- The Project Gutenberg EBook of Not George Washington, by
- P. G. Wodehouse and Herbert Westbrook
- This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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- Title: Not George Washington
- An Autobiographical Novel
- Author: P. G. Wodehouse
- Herbert Westbrook
- Posting Date: August 27, 2012 [EBook #7230]
- Release Date: January, 2005
- First Posted: March 29, 2003
- Language: English
- *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK NOT GEORGE WASHINGTON ***
- Produced by Suzanne L. Shell, Charles Franks and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team
- NOT GEORGE WASHINGTON
- An Autobiographical Novel
- by P. G. Wodehouse
- and Herbert Westbrook
- 1907
- CONTENTS
- PART ONE
- _Miss Margaret Goodwin's Narrative_
- 1. James Arrives
- 2. James Sets Out
- 3. A Harmless Deception
- PART TWO
- _James Orlebar Cloyster's Narrative_
- 1. The Invasion of Bohemia
- 2. I Evacuate Bohemia
- 3. The _Orb_
- 4. Julian Eversleigh
- 5. The Column
- 6. New Year's Eve
- 7. I Meet Mr. Thomas Blake
- 8. I Meet the Rev. John Hatton
- 9. Julian Learns My Secret
- 10. Tom Blake Again
- 11. Julian's Idea
- 12. The First Ghost
- 13. The Second Ghost
- 14. The Third Ghost
- 15. Eva Eversleigh
- 16. I Tell Julian
- _Sidney Price's Narrative_
- 17. A Ghostly Gathering
- 18. One in the Eye
- 19. In the Soup
- 20. Norah Wins Home
- _Julian Eversleigh's Narrative_
- 21. The Transposition of Sentiment
- 22. A Chat with James
- 23. In a Hansom
- _Narrative Resumed by James Orlebar Cloyster_
- 24. A Rift in the Clouds
- 25. Briggs to the Rescue
- 26. My Triumph
- PART ONE
- _Miss Margaret Goodwin's Narrative_
- CHAPTER 1
- JAMES ARRIVES
- I am Margaret Goodwin. A week from today I shall be Mrs. James Orlebar
- Cloyster.
- It is just three years since I first met James. We made each other's
- acquaintance at half-past seven on the morning of the 28th of July in
- the middle of Fermain Bay, about fifty yards from the shore.
- Fermain Bay is in Guernsey. My home had been with my mother for many
- years at St. Martin's in that island. There we two lived our uneventful
- lives until fate brought one whom, when first I set my eyes on him, I
- knew I loved.
- Perhaps it is indiscreet of me to write that down. But what does it
- matter? It is for no one's reading but my own. James, my _fiancé_,
- is _not_ peeping slyly over my shoulder as I write. On the
- contrary, my door is locked, and James is, I believe, in the
- smoking-room of his hotel at St. Peter's Port.
- At that time it had become my habit to begin my day by rising before
- breakfast and taking a swim in Fermain Bay, which lies across the road
- in front of our cottage. The practice--I have since abandoned it--was
- good for the complexion, and generally healthy. I had kept it up,
- moreover, because I had somehow cherished an unreasonable but
- persistent presentiment that some day Somebody (James, as it turned
- out) would cross the pathway of my maiden existence. I told myself that
- I must be ready for him. It would never do for him to arrive, and find
- no one to meet him.
- On the 28th of July I started off as usual. I wore a short tweed skirt,
- brown stockings--my ankles were, and are, good--a calico blouse, and a
- red tam-o'-shanter. Ponto barked at my heels. In one hand I carried my
- blue twill bathing-gown. In the other a miniature alpenstock. The sun
- had risen sufficiently to scatter the slight mist of the summer
- morning, and a few flecked clouds were edged with a slender frame of
- red gold.
- Leisurely, and with my presentiment strong upon me, I descended the
- steep cliffside to the cave on the left of the bay, where, guarded by
- the faithful Ponto, I was accustomed to disrobe; and soon afterwards I
- came out, my dark hair over my shoulders and blue twill over a portion
- of the rest of me, to climb out to the point of the projecting rocks,
- so that I might dive gracefully and safely into the still blue water.
- I was a good swimmer. I reached the ridge on the opposite side of the
- bay without fatigue, not changing from a powerful breast-stroke. I then
- sat for a while at the water's edge to rest and to drink in the
- thrilling glory of what my heart persisted in telling me was the
- morning of my life.
- And then I saw Him.
- Not distinctly, for he was rowing a dinghy in my direction, and
- consequently had his back to me.
- In the stress of my emotions and an aggravation of modesty, I dived
- again. With an intensity like that of a captured conger I yearned to be
- hidden by the water. I could watch him as I swam, for, strictly
- speaking, he was in my way, though a little farther out to sea than
- I intended to go. As I drew near, I noticed that he wore an odd garment
- like a dressing-gown. He had stopped rowing.
- I turned upon my back for a moment's rest, and, as I did so, heard a
- cry. I resumed my former attitude, and brushed the salt water from my
- eyes.
- The dinghy was wobbling unsteadily. The dressing-gown was in the bows;
- and he, my sea-god, was in the water. Only for a second I saw him. Then
- he sank.
- How I blessed the muscular development of my arms.
- I reached him as he came to the surface.
- "That's twice," he remarked contemplatively, as I seized him by the
- shoulders.
- "Be brave," I said excitedly; "I can save you."
- "I should be most awfully obliged," he said.
- "Do exactly as I tell you."
- "I say," he remonstrated, "you're not going to drag me along by the
- roots of my hair, are you?"
- The natural timidity of man is, I find, attractive.
- I helped him to the boat, and he climbed in. I trod water, clinging
- with one hand to the stern.
- "Allow me," he said, bending down.
- "No, thank you," I replied.
- "Not, really?"
- "Thank you very much, but I think I will stay where I am."
- "But you may get cramp. By the way--I'm really frightfully obliged to
- you for saving my life--I mean, a perfect stranger--I'm afraid it's
- quite spoiled your dip."
- "Not at all," I said politely. "Did you get cramp?"
- "A twinge. It was awfully kind of you."
- "Not at all."
- Then there was a rather awkward silence.
- "Is this your first visit to Guernsey?" I asked.
- "Yes; I arrived yesterday. It's a delightful place. Do you live here?"
- "Yes; that white cottage you can just see through the trees."
- "I suppose I couldn't give you a tow anywhere?"
- "No; thank you very much. I will swim back."
- Another constrained silence.
- "Are you ever in London, Miss----?"
- "Goodwin. Oh, yes; we generally go over in the winter, Mr.----"
- "Cloyster. Really? How jolly. Do you go to the theatre much?"
- "Oh, yes. We saw nearly everything last time we were over."
- There was a third silence. I saw a remark about the weather trembling
- on his lip, and, as I was beginning to feel the chill of the water a
- little, I determined to put a temporary end to the conversation.
- "I think I will be swimming back now," I said.
- "You're quite sure I can't give you a tow?"
- "Quite, thanks. Perhaps you would care to come to breakfast with us,
- Mr. Cloyster? I know my mother would be glad to see you."
- "It is very kind of you. I should be delighted. Shall we meet on the
- beach?"
- I swam off to my cave to dress.
- Breakfast was a success, for my mother was a philosopher. She said very
- little, but what she did say was magnificent. In her youth she had
- moved in literary circles, and now found her daily pleasure in the
- works of Schopenhauer, Kant, and other Germans. Her lightest reading
- was _Sartor Resartus_, and occasionally she would drop into Ibsen
- and Maeterlinck, the asparagus of her philosophic banquet. Her chosen
- mode of thought, far from leaving her inhuman or intolerant, gave her a
- social distinction which I had inherited from her. I could, if I had
- wished it, have attended with success the tea-drinkings, the
- tennis-playings, and the éclair-and-lemonade dances to which I was
- frequently invited. But I always refused. Nature was my hostess.
- Nature, which provided me with balmy zephyrs that were more comforting
- than buttered toast; which set the race of the waves to the ridges of
- Fermain, where arose no shrill, heated voice crying, "Love--forty";
- which decked foliage in more splendid sheen than anything the local
- costumier could achieve, and whose poplars swayed more rhythmically
- than the dancers of the Assembly Rooms.
- The constraint which had been upon us during our former conversation
- vanished at breakfast. We were both hungry, and we had a common topic.
- We related our story of the sea in alternate sentences. We ate and we
- talked, turn and turn about. My mother listened. To her the affair,
- compared with the tremendous subjects to which she was accustomed to
- direct her mind, was broad farce. James took it with an air of
- restrained amusement. I, seriously.
- Tentatively, I diverged from this subject towards other and wider
- fields. Impressions of Guernsey, which drew from him his address, at
- the St. Peter's Port Hotel. The horrors of the sea passage from
- Weymouth, which extorted a comment on the limitations of England.
- England. London. Kensington. South Kensington. The Gunton-Cresswells?
- Yes, yes! Extraordinary. Curious coincidence. Excursus on smallness of
- world. Queer old gentleman, Mr. Gunton-Cresswell. He is, indeed. Quite
- one of the old school. Oh, quite. Still wears that beaver hat? Does he
- really? Yes. Ha, ha! Yes.
- Here the humanising influence of the Teutonic school of philosophic
- analysis was demonstrated by my mother's action. Mr. Cloyster, she
- said, must reconcile himself to exchanging his comfortable rooms at the
- St. Peter's Port--("I particularly dislike half-filled hotel life, Mrs.
- Goodwin")--for the shelter of our cottage. He accepted. He was then
- "warned" that I was chef at the cottage. Mother gave him "a chance to
- change his mind." Something was said about my saving life and
- destroying digestion. He went to collect his things in an ecstasy of
- merriment.
- At this point I committed an indiscretion which can only be excused by
- the magnitude of the occasion.
- My mother had retired to her favourite bow-window where, by a _tour
- de force_ on the part of the carpenter, a system of low, adjustable
- bookcases had been craftily constructed in such a way that when she sat
- in her window-seat they jutted in a semicircle towards her hand.
- James, whom I had escorted down the garden path, had left me at the
- little wooden gate and had gone swinging down the road. I, shielded
- from outside observation (if any) by a line of lilacs, gazed
- rapturously at his retreating form. The sun was high in the sky now. It
- was a perfect summer's day. Birds were singing. Their notes blended
- with the gentle murmur of the sea on the beach below. Every fibre of my
- body was thrilling with the magic of the morning.
- Through the kindly branches of the lilac I watched him, and then, as
- though in obedience to the primaeval call of that July sunshine, I
- stood on tiptoe, and blew him a kiss.
- I realised in an instant what I had done. Fool that I had been. The
- bow-window!
- I was rigid with discomfiture. My mother's eyes were on the book she
- held. And yet a faint smile seemed to hover round her lips. I walked in
- silence to where she sat at the open window.
- She looked up. Her smile was more pronounced.
- "Margie," she said.
- "Yes, mother?"
- "The hedonism of Voltaire is the indictment of an honest bore."
- "Yes, mother."
- She then resumed her book.
- CHAPTER 2
- JAMES SETS OUT
- _(Miss Margaret Goodwin's narrative continued)_
- Those August days! Have there been any like them before? I realise with
- difficulty that the future holds in store for me others as golden.
- The island was crammed with trippers. They streamed in by every boat.
- But James and I were infinitely alone. I loved him from the first, from
- the moment when he had rowed out of the unknown into my life, clad in a
- dressing-gown. I like to think that he loved me from that moment, too.
- But, if he did, the knowledge that he did came to him only after a
- certain delay. It was my privilege to watch this knowledge steal
- gradually but surely upon him.
- We were always together; and as the days passed by he spoke freely of
- himself and his affairs, obeying unconsciously the rudder of my tactful
- inquisitiveness. By the end of the first week I knew as much about him
- as he did himself.
- It seemed that a guardian--an impersonal sort of business man with a
- small but impossible family--was the most commanding figure in his
- private life. As for his finances, five-and-forty sovereigns, the
- remnant of a larger sum which had paid for his education at Cambridge,
- stood between him and the necessity of offering for hire a sketchy
- acquaintance with general literature and a third class in the classical
- tripos.
- He had come to Guernsey to learn by personal observation what chances
- tomato growing held out to a young man in a hurry to get rich.
- "Tomato growing?" I echoed dubiously. And then, to hide a sense of
- bathos, "People _have_ made it pay. Of course, they work very
- hard."
- "M'yes," said James without much enthusiasm.
- "But I fancy," I added, "the life is not at all unpleasant."
- At this point embarrassment seemed to engulf James. He blushed,
- swallowed once or twice in a somewhat convulsive manner, and stammered.
- Then he made his confession guiltily.
- I was not to suppose that his aims ceased with the attainment of a
- tomato-farm. The nurture of a wholesome vegetable occupied neither the
- whole of his ambitions nor even the greater part of them. To write--the
- agony with which he throatily confessed it!--to be swept into the
- maelstrom of literary journalism, to be _en rapport_ with the
- unslumbering forces of Fleet Street--those were the real objectives of
- James Orlebar Cloyster.
- "Of course, I mean," he said, "I suppose it would be a bit of a
- struggle at first, if you see what I mean. What I mean to say is,
- rejected manuscripts, and so on. But still, after a bit, once get a
- footing, you know--I should like to have a dash at it. I mean, I think
- I could do something, you know."
- "Of course you could," I said.
- "I mean, lots of men have, don't you know."
- "There's plenty of room at the top," I said.
- He seemed struck with this remark. It encouraged him.
- He had had his opportunity of talking thus of himself during our long
- rambles out of doors. They were a series of excursions which he was
- accustomed to describe as hunting expeditions for the stocking of our
- larder.
- Thus James would announce at breakfast that prawns were the day's
- quarry, and the foreshore round Cobo Bay the hunting-ground. And to
- Cobo, accordingly, we would set out. This prawn-yielding area extends
- along the coast on the other side of St. Peter's Port, where two halts
- had to be made, one at Madame Garnier's, the confectioners, the other
- at the library, to get fiction, which I never read. Then came a journey
- on the top of the antediluvian horse-tram, a sort of _diligence_
- on rails; and then a whole summer's afternoon among the prawns. Cobo is
- an expanse of shingle, dotted with seaweed and rocks; and Guernsey is a
- place where one can take off one's shoes and stockings on the slightest
- pretext. We waded hither and thither with the warm brine lapping
- unchecked over our bare legs. We did not use our nets very
- industriously, it is true; but our tongues were seldom still. The slow
- walk home was a thing to be looked forward to. Ah! those memorable
- homecomings in the quiet solemnity of that hour, when a weary sun
- stoops, one can fancy with a sigh of pleasure, to sink into the bosom
- of the sea!
- Prawn-hunting was agreeably varied by fish-snaring, mussel-stalking,
- and mushroom-trapping--sports which James, in his capacity of Head
- Forester, included in his venery.
- For mushroom-trapping an early start had to be made--usually between
- six and seven. The chase took us inland, until, after walking through
- the fragrant, earthy lanes, we turned aside into dewy meadows, where
- each blade of grass sparkled with a gem of purest water. Again the
- necessity of going barefoot. Breakfast was late on these mornings, my
- mother whiling away the hours of waiting with a volume of Diogenes
- Laertius in the bow-window. She would generally open the meal with the
- remark that Anaximander held the primary cause of all things to be the
- Infinite, or that it was a favourite expression of Theophrastus that
- time was the most valuable thing a man could spend. When breakfast was
- announced, one of the covers concealed the mushrooms, which, under my
- superintendence, James had done his best to devil. A quiet day
- followed, devoted to sedentary recreation after the labours of the run.
- The period which I have tried to sketch above may be called the period
- of good-fellowship. Whatever else love does for a woman, it makes her
- an actress. So we were merely excellent friends till James's eyes were
- opened. When that happened, he abruptly discarded good-fellowship. I,
- on the other hand, played it the more vigorously. The situation was
- mine.
- Our day's run became the merest shadow of a formality. The office of
- Head Forester lapsed into an absolute sinecure. Love was with
- us--triumphant, and no longer to be skirted round by me; fresh,
- electric, glorious in James.
- We talked--we must have talked. We moved. Our limbs performed their
- ordinary, daily movements. But a golden haze hangs over that second
- period. When, by the strongest effort of will, I can let my mind stand
- by those perfect moments, I seem to hear our voices, low and measured.
- And there are silences, fond in themselves and yet more fondly
- interrupted by unspoken messages from our eyes. What we really said,
- what we actually did, where precisely we two went, I do not know. We
- were together, and the blur of love was about us. Always the blur. It
- is not that memory cannot conjure up the scene again. It is not that
- the scene is clouded by the ill-proportion of a dream. No. It is
- because the dream is brought to me by will and not by sleep. The blur
- recurs because the blur was there. A love vast as ours is penalised, as
- it were, by this blur, which is the hall-mark of infinity.
- In mighty distances, whether from earth to heaven, whether from 5245
- Gerrard to 137 Glasgow, there is always that awful, that disintegrating
- blur.
