavement this six
- years--can’t sleep even there, poor dear, because of the motor-horns and
- its shattered nerves.”
- “Movin’ everywhere,” said my uncle. “I expect you’re right.... It’s a
- big time we’re in, George. It’s a big Progressive On-coming Imperial
- Time. This Palestine business--the daring of it.... It’s, it’s a
- Process, George. And we got our hands on it. Here we sit--with our hands
- on it, George. Entrusted.
- “It seems quiet to--night. But if we could see and hear.” He waved his
- cigar towards Leatherhead and London.
- “There they are, millions, George. Jes’ think of what they’ve been up to
- to-day--those ten millions--each one doing his own particular job. You
- can’t grasp it. It’s like old Whitman says--what is it he says? Well,
- anyway it’s like old Whitman. Fine chap, Whitman! Fine old chap! Queer,
- you can’t quote him. ... And these millions aren’t anything. There’s
- the millions over seas, hundreds of millions, Chinese, M’rocco, Africa
- generally, ‘Merica.... Well, here we are, with power, with leisure,
- picked out--because we’ve been energetic, because we’ve seized
- opportunities, because we’ve made things hum when other people have
- waited for them to hum. See? Here we are--with our hands on it. Big
- people. Big growing people. In a sort of way,--Forces.”
- He paused. “It’s wonderful, George,” he said.
- “Anglo-Saxon energy,” I said softly to the night.
- “That’s it, George--energy. It’s put things in our grip--threads, wires,
- stretching out and out, George, from that little office of ours, out to
- West Africa, out to Egypt, out to Inja, out east, west, north and south.
- Running the world practically. Running it faster and faster. Creative.
- There’s that Palestine canal affair. Marvellous idee! Suppose we take
- that up, suppose we let ourselves in for it, us and the others, and run
- that water sluice from the Mediterranean into the Dead Sea Valley--think
- of the difference it will make! All the desert blooming like a rose,
- Jericho lost for ever, all the Holy Places under water.... Very likely
- destroy Christianity.”...
- He mused for a space. “Cuttin’ canals,” murmured my uncle. “Making
- tunnels.... New countries.... New centres.... Zzzz.... Finance.... Not
- only Palestine.
- “I wonder where we shall get before we done, George? We got a lot of big
- things going. We got the investing public sound and sure. I don’t see
- why in the end we shouldn’t be very big. There’s difficulties but I’m
- equal to them. We’re still a bit soft in our bones, but they’ll harden
- all right.... I suppose, after all, I’m worth something like a million,
- George, cleared up and settled. If I got out of things now. It’s a great
- time, George, a wonderful time!”...
- I glanced through the twilight at his convexity and I must confess it
- struck me that on the whole he wasn’t particularly good value.
- “We got our hands on things, George, us big people. We got to hang
- together, George run the show. Join up with the old order like that
- mill-wheel of Kipling’s. (Finest thing he ever wrote, George; I jes’
- been reading it again. Made me buy Lady Grove.) Well, we got to run
- the country, George. It’s ours. Make it a Scientific Organised Business
- Enterprise. Put idees into it. ‘Lectrify it. Run the Press. Run all
- sorts of developments. All sorts of developments. I been talking to Lord
- Boom. I been talking to all sorts of people. Great things. Progress. The
- world on business lines. Only jes’ beginning.”...
- He fell into a deep meditation.
- He Zzzzed for a time and ceased.
- “YES,” he said at last in the tone of a man who has at last emerged with
- ultimate solutions to the profoundest problems.
- “What?” I said after a seemly pause.
- My uncle hung fire for a moment and it seemed to me the fate of nations
- trembled in the balance. Then he spoke as one who speaks from the very
- bottom of his heart--and I think it was the very bottom of his heart.
- “I’d jes’ like to drop into the Eastry Arms, jes’ when all those beggars
- in the parlour are sittin’ down to whist, Ruck and Marbel and all, and
- give ‘em ten minutes of my mind, George. Straight from the shoulder.
- Jes’ exactly what I think of them. It’s a little thing, but I’d like to
- do it jes’ once before I die.”...
- He rested on that for some time Zzzz-ing.
- Then he broke out at a new place in a tone of detached criticism.
- “There’s Boom,” he reflected.
- “It’s a wonderful system this old British system, George. It’s staid
- and stable and yet it has a place for new men. We come up and take our
- places. It’s almost expected. We take a hand. That’s where our Democracy
- differs from America. Over there a man succeeds; all he gets is money.
- Here there’s a system open to every one--practically.... Chaps like
- Boom--come from nowhere.”
- His voice ceased. I reflected upon the spirit of his words. Suddenly I
- kicked my feet in the air, rolled on my side and sat up suddenly on my
- deck chair with my legs down.
- “You don’t mean it!” I said.
- “Mean what, George?”
- “Subscription to the party funds. Reciprocal advantage. Have we got to
- that?”
- “Whad you driving at, George?”
- “You know. They’d never do it, man!”
- “Do what?” he said feebly; and, “Why shouldn’t they?”
- “They’d not even go to a baronetcy. NO!.... And yet, of course, there’s
- Boom! And Collingshead and Gorver. They’ve done beer, they’ve done
- snippets! After all Tono-Bungay--it’s not like a turf commission
- agent or anything like that!... There have of course been some very
- gentlemanly commission agents. It isn’t like a fool of a scientific man
- who can’t make money!”
- My uncle grunted; we’d differed on that issue before.
- A malignant humour took possession of me. “What would they call you?”
- I speculated. “The vicar would like Duffield. Too much like Duffer!
- Difficult thing, a title.” I ran my mind over various possibilities.
- “Why not take a leaf from a socialist tract I came upon yesterday. Chap
- says we’re all getting delocalised. Beautiful word--delocalised! Why not
- be the first delocalised peer? That gives you--Tono-Bungay! There is a
- Bungay, you know. Lord Tono of Bungay--in bottles everywhere. Eh?”
- My uncle astonished me by losing his temper.
- “Damn it. George, you don’t seem to see I’m serious! You’re always
- sneering at Tono-Bungay! As though it was some sort of swindle. It was
- perfec’ly legitimate trade, perfec’ly legitimate. Good value and a
- good article.... When I come up here and tell you plans and exchange
- idees--you sneer at me. You do. You don’t see--it’s a big thing. It’s
- a big thing. You got to get used to new circumstances. You got to face
- what lies before us. You got to drop that tone.”
- IX
- My uncle was not altogether swallowed up in business and ambition. He
- kept in touch with modern thought. For example, he was, I know, greatly
- swayed by what he called “This Overman idee, Nietzsche--all that stuff.”
- He mingled those comforting suggestions of a potent and exceptional
- human being emancipated from the pettier limitations of integrity with
- the Napoleonic legend. It gave his imagination a considerable outlet.
- That Napoleonic legend! The real mischief of Napoleon’s immensely
- disastrous and accidental career began only when he was dead and the
- romantic type of mind was free to elaborate his character. I do believe
- that my uncle would have made a far less egregious smash if there had
- been no Napoleonic legend to misguide him. He was in many ways better
- and infinitely kinder than his career. But when in doubt between
- decent conduct and a base advantage, that cult came in more and more
- influentially: “think of Napoleon; think what the inflexibly-wilful
- Napoleon would have done with such scruples as yours;” that was the
- rule, and the end was invariably a new step in dishonour.
- My uncle was in an unsystematic way a collector of Napoleonic relics;
- the bigger the book about his hero the more readily he bought it; he
- purchased letters and tinsel and weapons that bore however remotely
- upon the Man of Destiny, and he even secured in Geneva, though he never
- brought home, an old coach in which Buonaparte might have ridden; he
- crowded the quiet walls of Lady Grove with engravings and figures of
- him, preferring, my aunt remarked, the more convex portraits with the
- white vest and those statuettes with the hands behind the back which
- threw forward the figure. The Durgans watched him through it all,
- sardonically.
- And he would stand after breakfast at times in the light of the window
- at Lady Grove, a little apart, with two fingers of one hand stuck
- between his waistcoat-buttons and his chin sunken, thinking,--the most
- preposterous little fat man in the world. It made my aunt feel, she
- said, “like an old Field Marshal--knocks me into a cocked hat, George!”
- Perhaps this Napoleonic bias made him a little less frequent with his
- cigars than he would otherwise have been, but of that I cannot be sure,
- and it certainly caused my aunt a considerable amount of vexation after
- he had read Napoleon and the Fair Sex, because for a time that roused
- him to a sense of a side of life he had in his commercial preoccupations
- very largely forgotten. Suggestion plays so great a part in this field.
- My uncle took the next opportunity and had an “affair”!
- It was not a very impassioned affair, and the exact particulars never of
- course reached me. It is quite by chance I know anything of it at
- all. One evening I was surprised to come upon my uncle in a mixture of
- Bohemia and smart people at an At Home in the flat of Robbert, the R.A.
- who painted my aunt, and he was standing a little apart in a recess,
- talking or rather being talked to in undertones by a plump, blond
- little woman in pale blue, a Helen Scrymgeour who wrote novels and was
- organising a weekly magazine. I elbowed a large lady who was saying
- something about them, but I didn’t need to hear the thing she said to
- perceive the relationship of the two. It hit me like a placard on a
- hoarding. I was amazed the whole gathering did not see it. Perhaps they
- did. She was wearing a remarkably fine diamond necklace, much too fine
- for journalism, and regarding him with that quality of questionable
- proprietorship, of leashed but straining intimacy, that seems
- inseparable from this sort of affair. It is so much more palpable than
- matrimony. If anything was wanted to complete my conviction it was
- my uncles’s eyes when presently he became aware of mine, a certain
- embarrassment and a certain pride and defiance. And the next day he made
- an opportunity to praise the lady’s intelligence to me concisely, lest I
- should miss the point of it all.
- After that I heard some gossip--from a friend of the lady’s. I was
- much too curious to do anything but listen. I had never in all my life
- imagined my uncle in an amorous attitude. It would appear that she
- called him her “God in the Car”--after the hero in a novel of Anthony
- Hope’s. It was essential to the convention of their relations that he
- should go relentlessly whenever business called, and it was generally
- arranged that it did call. To him women were an incident, it was
- understood between them; Ambition was the master-passion. A great world
- called him and the noble hunger for Power. I have never been able to
- discover just how honest Mrs. Scrymgeour was in all this, but it is
- quite possible the immense glamour of his financial largeness prevailed
- with her and that she did bring a really romantic feeling to their
- encounters. There must have been some extraordinary moments....
- I was a good deal exercised and distressed about my aunt when I realised
- what was afoot. I thought it would prove a terrible humiliation to her.
- I suspected her of keeping up a brave front with the loss of my uncle’s
- affections fretting at her heart, but there I simply underestimated her.
- She didn’t hear for some time and when she did hear she was extremely
- angry and energetic. The sentimental situation didn’t trouble her for
- a moment. She decided that my uncle “wanted smacking.” She accentuated
- herself with an unexpected new hat, went and gave him an inconceivable
- talking-to at the Hardingham, and then came round to “blow-up” me for
- not telling her what was going on before....
- I tried to bring her to a proper sense of the accepted values in this
- affair, but my aunt’s originality of outlook was never so invincible.
- “Men don’t tell on one another in affairs of passion,” I protested, and
- such-like worldly excuses.
- “Women!” she said in high indignation, “and men! It isn’t women and
- men--it’s him and me, George! Why don’t you talk sense?
- “Old passion’s all very well, George, in its way, and I’m the last
- person to be jealous. But this is old nonsense.... I’m not going to let
- him show off what a silly old lobster he is to other women....
- I’ll mark every scrap of his underclothes with red letters,
- ‘Ponderevo-Private’--every scrap.
- “Going about making love indeed,--in abdominal belts!--at his time of
- life!”
- I cannot imagine what passed between her and my uncle. But I have no
- doubt that for once her customary badinage was laid aside. How they
- talked then I do not know, for I who knew them so well had never heard
- that much of intimacy between them. At any rate it was a concerned and
- preoccupied “God in the Car” I had to deal with in the next few days,
- unusually Zzzz-y and given to slight impatient gestures that had nothing
- to do with the current conversation. And it was evident that in all
- directions he was finding things unusually difficult to explain.
- All the intimate moments in this affair were hidden from me, but in
- the end my aunt triumphed. He did not so much throw as jerk over Mrs.
- Scrymgeour, and she did not so much make a novel of it as upset a huge
- pailful of attenuated and adulterated female soul upon this occasion.
- My aunt did not appear in that, even remotely. So that it is doubtful
- if the lady knew the real causes of her abandonment. The Napoleonic hero
- was practically unmarried, and he threw over his lady as Napoleon threw
- over Josephine for a great alliance.
- It was a triumph for my aunt, but it had its price. For some time it was
- evident things were strained between them. He gave up the lady, but he
- resented having to do so, deeply. She had meant more to his imagination
- than one could have supposed. He wouldn’t for a long time “come round.”
- He became touchy and impatient and secretive towards my aunt, and she, I
- noted, after an amazing check or so, stopped that stream of kindly abuse
- that had flowed for so long and had been so great a refreshment in their
- lives. They were both the poorer for its cessation, both less happy.
- She devoted herself more and more to Lady Grove and the humours and
- complications of its management. The servants took to her--as they
- say--she god-mothered three Susans during her rule, the coachman’s, the
- gardener’s, and the Up Hill gamekeeper’s. She got together a library of
- old household books that were in the vein of the place. She revived the
- still-room, and became a great artist in jellies and elder and cowslip
- wine.
- X
- And while I neglected the development of my uncle’s finances--and
- my own, in my scientific work and my absorbing conflict with the
- difficulties of flying,--his schemes grew more and more expansive and
- hazardous, and his spending wilder and laxer. I believe that a haunting
- sense of the intensifying unsoundness of his position accounts largely
- for his increasing irritability and his increasing secretiveness with my
- aunt and myself during these crowning years. He dreaded, I think, having
- to explain, he feared our jests might pierce unwittingly to the truth.
- Even in the privacy of his mind he would not face the truth. He was
- accumulating unrealisable securities in his safes until they hung a
- potential avalanche over the economic world. But his buying became a
- fever, and his restless desire to keep it up with himself that he was
- making a triumphant progress to limitless wealth gnawed deeper and
- deeper. A curious feature of this time with him was his buying over and
- over again of similar things. His ideas seemed to run in series. Within
- a twelve-month he bought five new motor-cars, each more swift and
- powerful than its predecessor, and only the repeated prompt resignation
- of his chief chauffeur at each moment of danger, prevented his driving
- them himself. He used them more and more. He developed a passion for
- locomotion for its own sake.
- Then he began to chafe at Lady Grove, fretted by a chance jest he had
- overheard at a dinner. “This house, George,” he said. “It’s a misfit.
- There’s no elbow-room in it; it’s choked with old memories. And I can’t
- stand all these damned Durgans!
- “That chap in the corner, George. No! the other corner! The man in a
- cherry-coloured coat. He watched you! He’d look silly if I stuck a poker
- through his Gizzard!”
- “He’d look,” I reflected, “much as he does now. As though he was
- amused.”
- He replaced his glasses, which had fallen at his emotion, and glared at
- his antagonists. “What are they? What are they all, the lot of ‘em?
- Dead as Mutton! They just stuck in the mud. They didn’t even rise to the
- Reformation. The old out-of-date Reformation! Move with the times!--they
- moved against the times.
- “Just a Family of Failure,--they never even tried!
- “They’re jes’, George, exactly what I’m not. Exactly. It isn’t
- suitable.... All this living in the Past.
- “And I want a bigger place too, George. I want air and sunlight and
- room to move about and more service. A house where you can get a Move
- on things! Zzzz. Why! it’s like a discord--it jars--even to have the
- telephone.... There’s nothing, nothing except the terrace, that’s worth
- a Rap. It’s all dark and old and dried up and full of old-fashioned
- things--musty old idees--fitter for a silver-fish than a modern man....
- I don’t know how I got here.”
- He broke out into a new grievance. “That damned vicar,” he complained,
- “thinks I ought to think myself lucky to get this place! Every time I
- meet him I can see him think it.... One of these days, George I’ll show
- him what a Mod’un house is like!”
- And he did.
- I remember the day when he declared, as Americans say, for Crest
- Hill. He had come up to see my new gas plant, for I was then only just
- beginning to experiment with auxiliary collapsible balloons, and all
- the time the shine of his glasses was wandering away to the open down
- beyond. “Let’s go back to Lady Grove over the hill,” he said. “Something
- I want to show you. Something fine!”
- It was an empty sunlit place that summer evening, sky and earth
- warm with sundown, and a pe-wit or so just accentuating the pleasant
- stillness that ends a long clear day. A beautiful peace, it was, to
- wreck for ever. And there was my uncle, the modern man of power, in his
- grey top-hat and his grey suit and his black-ribboned glasses, short,
- thin-legged, large-stomached, pointing and gesticulating, threatening
- this calm.
- He began with a wave of his arm. “That’s the place, George,” he said.
- “See?”
- “Eh!” I cried--for I had been thinking of remote things.
- “I got it.”
- “Got what?”
- “For a house!--a Twentieth Century house! That’s the place for it!”
- One of his characteristic phrases was begotten in him.
- “Four-square to the winds of heaven, George!” he said. “Eh? Four-square
- to the winds of heaven!”
- “You’ll get the winds up here,” I said.
- “A mammoth house it ought to be, George--to suit these hills.”
- “Quite,” I said.
- “Great galleries and things--running out there and there--See? I been
- thinking of it, George! Looking out all this way--across the Weald. With
- its back to Lady Grove.”
- “And the morning sun in its eye.”
- “Like an eagle, George,--like an eagle!”
- So he broached to me what speedily became the leading occupation of
- his culminating years, Crest Hill. But all the world has heard of that
- extravagant place which grew and changed its plans as it grew, and
- bubbled like a salted snail, and burgeoned and bulged and evermore
- grew. I know not what delirium of pinnacles and terraces and arcades and
- corridors glittered at last upon the uplands of his mind; the place,
- for all that its expansion was terminated abruptly by our collapse, is
- wonderful enough as it stands,--that empty instinctive building of a
- childless man. His chief architect was a young man named Westminster,
- whose work he had picked out in the architecture room of the Royal
- Academy on account of a certain grandiose courage in it, but with him
- he associated from time to time a number of fellow professionals,
- stonemasons, sanitary engineers, painters, sculptors, scribes, metal
- workers, wood carvers, furniture designers, ceramic specialists,
- landscape gardeners, and the man who designs the arrangement and
- ventilation of the various new houses in the London Zoological Gardens.
- In addition he had his own ideas. The thing occupied his mind at all
- times, but it held it completely from Friday night to Monday morning.
- He would come down to Lady Grove on Friday night in a crowded motor-car
- that almost dripped architects. He didn’t, however, confine himself to
- architects; every one was liable to an invitation to week-end and view
- Crest Hill, and many an eager promoter, unaware of how Napoleonically
- and completely my uncle had departmentalised his mind, tried to creep up
- to him by way of tiles and ventilators and new electric fittings. Always
- on Sunday mornings, unless the weather was vile, he would, so soon as
- breakfast and his secretaries were disposed of, visit the site with a
- considerable retinue, and alter and develop plans, making modifications,
- Zzzz-ing, giving immense new orders verbally--an unsatisfactory way, as
- Westminster and the contractors ultimately found.
- There he stands in my memory, the symbol of this age for me, the man of
- luck and advertisement, the current master of the world. There he
- stands upon the great outward sweep of the terrace before the huge
- main entrance, a little figure, ridiculously disproportionate to that
- forty-foot arch, with the granite ball behind him--the astronomical
- ball, brass coopered, that represented the world, with a little
- adjustable tube of lenses on a gun-metal arm that focussed the sun
- upon just that point of the earth on which it chanced to be shining
- vertically. There he stands, Napoleonically grouped with his retinue men
- in tweeds and golfing-suits, a little solicitor, whose name I forget,
- in grey trousers and a black jacket, and Westminster in Jaeger
- underclothing, a floriferous tie, and peculiar brown cloth of his own.
- The downland breeze flutters my uncle’s coat-tails, disarranges his
- stiff hair, and insists on the evidence of undisciplined appetites in
- face and form, as he points out this or that feature in the prospect to
- his attentive collaborator.
- Below are hundreds of feet of wheeling-planks, ditches, excavations,
- heaps of earth, piles of garden stone from the Wealden ridges. On either
- hand the walls of his irrelevant unmeaning palace rise at one time he
- had working in that place--disturbing the economic balance of the whole
- countryside by their presence--upwards of three thousand men....
- So he poses for my picture amidst the raw beginnings that were never to
- be completed. He did the strangest things about that place, things more
- and more detached from any conception of financial scale, things more
- and more apart from sober humanity. He seemed to think himself, at last,
- released from any such limitations. He moved a quite considerable hill,
- and nearly sixty mature trees were moved with it to open his prospect
- eastward, moved it about two hundred feet to the south. At another
- time he caught a suggestion from some city restaurant and made a
- billiard-room roofed with plate glass beneath the waters of his
- ornamental lake. He furnished one wing while its roof still awaited
- completion. He had a swimming bath thirty feet square next to his
- bedroom upstairs, and to crown it all he commenced a great wall to hold
- all his dominions together, free from the invasion of common men. It
- was a ten-foot wall, glass surmounted, and had it been completed as he
- intended it, it would have had a total length of nearly eleven miles.
- Some of it towards the last was so dishonestly built that it collapsed
- within a year upon its foundations, but some miles of it still stand. I
- never think of it now but what I think of the hundreds of eager little
- investors who followed his “star,” whose hopes and lives, whose wives’
- security and children’s prospects are all mixed up beyond redemption
- with that flaking mortar....
- It is curious how many of these modern financiers of chance and bluff
- have ended their careers by building. It was not merely my uncle. Sooner
- or later they all seem to bring their luck to the test of realisation,
- try to make their fluid opulence coagulate out as bricks and mortar,
- bring moonshine into relations with a weekly wages-sheet. Then the whole
- fabric of confidence and imagination totters--and down they come....
- When I think of that despoiled hillside, that colossal litter of bricks
- and mortar, and crude roads and paths, the scaffolding and sheds, the
- general quality of unforeseeing outrage upon the peace of nature, I
- am reminded of a chat I had with the vicar one bleak day after he had
- witnessed a glide. He talked to me of aeronautics as I stood in jersey
- and shorts beside my machine, fresh from alighting, and his cadaverous
- face failed to conceal a peculiar desolation that possessed him.
- “Almost you convince me,” he said, coming up to me, “against my will....
- A marvellous invention! But it will take you a long time, sir, before
- you can emulate that perfect mechanism--the wing of a bird.”
- He looked at my sheds.
- “You’ve changed the look of this valley, too,” he said.
- “Temporary defilements,” I remarked, guessing what was in his mind.
- “Of course. Things come and go. Things come and go. But--H’m. I’ve
- just been up over the hill to look at Mr. Edward Ponderevo’s new house.
- That--that is something more permanent. A magnificent place!--in many
- ways. Imposing. I’ve never somehow brought myself to go that way before.
- Things are greatly advanced.... We find--the great number of strangers
- introduced into the villages about here by these operations, working-men
- chiefly, a little embarrassing. It put us out. They bring a new
- spirit into the place; betting--ideas--all sorts of queer notions.
- Our publicans like it, of course. And they come and sleep in one’s
- outhouses--and make the place a little unsafe at nights. The other
- morning I couldn’t sleep--a slight dyspepsia--and I looked out of
- the window. I was amazed to see people going by on bicycles. A silent
- procession. I counted ninety-seven--in the dawn. All going up to the new
- road for Crest Hill. Remarkable I thought it. And so I’ve been up to see
- what they were doing.”
- “They would have been more than remarkable thirty years ago,” I said.
- “Yes, indeed. Things change. We think nothing of it now at
- all--comparatively. And that big house--”
- He raised his eyebrows. “Really stupendous! Stupendous.
- “All the hillside--the old turf--cut to ribbons!”
- His eye searched my face. “We’ve grown so accustomed to look up to Lady
- Grove,” he said, and smiled in search of sympathy. “It shifts our centre
- of gravity.”
- “Things will readjust themselves,” I lied.
- He snatched at the phrase. “Of course,” he said.
- “They’ll readjust themselves--settle down again. Must. In the old way.
- It’s bound to come right again--a comforting thought. Yes. After all,
- Lady Grove itself had to be built once upon a time--was--to begin
- with--artificial.”
- His eye returned to my aeroplane. He sought to dismiss his graver
- preoccupations. “I should think twice,” he remarked, “before I trusted
- myself to that concern.... But I suppose one grows accustomed to the
- motion.”
- He bade me good morning and went his way, bowed and thoughtful....
- He had kept the truth from his mind a long time, but that morning it had
- forced its way to him with an aspect that brooked no denial that this
- time it was not just changes that were coming in his world, but that all
- his world lay open and defenceless, conquered and surrendered, doomed so
- far as he could see, root and branch, scale and form alike, to change.
- CHAPTER THE THIRD
- SOARING
- I
- For nearly all the time that my uncle was incubating and hatching
- Crest Hill I was busy in a little transverse valley between that
- great beginning and Lady Grove with more and more costly and ambitious
- experiments in aerial navigation. This work was indeed the main
- substance of my life through all the great time of the Tono-Bungay
- symphony.
- I have told already how I came to devote myself to this system of
- inquiries, how in a sort of disgust with the common adventure of life
- I took up the dropped ends of my college studies, taking them up again
- with a man’s resolution instead of a boy’s ambition. From the first
- I did well at this work. It--was, I think, largely a case of special
- aptitude, of a peculiar irrelevant vein of faculty running through my
- mind. It is one of those things men seem to have by chance, that has
- little or nothing to do with their general merit, and which it is
- ridiculous to be either conceited or modest about. I did get through
- a very big mass of work in those years, working for a time with a
- concentrated fierceness that left little of such energy or capacity as
- I possess unused. I worked out a series of problems connected with the
- stability of bodies pitching in the air and the internal movements of
- the wind, and I also revolutionised one leading part at last of the
- theory of explosive engines. These things are to be found in the
- Philosophical Transactions, the Mathematical Journal, and less
- frequently in one or two other such publications, and they needn’t
- detain us here. Indeed, I doubt if I could write about them here. One
- acquires a sort of shorthand for one’s notes and mind in relation to
- such special work. I have never taught; nor lectured, that is to say,
- I have never had to express my thoughts about mechanical things in
- ordinary everyday language, and I doubt very much if I could do so now
- without extreme tedium.
- My work was, to begin with, very largely theoretical. I was able to
- attack such early necessities of verification as arose with quite little
- models, using a turntable to get the motion through the air, and
- cane, whalebone and silk as building material. But a time came when
- incalculable factors crept in, factors of human capacity and factors of
- insufficient experimental knowledge, when one must needs guess and
- try. Then I had to enlarge the scale of my operations, and soon I had
- enlarged them very greatly. I set to work almost concurrently on the
- balance and stability of gliders and upon the steering of inflated bags,
- the latter a particularly expensive branch of work. I was no doubt moved
- by something of the same spirit of lavish expenditure that was running
- away with my uncle in these developments. Presently my establishment
- above Lady Grove had grown to a painted wood chalet big enough to
- accommodate six men, and in which I would sometimes live for three
- weeks together; to a gasometer, to a motor-house, to three big
- corrugated-roofed sheds and lock-up houses, to a stage from which to
- start gliders, to a workshop and so forth. A rough road was made. We
- brought up gas from Cheaping and electricity from Woking, which place
- I found also afforded a friendly workshop for larger operations than
- I could manage. I had the luck also to find a man who seemed my
- heaven-sent second-in-command--Cothope his name was. He was a
- self-educated-man; he had formerly been a sapper and he was one of the
- best and handiest working engineers alive. Without him I do not think I
- could have achieved half what I have done. At times he has been not so
- much my assistant as my collaborator, and has followed my fortunes to
- this day. Other men came and went as I needed them.
- I do not know how far it is possible to convey to any one who has not
- experienced it, the peculiar interest, the peculiar satisfaction that
- lies in a sustained research when one is not hampered by want of money.