- A third period succeeded. I may call it the affectionately practical
- period. Instantly the blur vanishes. We were at our proper distance
- from the essence of things, and though infinity is something one yearns
- for passionately, one's normal condition has its meed of comfort. I
- remember once hearing a man in a Government office say that the
- pleasantest moment of his annual holiday was when his train rolled back
- into Paddington Station. And he was a man, too, of a naturally lazy
- disposition.
- It was about the middle of this third period, during a
- mushroom-trapping ramble, that the idea occurred to us, first to me,
- then--after reflection--to James, that mother ought to be informed how
- matters stood between us.
- We went into the house, hand-in-hand, and interviewed her.
- She was in the bow-window, reading a translation of _The
- Deipnosophists_ of Athenaeus.
- "Good morning," she said, looking at her watch. "It is a little past
- our usual breakfast time, Margie, I think?"
- "We have been looking for mushrooms, mother."
- "Every investigation, says Athenaeus, which is guided by principles of
- Nature fixes its ultimate aim entirely on gratifying the stomach. Have
- you found any mushrooms?"
- "Heaps, Mrs. Goodwin," said James.
- "Mother," I said, "we want to tell you something."
- "The fact is, Mrs. Goodwin----"
- "We are engaged."
- My mother liked James.
- "Margie," she once said to me, "there is good in Mr. Cloyster. He is
- not for ever offering to pass me things." Time had not caused her to
- modify this opinion. She received our news calmly, and inquired into
- James's means and prospects. James had forty pounds and some odd
- silver. I had nothing.
- The key-note of my mother's contribution to our conference was, "Wait."
- "You are both young," she said.
- She then kissed me, smiled contemplatively at James, and resumed her
- book.
- When we were alone, "My darling," said James, "we must wait. Tomorrow I
- catch the boat for Weymouth. I shall go straight to London. My first
- manuscript shall be in an editor's hands on Wednesday morning. I will
- go, but I will come back."
- I put my arms round his neck.
- "My love," I said, "I trust you. Go. Always remember that I know you
- will succeed."
- I kissed him.
- "And when you have succeeded, come back."
- CHAPTER 3
- A HARMLESS DECEPTION
- _(Miss Margaret Goodwin's narrative continued)_
- They say that everyone is capable of one novel. And, in my opinion,
- most people could write one play.
- Whether I wrote mine in an inspiration of despair, I cannot say. I
- wrote it.
- Three years had passed, and James was still haggling with those who buy
- men's brains. His earnings were enough just to keep his head above
- water, but not enough to make us two one.
- Perhaps, because everything is clear and easy for us now, I am
- gradually losing a proper appreciation of his struggle. That should
- never be. He did not win. But he did not lose; which means nearly as
- much. For it is almost less difficult to win than not to lose, so my
- mother has told me, in modern journalistic London. And I know that he
- would have won. The fact that he continued the fight as he did was in
- itself a pledge of ultimate victory. What he went through while trying
- with his pen to make a living for himself and me I learned from his
- letters.
- "London," he wrote, "is not paved with gold; but in literary fields
- there are nuggets to be had by the lightest scratching. And those
- nuggets are plays. A successful play gives you money and a name
- automatically. What the ordinary writer makes in a year the successful
- dramatist receives, without labour, in a fortnight." He went on to
- deplore his total lack of dramatic intuition. "Some men," he said,
- "have some of the qualifications while falling short of the others.
- They have a sense of situation without the necessary tricks of
- technique. Or they sacrifice plot to atmosphere, or atmosphere to plot.
- I, worse luck, have not one single qualification. The nursing of a
- climax, the tremendous omissions in the dialogue, the knack of stage
- characterisation--all these things are, in some inexplicable way,
- outside me."
- It was this letter that set me thinking. Ever since James had left the
- island, I had been chafing at the helplessness of my position. While he
- toiled in London, what was I doing? Nothing. I suppose I helped him in
- a way. The thought of me would be with him always, spurring him on to
- work, that the time of our separation might be less. But it was not
- enough. I wanted to be _doing_ something.... And it was during
- these restless weeks that I wrote my play.
- I think nothing will ever erase from my mind the moment when the
- central idea of _The Girl who Waited_ came to me. It was a
- boisterous October evening. The wind had been rising all day. Now the
- branches of the lilac were dancing in the rush of the storm, and far
- out in the bay one could see the white crests of the waves gleaming
- through the growing darkness. We had just finished tea. The lamp was
- lit in our little drawing-room, and on the sofa, so placed that the
- light fell over her left shoulder in the manner recommended by
- oculists, sat my mother with Schopenhauer's _Art of Literature_.
- Ponto slept on the rug.
- Something in the unruffled peace of the scene tore at my nerves. I have
- seldom felt so restless. It may have been the storm that made me so. I
- think myself that it was James's letter. The boat had been late that
- morning, owing to the weather, and I had not received the letter till
- after lunch. I listened to the howl of the wind, and longed to be out
- in it.
- My mother looked at me over her book.
- "You are restless, Margie," she said. "There is a volume of Marcus
- Aurelius on the table beside you, if you care to read."
- "No, thank you, mother," I said. "I think I shall go for a walk."
- "Wrap up well, my dear," she replied.
- She then resumed her book.
- I went out of our little garden, and stood on the cliff. The wind flew
- at me like some wild thing. Spray stung my face. I was filled with a
- wild exhilaration.
- And then the idea came to me. The simplest, most dramatic idea. Quaint,
- whimsical, with just that suggestion of pathos blended with it which
- makes the fortunes of a play. The central idea, to be brief, of _The
- Girl who Waited_.
- Of my Maenad tramp along the cliff-top with my brain afire, and my
- return, draggled and dripping, an hour late for dinner; of my writing
- and re-writing, of my tears and black depression, of the pens I wore
- out and the quires of paper I spoiled, and finally of the ecstasy of
- the day when the piece began to move and the characters to live, I need
- not speak. Anyone who has ever written will know the sensations. James
- must have gone through a hundred times what I went through once. At
- last, at long last, the play was finished.
- For two days I gloated alone over the great pile of manuscript.
- Then I went to my mother.
- My diffidence was exquisite. It was all I could do to tell her the
- nature of my request, when I spoke to her after lunch. At last she
- understood that I had written a play, and wished to read it to her. She
- took me to the bow-window with gentle solicitude, and waited for me to
- proceed.
- At first she encouraged me, for I faltered over my opening words. But
- as I warmed to my work, and as my embarrassment left me, she no longer
- spoke. Her eyes were fixed intently upon the blue space beyond the
- lilac.
- I read on and on, till at length my voice trailed over the last line,
- rose gallantly at the last fence, the single word _Curtain_, and
- abruptly broke. The strain had been too much for me.
- Tenderly my mother drew me to the sofa; and quietly, with closed
- eyelids, I lay there until, in the soft cool of the evening, I asked
- for her verdict.
- Seeing, as she did instantly, that it would be more dangerous to deny
- my request than to accede to it, she spoke.
- "That there is an absence, my dear Margie, of any relationship with
- life, that not a single character is in any degree human, that passion
- and virtue and vice and real feeling are wanting--this surprises me
- more than I can tell you. I had expected to listen to a natural,
- ordinary, unactable episode arranged more or less in steichomuthics.
- There is no work so scholarly and engaging as the amateur's. But in
- your play I am amazed to find the touch of the professional and
- experienced playwright. Yes, my dear, you have proved that you happen
- to possess the quality--one that is most difficult to acquire--of
- surrounding a situation which is improbable enough to be convincing
- with that absurdly mechanical conversation which the theatre-going
- public demands. As your mother, I am disappointed. I had hoped for
- originality. As your literary well-wisher, I stifle my maternal
- feelings and congratulate you unreservedly."
- I thanked my mother effusively. I think I cried a little.
- She said affectionately that the hour had been one of great interest to
- her, and she added that she would be glad to be consulted with regard
- to the steps I contemplated taking in my literary future.
- She then resumed her book.
- I went to my room and re-read the last letter I had had from James.
- _The Barrel Club,
- Covent Garden,
- London._
- MY DARLING MARGIE,--I am writing this line simply and solely for
- the selfish pleasure I gain from the act of writing to you. I know
- everything will come right some time or other, but at present I am
- suffering from a bad attack of the blues. I am like a general who
- has planned out a brilliant attack, and realises that he must fail
- for want of sufficient troops to carry a position, on the taking of
- which the whole success of the assault depends. Briefly, my position
- is like this. My name is pretty well known in a small sort of way
- among editors and the like as that of a man who can turn out fairly
- good stuff. Besides this, I have many influential friends. You see
- where this brings me? I am in the middle of my attacking movement,
- and I have not been beaten back; but the key to the enemy's position
- is still uncaptured. You know what this key is from my other letters.
- It's the stage. Ah, Margie, one acting play! Only one! It would mean
- everything. Apart from the actual triumph and the direct profits, it
- would bring so much with it. The enemy's flank would be turned, and
- the rest of the battle would become a mere rout. I should have an
- accepted position in the literary world which would convert all the
- other avenues to wealth on which I have my eye instantly into royal
- roads. Obstacles would vanish. The fact that I was a successful
- playwright would make the acceptance of the sort of work I am doing
- now inevitable, and I should get paid ten times as well for it. And
- it would mean--well, you know what it would mean, don't you? Darling
- Margie, tell me again that I have your love, that the waiting is not
- too hard, that you believe in me. Dearest, it will come right in the
- end. Nothing can prevent that. Love and the will of a man have always
- beaten Time and Fate. Write to me, dear.
- _Ever your devoted
- James._
- How utterly free from thought of self! His magnificent loyalty forgot
- the dreadful tension of his own great battle, and pictured only the
- tedium of waiting which it was my part to endure.
- I finished my letter to James very late that night. It was a very long
- and explanatory letter, and it enclosed my play.
- The main point I aimed at was not to damp his spirits. He would, I knew
- well, see that the play was suitable for staging. He would, in short,
- see that I, an inexperienced girl, had done what he, a trained
- professional writer, had failed to do. Lest, therefore, his pique
- should kill admiration and pleasure when he received my work, I wrote
- as one begging a favour. "Here," I said, "we have the means to achieve
- all we want. Do not--oh, do not--criticise. I have written down the
- words. But the conception is yours. The play was inspired by you. But
- for you I should never have begun it. Take my play, James; take it as
- your own. For yours it is. Put your name to it, and produce it, if you
- love me, under your own signature. If this hurts your pride, I will
- word my request differently. You alone are able to manage the business
- side of the production. You know the right men to go to. To approach
- them on behalf of a stranger's work is far less likely to lead to
- success. I have assumed, you will see, that the play is certain to be
- produced. But that will only be so if you adopt it as your own. Claim
- the authorship, and all will be well."
- Much more I wrote to James in the same strain; and my reward came next
- day in the shape of a telegram: "Accept thankfully.--Cloyster."
- Of the play and its reception by the public there is no need to speak.
- The criticisms were all favourable.
- Neither the praise of the critics nor the applause of the public
- aroused any trace of jealousy in James. Their unanimous note of praise
- has been a source of pride to him. He is proud--ah, joy!--that I am to
- be his wife.
- I have blotted the last page of this commonplace love-story of mine.
- The moon has come out from behind a cloud, and the whole bay is one
- vast sheet of silver. I could sit here at my bedroom window and look at
- it all night. But then I should be sure to oversleep myself and be late
- for breakfast. I shall read what I have written once more, and then I
- shall go to bed.
- I think I shall wear my white muslin tomorrow.
- _(End of Miss Margaret Goodwin's narrative.)_
- PART TWO
- James Orlebar Cloyster's Narrative
- CHAPTER 1
- THE INVASION OF BOHEMIA
- It is curious to reflect that my marriage (which takes place today
- week) destroys once and for all my life's ambition. I have never won
- through to the goal I longed for, and now I never shall.
- Ever since I can remember I have yearned to be known as a Bohemian.
- That was my ambition. I have ceased to struggle now. Married Bohemians
- live in Oakley Street, King's Road, Chelsea. We are to rent a house in
- Halkett Place.
- Three years have passed since the excellent, but unsteady, steamship
- _Ibex_ brought me from Guernsey to Southampton. It was a sleepy,
- hot, and sticky wreck that answered to the name of James Orlebar
- Cloyster that morning; but I had my first youth and forty pounds, so
- that soap and water, followed by coffee and an omelette, soon restored
- me.
- The journey to Waterloo gave me opportunity for tobacco and reflection.
- What chiefly exercised me, I remember, was the problem whether it was
- possible to be a Bohemian, and at the same time to be in love. Bohemia
- I looked on as a region where one became inevitably entangled with
- women of unquestionable charm, but doubtful morality. There were supper
- parties.... Festive gatherings in the old studio.... Babette....
- Lucille.... The artists' ball.... Were these things possible for a
- man with an honest, earnest, whole-hearted affection?
- The problem engaged me tensely till my ticket was collected at
- Vauxhall. Just there the solution came. I would be a Bohemian, but a
- misogynist. People would say, "Dear old Jimmy Cloyster. How he hates
- women!" It would add to my character a pleasant touch of dignity and
- reserve which would rather accentuate my otherwise irresponsible way of
- living.
- Little did the good Bohemians of the metropolis know how keen a recruit
- the boat train was bringing to them.
- * * * * *
- As a _pied-à-terre_ I selected a cheap and dingy hotel in York
- Street, and from this base I determined to locate my proper sphere.
- Chelsea was the first place that occurred to me. There was St. John's
- Wood, of course, but that was such a long way off. Chelsea was
- comparatively near to the heart of things, and I had heard that one
- might find there artistic people whose hand-to-mouth, Saturnalian
- existence was redolent of that exquisite gaiety which so attracted my
- own casual temperament.
- Sallying out next morning into the brilliant sunshine and the dusty
- rattle of York Street, I felt a sense of elation at the thought that
- the time for action had come. I was in London. London! The home of the
- fragrant motor-omnibus and the night-blooming Hooligan. London, the
- battlefield of the literary aspirant since Caxton invented the printing
- press. It seemed to me, as I walked firmly across Westminster Bridge,
- that Margie gazed at me with the lovelight in her eyes, and that a
- species of amorous telepathy from Guernsey was girding me for the
- fight.
- Manresa Road I had once heard mentioned as being the heart of Bohemian
- Chelsea. To Manresa Road, accordingly, I went, by way of St. James's
- Park, Buckingham Palace Road, and Lower Sloane Street. Thence to Sloane
- Square. Here I paused, for I knew that I had reached the last outpost
- of respectable, inartistic London.
- "How sudden," I soliloquised, "is the change. Here I am in Sloane
- Square, regular, business-like, and unimaginative; while, a few hundred
- yards away, King's Road leads me into the very midst of genius,
- starvation, and possibly Free Love."
- Sloane Square, indeed, gave me the impression, not so much of a suburb
- as of the suburban portion of a great London railway terminus. It was
- positively pretty. People were shopping with comparative leisure,
- omnibus horses were being rubbed down and watered on the west side of
- the Square, out of the way of the main stream of traffic. A postman,
- clearing the letter-box at the office, stopped his work momentarily to
- read the contents of a postcard. For the moment I understood Caesar's
- feelings on the brink of the Rubicon, and the emotions of Cortes "when
- with eagle eyes he stared at the Pacific." I was on the threshold of
- great events. Behind me was orthodox London; before me the unknown.
- It was distinctly a Caesarian glance, full of deliberate revolt, that I
- bestowed upon the street called Sloane; that clean, orderly
- thoroughfare which leads to Knightsbridge, and thence either to the
- respectabilities of Kensington or the plush of Piccadilly.
- Setting my hat at a wild angle, I stepped with a touch of
- _abandon_ along the King's Road to meet the charming, impoverished
- artists whom our country refuses to recognise.
- My first glimpse of the Manresa Road was, I confess, a complete
- disappointment. Never was Bohemianism more handicapped by its setting
- than that of Chelsea, if the Manresa Road was to be taken as a
- criterion. Along the uninviting uniformity of this street no trace of
- unorthodoxy was to be seen. There came no merry, roystering laughter
- from attic windows. No talented figures of idle geniuses fetched pints
- of beer from the public-house at the corner. No one dressed in an
- ancient ulster and a battered straw hat and puffing enormous clouds of
- blue smoke from a treasured clay pipe gazed philosophically into space
- from a doorway. In point of fact, save for a most conventional
- butcher-boy, I was alone in the street.
- Then the explanation flashed upon me. I had been seen approaching. The
- word had been passed round. A stranger! The clique resents intrusion.
- It lies hid. These gay fellows see me all the time, and are secretly
- amused. But they do not know with whom they have to deal. I have come
- to join them, and join them I will. I am not easily beaten. I will
- outlast them. The joke shall be eventually against them, at some
- eccentric supper. I shall chaff them about how they tried to elude me,
- and failed.
- The hours passed. Still no Bohemians. I began to grow hungry. I sprang
- on to a passing 'bus. It took me to Victoria. I lunched at the
- Shakespeare Hotel, smoked a pipe, and went out into the sunlight again.
- It had occurred to me that night was perhaps the best time for trapping
- my shy quarry. Possibly the revels did not begin in Manresa Road till
- darkness had fallen. I spent the afternoon and evening in the Park,
- dined at Lyons' Popular Café (it must be remembered that I was not yet
- a Bohemian, and consequently owed no deference to the traditions of the
- order); and returned at nine o'clock to the Manresa Road. Once more I
- drew blank. A barrel-organ played cake-walk airs in the middle of the
- road, but it played to an invisible audience. No bearded men danced
- can-cans around it, shouting merry jests to one another. Solitude
- reigned.
- I wait. The duel continues. What grim determination, what perseverance
- can these Bohemians put into a mad jest! I find myself thinking how
- much better it would be were they to apply to their Art the same
- earnestness and fixity of purpose which they squander on a practical
- joke.
- Evening fell. Blinds began to be drawn down. Lamps were lit behind
- them, one by one. Despair was gnawing at my heart, but still I waited.
- Then, just as I was about to retire defeated, I was arrested by the
- appearance of a house numbered 93A.
- At the first-floor window sat a man. He was writing. I could see his
- profile, his long untidy hair. I understood in a moment. This was no
- ordinary writer. He was one of those Bohemians whose wit had been
- exercised upon me so successfully. He was a literary man, and though he
- enjoyed the sport as much as any of the others he was under the
- absolute necessity of writing his copy up to time. Unobserved by his
- gay comrades, he had slipped away to his work. They were still watching
- me; but he, probably owing to a contract with some journal, was obliged
- to give up his share in their merriment and toil with his pen.
- His pen fascinated me. I leaned against the railings of the house
- opposite, enthralled. Ever and anon he seemed to be consulting one or
- other of the books of reference piled up on each side of him. Doubtless
- he was preparing a scholarly column for a daily paper. Presently a
- printer's devil would arrive, clamouring for his "copy." I knew exactly
- the sort of thing that happened. I had read about it in novels.
- How unerring is instinct, if properly cultivated. Hardly had the clocks
- struck twelve when the emissaries--there were two of them, which showed
- the importance of their errand--walked briskly to No. 93A, and knocked
- at the door.
- The writer heard the knock. He rose hurriedly, and began to collect his
- papers. Meanwhile, the knocking had been answered from within by the
- shooting of bolts, noises that were followed by the apparition of a
- female head.
- A few brief questions and the emissaries entered. A pause.
- The litterateur is warning the menials that their charge is sacred;
- that the sheets he has produced are impossible to replace. High words.
- Abrupt re-opening of the front door. Struggling humanity projected on
- to the pavement. Three persons--my scribe in the middle, an emissary on
- either side--stagger strangely past me. The scribe enters the purple
- night only under the stony compulsion of the emissaries.
- What does this mean?
- I have it. The emissaries have become over-anxious. They dare not face
- the responsibility of conveying the priceless copy to Fleet Street.
- They have completely lost their nerve. They insist upon the author
- accompanying them to see with his own eyes that all is well. They do
- not wish Posterity to hand their names down to eternal infamy as "the
- men who lost Blank's manuscript."
- So, greatly against his will, he is dragged off.
- My vigil is rewarded. No. 93A harbours a Bohemian. Let it be inhabited
- also by me.
- I stepped across, and rang the bell.
- The answer was a piercing scream.
- "Ah, ha!" I said to myself complacently, "there are more Bohemians than
- one, then, in this house."
- The female head again appeared.
- "Not another? Oh, sir, say there ain't another wanted," said the head
- in a passionate Cockney accent.
- "That is precisely what there is," I replied. "I want----"
- "What for?"
- "For something moderate."
- "Well, that's a comfort in a wiy. Which of 'em is it you want? The
- first-floor back?"
- "I have no doubt the first-floor back would do quite well."
- My words had a curious effect. She scrutinised me suspiciously.
- "Ho!" she said, with a sniff; "you don't seem to care much which it is
- you get."
- "I don't," I said, "not particularly."
- "Look 'ere," she exclaimed, "you jest 'op it. See? I don't want none of
- your 'arf-larks here, and, what's more, I won't 'ave 'em. I don't
- believe you're a copper at all."
- "I'm not. Far from it."
- "Then what d'yer mean coming 'ere saying you want my first-floor back?"
- "But I do. Or any other room, if that is occupied."
- "'Ow! _Room_? Why didn't yer siy so? You'll pawdon me, sir, if
- I've said anything 'asty-like. I thought--but my mistake."
- "Not at all. Can you let me have a room? I notice that the gentleman
- whom I have just seen----"
- She cut me short. I was about to explain that I was a Bohemian, too.
- "'E's gorn for a stroll, sir. I expec' him back every moment. 'E's
- forgot 'is latchkey. Thet's why I'm sitting up for 'im. Mrs. Driver my
- name is, sir. That's my name, and well known in the neighbour'ood."
- Mrs. Driver spoke earnestly, but breathlessly.
- "I do not contemplate asking you, Mrs. Driver, to give me the
- apartments already engaged by the literary gentleman----"
- "Yes, sir," she interpolated, "that's wot 'e wos, I mean is. A literary
- gent."
- "But have you not another room vacant?"
- "The second-floor back, sir. Very comfortable, nice room, sir. Shady in
- the morning, and gets the setting sun."
- Had the meteorological conditions been adverse to the point of
- malignancy, I should have closed with her terms. Simple agreements were
- ratified then and there by the light of a candle in the passage, and I
- left the house, promising to "come in" in the course of the following
- afternoon.
- CHAPTER 2
- I EVACUATE BOHEMIA
- _(James Orlebar Cloister's narrative continued)_
- The three weeks which I spent at No. 93A mark an epoch in my life. It
- was during that period that I came nearest to realising my ambition to
- be a Bohemian; and at the end of the third week, for reasons which I
- shall state, I deserted Bohemia, firmly and with no longing, lingering
- glance behind, and settled down to the prosaic task of grubbing
- earnestly for money.
- The second-floor back had a cupboard of a bedroom leading out of it.
- Even I, desirous as I was of seeing romance in everything, could not
- call my lodgings anything but dingy, dark, and commonplace. They were
- just like a million other of London's mean lodgings. The window looked
- out over a sea of backyards, bounded by tall, depressing houses, and
- intersected by clothes-lines. A cats' club (social, musical, and
- pugilistic) used to meet on the wall to the right of my window. One or
- two dissipated trees gave the finishing touch of gloom to the scene.
- Nor was the interior of the room more cheerful. The furniture had been
- put in during the reign of George III, and last dusted in that of
- William and Mary. A black horse-hair sofa ran along one wall. There was
- a deal table, a chair, and a rickety bookcase. It was a room for a
- realist to write in; and my style, such as it was, was bright and
- optimistic.
- Once in, I set about the task of ornamenting my abode with much vigour.
- I had my own ideas of mural decoration. I papered the walls with
- editorial rejection forms, of which I was beginning to have a
- representative collection. Properly arranged, these look very striking.
- There is a good deal of variety about them. The ones I liked best were
- those which I received, at the rate of three a week, bearing a very
- pleasing picture, in green, of the publishing offices at the top of the
- sheet of note-paper. Scattered about in sufficient quantities, these
- lend an air of distinction to a room. _Pearson's Magazine_ also
- supplies a taking line in rejection forms. _Punch_'s I never cared
- for very much. Neat, I grant you; but, to my mind, too cold. I like a
- touch of colour in a rejection form.
- In addition to these, I purchased from the grocer at the corner a
- collection of pictorial advertisements. What I had really wanted was
- the theatrical poster, printed and signed by well-known artists. But
- the grocer didn't keep them, and I was impatient to create my proper
- atmosphere. My next step was to buy a corncob pipe and a quantity of
- rank, jet-black tobacco. I hated both, and kept them more as ornaments
- than for use.
- Then, having hacked my table about with a knife and battered it with a
- poker till it might have been the table of a shaggy and unrecognised
- genius, I settled down to work.
- I was not a brilliant success. I had that "little knowledge" which is
- held to be such a dangerous thing. I had not plunged into the literary
- profession without learning a few facts about it. I had read nearly
- every journalistic novel and "Hints on Writing for the Papers" book
- that had ever been published. In theory I knew all that there was to be
- known about writing. Now, all my authorities were very strong on one
- point. "Write," they said, very loud and clear, "not what _you_
- like, but what editors like." I smiled to myself when I started. I felt
- that I had stolen a march on my rivals. "All round me," I said to
- myself, "are young authors bombarding editors with essays on Lucretius,
- translations of Martial, and disquisitions on Ionic comedy. I know too
- much for that. I work on a different plan." "Study the papers, and see
- what they want," said my authorities. I studied the papers. Some wanted
- one thing, apparently, others another. There was one group of three
- papers whose needs seemed to coincide, and I could see an article
- rejected by one paper being taken by another. This offered me a number
- of chances instead of one. I could back my MSS. to win or for a place.
- I began a serious siege of these three papers.
- By the end of the second week I had had "Curious Freaks of Eccentric
- Testators," "Singular Scenes in Court," "Actors Who Have Died on the
- Stage," "Curious Scenes in Church," and seven others rejected by all
- three. Somehow this sort of writing is not so easy as it looks. A man
- who was on the staff of a weekly once told me that he had had two
- thousand of these articles printed since he started--poor devil. He had
- the knack. I could never get it. I sent up fifty-three in all in the
- first year of my literary life, and only two stuck. I got fifteen
- shillings from one periodical for "Men Who Have Missed Their Own
- Weddings," and, later, a guinea from the same for "Single Day
- Marriages." That paper has a penchant for the love-interest. Yet when I
- sent it my "Duchesses Who Have Married Dustmen," it came back by the
- early post next day. That was to me the worst part of those grey days.
- I had my victories, but they were always followed by a series of
- defeats. I would have a manuscript accepted by an editor. "Hullo," I
- would say, "here's the man at last, the Editor-Who-Believes-In-Me. Let
- the thing go on." I would send him off another manuscript. He would
- take it. Victory, by Jove! Then--_wonk_! Back would come my third
- effort with the curtest of refusals. I always imagined editors in those
- days to be pettish, whimsical men who amused themselves by taking up a
- beginner, and then, wearying of the sport, dropped him back into the
- slime from which they had picked him.
- In the intervals of articles I wrote short stories, again for the same
- three papers. As before, I studied these papers carefully to see what
- they wanted; then worked out a mechanical plot, invariably with a
- quarrel in the first part, an accident, and a rescue in the middle, and
- a reconciliation at the end--told it in a style that makes me hot all
- over when I think of it, and sent it up, enclosing a stamped addressed
- envelope in case of rejection. A very useful precaution, as it always
- turned out.
- It was the little knowledge to which I have referred above which kept
- my walls so thickly covered with rejection forms. I was in precisely
- the same condition as a man who has been taught the rudiments of
- boxing. I knew just enough to hamper me, and not enough to do me any
- good. If I had simply blundered straight at my work and written just
- what occurred to me in my own style, I should have done much better. I
- have a sense of humour. I deliberately stifled it. For it I substituted
- a grisly kind of playfulness. My hero called my heroine "little woman,"
- and the concluding passage where he kissed her was written in a sly,
- roguish vein, for which I suppose I shall have to atone in the next
- world. Only the editor of the _Colney Hatch Argus_ could have
- accepted work like mine. Yet I toiled on.
- It was about the middle of my third week at No. 93A that I definitely
- decided to throw over my authorities, and work by the light of my own
- intelligence.
- Nearly all my authorities had been very severe on the practice of
- verse-writing. It was, they asserted, what all young beginners tried to
- do, and it was the one thing editors would never look at. In the first
- ardour of my revolt I determined to do a set of verses.
- It happened that the weather had been very bad for the last few days.
- After a month and a half of sunshine the rain had suddenly begun to
- fall. I took this as my topic. It was raining at the time. I wrote a
- satirical poem, full of quaint rhymes.
- I had always had rather a turn for serious verse. It struck me that the
- rain might be treated poetically as well as satirically. That night I
- sent off two sets of verses to a daily and an evening paper. Next day
- both were in print, with my initials to them.
- I began to see light.
- "Verse is the thing," I said. "I will reorganise my campaign. First the
- skirmishers, then the real attack. I will peg along with verses till
- somebody begins to take my stories and articles."
- I felt easier in my mind than I had felt for some time. A story came
- back by the nine o'clock post from a monthly magazine (to which I had
- sent it from mere bravado), but the thing did not depress me. I got out
- my glue-pot and began to fasten the rejection form to the wall,
- whistling a lively air as I did so.
- While I was engaged in this occupation there was a testy rap at the
- door, and Mrs. Driver appeared. She eyed my manoeuvres with the
- rejection form with a severe frown. After a preliminary sniff she
- embarked upon a rapid lecture on what she called my irregular and
- untidy habits. I had turned her second-floor back, she declared, into a
- pig-stye.
- "Sech a litter," she said.
- "But," I protested, "this is a Bohemian house, is it not?"
- She appeared so shocked--indeed, so infuriated, that I dared not give
- her time to answer.
- "The gentleman below, he's not very tidy," I added diplomatically.
- "Wot gent below?" said Mrs. Driver.
- I reminded her of the night of my arrival.
- "Oh, '_im_," she said, shaken. "Well, 'e's not come back."
- "Mrs. Driver," I said sternly, "you said he'd gone out for a stroll. I
- refuse to believe that any man would stroll for three weeks."
- "So I did say it," was the defiant reply. "I said it so as you
- shouldn't be put off coming. You looked a steady young feller, and I
- wanted a let. Wish I'd told you the truth, if it 'ad a-stopped you."
- "What is the truth?"
- "'E was a wrong 'un, 'e wos. Writing begging letters to parties as was
- a bit soft, that wos '_is_ little gime. But 'e wos a bit too
- clever one day, and the coppers got 'im. Now you know!"
- Mrs. Driver paused after this outburst, and allowed her eye to wander
- slowly and ominously round my walls.
- I was deeply moved. My one link with Bohemia had turned out a fraud.
- Mrs. Driver's voice roused me from my meditations.
- "I must arst you to be good enough, if _you_ please, kindly to
- remove those there bits of paper."
- She pointed to the rejection forms.
- I hesitated. I felt that it was a thing that ought to be broken gently.
- "The fact is, Mrs. Driver," I said, "and no one can regret it more
- deeply than I do--the fact is, they're stuck on with glue."
- Two minutes later I had received my marching orders, and the room was
- still echoing with the slam of the door as it closed behind the
- indignant form of my landlady.
- Chapter 3
- THE ORB
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- The problem of lodgings in London is an easy one to a man with an
- adequate supply of money in his pocket. The only difficulty is to
- select the most suitable, to single out from the eager crowd the ideal
- landlady.
- Evicted from No. 93A, it seemed to me that I had better abandon
- Bohemia; postpone my connection with that land of lotus-eaters for the
- moment, while I provided myself with the means of paying rent and
- buying dinners. Farther down the King's Road there were comfortable
- rooms to be had for a moderate sum per week. They were prosaic, but
- inexpensive. I chose Walpole Street. A fairly large bed-sitting room
- was vacant at No. 23. I took it, and settled down seriously to make my
- writing pay.
- There were advantages in Walpole Street which Manresa Road had lacked.
- For one thing, there was more air, and it smelt less than the Manresa
- Road air. Walpole Street is bounded by Burton Court, where the
- Household Brigade plays cricket, and the breezes from the river come to
- it without much interruption. There was also more quiet. No. 23 is the
- last house in the street, and, even when I sat with my window open, the
- noise of traffic from the King's Road was faint and rather pleasant. It
- was an excellent spot for a man who meant to work. Except for a certain
- difficulty in getting my landlady and her daughters out of the room
- when they came to clear away my meals and talk about the better days
- they had seen, and a few imbroglios with the eight cats which infested
- the house, it was the best spot, I think, that I could have chosen.
- Living a life ruled by the strictest economy, I gradually forged ahead.
- Verse, light and serious, continued my long suit. I generally managed
- to place two of each brand a week; and that meant two guineas,
- sometimes more. One particularly pleasing thing about this
- verse-writing was that there was no delay, as there was with my prose.
- I would write a set of verses for a daily paper after tea, walk to
- Fleet Street with them at half-past six, thus getting a little
- exercise; leave them at the office; and I would see them in print in
- the next morning's issue. Payment was equally prompt. The rule was,
- Send in your bill before five on Wednesday, and call for payment on
- Friday at seven. Thus I had always enough money to keep me going during
- the week.
- In addition to verses, I kept turning out a great quantity of prose,
- fiction, and otherwise, but without much success. The visits of the
- postmen were the big events of the day at that time. Before I had been
- in Walpole Street a week I could tell by ear the difference between a
- rejected manuscript and an ordinary letter. There is a certain solid
- _plop_ about the fall of the former which not even a long envelope
- full of proofs can imitate successfully.