- It is a different thing from any other sort of human effort. You
- are free from the exasperating conflict with your fellow-creatures
- altogether--at least so far as the essential work goes; that for me is
- its peculiar merit. Scientific truth is the remotest of mistresses;
- she hides in strange places, she is attained by tortuous and laborious
- roads, but SHE IS ALWAYS THERE! Win to her and she will not fail you;
- she is yours and mankind’s for ever. She is reality, the one reality I
- have found in this strange disorder of existence. She will not sulk with
- you nor misunderstand you nor cheat you of your reward upon some petty
- doubt. You cannot change her by advertisement or clamour, nor stifle her
- in vulgarities. Things grow under your hands when you serve her, things
- that are permanent as nothing else is permanent in the whole life of
- man. That, I think, is the peculiar satisfaction of science and its
- enduring reward....
- The taking up of experimental work produced a great change in my
- personal habits. I have told how already once in my life at Wimblehurst
- I had a period of discipline and continuous effort, and how, when I
- came to South Kensington, I became demoralised by the immense effect
- of London, by its innumerable imperative demands upon my attention and
- curiosity. And I parted with much of my personal pride when I gave
- up science for the development of Tono-Bungay. But my poverty kept me
- abstinent and my youthful romanticism kept me chaste until my married
- life was well under way. Then in all directions I relaxed. I did a large
- amount of work, but I never troubled to think whether it was my maximum
- nor whether the moods and indolences that came to me at times were
- avoidable things. With the coming of plenty I ate abundantly and
- foolishly, drank freely and followed my impulses more and more
- carelessly. I felt no reason why I should do anything else. Never at any
- point did I use myself to the edge of my capacity. The emotional crisis
- of my divorce did not produce any immediate change in these matters of
- personal discipline. I found some difficulty at first in concentrating
- my mind upon scientific work, it was so much more exacting than
- business, but I got over that difficulty by smoking. I became an
- inordinate cigar smoker; it gave me moods of profound depression, but
- I treated these usually by the homeopathic method,--by lighting another
- cigar. I didn’t realise at all how loose my moral and nervous fibre had
- become until I reached the practical side of my investigations and was
- face to face with the necessity of finding out just how it felt to use a
- glider and just what a man could do with one.
- I got into this relaxed habit of living in spite of very real
- tendencies in my nature towards discipline. I’ve never been in love with
- self-indulgence. That philosophy of the loose lip and the lax paunch
- is one for which I’ve always had an instinctive distrust. I like bare
- things, stripped things, plain, austere and continent things, fine lines
- and cold colours. But in these plethoric times when there is too much
- coarse stuff for everybody and the struggle for life takes the form of
- competitive advertisement and the effort to fill your neighbour’s eye,
- when there is no urgent demand either for personal courage, sound nerves
- or stark beauty, we find ourselves by accident. Always before these
- times the bulk of the people did not over-eat themselves, because they
- couldn’t, whether they wanted to do so or not, and all but a very few
- were kept “fit” by unavoidable exercise and personal danger. Now, if
- only he pitch his standard low enough and keep free from pride, almost
- any one can achieve a sort of excess. You can go through contemporary
- life fudging and evading, indulging and slacking, never really hungry
- nor frightened nor passionately stirred, your highest moment a mere
- sentimental orgasm, and your first real contact with primary and
- elemental necessities, the sweat of your death-bed. So I think it was
- with my uncle; so, very nearly, it was with me.
- But the glider brought me up smartly. I had to find out how these things
- went down the air, and the only way to find out is to go down with one.
- And for a time I wouldn’t face it.
- There is something impersonal about a book, I suppose. At any rate I
- find myself able to write down here just the confession I’ve never been
- able to make to any one face to face, the frightful trouble it was to
- me to bring myself to do what I suppose every other coloured boy in the
- West Indies could do without turning a hair, and that is to fling myself
- off for my first soar down the wind. The first trial was bound to be the
- worst; it was an experiment I made with life, and the chance of death or
- injury was, I supposed, about equal to the chance of success. I believed
- that with a dawn-like lucidity. I had begun with a glider that I
- imagined was on the lines of the Wright brothers’ aeroplane, but I could
- not be sure. It might turn over. I might upset it. It might burrow its
- nose at the end and smash itself and me. The conditions of the flight
- necessitated alert attention; it wasn’t a thing to be done by jumping
- off and shutting one’s eyes or getting angry or drunk to do it. One
- had to use one’s weight to balance. And when at last I did it it was
- horrible--for ten seconds. For ten seconds or so, as I swept down the
- air flattened on my infernal framework and with the wind in my eyes, the
- rush of the ground beneath me filled me with sick and helpless terror;
- I felt as though some violent oscillatory current was throbbing in brain
- and back bone, and I groaned aloud. I set my teeth and groaned. It was
- a groan wrung out of me in spite of myself. My sensations of terror
- swooped to a climax. And then, you know, they ended!
- Suddenly my terror was over and done with. I was soaring through the air
- right way up, steadily, and no mischance had happened. I felt intensely
- alive and my nerves were strung like a bow. I shifted a limb, swerved
- and shouted between fear and triumph as I recovered from the swerve and
- heeled the other way and steadied myself.
- I thought I was going to hit a rook that was flying athwart me,--it
- was queer with what projectile silence that jumped upon me out of
- nothingness, and I yelled helplessly, “Get out of the way!” The bird
- doubled itself up like a partly inverted V, flapped, went up to the
- right abruptly and vanished from my circle of interest. Then I saw
- the shadow of my aeroplane keeping a fixed distance before me and very
- steady, and the turf as it seemed streaming out behind it. The turf!--it
- wasn’t after all streaming so impossibly fast.
- When I came gliding down to the safe spread of level green I had chosen,
- I was as cool and ready as a city clerk who drops off an omnibus in
- motion, and I had learnt much more than soaring. I tilted up her nose
- at the right moment, levelled again and grounded like a snowflake on a
- windless day. I lay flat for an instant and then knelt up and got on my
- feet atremble, but very satisfied with myself. Cothope was running down
- the hill to me. ...
- But from that day I went into training, and I kept myself in training
- for many months. I had delayed my experiments for very nearly six weeks
- on various excuses because of my dread of this first flight, because of
- the slackness of body and spirit that had come to me with the business
- life. The shame of that cowardice spurred me none the less because it
- was probably altogether my own secret. I felt that Cothope at any rate
- might suspect. Well,--he shouldn’t suspect again.
- It is curious that I remember that shame and self accusation and its
- consequences far more distinctly than I recall the weeks of vacillation
- before I soared. For a time I went altogether without alcohol, I stopped
- smoking altogether and ate very sparingly, and every day I did something
- that called a little upon my nerves and muscles. I soared as frequently
- as I could. I substituted a motor-bicycle for the London train and took
- my chances in the southward traffic, and I even tried what thrills were
- to be got upon a horse. But they put me on made horses, and I conceived
- a perhaps unworthy contempt for the certitudes of equestrian exercise
- in comparison with the adventures of mechanism. Also I walked along the
- high wall at the back of Lady Grove garden, and at last brought myself
- to stride the gap where the gate comes. If I didn’t altogether get rid
- of a certain giddy instinct by such exercises, at least I trained my
- will until it didn’t matter. And soon I no longer dreaded flight, but
- was eager to go higher into the air, and I came to esteem soaring upon
- a glider, that even over the deepest dip in the ground had barely forty
- feet of fall beneath it, a mere mockery of what flight might be. I began
- to dream of the keener freshness in the air high above the beechwoods,
- and it was rather to satisfy that desire than as any legitimate
- development of my proper work that presently I turned a part of my
- energies and the bulk of my private income to the problem of the
- navigable balloon.
- II
- I had gone far beyond that initial stage; I had had two smashes and a
- broken rib which my aunt nursed with great energy, and was getting some
- reputation in the aeronautic world when, suddenly, as though she had
- never really left it, the Honourable Beatrice Normandy, dark-eyed, and
- with the old disorderly wave of the hair from her brow, came back into
- my life. She came riding down a grass path in the thickets below Lady
- Grove, perched up on a huge black horse, and the old Earl of Carnaby
- and Archie Garvell, her half-brother, were with her. My uncle had been
- bothering me about the Crest Hill hot-water pipes, and we were returning
- by a path transverse to theirs and came out upon them suddenly. Old
- Carnaby was trespassing on our ground, and so he hailed us in a friendly
- fashion and pulled up to talk to us.
- I didn’t note Beatrice at all at first. I was interested in Lord
- Carnaby, that remarkable vestige of his own brilliant youth. I had heard
- of him, but never seen him. For a man of sixty-five who had sinned all
- the sins, so they said, and laid waste the most magnificent political
- debut of any man of his generation, he seemed to me to be looking
- remarkably fit and fresh. He was a lean little man with grey-blue eyes
- in his brown face, and his cracked voice was the worst thing in his
- effect.
- “Hope you don’t mind us coming this way, Ponderevo,” he cried; and my
- uncle, who was sometimes a little too general and generous with titles,
- answered, “Not at all, my lord, not at all! Glad you make use of it!”
- “You’re building a great place over the hill,” said Carnaby.
- “Thought I’d make a show for once,” said my uncle. “It looks big because
- it’s spread out for the sun.”
- “Air and sunlight,” said the earl. “You can’t have too much of them. But
- before our time they used to build for shelter and water and the high
- road.”
- Then I discovered that the silent figure behind the earl was Beatrice.
- I’d forgotten her sufficiently to think for a moment that she hadn’t
- changed at all since she had watched me from behind the skirts of Lady
- Drew. She was looking at me, and her dainty brow under her broad brimmed
- hat--she was wearing a grey hat and loose unbuttoned coat--was knit with
- perplexity, trying, I suppose, to remember where she had seen me before.
- Her shaded eyes met mine with that mute question....
- It seemed incredible to me she didn’t remember.
- “Well,” said the earl and touched his horse.
- Garvell was patting the neck of his horse, which was inclined to fidget,
- and disregarding me. He nodded over his shoulder and followed. His
- movement seemed to release a train of memories in her. She glanced
- suddenly at him and then back at me with a flash of recognition that
- warmed instantly to a faint smile. She hesitated as if to speak to me,
- smiled broadly and understandingly and turned to follow the others.
- All three broke into a canter and she did not look back. I stood for a
- second or so at the crossing of the lanes, watching her recede, and then
- became aware that my uncle was already some paces off and talking over
- his shoulder in the belief that I was close behind. I turned about and
- strode to overtake him. My mind was full of Beatrice and this surprise.
- I remembered her simply as a Normandy. I’d clean forgotten that Garvell
- was the son and she the step-daughter of our neighbour, Lady Osprey.
- Indeed, I’d probably forgotten at that time that we had Lady Osprey as a
- neighbour. There was no reason at all for remembering it. It was amazing
- to find her in this Surrey countryside, when I’d never thought of her
- as living anywhere in the world but at Bladesover Park, near forty miles
- and twenty years away. She was so alive--so unchanged! The same quick
- warm blood was in her cheeks. It seemed only yesterday that we had
- kissed among the bracken stems....
- “Eh?” I said.
- “I say he’s good stuff,” said my uncle. “You can say what you like
- against the aristocracy, George; Lord Carnaby’s rattling good stuff.
- There’s a sort of Savoir Faire, something--it’s an old-fashioned phrase,
- George, but a good one there’s a Bong-Tong.... It’s like the Oxford
- turf, George, you can’t grow it in a year. I wonder how they do it.
- It’s living always on a Scale, George. It’s being there from the
- beginning.”...
- “She might,” I said to myself, “be a picture by Romney come alive!”
- “They tell all these stories about him,” said my uncle, “but what do
- they all amount to?”
- “Gods!” I said to myself; “but why have I forgotten for so long? Those
- queer little brows of hers, the touch of mischief in her eyes--the way
- she breaks into a smile!”
- “I don’t blame him,” said my uncle. “Mostly it’s imagination. That and
- leisure, George. When I was a young man I was kept pretty busy. So were
- you. Even then--!”
- What puzzled me more particularly was the queer trick of my memory
- that had never recalled anything vital of Beatrice whatever when I
- met Garvell again that had, indeed, recalled nothing except a boyish
- antagonism and our fight. Now when my senses were full of her, it seemed
- incredible that I could ever have forgotten....
- III
- “Oh, Crikey!” said my aunt, reading a letter behind her coffee-machine.
- “HERE’S a young woman, George!”
- We were breakfasting together in the big window bay at Lady Grove that
- looks upon the iris beds; my uncle was in London.
- I sounded an interrogative note and decapitated an egg.
- “Who’s Beatrice Normandy?” asked my aunt. “I’ve not heard of her
- before.”
- “She the young woman?”
- “Yes. Says she knows you. I’m no hand at old etiquette, George, but
- her line is a bit unusual. Practically she says she’s going to make her
- mother--”
- “Eh? Step-mother, isn’t it?”
- “You seem to know a lot about her. She says ‘mother’--Lady Osprey.
- They’re to call on me, anyhow, next Wednesday week at four, and there’s
- got to be you for tea.”
- “Eh?”
- “You--for tea.
- “H’m. She had rather--force of character. When I knew her before.”
- I became aware of my aunt’s head sticking out obliquely from behind the
- coffee-machine and regarding me with wide blue curiosity. I met her gaze
- for a moment, flinched, coloured, and laughed.
- “I’ve known her longer than I’ve known you,” I said, and explained at
- length.
- My aunt kept her eye on me over and round the coffee-machine as I did
- so. She was greatly interested, and asked several elucidatory questions.
- “Why didn’t you tell me the day you saw her? You’ve had her on your mind
- for a week,” she said.
- “It IS odd I didn’t tell you,” I admitted.
- “You thought I’d get a Down on her,” said my aunt conclusively. “That’s
- what you thought” and opened the rest of her letters.
- The two ladies came in a pony-carriage with conspicuous punctuality, and
- I had the unusual experience of seeing my aunt entertaining callers. We
- had tea upon the terrace under the cedar, but old Lady Osprey, being an
- embittered Protestant, had never before seen the inside of the house,
- and we made a sort of tour of inspection that reminded me of my first
- visit to the place. In spite of my preoccupation with Beatrice, I stored
- a queer little memory of the contrast between the two other women; my
- aunt, tall, slender and awkward, in a simple blue homekeeping dress, an
- omnivorous reader and a very authentic wit, and the lady of pedigree,
- short and plump, dressed with Victorian fussiness, living at the
- intellectual level of palmistry and genteel fiction, pink in the face
- and generally flustered by a sense of my aunt’s social strangeness and
- disposed under the circumstances to behave rather like an imitation
- of the more queenly moments of her own cook. The one seemed made of
- whalebone, the other of dough. My aunt was nervous, partly through the
- intrinsic difficulty of handling the lady and partly because of her
- passionate desire to watch Beatrice and me, and her nervousness took a
- common form with her, a wider clumsiness of gesture and an exacerbation
- of her habitual oddity of phrase which did much to deepen the pink
- perplexity of the lady of title. For instance, I heard my aunt admit
- that one of the Stuart Durgan ladies did look a bit “balmy on
- the crumpet”; she described the knights of the age of chivalry as
- “korvorting about on the off-chance of a dragon”; she explained she
- was “always old mucking about the garden,” and instead of offering me a
- Garibaldi biscuit, she asked me with that faint lisp of hers, to
- “have some squashed flies, George.” I felt convinced Lady Osprey
- would describe her as “a most eccentric person” on the very first
- opportunity;--“a most eccentric person.” One could see her, as people
- say, “shaping” for that.
- Beatrice was dressed very quietly in brown, with a simple but courageous
- broad-brimmed hat, and an unexpected quality of being grown-up and
- responsible. She guided her step-mother through the first encounter,
- scrutinised my aunt, and got us all well in movement through the house,
- and then she turned her attention to me with a quick and half-confident
- smile.
- “We haven’t met,” she said, “since--”
- “It was in the Warren.”
- “Of course,” she said, “the Warren! I remembered it all except just the
- name.... I was eight.”
- Her smiling eyes insisted on my memories being thorough. I looked up and
- met them squarely, a little at a loss for what I should say.
- “I gave you away pretty completely,” she said, meditating upon my face.
- “And afterwards I gave way Archie.”
- She turned her face away from the others, and her voice fell ever so
- little.
- “They gave him a licking for telling lies!” she said, as though that was
- a pleasant memory. “And when it was all over I went to our wigwam. You
- remember the wigwam?”
- “Out in the West Wood?”
- “Yes--and cried--for all the evil I had done you, I suppose.... I’ve
- often thought of it since.”...
- Lady Osprey stopped for us to overtake her. “My dear!” she said to
- Beatrice. “Such a beautiful gallery!” Then she stared very hard at me,
- puzzled in the most naked fashion to understand who I might be.
- “People say the oak staircase is rather good,” said my aunt, and led the
- way.
- Lady Osprey, with her skirts gathered for the ascent to the gallery
- and her hand on the newel, turned and addressed a look full of meaning
- overflowing indeed with meanings--at her charge. The chief meaning
- no doubt was caution about myself, but much of it was just meaning at
- large. I chanced to catch the response in a mirror and detected Beatrice
- with her nose wrinkled into a swift and entirely diabolical grimace.
- Lady Osprey became a deeper shade of pink and speechless with
- indignation--it was evident she disavowed all further responsibility, as
- she followed my aunt upstairs.
- “It’s dark, but there’s a sort of dignity,” said Beatrice very
- distinctly, regarding the hall with serene tranquillity, and allowing
- the unwilling feet on the stairs to widen their distance from us. She
- stood a step up, so that she looked down a little upon me and over me at
- the old hall.
- She turned upon me abruptly when she thought her step-mother was beyond
- ear-shot.
- “But how did you get here?” she asked.
- “Here?”
- “All this.” She indicated space and leisure by a wave of the hand at
- hall and tall windows and sunlit terrace. “Weren’t you the housekeeper’s
- son?”
- “I’ve adventured. My uncle has become--a great financier. He used to
- be a little chemist about twenty miles from Bladesover. We’re promoters
- now, amalgamators, big people on the new model.”
- “I understand.” She regarded me with interested eyes, visibly thinking
- me out.
- “And you recognised me?” I asked.
- “After a second or so. I saw you recognised me. I couldn’t place you,
- but I knew I knew you. Then Archie being there helped me to remember.”
- “I’m glad to meet again,” I ventured. “I’d never forgotten you.”
- “One doesn’t forget those childish things.”
- We regarded one another for a moment with a curiously easy and confident
- satisfaction in coming together again. I can’t explain our ready zest in
- one another. The thing was so. We pleased each other, we had no doubt in
- our minds that we pleased each other. From the first we were at our ease
- with one another. “So picturesque, so very picturesque,” came a voice
- from above, and then: “Bee-atrice!”
- “I’ve a hundred things I want to know about you,” she said with an easy
- intimacy, as we went up the winding steps....
- As the four of us sat at tea together under the cedar on the terrace she
- asked questions about my aeronautics. My aunt helped with a word or so
- about my broken ribs. Lady Osprey evidently regarded flying as a most
- indesirable and improper topic--a blasphemous intrusion upon the angels.
- “It isn’t flying,” I explained. “We don’t fly yet.”
- “You never will,” she said compactly. “You never will.”
- “Well,” I said, “we do what we can.”
- The little lady lifted a small gloved hand and indicated a height of
- about four feet from the ground. “Thus far,” she said, “thus far--AND NO
- FARTHER! No!”
- She became emphatically pink. “NO,” she said again quite conclusively,
- and coughed shortly. “Thank you,” she said to her ninth or tenth cake.
- Beatrice burst into cheerful laughter with her eye on me. I was lying
- on the turf, and this perhaps caused a slight confusion about the
- primordial curse in Lady Osprey’s mind.
- “Upon his belly shall he go,” she said with quiet distinctness, “all the
- days of his life.”
- After which we talked no more of aeronautics.
- Beatrice sat bunched together in a chair and regarded me with exactly
- the same scrutiny, I thought, the same adventurous aggression, that
- I had faced long ago at the tea-table in my mother’s room. She was
- amazingly like that little Princess of my Bladesover memories, the
- wilful misbehaviours of her hair seemed the same--her voice; things one
- would have expected to be changed altogether. She formed her plans in
- the same quick way, and acted with the same irresponsible decision.
- She stood up abruptly.
- “What is there beyond the terrace?” she said, and found me promptly
- beside her.
- I invented a view for her.
- At the further corner from the cedar she perched herself up upon the
- parapet and achieved an air of comfort among the lichenous stones. “Now
- tell me,” she said, “all about yourself. Tell me about yourself; I know
- such duffers of men! They all do the same things. How did you get--here?
- All my men WERE here. They couldn’t have got here if they hadn’t been
- here always. They wouldn’t have thought it right. You’ve climbed.”
- “If it’s climbing,” I said.
- She went off at a tangent. “It’s--I don’t know if you’ll
- understand--interesting to meet you again. I’ve remembered you. I don’t
- know why, but I have. I’ve used you as a sort of lay figure--when I’ve
- told myself stories. But you’ve always been rather stiff and difficult
- in my stories--in ready-made clothes--a Labour Member or a Bradlaugh, or
- something like that. You’re not like that a bit. And yet you ARE!”
- She looked at me. “Was it much of a fight? They make out it is.”
- “I don’t know why.”
- “I was shot up here by an accident,” I said. “There was no fight at all.
- Except to keep honest, perhaps and I made no great figure in that. I
- and my uncle mixed a medicine and it blew us up. No merit in that! But
- you’ve been here all the time. Tell me what you have done first.”
- “One thing we didn’t do.” She meditated for a moment.
- “What?” said I.
- “Produce a little half-brother for Bladesover. So it went to the
- Phillbrick gang. And they let it! And I and my step-mother--we let, too.
- And live in a little house.”
- She nodded her head vaguely over her shoulder and turned to me again.
- “Well, suppose it was an accident. Here you are! Now you’re here, what
- are you going to do? You’re young. Is it to be Parliament? heard some
- men the other day talking about you. Before I knew you were you. They
- said that was what you ought to do.”...
- She put me through my intentions with a close and vital curiosity. It
- was just as she had tried to imagine me a soldier and place me years
- ago. She made me feel more planless and incidental than ever. “You want
- to make a flying-machine,” she pursued, “and when you fly? What then?
- Would it be for fighting?”
- I told her something of my experimental work. She had never heard of
- the soaring aeroplane, and was excited by the thought, and keen to hear
- about it. She had thought all the work so far had been a mere projecting
- of impossible machines. For her Pilcher and Lilienthal had died in vain.
- She did not know such men had lived in the world.
- “But that’s dangerous!” she said, with a note of discovery.
- “Oh!--it’s dangerous.”
- “Bee-atrice!” Lady Osprey called.
- Beatrice dropped from the wall to her feet.
- “Where do you do this soaring?”
- “Beyond the high Barrows. East of Crest Hill and the wood.”
- “Do you mind people coming to see?”
- “Whenever you please. Only let me know”
- “I’ll take my chance some day. Some day soon.” She looked at me
- thoughtfully, smiled, and our talk was at an end.
- IV
- All my later work in aeronautics is associated in my memory with the
- quality of Beatrice, with her incidental presence, with things she said
- and did and things I thought of that had reference to her.
- In the spring of that year I had got to a flying machine that lacked
- nothing but longitudinal stability. My model flew like a bird for fifty
- or a hundred yards or so, and then either dived and broke its nose or,
- what was commoner, reared up, slid back and smashed its propeller. The
- rhythm of the pitching puzzled me. I felt it must obey some laws not
- yet quite clearly stated. I became therefore a student of theory and
- literature for a time; I hit upon the string of considerations that led
- me to what is called Ponderevo’s Principle and my F.R.S., and I worked
- this out in three long papers. Meanwhile I made a lot of turn-table
- and glider models and started in upon an idea of combining gas-bags and
- gliders. Balloon work was new to me. I had made one or two ascents in
- the balloons of the Aero Club before I started my gasometer and
- the balloon shed and gave Cothope a couple of months with Sir Peter
- Rumchase. My uncle found part of the money for these developments; he
- was growing interested and competitive in this business because of
- Lord Boom’s prize and the amount of reclame involved, and it was at his
- request that I named my first navigable balloon Lord Roberts Alpha.
- Lord Roberts A very nearly terminated all my investigations. My idea
- both in this and its more successful and famous younger brother, Lord
- Roberts B, was to utilise the idea of a contractile balloon with a rigid
- flat base, a balloon shaped rather like an inverted boat that should
- almost support the apparatus, but not quite. The gas-bag was of the
- chambered sort used for these long forms, and not with an internal
- balloonette. The trouble was to make the thing contractile. This I
- sought to do by fixing a long, fine-meshed silk net over it that
- was fastened to be rolled up on two longitudinal rods. Practically I
- contracted my sausage gas-bag by netting it down. The ends were too
- complex for me to describe here, but I thought them out elaborately and
- they were very carefully planned. Lord Roberts A was furnished with a
- single big screw forward, and there was a rudder aft. The engine was the
- first one to be, so to speak, right in the plane of the gas-bag. I lay
- immediately under the balloon on a sort of glider framework, far away
- from either engine or rudder, controlling them by wire-pulls constructed
- on the principle of the well-known Bowden brake of the cyclist.
- But Lord Roberts A has been pretty exhaustively figured and described in
- various aeronautical publications. The unforeseen defect was the badness
- of the work in the silk netting. It tore aft as soon as I began to
- contract the balloon, and the last two segments immediately bulged
- through the hole, exactly as an inner tube will bulge through the
- ruptured outer cover of a pneumatic tire, and then the sharp edge of the
- torn net cut the oiled-silk of the distended last segment along a weak
- seam and burst it with a loud report.
- Up to that point the whole thing had been going on extremely well. As a
- navigable balloon and before I contracted it, the Lord Roberts A was an
- unqualified success. It had run out of the shed admirably at nine or
- ten miles an hour or more, and although there was a gentle southwester
- blowing, it had gone up and turned and faced it as well as any craft of
- the sort I have ever seen.
- I lay in my customary glider position, horizontal and face downward, and
- the invisibility of all the machinery gave an extraordinary effect of
- independent levitation. Only by looking up, as it were, and turning my
- head back could I see the flat aeroplane bottom of the balloon and
- the rapid successive passages, swish, swish, swish of the vans of the
- propeller. I made a wide circle over Lady Grove and Duffield and
- out towards Effingham and came back quite successfully to the
- starting-point.
- Down below in the October sunlight were my sheds and the little group
- that had been summoned to witness the start, their faces craned upward
- and most of them scrutinising my expression through field-glasses. I
- could see Carnaby and Beatrice on horseback, and two girls I did not
- know with them; Cothope and three or four workmen I employed; my aunt
- and Mrs. Levinstein, who was staying with her, on foot, and Dimmock, the
- veterinary surgeon, and one or two others. My shadow moved a little to
- the north of them like the shadow of a fish. At Lady Grove the servants
- were out on the lawn, and the Duffield school playground swarmed with
- children too indifferent to aeronautics to cease their playing. But in
- the Crest Hill direction--the place looked extraordinarily squat
- and ugly from above--there were knots and strings of staring workmen
- everywhere--not one of them working, but all agape. (But now I write it,
- it occurs to me that perhaps it was their dinner hour; it was certainly
- near twelve.) I hung for a moment or so enjoying the soar, then turned
- about to face a clear stretch of open down, let the engine out to full
- speed and set my rollers at work rolling in the net, and so tightening
- the gas-bags. Instantly the pace quickened with the diminished
- resistance...
- In that moment before the bang I think I must have been really flying.
- Before the net ripped, just in the instant when my balloon was at its
- systole, the whole apparatus was, I am convinced, heavier than air.
- That, however, is a claim that has been disputed, and in any case this
- sort of priority is a very trivial thing.
- Then came a sudden retardation, instantly followed by an inexpressibly
- disconcerting tilt downward of the machine. That I still recall with
- horror. I couldn’t see what was happening at all and I couldn’t imagine.
- It was a mysterious, inexplicable dive. The thing, it seemed, without
- rhyme or reason, was kicking up its heels in the air. The bang followed
- immediately, and I perceived I was falling rapidly.