- I worked extraordinarily hard at that time. All day, sometimes. The
- thought of Margie waiting in Guernsey kept me writing when I should
- have done better to have taken a rest. My earnings were small in
- proportion to my labour. The guineas I made, except from verse, were
- like the ounce of gold to the ton of ore. I no longer papered the walls
- with rejection forms; but this was from choice, not from necessity. I
- had plenty of material, had I cared to use it.
- I made a little money, of course. My takings for the first month
- amounted to £9 10s. I notched double figures in the next with £ll 1s.
- 6d. Then I dropped to £7 0s. 6d. It was not starvation, but it was
- still more unlike matrimony.
- But at the end of the sixth month there happened to me what, looking
- back, I consider to be the greatest piece of good fortune of my life. I
- received a literary introduction. Some authorities scoff at literary
- introductions. They say that editors read everything, whether they know
- the author or not. So they do; and, if the work is not good, a letter
- to the editor from a man who once met his cousin at a garden-party is
- not likely to induce him to print it. There is no journalistic "ring"
- in the sense in which the word is generally used; but there are
- undoubtedly a certain number of men who know the ropes, and can act as
- pilots in a strange sea; and an introduction brings one into touch with
- them. There is a world of difference between contributing blindly work
- which seems suitable to the style of a paper and sending in matter
- designed to attract the editor personally.
- Mr. Macrae, whose pupil I had been at Cambridge, was the author of my
- letter of introduction. At St. Gabriel's, Mr. Macrae had been a man for
- whom I entertained awe and respect. Likes and dislikes in connection
- with one's tutor seemed outside the question. Only a chance episode had
- shown me that my tutor was a mortal with a mortal's limitations. We
- were bicycling together one day along the Trumpington Road, when a form
- appeared, coming to meet us. My tutor's speech grew more and more
- halting as the form came nearer. At last he stopped talking altogether,
- and wobbled in his saddle. The man bowed to him, and, as if he had won
- through some fiery ordeal, he shot ahead like a gay professional rider.
- When I drew level with him, he said, "That, Mr. Cloyster, is my
- tailor."
- Mr. Macrae was typical of the University don who is Scotch. He had
- married the senior historian of Newnham. He lived (and still lives) by
- proxy. His publishers order his existence. His honeymoon had been
- placed at the disposal of these gentlemen, and they had allotted to
- that period an edition of Aristotle's Ethics. Aristotle, accordingly,
- received the most scholarly attention from the recently united couple
- somewhere on the slopes of Mount Parnassus. All the reviews were
- satisfactory.
- In my third year at St. Gabriel's it was popularly supposed that Master
- Pericles Aeschylus, Mr. Macrae's infant son, was turned to correct my
- Latin prose, though my Iambics were withheld from him at the request of
- the family doctor.
- The letter which Pericles Aeschylus's father had addressed to me was
- one of the pleasantest surprises I have ever had. It ran as follows:
- _St. Gabriel's College,
- Cambridge._
- MY DEAR CLOYSTER,--The divergence of our duties and pleasures
- during your residence here caused us to see but little of each
- other. Would it had been otherwise! And too often our intercourse
- had--on my side--a distinctly professional flavour. Your attitude
- towards your religious obligations was, I fear, something to seek.
- Indeed, the line, "_Pastor deorum cultor et infrequens_,"
- might have been directly inspired by your views on the keeping
- of Chapels. On the other hand, your contributions to our musical
- festivities had the true Aristophanes _panache_.
- I hear you are devoting yourself to literature, and I beg that
- you will avail yourself of the enclosed note, which is addressed
- to a personal friend of mine.
- Believe me,
- _Your well-wisher,
- David Ossian Macrae._
- The enclosure bore this inscription:
- CHARLES FERMIN, ESQ.,
- Offices of the _Orb_,
- Strand,
- London.
- I had received the letter at breakfast. I took a cab, and drove
- straight to the _Orb_.
- A painted hand, marked "Editorial," indicated a flight of stairs. At
- the top of these I was confronted by a glass door, beyond which,
- entrenched behind a desk, sat a cynical-looking youth. A smaller boy in
- the background talked into a telephone. Both were giggling. On seeing
- me the slightly larger of the two advanced with a half-hearted attempt
- at solemnity, though unable to resist a Parthian shaft at his
- companion, who was seized on the instant with a paroxysm of suppressed
- hysteria.
- My letter was taken down a mysterious stone passage. After some waiting
- the messenger returned with the request that I would come back at
- eleven, as Mr. Fermin would be very busy till then.
- I went out into the Strand, and sought a neighbouring hostelry. It was
- essential that I should be brilliant at the coming interview, if only
- spirituously brilliant; and I wished to remove a sensation of stomachic
- emptiness, such as I had been wont to feel at school when approaching
- the headmaster's study.
- At eleven I returned, and asked again for Mr. Fermin; and presently he
- appeared--a tall, thin man, who gave one the impression of being in a
- hurry. I knew him by reputation as a famous quarter-miler. He had been
- president of the O.U.A.C. some years back. He looked as if at any
- moment he might dash off in any direction at quarter-mile pace.
- We shook hands, and I tried to look intelligent.
- "Sorry to have to keep you waiting," he said, as we walked to his club;
- "but we are always rather busy between ten and eleven, putting the
- column through. Gresham and I do 'On Your Way,' you know. The last copy
- has to be down by half-past ten."
- We arrived at the Club, and sat in a corner of the lower smoking-room.
- "Macrae says that you are going in for writing. Of course, I'll do
- anything I can, but it isn't easy to help a man. As it happens, though,
- I can put you in the way of something, if it's your style of work. Do
- you ever do verse?"
- I felt like a batsman who sees a slow full-toss sailing through the
- air.
- "It's the only thing I can get taken," I said. "I've had quite a lot in
- the _Chronicle_ and occasional bits in other papers."
- He seemed relieved.
- "Oh, that's all right, then," he said. "You know 'On Your Way.' Perhaps
- you'd care to come in and do that for a bit? It's only holiday work,
- but it'll last five weeks. And if you do it all right I can get you the
- whole of the holiday work on the column. That comes to a good lot in
- the year. We're always taking odd days off. Can you come up at a
- moment's notice?"
- "Easily," I said.
- "Then, you see, if you did that you would drop into the next vacancy on
- the column. There's no saying when one may occur. It's like the General
- Election. It may happen tomorrow, or not for years. Still, you'd be on
- the spot in case."
- "It's awfully good of you."
- "Not at all. As a matter of fact, I was rather in difficulties about
- getting a holiday man. I'm off to Scotland the day after tomorrow, and
- I had to find a sub. Well, then, will you come in on Monday?"
- "All right."
- "You've had no experience of newspaper work, have you?"
- "No."
- "Well, all the work at the _Orb's_ done between nine and eleven.
- You must be there at nine sharp. Literally sharp, I mean. Not
- half-past. And you'd better do some stuff overnight for the first week
- or so. You'll find working in the office difficult till you get used to
- it. Of course, though, you'll always have Gresham there, so there's no
- need to get worried. He can fill the column himself, if he's pushed.
- Four or five really good paragraphs a day and an occasional set of
- verses are all he'll want from you."
- "I see."
- "On Monday, then. Nine sharp. Good-bye."
- I walked home along Piccadilly with almost a cake-walk stride. At last
- I was in the inner circle.
- An _Orb_ cart passed me. I nodded cheerfully to the driver. He was
- one of _Us_.
- Chapter 4
- JULIAN EVERSLEIGH
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- I determined to celebrate the occasion by dining out, going to a
- theatre, and having supper afterwards, none of which things were
- ordinarily within my means. I had not been to a theatre since I had
- arrived in town; and, except on Saturday nights, I always cooked my own
- dinner, a process which was cheap, and which appealed to the passion
- for Bohemianism which I had not wholly cast out of me.
- The morning paper informed me that there were eleven musical comedies,
- three Shakespeare plays, a blank verse drama, and two comedies ("last
- weeks") for me to choose from. I bought a stall at the Briggs Theatre.
- Stanley Briggs, who afterwards came to bulk large in my small world,
- was playing there in a musical comedy which had had even more than the
- customary musical-comedy success.
- London by night had always had an immense fascination for me. Coming
- out of the restaurant after supper, I felt no inclination to return to
- my lodgings, and end the greatest night of my life tamely with a book
- and a pipe. Here was I, a young man, fortified by an excellent supper,
- in the heart of Stevenson's London. Why should I have no New Arabian
- Night adventure? I would stroll about for half an hour, and give London
- a chance of living up to its reputation.
- I walked slowly along Piccadilly, and turned up Rupert Street. A magic
- name. Prince Florizel of Bohemia had ended his days there in his
- tobacconist's divan. Mr. Gilbert's Policeman Forth had been discovered
- there by the men of London at the end of his long wanderings through
- Soho. Probably, if the truth were known, Rudolf Rassendyl had spent
- part of his time there. It could not be that Rupert Street would send
- me empty away.
- My confidence was not abused. Turning into Rupert Court, a dark and
- suggestive passage some short distance up the street on the right, I
- found a curious little comedy being played.
- A door gave on to the deserted passageway, and on each side of it stood
- a man--the lurcher type of man that is bred of London streets. The door
- opened inwards. Another man stepped out. The hands of one of the
- lurchers flew to the newcomer's mouth. The hands of the other lurcher
- flew to the newcomer's pockets.
- At that moment I advanced.
- The lurchers vanished noiselessly and instantaneously.
- Their victim held out his hand.
- "Come in, won't you?" he said, smiling sleepily at me.
- I followed him in, murmuring something about "caught in the act."
- He repeated the phrase as we went upstairs.
- "'Caught in the act.' Yes, they are ingenious creatures. Let me
- introduce myself. My name is Julian Eversleigh. Sit down, won't you?
- Excuse me for a moment."
- He crossed to a writing-table.
- Julian Eversleigh inhabited a single room of irregular shape. It was
- small, and situated immediately under the roof. One side had a window
- which overlooked Rupert Court. The view from it was, however,
- restricted, because the window was inset, so that the walls projecting
- on either side prevented one seeing more than a yard or two of the
- court.
- The room contained a hammock, a large tin bath, propped up against the
- wall, a big wardrobe, a couple of bookcases, a deal writing-table--at
- which the proprietor was now sitting with a pen in his mouth, gazing at
- the ceiling--and a divan-like formation of rugs and cube sugar boxes.
- The owner of this mixed lot of furniture wore a very faded blue serge
- suit, the trousers baggy at the knees and the coat threadbare at the
- elbows. He had the odd expression which green eyes combined with red
- hair give a man.
- "Caught in the act," he was murmuring. "Caught in the act."
- The phrase seemed to fascinate him.
- I had established myself on the divan, and was puffing at a cigar,
- which I had bought by way of setting the coping-stone on my night's
- extravagance, before he got up from his writing.
- "Those fellows," he said, producing a bottle of whisky and a syphon
- from one of the lower drawers of the wardrobe, "did me a double
- service. They introduced me to you--say when--and they gave me----"
- "When."
- "--an idea."
- "But how did it happen?" I asked.
- "Quite simple," he answered. "You see, my friends, when they call on me
- late at night, can't get in by knocking at the front door. It is a
- shop-door, and is locked early. Vancott, my landlord, is a baker, and,
- as he has to be up making muffins somewhere about five in the
- morning--we all have our troubles--he does not stop up late. So people
- who want me go into the court, and see whether my lamp is burning by
- the window. If it is, they stand below and shout, 'Julian,' till I open
- the door into the court. That's what happened tonight. I heard my name
- called, went down, and walked into the arms of the enterprising
- gentlemen whom you chanced to notice. They must have been very hungry,
- for even if they had carried the job through they could not have
- expected to make their fortunes. In point of fact, they would have
- cleared one-and-threepence. But when you're hungry you can see no
- further than the pit of your stomach. Do you know, I almost sympathise
- with the poor brutes. People sometimes say to me, 'What are you?' I
- have often half a mind to reply, 'I have been hungry.' My stars, be
- hungry once, and you're educated, if you don't die of it, for a
- lifetime."
- This sort of talk from a stranger might have been the prelude to an
- appeal for financial assistance.
- He dissipated that half-born thought.
- "Don't be uneasy," he said; "you have not been lured up here by the
- ruse of a clever borrower. I can do a bit of touching when in the mood,
- mind you, but you're safe. You are here because I see that you are a
- pleasant fellow."
- "Thank you," I said.
- "Besides," he continued, "I am not hungry at present. In fact, I shall
- never be hungry again."
- "You're lucky," I remarked.
- "I am. I am the fortunate possessor of the knack of writing
- advertisements."
- "Indeed," I said, feeling awkward, for I saw that I ought to be
- impressed.
- "Ah!" he said, laughing outright. "You're not impressed in the least,
- really. But I'll ask you to consider what advertisements mean. First,
- they are the life-essence of every newspaper, every periodical, and
- every book."
- "Every book?"
- "Practically, yes. Most books contain some latent support of a fashion
- in clothes or food or drink, or of some pleasant spot or phase of
- benevolence or vice, all of which form the interest of one or other of
- the sections of society, which sections require publicity at all costs
- for their respective interests."
- I was about to probe searchingly into so optimistic a view of modern
- authorship, but he stalled me off by proceeding rapidly with his
- discourse.
- "Apart, however, from the less obvious modes of advertising, you'll
- agree that this is the age of all ages for the man who can write puffs.
- 'Good wine needs no bush' has become a trade paradox, 'Judge by
- appearances,' a commercial platitude. The man who is ambitious and
- industrious turns his trick of writing into purely literary channels,
- and becomes a novelist. The man who is not ambitious and not
- industrious, and who does not relish the prospect of becoming a loafer
- in Strand wine-shops, writes advertisements. The gold-bearing area is
- always growing. It's a Tom Tiddler's ground. It is simply a question of
- picking up the gold and silver. The industrious man picks up as much as
- he wants. Personally, I am easily content. An occasional nugget
- satisfies me. Here's tonight's nugget, for instance."
- I took the paper he handed to me. It bore the words:
- CAUGHT IN THE ACT
- CAUGHT IN THE ACT of drinking Skeffington's Sloe Gin, a man will
- always present a happy and smiling appearance. Skeffington's Sloe
- Gin adds a crowning pleasure to prosperity, and is a consolation
- in adversity. Of all Grocers.
- "Skeffington's," he said, "pay me well. I'm worth money to them, and
- they know it. At present they are giving me a retainer to keep my work
- exclusively for them. The stuff they have put on the market is neither
- better nor worse than the average sloe gin. But my advertisements have
- given it a tremendous vogue. It is the only brand that grocers stock.
- Since I made the firm issue a weekly paper called _Skeffington's
- Poultry Farmer_, free to all country customers, the consumption of
- sloe gin has been enormous among agriculturists. My idea, too, of
- supplying suburban buyers gratis with a small drawing-book, skeleton
- illustrations, and four coloured chalks, has made the drink popular
- with children. You must have seen the poster I designed. There's a
- reduced copy behind you. The father of a family is unwrapping a bottle
- of Skeffington's Sloe Gin. His little ones crowd round him, laughing
- and clapping their hands. The man's wife is seen peeping roguishly in
- through the door. Beneath is the popular catch-phrase, "Ain't mother
- going to 'ave none?"
- "You're a genius," I cried.
- "Hardly that," he said. "At least, I have no infinite capacity for
- taking pains. I am one of Nature's slackers. Despite my talent for
- drawing up advertisements, I am often in great straits owing to my
- natural inertia and a passionate love of sleep. I sleep on the
- slightest provocation or excuse. I will back myself to sleep against
- anyone in the world, no age, weight, or colour barred. You, I should
- say, are of a different temperament. More energetic. The Get On or Get
- Out sort of thing. The Young Hustler."
- "Rather," I replied briskly, "I am in love."
- "So am I," said Julian Eversleigh. "Hopelessly, however. Give us a
- match."
- After that we confirmed our friendship by smoking a number of pipes
- together.
- Chapter 5
- THE COLUMN
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- After the first week "On Your Way," on the _Orb_, offered hardly
- any difficulty. The source of material was the morning papers, which
- were placed in a pile on our table at nine o'clock. The halfpenny
- papers were our principal support. Gresham and I each took one, and
- picked it clean. We attended first to the Subject of the Day. This was
- generally good for two or three paragraphs of verbal fooling. There was
- a sort of tradition that the first half-dozen paragraphs should be
- topical. The rest might be topical or not, as occasion served.
- The column usually opened with a one-line pun--Gresham's invention.
- Gresham was a man of unparalleled energy and ingenuity. He had created
- several of the typical characters who appeared from time to time in "On
- Your Way," as, for instance, Mrs. Jenkinson, our Mrs. Malaprop, and
- Jones junior, our "howler" manufacturing schoolboy. He was also a stout
- apostle of a mode of expression which he called "funny language." Thus,
- instead of writing boldly: "There is a rumour that----," I was taught to
- say, "It has got about that----." This sounds funnier in print, so
- Gresham said. I could never see it myself.