- I was too much taken by surprise to think of the proper cause of the
- report. I don’t even know what I made of it. I was obsessed, I suppose,
- by that perpetual dread of the modern aeronaut, a flash between engine
- and balloon. Yet obviously I wasn’t wrapped in flames. I ought to have
- realised instantly it wasn’t that. I did, at any rate, whatever other
- impressions there were, release the winding of the outer net and let the
- balloon expand again, and that no doubt did something to break my fall.
- I don’t remember doing that. Indeed, all I do remember is the giddy
- effect upon the landscape of falling swiftly upon it down a flat spiral,
- the hurried rush of fields and trees and cottages on my left shoulder
- and the overhung feeling as if the whole apparatus was pressing down
- the top of my head. I didn’t stop or attempt to stop the screw. That was
- going on, swish, swish, swish all the time.
- Cothope really knows more about the fall than I do. He describes the
- easterly start, the tilt, and the appearance and bursting of a sort
- of bladder aft. Then down I swooped, very swiftly, but not nearly so
- steeply as I imagined I was doing. “Fifteen or twenty degrees,” said
- Cothope, “to be exact.” From him it was that I learnt that I let the
- nets loose again, and so arrested my fall. He thinks I was more in
- control of myself than I remember.
- But I do not see why I should have forgotten so excellent a resolution.
- His impression is that I was really steering and trying to drop into
- the Farthing Down beeches. “You hit the trees,” he said, “and the whole
- affair stood on its nose among them, and then very slowly crumpled up.
- I saw you’d been jerked out, as I thought, and I didn’t stay for more. I
- rushed for my bicycle.”
- As a matter of fact, it was purely accidental that I came down in the
- woods. I am reasonably certain that I had no more control then than a
- thing in a parcel. I remember I felt a sort of wincing, “Now it comes!”
- as the trees rushed up to me. If I remember that, I should remember
- steering. Then the propeller smashed, everything stopped with a jerk,
- and I was falling into a mass of yellowing leaves, and Lord Roberts A,
- so it seemed to me, was going back into the sky.
- I felt twigs and things hit me in the face, but I didn’t feel injured
- at the time; I clutched at things that broke, tumbled through a froth
- of green and yellow into a shadowy world of great bark-covered arms, and
- there, snatching wildly, got a grip on a fair round branch, and hung.
- I became intensely alert and clear-headed. I held by that branch for a
- moment and then looked about me, and caught at another, and then found
- myself holding to a practicable fork. I swung forward to that and got a
- leg around it below its junction, and so was able presently to clamber
- down, climbing very coolly and deliberately. I dropped ten feet or so
- from the lowest branch and fell on my feet. “That’s all right,” I said,
- and stared up through the tree to see what I could of the deflated and
- crumpled remains that had once been Lord Roberts A festooned on the
- branches it had broken. “Gods!” I said, “what a tumble!”
- I wiped something that trickled from my face and was shocked to see my
- hand covered with blood. I looked at myself and saw what seemed to me
- an astonishing quantity of blood running down my arm and shoulder.
- I perceived my mouth was full of blood. It’s a queer moment when one
- realises one is hurt, and perhaps badly hurt, and has still to discover
- just how far one is hurt. I explored my face carefully and found
- unfamiliar contours on the left side. The broken end of a branch had
- driven right through my cheek, damaging my cheek and teeth and gums,
- and left a splinter of itself stuck, like an explorer’s fartherest-point
- flag, in the upper maxillary. That and a sprained wrist were all my
- damage. But I bled as though I had been chopped to pieces, and it
- seemed to me that my face had been driven in. I can’t describe just the
- horrible disgust I felt at that.
- “This blood must be stopped, anyhow,” I said, thickheadedly.
- “I wonder where there’s a spider’s web”--an odd twist for my mind to
- take. But it was the only treatment that occurred to me.
- I must have conceived some idea of going home unaided, because I was
- thirty yards from the tree before I dropped.
- Then a kind of black disc appeared in the middle of the world and rushed
- out to the edge of things and blotted them out. I don’t remember falling
- down. I fainted from excitement, disgust at my injury and loss of blood,
- and lay there until Cothope found me.
- He was the first to find me, scorching as he did over the downland
- turf, and making a wide course to get the Carnaby plantations at their
- narrowest. Then presently, while he was trying to apply the methodical
- teachings of the St. John’s Ambulance classes to a rather abnormal case,
- Beatrice came galloping through the trees full-tilt, with Lord Carnaby
- hard behind her, and she was hatless, muddy from a fall, and white as
- death. “And cool as a cucumber, too,” said Cothope, turning it over in
- his mind as he told me.
- (“They never seem quite to have their heads, and never seem quite to
- lose ‘em,” said Cothope, generalising about the sex.)
- Also he witnessed she acted with remarkable decision. The question
- was whether I should be taken to the house her step-mother occupied at
- Bedley Corner, the Carnaby dower house, or down to Carnaby’s place at
- Easting. Beatrice had no doubt in the matter, for she meant to nurse me.
- Carnaby didn’t seem to want that to happen. “She WOULD have it wasn’t
- half so far,” said Cothope. “She faced us out....
- “I hate to be faced out of my opinion, so I’ve taken a pedometer over it
- since. It’s exactly forty-three yards further.
- “Lord Carnaby looked at her pretty straight,” said Cothope, finishing
- the picture; “and then he give in.”
- V
- But my story has made a jump from June to October, and during that time
- my relations with Beatrice and the countryside that was her setting had
- developed in many directions. She came and went, moving in an orbit
- for which I had no data, going to London and Paris, into Wales and
- Northampton, while her stepmother, on some independent system of her
- own, also vanished and recurred intermittently. At home they obeyed the
- rule of an inflexible old maid, Charlotte, and Beatrice exercised
- all the rights of proprietorship in Carnaby’s extensive stables. Her
- interest in me was from the first undisguised. She found her way to my
- worksheds and developed rapidly, in spite of the sincere discouragement
- of Cothope, into a keen amateur of aeronautics. She would come sometimes
- in the morning, sometimes in the afternoon, sometimes afoot with an
- Irish terrier, sometimes riding. She would come for three or four days
- every day, vanish for a fortnight or three weeks, return.
- It was not long before I came to look for her. From the first I
- found her immensely interesting. To me she was a new feminine type
- altogether--I have made it plain, I think, how limited was my knowledge
- of women. But she made me not simply interested in her, but in myself.
- She became for me something that greatly changes a man’s world. How
- shall I put it? She became an audience. Since I’ve emerged from the
- emotional developments of the affair I have thought it out in a hundred
- aspects, and it does seem to me that this way in which men and women
- make audiences for one another is a curiously influential force in their
- lives. For some it seems an audience is a vital necessity, they seek
- audiences as creatures seek food; others again, my uncle among them,
- can play to an imaginary audience. I, I think, have lived and can live
- without one. In my adolescence I was my own audience and my own court
- of honour. And to have an audience in one’s mind is to play a part,
- to become self-conscious and dramatic. For many years I had been
- self-forgetful and scientific. I had lived for work and impersonal
- interests until I found scrutiny, applause and expectation in Beatrice’s
- eyes. Then I began to live for the effect I imagined I made upon her, to
- make that very soon the principal value in my life. I played to her.
- I did things for the look of them. I began to dream more and more of
- beautiful situations and fine poses and groupings with her and for her.
- I put these things down because they puzzle me. I think I was in love
- with Beatrice, as being in love is usually understood; but it was quite
- a different state altogether from my passionate hunger for Marion, or
- my keen, sensuous desire for and pleasure in Effie. These were selfish,
- sincere things, fundamental and instinctive, as sincere as the leap of
- a tiger. But until matters drew to a crisis with Beatrice, there was
- an immense imaginative insurgence of a quite different quality. I am
- setting down here very gravely, and perhaps absurdly, what are no doubt
- elementary commonplaces for innumerable people. This love that grew up
- between Beatrice and myself was, I think--I put it quite tentatively and
- rather curiously--romantic love. That unfortunate and truncated affair
- of my uncle and the Scrymgeour lady was really of the same stuff, if
- a little different in quality. I have to admit that. The factor of
- audience was of primary importance in either else.
- Its effect upon me was to make me in many respects adolescent again.
- It made me keener upon the point of honour, and anxious and eager to
- do high and splendid things, and in particular, brave things. So far it
- ennobled and upheld me. But it did also push me towards vulgar and showy
- things. At bottom it was disingenuous; it gave my life the quality of
- stage scenery, with one side to the audience, another side that wasn’t
- meant to show, and an economy of substance. It certainly robbed my work
- of high patience and quality. I cut down the toil of research in my
- eagerness and her eagerness for fine flourishes in the air, flights that
- would tell. I shirked the longer road.
- And it robbed me, too, of any fine perception of absurdity.
- Yet that was not everything in our relationship. The elemental thing was
- there also. It came in very suddenly.
- It was one day in the summer, though I do not now recall without
- reference to my experimental memoranda whether it was in July or
- August. I was working with a new and more bird-like aeroplane with wing
- curvatures studied from Lilienthal, Pilcher and Phillips, that I
- thought would give a different rhythm for the pitching oscillations than
- anything I’d had before. I was soaring my long course from the framework
- on the old barrow by my sheds down to Tinker’s Corner. It is a clear
- stretch of downland, except for two or three thickets of box and thorn
- to the right of my course; one transverse trough, in which there is bush
- and a small rabbit warren, comes in from the east. I had started,
- and was very intent on the peculiar long swoop with which any new
- arrangement flew. Then, without any sort of notice, right ahead of me
- appeared Beatrice, riding towards Tinker’s Corner to waylay and talk to
- me. She looked round over her shoulder, saw me coming, touched her
- horse to a gallop, and then the brute bolted right into the path of my
- machine.
- There was a queer moment of doubt whether we shouldn’t all smash
- together. I had to make up my mind very quickly whether I would pitch-up
- and drop backward at once and take my chance of falling undamaged--a
- poor chance it would have been--in order to avoid any risk to her, or
- whether I would lift against the wind and soar right over her. This
- latter I did. She had already got her horse in hand when I came up to
- her. Her woman’s body lay along his neck, and she glanced up as I, with
- wings aspread, and every nerve in a state of tension, swept over her.
- Then I had landed, and was going back to where her horse stood still and
- trembling.
- We exchanged no greetings. She slid from her saddle into my arms, and
- for one instant I held her.
- “Those great wings,” she said, and that was all.
- She lay in my arms, and I thought for a moment she had fainted.
- “Very near a nasty accident,” said Cothope, coming up and regarding
- our grouping with disfavour. He took her horse by the bridle. “Very
- dangerous thing coming across us like that.”
- Beatrice disengaged herself from me, stood for a moment trembling, and
- then sat down on the turf “I’ll just sit down for a moment,” she said.
- “Oh!” she said.
- She covered her face with her hands, while Cothope looked at her with an
- expression between suspicion and impatience.
- For some moments nobody moved. Then Cothope remarked that perhaps he’d
- better get her water.
- As for me, I was filled with a new outrageous idea, begotten I scarcely
- know how from this incident, with its instant contacts and swift
- emotions, and that was that I must make love to and possess Beatrice. I
- see no particular reason why that thought should have come to me in that
- moment, but it did. I do not believe that before then I had thought
- of our relations in such terms at all. Suddenly, as I remember it, the
- factor of passion came. She crouched there, and I stood over her, and
- neither of us said a word. But it was just as though something had been
- shouted from the sky.
- Cothope had gone twenty paces perhaps when she uncovered her face. “I
- shan’t want any water,” she said. “Call him back.”
- VI
- After that the spirit of our relations changed. The old ease had gone.
- She came to me less frequently, and when she came she would have some
- one with her, usually old Carnaby, and he would do the bulk of the
- talking. All through September she was away. When we were alone together
- there was a curious constraint. We became clouds of inexpressible
- feeling towards one another; we could think of nothing that was not too
- momentous for words.
- Then came the smash of Lord Roberts A, and I found myself with a
- bandaged face in a bedroom in the Bedley Corner dower-house with
- Beatrice presiding over an inefficient nurse, Lady Osprey very pink and
- shocked in the background, and my aunt jealously intervening.
- My injuries were much more showy than serious, and I could have been
- taken to Lady Grove next day, but Beatrice would not permit that, and
- kept me at Bedley Corner three clear days. In the afternoon of the
- second day she became extremely solicitous for the proper aeration of
- the nurse, packed her off for an hour in a brisk rain, and sat by me
- alone.
- I asked her to marry me.
- All the whole I must admit it was not a situation that lent itself to
- eloquence. I lay on my back and talked through bandages, and with
- some little difficulty, for my tongue and mouth had swollen. But I was
- feverish and in pain, and the emotional suspense I had been in so long
- with regard to her became now an unendurable impatience.
- “Comfortable?” she asked.
- “Yes.”
- “Shall I read to you?”
- “No. I want to talk.”
- “You can’t. I’d better talk to you.”
- “No,” I said, “I want to talk to you.”
- She came and stood by my bedside and looked me in the eyes. “I don’t--I
- don’t want you to talk to me,” she said. “I thought you couldn’t talk.”
- “I get few chances--of you.”
- “You’d better not talk. Don’t talk now. Let me chatter instead. You
- ought not to talk.”
- “It isn’t much,” I said.
- “I’d rather you didn’t.”
- “I’m not going to be disfigured,” I said. “Only a scar.”
- “Oh!” she said, as if she had expected something quite different. “Did
- you think you’d become a sort of gargoyle?”
- “L’Homme qui Rit!--I didn’t know. But that’s all right. Jolly flowers
- those are!”
- “Michaelmas daisies,” she said. “I’m glad you’r not disfigured, and
- those are perennial sunflowers. Do you know no flowers at all? When I
- saw you on the ground I certainly thought you were dead. You ought to
- have been, by all the rules of the game.”
- She said some other things, but I was thinking of my next move.
- “Are we social equals?” I said abruptly.
- She stared at me. “Queer question,” she said.
- “But are we?”
- “H’m. Difficult to say. But why do you ask? Is the daughter of a
- courtesy Baron who died--of general disreputableness, I believe--before
- his father--? I give it up. Does it matter?”
- “No. My mind is confused. I want to know if you will marry me.”
- She whitened and said nothing. I suddenly felt I must plead with her.
- “Damn these bandages!” I said, breaking into ineffectual febrile rage.
- She roused herself to her duties as nurse. “What are you doing? Why are
- you trying to sit up? Sit down! Don’t touch your bandages. I told you
- not to talk.”
- She stood helpless for a moment, then took me firmly by the shoulders
- and pushed me back upon the pillow. She gripped the wrist of the hand I
- had raised to my face.
- “I told you not to talk,” she whispered close to my face. “I asked you
- not to talk. Why couldn’t you do as I asked you?”
- “You’ve been avoiding me for a month,” I said.
- “I know. You might have known. Put your hand back--down by your side.”
- I obeyed. She sat on the edge of the bed. A flush had come to her
- cheeks, and her eyes were very bright. “I asked you,” she repeated, “not
- to talk.”
- My eyes questioned her mutely.
- She put her hand on my chest. Her eyes were tormented.
- “How can I answer you now?” she said.
- “How can I say anything now?”
- “What do you mean?” I asked.
- She made no answer.
- “Do you mean it must be ‘No’?”
- She nodded.
- “But” I said, and my whole soul was full of accusations.
- “I know,” she said. “I can’t explain. I can’t. But it has to be ‘No!’ It
- can’t be. It’s utterly, finally, for ever impossible.... Keep your hands
- still!”
- “But,” I said, “when we met again--”
- “I can’t marry. I can’t and won’t.”
- She stood up. “Why did you talk?” she cried, “couldn’t you SEE?”
- She seemed to have something it was impossible to say.
- She came to the table beside my bed and pulled the Michaelmas daisies
- awry. “Why did you talk like that?” she said in a tone of infinite
- bitterness. “To begin like that!”
- “But what is it?” I said. “Is it some circumstance--my social position?”
- “Oh, DAMN your social position!” she cried.
- She went and stood at the further window, staring out at the rain. For
- a long time we were absolutely still. The wind and rain came in little
- gusts upon the pane. She turned to me abruptly.
- “You didn’t ask me if I loved you,” she said.
- “Oh, if it’s THAT!” said I.
- “It’s not that,” she said. “But if you want to know--” She paused.
- “I do,” she said.
- We stared at one another.
- “I do--with all my heart, if you want to know.”
- “Then, why the devil--?” I asked.
- She made no answer. She walked across the room to the piano and began
- to play, rather noisily and rapidly, with odd gusts of emphasis,
- the shepherd’s pipe music from the last act in “Tristan and Isolde.”
- Presently she missed a note, failed again, ran her finger heavily up the
- scale, struck the piano passionately with her fist, making a feeble jar
- in the treble, jumped up, and went out of the room....
- The nurse found me still wearing my helmet of bandages, partially
- dressed, and pottering round the room to find the rest of my clothes.
- I was in a state of exasperated hunger for Beatrice, and I was too
- inflamed and weakened to conceal the state of my mind. I was feebly
- angry because of the irritation of dressing, and particularly of the
- struggle to put on my trousers without being able to see my legs. I was
- staggering about, and once I had fallen over a chair and I had upset the
- jar of Michaelmas daisies.
- I must have been a detestable spectacle. “I’ll go back to bed,” said I,
- “if I may have a word with Miss Beatrice. I’ve got something to say to
- her. That’s why I’m dressing.”
- My point was conceded, but there were long delays. Whether the household
- had my ultimatum or whether she told Beatrice directly I do not know,
- and what Lady Osprey can have made of it in the former case I don’t
- imagine.
- At last Beatrice came and stood by my bedside. “Well?” she said.
- “All I want to say,” I said with the querulous note of a misunderstood
- child, “is that I can’t take this as final. I want to see you and talk
- when I’m better, and write. I can’t do anything now. I can’t argue.”
- I was overtaken with self-pity and began to snivel, “I can’t rest. You
- see? I can’t do anything.”
- She sat down beside me again and spoke softly. “I promise I will talk
- it all over with you again. When you are well. I promise I will meet you
- somewhere so that we can talk. You can’t talk now.
- “I asked you not to talk now. All you want to know you shall know... Will
- that do?”
- “I’d like to know”
- She looked round to see the door was closed, stood up and went to it.
- Then she crouched beside me and began whispering very softly and rapidly
- with her face close to me.
- “Dear,” she said, “I love you. If it will make you happy to marry me, I
- will marry you. I was in a mood just now--a stupid, inconsiderate mood.
- Of course I will marry you. You are my prince, my king. Women are such
- things of mood--or I would have behaved differently. We say ‘No’ when we
- mean ‘Yes’--and fly into crises. So now, Yes--yes--yes. I will. I can’t
- even kiss you. Give me your hand to kiss that. Understand, I am yours.
- Do you understand? I am yours just as if we had been married fifty
- years. Your wife--Beatrice. Is that enough? Now--now will you rest?”
- “Yes,” I said, “but why?”
- “There are complications. There are difficulties. When you are better
- you will be able to--understand them. But now they don’t matter. Only
- you know this must be secret--for a time. Absolutely secret between us.
- Will you promise that?”
- “Yes,” I said, “I understand. I wish I could kiss you.”
- She laid her head down beside mine for a moment and then she kissed my
- hand.
- “I don’t care what difficulties there are,” I said, and I shut my eyes.
- VII
- But I was only beginning to gauge the unaccountable elements in
- Beatrice. For a week after my return to Lady Grove I had no sign of
- her, and then she called with Lady Osprey and brought a huge bunch of
- perennial sunflowers and Michaelmas daisies, “just the old flowers there
- were in your room,” said my aunt, with a relentless eye on me. I didn’t
- get any talk alone with Beatrice then, and she took occasion to tell us
- she was going to London for some indefinite number of weeks. I couldn’t
- even pledge her to write to me, and when she did it was a brief,
- enigmatical, friendly letter with not a word of the reality between us.
- I wrote back a love letter--my first love letter--and she made no reply
- for eight days. Then came a scrawl: “I can’t write letters. Wait till we
- can talk. Are you better?”
- I think the reader would be amused if he could see the papers on my desk
- as I write all this, the mangled and disfigured pages, the experimental
- arrangements of notes, the sheets of suggestions balanced in
- constellations, the blottesque intellectual battlegrounds over which
- I have been fighting. I find this account of my relations to Beatrice
- quite the most difficult part of my story to write. I happen to be a
- very objective-minded person, I forget my moods, and this was so much an
- affair of moods. And even such moods and emotions as I recall are very
- difficult to convey. To me it is about as difficult as describing a
- taste or a scent.
- Then the objective story is made up of little things that are difficult
- to set in a proper order. And love in an hysterical passion, now high,
- now low, now exalted, and now intensely physical. No one has ever yet
- dared to tell a love story completely, its alternations, its comings and
- goings, its debased moments, its hate. The love stories we tell, tell
- only the net consequence, the ruling effect....
- How can I rescue from the past now the mystical quality of Beatrice; my
- intense longing for her; the overwhelming, irrational, formless desire?
- How can I explain how intimately that worship mingled with a high,
- impatient resolve to make her mine, to take her by strength and courage,
- to do my loving in a violent heroic manner? And then the doubts, the
- puzzled arrest at the fact of her fluctuations, at her refusal to marry
- me, at the fact that even when at last she returned to Bedley Corner she
- seemed to evade me?
- That exasperated me and perplexed me beyond measure.
- I felt that it was treachery. I thought of every conceivable
- explanation, and the most exalted and romantic confidence in her did not
- simply alternate, but mingled with the basest misgivings.
- And into the tangle of memories comes the figure of Carnaby, coming
- out slowly from the background to a position of significance, as an
- influence, as a predominant strand in the nets that kept us apart, as a
- rival. What were the forces that pulled her away from me when it was
- so clearly manifest she loved me? Did she think of marrying him? Had
- I invaded some long-planned scheme? It was evident he did not like me,
- that in some way I spoilt the world for him. She returned to Bedley
- Corner, and for some weeks she was flitting about me, and never once
- could I have talk with her alone. When she came to my sheds Carnaby was
- always with her, jealously observant. (Why the devil couldn’t she send
- him about his business?) The days slipped by and my anger gathered.
- All this mingles with the making of Lord Roberts B. I had resolved upon
- that one night as I lay awake at Bedley Corner; I got it planned out
- before the bandages were off my face. I conceived this second navigable
- balloon in a grandiose manner. It was to be a second Lord Roberts A,
- only more so; it was to be three times as big, large enough to carry
- three men, and it was to be an altogether triumphant vindication of my
- claims upon the air. The framework was to be hollow like a bird’s bones,
- airtight, and the air pumped in or out, and the weight of fuel I carried
- changed. I talked much and boasted to Cothope--whom I suspected
- of scepticisms about this new type--of what it would do, and it
- progressed--slowly. It progressed slowly because I was restless and
- uncertain. At times I would go away to London to snatch some chance of
- seeing Beatrice there, at times nothing but a day of gliding and hard
- and dangerous exercise would satisfy me. And now in the newspapers, in
- conversation, in everything about me, arose a new invader of my mental
- states. Something was happening to the great schemes of my uncle’s
- affairs; people were beginning to doubt, to question. It was the first
- quiver of his tremendous insecurity, the first wobble of that gigantic
- credit top he had kept spinning so long.
- There were comings and goings, November and December slipped by. I
- had two unsatisfactory meetings with Beatrice, meetings that had no
- privacy--in which we said things of the sort that need atmosphere,
- baldly and furtively. I wrote to her several times and she wrote back
- notes that I would sometimes respond to altogether, sometimes condemn as
- insincere evasions. “You don’t understand. I can’t just now explain. Be
- patient with me. Leave things a little while to me.” She wrote.
- I would talk aloud to these notes and wrangle over them in my
- workroom--while the plans of Lord Roberts B waited.
- “You don’t give me a chance!” I would say. “Why don’t you let me
- know the secret? That’s what I’m for--to settle difficulties! to tell
- difficulties to!”
- And at last I could hold out no longer against these accumulating
- pressures.
- I took an arrogant, outrageous line that left her no loopholes; I
- behaved as though we were living in a melodrama.
- “You must come and talk to me,” I wrote, “or I will come and take you. I
- want you--and the time runs away.”
- We met in a ride in the upper plantations. It must have been early in
- January, for there was snow on the ground and on the branches of the
- trees. We walked to and fro for an hour or more, and from the first I
- pitched the key high in romance and made understandings impossible. It
- was our worst time together. I boasted like an actor, and she, I know
- not why, was tired and spiritless.
- Now I think over that talk in the light of all that has happened since,
- I can imagine how she came to me full of a human appeal I was too
- foolish to let her make. I don’t know. I confess I have never completely
- understood Beatrice. I confess I am still perplexed at many things she
- said and did. That afternoon, anyhow, I was impossible. I posed and
- scolded. I was--I said it--for “taking the Universe by the throat!”
- “If it was only that,” she said, but though I heard, I did not heed her.
- At last she gave way to me and talked no more. Instead she looked
- at me--as a thing beyond her controlling, but none the less
- interesting--much as she had looked at me from behind the skirts of Lady
- Drew in the Warren when we were children together.
- Once even I thought she smiled faintly.
- “What are the difficulties” I cried, “there’s no difficulty I will not
- overcome for you! Do your people think I’m no equal for you? Who says
- it? My dear, tell me to win a title! I’ll do it in five years!...
- “Here am I just grown a man at the sight of you. I have wanted something
- to fight for. Let me fight for you!...
- “I’m rich without intending it. Let me mean it, give me an honourable
- excuse for it, and I’ll put all this rotten old Warren of England at
- your feet!”
- I said such things as that. I write them down here in all their
- resounding base pride. I said these empty and foolish things, and they
- are part of me. Why should I still cling to pride and be ashamed? I
- shouted her down.
- I passed from such megalomania to petty accusations.
- “You think Carnaby is a better man than I?” I said.
- “No!” she cried, stung to speech. “No!”
- “You think we’re unsubstantial. You’ve listened to all these rumours
- Boom has started because we talked of a newspaper of our own. When you
- are with me you know I’m a man; when you get away from me you think I’m
- a cheat and a cad.... There’s not a word of truth in the things they say
- about us. I’ve been slack. I’ve left things. But we have only to exert
- ourselves. You do not know how wide and far we have spread our nets.
- Even now we have a coup--an expedition--in hand. It will put us on a
- footing.”...
- Her eyes asked mutely and asked in vain that I would cease to boast of
- the very qualities she admired in me.
- In the night I could not sleep for thinking of that talk and the vulgar
- things I had said in it. I could not understand the drift my mind had
- taken. I was acutely disgusted. And my unwonted doubts about myself
- spread from a merely personal discontent to our financial position.
- It was all very well to talk as I had done of wealth and power and
- peerages, but what did I know nowadays of my uncle’s position? Suppose
- in the midst of such boasting and confidence there came some turn I did
- not suspect, some rottenness he had concealed from me? I resolved I had
- been playing with aeronautics long enough; that next morning I would go
- to him and have things clear between us.
- I caught an early train and went up to the Hardingham.
- I went up to the Hardingham through a dense London fog to see how things
- really stood. Before I had talked to my uncle for ten minutes I felt
- like a man who has just awakened in a bleak, inhospitable room out of a
- grandiose dream.
- CHAPTER THE FOURTH
- HOW I STOLE THE HEAPS OF QUAP FROM MORDET ISLAND
- I
- “We got to make a fight for it,” said my uncle. “We got to face the
- music!”
- I remember that even at the sight of him I had a sense of impending
- calamity. He sat under the electric light with the shadow of his hair
- making bars down his face. He looked shrunken, and as though his skin
- had suddenly got loose and yellow. The decorations of the room seemed
- to have lost freshness, and outside the blinds were up--there was not so
- much fog as a dun darkness. One saw the dingy outlines of the chimneys
- opposite quite distinctly, and then a sky of such brown as only London
- can display.
- “I saw a placard,” I said: “‘More Ponderevity.’”
- “That’s Boom,” he said. “Boom and his damned newspapers. He’s trying to
- fight me down. Ever since I offered to buy the Daily Decorator he’s
- been at me. And he thinks consolidating Do Ut cut down the ads. He wants
- everything, damn him! He’s got no sense of dealing. I’d like to bash his
- face!”
- “Well,” I said, “what’s to be done?”
- “Keep going,” said my uncle.
- “I’ll smash Boom yet,” he said, with sudden savagery.
- “Nothing else?” I asked.
- “We got to keep going. There’s a scare on. Did you notice the rooms?
- Half the people out there this morning are reporters. And if I talk they
- touch it up!... They didn’t used to touch things up! Now they put in
- character touches--insulting you. Don’t know what journalism’s coming
- to. It’s all Boom’s doing.”
- He cursed Lord Boom with considerable imaginative vigour.
- “Well,” said I, “what can he do?”
- “Shove us up against time, George; make money tight for us. We been
- handling a lot of money--and he tightens us up.”
- “We’re sound?”
- “Oh, we’re sound, George. Trust me for that! But all the same--There’s
- such a lot of imagination in these things.... We’re sound enough. That’s
- not it.”
- He blew. “Damn Boom!” he said, and his eyes over his glasses met mine
- defiantly.
- “We can’t, I suppose, run close hauled for a bitstop expenditure?”
- “Where?”
- “Well,--Crest Hill”
- “What!” he shouted. “Me stop Crest Hill for Boom!” He waved a fist as if
- to hit his inkpot, and controlled himself with difficulty. He spoke at
- last in a reasonable voice. “If I did,” he said, “he’d kick up a fuss.
- It’s no good, even if I wanted to. Everybody’s watching the place. If I
- was to stop building we’d be down in a week.”
- He had an idea. “I wish I could do something to start a strike or
- something. No such luck. Treat those workmen a sight too well. No, sink
- or swim, Crest Hill goes on until we’re under water.”
- I began to ask questions and irritated him instantly.
- “Oh, dash these explanations, George!” he cried; “You only make things
- look rottener than they are. It’s your way. It isn’t a case of figures.
- We’re all right--there’s only one thing we got to do.”
- “Yes?”
- “Show value, George. That’s where this quap comes in; that’s why I fell
- in so readily with what you brought to me week before last. Here we are,
- we got our option on the perfect filament, and all we want’s canadium.
- Nobody knows there’s more canadium in the world than will go on the
- edge of a sixpence except me and you. Nobody has an idee the perfect
- filament’s more than just a bit of theorising. Fifty tons of quap and
- we’d turn that bit of theorising into something. We’d make the lamp
- trade sit on its tail and howl. We’d put Ediswan and all of ‘em into a
- parcel without last year’s trousers and a hat, and swap ‘em off for a
- pot of geraniums. See? We’d do it through Business Organisations, and
- there you are! See? Capern’s Patent Filament!
- “The Ideal and the Real! George, we’ll do it! We’ll bring it off! And
- then we’ll give such a facer to Boom, he’ll think for fifty years. He’s
- laying up for our London and African meeting. Let him. He can turn the
- whole paper on to us. He says the Business Organisations shares aren’t
- worth fifty-two and we quote ‘em at eighty-four. Well, here we are
- gettin’ ready for him--loading our gun.”
- His pose was triumphant.
- “Yes,” I said, “that’s all right. But I can’t help thinking where should
- we be if we hadn’t just by accident got Capern’s Perfect Filament.
- Because, you know it was an accident--my buying up that.”
- He crumpled up his nose into an expression of impatient distaste at my
- unreasonableness.
- “And after all, the meeting’s in June, and you haven’t begun to get the
- quap! After all, we’ve still got to load our gun.”
- “They start on Toosday.”
- “Have they got the brig?”
- “They’ve got a brig.”
- “Gordon-Nasmyth!” I doubted.
- “Safe as a bank,” he said. “More I see of that man the more I like him.
- All I wish is we’d got a steamer instead of a sailing ship.”
- “And,” I went on, “you seem to overlook what used to weigh with us a
- bit. This canadium side of the business and the Capern chance has
- rushed you off your legs. After all--it’s stealing, and in its way an
- international outrage. They’ve got two gunboats on the coast.”
- I jumped up and went and stared out at the fog.
- “And, by Jove, it’s about our only chance! I didn’t dream.”
- I turned on him. “I’ve been up in the air,” I said.
- “Heaven knows where I haven’t been. And here’s our only chance--and you
- give it to that adventurous lunatic to play in his own way--in a brig!”
- “Well, you had a voice--”
- “I wish I’d been in this before. We ought to have run out a steamer to
- Lagos or one of those West Coast places and done it from there. Fancy a
- brig in the channel at this time of year, if it blows southwest!”
- “I dessay you’d have shoved it, George. Still you know, George.... I
- believe in him.”
- “Yes,” I said. “Yes, I believe in him, too. In a way. Still--”
- We took up a telegram that was lying on his desk and opened it. His
- face became a livid yellow. He put the flimsy paper down with a slow,
- reluctant movement and took off his glasses.
- “George,” he said, “the luck’s against us.”
- “What?”
- He grimaced with his mouth--in the queerest way at the telegram.
- “That.”
- I took it up and read:
- “Motor smash compound fracture of the leg gordon nasmyth what price
- mordet now”
- For a moment neither of us spoke.
- “That’s all right,” I said at last.
- “Eh?” said my uncle.
- “I’M going. I’ll get that quap or bust.”
- II
- I had a ridiculous persuasion that I was “saving the situation.”
- “I’m going,” I said quite consciously and dramatically. I saw the whole
- affair--how shall I put it?--in American colours.
- I sat down beside him. “Give me all the data you’ve got,” I said, “and
- I’ll pull this thing off.”
- “But nobody knows exactly where--”
- “Nasmyth does, and he’ll tell me.”
- “He’s been very close,” said my uncle, and regarded me.
- “He’ll tell me all right, now he’s smashed.”
- He thought. “I believe he will.”
- “George,” he said, “if you pull this thing off--Once or twice before
- you’ve stepped in--with that sort of Woosh of yours--”
- He left the sentence unfinished.
- “Give me that note-book,” I said, “and tell me all you know. Where’s the
- ship? Where’s Pollack? And where’s that telegram from? If that quap’s
- to be got, I’ll get it or bust. If you’ll hold on here until I get back
- with it.”...
- And so it was I jumped into the wildest adventure of my life.
- I requisitioned my uncle’s best car forthwith. I went down that night
- to the place of despatch named on Nasmyth’s telegram, Bampton S.O. Oxon,
- routed him out with a little trouble from that centre, made things right
- with him and got his explicit directions; and I was inspecting the Maud
- Mary with young Pollack, his cousin and aide, the following afternoon.
- She was rather a shock to me and not at all in my style, a beast of a
- brig inured to the potato trade, and she reeked from end to end with the
- faint, subtle smell of raw potatoes so that it prevailed even over the
- temporary smell of new paint. She was a beast of a brig, all hold and
- dirty framework, and they had ballasted her with old iron and old
- rails and iron sleepers, and got a miscellaneous lot of spades and iron
- wheelbarrows against the loading of the quap. I thought her over with
- Pollack, one of those tall blond young men who smoke pipes and don’t
- help much, and then by myself, and as a result I did my best to sweep
- Gravesend clean of wheeling planks, and got in as much cord and small
- rope as I could for lashing. I had an idea we might need to run up a
- jetty. In addition to much ballast she held, remotely hidden in a sort
- of inadvertent way a certain number of ambiguous cases which I didn’t
- examine, but which I gathered were a provision against the need of a
- trade.
- The captain was a most extraordinary creature, under the impression we
- were after copper ore; he was a Roumanian Jew, with twitching, excitable
- features, who had made his way to a certificate after some preliminary
- naval experiences in the Black Sea. The mate was an Essex man of
- impenetrable reserve. The crew were astoundingly ill-clad and destitute
- and dirty; most of them youths, unwashed, out of colliers. One, the cook
- was a mulatto; and one, the best-built fellow of them all, was a Breton.
- There was some subterfuge about our position on board--I forget the
- particulars now--I was called the supercargo and Pollack was the
- steward. This added to the piratical flavour that insufficient funds and
- Gordon-Nasmyth’s original genius had already given the enterprise.
- Those two days of bustle at Gravesend, under dingy skies, in narrow,
- dirty streets, were a new experience for me. It is like nothing else in
- my life. I realised that I was a modern and a civilised man. I found
- the food filthy and the coffee horrible; the whole town stank in my
- nostrils, the landlord of the Good Intent on the quay had a stand-up
- quarrel with us before I could get even a hot bath, and the bedroom
- I slept in was infested by a quantity of exotic but voracious flat
- parasites called locally “bugs,” in the walls, in the woodwork,
- everywhere. I fought them with insect powder, and found them comatose
- in the morning. I was dipping down into the dingy underworld of the
- contemporary state, and I liked it no better than I did my first dip
- into it when I stayed with my Uncle Nicodemus Frapp at the bakery at
- Chatham--where, by-the-by, we had to deal with cockroaches of a smaller,
- darker variety, and also with bugs of sorts.
- Let me confess that through all this time before we started I was
- immensely self-conscious, and that Beatrice played the part of audience
- in my imagination throughout. I was, as I say, “saving the situation,”
- and I was acutely aware of that. The evening before we sailed, instead
- of revising our medicine-chest as I had intended, I took the car and
- ran across country to Lady Grove to tell my aunt of the journey I was
- making, dress, and astonish Lady Osprey by an after dinner call.
- The two ladies were at home and alone beside a big fire that seemed
- wonderfully cheerful after the winter night. I remember the effect of
- the little parlour in which they sat as very bright and domestic. Lady
- Osprey, in a costume of mauve and lace, sat on a chintz sofa and played
- an elaborately spread-out patience by the light of a tall shaded lamp;
- Beatrice, in a whiteness that showed her throat, smoked a cigarette
- in an armchair and read with a lamp at her elbow. The room was
- white-panelled and chintz-curtained. About those two bright centres of
- light were warm dark shadow, in which a circular mirror shone like a
- pool of brown water. I carried off my raid by behaving like a slave of
- etiquette. There were moments when I think I really made Lady Osprey
- believe that my call was an unavoidable necessity, that it would have
- been negligent of me not to call just how and when I did. But at the
- best those were transitory moments.
- They received me with disciplined amazement. Lady Osprey was interested
- in my face and scrutinised the scar. Beatrice stood behind
- her solicitude. Our eyes met, and in hers I could see startled
- interrogations.
- “I’m going,” I said, “to the west coast of Africa.”
- They asked questions, but it suited my mood to be vague.
- “We’ve interests there. It is urgent I should go. I don’t know when I
- may return.”
- After that I perceived Beatrice surveyed me steadily.
- The conversation was rather difficult. I embarked upon lengthy thanks
- for their kindness to me after my accident. I tried to understand Lady
- Osprey’s game of patience, but it didn’t appear that Lady Osprey was
- anxious for me to understand her patience. I came to the verge of taking
- my leave.
- “You needn’t go yet,” said Beatrice, abruptly.
- She walked across to the piano, took a pile of music from the cabinet
- near, surveyed Lady Osprey’s back, and with a gesture to me dropped it
- all deliberately on to the floor.
- “Must talk,” she said, kneeling close to me as I helped her to pick it
- up. “Turn my pages. At the piano.”
- “I can’t read music.”
- “Turn my pages.”
- Presently we were at the piano, and Beatrice was playing with noisy
- inaccuracy. She glanced over her shoulder and Lady Osprey had resumed
- her patience. The old lady was very pink, and appeared to be absorbed in
- some attempt to cheat herself without our observing it.
- “Isn’t West Africa a vile climate?” “Are you going to live there?” “Why
- are you going?”
- Beatrice asked these questions in a low voice and gave me no chance to
- answer. Then taking a rhythm from the music before her, she said--
- “At the back of the house is a garden--a door in the wall--on the lane.
- Understand?”
- I turned over the pages without any effect on her playing.
- “When?” I asked.
- She dealt in chords. “I wish I COULD play this!” she said. “Midnight.”
- She gave her attention to the music for a time.
- “You may have to wait.”
- “I’ll wait.”
- She brought her playing to an end by--as school boys say--“stashing it
- up.”
- “I can’t play to-night,” she said, standing up and meeting my eyes. “I
- wanted to give you a parting voluntary.”
- “Was that Wagner, Beatrice?” asked Lady Osprey looking up from her
- cards. “It sounded very confused.”
- I took my leave. I had a curious twinge of conscience as I parted from
- Lady Osprey. Either a first intimation of middle-age or my inexperience
- in romantic affairs was to blame, but I felt a very distinct objection
- to the prospect of invading this good lady’s premises from the garden
- door. I motored up to the pavilion, found Cothope reading in bed,
- told him for the first time of West Africa, spent an hour with him in
- settling all the outstanding details of Lord Roberts B, and left that
- in his hands to finish against my return. I sent the motor back to Lady
- Grove, and still wearing my fur coat--for the January night was damp and
- bitterly cold--walked to Bedley Corner. I found the lane to the back of
- the Dower House without any difficulty, and was at the door in the wall
- with ten minutes to spare. I lit a cigar and fell to walking up and
- down. This queer flavour of intrigue, this nocturnal garden-door
- business, had taken me by surprise and changed my mental altitudes.
- I was startled out of my egotistical pose and thinking intently of
- Beatrice, of that elfin quality in her that always pleased me, that
- always took me by surprise, that had made her for example so instantly
- conceive this meeting.
- She came within a minute of midnight; the door opened softly and she
- appeared, a short, grey figure in a motor-coat of sheepskin, bareheaded
- to the cold drizzle. She flitted up to me, and her eyes were shadows in
- her dusky face.
- “Why are you going to West Africa?” she asked at once.
- “Business crisis. I have to go.”
- “You’re not going--? You’re coming back?”
- “Three or four months,” I said, “at most.”
- “Then, it’s nothing to do with me?”
- “Nothing,” I said. “Why should it have?”
- “Oh, that’s all right. One never knows what people think or what people
- fancy.” She took me by the arm, “Let’s go for a walk,” she said.
- I looked about me at darkness and rain.
- “That’s all right,” she laughed. “We can go along the lane and into the
- Old Woking Road. Do you mind? Of course you don’t. My head. It doesn’t
- matter. One never meets anybody.”
- “How do you know?”
- “I’ve wandered like this before.... Of course. Did you think”--she
- nodded her head back at her home--“that’s all?”
- “No, by Jove!” I cried; “it’s manifest it isn’t.”
- She took my arm and turned me down the lane. “Night’s my time,” she
- said by my side. “There’s a touch of the werewolf in my blood. One never
- knows in these old families.... I’ve wondered often.... Here we are,
- anyhow, alone in the world. Just darkness and cold and a sky of clouds
- and wet. And we--together.
- “I like the wet on my face and hair, don’t you? When do you sail?”
- I told her to-morrow.
- “Oh, well, there’s no to-morrow now. You and I!” She stopped and
- confronted me.
- “You don’t say a word except to answer!”
- “No,” I said.
- “Last time you did all the talking.”
- “Like a fool. Now--”
- We looked at each other’s two dim faces. “You’re glad to be here?”
- “I’m glad--I’m beginning to be--it’s more than glad.”
- She put her hands on my shoulders and drew me down to kiss her.
- “Ah!” she said, and for a moment or so we just clung to one another.
- “That’s all,” she said, releasing herself. “What bundles of clothes we
- are to-night. I felt we should kiss some day again. Always. The last
- time was ages ago.”
- “Among the fern stalks.”
- “Among the bracken. You remember. And your lips were cold. Were mine?
- The same lips--after so long--after so much!... And now let’s trudge
- through this blotted-out world together for a time. Yes, let me take
- your arm. Just trudge. See? Hold tight to me because I know the way--and
- don’t talk--don’t talk. Unless you want to talk.... Let me tell you
- things! You see, dear, the whole world is blotted out--it’s dead and
- gone, and we’re in this place. This dark wild place.... We’re dead. Or
- all the world is dead. No! We’re dead. No one can see us. We’re shadows.
- We’ve got out of our positions, out of our bodies--and together. That’s
- the good thing of it--together. But that’s why the world can’t see us
- and why we hardly see the world. Sssh! Is it all right?”
- “It’s all right,” I said.
- We stumbled along for a time in a close silence. We passed a dim-lit,
- rain-veiled window.
- “The silly world,” she said, “the silly world! It eats and sleeps.
- If the wet didn’t patter so from the trees we’d hear it snoring. It’s
- dreaming such stupid things--stupid judgments. It doesn’t know we are
- passing, we two--free of it--clear of it. You and I!”
- We pressed against each other reassuringly.
- “I’m glad we’re dead,” she whispered. “I’m glad we’re dead. I was tired
- of it, dear. I was so tired of it, dear, and so entangled.”
- She stopped abruptly.
- We splashed through a string of puddles. I began to remember things I
- had meant to say.
- “Look here!” I cried. “I want to help you beyond measure. You are
- entangled. What is the trouble? I asked you to marry me. You said you
- would. But there’s something.”
- My thoughts sounded clumsy as I said them.
- “Is it something about my position?... Or is it
- something--perhaps--about some other man?”
- There was an immense assenting silence.
- “You’ve puzzled me so. At first--I mean quite early--I thought you meant
- to make me marry you.”
- “I did.”
- “And then?”
- “To-night,” she said after a long pause, “I can’t explain. No! I can’t
- explain. I love you! But--explanations! To-night my dear, here we are in
- the world alone--and the world doesn’t matter. Nothing matters. Here I
- am in the cold with you and my bed away there deserted. I’d tell you--I
- will tell you when things enable me to tell you, and soon enough they
- will. But to-night--I won’t--I won’t.”
- She left my side and went in front of me.
- She turned upon me. “Look here,” she said, “I insist upon your being
- dead. Do you understand? I’m not joking. To-night you and I are out
- of life. It’s our time together. There may be other times, but this we
- won’t spoil. We’re--in Hades if you like. Where there’s nothing to
- hide and nothing to tell. No bodies even. No bothers. We loved each
- other--down there--and were kept apart, but now it doesn’t matter. It’s
- over.... If you won’t agree to that--I will go home.”
- “I wanted,” I began.
- “I know. Oh! my dear, if you’d only understand I understand. If you’d
- only not care--and love me to-night.”
- “I do love you,” I said.
- “Then LOVE me,” she answered, “and leave all the things that bother you.
- Love me! Here I am!”
- “But!--”
- “No!” she said.
- “Well, have your way.”
- So she carried her point, and we wandered into the night together and
- Beatrice talked to me of love....
- I’d never heard a woman before in all my life who could talk of love,
- who could lay bare and develop and touch with imagination all that mass
- of fine emotion every woman, it may be, hides. She had read of love,
- she had thought of love, a thousand sweet lyrics had sounded through her
- brain and left fine fragments in her memory; she poured it out, all
- of it, shamelessly, skilfully, for me. I cannot give any sense of that
- talk, I cannot even tell how much of the delight of it was the magic of
- her voice, the glow of her near presence. And always we walked swathed
- warmly through a chilly air, along dim, interminable greasy roads--with
- never a soul abroad it seemed to us, never a beast in the fields.
- “Why do people love each other?” I said.
- “Why not?”
- “But why do I love you? Why is your voice better than any voice, your
- face sweeter than any face?”
- “And why do I love you?” she asked; “not only what is fine in you,
- but what isn’t? Why do I love your dullness, your arrogance? For I do.
- To--night I love the very raindrops on the fur of your coat!”...
- So we talked; and at last very wet, still glowing but a little tired,
- we parted at the garden door. We had been wandering for two hours in our
- strange irrational community of happiness, and all the world about us,
- and particularly Lady Osprey and her household, had been asleep--and
- dreaming of anything rather than Beatrice in the night and rain.
- She stood in the doorway, a muffled figure with eyes that glowed.
- “Come back,” she whispered. “I shall wait for you.”
- She hesitated.
- She touched the lapel of my coat. “I love you NOW,” she said, and lifted
- her face to mine.
- I held her to me and was atremble from top to toe. “O God!” I cried.
- “And I must go!”
- She slipped from my arms and paused, regarding me. For an instant the
- world seemed full of fantastic possibilities.
- “Yes, GO!” she said, and vanished and slammed the door upon me, leaving
- me alone like a man new fallen from fairyland in the black darkness of
- the night.
- III
- That expedition to Mordet Island stands apart from all the rest of my
- life, detached, a piece by itself with an atmosphere of its own. It
- would, I suppose, make a book by itself--it has made a fairly voluminous
- official report--but so far as this novel of mine goes it is merely an
- episode, a contributory experience, and I mean to keep it at that.
- Vile weather, an impatient fretting against unbearable slowness
- and delay, sea--sickness, general discomfort and humiliating
- self--revelation are the master values of these memories.
- I was sick all through the journey out. I don’t know why. It was the
- only time I was ever sea-sick, and I have seen some pretty bad weather
- since I became a boat-builder. But that phantom smell of potatoes was
- peculiarly vile to me. Coming back on the brig we were all ill, every
- one of us, so soon as we got to sea, poisoned, I firmly believe, by
- quap. On the way out most of the others recovered in a few days, but the
- stuffiness below, the coarse food, the cramped dirty accommodation kept
- me, if not actually sea-sick, in a state of acute physical wretchedness
- the whole time. The ship abounded in cockroaches and more intimate
- vermin. I was cold all the time until after we passed Cape Verde, then
- I became steamily hot; I had been too preoccupied with Beatrice and my
- keen desire to get the Maud Mary under way at once, to consider a proper
- wardrobe for myself, and in particular I lacked a coat. Heavens! how I
- lacked that coat! And, moreover, I was cooped up with two of the worst
- bores in Christendom, Pollack and the captain. Pollack, after conducting
- his illness in a style better adapted to the capacity of an opera house
- than a small compartment, suddenly got insupportably well and breezy,
- and produced a manly pipe in which he smoked a tobacco as blond as
- himself, and divided his time almost equally between smoking it and
- trying to clean it. “There’s only three things you can clean a pipe
- with,” he used to remark with a twist of paper in hand. “The best’s a
- feather, the second’s a straw, and the third’s a girl’s hairpin. I never
- see such a ship. You can’t find any of ‘em. Last time I came this way
- I did find hairpins anyway, and found ‘em on the floor of the captain’s
- cabin. Regular deposit. Eh?... Feelin’ better?”
- At which I usually swore.
- “Oh, you’ll be all right soon. Don’t mind my puffin’ a bit? Eh?”
- He never tired of asking me to “have a hand at Nap. Good game. Makes you
- forget it, and that’s half the battle.”
- He would sit swaying with the rolling of the ship and suck at his pipe
- of blond tobacco and look with an inexpressibly sage but somnolent blue
- eye at the captain by the hour together. “Captain’s a Card,” he would
- say over and over again as the outcome of these meditations. “He’d like
- to know what we’re up to. He’d like to know--no end.”
- That did seem to be the captain’s ruling idea. But he also wanted to
- impress me with the notion that he was a gentleman of good family and to
- air a number of views adverse to the English, to English literature, to
- the English constitution, and the like.
- He had learnt the sea in the Roumanian navy, and English out of a book;
- he would still at times pronounce the e’s at the end of “there”
- and “here”; he was a naturalised Englishman, and he drove me into a
- reluctant and uncongenial patriotism by his everlasting carping at
- things English. Pollack would set himself to “draw him out.” Heaven
- alone can tell how near I came to murder.
- Fifty-three days I had outward, cooped up with these two and a shy and
- profoundly depressed mate who read the Bible on Sundays and spent the
- rest of his leisure in lethargy, three and fifty days of life cooped up
- in a perpetual smell, in a persistent sick hunger that turned from the
- sight of food, in darkness, cold and wet, in a lightly ballasted ship
- that rolled and pitched and swayed. And all the time the sands in the
- hour-glass of my uncle’s fortunes were streaming out. Misery! Amidst it
- all I remember only one thing brightly, one morning of sunshine in the
- Bay of Biscay and a vision of frothing waves, sapphire green, a bird
- following our wake and our masts rolling about the sky. Then wind and
- rain close in on us again.
- You must not imagine they were ordinary days, days, I mean, of an
- average length; they were not so much days as long damp slabs of time
- that stretched each one to the horizon, and much of that length was
- night. One paraded the staggering deck in a borrowed sou’-wester hour
- after hour in the chilly, windy, splashing and spitting darkness, or
- sat in the cabin, bored and ill, and looked at the faces of those
- inseparable companions by the help of a lamp that gave smell rather than
- light. Then one would see going up, up, up, and then sinking down, down,
- down, Pollack, extinct pipe in mouth, humorously observant, bringing his
- mind slowly to the seventy-seventh decision that the captain was a Card,
- while the words flowed from the latter in a nimble incessant good.
- “Dis England eet is not a country aristocratic, no! Eet is a glorified
- bourgeoisie! Eet is plutocratic. In England dere is no aristocracy since
- de Wars of Roses. In the rest of Europe east of the Latins, yes; in
- England, no.
- “Eet is all middle-class, youra England. Everything you look at,
- middle-class. Respectable! Everything good--eet is, you say, shocking.
- Madame Grundy! Eet is all limited and computing and self-seeking. Dat is
- why your art is so limited, youra fiction, your philosophin, why you
- are all so inartistic. You want nothing but profit! What will pay! What
- would you?”...
- He had all those violent adjuncts to speech we Western Europeans have
- abandoned, shruggings of the shoulders, waving of the arms, thrusting
- out of the face, wonderful grimaces and twiddlings of the hands under
- your nose until you wanted to hit them away. Day after day it went on,
- and I had to keep any anger to myself, to reserve myself for the time
- ahead when it would be necessary to see the quap was got aboard and
- stowed--knee deep in this man’s astonishment. I knew he would make a
- thousand objections to all we had before us. He talked like a drugged
- man. It ran glibly over his tongue. And all the time one could see his
- seamanship fretting him, he was gnawed by responsibility, perpetually
- uneasy about the ship’s position, perpetually imagining dangers. If a
- sea hit us exceptionally hard he’d be out of the cabin in an instant
- making an outcry of inquiries, and he was pursued by a dread of the
- hold, of ballast shifting, of insidious wicked leaks. As we drew near
- the African coast his fear of rocks and shoals became infectious.
- “I do not know dis coast,” he used to say. “I cama hera because
- Gordon-Nasmyth was coming too. Den he does not come!”
- “Fortunes of war,” I said, and tried to think in vain if any motive but
- sheer haphazard could have guided Gordon-Nasmyth in the choice of these
- two men. I think perhaps Gordon-Nasmyth had the artistic temperament and
- wanted contrasts, and also that the captain helped him to express his
- own malignant Anti-Britishism.
- He was indeed an exceptionally inefficient captain. On the whole I was
- glad I had come even at the eleventh hour to see to things.
- (The captain, by-the-by, did at last, out of sheer nervousness, get
- aground at the end of Mordet’s Island, but we got off in an hour or so
- with a swell and a little hard work in the boat.)
- I suspected the mate of his opinion of the captain long before he
- expressed it. He was, I say, a taciturn man, but one day speech broke
- through him. He had been sitting at the table with his arms folded on
- it, musing drearily, pipe in mouth, and the voice of the captain drifted
- down from above.
- The mate lifted his heavy eyes to me and regarded me for a moment.
- Then he began to heave with the beginnings of speech. He disembarrassed
- himself of his pipe. I cowered with expectation. Speech was coming at
- last. Before he spoke he nodded reassuringly once or twice.
- “E--”
- He moved his head strangely and mysteriously, but a child might have
- known he spoke of the captain.
- “E’s a foreigner.”
- He regarded me doubtfully for a time, and at last decided for the sake
- of lucidity to clench the matter.
- “That’s what E is--a DAGO!”
- He nodded like a man who gives a last tap to a nail, and I could see
- he considered his remark well and truly laid. His face, though still
- resolute, became as tranquil and uneventful as a huge hall after a
- public meeting has dispersed out of it, and finally he closed and locked
- it with his pipe.
- “Roumanian Jew, isn’t he?” I said.
- He nodded darkly and almost forbiddingly.
- More would have been too much. The thing was said. But from that time
- forth I knew I could depend upon him and that he and I were friends. It
- happens I never did have to depend upon him, but that does not affect
- our relationship.
- Forward the crew lived lives very much after the fashion of ours, more
- crowded, more cramped and dirty, wetter, steamier, more verminous. The
- coarse food they had was still not so coarse but that they did not think
- they were living “like fighting cocks.” So far as I could make out
- they were all nearly destitute men; hardly any of them had a proper
- sea outfit, and what small possessions they had were a source of mutual
- distrust. And as we pitched and floundered southward they gambled and
- fought, were brutal to one another, argued and wrangled loudly, until we
- protested at the uproar.