- Gresham had a way of seizing on any bizarre incident reported in the
- morning papers, enfolding it in "funny language," adding a pun, and
- thus making it his own. He had a cunning mastery of periphrasis, and a
- telling command of adverbs.
- Here is an illustration. An account was given one morning by the
- Central news of the breaking into of a house at Johnsonville (Mich.) by
- a negro, who had stolen a quantity of greenbacks. The thief, escaping
- across some fields, was attacked by a cow, which, after severely
- injuring the negro, ate the greenbacks.
- Gresham's unacknowledged version of the episode ran as follows:
- "The sleepy god had got the stranglehold on John Denville when Caesar
- Bones, a coloured gentleman, entered John's house at Johnsonville
- (Mich.) about midnight. Did the nocturnal caller disturb his slumbering
- host? No. Caesar Bones has the finer feelings. But as he was
- noiselessly retiring, what did he see? Why, a pile of greenbacks which
- John had thoughtlessly put away in a fire-proof safe."
- To prevent the story being cut out by the editor, who revised all the
- proofs of the column, with the words "too long" scribbled against it,
- Gresham continued his tale in another paragraph.
- "'Dis am berry insecure,' murmured the visitor to himself,
- transplanting the notes in a neighbourly way into his pocket. Mark the
- sequel. The noble Caesar met, on his homeward path, an irritable
- cudster. The encounter was brief. Caesar went weak in the second round,
- and took the count in the third. Elated by her triumph, and hungry from
- her exertions, the horned quadruped nosed the wad of paper money and
- daringly devoured it. Caesar has told the court that if he is convicted
- of felony, he will arraign the owner of the ostrich-like bovine on a
- charge of receiving stolen goods. The owner merely ejaculates 'Black
- male!'"
- On his day Gresham could write the column and have a hundred lines over
- by ten o'clock. I, too, found plenty of copy as a rule, though I
- continued my practice of doing a few paragraphs overnight. But every
- now and then fearful days would come, when the papers were empty of
- material for our purposes, and when two out of every half-dozen
- paragraphs which we did succeed in hammering out were returned deleted
- on the editor's proof.
- The tension at these times used to be acute. The head printer would
- send up a relay of small and grubby boys to remind us that "On Your
- Way" was fifty lines short. At ten o'clock he would come in person, and
- be plaintive.
- Gresham, the old hand, applied to such occasions desperate remedies. He
- would manufacture out of even the most pointless item of news two
- paragraphs by adding to his first the words, "This reminds us of
- Mr. Punch's famous story." He would then go through the bound volumes
- of _Punch_--we had about a dozen in the room--with lightning speed
- until he chanced upon a more or less appropriate tag.
- Those were mornings when verses would be padded out from three stanzas
- to five, Gresham turning them out under fifteen minutes. He had a
- wonderful facility for verse.
- As a last expedient one fell back upon a standing column, a moth-eaten
- collection of alleged jests which had been set up years ago to meet the
- worst emergencies. It was, however, considered a confession of weakness
- and a degradation to use this column.
- We had also in our drawer a book of American witticisms, published in
- New York. To cut one out, preface it with "A good American story comes
- to hand," and pin it on a slip was a pleasing variation of the usual
- mode of constructing a paragraph. Gresham and I each had our favourite
- method. Personally, I had always a partiality for dealing with
- "buffers." "The brakes refused to act, and the train struck the buffers
- at the end of the platform" invariably suggested that if elderly
- gentlemen would abstain from loitering on railway platforms, they would
- not get hurt in this way.
- Gresham had a similar liking for "turns." "The performance at the
- Frivoli Music Hall was in full swing when the scenery was noticed to be
- on fire. The audience got a turn. An extra turn."
- Julian Eversleigh, to whom I told my experiences on the _Orb_,
- said he admired the spirit with which I entered into my duties. He
- said, moreover, that I had a future before me, not only as a
- journalist, but as a writer.
- Nor, indeed, could I help seeing for myself that I was getting on. I
- was making a fair income now, and had every prospect of making a much
- better one. My market was not restricted. Verses, articles, and fiction
- from my pen were being accepted with moderate regularity by many of the
- minor periodicals. My scope was growing distinctly wider. I found, too,
- that my work seemed to meet with a good deal more success when I sent
- it in from the _Orb_, with a letter to the editor on _Orb_ notepaper.
- Altogether, my five weeks on the _Orb_ were invaluable to me. I
- ought to have paid rather than have taken payment for working on the
- column. By the time Fermin came back from Scotland to turn me out, I
- was a professional. I had learned the art of writing against time. I
- had learned to ignore noise, which, for a writer in London, is the most
- valuable quality of all. Every day at the _Orb_ I had had to turn
- out my stuff with the hum of the Strand traffic in my ears, varied by
- an occasional barrel-organ, the whistling of popular songs by the
- printers, whose window faced ours, and the clatter of a typewriter in
- the next room. Often I had to turn out a paragraph or a verse while
- listening and making appropriate replies to some other member of the
- staff, who had wandered into our room to pass the time of day or read
- out a bit of his own stuff which had happened to please him
- particularly. All this gave me a power of concentration, without which
- writing is difficult in this city of noises.
- The friendship I formed with Gresham too, besides being pleasant, was
- of infinite service to me. He knew all about the game. I followed his
- advice, and prospered. His encouragement was as valuable as his advice.
- He was my pilot, and saw me, at great trouble to himself, through the
- dangerous waters.
- I foresaw that the future held out positive hope that my marriage with
- Margaret would become possible. And yet----
- Pausing in the midst of my castle-building, I suffered a sense of
- revulsion. I had been brought up to believe that the only adjective
- that could be coupled with the noun "journalism" was "precarious." Was
- I not, as Gresham would have said, solving an addition sum in infantile
- poultry before their mother, the feathered denizen of the farmyard, had
- lured them from their shell? Was I not mistaking a flash in the pan for
- a genuine success?
- These thoughts numbed my fingers in the act of writing to Margaret.
- Instead, therefore, of the jubilant letter I had intended to send her,
- I wrote one of quite a different tone. I mentioned the arduous nature
- of my work. I referred to the struggle in which I was engaged. I
- indicated cleverly that I was a man of extraordinary courage battling
- with fate. I implied that I made just enough to live on.
- It would have been cruel to arouse expectations which might never be
- fulfilled. In this letter, accordingly, and in subsequent letters, I
- rather went to the opposite extreme. Out of pure regard for Margaret, I
- painted my case unnecessarily black. Considerations of a similar nature
- prompted me to keep on my lodging in Walpole Street. I had two rooms
- instead of one, but they were furnished severely and with nothing but
- the barest necessaries.
- I told myself through it all that I loved Margaret as dearly as ever.
- Yet there were moments, and they seemed to come more frequently as the
- days went on, when I found myself wondering. Did I really want to give
- up all this? The untidiness, the scratch meals, the nights with Julian?
- And, when I was honest, I answered, No.
- Somehow Margaret seemed out of place in this new world of mine.
- CHAPTER 6
- NEW YEAR'S EVE
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- The morning of New Year's Eve was a memorable one for me. My first
- novel was accepted. Not an ambitious volume. It was rather short, and
- the plot was not obtrusive. The sporting gentlemen who accepted it,
- however--Messrs. Prodder and Way--seemed pleased with it; though, when
- I suggested a sum in cash in advance of royalties, they displayed a
- most embarrassing coyness--and also, as events turned out, good sense.
- I carried the good news to Julian, whom I found, as usual, asleep in
- his hammock. I had fallen into the habit of calling on him after my
- _Orb_ work. He was generally sleepy when I arrived, at half-past
- eleven, and while we talked I used to make his breakfast act as a
- sort of early lunch for myself. He said that the people of the house
- had begun by trying to make the arrival of his breakfast coincide with
- the completion of his toilet; that this had proved so irksome that they
- had struck; and that finally it had been agreed on both sides that the
- meal should be put in his room at eleven o'clock, whether he was
- dressed or not. He said that he often saw his breakfast come in, and
- would drowsily determine to consume it hot. But he had never had the
- energy to do so. Once, indeed, he had mistaken the time, and had
- confidently expected that the morning of a hot breakfast had come at
- last. He was dressed by nine, and had sat for two hours gloating over
- the prospect of steaming coffee and frizzling bacon. On that particular
- morning, however, there had been some domestic tragedy--the firing of a
- chimney or the illness of a cook--and at eleven o'clock, not breakfast,
- but an apology for its absence had been brought to him. This embittered
- Julian. He gave up the unequal contest, and he has frequently confessed
- to me that cold breakfast is an acquired, yet not unpleasant, taste.
- He woke up when I came in, and, after hearing my news and
- congratulating me, began to open the letters that lay on the table at
- his side.
- One of the envelopes had Skeffington's trade mark stamped upon it, and
- contained a bank-note and a sheet closely type-written on both sides.
- "Half a second, Jimmy," said he, and began to read.
- I poured myself out a cup of cold coffee, and, avoiding the bacon and
- eggs, which lay embalmed in frozen grease, began to lunch off bread and
- marmalade.
- "I'll do it," he burst out when he had finished. "It's a sweat--a
- fearful sweat, but----
- "Skeffington's have written urging me to undertake a rather original
- advertising scheme. They're very pressing, and they've enclosed a
- tenner in advance. They want me to do them a tragedy in four acts. I
- sent them the scenario last week. I sketched out a skeleton plot in
- which the hero is addicted to a strictly moderate use of Skeffington's
- Sloe Gin. His wife adopts every conceivable measure to wean him from
- this harmless, even praiseworthy indulgence. At the end of the second
- act she thinks she has cured him. He has promised to gratify what he
- regards as merely a capricious whim on her part. 'I will give--yes, I
- will give it up, darling!' 'George! George!' She falls on his neck.
- Over her shoulder he winks at the audience, who realise that there is
- more to come. Curtain. In Act 3 the husband is seen sitting alone in
- his study. His wife has gone to a party. The man searches in a cupboard
- for something to read. Instead of a novel, however, he lights on a
- bottle of Skeffington's Sloe Gin. Instantly the old overwhelming
- craving returns. He hesitates. What does it matter? She will never
- know. He gulps down glass after glass. He sinks into an intoxicated
- stupor. His wife enters. Curtain again. Act 4. The draught of nectar
- tasted in the former act after a period of enforced abstinence has
- produced a deadly reaction. The husband, who previously improved his
- health, his temper, and his intellect by a strictly moderate use of
- Skeffington's Sloe Gin, has now become a ghastly dipsomaniac. His wife,
- realising too late the awful effect of her idiotic antagonism to
- Skeffington's, experiences the keenest pangs of despair. She drinks
- laudanum, and the tragedy is complete."
- "Fine," I said, finishing the coffee.
- "In a deferential postscript," said Julian, "Skeffington's suggest an
- alternative ending, that the wife should drink, not laudanum, but Sloe
- Gin, and grow, under its benign influence, resigned to the fate she has
- brought on her husband and herself. Resignation gives way to hope. She
- devotes her life to the care of the inebriate man, and, by way of
- pathetic retribution, she lives precisely long enough to nurse him back
- to sanity. Which finale do you prefer?"
- "Yours!" I said.
- "Thank you," said Julian, considerably gratified. "So do I. It's
- terser, more dramatic, and altogether a better advertisement.
- Skeffington's make jolly good sloe gin, but they can't arouse pity and
- terror. Yes, I'll do it; but first let me spend the tenner."
- "I'm taking a holiday, too, today," I said. "How can we amuse
- ourselves?"
- Julian had opened the last of his letters. He held up two cards.
- "Tickets for Covent Garden Ball tonight," he said. "Why not come? It's
- sure to be a good one."
- "I should like to," I said. "Thanks."
- Julian dropped from his hammock, and began to get his bath ready.
- We arranged to dine early at the Maison Suisse in Rupert
- Street--_table d'hôte_ one franc, plus twopence for mad'moiselle--and
- go on to the gallery of a first night. I was to dress for Covent Garden
- at Julian's after the theatre, because white waistcoats and the franc
- _table d'hôte_ didn't go well together.
- When I dined out, I usually went to the Maison Suisse. I shall never
- have the chance of going again, even if, as a married man, I were
- allowed to do so, for it has been pulled down to make room for the
- Hicks Theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue. When I did not dine there, I
- attended a quaint survival of last century's coffee-houses in
- Glasshouse Street: Tall, pew-like boxes, wooden tables without
- table-cloths, panelled walls; an excellent menu of chops, steaks, fried
- eggs, sausages, and other British products. Once the resort of bucks
- and Macaronis, Ford's coffee-house I found frequented by a strange
- assortment of individuals, some of whom resembled bookmakers' touts,
- others clerks of an inexplicably rustic type. Who these people really
- were I never discovered.
- "I generally have supper at Pepolo's," said Julian, as we left the
- theatre, "before a Covent Garden Ball. Shall we go on there?"
- There are two entrances to Pepolo's restaurant, one leading to the
- ground floor, the other to the brasserie in the basement. I liked to
- spend an hour or so there occasionally, smoking and watching the
- crowd. Every sixth visit on an average I would happen upon somebody
- interesting among the ordinary throng of medical students and
- third-rate clerks--watery-eyed old fellows who remembered Cremorne, a
- mahogany derelict who had spent his youth on the sea when liners were
- sailing-ships, and the apprentices, terrorised by bullying mates and
- the rollers of the Bay, lay howling in the scuppers and prayed to be
- thrown overboard. He told me of one voyage on which the Malay cook went
- mad, and, escaping into the ratlines, shot down a dozen of the crew
- before he himself was sniped.
- The supper tables are separated from the brasserie by a line of stucco
- arches, and as it was now a quarter to twelve the place was full. At a
- first glance it seemed that there were no empty supper tables.
- Presently, however, we saw one, laid for four, at which only one man
- was sitting.
- "Hullo!" said Julian, "there's Malim. Let's go and see if we can push
- into his table. Well, Malim, how are you? Do you know Cloyster?"
- Mr. Malim had a lofty expression. I should have put him down as a
- scholarly recluse. His first words upset this view somewhat.
- "Coming to Covent Garden?" he said, genially. "I am. So is Kit. She'll
- be down soon."
- "Good," said Julian; "may Jimmy and I have supper at your table?"
- "Do," said Malim. "Plenty of room. We'd better order our food and not
- wait for her."
- We took our places, and looked round us. The hum of conversation was
- persistent. It rose above the clatter of the supper tables and the
- sudden bursts of laughter.
- It was now five minutes to twelve. All at once those nearest the door
- sprang to their feet. A girl in scarlet and black had come in.
- "Ah, there's Kit at last," said Malim.
- "They're cheering her," said Julian.
- As he spoke, the tentative murmur of a cheer was caught up by everyone.
- Men leaped upon chairs and tables.
- "Hullo, hullo, hullo!" said Kit, reaching us. "Kiddie, when they do
- that it makes me feel shy."
- She was laughing like a child. She leaned across the table, put her
- arms round Malim's neck, and kissed him. She glanced at us.
- Malim smiled quietly, but said nothing.
- She kissed Julian, and she kissed me.
- "Now we're all friends," she said, sitting down.
- "Better know each other's names," said Malim. "Kit, this is Mr.
- Cloyster. Mr. Cloyster, may I introduce you to my wife?"
- Chapter 7
- I MEET MR. THOMAS BLAKE
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- Someone had told me that, the glory of Covent Garden Ball had departed.
- It may be so. Yet the floor, with its strange conglomeration of
- music-hall artists, callow university men, shady horse-dealers, and
- raucous military infants, had an atmosphere of more than meretricious
- gaiety. The close of an old year and the birth of a new one touch the
- toughest.
- The band was working away with a strident brassiness which filled the
- room with noise. The women's dresses were a shriek of colour. The
- vulgarity of the scene was so immense as to be almost admirable. It was
- certainly interesting.
- Watching his opportunity, Julian presently drew me aside into the
- smoking-room.
- "Malim," he said, "has paid you a great compliment."
- "Really," I said, rather surprised, for Julian's acquaintance had done
- nothing more, to my knowledge, than give me a cigar and a
- whiskey-and-soda.
- "He's introduced you to his wife."
- "Very good of him, I'm sure."
- "You don't understand. You see Kit for what she is: a pretty,
- good-natured creature bred in the gutter. But Malim--well, he's in the
- Foreign Office and is secretary to Sir George Grant."
- "Then what in Heaven's name," I cried, "induced him to marry----"
- "My dear Jimmy," said Julian, adroitly avoiding the arm of an exuberant
- lady impersonating Winter, and making fair practice with her detachable
- icicles, "it was Kit or no one. Just consider Malim's position, which
- was that of thousands of other men of his type. They are the cleverest
- men of their schools; they are the intellectual stars of their
- Varsities. I was at Oxford with Malim. He was a sort of tin god.