- There’s no romance about the sea in a small sailing ship as I saw it.
- The romance is in the mind of the landsman dreamer. These brigs and
- schooners and brigantines that still stand out from every little port
- are relics from an age of petty trade, as rotten and obsolescent as
- a Georgian house that has sunken into a slum. They are indeed just
- floating fragments of slum, much as icebergs are floating fragments of
- glacier. The civilised man who has learnt to wash, who has developed
- a sense of physical honour, of cleanly temperate feeding, of time, can
- endure them no more. They pass, and the clanking coal-wasting steamers
- will follow them, giving place to cleaner, finer things....
- But so it was I made my voyage to Africa, and came at last into a world
- of steamy fogs and a hot smell of vegetable decay, and into sound and
- sight of surf and distant intermittent glimpses of the coast. I lived
- a strange concentrated life through all that time, such a life as a
- creature must do that has fallen in a well. All my former ways ceased,
- all my old vistas became memories.
- The situation I was saving was very small and distant now; I felt its
- urgency no more. Beatrice and Lady Grove, my uncle and the Hardingham,
- my soaring in the air and my habitual wide vision of swift effectual
- things, became as remote as if they were in some world I had left for
- ever....
- IV
- All these African memories stand by themselves. It was for me an
- expedition into the realms of undisciplined nature out of the world that
- is ruled by men, my first bout with that hot side of our mother that
- gives you the jungle--that cold side that gives you the air-eddy I was
- beginning to know passing well. They are memories woven upon a fabric
- of sunshine and heat and a constant warm smell of decay. They end
- in rain--such rain as I had never seen before, a vehement, a frantic
- downpouring of water, but our first slow passage through the channels
- behind Mordet’s Island was in incandescent sunshine.
- There we go in my memory still, a blistered dirty ship with patched
- sails and a battered mermaid to present Maud Mary, sounding and taking
- thought between high ranks of forest whose trees come out knee-deep
- at last in the water. There we go with a little breeze on our quarter,
- Mordet Island rounded and the quap, it might be within a day of us.
- Here and there strange blossoms woke the dank intensities of green with
- a trumpet call of colour. Things crept among the jungle and peeped and
- dashed back rustling into stillness. Always in the sluggishly drifting,
- opaque water were eddyings and stirrings; little rushes of bubbles came
- chuckling up light-heartedly from this or that submerged conflict and
- tragedy; now and again were crocodiles like a stranded fleet of logs
- basking in the sun. Still it was by day, a dreary stillness broken only
- by insect sounds and the creaking and flapping of our progress, by the
- calling of the soundings and the captain’s confused shouts; but in
- the night as we lay moored to a clump of trees the darkness brought a
- thousand swampy things to life and out of the forest came screaming and
- howlings, screaming and yells that made us glad to be afloat. And once
- we saw between the tree stems long blazing fires. We passed two or three
- villages landward, and brown-black women and children came and stared at
- us and gesticulated, and once a man came out in a boat from a creek and
- hailed us in an unknown tongue; and so at last we came to a great open
- place, a broad lake rimmed with a desolation of mud and bleached refuse
- and dead trees, free from crocodiles or water birds or sight or sound
- of any living thing, and saw far off, even as Nasmyth had described, the
- ruins of the deserted station, and hard by two little heaps of buff-hued
- rubbish under a great rib of rock, the quap! The forest receded. The
- land to the right of us fell away and became barren, and far on across
- notch in its backbone was surf and the sea.
- We took the ship in towards those heaps and the ruined jetty slowly and
- carefully. The captain came and talked.
- “This is eet?” he said.
- “Yes,” said I.
- “Is eet for trade we have come?”
- This was ironical.
- “No,” said I.
- “Gordon-Nasmyth would haf told me long ago what it ees for we haf come.”
- “I’ll tell you now,” I said. “We are going to lay in as close as we can
- to those two heaps of stuff--you see them?--under the rock. Then we are
- going to chuck all our ballast overboard and take those in. Then we’re
- going home.”
- “May I presume to ask--is eet gold?”
- “No,” I said incivilly, “it isn’t.”
- “Then what is it?”
- “It’s stuff--of some commercial value.”
- “We can’t do eet,” he said.
- “We can,” I answered reassuringly.
- “We can’t,” he said as confidently. “I don’t mean what you mean. You
- know so liddle--But--dis is forbidden country.”
- I turned on him suddenly angry and met bright excited eyes. For a minute
- we scrutinised one another. Then I said, “That’s our risk. Trade is
- forbidden. But this isn’t trade.... This thing’s got to be done.”
- His eyes glittered and he shook his head....
- The brig stood in slowly through the twilight toward this strange
- scorched and blistered stretch of beach, and the man at the wheel
- strained his ears to listening the low-voiced angry argument that began
- between myself and the captain, that was presently joined by Pollack. We
- moored at last within a hundred yards of our goal, and all through our
- dinner and far into the night we argued intermittently and fiercely with
- the captain about our right to load just what we pleased. “I will haf
- nothing to do with eet,” he persisted. “I wash my hands.” It seemed that
- night as though we argued in vain. “If it is not trade,” he said, “it
- is prospecting and mining. That is worse. Any one who knows
- anything--outside England--knows that is worse.”
- We argued and I lost my temper and swore at him. Pollack kept cooler and
- chewed his pipe watchfully with that blue eye of his upon the captain’s
- gestures. Finally I went on deck to cool. The sky was overcast I
- discovered all the men were in a knot forward, staring at the faint
- quivering luminosity that had spread over the heaps of quap, a
- phosphorescence such as one sees at times on rotting wood. And about
- the beach east and west there were patches and streaks of something like
- diluted moonshine....
- In the small hours I was still awake and turning over scheme after
- scheme in my mind whereby I might circumvent the captain’s opposition. I
- meant to get that quap aboard if I had to kill some one to do it. Never
- in my life had I been so thwarted! After this intolerable voyage! There
- came a rap at my cabin door and then it opened and I made out a bearded
- face. “Come in,” I said, and a black voluble figure I could just see
- obscurely came in to talk in my private ear and fill my cabin with its
- whisperings and gestures. It was the captain. He, too, had been awake
- and thinking things over. He had come to explain--enormously. I lay
- there hating him and wondering if I and Pollack could lock him in
- his cabin and run the ship without him. “I do not want to spoil dis
- expedition,” emerged from a cloud of protestations, and then I was able
- to disentangle “a commission--shush a small commission--for special
- risks!” “Special risks” became frequent. I let him explain himself out.
- It appeared he was also demanding an apology for something I had said.
- No doubt I had insulted him generously. At last came definite offers. I
- broke my silence and bargained.
- “Pollack!” I cried and hammered the partition.
- “What’s up?” asked Pollack.
- I stated the case concisely.
- There came a silence.
- “He’s a Card,” said Pollack. “Let’s give him his commission. I don’t
- mind.”
- “Eh?” I cried.
- “I said he was a Card, that’s all,” said Pollack. “I’m coming.”
- He appeared in my doorway a faint white figure joined our vehement
- whisperings.
- We had to buy the captain off; we had to promise him ten per cent. of
- our problematical profits. We were to give him ten per cent. on what we
- sold the cargo for over and above his legitimate pay, and I found in my
- out-bargained and disordered state small consolation in the thought that
- I, as the Gordon-Nasmyth expedition, was to sell the stuff to myself as
- Business Organisations. And he further exasperated me by insisting on
- having our bargain in writing. “In the form of a letter,” he insisted.
- “All right,” I acquiesced, “in the form of a letter. Here goes! Get a
- light!”
- “And the apology,” he said, folding up the letter.
- “All right,” I said; “Apology.”
- My hand shook with anger as I wrote, and afterwards I could not sleep
- for hate of him. At last I got up. I suffered, I found, from an unusual
- clumsiness. I struck my toe against my cabin door, and cut myself as I
- shaved. I found myself at last pacing the deck under the dawn in a
- mood of extreme exasperation. The sun rose abruptly and splashed light
- blindingly into my eyes and I swore at the sun. I found myself imagining
- fresh obstacles with the men and talking aloud in anticipatory rehearsal
- of the consequent row.
- The malaria of the quap was already in my blood.
- V
- Sooner or later the ridiculous embargo that now lies upon all the coast
- eastward of Mordet Island will be lifted and the reality of the deposits
- of quap ascertained. I am sure that we were merely taking the outcrop
- of a stratum of nodulated deposits that dip steeply seaward. Those heaps
- were merely the crumbled out contents of two irregular cavities in the
- rock; they are as natural as any talus or heap of that kind, and the
- mud along the edge of the water for miles is mixed with quap, and is
- radio-active and lifeless and faintly phosphorescent at night. But the
- reader will find the full particulars of my impression of all this in
- the Geological Magazine for October, 1905, and to that I must refer him.
- There, too, he will find my unconfirmed theories of its nature. If I am
- right it is something far more significant from the scientific point
- of view than those incidental constituents of various rare metals,
- pitchblende, rutile, and the like, upon which the revolutionary
- discoveries of the last decade are based. Those are just little
- molecular centres of disintegration, of that mysterious decay and
- rotting of those elements, elements once regarded as the most stable
- things in nature. But there is something--the only word that comes near
- it is CANCEROUS--and that is not very near, about the whole of quap,
- something that creeps and lives as a disease lives by destroying; an
- elemental stirring and disarrangement, incalculably maleficent and
- strange.
- This is no imaginative comparison of mine. To my mind radio-activity
- is a real disease of matter. Moreover, it is a contagious disease. It
- spreads. You bring those debased and crumbling atoms near others and
- those too presently catch the trick of swinging themselves out of
- coherent existence. It is in matter exactly what the decay of our old
- culture is in society, a loss of traditions and distinctions and assured
- reactions. When I think of these inexplicable dissolvent centres that
- have come into being in our globe--these quap heaps are surely by far
- the largest that have yet been found in the world; the rest as yet mere
- specks in grains and crystals--I am haunted by a grotesque fancy of the
- ultimate eating away and dry-rotting and dispersal of all our world. So
- that while man still struggles and dreams his very substance will change
- and crumble from beneath him. I mention this here as a queer persistent
- fancy. Suppose, indeed, that is to be the end of our planet; no splendid
- climax and finale, no towering accumulation of achievements, but
- just--atomic decay! I add that to the ideas of the suffocating comet,
- the dark body out of space, the burning out of the sun, the distorted
- orbit, as a new and far more possible end--as Science can see ends--to
- this strange by-play of matter that we call human life. I do not believe
- this can be the end; no human soul can believe in such an end and go on
- living, but to it science points as a possible thing, science and reason
- alike. If single human beings--if one single ricketty infant--can be
- born as it were by accident and die futile, why not the whole race?
- These are questions I have never answered, that now I never attempt to
- answer, but the thought of quap and its mysteries brings them back to
- me.
- I can witness that the beach and mud for two miles or more either way
- was a lifeless beach--lifeless as I could have imagined no tropical mud
- could ever be, and all the dead branches and leaves and rotting dead
- fish and so forth that drifted ashore became presently shrivelled and
- white. Sometimes crocodiles would come up out of the water and bask, and
- now and then water birds would explore the mud and rocky ribs that rose
- out of it, in a mood of transitory speculation. That was its utmost
- admiration. And the air felt at once hot and austere, dry and
- blistering, and altogether different the warm moist embrace that had met
- us at our first African landfall and to which we had grown accustomed.
- I believe that the primary influence of the quap upon us was to increase
- the conductivity of our nerves, but that is a mere unjustifiable
- speculation on my part. At any rate it gave a sort of east wind effect
- to life. We all became irritable, clumsy, languid and disposed to
- be impatient with our languor. We moored the brig to the rocks with
- difficulty, and got aground on mud and decided to stick there and tow
- off when we had done--the bottom was as greasy as butter. Our efforts
- to fix up planks and sleepers in order to wheel the quap aboard were as
- ill-conceived as that sort of work can be--and that sort of work can at
- times be very ill-conceived. The captain had a superstitious fear of his
- hold: he became wildly gesticulatory and expository and incompetent at
- the bare thought of it. His shouts still echo in my memory, becoming as
- each crisis approached less and less like any known tongue.
- But I cannot now write the history of those days of blundering and toil:
- of how Milton, one of the boys, fell from a plank to the beach, thirty
- feet perhaps, with his barrow and broke his arm and I believe a rib,
- of how I and Pollack set the limb and nursed him through the fever that
- followed, of how one man after another succumbed to a feverish malaria,
- and how I--by virtue of my scientific reputation--was obliged to play
- the part of doctor and dose them with quinine, and then finding that
- worse than nothing, with rum and small doses of Easton’s Syrup, of which
- there chanced to be a case of bottles aboard--Heaven and Gordon-Nasmyth
- know why. For three long days we lay in misery and never shipped a
- barrow-load. Then, when they resumed, the men’s hands broke out into
- sores. There were no gloves available; and I tried to get them, while
- they shovelled and wheeled, to cover their hands with stockings
- or greased rags. They would not do this on account of the heat and
- discomfort. This attempt of mine did, however, direct their attention to
- the quap as the source of their illness and precipitated what in the
- end finished our lading, an informal strike. “We’ve had enough of this,”
- they said, and they meant it. They came aft to say as much. They cowed
- the captain.
- Through all these days the weather was variously vile, first a furnace
- heat under a sky of a scowling intensity of blue, then a hot fog that
- stuck in one’s throat like wool and turned the men on the planks into
- colourless figures of giants, then a wild burst of thunderstorms,
- mad elemental uproar and rain. Through it all, against illness, heat,
- confusion of mind, one master impetus prevailed with me, to keep the
- shipping going, to maintain one motif at least, whatever else arose
- or ceased, the chuff of the spades, the squeaking and shriek of the
- barrows, the pluppa, pluppa, pluppa, as the men came trotting along the
- swinging high planks, and then at last, the dollop, dollop, as the stuff
- shot into the hold. “Another barrow-load, thank God! Another
- fifteen hundred, or it may be two thousand pounds, for the saving of
- Ponderevo!...”
- I found out many things about myself and humanity in those weeks of
- effort behind Mordet Island. I understand now the heart of the sweater,
- of the harsh employer, of the nigger-driver. I had brought these
- men into a danger they didn’t understand, I was fiercely resolved to
- overcome their opposition and bend and use them for my purpose, and I
- hated the men. But I hated all humanity during the time that the quap
- was near me.
- And my mind was pervaded, too, by a sense of urgency and by the fear
- that we should be discovered and our proceedings stopped. I wanted to
- get out to sea again--to be beating up northward with our plunder. I was
- afraid our masts showed to seaward and might betray us to some curious
- passer on the high sea. And one evening near the end I saw a canoe
- with three natives far off down the lake; I got field-glasses from the
- captain and scrutinised them, and I could see them staring at us. One
- man might have been a half-breed and was dressed in white. They watched
- us for some time very quietly and then paddled off into some channel in
- the forest shadows.
- And for three nights running, so that it took a painful grip upon my
- inflamed imagination, I dreamt of my uncle’s face, only that it was
- ghastly white like a clown’s, and the throat was cut from ear to ear--a
- long ochreous cut. “Too late,” he said; “Too late!...”
- VI
- A day or so after we had got to work upon the quap I found myself so
- sleepless and miserable that the ship became unendurable. Just before
- the rush of sunrise I borrowed Pollack’s gun, walked down the planks,
- clambered over the quap heaps and prowled along the beach. I went
- perhaps a mile and a half that day and some distance beyond the ruins
- of the old station. I became interested in the desolation about me, and
- found when I returned that I was able to sleep for nearly an hour. It
- was delightful to have been alone for so long,--no captain, no Pollack,
- no one. Accordingly I repeated this expedition the next morning and the
- next until it became a custom with me. There was little for me to do
- once the digging and wheeling was organised, and so these prowlings of
- mine grew longer and longer, and presently I began to take food with me.
- I pushed these walks far beyond the area desolated by the quap. On the
- edges of that was first a zone of stunted vegetation, then a sort of
- swampy jungle that was difficult to penetrate, and then the beginnings
- of the forest, a scene of huge tree stems and tangled creeper ropes
- and roots mingled with oozy mud. Here I used to loaf in a state between
- botanising and reverie--always very anxious to know what was up above in
- the sunlight--and here it was I murdered a man.
- It was the most unmeaning and purposeless murder imaginable. Even as I
- write down its well-remembered particulars there comes again the sense
- of its strangeness, its pointlessness, its incompatibility with any of
- the neat and definite theories people hold about life and the meaning of
- the world. I did this thing and I want to tell of my doing it, but why I
- did it and particularly why I should be held responsible for it I cannot
- explain.
- That morning I had come upon a track in the forest, and it had occurred
- to me as a disagreeable idea that this was a human pathway. I didn’t
- want to come upon any human beings. The less our expedition saw of the
- African population the better for its prospects. Thus far we had been
- singularly free from native pestering. So I turned back and was making
- my way over mud and roots and dead fronds and petals scattered from the
- green world above when abruptly I saw my victim.
- I became aware of him perhaps forty feet off standing quite still and
- regarding me.
- He wasn’t by any means a pretty figure. He was very black and naked
- except for a dirty loin-cloth, his legs were ill-shaped and his toes
- spread wide and the upper edge of his cloth and a girdle of string cut
- his clumsy abdomen into folds. His forehead was low, his nose very
- flat and his lower lip swollen and purplish-red. His hair was short and
- fuzzy, and about his neck was a string and a little purse of skin. He
- carried a musket, and a powder-flask was stuck in his girdle. It was a
- curious confrontation. There opposed to him stood I, a little soiled,
- perhaps, but still a rather elaborately civilised human being, born,
- bred and trained in a vague tradition. In my hand was an unaccustomed
- gun. And each of us was essentially a teeming, vivid brain, tensely
- excited by the encounter, quite unaware of the other’s mental content or
- what to do with him.
- He stepped back a pace or so, stumbled and turned to run.
- “Stop,” I cried; “stop, you fool!” and started to run after him,
- shouting such things in English. But I was no match for him over the
- roots and mud.
- I had a preposterous idea. “He mustn’t get away and tell them!”
- And with that instantly I brought both feet together, raised my gun,
- aimed quite coolly, drew the trigger carefully and shot him neatly in
- the back.
- I saw, and saw with a leap of pure exaltation, the smash of my bullet
- between his shoulder blades. “Got him,” said I, dropping my gun and down
- he flopped and died without a groan. “By Jove!” I cried with note of
- surprise, “I’ve killed him!” I looked about me and then went forward
- cautiously, in a mood between curiosity and astonishment, to look at
- this man whose soul I had flung so unceremoniously out of our common
- world. I went to him, not as one goes to something one has made or done,
- but as one approaches something found.
- He was frightfully smashed out in front; he must have died in the
- instant. I stooped and raised him by his shoulder and realised that. I
- dropped him, and stood about and peered about me through the trees. “My
- word!” I said. He was the second dead human being--apart, I mean, from
- surgical properties and mummies and common shows of that sort--that I
- have ever seen. I stood over him wondering, wondering beyond measure.
- A practical idea came into that confusion. Had any one heard the gun?
- I reloaded.
- After a time I felt securer, and gave my mind again to the dead I had
- killed. What must I do?
- It occurred to me that perhaps I ought to bury him. At any rate, I ought
- to hide him. I reflected coolly, and then put my gun within easy reach
- and dragged him by the arm towards a place where the mud seemed soft,
- and thrust him in. His powder-flask slipped from his loin-cloth, and I
- went back to get it. Then I pressed him down with the butt of my rifle.
- Afterwards this all seemed to me most horrible, but at the time it was
- entirely a matter-of-fact transaction. I looked round for any other
- visible evidence of his fate, looked round as one does when one packs
- one’s portmanteau in an hotel bedroom.
- When I got my bearings, and carefully returned towards the ship. I had
- the mood of grave concentration of a boy who has lapsed into poaching.
- And the business only began to assume proper proportions for me as I
- got near the ship, to seem any other kind of thing than the killing of a
- bird or rabbit.
- In the night, however, it took on enormous and portentous forms. “By
- God!” I cried suddenly, starting wide awake; “but it was murder!”
- I lay after that wide awake, staring at my memories. In some odd way
- these visions mixed up with my dream of in my uncle in his despair.
- The black body which saw now damaged and partly buried, but which,
- nevertheless, I no longer felt was dead but acutely alive and
- perceiving, I mixed up with the ochreous slash under my uncle’s face. I
- tried to dismiss this horrible obsession from my mind, but it prevailed
- over all my efforts.
- The next day was utterly black with my sense of that ugly creature’s
- body. I am the least superstitious of men, but it drew me. It drew me
- back into those thickets to the very place where I had hidden him.
- Some evil and detestable beast had been at him, and he lay disinterred.
- Methodically I buried his swollen and mangled carcass again, and
- returned to the ship for another night of dreams. Next day for all the
- morning I resisted the impulse to go to him, and played nap with Pollack
- with my secret gnawing at me, and in the evening started to go and was
- near benighted. I never told a soul of them of this thing I had done.
- Next day I went early, and he had gone, and there were human footmarks
- and ugly stains round the muddy hole from which he had been dragged.
- I returned to the ship, disconcerted and perplexed. That day it was the
- men came aft, with blistered hands and faces, and sullen eyes. When they
- proclaimed, through Edwards, their spokesman, “We’ve had enough of this,
- and we mean it,” I answered very readily, “So have I. Let’s go.”
- VII
- We were none too soon. People had been reconnoitring us, the telegraph
- had been at work, and we were not four hours at sea before we ran
- against the gunboat that had been sent down the coast to look for us and
- that would have caught us behind the island like a beast in a trap. It
- was a night of driving cloud that gave intermittent gleams of moonlight;
- the wind and sea were strong and we were rolling along through a drift
- of rails and mist. Suddenly the world was white with moonshine. The
- gunboat came out as a long dark shape wallowing on the water to the
- east.
- She sighted the Maud Mary at once, and fired some sort of popgun to
- arrest us.
- The mate turned to me.
- “Shall I tell the captain?”
- “The captain be damned” said I, and we let him sleep through two hours
- of chase till a rainstorm swallowed us up. Then we changed our course
- and sailed right across them, and by morning only her smoke was showing.
- We were clear of Africa--and with the booty aboard I did not see what
- stood between us and home.
- For the first time since I had fallen sick in the Thames my spirits
- rose. I was sea-sick and physically disgusted, of course, but I felt
- kindly in spite of my qualms. So far as I could calculate then the
- situation was saved. I saw myself returning triumphantly into the
- Thames, and nothing on earth to prevent old Capern’s Perfect Filament
- going on the market in fortnight. I had the monopoly of electric lamps
- beneath my feet.
- I was released from the spell of that bloodstained black body all mixed
- up with grey-black mud. I was going back to baths and decent food and
- aeronautics and Beatrice. I was going back to Beatrice and my real life
- again--out of this well into which I had fallen. It would have needed
- something more than sea-sickness and quap fever to prevent my spirits
- rising.
- I told the captain that I agreed with him that the British were the scum
- of Europe, the westward drift of all the people, a disgusting rabble,
- and I lost three pounds by attenuated retail to Pollack at ha’penny nap
- and euchre.
- And then you know, as we got out into the Atlantic this side of Cape
- Verde, the ship began to go to pieces. I don’t pretend for one moment to
- understand what happened. But I think Greiffenhagen’s recent work on
- the effects of radium upon ligneous tissue does rather carry out my idea
- that emanations from quap have rapid rotting effect upon woody fibre.
- From the first there had been a different feel about the ship, and as
- the big winds and waves began to strain her she commenced leaking. Soon
- she was leaking--not at any particular point, but everywhere. She did
- not spring a leak, I mean, but water came in first of all near the
- decaying edges of her planks, and then through them.
- I firmly believe the water came through the wood. First it began to
- ooze, then to trickle. It was like trying to carry moist sugar in a thin
- paper bag. Soon we were taking in water as though we had opened a door
- in her bottom.
- Once it began, the thing went ahead beyond all fighting. For a day or
- so we did our best, and I can still remember in my limbs and back the
- pumping--the fatigue in my arms and the memory of a clear little dribble
- of water that jerked as one pumped, and of knocking off and the being
- awakened to go on again, and of fatigue piling up upon fatigue. At
- last we ceased to think of anything but pumping; one became a thing of
- torment enchanted, doomed to pump for ever. I still remember it as pure
- relief when at last Pollack came to me pipe in mouth.
- “The captain says the damned thing’s going down right now;” he remarked,
- chewing his mouthpiece. “Eh?”
- “Good idea!” I said. “One can’t go on pumping for ever.”
- And without hurry or alacrity, sullenly and wearily we got into the
- boats and pulled away from the Maud Mary until we were clear of her,
- and then we stayed resting on our oars, motionless upon a glassy sea,
- waiting for her to sink. We were all silent, even the captain was silent
- until she went down. And then he spoke quite mildly in an undertone.
- “Dat is the first ship I haf ever lost.... And it was not a fair game!
- It wass not a cargo any man should take. No!”
- I stared at the slow eddies that circled above the departed Maud Mary,
- and the last chance of Business Organisations. I felt weary beyond
- emotion. I thought of my heroics to Beatrice and my uncle, of my prompt
- “I’LL go,” and of all the ineffectual months I had spent after this
- headlong decision. I was moved to laughter at myself and fate.
- But the captain and the men did not laugh. The men scowled at me and
- rubbed their sore and blistered hands, and set themselves to row....
- As all the world knows we were picked up by the Union Castle liner,
- Portland Castle.
- The hairdresser aboard was a wonderful man, and he even improvised me a
- dress suit, and produced a clean shirt and warm underclothing. I had a
- hot bath, and dressed and dined and drank a bottle of Burgundy.
- “Now,” I said, “are there any newspapers? I want to know what’s been
- happening in the world.”
- My steward gave me what he had, but I landed at Plymouth still largely
- ignorant of the course of events. I shook off Pollack, and left the
- captain and mate in an hotel, and the men in a Sailor’s Home until I
- could send to pay them off, and I made my way to the station.
- The newspapers I bought, the placards I saw, all England indeed
- resounded to my uncle’s bankruptcy.
- BOOK THE FOURTH
- THE AFTERMATH OF TONO-BUNGAY
- CHAPTER THE FIRST
- THE STICK OF THE ROCKET
- I
- That evening I talked with my uncle in the Hardingham for the last time.
- The atmosphere of the place had altered quite shockingly. Instead of the
- crowd of importunate courtiers there were just half a dozen uninviting
- men, journalists waiting for an interview. Ropper the big commissionaire
- was still there, but now indeed he was defending my uncle from something
- more than time-wasting intrusions. I found the little man alone in the
- inner office pretending to work, but really brooding. He was looking
- yellow and deflated.
- “Lord!” he said at the sight of me. “You’re lean, George. It makes that
- scar of yours show up.”
- We regarded each other gravely for a time.
- “Quap,” I said, “is at the bottom of the Atlantic. There’s some
- bills--We’ve got to pay the men.”
- “Seen the papers?”
- “Read ‘em all in the train.”
- “At bay,” he said. “I been at bay for a week.... Yelping round me....
- And me facing the music. I’m feelin’ a bit tired.”
- He blew and wiped his glasses.
- “My stomack isn’t what it was,” he explained. “One finds it--these
- times. How did it all happen, George? Your Marconigram--it took me in
- the wind a bit.”
- I told him concisely. He nodded to the paragraphs of my narrative and at
- the end he poured something from a medicine bottle into a sticky little
- wineglass and drank it. I became aware of the presence of drugs, of
- three or four small bottles before him among his disorder of papers, of
- a faint elusively familiar odour in the room.
- “Yes,” he said, wiping his lips and recorking the bottle. “You’ve done
- your best, George. The luck’s been against us.”
- He reflected, bottle in hand. “Sometimes the luck goes with you and
- sometimes it doesn’t. Sometimes it doesn’t. And then where are you?
- Grass in the oven! Fight or no fight.”
- He asked a few questions and then his thoughts came back to his own
- urgent affairs. I tried to get some comprehensive account of the
- situation from him, but he would not give it.
- “Oh, I wish I’d had you. I wish I’d had you, George. I’ve had a lot on
- my hands. You’re clear headed at times.”
- “What has happened?”
- “Oh! Boom!--infernal things.”
- “Yes, but--how? I’m just off the sea, remember.”
- “It’d worry me too much to tell you now. It’s tied up in a skein.”
- He muttered something to himself and mused darkly, and roused himself to
- say--
- “Besides--you’d better keep out of it. It’s getting tight. Get ‘em
- talking. Go down to Crest Hill and fly. That’s YOUR affair.”
- For a time his manner set free queer anxieties in my brain again.
- I will confess that that Mordet Island nightmare of mine returned,
- and as I looked at him his hand went out for the drug again. “Stomach,
- George,” he said.
- “I been fightin’ on that. Every man fights on some thing--gives way
- somewheres--head, heart, liver--something. Zzzz. Gives way somewhere.
- Napoleon did at last. All through the Waterloo campaign, his stomach--it
- wasn’t a stomach! Worse than mine, no end.”
- The mood of depression passed as the drug worked within him. His eyes
- brightened. He began to talk big. He began to dress up the situation for
- my eyes, to recover what he had admitted to me. He put it as a retreat
- from Russia. There were still the chances of Leipzig.
- “It’s a battle, George--a big fight. We’re fighting for millions.
- I’ve still chances. There’s still a card or so. I can’t tell all my
- plans--like speaking on the stroke.”
- “You might,” I began.
- “I can’t, George. It’s like asking to look at some embryo. You got to
- wait. I know. In a sort of way, I know. But to tell it--No! You been
- away so long. And everything’s got complicated.”
- My perception of disastrous entanglements deepened with the rise of his
- spirits. It was evident that I could only help to tie him up in whatever
- net was weaving round his mind by forcing questions and explanations
- upon him. My thoughts flew off at another angle. “How’s Aunt Susan?”
- said I.
- I had to repeat the question. His busy whispering lips stopped for a
- moment, and he answered in the note of one who repeats a formula.
- “She’d like to be in the battle with me. She’d like to be here in
- London. But there’s corners I got to turn alone.” His eye rested for a
- moment on the little bottle beside him. “And things have happened.
- “You might go down now and talk to her,” he said, in a directer voice.
- “I shall be down to-morrow night, I think.”
- He looked up as though he hoped that would end our talk.
- “For the week-end?” I asked.
- “For the week-end. Thank God for week-ends, George!”
- II
- My return home to Lady Grove was a very different thing from what I had
- anticipated when I had got out to sea with my load of quap and fancied
- the Perfect-Filament was safe within my grasp. As I walked through the
- evening light along the downs, the summer stillness seemed like the
- stillness of something newly dead. There were no lurking workmen any
- more, no cyclists on the high road.
- Cessation was manifest everywhere. There had been, I learnt from my
- aunt, a touching and quite voluntary demonstration when the Crest Hill
- work had come to an end and the men had drawn their last pay; they had
- cheered my uncle and hooted the contractors and Lord Boom.
- I cannot now recall the manner in which my aunt and I greeted one
- another. I must have been very tired there, but whatever impression was
- made has gone out of my memory. But I recall very clearly how we sat at
- the little round table near the big window that gave on the terrace, and
- dined and talked. I remember her talking of my uncle.
- She asked after him, and whether he seemed well. “I wish I could help,”
- she said. “But I’ve never helped him much, never. His way of doing
- things was never mine. And since--since--. Since he began to get so
- rich, he’s kept things from me. In the old days--it was different....
- “There he is--I don’t know what he’s doing. He won’t have me near
- him....
- “More’s kept from me than anyone. The very servants won’t let me know.
- They try and stop the worst of the papers--Boom’s things--from coming
- upstairs.... I suppose they’ve got him in a corner, George. Poor old
- Teddy! Poor old Adam and Eve we are! Ficial Receivers with flaming
- swords to drive us out of our garden! I’d hoped we’d never have another
- Trek. Well--anyway, it won’t be Crest Hill.... But it’s hard on Teddy.
- He must be in such a mess up there. Poor old chap. I suppose we
- can’t help him. I suppose we’d only worry him. Have some more soup
- George--while there is some?...”
- The next day was one of those days of strong perception that stand out
- clear in one’s memory when the common course of days is blurred. I can
- recall now the awakening in the large familiar room that was always kept
- for me, and how I lay staring at its chintz-covered chairs, its spaced
- fine furniture, its glimpse of the cedars without, and thought that all
- this had to end.
- I have never been greedy for money, I have never wanted to be rich,
- but I felt now an immense sense of impending deprivation. I read the
- newspapers after breakfast--I and my aunt together--and then I walked
- up to see what Cothope had done in the matter of Lord Roberts B. Never
- before had I appreciated so acutely the ample brightness of the Lady
- Grove gardens, the dignity and wide peace of all about me. It was one
- of those warm mornings in late May that have won all the glory of summer
- without losing the gay delicacy of spring. The shrubbery was bright with
- laburnum and lilac, the beds swarmed with daffodils and narcissi and
- with lilies of the valley in the shade.
- I went along the well-kept paths among the rhododendra and through the
- private gate into the woods where the bluebells and common orchid were
- in profusion. Never before had I tasted so completely the fine sense
- of privilege and ownership. And all this has to end, I told myself, all
- this has to end.
- Neither my uncle nor I had made any provision for disaster; all we had
- was in the game, and I had little doubt now of the completeness of our
- ruin. For the first time in my life since he had sent me that
- wonderful telegram of his I had to consider that common anxiety of
- mankind,--Employment. I had to come off my magic carpet and walk once
- more in the world.
- And suddenly I found myself at the cross drives where I had seen
- Beatrice for the first time after so many years. It is strange, but so
- far as I can recollect I had not thought of her once since I had landed
- at Plymouth. No doubt she had filled the background of my mind, but I do
- not remember one definite, clear thought. I had been intent on my uncle
- and the financial collapse.
- It came like a blow in the face now; all that, too, had to end!
- Suddenly I was filled with the thought of her and a great longing for
- her. What would she do when she realised our immense disaster? What
- would she do? How would she take it? It filled me with astonishment to
- realise how little I could tell....
- Should I perhaps presently happen upon her?
- I went on through the plantations and out upon the downs, and thence I
- saw Cothope with a new glider of his own design soaring down wind to
- my old familiar “grounding” place. To judge by its long rhythm it was a
- very good glider. “Like Cothope’s cheek,” thought I, “to go on with the
- research. I wonder if he’s keeping notes.... But all this will have to
- stop.”
- He was sincerely glad to see me. “It’s been a rum go,” he said.
- He had been there without wages for a month, a man forgotten in the rush
- of events.
- “I just stuck on and did what I could with the stuff. I got a bit of
- money of my own--and I said to myself, ‘Well, here you are with the gear
- and no one to look after you. You won’t get such a chance again, my boy,
- not in all your born days. Why not make what you can with it? ’”
- “How’s Lord Roberts B?”
- Cothope lifted his eyebrows. “I’ve had to refrain,” he said. “But he’s
- looking very handsome.”
- “Gods!” I said, “I’d like to get him up just once before we smash. You
- read the papers? You know we’re going to smash?”
- “Oh! I read the papers. It’s scandalous, sir, such work as ours should
- depend on things like that. You and I ought to be under the State, sir,
- if you’ll excuse me.”
- “Nothing to excuse,” I said. “I’ve always been a Socialist--of a
- sort--in theory. Let’s go and have a look at him. How is he? Deflated?”
- “Just about quarter full. That last oil glaze of yours holds the gas
- something beautiful. He’s not lost a cubic metre a week.”...
- Cothope returned to Socialism as we went toward the sheds.
- “Glad to think you’re a Socialist, sir,” he said, “it’s the only
- civilised state. I been a Socialist some years--off the Clarion. It’s a
- rotten scramble, this world. It takes the things we make and invent and
- it plays the silly fool with ‘em. We scientific people, we’ll have to
- take things over and stop all this financing and advertisement and that.
- It’s too silly. It’s a noosance. Look at us!”
- Lord Roberts B, even in his partially deflated condition in his shed,
- was a fine thing to stare up at. I stood side by side with Cothope
- regarding him, and it was borne in upon me more acutely than ever that
- all this had to end. I had a feeling just like the feeling of a boy who
- wants to do wrong, that I would use up the stuff while I had it before
- the creditors descended. I had a queer fancy, too, I remember, that if I
- could get into the air it would advertise my return to Beatrice.
- “We’ll fill her,” I said concisely.
- “It’s all ready,” said Cothope, and added as an afterthought, “unless
- they cut off the gas.”...
- I worked and interested myself with Cothope all the morning and for a
- time forgot my other troubles. But the thought of Beatrice flooded me
- slowly and steadily. It became an unintelligent sick longing to see her.
- I felt that I could not wait for the filling of Lord Roberts B, that I
- must hunt her up and see her soon. I got everything forward and lunched
- with Cothope, and then with the feeblest excuses left him in order to
- prowl down through the woods towards Bedley Corner. I became a prey to
- wretched hesitations and diffidence. Ought I to go near her now? I asked
- myself, reviewing all the social abasements of my early years. At
- last, about five, I called at the Dower House. I was greeted by their
- Charlotte--with a forbidding eye and a cold astonishment.
- Both Beatrice and Lady Osprey were out.
- There came into my head some prowling dream of meeting her. I went along
- the lane towards Woking, the lane down which we had walked five months
- ago in the wind and rain.
- I mooned for a time in our former footsteps, then swore and turned back
- across the fields, and then conceived a distaste for Cothope and went
- Downward. At last I found myself looking down on the huge abandoned
- masses of the Crest Hill house.
- That gave my mind a twist into a new channel. My uncle came uppermost
- again. What a strange, melancholy emptiness of intention that stricken
- enterprise seemed in the even evening sunlight, what vulgar magnificence
- and crudity and utter absurdity! It was as idiotic as the pyramids. I
- sat down on the stile, staring at it as though I had never seen that
- forest of scaffold poles, that waste of walls and bricks and plaster and
- shaped stones, that wilderness of broken soil and wheeling tracks and
- dumps before. It struck me suddenly as the compactest image and sample
- of all that passes for Progress, of all the advertisement-inflated
- spending, the aimless building up and pulling down, the enterprise and
- promise of my age. This was our fruit, this was what he had done, I and
- my uncle, in the fashion of our time. We were its leaders and exponents,
- we were the thing it most flourishingly produced. For this futility in
- its end, for an epoch of such futility, the solemn scroll of history had
- unfolded....
- “Great God!” I cried, “but is this Life?”
- For this the armies drilled, for this the Law was administered and the
- prisons did their duty, for this the millions toiled and perished in
- suffering, in order that a few of us should build palaces we never
- finished, make billiard-rooms under ponds, run imbecile walls round
- irrational estates, scorch about the world in motor-cars, devise
- flying-machines, play golf and a dozen such foolish games of ball, crowd
- into chattering dinner parties, gamble and make our lives one vast,
- dismal spectacle of witless waste! So it struck me then, and for a time
- I could think of no other interpretation. This was Life! It came to me
- like a revelation, a revelation at once incredible and indisputable of
- the abysmal folly of our being.
- III
- I was roused from such thoughts by the sound of footsteps behind me.
- I turned half hopeful--so foolish is a lover’s imagination, and stopped
- amazed. It was my uncle. His face was white--white as I had seen it in
- my dream.
- “Hullo!” I said, and stared. “Why aren’t you in London?”
- “It’s all up,” he said....
- “Adjudicated?”
- “No!”
- I stared at him for a moment, and then got off the stile.
- We stood swaying and then came forward with a weak motion of his arms
- like a man who cannot see distinctly, and caught at and leant upon the
- stile. For a moment we were absolutely still. He made a clumsy gesture
- towards the great futility below and choked. I discovered that his face
- was wet with tears, that his wet glasses blinded him. He put up his
- little fat hand and clawed them off clumsily, felt inefficiently for his
- pocket-handkerchief, and then, to my horror, as he clung to me, he
- began to weep aloud, this little, old worldworn swindler. It wasn’t just
- sobbing or shedding tears, it was crying as a child cries. It was oh!
- terrible!
- “It’s cruel,” he blubbered at last. “They asked me questions. They KEP’
- asking me questions, George.”
- He sought for utterance, and spluttered.
- “The Bloody bullies!” he shouted. “The Bloody Bullies.”
- He ceased to weep. He became suddenly rapid and explanatory.
- “It’s not a fair game, George. They tire you out. And I’m not well. My
- stomach’s all wrong. And I been and got a cold. I always been li’ble to
- cold, and this one’s on my chest. And then they tell you to speak up.
- They bait you--and bait you, and bait you. It’s torture. The strain
- of it. You can’t remember what you said. You’re bound to contradict
- yourself. It’s like Russia, George.... It isn’t fair play.... Prominent
- man. I’ve been next at dinners with that chap, Neal; I’ve told him
- stories--and he’s bitter! Sets out to ruin me. Don’t ask a civil
- question--bellows.” He broke down again. “I’ve been bellowed at, I been
- bullied, I been treated like a dog. Dirty cads they are! Dirty cads!
- I’d rather be a Three-Card Sharper than a barrister; I’d rather sell
- cat’s-meat in the streets.
- “They sprung things on me this morning, things I didn’t expect. They
- rushed me! I’d got it all in my hands and then I was jumped. By Neal!
- Neal I’ve given city tips to! Neal! I’ve helped Neal....
- “I couldn’t swallow a mouthful--not in the lunch hour. I couldn’t face
- it. It’s true, George--I couldn’t face it. I said I’d get a bit of air
- and slipped out and down to the Embankment, and there I took a boat to
- Richmond. Some idee. I took a rowing boat when I got there and I rowed
- about on the river for a bit. A lot of chaps and girls there was on the
- bank laughed at my shirt-sleeves and top hat. Dessay they thought it was
- a pleasure trip. Fat lot of pleasure! I rowed round for a bit and came
- in. Then I came on here. Windsor way. And there they are in London doing
- what they like with me.... I don’t care!”
- “But” I said, looking down at him, perplexed.
- “It’s abscondin’. They’ll have a warrant.”
- “I don’t understand,” I said.
- “It’s all up, George--all up and over.
- “And I thought I’d live in that place, George and die a lord! It’s a
- great place, reely, an imperial--if anyone has the sense to buy it and
- finish it. That terrace--”
- I stood thinking him over.
- “Look here!” I said. “What’s that about--a warrant? Are you sure they’ll
- get a warrant? I’m sorry uncle; but what have you done?”
- “Haven’t I told you?”
- “Yes, but they won’t do very much to you for that. They’ll only bring
- you up for the rest of your examination.”
- He remained silent for a time. At last he spoke--speaking with
- difficulty.
- “It’s worse than that. I’ve done something. They’re bound to get it out.
- Practically they HAVE got it out.”
- “What?”
- “Writin’ things down--I done something.”
- For the first time in his life, I believe, he felt and looked ashamed.
- It filled me with remorse to see him suffer so.
- “We’ve all done things,” I said. “It’s part of the game the world makes
- us play. If they want to arrest you--and you’ve got no cards in your
- hand--! They mustn’t arrest you.”
- “No. That’s partly why I went to Richmond. But I never thought--”
- His little bloodshot eyes stared at Crest Hill.
- “That chap Wittaker Wright,” he said, “he had his stuff ready. I
- haven’t. Now you got it, George. That’s the sort of hole I’m in.”
- IV
- That memory of my uncle at the gate is very clear and full. I am able
- to recall even the undertow of my thoughts while he was speaking.
- I remember my pity and affection for him in his misery growing and
- stirring within me, my realisation that at any risk I must help him.
- But then comes indistinctness again. I was beginning to act. I know I
- persuaded him to put himself in my hands, and began at once to plan and
- do. I think that when we act most we remember least, that just in the
- measure that the impulse of our impressions translates itself into
- schemes and movements, it ceases to record itself in memories. I know
- I resolved to get him away at once, and to use the Lord Roberts B in
- effecting that. It was clear he was soon to be a hunted man, and it
- seemed to me already unsafe for him to try the ordinary Continental
- routes in his flight. I had to evolve some scheme, and evolve it
- rapidly, how we might drop most inconspicuously into the world across
- the water. My resolve to have one flight at least in my airship fitted
- with this like hand to glove. It seemed to me we might be able to cross
- over the water in the night, set our airship adrift, and turn up as
- pedestrian tourists in Normandy or Brittany, and so get away. That, at
- any rate, was my ruling idea.
- I sent off Cothope with a dummy note to Woking, because I did not want
- to implicate him, and took my uncle to the pavilion. I went down to my
- aunt, and made a clean breast of the situation. She became admirably
- competent. We went into his dressing-room and ruthlessly broke his
- locks. I got a pair of brown boots, a tweed suit and a cap of his,
- and indeed a plausible walking outfit, and a little game bag for his
- pedestrian gear; and, in addition, a big motoring overcoat and a supply
- of rugs to add to those I had at the pavilion. I also got a flask
- of brandy, and she made sandwiches. I don’t remember any servants
- appearing, and I forget where she got those sandwiches. Meanwhile we
- talked. Afterwards I thought with what a sure confidence we talked to
- each other.
- “What’s he done?” she said.
- “D’you mind knowing?”
- “No conscience left, thank God!”
- “I think--forgery!”
- There was just a little pause. “Can you carry this bundle?” she asked.
- I lifted it.
- “No woman ever has respected the law--ever,” she said. “It’s too
- silly.... The things it lets you do! And then pulls you up--like a mad
- nurse minding a child.”
- She carried some rugs for me through the shrubbery in the darkling.
- “They’ll think we’re going mooning,” she said, jerking her head at the
- household. “I wonder what they make of us--criminals.” ... An immense
- droning note came as if in answer to that. It startled us both for a
- moment. “The dears!” she said. “It’s the gong for dinner!... But I wish
- I could help little Teddy, George. It’s awful to think of him there with
- hot eyes, red and dry. And I know--the sight of me makes him feel sore.
- Things I said, George. If I could have seen, I’d have let him have an
- omnibusful of Scrymgeours. I cut him up. He’d never thought I meant it
- before.... I’ll help all I can, anyhow.”
- I turned at something in her voice, and got a moon light gleam of tears
- upon her face.
- “Could SHE have helped?” she asked abruptly.
- “SHE?”
- “That woman.”
- “My God!” I cried, “HELPED! Those--things don’t help!”
- “Tell me again what I ought to do,” she said after a silence.
- I went over the plans I had made for communicating, and the things I
- thought she might do. I had given her the address of a solicitor she
- might put some trust in.
- “But you must act for yourself,” I insisted.
- “Roughly,” I said, “it’s a scramble. You must get what you can for us,
- and follow as you can.”
- She nodded.
- She came right up to the pavilion and hovered for a time shyly, and then
- went away.
- I found my uncle in my sitting-room in an arm-chair, with his feet upon
- the fender of the gas stove, which he had lit, and now he was feebly
- drunken with my whisky, and very weary in body and spirit, and inclined
- to be cowardly.
- “I lef’ my drops,” he said.
- He changed his clothes slowly and unwillingly. I had to bully him, I had
- almost to shove him to the airship and tuck him up upon its wicker flat.
- Single-handed I made but a clumsy start; we scraped along the roof
- of the shed and bent a van of the propeller, and for a time I hung
- underneath without his offering a hand to help me to clamber up. If it
- hadn’t been for a sort of anchoring trolley device of Cothope’s, a sort
- of slip anchor running on a rail, we should never have got clear at all.
- V
- The incidents of our flight in Lord Roberts B do not arrange themselves
- in any consecutive order. To think of that adventure is like dipping
- haphazard into an album of views. One is reminded first of this and then
- of that. We were both lying down on a horizontal plate of basketwork;
- for Lord Roberts B had none of the elegant accommodation of a balloon. I
- lay forward, and my uncle behind me in such a position that he could
- see hardly anything of our flight. We were protected from rolling over
- simply by netting between the steel stays. It was impossible for us to
- stand up at all; we had either to lie or crawl on all fours over
- the basket work. Amidships were lockers made of Watson’s Aulite
- material,--and between these it was that I had put my uncle, wrapped in
- rugs. I wore sealskin motoring boots and gloves, and a motoring fur coat
- over my tweeds, and I controlled the engine by Bowden wires and levers
- forward.
- The early part of that night’s experience was made up of warmth, of
- moonlit Surrey and Sussex landscape, and of a rapid and successful
- flight, ascending and swooping, and then ascending again southward. I
- could not watch the clouds because the airship overhung me; I could not
- see the stars nor gauge the meteorological happening, but it was
- fairly clear to me that a wind shifting between north and northeast
- was gathering strength, and after I had satisfied myself by a series
- of entirely successful expansions and contractions of the real
- air-worthiness of Lord Roberts B, I stopped the engine to save my
- petrol, and let the monster drift, checking its progress by the dim
- landscape below. My uncle lay quite still behind me, saying little
- and staring in front of him, and I was left to my own thoughts and
- sensations.
- My thoughts, whatever they were, have long since faded out of memory,
- and my sensations have merged into one continuous memory of an
- countryside lying, as it seemed, under snow, with square patches of
- dimness, white phantoms of roads, rents and pools of velvety blackness,
- and lamp-jewelled houses. I remember a train boring its way like a
- hastening caterpillar of fire across the landscape, and how distinctly I
- heard its clatter. Every town and street was buttoned with street lamps.
- I came quite close to the South Downs near Lewes, and all the lights
- were out in the houses, and the people gone to bed. We left the land a
- little to the east of Brighton, and by that time Brighton was well abed.
- and the brightly lit sea-front deserted. Then I let out the gas chamber
- to its fullest extent and rose. I like to be high above water.
- I do not clearly know what happened in the night. I think I must have
- dozed, and probably my uncle slept. I remember that once or twice
- I heard him talking in an eager, muffled voice to himself, or to an
- imaginary court. But there can be no doubt the wind changed right round
- into the east, and that we were carried far down the Channel without any
- suspicion of the immense leeway we were making. I remember the kind of
- stupid perplexity with which I saw the dawn breaking over a grey waste
- of water, below, and realised that something was wrong. I was so stupid
- that it was only after the sunrise I really noticed the trend of the
- foam caps below, and perceived we were in a severe easterly gale. Even
- then, instead of heading southeasterly, I set the engine going, headed
- south, and so continued a course that must needs have either just hit
- Ushant, or carry us over the Bay of Biscay. I thought I was east of
- Cherbourg, when I was far to the west and stopped my engine in that
- belief, and then set it going again. I did actually sight the coast of
- Brittany to the southeast in the late afternoon, and that it was woke
- me up to the gravity of our position. I discovered it by accident in the
- southeast, when I was looking for it in the southwest. I turned about
- east and faced the wind for some time, and finding I had no chance in
- its teeth, went high, where it seemed less violent, and tried to make a
- course southeast. It was only then that I realised what a gale I was in.
- I had been going westward, and perhaps even in gusts north of west, at a
- pace of fifty or sixty miles an hour.
- Then I began what I suppose would be called a Fight against the east
- wind. One calls it a Fight, but it was really almost as unlike a fight
- as plain sewing. The wind tried to drive me westwardly, and I tried to
- get as much as I could eastwardly, with the wind beating and rocking us
- irregularly, but by no means unbearably, for about twelve hours. My
- hope lay in the wind abating, and our keeping in the air and eastward of
- Finisterre until it did, and the chief danger was the exhaustion of our
- petrol. It was a long and anxious and almost meditative time; we were
- fairly warm, and only slowly getting hungry, and except that my uncle
- grumbled a little and produced some philosophical reflections, and began
- to fuss about having a temperature, we talked very little. I was tired
- and sulky, and chiefly worried about the engine. I had to resist
- a tendency to crawl back and look at it. I did not care to risk
- contracting our gas chamber for fear of losing gas. Nothing was less
- like a fight. I know that in popular magazines, and so forth, all such
- occasions as this are depicted in terms of hysteria. Captains save their
- ships engineers complete their bridges, generals conduct their battles,
- in a state of dancing excitement, foaming recondite technicalities at
- the lips. I suppose that sort of thing works up the reader, but so far
- as it professes to represent reality, I am convinced it is all childish
- nonsense, schoolboys of fifteen, girls of eighteen, and literary men
- all their lives, may have these squealing fits, but my own experience
- is that most exciting scenes are not exciting, and most of the urgent
- moments in life are met by steady-headed men.
- Neither I nor my uncle spent the night in ejaculations, nor in humorous
- allusions, nor any of these things. We remained lumpish.
- My uncle stuck in his place and grumbled about his stomach, and
- occasionally rambled off into expositions of his financial position and
- denunciations of Neal--he certainly struck out one or two good phrases
- for Neal--and I crawled about at rare intervals in a vague sort of way
- and grunted, and our basketwork creaked continually, and the wind on our
- quarter made a sort of ruffled flapping in the wall of the gas chamber.
- For all our wraps we got frightfully cold as the night wore on.
- I must have dozed, and it was still dark when I realised with a
- start that we were nearly due south of, and a long way from, a
- regularly-flashing lighthouse, standing out before the glow of some
- great town, and then that the thing that had awakened me was the
- cessation of our engine, and that we were driving back to the west.
- Then, indeed, for a time I felt the grim thrill of life. I crawled
- forward to the cords of the release valves, made my uncle crawl forward
- too, and let out the gas until we were falling down through the air like
- a clumsy glider towards the vague greyness that was land.
- Something must have intervened here that I have forgotten.
- I saw the lights of Bordeaux when it was quite dark, a nebulous haze
- against black; of that I am reasonably sure. But certainly our fall
- took place in the cold, uncertain light of early dawn. I am, at least,
- equally sure of that. And Mimizan, near where we dropped, is fifty miles
- from Bordeaux, whose harbour lights I must have seen.
- I remember coming down at last with a curious indifference, and actually
- rousing myself to steer. But the actual coming to earth was exciting
- enough. I remember our prolonged dragging landfall, and the difficulty
- I had to get clear, and how a gust of wind caught Lord Roberts B as my
- uncle stumbled away from the ropes and litter, and dropped me heavily,
- and threw me on to my knees. Then came the realisation that the monster
- was almost consciously disentangling itself for escape, and then the
- light leap of its rebound. The rope slipped out of reach of my hand.
- I remember running knee-deep in a salt pool in hopeless pursuit of the
- airship.
- As it dragged and rose seaward, and how only after it had escaped my
- uttermost effort to recapture it, did I realise that this was quite the
- best thing that could have happened. It drove swiftly over the sandy
- dunes, lifting and falling, and was hidden by a clump of windbitten
- trees. Then it reappeared much further off, and still receding. It
- soared for a time, and sank slowly, and after that I saw it no more. I
- suppose it fell into the sea and got wetted with salt water and heavy,
- and so became deflated and sank.
- It was never found, and there was never a report of anyone seeing it
- after it escaped from me.
- VI
- But if I find it hard to tell the story of our long flight through the
- air overseas, at least that dawn in France stands cold and clear and
- full. I see again almost as if I saw once more with my bodily eyes
- the ridges of sand rising behind ridges of sand, grey and cold and
- black-browed, with an insufficient grass. I feel again the clear, cold
- chill of dawn, and hear the distant barking of a dog. I find myself
- asking again, “What shall we do now?” and trying to scheme with brain
- tired beyond measure.
- At first my uncle occupied my attention. He was shivering a good
- deal, and it was all I could do to resist my desire to get him into a
- comfortable bed at once. But I wanted to appear plausibly in this part
- of the world. I felt it would not do to turn up anywhere at dawn and
- rest, it would be altogether too conspicuous; we must rest until the day
- was well advanced, and then appear as road-stained pedestrians seeking
- a meal. I gave him most of what was left of the biscuits, emptied our
- flasks, and advised him to sleep, but at first it was too cold, albeit I
- wrapped the big fur rug around him.
- I was struck now by the flushed weariness of his face, and the look of
- age the grey stubble on his unshaved chin gave him. He sat crumpled up,
- shivering and coughing, munching reluctantly, but drinking eagerly, and
- whimpering a little, a dreadfully pitiful figure to me. But we had to go
- through with it; there was no way out for us.