- Double-first and all that. Just like all the rest of them. They get
- what is looked upon as a splendid appointment under Government. They
- come to London, hire comfortable chambers or a flat, go off to their
- office in the morning, leave it in the evening, and are given a salary
- which increases by regular gradations from an initial two hundred a
- year. Say that a man begins this kind of work at twenty-four. What are
- his matrimonial prospects? His office work occupies his entire
- attention (the idea that Government clerks don't work is a fiction
- preserved merely for the writers of burlesque) from the moment he wakes
- in the morning until dinner. His leisure extends, roughly speaking,
- from eight-thirty until twelve. The man whom I am discussing, and of
- whom Malim is a type, is, as I have already proved, intellectual. He
- has, therefore, ambitions. The more intellectual he is the more he
- loathes the stupid routine of his daily task. Thus his leisure is his
- most valuable possession. There are books he wants to read--those
- which he liked in the days previous to his slavery--and new ones which
- he sees published every day. There are plays he wants to see performed.
- And there are subjects on which he would like to write--would give his
- left hand to write, if the loss of that limb wouldn't disqualify him
- for his post. Where is his social chance? It surely exists only in the
- utter abandonment of his personal projects. And to go out when one is
- tied to the clock is a poor sort of game. But suppose he _does_
- seek the society of what friends he can muster in London. Is he made
- much of, fussed over? Not a bit of it. Brainless subalterns, ridiculous
- midshipmen, have, in the eyes of the girl whom he has come to see, a
- reputation that he can never win. They're in the Service; they're so
- dashing; they're so charmingly extravagant; they're so tremendous in
- face of an emergency that their conversational limitations of "Yes" and
- "No" are hailed as brilliant flights of genius. Their inane anecdotes,
- their pointless observations are positively courted. It is they who
- retire to the conservatory with the divine Violet, whose face is like
- the Venus of Milo's, whose hair (one hears) reaches to her knees, whose
- eyes are like blue saucers, and whose complexion is a pink poem. It is
- Jane, the stumpy, the flat-footed--Jane, who wears glasses and has all
- the virtues which are supposed to go with indigestion: big hands and an
- enormous waist--Jane, I repeat, who is told off to talk to a man like
- Malim. If, on the other hand, he and his fellows refuse to put on
- evening clothes and be bored to death of an evening, who can blame
- them? If they deliberately find enough satisfaction for their needs in
- the company of a circle of men friends and the casual pleasures of the
- town, selfishness is the last epithet with which their behaviour can be
- charged. Unselfishness has been their curse. No sane person would, of
- his own accord, become the automaton that a Government office requires.
- Pressure on the part of relations, of parents, has been brought to bear
- on them. The steady employment, the graduated income, the pension--that
- fatal pension--has been danced by their fathers and their mothers and
- their Uncle Johns before their eyes. Appeals have been made to them on
- filial, not to say religious, grounds. Threats would have availed
- nothing; but appeals--downright tearful appeals from mamma, husky,
- hand-gripping appeals from papa--that is what has made escape
- impossible. A huge act of unselfishness has been compelled; a lifetime
- of reactionary egotism is inevitable and legitimate. I was wrong when I
- said Malim was typical. He has to the good an ingenuity which assists
- naturally in the solution of the problem of self and circumstance. A
- year or two ago chance brought him in contact with Kit. They struck up
- a friendship. He became an habitué at the Fried Fish Shop in Tottenham
- Court Road. Whenever we questioned his taste he said that a physician
- recommended fish as a tonic for the brain. But it was not his brain
- that took Malim to the fried fish shop. It was his heart. He loved Kit,
- and presently he married her. One would have said this was an
- impossible step. Misery for Malim's people, his friends, himself, and
- afterwards for Kit. But Nature has endowed both Malim and Kit with
- extraordinary commonsense. He kept to his flat; she kept to her job in
- the fried fish shop. Only, instead of living in, she was able to retire
- after her day's work to a little house which he hired for her in the
- Hampstead Road. Her work, for which she is eminently fitted, keeps her
- out of mischief. His flat gives the impression to his family and the
- head of his department that he is still a bachelor. Thus, all goes
- well."
- "I've often read in the police reports," I said, "of persons who lead
- double lives, and I'm much interested in----"
- Malim and Kit bore down upon us. We rose.
- "It's the march past," observed the former. "Come upstairs."
- "Kiddie," said Kit, "give me your arm."
- At half-past four we were in Wellington Street. It was a fine, mild
- morning, and in the queer light of the false dawn we betook ourselves
- to the Old Hummums for breakfast. Other couples had done the same. The
- steps of the Hummums facing the market harboured already a waiting
- crowd. The doors were to be opened at five. We also found places on the
- stone steps. The market was alive with porters, who hailed our
- appearance with every profession of delight. Early hours would seem to
- lend a certain acidity to their badinage. By-and-by a more personal
- note crept into their facetious comments. Two guardsmen on the top step
- suddenly displayed, in return, a very creditable gift of repartee.
- Covent Garden market was delighted. It felt the stern joy which
- warriors feel with foemen worthy of their steel. It suspended its
- juggling feats with vegetable baskets, and devoted itself exclusively
- to the task of silencing our guns. Porters, costers, and the riff-raff
- of the streets crowded in a semicircle around us. Just then it was
- borne in on us how small our number was. A solid phalanx of the
- toughest customers in London faced us. Behind this semicircle a line of
- carts had been drawn up. Unseen enemies from behind this laager now
- began to amuse themselves by bombarding us with the product of the
- market garden. Tomatoes, cauliflowers, and potatoes came hurtling into
- our midst. I saw Julian consulting his watch. "Five minutes more," he
- said. I had noticed some minutes back that the ardour of the attack
- seemed to centre round one man in particular--a short, very burly man
- in a costume that seemed somehow vaguely nautical. His face wore the
- expression of one cheerfully conscious of being well on the road to
- intoxication. He was the ringleader. It was he who threw the largest
- cabbage, the most _passé_ tomato. I don't suppose he had ever
- enjoyed himself so much in his life. He was standing now on a cart full
- of potatoes, and firing them in with tremendous force.
- Kit saw him too.
- "Why, there's that blackguard Tom!" she cried.
- She had been told to sit down behind Malim for safety. Before anyone
- could stop her, or had guessed her intention, she had pushed her way
- through us and stepped out into the road.
- It was so unexpected that there was an involuntary lull in the
- proceedings.
- "Tom!"
- She pointed an accusing finger at the man, who gaped beerily.
- "Tom, who pinched farver's best trousers, and popped them?"
- There was a roar of laughter. A moment before, and Tom had been the pet
- of the market, the energetic leader, the champion potato-slinger. Now
- he was a thing of derision. His friends took up the question. Keen
- anxiety was expressed on all sides as to the fate of father's trousers.
- He was requested to be a man and speak up.
- The uproar died away as it was seen that Kit had not yet finished.
- "Cheese it, some of yer," shouted a voice. "The lady wants to orsk him
- somefin' else."
- "Tom," said Kit, "who was sent with tuppence to buy postage-stamps and
- spent it on beer?"
- The question was well received by the audience. Tom was beaten. A
- potato, vast and nobbly, fell from his palsied hand. He was speechless.
- Then he began to stammer.
- "Just you stop it, Tom," shouted Kit triumphantly. "Just you stop it,
- d'you 'ear, you stop it."
- She turned towards us on the steps, and, taking us all into her
- confidence, added: "'E's a nice thing to 'ave for a bruvver, anyway."
- Then she rejoined Malim, amid peals of laughter from both armies. It
- was a Homeric incident.
- Only a half-hearted attempt was made to renew the attack. And when the
- door of the Hummums at last opened, Malim observed to Julian and me, as
- we squashed our way in, that if a man's wife's relations were always as
- opportune as Kit's, the greatest objection to them would be removed.
- CHAPTER 8
- I MEET THE REV. JOHN HATTON
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- I saw a great deal of Malim after that. He and Julian became my two
- chief mainstays when I felt in need of society. Malim was a man of
- delicate literary skill, a genuine lover of books, a severe critic of
- modern fiction. Our tastes were in the main identical, though it was
- always a blow to me that he could see nothing humorous in Mr. George
- Ade, whose Fables I knew nearly by heart. The more robust type of
- humour left him cold.
- In all other respects we agreed.
- There is a never-failing fascination in a man with a secret. It gave
- me a pleasant feeling of being behind the scenes, to watch Malim,
- sitting in his armchair, the essence of everything that was
- conventional and respectable, with Eton and Oxford written all over
- him, and to think that he was married all the while to an employee in a
- Tottenham Court Road fried-fish shop.
- Kit never appeared in the flat: but Malim went nearly every evening to
- the little villa. Sometimes he took Julian and myself, more often
- myself alone, Julian being ever disinclined to move far from his
- hammock. The more I saw of Kit the more thoroughly I realized how
- eminently fitted she was to be Malim's wife. It was a union of
- opposites. Except for the type of fiction provided by "penny libraries
- of powerful stories." Kit had probably not read more than half a dozen
- books in her life. Grimm's fairy stories she recollected dimly, and she
- betrayed a surprising acquaintance with at least three of Ouida's
- novels. I fancy that Malim appeared to her as a sort of combination of
- fairy prince and Ouida guardsman. He exhibited the Oxford manner at
- times rather noticeably. Kit loved it.
- Till I saw them together I had thought Kit's accent and her incessant
- mangling of the King's English would have jarred upon Malim. But I soon
- found that I was wrong. He did not appear to notice.
- I learned from Kit, in the course of my first visit to the villa, some
- further particulars respecting her brother Tom, the potato-thrower of
- Covent Garden Market. Mr. Thomas Blake, it seemed, was the proprietor
- and skipper of a barge. A pleasant enough fellow when sober, but too
- much given to what Kit described as "his drop." He had apparently left
- home under something of a cloud, though whether this had anything to do
- with "father's trousers" I never knew. Kit said she had not seen him
- for some years, though each had known the other's address. It seemed
- that the Blake family were not great correspondents.
- "Have you ever met John Hatton?" asked Malim one night after dinner at
- his flat.
- "John Hatton?" I answered. "No. Who is he?"
- "A parson. A very good fellow. You ought to know him. He's a man with a
- number of widely different interests. We were at Trinity together. He
- jumps from one thing to another, but he's frightfully keen about
- whatever he does. Someone was saying that he was running a boys' club
- in the thickest part of Lambeth."
- "There might be copy in it," I said.
- "Or ideas for advertisements for Julian," said Malim. "Anyway, I'll
- introduce you to him. Have you ever been in the Barrel?"
- "What's the Barrel?"
- "The Barrel is a club. It gets the name from the fact that it's the
- only club in England that allows, and indeed urges, its members to sit
- on a barrel. John Hatton is sometimes to be found there. Come round to
- it tomorrow night."
- "All right," I replied. "Where is it?"
- "A hundred and fifty-three, York Street, Covent Garden. First floor."
- "Very well," I said. "I'll meet you there at twelve o'clock. I can't
- come sooner because I've got a story to write."
- Twelve had just struck when I walked up York Street looking for No.
- 153.
- The house was brilliantly lighted on the first floor. The street door
- opened on to a staircase, and as I mounted it the sound of a piano and
- a singing voice reached me. At the top of the stairs I caught sight of
- a waiter loaded with glasses. I called to him.
- "Mr. Cloyster, sir? Yessir. I'll find out whether Mr. Malim can see
- you, sir."
- Malim came out to me. "Hatton's not here," he said, "but come in.
- There's a smoking concert going on."
- He took me into the room, the windows of which I had seen from the
- street.
- There was a burst of cheering as we entered the room. The song was
- finished, and there was a movement among the audience. "It's the
- interval," said Malim.
- Men surged out of the packed front room into the passage, and then into
- a sort of bar parlour. Malim and I also made our way there. "That's the
- fetish of the club," said Malim, pointing to a barrel standing on end;
- "and I'll introduce you to the man who is sitting on it. He's little
- Michael, the musical critic. They once put on an operetta of his at the
- Court. It ran about two nights, but he reckons all the events of the
- world from the date of its production."
- "Mr. Cloyster--Mr. Michael."
- The musician hopped down from the barrel and shook hands. He was a
- dapper little person, and had a trick of punctuating every sentence
- with a snigger.
- "Cheer-o," he said genially. "Is this your first visit?"
- I said it was.
- "Then sit on the barrel. We are the only club in London who can offer
- you the privilege." Accordingly I sat on the barrel, and through a
- murmur of applause I could hear Michael telling someone that he'd first
- seen that barrel five years before his operetta came out at the Court.
- At that moment a venerable figure strode with dignity into the bar.
- "Maundrell," said Malim to me. "The last of the old Bohemians. An old
- actor. Always wears the steeple hat and a long coat with skirts."
- The survivor of the days of Kean uttered a bellow for whisky-and-water.
- "That barrel," he said, "reminds me of Buckstone's days at the
- Haymarket. After the performance we used to meet at the Café de
- l'Europe, a few yards from the theatre. Our secret society sat there."
- "What was the society called, Mr. Maundrell?" asked a new member with
- unusual intrepidity.
- "Its name," replied the white-headed actor simply, "I shall not
- divulge. It was not, however, altogether unconnected with the Pink Men
- of the Blue Mountains. We used to sit, we who were initiated, in a
- circle. We met to discuss the business of the society. Oh, we were the
- observed of all observers, I can assure you. Our society was extensive.
- It had its offshoots in foreign lands. Well, we at these meetings used
- to sit round a barrel--a great big barrel, which had a hole in the top.
- The barrel was not merely an ornament, for through the hole in the top
- we threw any scraps and odds and ends we did not want. Bits of tobacco,
- bread, marrow bones, the dregs of our glasses--anything and everything
- went into the barrel. And so it happened, as the barrel became fuller
- and fuller, strange animals made their appearance--animals of peculiar
- shape and form crawled out of the barrel and would attempt to escape
- across the floor. But we were on their tracks. We saw them. We headed
- them off with our sticks, and we chased them back again to the place
- where they had been born and bred. We poked them in, sir, with our
- sticks."
- Mr. Maundrell emitted a placid chuckle at this reminiscence.
- "A good many members of this club," whispered Malim to me, "would have
- gone back into that barrel."
- A bell sounded. "That's for the second part to begin," said Malim.
- We herded back along the passage. A voice cried, "Be seated, please,
- gentlemen."
- At the far end of the room was a table for the chairman and the
- committee, and to the left stood a piano. Everyone had now sat down
- except the chairman, who was apparently not in the room. There was a
- pause. Then a man from the audience whooped sharply and clambered over
- the table and into the place of the chairman. He tapped twice with the
- mallet. "Get out of that chair," yelled various voices.
- "Gentlemen," said the man in the chair. A howl of execration went up,
- and simultaneously the door was flung open. A double file of
- white-robed Druids came, chanting, into the room.
- The Druids carried in with them a small portable tree which they
- proceeded to set upright. The chant now became extremely topical. Each
- Druid sang a verse in turn, while his fellow Druids danced a stately
- measure round the tree. As the verse was being sung, an imitation
- granite altar was hastily erected.
- The man in the chair, who had so far smoked a cigarette in silence, now
- tapped again with his mallet. "Gentlemen," he observed.
- The Druids ended their song abruptly, and made a dash at the occupant
- of the chair. The audience stood up. "A victim for our ancient rites!"
- screamed the Druids, falling upon the man and dragging him towards the
- property altar.
- The victim showed every sign of objection to early English rites; but
- he was dislodged, and after being dragged, struggling, across the
- table, subsided quickly on the floor. The mob surged about and around
- him. He was hidden from view. His position, however, could be located
- by a series of piercing shrieks.
- The door again opened. Mr. Maundrell, the real chairman of the evening,
- stood on the threshold. "Chair!" was now the word that arose on every
- side, and at this signal the Druids disappeared at a trot past the
- long-bearded, impassive Mr. Maundrell. Their victim followed them, but
- before he did so he picked up his trousers which were lying on the
- carpet.
- All the time this scene had been going on, I fancied I recognised the
- man in the chair. In a flash I remembered. It was Dawkins who had
- coached First Trinity, and whom I, as a visitor once at the crew's
- training dinner, had last seen going through the ancient and honourable
- process of de-bagging at the hands of his light-hearted boat.
- "Come on," said Malim. "Godfrey Lane's going to sing a patriotic song.
- They _will_ let him do it. We'll go down to the Temple and find
- John Hatton."
- We left the Barrel at about one o'clock. It was a typical London late
- autumn night. Quiet with the peace of a humming top; warm with the heat
- generated from mellow asphalt and resinous wood-paving.
- We turned from Bedford Street eastwards along the Strand.
- Between one and two the Strand is as empty as it ever is. It is given
- over to lurchers and policemen. Fleet Street reproduces for this one
- hour the Sahara.
- "When I knock at the Temple gate late at night," said Malim, "and am
- admitted by the night porter, I always feel a pleasantly archaic
- touch."
- I agreed with him. The process seemed a quaint admixture of an Oxford
- or Cambridge college, Gottingen, and a feudal keep. And after the gate
- had been closed behind one, it was difficult to realise that within a
- few yards of an academic system of lawns and buildings full of living
- traditions and associations which wainscoting and winding stairs
- engender, lay the modern world, its American invaders, its new humour,
- its women's clubs, its long firms, its musical comedies, its Park Lane,
- and its Strand with the hub of the universe projecting from the roadway
- at Charing Cross, plain for Englishmen to gloat over and for foreigners
- to envy.