- Presently the sun rose over the pines, and the sand grew rapidly warm.
- My uncle had done eating, and sat with his wrists resting on his knees,
- the most hopeless looking of lost souls.
- “I’m ill,” he said, “I’m damnably ill! I can feel it in my skin!”
- Then--it was horrible to me--he cried, “I ought to be in bed; I ought to
- be in bed... instead of flying about,” and suddenly he burst into tears.
- I stood up. “Go to sleep, man!” I said, and took the rug from him, and
- spread it out and rolled him up in it.
- “It’s all very well,” he protested; “I’m not young enough--”
- “Lift up your head,” I interrupted, and put his knapsack under it.
- “They’ll catch us here, just as much as in an inn,” he grumbled and then
- lay still.
- Presently, after a long time, I perceived he was asleep. His breath came
- with peculiar wheezings, and every now and again he would cough. I was
- very stiff and tired myself, and perhaps I dozed. I don’t remember. I
- remember only sitting, as it seemed, nigh interminably, beside him, too
- weary even to think in that sandy desolation.
- No one came near us; no creature, not even a dog. I roused myself at
- last, feeling that it was vain to seek to seem other than abnormal,
- and with an effort that was like lifting a sky of lead, we made our way
- through the wearisome sand to a farmhouse. There I feigned even a more
- insufficient French than I possess naturally, and let it appear that we
- were pedestrians from Biarritz who had lost our way along the shore and
- got benighted.
- This explained us pretty well, I thought, and we got most heartening
- coffee and a cart to a little roadside station. My uncle grew more
- and more manifestly ill with every stage of our journey. I got him to
- Bayonne, where he refused at first to eat, and was afterwards very sick,
- and then took him shivering and collapsed up a little branch line to a
- frontier place called Luzon Gare.
- We found one homely inn with two small bedrooms, kept by a kindly Basque
- woman. I got him to bed, and that night shared his room, and after an
- hour or so of sleep he woke up in a raging fever and with a wandering
- mind, cursing Neal and repeating long, inaccurate lists of figures. He
- was manifestly a case for a doctor, and in the morning we got one in.
- He was a young man from Montpelier, just beginning to practise, and very
- mysterious and technical and modern and unhelpful. He spoke of cold
- and exposure, and la grippe and pneumonia. He gave many explicit and
- difficult directions.... I perceived it devolved upon me to organise
- nursing and a sick-room. I installed a religieuse in the second bedroom
- of the inn, and took a room for myself in the inn of Port de Luzon, a
- quarter of a mile away.
- VII
- And now my story converges on what, in that queer corner of refuge
- out of the world, was destined to be my uncle’s deathbed. There is a
- background of the Pyrenees, of blue hills and sunlit houses, of the old
- castle of Luzon and a noisy cascading river, and for a foreground the
- dim, stuffy room whose windows both the religieuse and hostess
- conspired to shut, with its waxed floor, its four-poster bed, its
- characteristically French chairs and fireplace, its champagne bottles
- and dirty basins and used towels and packets of Somatose on the table.
- And in the sickly air of the confined space in behind the curtains
- of the bed lay my little uncle, with an effect of being enthroned and
- secluded, or sat up, or writhed and tossed in his last dealings of life.
- One went and drew back the edge of the curtains if one wanted to speak
- to him or look at him.
- Usually he was propped up against pillows, because so he breathed more
- easily. He slept hardly at all.
- I have a confused memory of vigils and mornings and afternoons spent by
- that bedside, and how the religieuse hovered about me, and how meek and
- good and inefficient she was, and how horribly black were her nails.
- Other figures come and go, and particularly the doctor, a young man
- plumply rococo, in bicycling dress, with fine waxen features, a little
- pointed beard, and the long black frizzy hair and huge tie of a minor
- poet. Bright and clear-cut and irrelevant are memories of the Basque
- hostess of my uncle’s inn and of the family of Spanish people who
- entertained me and prepared the most amazingly elaborate meals for me,
- with soup and salad and chicken and remarkable sweets. They were all
- very kind and sympathetic people, systematically so. And constantly,
- without attracting attention, I was trying to get newspapers from home.
- My uncle is central to all these impressions.
- I have tried to make you picture him, time after time, as the young man
- of the Wimblehurst chemist’s shop, as the shabby assistant in Tottenham
- Court Road, as the adventurer of the early days of Tono-Bungay, as
- the confident, preposterous plutocrat. And now I have to tell of him
- strangely changed under the shadow of oncoming death, with his skin lax
- and yellow and glistening with sweat, his eyes large and glassy, his
- countenance unfamiliar through the growth of a beard, his nose pinched
- and thin. Never had he looked so small as now. And he talked to me in
- a whispering, strained voice of great issues, of why his life had been,
- and whither he was going. Poor little man! that last phase is, as it
- were, disconnected from all the other phases. It was as if he crawled
- out from the ruins of his career, and looked about him before he died.
- For he had quite clear-minded states in the intervals of his delirium.
- He knew he was almost certainly dying. In a way that took the burthen of
- his cares off his mind. There was no more Neal to face, no more flights
- or evasions, no punishments.
- “It has been a great career, George,” he said, “but I shall be glad to
- rest. Glad to rest!... Glad to rest.”
- His mind ran rather upon his career, and usually, I am glad to recall,
- with a note of satisfaction and approval. In his delirious phases he
- would most often exaggerate this self-satisfaction, and talk of his
- splendours. He would pluck at the sheet and stare before him, and
- whisper half-audible fragments of sentences.
- “What is this great place, these cloud-capped towers, these any
- pinnacles?... Ilion. Sky-pointing.... Ilion House, the residence of one
- of our great merchant princes.... Terrace above terrace. Reaching to the
- heavens.... Kingdoms Caesar never knew.... A great poet, George. Zzzz.
- Kingdoms Caesar never knew.... Under entirely new management.
- “Greatness....Millions... Universities.... He stands on the terrace--on
- the upper terrace--directing--directing--by the globe--directing--the
- trade.”
- It was hard at times to tell when his sane talk ceased and his delirium
- began. The secret springs of his life, the vain imaginations were
- revealed. I sometimes think that all the life of man sprawls abed,
- careless and unkempt, until it must needs clothe and wash itself
- and come forth seemly in act and speech for the encounter with one’s
- fellow-men. I suspect that all things unspoken in our souls partake
- somewhat of the laxity of delirium and dementia. Certainly from those
- slimy, tormented lips above the bristling grey beard came nothing but
- dreams and disconnected fancies....
- Sometimes he raved about Neal, threatened Neal. “What has he got
- invested?” he said. “Does he think he can escape me?... If I followed
- him up.... Ruin. Ruin.... One would think _I_ had taken his money.”
- And sometimes he reverted to our airship flight. “It’s too long, George,
- too long and too cold. I’m too old a man--too old--for this sort of
- thing.... You know you’re not saving--you’re killing me.”
- Towards the end it became evident our identity was discovered. I found
- the press, and especially Boom’s section of it, had made a sort of hue
- and cry for us, sent special commissioners to hunt for us, and though
- none of these emissaries reached us until my uncle was dead, one felt
- the forewash of that storm of energy. The thing got into the popular
- French press. People became curious in their manner towards us, and a
- number of fresh faces appeared about the weak little struggle that went
- on in the closeness behind the curtains of the bed. The young doctor
- insisted on consultations, and a motor-car came up from Biarritz,
- and suddenly odd people with questioning eyes began to poke in with
- inquiries and help. Though nothing was said, I could feel that we were
- no longer regarded as simple middle-class tourists; about me, as I went,
- I perceived almost as though it trailed visibly, the prestige of Finance
- and a criminal notoriety. Local personages of a plump and prosperous
- quality appeared in the inn making inquiries, the Luzon priest became
- helpful, people watched our window, and stared at me as I went to and
- fro; and then we had a raid from a little English clergyman and his
- amiable, capable wife in severely Anglican blacks, who swooped down
- upon us like virtuous but resolute vultures from the adjacent village of
- Saint Jean de Pollack.
- The clergyman was one of those odd types that oscillate between remote
- country towns in England and the conduct of English Church services
- on mutual terms in enterprising hotels abroad, a tremulous, obstinate
- little being with sporadic hairs upon his face, spectacles, a red button
- nose, and aged black raiment. He was evidently enormously impressed by
- my uncle’s monetary greatness, and by his own inkling of our identity,
- and he shone and brimmed over with tact and fussy helpfulness. He
- was eager to share the watching of the bedside with me, he proffered
- services with both hands, and as I was now getting into touch with
- affairs in London again, and trying to disentangle the gigantic details
- of the smash from the papers I had succeeded in getting from Biarritz,
- I accepted his offers pretty generously, and began the studies in modern
- finance that lay before me. I had got so out of touch with the old
- traditions of religion that I overlooked the manifest possibility of
- his attacking my poor, sinking vestiges of an uncle with theological
- solicitudes. My attention was called to that, however, very speedily by
- a polite but urgent quarrel between himself and the Basque landlady as
- to the necessity of her hanging a cheap crucifix in the shadow over the
- bed, where it might catch my uncle’s eye, where, indeed, I found it had
- caught his eye.
- “Good Lord!” I cried; “is THAT still going on!”
- That night the little clergyman watched, and in the small hours he
- raised a false alarm that my uncle was dying, and made an extraordinary
- fuss. He raised the house. I shall never forget that scene, I think,
- which began with a tapping at my bedroom door just after I had fallen
- asleep, and his voice--
- “If you want to see your uncle before he goes, you must come now.”
- The stuffy little room was crowded when I reached it, and lit by three
- flickering candles. I felt I was back in the eighteenth century. There
- lay my poor uncle amidst indescribably tumbled bedclothes, weary of life
- beyond measure, weary and rambling, and the little clergyman trying to
- hold his hand and his attention, and repeating over and over again:
- “Mr. Ponderevo, Mr. Ponderevo, it is all right. It is all right.
- “Only Believe! ‘Believe on me, and ye shall be saved’!”
- Close at hand was the doctor with one of those cruel and idiotic
- injection needles modern science puts in the hands of these
- half-educated young men, keeping my uncle flickeringly alive for no
- reason whatever. The religieuse hovered sleepily in the background with
- an overdue and neglected dose. In addition, the landlady had not only
- got up herself, but roused an aged crone of a mother and a partially
- imbecile husband, and there was also a fattish, stolid man in grey
- alpaca, with an air of importance--who he was and how he got there, I
- don’t know. I rather fancy the doctor explained him to me in French I
- did not understand. And they were all there, wearily nocturnal, hastily
- and carelessly dressed, intent upon the life that flickered and sank,
- making a public and curious show of its going, queer shapes of human
- beings lit by three uncertain candles, and every soul of them keenly and
- avidly resolved to be in at the death. The doctor stood, the others were
- all sitting on chairs the landlady had brought in and arranged for them.
- And my uncle spoilt the climax, and did not die.
- I replaced the little clergyman on the chair by the bedside, and he
- hovered about the room.
- “I think,” he whispered to me mysteriously, as he gave place to me, “I
- believe--it is well with him.”
- I heard him trying to render the stock phrases of Low Church piety into
- French for the benefit of the stolid man in grey alpaca. Then he knocked
- a glass off the table, and scrabbled for the fragments. From the first
- I doubted the theory of an immediate death. I consulted the doctor in
- urgent whispers. I turned round to get champagne, and nearly fell over
- the clergyman’s legs. He was on his knees at the additional chair the
- Basque landlady had got on my arrival, and he was praying aloud, “Oh,
- Heavenly Father, have mercy on this thy Child....” I hustled him up
- and out of the way, and in another minute he was down at another chair
- praying again, and barring the path of the religieuse, who had found me
- the corkscrew. Something put into my head that tremendous blasphemy of
- Carlyle’s about “the last mew of a drowning kitten.” He found a third
- chair vacant presently; it was as if he was playing a game.
- “Good Heavens!” I said, “we must clear these people out,” and with a
- certain urgency I did.
- I had a temporary lapse of memory, and forgot all my French. I drove
- them out mainly by gesture, and opened the window, to the universal
- horror. I intimated the death scene was postponed, and, as a matter of
- fact, my uncle did not die until the next night.
- I did not let the little clergyman come near him again, and I was
- watchful for any sign that his mind had been troubled. But he made none.
- He talked once about “that parson chap.”
- “Didn’t bother you?” I asked.
- “Wanted something,” he said.
- I kept silence, listening keenly to his mutterings. I understood him to
- say, “They wanted too much.” His face puckered like a child’s going to
- cry. “You can’t get a safe six per cent.,” he said. I had for a moment
- a wild suspicion that those urgent talks had not been altogether
- spiritual, but that, I think, was a quite unworthy and unjust suspicion.
- The little clergyman was as simple and honest as the day. My uncle was
- simply generalising about his class.
- But it may have been these talks that set loose some long dormant string
- of ideas in my uncle’s brain, ideas the things of this world had long
- suppressed and hidden altogether. Near the end he suddenly became
- clearminded and lucid, albeit very weak, and his voice was little, but
- clear.
- “George,” he said.
- “I’m here,” I said, “close beside you.”
- “George. You have always been responsible for the science. George. You
- know better than I do. Is--Is it proved?”
- “What proved?”
- “Either way?”
- “I don’t understand.”
- “Death ends all. After so much--Such splendid beginnin’s. Somewhere.
- Something.”
- I stared at him amazed. His sunken eyes were very grave.
- “What do you expect?” I said in wonder.
- He would not answer. “Aspirations,” he whispered. He fell into a broken
- monologue, regardless of me. “Trailing clouds of glory,” he said, and
- “first-rate poet, first-rate....George was always hard. Always.”
- For a long time there was silence.
- Then he made a gesture that he wished to speak.
- “Seems to me, George”
- I bent my head down, and he tried to lift his hand to my shoulder. I
- raised him a little on his pillows, and listened.
- “It seems to me, George, always--there must be something in me--that
- won’t die.”
- He looked at me as though the decision rested with me.
- “I think,” he said; “--something.”
- Then, for a moment, his mind wandered. “Just a little link,” he
- whispered almost pleadingly, and lay quite still, but presently he was
- uneasy again.
- “Some other world”
- “Perhaps,” I said. “Who knows?”
- “Some other world.”
- “Not the same scope for enterprise,” I said.
- “No.”
- He became silent. I sat leaning down to him, and following out my own
- thoughts, and presently the religieuse resumed her periodic conflict
- with the window fastening. For a time he struggled for breath.... It
- seemed such nonsense that he should have to suffer so--poor silly little
- man!
- “George,” he whispered, and his weak little hand came out. “PERHAPS--”
- He said no more, but I perceived from the expression of his eyes that he
- thought the question had been put.
- “Yes, I think so;” I said stoutly.
- “Aren’t you sure?”
- “Oh--practically sure,” said I, and I think he tried to squeeze my hand.
- And there I sat, holding his hand tight, and trying to think what seeds
- of immortality could be found in all his being, what sort of ghost there
- was in him to wander out into the bleak immensities. Queer fancies came
- to me.... He lay still for a long time, save for a brief struggle or so
- for breath and ever and again I wiped his mouth and lips.
- I fell into a pit of thought. I did not remark at first the change that
- was creeping over his face. He lay back on his pillow, made a
- faint zzzing sound that ceased, and presently and quite quietly he
- died--greatly comforted by my assurance. I do not know when he died. His
- hand relaxed insensibly. Suddenly, with a start, with a shock, I found
- that his mouth had fallen open, and that he was dead....
- VIII
- It was dark night when I left his deathbed and went back to my own inn
- down the straggling street of Luzon.
- That return to my inn sticks in my memory also as a thing apart, as an
- experience apart. Within was a subdued bustle of women, a flitting of
- lights, and the doing of petty offices to that queer, exhausted thing
- that had once been my active and urgent little uncle. For me those
- offices were irksome and impertinent. I slammed the door, and went out
- into the warm, foggy drizzle of the village street lit by blurred specks
- of light in great voids of darkness, and never a soul abroad. That warm
- veil of fog produced an effect of vast seclusion. The very houses by the
- roadside peered through it as if from another world. The stillness of
- the night was marked by an occasional remote baying of dogs; all these
- people kept dogs because of the near neighbourhood of the frontier.
- Death!
- It was one of those rare seasons of relief, when for a little time one
- walks a little outside of and beside life. I felt as I sometimes feel
- after the end of a play. I saw the whole business of my uncle’s life as
- something familiar and completed. It was done, like a play one leaves,
- like a book one closes. I thought of the push and the promotions, the
- noise of London, the crowded, various company of people through which
- our lives had gone, the public meetings, the excitements, the dinners
- and disputations, and suddenly it appeared to me that none of these
- things existed.
- It came to me like a discovery that none of these things existed.
- Before and after I have thought and called life a phantasmagoria, but
- never have I felt its truth as I did that night.... We had parted; we
- two who had kept company so long had parted. But there was, I knew, no
- end to him or me. He had died a dream death, and ended a dream; his pain
- dream was over. It seemed to me almost as though I had died, too. What
- did it matter, since it was unreality, all of it, the pain and desire,
- the beginning and the end? There was no reality except this solitary
- road, this quite solitary road, along which one went rather puzzled,
- rather tired....
- Part of the fog became a big mastiff that came towards me and stopped
- and slunk round me, growling, barked gruffly, and shortly and presently
- became fog again.
- My mind swayed back to the ancient beliefs and fears of our race.
- My doubts and disbeliefs slipped from me like a loosely fitting garment.
- I wondered quite simply what dogs bayed about the path of that other
- walker in the darkness, what shapes, what lights, it might be, loomed
- about him as he went his way from our last encounter on earth--along the
- paths that are real, and the way that endures for ever?
- IX
- Last belated figure in that grouping round my uncle’s deathbed is my
- aunt. When it was beyond all hope that my uncle could live I threw aside
- whatever concealment remained to us and telegraphed directly to her.
- But she came too late to see him living. She saw him calm and still,
- strangely unlike his habitual garrulous animation, an unfamiliar
- inflexibility.
- “It isn’t like him,” she whispered, awed by this alien dignity.
- I remember her chiefly as she talked and wept upon the bridge below the
- old castle. We had got rid of some amateurish reporters from Biarritz,
- and had walked together in the hot morning sunshine down through Port
- Luzon. There, for a time, we stood leaning on the parapet of the bridge
- and surveying the distant peeks, the rich blue masses of the Pyrenees.
- For a long time we said nothing, and then she began talking.
- “Life’s a rum Go, George!” she began. “Who would have thought, when I
- used to darn your stockings at old Wimblehurst, that this would be the
- end of the story? It seems far away now--that little shop, his and my
- first home. The glow of the bottles, the big coloured bottles! Do you
- remember how the light shone on the mahogany drawers? The little
- gilt letters! Ol Amjig, and Snap! I can remember it all--bright and
- shining--like a Dutch picture. Real! And yesterday. And here we are in
- a dream. You a man--and me an old woman, George. And poor little Teddy,
- who used to rush about and talk--making that noise he did--Oh!”
- She choked, and the tears flowed unrestrained. She wept, and I was glad
- to see her weeping.
- She stood leaning over the bridge; her tear-wet handkerchief gripped in
- her clenched hand.
- “Just an hour in the old shop again--and him talking. Before things got
- done. Before they got hold of him. And fooled him.
- “Men oughtn’t to be so tempted with business and things....
- “They didn’t hurt him, George?” she asked suddenly.
- For a moment I was puzzled.
- “Here, I mean,” she said.
- “No,” I lied stoutly, suppressing the memory of that foolish injection
- needle I had caught the young doctor using.
- “I wonder, George, if they’ll let him talk in Heaven....”
- She faced me. “Oh! George, dear, my heart aches, and I don’t know what
- I say and do. Give me your arm to lean on--it’s good to have you,
- dear, and lean upon you.... Yes, I know you care for me. That’s why I’m
- talking. We’ve always loved one another, and never said anything about
- it, and you understand, and I understand. But my heart’s torn to pieces
- by this, torn to rags, and things drop out I’ve kept in it. It’s true he
- wasn’t a husband much for me at the last. But he was my child, George,
- he was my child and all my children, my silly child, and life has
- knocked him about for me, and I’ve never had a say in the matter; never
- a say; it’s puffed him up and smashed him--like an old bag--under my
- eyes. I was clever enough to see it, and not clever enough to prevent
- it, and all I could do was to jeer. I’ve had to make what I could of
- it. Like most people. Like most of us.... But it wasn’t fair, George.
- It wasn’t fair. Life and Death--great serious things--why couldn’t they
- leave him alone, and his lies and ways? If WE could see the lightness of
- it--
- “Why couldn’t they leave him alone?” she repeated in a whisper as we
- went towards the inn.
- CHAPTER THE SECOND
- LOVE AMONG THE WRECKAGE
- I
- When I came back I found that my share in the escape and death of my
- uncle had made me for a time a notorious and even popular character.
- For two weeks I was kept in London “facing the music,” as he would have
- said, and making things easy for my aunt, and I still marvel at the
- consideration with which the world treated me. For now it was open and
- manifest that I and my uncle were no more than specimens of a modern
- species of brigand, wasting the savings of the public out of the sheer
- wantonness of enterprise. I think that in a way, his death produced
- a reaction in my favour and my flight, of which some particulars now
- appeared stuck in the popular imagination. It seemed a more daring and
- difficult feat than it was, and I couldn’t very well write to the papers
- to sustain my private estimate. There can be little doubt that men
- infinitely prefer the appearance of dash and enterprise to simple
- honesty. No one believed I was not an arch plotter in his financing. Yet
- they favoured me. I even got permission from the trustee to occupy
- my chalet for a fortnight while I cleared up the mass of papers,
- calculations, notes of work, drawings and the like, that I left in
- disorder when I started on that impulsive raid upon the Mordet quap
- heaps.
- I was there alone. I got work for Cothope with the Ilchesters, for whom
- I now build these destroyers. They wanted him at once, and he was short
- of money, so I let him go and managed very philosophically by myself.
- But I found it hard to fix my attention on aeronautics, I had been away
- from the work for a full half-year and more, a half-year crowded with
- intense disconcerting things. For a time my brain refused these fine
- problems of balance and adjustment altogether; it wanted to think about
- my uncle’s dropping jaw, my aunt’s reluctant tears, about dead negroes
- and pestilential swamps, about the evident realities of cruelty and
- pain, about life and death. Moreover, it was weary with the frightful
- pile of figures and documents at the Hardingham, a task to which this
- raid to Lady Grove was simply an interlude. And there was Beatrice.
- On the second morning, as I sat out upon the veranda recalling memories
- and striving in vain to attend to some too succinct pencil notes of
- Cothope’s, Beatrice rode up suddenly from behind the pavilion, and
- pulled rein and became still; Beatrice, a little flushed from riding and
- sitting on a big black horse.
- I did not instantly rise. I stared at her. “YOU!” I said.
- She looked at me steadily. “Me,” she said
- I did not trouble about any civilities. I stood up and asked point blank
- a question that came into my head.
- “Whose horse is that?” I said.
- She looked me in the eyes. “Carnaby’s,” she answered.
- “How did you get here--this way?”
- “The wall’s down.”
- “Down? Already?”
- “A great bit of it between the plantations.”
- “And you rode through, and got here by chance?”
- “I saw you yesterday. And I rode over to see you.” I had now come close
- to her, and stood looking up into her face.
- “I’m a mere vestige,” I said.
- She made no answer, but remained regarding me steadfastly with a curious
- air of proprietorship.
- “You know I’m the living survivor now of the great smash. I’m rolling
- and dropping down through all the scaffolding of the social system....
- It’s all a chance whether I roll out free at the bottom, or go down a
- crack into the darkness out of sight for a year or two.”
- “The sun,” she remarked irrelevantly, “has burnt you.... I’m getting
- down.”
- She swung herself down into my arms, and stood beside me face to face.
- “Where’s Cothope?” she asked.
- “Gone.”
- Her eyes flitted to the pavilion and back to me. We stood close
- together, extraordinarily intimate, and extraordinarily apart.
- “I’ve never seen this cottage of yours,” she said, “and I want to.”
- She flung the bridle of her horse round the veranda post, and I helped
- her tie it.
- “Did you get what you went for to Africa?” she asked.
- “No,” I said, “I lost my ship.”
- “And that lost everything?”
- “Everything.”
- She walked before me into the living-room of the chalet, and I saw that
- she gripped her riding-whip very tightly in her hand. She looked about
- her for a moment,--and then at me.
- “It’s comfortable,” she remarked.
- Our eyes met in a conversation very different from the one upon our
- lips. A sombre glow surrounded us, drew us together; an unwonted shyness
- kept us apart. She roused herself, after an instant’s pause, to examine
- my furniture.
- “You have chintz curtains. I thought men were too feckless to have
- curtains without a woman. But, of course, your aunt did that! And a
- couch and a brass fender, and--is that a pianola? That is your desk.
- I thought men’s desks were always untidy, and covered with dust and
- tobacco ash.”
- She flitted to my colour prints and my little case of books. Then she
- went to the pianola. I watched her intently.
- “Does this thing play?” she said.
- “What?” I asked.
- “Does this thing play?”
- I roused myself from my preoccupation.
- “Like a musical gorilla with fingers all of one length. And a sort of
- soul.... It’s all the world of music to me.”
- “What do you play?”
- “Beethoven, when I want to clear up my head while I’m working. He
- is--how one would always like to work. Sometimes Chopin and those
- others, but Beethoven. Beethoven mainly. Yes.”
- Silence again between us. She spoke with an effort.
- “Play me something.” She turned from me and explored the rack of
- music rolls, became interested and took a piece, the first part of the
- Kreutzer Sonata, hesitated. “No,” she said, “that!”
- She gave me Brahms’ Second Concerto, Op. 58, and curled up on the sofa
- watching me as I set myself slowly to play....
- “I say,” he said when I had done, “that’s fine. I didn’t know those
- things could play like that. I’m all astir...”
- She came and stood over me, looking at me. “I’m going to have a
- concert,” she said abruptly, and laughed uneasily and hovered at the
- pigeon-holes. “Now--now what shall I have?” She chose more of Brahms.
- Then we came to the Kreutzer Sonata. It is queer how Tolstoy has loaded
- that with suggestions, debauched it, made it a scandalous and intimate
- symbol. When I had played the first part of that, she came up to the
- pianola and hesitated over me. I sat stiffly--waiting.
- Suddenly she seized my downcast head and kissed my hair. She caught at
- my face between her hands and kissed my lips. I put my arms about her
- and we kissed together. I sprang to my feet and clasped her.
- “Beatrice!” I said. “Beatrice!”
- “My dear,” she whispered, nearly breathless, with her arms about me.
- “Oh! my dear!”
- II
- Love, like everything else in this immense process of social
- disorganisation in which we live, is a thing adrift, a fruitless thing
- broken away from its connexions. I tell of this love affair here because
- of its irrelevance, because it is so remarkable that it should mean
- nothing, and be nothing except itself. It glows in my memory like some
- bright casual flower starting up amidst the debris of a catastrophe.
- For nearly a fortnight we two met and made love together. Once more this
- mighty passion, that our aimless civilisation has fettered and maimed
- and sterilised and debased, gripped me and filled me with passionate
- delights and solemn joys--that were all, you know, futile and
- purposeless. Once more I had the persuasion “This matters. Nothing
- else matters so much as this.” We were both infinitely grave in such
- happiness as we had. I do not remember any laughter at all between us.
- Twelve days it lasted from that encounter in my chalet until our
- parting.
- Except at the end, they were days of supreme summer, and there was a
- waxing moon. We met recklessly day by day. We were so intent upon each
- other at first so intent upon expressing ourselves to each other, and
- getting at each other, that we troubled very little about the appearance
- of our relationship. We met almost openly.... We talked of ten thousand
- things, and of ourselves. We loved. We made love. There is no prose
- of mine that can tell of hours transfigured. The facts are nothing.
- Everything we touched, the meanest things, became glorious. How can I
- render bare tenderness and delight and mutual possession? I sit here at
- my desk thinking of untellable things.
- I have come to know so much of love that I know now what love might be.
- We loved, scarred and stained; we parted--basely and inevitably, but at
- least I met love.