- Sixty-two Harcourt Buildings is emblazoned with many names, including
- that of the Rev. John Hatton. The oak was not sported, and our rap at
- the inner door was immediately answered by a shout of "Come in!" As we
- opened it we heard a peculiar whirring sound. "Road skates," said
- Hatton, gracefully circling the table and then coming to a standstill.
- I was introduced. "I'm very glad to see you both," he said. "The two
- other men I share these rooms with have gone away, so I'm killing time
- by training for my road-skate tour abroad. It's trying for one's
- ankles."
- "Could you go downstairs on them?" said Malim.
- "Certainly," he replied, "I'll do so now. And when we're down, I'll
- have a little practice in the open."
- Whereupon he skated to the landing, scrambled down the stairs, sped up
- Middle Temple Lane, and called the porter to let us out into Fleet
- Street. He struck me as a man who differed in some respects from the
- popular conception of a curate.
- "I'll race you to Ludgate Circus and back," said the clergyman.
- "You're too fast," said Malim; "it must be a handicap."
- "We might do it level in a cab," said I, for I saw a hansom crawling
- towards us.
- "Done," said the Rev. John Hatton. "Done, for half-a-crown!"
- I climbed into the hansom, and Malim, about to follow me, found that a
- constable, to whom the soil of the City had given spontaneous birth,
- was standing at his shoulder. "Wot's the game?" inquired the officer,
- with tender solicitude.
- "A fine night, Perkins," remarked Hatton.
- "A fine morning, beggin' your pardon, sir," said the policeman
- facetiously. He seemed to be an acquaintance of the skater.
- "Reliability trials," continued Hatton. "Be good enough to start us,
- Perkins."
- "Very good, sir," said Perkins.
- "Drive to Ludgate Circus and back, and beat the gentleman on the
- skates," said Malim to our driver, who was taking the race as though he
- assisted at such events in the course of his daily duty.
- "Hi shall say, 'Are you ready? Horf!'"
- "We shall have Perkins applying to the Jockey Club for Ernest
- Willoughby's job," whispered Malim.
- "Are you ready? Horf!"
- Hatton was first off the mark. He raced down the incline to the Circus
- at a tremendous speed. He was just in sight as he swung laboriously
- round and headed for home. But meeting him on our outward journey, we
- noticed that the upward slope was distressing him. "Shall we do it?" we
- asked.
- "Yessir," said our driver. And now we, too, were on the up grade. We
- went up the hill at a gallop: were equal with Hatton at Fetter Lane,
- and reached the Temple Gate yards to the good.
- The ancient driver of a four-wheeler had been the witness of the
- finish.
- He gazed with displeasure upon us.
- "This 'ere's a nice use ter put Fleet Street to, I don't think," he
- said coldly.
- This sarcastic rebuke rather damped us, and after Hatton had paid Malim
- his half-crown, and had invited me to visit him, we departed.
- "Queer chap, Hatton," said Malim as we walked up the Strand.
- I was to discover at no distant date that he was distinctly a
- many-sided man. I have met a good many clergymen in my time, but I have
- never come across one quite like the Rev. John Hatton.
- Chapter 9
- JULIAN LEARNS MY SECRET
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- A difficulty in the life of a literary man in London is the question of
- getting systematic exercise. At school and college I had been
- accustomed to play games every day, and now I felt the change acutely.
- It was through this that I first became really intimate with John
- Hatton, and incidentally with Sidney Price, of the Moon Assurance
- Company. I happened to mention my trouble one night in Hatton's rooms.
- I had been there frequently since my first visit.
- "None of my waistcoats fit," I remarked.
- "My dear fellow," said Hatton, "I'll give you exercise and to spare;
- that is to say, if you can box."
- "I'm not a champion," I said; "but I'm fond of it. I shouldn't mind
- taking up boxing again. There's nothing like it for exercise."
- "Quite right, James," he replied; "and exercise, as I often tell my
- boys, is essential."
- "What boys?" I asked.
- "My club boys," said Hatton. "They belong to the most dingy quarter of
- the whole of London--South Lambeth. They are not hooligans. They are
- not so interesting as that. They represent the class of youth that is a
- stratum or two above hooliganism. Frightful weeds. They lack the robust
- animalism of the class below them, and they lack the intelligence of
- the class above them. The fellows at my club are mostly hard-working
- mechanics and under-paid office boys. They have nothing approaching a
- sense of humour or the instinct of sport."
- "Not very encouraging," I said.
- "Nor picturesque," said Hatton; "and that is why they've been so
- neglected. There is romance in an out-and-out hooligan. It interests
- people to reform him. But to the outsider my boys are dull. I don't
- find them so. But then I know them. Boxing lessons are just what they
- want. In fact, I was telling Sidney Price, an insurance clerk who lives
- in Lambeth and helps me at the club, only yesterday how much I wished
- we could teach them to use the gloves."
- "I'll take it on, then, Hatton, if you like," I said. "It ought to keep
- me in form."
- I found that it did. I ceased to be aware of my liver. That winter I
- was able to work to good purpose, and the result was that I arrived. It
- dawned upon me at last that the "precarious" idea was played out. One
- could see too plainly the white sheet and phosphorus.
- And I was happy. Happier, perhaps, than I had ever hoped to be.
- Happier, in a sense, than I can hope to be again. I had congenial work,
- and, what is more, I had congenial friends.
- What friends they were!
- Julian--I seem to see him now sprawling in his hammock, sucking his
- pipe, planning an advertisement, or propounding some whimsical theory
- of life; and in his eyes he bears the pain of one whose love and life
- are spoilt. Julian--no longer my friend.
- Kit and Malim--what evenings are suggested by those names.
- Evenings alone with Malim at his flat in Vernon Place. An unimpeachable
- dinner, a hand at picquet, midnight talk with the blue smoke wreathing
- round our heads.
- Well, Malim and I are unlikely to meet again in Vernon Place. Nor shall
- we foregather at the little house in the Hampstead Road, the house
- which Kit enveloped in an inimitable air of domesticity. Her past had
- not been unconnected with the minor stage. She could play on the piano
- from ear, and sing the songs of the street with a charming cockney
- twang. But there was nothing of the stage about her now. She was born
- for domesticity and, as the wife of Malim, she wished to forget all
- that had gone before. She even hesitated to give us her wonderful
- imitations of the customers at the fried fish shop, because in her
- heart she did not think such impersonations altogether suitable for a
- respectable married woman.
- It was Malim who got me elected to the Barrel Club. I take it that I
- shall pay few more visits there.
- I have mentioned at this point the love of my old friends who made my
- first years in London a period of happiness, since it was in this month
- of April that I had a momentous conversation with Julian about
- Margaret.
- He had come to Walpole Street to use my typewriter, and seemed amazed
- to find that I was still living in much the same style as I had always
- done.
- "Let me see," he said. "How long is it since I was here last?"
- "You came some time before Christmas."
- "Ah, yes," he said reminiscently. "I was doing a lot of travelling just
- then." And he added, thoughtfully, "What a curious fellow you are,
- Jimmy. Here are you making----" He glanced at me.
- "Oh, say a thousand a year."
- "--Fifteen hundred a year, and you live in precisely the same shoddy
- surroundings as you did when your manuscripts were responsible for an
- extra size in waste-paper baskets. I was surprised to hear that you
- were still in Walpole Street. I supposed that, at any rate, you had
- taken the whole house."
- His eyes raked the little sitting-room from the sham marble mantelpiece
- to the bamboo cabinet. I surveyed it, too, and suddenly it did seem
- unnecessarily wretched and depressing.
- Julian looked at me curiously.
- "There's some mystery here," he said.
- "Don't be an ass, Julian," I replied weakly.
- "It's no good denying it," he retorted; "there's some mystery. You're a
- materialist. You don't live like this from choice. If you were to
- follow your own inclinations, you'd do things in the best style you
- could run to. You'd be in Jermyn Street; you'd have your man, a cottage
- in Surrey; you'd entertain, go out a good deal. You'd certainly give up
- these dingy quarters. My friendship for you deplores a mammoth skeleton
- in your cupboard, James. My study of advertising tells me that this
- paltry existence of yours does not adequately push your name before the
- public. You're losing money, you're----"
- "Stop, Julian," I exclaimed.
- "_Cherchez_," he continued, "_cherchez_----"
- "Stop! Confound you, stop! I tell you----"
- "Come," he said laughing. "I mustn't force your confidence; but I can't
- help feeling it's odd----"
- "When I came to London," I said, firmly, "I was most desperately in
- love. I was to make a fortune, incidentally my name, marry, and live
- happily ever after. There seemed last year nothing complex about that
- programme. It seemed almost too simple. I even, like a fool, thought to
- add an extra touch of piquancy to it by endeavouring to be a Bohemian.
- I then discovered that what I was attempting was not so simple as I had
- imagined. To begin with, Bohemians diffuse their brains in every
- direction except that where bread-and-butter comes from. I found, too,
- that unless one earns bread-and-butter, one has to sprint very fast to
- the workhouse door to prevent oneself starving before one gets there;
- so I dropped Bohemia and I dropped many other pleasant fictions as
- well. I took to examining pavements, saw how hard they were, had a look
- at the gutters, and saw how broad they were. I noticed the accumulation
- of dirt on the house fronts, the actual proportions of industrial
- buildings. I observed closely the price of food, clothes, and roofs."
- "You became a realist."
- "Yes; I read a good deal of Gissing about then, and it scared me. I
- pitied myself. And after that came pity for the girl I loved. I swore
- that I would never let her come to my side in the ring where the
- monster Poverty and I were fighting. If you've been there you've been
- in hell. And if you come out with your soul alive you can't tell other
- people what it felt like. They couldn't understand."
- Julian nodded. "I understand, you know," he said gravely.
- "Yes, you've been there," I said. "Well, you've seen that my little
- turn-up with the monster was short and sharp. It wasn't one of the
- old-fashioned, forty-round, most-of-a-lifetime, feint-for-an-opening,
- in-and-out affairs. Our pace was too fast for that. We went at it both
- hands, fighting all the time. I was going for the knock-out in the
- first round. Not your method, Julian."
- "No," said Julian; "it's not my method. I treat the monster rather as a
- wild animal than as a hooligan; and hearing that wild animals won't do
- more than sniff at you if you lie perfectly still, I adopted that ruse
- towards him to save myself the trouble of a conflict. But the effect of
- lying perfectly still was that I used to fall asleep; and that works
- satisfactorily."
- "Julian," I said, "I detect a touch of envy in your voice. You try to
- keep it out, but you can't. Wait a bit, though. I haven't finished.
- "As you know, I had the monster down in less than no time. I said to
- myself, 'I've won. I'll write to Margaret, and tell her so!' Do you
- know I had actually begun to write the letter when another thought
- struck me. One that started me sweating and shaking. 'The monster,' I
- said again to myself, 'the monster is devilish cunning. Perhaps he's
- only shamming! It looks as if he were beaten. Suppose it's only a feint
- to get me off my guard. Suppose he just wants me to take my eyes off
- him so that he may get at me again as soon as I've begun to look for a
- comfortable chair and a mantelpiece to rest my feet on!' I told myself
- that I wouldn't risk bringing Margaret over. I didn't dare chance her
- being with me if ever I had to go back into the ring. So I kept jumping
- and stamping on the monster. The referee had given me the fight and had
- gone away; and, with no one to stop me, I kicked the life out of him."
- "No, you didn't," interrupted Julian. "Excuse me, I'm sure you didn't.
- I often wake up and hear him prowling about."
- "Yes; but there's a separate monster set apart for each of us. It's
- Fate who arranges the programme, and, by stress of business, Fate
- postpones many contests so late that before they can take place the man
- has died. Those who die before their fight comes on are called rich
- men. To return, however, to my own monster: I was at last convinced
- that he was dead a thousand times----"
- "How long have you had this conviction?" asked Julian.
- "The absolute certainty that my monster has ceased to exist came to me
- this morning whilst I brushed my hair."
- "Ah," said Julian; "and now, I suppose, you really will write to Miss
- Margaret----" He paused.
- "Goodwin?"
- "To Miss Margaret Goodwin," he repeated.
- "Look here, Julian," I said irritably; "it's no use your repeating
- every observation I make as though you were Massa Johnson on Margate
- Sands."
- "What's the matter?"
- I was silent for a moment. Then I confessed.
- "Julian," I said, "I can't write to her. You need neither say that I'm
- a blackguard nor that you're sorry for us both. At this present moment
- I've no more affection for Margaret than I have for this chair. When
- precisely I left off caring for her I don't know. Why I ever thought I
- loved her I don't know, either. But ever since I came to London all the
- love I did have for her has been ebbing away every day."
- "Had you met many people before you met her?" asked Julian slowly.
- "No one that counted. Not a woman that counted, that's to say. I am shy
- with women. I can talk to them in a sort of way, but I never seem able
- to get intimate. Margaret was different. She saved my life, and we
- spent the summer in Guernsey together."
- "And you seriously expected not to fall in love?" Julian laughed "My
- dear Jimmy, you ought to write a psychological novel."
- "Possibly. But, in the meantime, what am I to do?"
- Julian stood up.
- "She's in love with you, I suppose?"
- "Yes."
- He stood looking at me.
- "Well, can't you speak?" I said.
- He turned away, shrugging his shoulders. "One's got one's own right and
- one's own wrong," he grumbled, lighting his pipe.
- "I know what you're thinking," I said.
- He would not look at me.
- "You're thinking," I went on, "what a cad I am not to have written that
- letter." I sat down resting my head on my hands. After all--love and
- liberty--they're both very sweet.
- "I'm thinking," said Julian, watching the smoke from his pipe
- abstractedly, "that you will probably write tonight; and I think I know
- how you're feeling."
- "Julian," I said, "must it be tonight? Why? The letter shall go. But
- must it be tonight?"
- Julian hesitated.
- "No," he said; "but you've made up your mind, so why put off the
- inevitable?"
- "I can't," I exclaimed; "oh, I really can't. I must have my freedom a
- little longer."
- "You must give it up some day. It'll be all the harder when you've got
- to face it."
- "I don't mind that. A little more freedom, just a little; and then I'll
- tell her to come to me."
- He smoked in silence.
- "Surely," I said, "this little more freedom that I ask is a small thing
- compared with the sacrifice I have promised to make?"
- "You won't let her know it's a sacrifice?"
- "Of course not. She shall think that I love her as I used to."
- "Yes, you ought to do that," he said softly. "Poor devil," he added.
- "Am I too selfish?" I asked.
- He got up to go. "No," he said. "To my mind, you're entitled to a
- breathing space before you give up all that you love best. But there's
- a risk."
- "Of what?"
- "Of her finding out by some other means than yourself and before your
- letter comes, that the letter should have been written earlier. Do you
- sign all your stuff with your own name?"
- "Yes."
- "Well, then, she's bound to see how you're getting on. She'll see your
- name in the magazines, in newspapers and in books. She'll know you
- don't write for nothing, and she'll make calculations."
- I was staggered.
- "You mean--?" I said.
- "Why, it will occur to her before long that your statement of your
- income doesn't square with the rest of the evidence; and she'll wonder
- why you pose as a pauper when you're really raking in the money with
- both hands. She'll think it over, and then she'll see it all."
- "I see," I said, dully. "Well, you've taken my last holiday from me.
- I'll write to her tonight, telling her the truth."
- "I shouldn't, necessarily. Wait a week or two. You may quite possibly
- hit on some way out of the difficulty. I'm bound to say, though, I
- can't see one myself at the moment."
- "Nor can I," I said.
- Chapter 10
- TOM BLAKE AGAIN
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- Hatton's Club boys took kindly to my course of instruction. For a
- couple of months, indeed, it seemed that another golden age of the
- noble art was approaching, and that the rejuvenation of boxing would
- occur, beginning at Carnation Hall, Lambeth.
- Then the thing collapsed like a punctured tyre.
- At first, of course, they fought a little shy. But when I had them up
- in line, and had shown them what a large proportion of an eight-ounce
- glove is padding, they grew more at ease. To be asked suddenly to fight
- three rounds with one of your friends before an audience, also of your
- friends, is embarrassing. One feels hot and uncomfortable. Hatton's
- boys jibbed nervously. As a preliminary measure, therefore, I drilled
- them in a class at foot-work and the left lead. They found the exercise
- exhilarating. If this was the idea, they seemed to say, let the thing
- go on. Then I showed them how to be highly scientific with a punch
- ball. Finally, I sparred lightly with them myself.
- In the rough they were impossible boxers. After their initial distrust
- had evaporated under my gentle handling of them, they forgot all I had
- taught them about position and guards. They bored in, heads down and
- arms going like semicircular pistons. Once or twice I had to stop them.