- I remember as we sat in a Canadian canoe, in a reedy, bush-masked
- shallow we had discovered operating out of that pine-shaded Woking
- canal, how she fell talking of the things that happened to her before
- she met me again....
- She told me things, and they so joined and welded together other things
- that lay disconnected in my memory, that it seemed to me I had always
- known what she told me. And yet indeed I had not known nor suspected it,
- save perhaps for a luminous, transitory suspicion ever and again.
- She made me see how life had shaped her. She told me of her girlhood
- after I had known her. “We were poor and pretending and managing. We
- hacked about on visits and things. I ought to have married. The chances
- I had weren’t particularly good chances. I didn’t like ‘em.”
- She paused. “Then Carnaby came along.”
- I remained quite still. She spoke now with downcast eyes, and one finger
- just touching the water.
- “One gets bored, bored beyond redemption. One does about to these huge
- expensive houses I suppose--the scale’s immense. One makes one’s
- self useful to the other women, and agreeable to the men. One has to
- dress.... One has food and exercise and leisure, It’s the leisure, and
- the space, and the blank opportunity it seems a sin not to fill. Carnaby
- isn’t like the other men. He’s bigger.... They go about making love.
- Everybody’s making love. I did.... And I don’t do things by halves.”
- She stopped.
- “You knew?”--she asked, looking up, quite steadily. I nodded.
- “Since when?”
- “Those last days.... It hasn’t seemed to matter really. I was a little
- surprised.”
- She looked at me quietly. “Cothope knew,” she said. “By instinct. I
- could feel it.”
- “I suppose,” I began, “once, this would have mattered immensely. Now--”
- “Nothing matters,” she said, completing me. “I felt I had to tell you. I
- wanted you to understand why I didn’t marry you--with both hands. I have
- loved you”--she paused--“have loved you ever since the day I kissed you
- in the bracken. Only--I forgot.”
- And suddenly she dropped her face upon her hands, and sobbed
- passionately--
- “I forgot--I forgot,” she cried, and became still....
- I dabbled my paddle in the water. “Look here!” I said; “forget again!
- Here am I--a ruined man. Marry me.”
- She shook her head without looking up.
- We were still for a long time. “Marry me!” I whispered.
- She looked up, twined back a whisp of hair, and answered
- dispassionately--
- “I wish I could. Anyhow, we have had this time. It has been a fine
- time--has it been--for you also? I haven’t nudged you all I had to give.
- It’s a poor gift--except for what it means and might have been. But we
- are near the end of it now.”
- “Why?” I asked. “Marry me! Why should we two--”
- “You think,” she said, “I could take courage and come to you and be your
- everyday wife--while you work and are poor?”
- “Why not?” said I.
- She looked at me gravely, with extended finger. “Do you really think
- that--of me? Haven’t you seen me--all?”
- I hesitated.
- “Never once have I really meant marrying you,” she insisted. “Never
- once. I fell in love with you from the first. But when you seemed a
- successful man, I told myself I wouldn’t. I was love-sick for you,
- and you were so stupid, I came near it then. But I knew I wasn’t good
- enough. What could I have been to you? A woman with bad habits and bad
- associations, a woman smirched. And what could I do for you or be to
- you? If I wasn’t good enough to be a rich man’s wife, I’m certainly not
- good enough to be a poor one’s. Forgive me for talking sense to you now,
- but I wanted to tell you this somehow.”
- She stopped at my gesture. I sat up, and the canoe rocked with my
- movement.
- “I don’t care,” I said. “I want to marry you and make you my wife!”
- “No,” she said, “don’t spoil things. That is impossible!”
- “Impossible!”
- “Think! I can’t do my own hair! Do you mean you will get me a maid?”
- “Good God!” I cried, disconcerted beyond measure, “won’t you learn to do
- your own hair for me? Do you mean to say you can love a man--”
- She flung out her hands at me. “Don’t spoil it,” she cried. “I have
- given you all I have, I have given you all I can. If I could do it, if
- I was good enough to do it, I would. But I am a woman spoilt and
- ruined, dear, and you are a ruined man. When we are making love we’re
- lovers--but think of the gulf between us in habits and ways of thought,
- in will and training, when we are not making love. Think of it--and
- don’t think of it! Don’t think of it yet. We have snatched some hours.
- We still may have some hours!”
- She suddenly knelt forward toward me, with a glowing darkness in her
- eyes. “Who cares if it upsets?” she cried. “If you say another word I
- will kiss you. And go to the bottom clutching you.
- “I’m not afraid of that. I’m not a bit afraid of that. I’ll die with you.
- Choose a death, and I’ll die with you--readily. Do listen to me! I love
- you. I shall always love you. It’s because I love you that I won’t go
- down to become a dirty familiar thing with you amidst the grime. I’ve
- given all I can. I’ve had all I can.... Tell me,” and she crept nearer,
- “have I been like the dusk to you, like the warm dusk? Is there magic
- still? Listen to the ripple of water from your paddle. Look at the warm
- evening light in the sky. Who cares if the canoe upsets? Come nearer to
- me. Oh, my love! come near! So.”
- She drew me to her and our lips met.
- III
- I asked her to marry me once again.
- It was our last morning together, and we had met very early, about
- sunrise, knowing that we were to part. No sun shone that day. The sky
- was overcast, the morning chilly and lit by a clear, cold, spiritless
- light. A heavy dampness in the air verged close on rain. When I think of
- that morning, it has always the quality of greying ashes wet with rain.
- Beatrice too had changed. The spring had gone out of her movement; it
- came to me, for the first time, that some day she might grow old. She
- had become one flesh with the rest of common humanity; the softness
- had gone from her voice and manner, the dusky magic of her presence had
- gone. I saw these things with perfect clearness, and they made me sorry
- for them and for her. But they altered my love not a whit, abated it
- nothing. And when we had talked awkwardly for half a dozen sentences, I
- came dully to my point.
- “And now,” I cried, “will you marry me?”
- “No,” she said, “I shall keep to my life here.”
- I asked her to marry me in a year’s time. She shook her head.
- “This world is a soft world,” I said, “in spite of my present disasters.
- I know now how to do things. If I had you to work for--in a year I could
- be a prosperous man.”
- “No,” she said, “I will put it brutally, I shall go back to Carnaby.”
- “But--!” I did not feel angry. I had no sort of jealousy, no wounded
- pride, no sense of injury. I had only a sense of grey desolation, of
- hopeless cross-purposes.
- “Look here,” she said. “I have been awake all night and every night. I
- have been thinking of this--every moment when we have not been together.
- I’m not answering you on an impulse. I love you. I love you. I’ll say
- that over ten thousand times. But here we are--”
- “The rest of life together,” I said.
- “It wouldn’t be together. Now we are together. Now we have been
- together. We are full of memories I do not feel I can ever forget a
- single one.”
- “Nor I.”
- “And I want to close it and leave it at that. You see, dear, what else
- is there to do?”
- She turned her white face to me. “All I know of love, all I have ever
- dreamt or learnt of love I have packed into these days for you. You
- think we might live together and go on loving. No! For you I will have
- no vain repetitions. You have had the best and all of me. Would you have
- us, after this, meet again in London or Paris or somewhere, scuffle to
- some wretched dressmaker’s, meet in a cabinet particulier?”
- “No,” I said. “I want you to marry me. I want you to play the game of
- life with me as an honest woman should. Come and live with me. Be my
- wife and squaw. Bear me children.”
- I looked at her white, drawn face, and it seemed to me I might carry her
- yet. I spluttered for words.
- “My God! Beatrice!” I cried; “but this is cowardice and folly! Are you
- afraid of life? You of all people! What does it matter what has been or
- what we were? Here we are with the world before us! Start clean and new
- with me. We’ll fight it through! I’m not such a simple lover that I’ll
- not tell you plainly when you go wrong, and fight our difference out
- with you. It’s the one thing I want, the one thing I need--to have you,
- and more of you and more! This love-making--it’s love-making. It’s just
- a part of us, an incident--”
- She shook her head and stopped me abruptly. “It’s all,” she said.
- “All!” I protested.
- “I’m wiser than you. Wiser beyond words.” She turned her eyes to me and
- they shone with tears.
- “I wouldn’t have you say anything--but what you’re saying,” she said.
- “But it’s nonsense, dear. You know it’s nonsense as you say it.”
- I tried to keep up the heroic note, but she would not listen to it.
- “It’s no good,” she cried almost petulantly. “This little world has made
- us what we are. Don’t you see--don’t you see what I am? I can make love.
- I can make love and be loved, prettily. Dear, don’t blame me. I have
- given you all I have. If I had anything more--I have gone through it
- all over and over again--thought it out. This morning my head aches, my
- eyes ache.
- “The light has gone out of me and I am a sick and tired woman. But I’m
- talking wisdom--bitter wisdom. I couldn’t be any sort of helper to you,
- any sort of wife, any sort of mother. I’m spoilt.
- “I’m spoilt by this rich idle way of living, until every habit is wrong,
- every taste wrong. The world is wrong. People can be ruined by wealth
- just as much as by poverty. Do you think I wouldn’t face life with you
- if I could, if I wasn’t absolutely certain I should be down and dragging
- in the first half-mile of the journey? Here I am--damned! Damned! But
- I won’t damn you. You know what I am! You know. You are too clear and
- simple not to know the truth. You try to romance and hector, but you
- know the truth. I am a little cad--sold and done. I’m--. My dear, you
- think I’ve been misbehaving, but all these days I’ve been on my best
- behaviour.... You don’t understand, because you’re a man.
- “A woman, when she’s spoilt, is SPOILT. She’s dirty in grain. She’s
- done.”
- She walked on weeping.
- “You’re a fool to want me,” she said. “You’re a fool to want me--for
- my sake just as much as yours. We’ve done all we can. It’s just
- romancing--”
- She dashed the tears from her eyes and turned upon me. “Don’t you
- understand?” she challenged. “Don’t you know?”
- We faced one another in silence for a moment.
- “Yes,” I said, “I know.”
- For a long time we spoke never a word, but walked on together, slowly
- and sorrowfully, reluctant to turn about towards our parting. When at
- last we did, she broke silence again.
- “I’ve had you,” she said.
- “Heaven and hell,” I said, “can’t alter that.”
- “I’ve wanted--” she went on. “I’ve talked to you in the nights and made
- up speeches. Now when I want to make them I’m tongue-tied. But to me
- it’s just as if the moments we have had lasted for ever. Moods and
- states come and go. To-day my light is out...”
- To this day I cannot determine whether she said or whether I imagined
- she said “chloral.” Perhaps a half-conscious diagnosis flashed it on
- my brain. Perhaps I am the victim of some perverse imaginative freak
- of memory, some hinted possibility that scratched and seared. There the
- word stands in my memory, as if it were written in fire.
- We came to the door of Lady Osprey’s garden at last, and it was
- beginning to drizzle.
- She held out her hands and I took them.
- “Yours,” she said, in a weary unimpassioned voice; “all that I had--such
- as it was. Will you forget?”
- “Never,” I answered.
- “Never a touch or a word of it?”
- “No.”
- “You will,” she said.
- We looked at one another in silence, and her face full of fatigue and
- misery.
- What could I do? What was there to do?
- “I wish--” I said, and stopped.
- “Good-bye.”
- IV
- That should have been the last I saw of her, but, indeed, I was destined
- to see her once again. Two days after I was at Lady Grove, I forget
- altogether upon what errand, and as I walked back to the station
- believing her to be gone away she came upon me, and she was riding with
- Carnaby, just as I had seen them first. The encounter jumped upon us
- unprepared. She rode by, her eyes dark in her white face, and scarcely
- noticed me. She winced and grew stiff at the sight of me and bowed her
- head. But Carnaby, because he thought I was a broken and discomfited
- man, saluted me with an easy friendliness, and shouted some genial
- commonplace to me.
- They passed out of sight and left me by the roadside....
- And then, indeed, I tasted the ultimate bitterness of life. For the
- first time I felt utter futility, and was wrung by emotion that begot no
- action, by shame and pity beyond words. I had parted from her dully and
- I had seen my uncle break and die with dry eyes and a steady mind, but
- this chance sight of my lost Beatrice brought me to tears. My face was
- wrung, and tears came pouring down my cheeks. All the magic she had for
- me had changed to wild sorrow. “Oh God!” I cried, “this is too much,”
- and turned my face after her and made appealing gestures to the beech
- trees and cursed at fate. I wanted to do preposterous things, to pursue
- her, to save her, to turn life back so that she might begin again.
- I wonder what would have happened had I overtaken them in pursuit,
- breathless with running, uttering incoherent words, weeping,
- expostulatory. I came near to doing that.
- There was nothing in earth or heaven to respect my curses or weeping. In
- the midst of it a man who had been trimming the opposite hedge appeared
- and stared at me.
- Abruptly, ridiculously, I dissembled before him and went on and caught
- my train....
- But the pain I felt then I have felt a hundred times; it is with me as
- I write. It haunts this book, I see, that is what haunts this book, from
- end to end.
- CHAPTER THE THIRD
- NIGHT AND THE OPEN SEA
- I
- I have tried throughout all this story to tell things as they happened
- to me. In the beginning--the sheets are still here on the table, grimy
- and dogs-eared and old-looking--I said I wanted to tell MYSELF and the
- world in which I found myself, and I have done my best. But whether I
- have succeeded I cannot imagine. All this writing is grey now and dead
- and trite and unmeaning to me; some of it I know by heart. I am the last
- person to judge it.
- As I turn over the big pile of manuscript before me certain things
- become clearer to me, and particularly the immense inconsequences of my
- experiences. It is, I see now that I have it all before me, a story of
- activity and urgency and sterility. I have called it Tono-Bungay, but I
- had far better have called it Waste. I have told of childless Marion, of
- my childless aunt, of Beatrice wasted and wasteful and futile. What hope
- is there for a people whose women become fruitless? I think of all the
- energy I have given to vain things. I think of my industrious scheming
- with my uncle, of Crest Hill’s vast cessation, of his resonant strenuous
- career. Ten thousand men have envied him and wished to live as he lived.
- It is all one spectacle of forces running to waste, of people who use
- and do not replace, the story of a country hectic with a wasting aimless
- fever of trade and money-making and pleasure-seeking. And now I build
- destroyers!
- Other people may see this country in other terms; this is how I have
- seen it. In some early chapter in this heap I compared all our present
- colour and abundance to October foliage before the frosts nip down the
- leaves. That I still feel was a good image. Perhaps I see wrongly. It
- may be I see decay all about me because I am, in a sense, decay. To
- others it may be a scene of achievement and construction radiant with
- hope. I, too, have a sort of hope, but it is a remote hope, a hope that
- finds no promise in this Empire or in any of the great things of our
- time.
- How they will look in history I do not know, how time and chance will
- prove them I cannot guess; that is how they have mirrored themselves on
- one contemporary mind.
- II
- Concurrently with writing the last chapter of this book I have been much
- engaged by the affairs of a new destroyer we have completed. It has been
- an oddly complementary alternation of occupations. Three weeks or so ago
- this novel had to be put aside in order that I might give all my time
- day and night to the fitting and finishing of the engines. Last Thursday
- X 2, for so we call her, was done and I took her down the Thames and
- went out nearly to Texel for a trial of speed.
- It is curious how at times one’s impressions will all fuse and run
- together into a sort of unity and become continuous with things that
- have hitherto been utterly alien and remote. That rush down the river
- became mysteriously connected with this book.
- As I passed down the Thames I seemed in a new and parallel manner to be
- passing all England in review. I saw it then as I had wanted my readers
- to see it. The thought came to me slowly as I picked my way through the
- Pool; it stood out clear as I went dreaming into the night out upon the
- wide North Sea.
- It wasn’t so much thinking at the time as a sort of photographic thought
- that came and grew clear. X2 went ripping through the dirty oily water
- as scissors rip through canvas, and the front of my mind was all intent
- with getting her through under the bridges and in and out among the
- steam-boats and barges and rowing-boats and piers. I lived with my
- hands and eyes hard ahead. I thought nothing then of any appearances but
- obstacles, but for all that the back of my mind took the photographic
- memory of it complete and vivid....
- “This,” it came to me, “is England. That is what I wanted to give in my
- book. This!”
- We started in the late afternoon. We throbbed out of our yard above
- Hammersmith Bridge, fussed about for a moment, and headed down stream.
- We came at an easy rush down Craven Reach, past Fulham and Hurlingham,
- past the long stretches of muddy meadow And muddy suburb to Battersea
- and Chelsea, round the cape of tidy frontage that is Grosvenor Road and
- under Vauxhall Bridge, and Westminster opened before us. We cleared
- a string of coal barges and there on the left in the October sunshine
- stood the Parliament houses, and the flag was flying and Parliament was
- sitting.
- I saw it at the time unseeingly; afterwards it came into my mind as the
- centre of the whole broad panoramic effect of that afternoon. The stiff
- square lace of Victorian Gothic with its Dutch clock of a tower came
- upon me suddenly and stared and whirled past in a slow half pirouette
- and became still, I know, behind me as if watching me recede. “Aren’t
- you going to respect me, then?” it seemed to say.
- Not I! There in that great pile of Victorian architecture the landlords
- and the lawyers, the bishops, the railway men and the magnates of
- commerce go to and fro--in their incurable tradition of commercialised
- Bladesovery, of meretricious gentry and nobility sold for riches. I have
- been near enough to know. The Irish and the Labour-men run about among
- their feet, making a fuss, effecting little, they’ve got no better plans
- that I can see. Respect it indeed! There’s a certain paraphernalia of
- dignity, but whom does it deceive? The King comes down in a gilt coach
- to open the show and wears long robes and a crown; and there’s a display
- of stout and slender legs in white stockings and stout and slender legs
- in black stockings and artful old gentlemen in ermine. I was reminded
- of one congested afternoon I had spent with my aunt amidst a cluster of
- agitated women’s hats in the Royal Gallery of the House of Lords and
- how I saw the King going to open Parliament, and the Duke of Devonshire
- looking like a gorgeous pedlar and terribly bored with the cap of
- maintenance on a tray before him hung by slings from his shoulder. A
- wonderful spectacle!
- It is quaint, no doubt, this England--it is even dignified in
- places--and full of mellow associations. That does not alter the quality
- of the realities these robes conceal. The realities are greedy trade,
- base profit--seeking, bold advertisement; and kingship and chivalry,
- spite of this wearing of treasured robes, are as dead among it all
- as that crusader my uncle championed against the nettles outside the
- Duffield church.
- I have thought much of that bright afternoon’s panorama.
- To run down the Thames so is to run one’s hand over the pages in the
- book of England from end to end. One begins in Craven Reach and it is as
- if one were in the heart of old England. Behind us are Kew and Hampton
- Court with their memories of Kings and Cardinals, and one runs at first
- between Fulham’s episcopal garden parties and Hurlingham’s playground
- for the sporting instinct of our race. The whole effect is English.
- There is space, there are old trees and all the best qualities of
- the home-land in that upper reach. Putney, too, looks Anglican on a
- dwindling scale. And then for a stretch the newer developments slop
- over, one misses Bladesover and there come first squalid stretches of
- mean homes right and left and then the dingy industrialism of the
- south side, and on the north bank the polite long front of nice houses,
- artistic, literary, administrative people’s residences, that stretches
- from Cheyne Walk nearly to Westminster and hides a wilderness of slums.
- What a long slow crescendo that is, mile after mile, with the houses
- crowding closelier, the multiplying succession of church towers, the
- architectural moments, the successive bridges, until you come out into
- the second movement of the piece with Lambeth’s old palace under your
- quarter and the houses of Parliament on your bow! Westminster Bridge
- is ahead of you then, and through it you flash, and in a moment the
- round-faced clock tower cranes up to peer at you again and New
- Scotland Yard squares at you, a fat beef-eater of a policeman disguised
- miraculously as a Bastille.
- For a stretch you have the essential London; you have Charing Cross
- railway station, heart of the world, and the Embankment on the north
- side with its new hotels overshadowing its Georgian and Victorian
- architecture, and mud and great warehouses and factories, chimneys, shot
- towers, advertisements on the south. The northward skyline grows more
- intricate and pleasing, and more and more does one thank God for Wren.
- Somerset House is as picturesque as the civil war, one is reminded again
- of the original England, one feels in the fretted sky the quality of
- Restoration Lace.
- And then comes Astor’s strong box and the lawyers’ Inns.
- (I had a passing memory of myself there, how once I had trudged along
- the Embankment westward, weighing my uncle’s offer of three hundred
- pounds a year....)
- Through that central essential London reach I drove, and X2 bored
- her nose under the foam regardless of it all like a black hound going
- through reeds--on what trail even I who made her cannot tell.
- And in this reach, too, one first meets the seagulls and is reminded of
- the sea. Blackfriars one takes--just under these two bridges and just
- between them is the finest bridge moment in the world--and behold,
- soaring up, hanging in the sky over a rude tumult of warehouses, over a
- jostling competition of traders, irrelevantly beautiful and altogether
- remote, Saint Paul’s! “Of course!” one says, “Saint Paul’s!” It is the
- very figure of whatever fineness the old Anglican culture achieved,
- detached, a more dignified and chastened Saint Peter’s, colder, greyer,
- but still ornate; it has never been over thrown, never disavowed, only
- the tall warehouses and all the roar of traffic have forgotten it,
- every one has forgotten it; the steamships, the barges, go heedlessly by
- regardless of it, intricacies of telephone wires and poles cut blackly
- into its thin mysteries, and presently, when in a moment the traffic
- permits you and you look round for it, it has dissolved like a cloud
- into the grey blues of the London sky.
- And then the traditional and ostensible England falls from you
- altogether. The third movement begins, the last great movement in the
- London symphony, in which the trim scheme of the old order is altogether
- dwarfed and swallowed up. Comes London Bridge, and the great warehouses
- tower up about you, waving stupendous cranes, the gulls circle and
- scream in your ears, large ships lie among their lighters, and one is
- in the port of the world. Again and again in this book I have written
- of England as a feudal scheme overtaken by fatty degeneration and
- stupendous accidents of hypertrophy.
- For the last time I must strike that note as the memory of the dear
- neat little sunlit ancient Tower of London lying away in a gap among the
- warehouses comes back to me, that little accumulation of buildings so
- provincially pleasant and dignified, overshadowed by the vulgarest,
- most typical exploit of modern England, the sham Gothic casings to the
- ironwork of the Tower Bridge. That Tower Bridge is the very balance and
- confirmation of Westminster’s dull pinnacles and tower. That sham Gothic
- bridge; in the very gates of our mother of change, the Sea!
- But after that one is in a world of accident and nature. For the third
- part of the panorama of London is beyond all law, order, and precedence;
- it is the seaport and the sea. One goes down the widening reaches
- through a monstrous variety of shipping, great steamers, great
- sailing-ships, trailing the flags of all the world, a monstrous
- confusion of lighters, witches’ conferences of brown-sailed barges,
- wallowing tugs, a tumultuous crowding and jostling of cranes and spars,
- and wharves and stores, and assertive inscriptions. Huge vistas of dock
- open right and left of one, and here and there beyond and amidst it all
- are church towers, little patches of indescribably old-fashioned and
- worn-out houses, riverside pubs and the like, vestiges of townships that
- were long since torn to fragments and submerged in these new growths.
- And amidst it all no plan appears, no intention, no comprehensive
- desire. That is the very key of it all. Each day one feels that the
- pressure of commerce and traffic grew, grew insensibly monstrous, and
- first this man made a wharf and that erected a crane, and then this
- company set to work and then that, and so they jostled together to make
- this unassimilable enormity of traffic. Through it we dodged and drove
- eager for the high seas.
- I remember how I laughed aloud at the glimpse of the name of a London
- County Council steamboat that ran across me. Caxton it was called, and
- another was Pepys, and another was Shakespeare. They seemed so wildly
- out of place, splashing about in that confusion. One wanted to take them
- out and wipe them and put them back in some English gentleman’s library.
- Everything was alive about them, flash ing, splashing, and passing,
- ships moving, tugs panting, hawsers taut, barges going down with men
- toiling at the sweeps, the water all a-swirl with the wash of shipping,
- scaling into millions of little wavelets, curling and frothing under the
- whip of the unceasing wind. Past it all we drove. And at Greenwich to
- the south, you know, there stands a fine stone frontage where all the
- victories are recorded in a Painted Hall, and beside it is the “Ship”
- where once upon a time those gentlemen of Westminster used to have
- an annual dinner--before the port of London got too much for them
- altogether. The old facade of the Hospital was just warming to the
- sunset as we went by, and after that, right and left, the river opened,
- the sense of the sea increased and prevailed, reach after reach from
- Northfleet to the Nore.
- And out you come at last with the sun behind you into the eastern
- sea. You speed up and tear the oily water louder and faster, siroo,
- siroo-swish-siroo, and the hills of Kent--over which I once fled from
- the Christian teachings of Nicodemus Frapp--fall away on the right hand
- and Essex on the left. They fall away and vanish into blue haze, and
- the tall slow ships behind the tugs, scarce moving ships and wallowing
- sturdy tugs, are all wrought of wet gold as one goes frothing by. They
- stand out, bound on strange missions of life and death, to the killing
- of men in unfamiliar lands. And now behind us is blue mystery and the
- phantom flash of unseen lights, and presently even these are gone, and
- I and my destroyer tear out to the unknown across a great grey space.
- We tear into the great spaces of the future and the turbines fall to
- talking in unfamiliar tongues. Out to the open we go, to windy freedom
- and trackless ways. Light after light goes down. England and the
- Kingdom, Britain and the Empire, the old prides and the old devotions,
- glide abeam, astern, sink down upon the horizon, pass--pass. The river
- passes--London passes, England passes...
- III
- This is the note I have tried to emphasise, the note that sounds clear
- in my mind when I think of anything beyond the purely personal aspects
- of my story.
- It is a note of crumbling and confusion, of change and seemingly aimless
- swelling, of a bubbling up and medley of futile loves and sorrows.
- But through the confusion sounds another note. Through the confusion
- something drives, something that is at once human achievement and the
- most inhuman of all existing things. Something comes out of it....
- How can I express the values of a thing at once so essential and so
- immaterial. It is something that calls upon such men as I with an
- irresistible appeal.
- I have figured it in my last section by the symbol of my destroyer,
- stark and swift, irrelevant to most human interests. Sometimes I call
- this reality Science, sometimes I call it Truth. But it is something we
- draw by pain and effort ont of the heart of life, that we disentangle
- and make clear. Other men serve it, I know, in art, in literature, in
- social invention, and see it in a thousand different figures, under a
- hundred names. I see it always as austerity, as beauty. This thing we
- make clear is the heart of life. It is the one enduring thing. Men and
- nations, epochs and civilisation pass each making its contribution I do
- not know what it is, this something, except that it is supreme. It is,
- a something, a quality, an element, one may find now in colours, now in
- norms, now in sounds, now in thoughts. It emerges from life with each
- year one lives and feels, and generation by generation and age by age,
- but the how and why of it are all beyond the compass of my mind....
- Yet the full sense of it was with me all that night as I drove, lonely
- above the rush and murmur of my engines, out upon the weltering circle
- of the sea.
- Far out to the northeast there came the flicker of a squadron of
- warships waving white swords of light about the sky. I kept them
- hull-down, and presently they were mere summer lightning over the watery
- edge of the globe.... I fell into thought that was nearly formless, into
- doubts and dreams that have no words, and it seemed good to me to drive
- ahead and on and or through the windy starlight, over the long black
- waves.
- IV
- It was morning and day before I returned with the four sick and starving
- journalists who had got permission to come with me, up the shining
- river, and past the old grey Tower....
- I recall the back views of those journalists very distinctly, going with
- a certain damp weariness of movement, along a side street away from the
- river. They were good men and bore me no malice, and they served me up
- to the public in turgid degenerate Kiplingese, as a modest button on the
- complacent stomach of the Empire. Though as a matter of fact, X2 isn’t
- intended for the empire, or indeed for the hands of any European power.
- We offered it to our own people first, but they would have nothing to
- do with me, and I have long since ceased to trouble much about such
- questions. I have come to see myself from the outside, my country from
- the outside--without illusions. We make and pass.
- We are all things that make and pass striving upon a hidden mission, out
- to the open sea.
- End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Tono Bungay, by H. G. Wells
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