- They were easily steadied. They hastened to adopt a certain snakiness
- of attack instead of the frontal method which had left them so exposed.
- They began to cultivate a kind of negative style. They were
- tremendously impressed by the superiority of science over strength.
- I am not sure that I did not harp rather too much on the scientific
- note. Perhaps if I had referred to it less, the ultimate disaster would
- not have been quite so appalling. On the other hand, I had not the
- slightest suspicion that they would so exaggerate my meaning when I was
- remarking on the worth of science, how it "tells," and how it causes
- the meagre stripling to play fast and loose with huge, brawny
- ruffians--no cowards, mark you--and hairy as to their chests.
- But the weeds at Hatton's Club were fascinated by my homilies on
- science. The simplicity of the thing appealed to them irresistibly.
- They caught at the expression, "Science," and regarded it as the "Hey
- Presto!" of a friendly conjurer who could so arrange matters for them
- that powerful opponents would fall flat, involuntarily, at the sight of
- their technically correct attitude.
- I did not like to destroy their illusions. Had I said to them, "Look
- here, science is no practical use to you unless you've got low-bridged,
- snub noses, protruding temples, nostrils like the tubes of a
- vacuum-cleaner, stomach muscles like motor-car wheels, hands like legs
- of mutton, and biceps like transatlantic cables"--had I said that, they
- would have voted boxing a fraud, and gone away to quarrel over a game
- of backgammon, which was precisely what I wished to avoid.
- So I let them go on with their tapping and feinting and side-slipping.
- To make it worse they overheard Sidney Price trying to pay me a
- compliment. Price was the insurance clerk who had attached himself to
- Hatton and had proved himself to be of real service in many ways. He
- was an honest man, but he could not box. He came down to the hall one
- night after I had given four or five lessons, to watch the boys spar.
- Of course, to the uninitiated eye it did seem as though they were neat
- in their work. The sight was very different from the absurd exhibition
- which Price had seen on the night I started with them. He might easily
- have said, if he was determined to compliment me, that they had
- "improved," "progressed," or something equally adequate and innocuous.
- But no. The man must needs be effusive, positively gushing. He came to
- me in transports. "Wonderful!" he said. "Wonderful!"
- "What's wonderful?" I said, a shade irritably.
- "Their style," he said loudly, so that they could all hear, "their
- style. It's their style that astonishes me."
- I hustled him away as soon as I could, but the mischief was done.
- Style ran through Hatton's Club boys like an epidemic. Carnation Hall
- fairly buzzed with style. An apology for a blow which landed on your
- chest with the delicacy of an Agag among butterflies was extolled to
- the skies because it was a stylish blow. When Alf Joblin, a recruit,
- sent Walter Greenway sprawling with a random swing on the mark, there
- was a pained shudder. Not only Walter Greenway, but the whole club
- explained to Alf that the swing was a bad swing, an awful violation of
- style, practically a crime. By the time they had finished explaining,
- Alf was dazed; and when invited by Walter to repeat the hit with a view
- to his being further impressed with its want of style, did so in such
- half-hearted fashion that Walter had time to step stylishly aside and
- show Alf how futile it is to be unscientific.
- To the club this episode was decently buried in an unremembered past.
- To me, however, it was significant, though I did not imagine it would
- ever have the tremendous sequel which was brought about by the coming
- of Thomas Blake.
- Fate never planned a coup so successfully. The psychology of Blake's
- arrival was perfect. The boxers of Carnation Hall had worked themselves
- into a mental condition which I knew was as ridiculous as it was
- dangerous. Their conceit and their imagination transformed the hall
- into a kind of improved National Sporting Club. They went about with an
- air of subdued but tremendous athleticism. They affected a sort of
- self-conscious nonchalance. They adopted an odiously patronising
- attitude towards the once popular game of backgammon. I daresay that
- picture is not yet forgotten where a British general, a man of blood
- and iron, is portrayed as playing with a baby, to the utter neglect of
- a table full of important military dispatches. Well, the club boys, to
- a boy, posed as generals of blood and iron when they condescended to
- play backgammon. They did it, but they let you see that they did not
- regard it as one of the serious things of life.
- Also, knowing that each other's hitting was so scientific as to be
- harmless, they would sometimes deliberately put their eye in front of
- their opponent's stylish left, in the hope that the blow would raise a
- bruise. It hardly ever did. But occasionally----! Oh, then you should
- have seen the hero-with-the-quiet-smile look on their faces as they
- lounged ostentatiously about the place. In a word, they were above
- themselves. They sighed for fresh worlds to conquer. And Thomas Blake
- supplied the long-felt want.
- Personally, I did not see his actual arrival. I only saw his handiwork
- after he had been a visitor awhile within the hall. But, to avoid
- unnecessary verbiage and to avail myself of the privilege of an author,
- I will set down, from the evidence of witnesses, the main points of the
- episode as though I myself had been present at his entrance.
- He did not strike them, I am informed, as a particularly big man. He
- was a shade under average height. His shoulders seemed to them not so
- much broad as "humpy." He rolled straight in from the street on a wet
- Saturday night at ten minutes to nine, asking for "free tea."
- I should mention that on certain Fridays Hatton gave a free meal to his
- parishioners on the understanding that it was rigidly connected with a
- Short Address. The preceding Friday had been such an occasion. The
- placards announcing the tea were still clinging to the outer railings
- of the hall.
- When I said that Blake asked for free tea, I should have said, shouted
- for free tea. He cast one decisive glance at Hatton's placards, and
- rolled up. He shot into the gate, up the steps, down the passage, and
- through the door leading into the big corrugated-iron hall which I used
- for my lessons. And all the time he kept shouting for free tea.
- In the hall the members of my class were collected. Some were changing
- their clothes; others, already changed, were tapping the punch-ball.
- They knew that I always came punctually at nine o'clock, and they liked
- to be ready for me. Amongst those present was Sidney Price.
- Thomas Blake brought up short, hiccuping, in the midst of them. "Gimme
- that free tea!" he said.
- Sidney Price, whose moral fortitude has never been impeached, was the
- first to handle the situation.
- "My good man," he said, "I am sorry to say you have made a mistake."
- "A mistake!" said Thomas, quickly taking him up. "A mistake! Oh! What
- oh! My errer?"
- "Quite so," said Price, diplomatically; "an error."
- Thomas Blake sat down on the floor, fumbled for a short pipe, and said,
- "Seems ter me I'm sick of errers. Sick of 'em! Made a bloomer this
- mornin'--this way." Here he took into his confidence the group which
- had gathered uncertainly round him. "My wife's brother, 'im wot's a
- postman, owes me arf a bloomin' thick 'un. 'E's a hard-working bloke,
- and ter save 'im trouble I came down 'ere from Brentford, where my boat
- lies, to catch 'im on 'is rounds. Lot of catchin' 'e wanted, too--I
- _don't_ think. Tracked 'im by the knocks at last. And then, wot
- d'yer think 'e said? Didn't know nothing about no ruddy 'arf thick 'un,
- and would I kindly cease to impede a public servant in the discharge of
- 'is dooty. Otherwise--the perlice. That, mind you, was my own
- brother-in-law. Oh, he's a nice man, I _don't_ think!"
- Thomas Blake nodded his head as one who, though pained by the
- hollowness of life, is resigned to it, and proceeded to doze.
- The crowd gazed at him and murmured.
- Sidney Price, however, stepped forward with authority.
- "You'd better be going," he said; and he gently jogged the recumbent
- boatman's elbow.
- "Leave me be! I want my tea," was the muttered and lyrical reply.
- "Hook it!" said Price.
- "Without my tea?" asked Blake, opening his eyes wide.
- "It was yesterday," explained Price, brusquely. "There isn't any free
- tea tonight."
- The effect was magical. A very sinister expression came over the face
- of the prostrate one, and he slowly clambered to his feet.
- "Ho!" he said, disengaging himself from his coat. "Ho. There ain't no
- free tea ternight, ain't there? Bills stuck on them railings in errer,
- I suppose. Another bloomin' errer. Seems to me I'm sick of errers. Wot
- I says is, 'Come on, all of yer.' I'm Tom Blake, I am. You can arst
- them down at Brentford. Kind old Tom Blake, wot wouldn't hurt a fly;
- and I says, 'Come on, all of yer,' and I'll knock yer insides through
- yer backbones."
- Sidney Price spoke again. His words were honeyed, but ineffectual.
- "I'm honest old Tom, I am," boomed Thomas Blake, "and I'm ready for the
- lot of yer: you and yer free tea and yer errers."
- At this point Alf Joblin detached himself from the hovering crowd and
- said to Price: "He must be cowed. I'll knock sense into the drunken
- brute."
- "Well," said Price, "he's got to go; but you won't hurt him, Alf, will
- you?"
- "No," said Alf, "I won't hurt him. I'll just make him look a fool. This
- is where science comes in."
- "I'm honest old Tom," droned the boatman.
- "If you _will_ have it," said Alf, with fine aposiopesis.
- He squared up to him.
- Now Alf Joblin, like the other pugilists of my class, habitually
- refrained from delivering any sort of attack until he was well assured
- that he had seen an orthodox opening. A large part of every round
- between Hatton's boys was devoted to stealthy circular movements,
- signifying nothing. But Thomas Blake had not had the advantage of
- scientific tuition. He came banging in with a sweeping right. Alf
- stopped him with his left. Again Blake swung his right, and again he
- took Alf's stopping blow without a blink. Then he went straight in,
- right and left in quick succession. The force of the right was broken
- by Alf's guard, but the left got home on the mark; and Alf Joblin's
- wind left him suddenly. He sat down on the floor.
- To say that this tragedy in less than five seconds produced dismay
- among the onlookers would be incorrect. They were not dismayed. They
- were amused. They thought that Alf had laid himself open to chaff.
- Whether he had slipped or lost his head they did not know. But as for
- thinking that Alf with all his scientific knowledge was not more than a
- match for this ignorant, intoxicated boatman, such a reflection never
- entered their heads. What is more, each separate member of the audience
- was convinced that he individually was the proper person to illustrate
- the efficacy of style versus untutored savagery.
- As soon, therefore, as Alf Joblin went writhing to the floor, and
- Thomas Blake's voice was raised afresh in a universal challenge, Walter
- Greenway stepped briskly forward.
- And as soon as Walter's guard had been smashed down by a most
- unconventional attack, and Walter himself had been knocked senseless by
- a swing on the side of the jaw, Bill Shale leaped gaily forth to take
- his place.
- And so it happened that, when I entered the building at nine, it was as
- though a devastating tornado had swept down every club boy, sparing
- only Sidney Price, who was preparing miserably to meet his fate.
- To me, standing in the doorway, the situation was plain at the first
- glance. Only by a big effort could I prevent myself laughing outright.
- It was impossible to check a grin. Thomas Blake saw me.
- "Hullo!" I said; "what's all this?"
- He stared at me.
- "'Ullo!" he said, "another of 'em, is it? I'm honest old Tom Blake,
- _I_ am, and wot I say is----"
- "Why honest, Mr. Blake?" I interrupted.
- "Call me a liar, then!" said he. "Go on. You do it. Call it me, then,
- and let's see."
- He began to shuffle towards me.
- "Who pinched his father's trousers, and popped them?" I inquired
- genially.
- He stopped and blinked.
- "Eh?" he said weakly.
- "And who," I continued, "when sent with twopence to buy postage-stamps,
- squandered it on beer?"
- His jaw dropped, as it had dropped in Covent Garden. It must be very
- unpleasant to have one's past continually rising up to confront one.
- "Look 'ere!" he said, a conciliatory note in his voice, "you and me's
- pals, mister, ain't we? Say we're pals. Of course we are. You and me
- don't want no fuss. Of course we don't. Then look here: this is 'ow it
- is. You come along with me and 'ave a drop."
- It did not seem likely that my class would require any instruction in
- boxing that evening in addition to that which Mr. Blake had given them,
- so I went with him.
- Over the moisture, as he facetiously described it, he grew friendliness
- itself. He did not ask after Kit, but gave his opinion of her
- gratuitously. According to him, she was unkind to her relations. "Crool
- 'arsh," he said. A girl, in fact, who made no allowances for a man, and
- was over-prone to Sauce and the Nasty Snack.
- We parted the best of friends.
- "Any time you're on the Cut," he said, gripping my hand with painful
- fervour, "you look out for Tom Blake, mister. Tom Blake of the
- _Ashlade_ and _Lechton_. No ceremony. Jest drop in on me and
- the missis. Goo' night."
- At the moment of writing Tom Blake is rapidly acquiring an assured
- position in the heart of the British poetry-loving public. This
- incident in his career should interest his numerous admirers. The world
- knows little of its greatest men.
- CHAPTER 11
- JULIAN'S IDEA
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- I had been relating, on the morning after the Blake affair, the
- stirring episode of the previous night to Julian. He agreed with me
- that it was curious that our potato-thrower of Covent Garden market
- should have crossed my path again. But I noticed that, though he
- listened intently enough, he lay flat on his back in his hammock, not
- looking at me, but blinking at the ceiling; and when I had finished he
- turned his face towards the wall--which was unusual, since I generally
- lunched on his breakfast, as I was doing then, to the accompaniment of
- quite a flow of languid abuse.
- I was in particularly high spirits that morning, for I fancied that I
- had found a way out of my difficulty about Margaret. That subject being
- uppermost in my mind, I guessed at once what Julian's trouble was.
- "I think you'd like to know, Julian," I said, "whether I'd written to
- Guernsey."
- "Well?"
- "It's all right," I said.
- "You've told her to come?"
- "No; but I'm able to take my respite without wounding her. That's as
- good as writing, isn't it? We agreed on that."
- "Yes; that was the idea. If you could find a way of keeping her from
- knowing how well you were getting on with your writing, you were to
- take it. What's your idea?"
- "I've hit on a very simple way out of the difficulty," I said. "It came
- to me only this morning. All I need do is to sign my stuff with a
- pseudonym."
- "You only thought of that this morning?"
- "Yes. Why?"
- "My dear chap, I thought of it as soon as you told me of the fix you
- were in."
- "You might have suggested it."
- Julian slid to the floor, drained the almost empty teapot, rescued the
- last kidney, and began his breakfast.
- "I would have suggested it," he said, "if the idea had been worth
- anything."
- "What! What's wrong with it?"
- "My dear man, it's too risky. It's not as though you kept to one form
- of literary work. You're so confoundedly versatile. Let's suppose you
- did sign your work with a _nom de plume_."
- "Say, George Chandos."
- "All right. George Chandos. Well, how long would it be, do you think,
- before paragraphs appeared, announcing to the public, not only of
- England but of the Channel Islands, that George Chandos was really
- Jimmy Cloyster?"
- "What rot!" I said. "Why the deuce should they want to write paragraphs
- about me? I'm not a celebrity. You're talking through your hat,
- Julian."
- Julian lit his pipe.
- "Not at all," he said. "Count the number of people who must necessarily
- be in the secret from the beginning. There are your publishers, Prodder
- and Way. Then there are the editors of the magazine which publishes
- your Society dialogue bilge, and of all the newspapers, other than the
- _Orb_, in which your serious verse appears. My dear Jimmy, the
- news that you and George Chandos were the same man would go up and down
- Fleet Street and into the Barrel like wildfire. And after that the
- paragraphs."
- I saw the truth of his reasoning before he had finished speaking. Once
- more my spirits fell to the point where they had been before I hit upon
- what I thought was such a bright scheme.
- Julian's pipe had gone out while he was talking. He lit it again, and
- spoke through the smoke:
- "The weak point of your idea, of course, is that you and George Chandos
- are a single individual."
- "But why should the editors know that? Why shouldn't I simply send in
- my stuff, typed, by post, and never appear myself at all?"
- "My dear Jimmy, you know as well as I do that that wouldn't work. It
- would do all right for a bit. Then one morning: 'Dear Mr. Chandos,--I
- should be glad if you could make it convenient to call here some time
- between Tuesday and Thursday.--Yours faithfully. Editor of
- Something-or-other.' Sooner or later a man who writes at all regularly
- for the papers is bound to meet the editors of them. A successful
- author can't conduct all his business through the post. Of course, if
- you chucked London and went to live in the country----"
- "I couldn't," I said. "I simply couldn't do it. London's got into my
- bones."
- "It does," said Julian.
- "I like the country, but I couldn't live there. Besides, I don't
- believe I could write there--not for long. All my ideas would go."
- Julian nodded.
- "Just so," he said. "Then exit George Chandos."
- "My scheme is worthless, you think, then?"
- "As you state it, yes."
- "You mean----?" I prompted quickly, clutching at something in his tone
- which seemed to suggest that he did not consider the matter entirely
- hopeless.
- "I mean this. The weak spot in your idea, as I told you, is that you
- and George Chandos have the same body. Now, if you could manage to
- provide George with separate flesh and blood of his own, there's no
- reason----"
- "By Jove! you've hit it. Go on."
- "Listen. Here is my rough draft of what I think might be a sound,
- working system. How many divisions does your work fall into, not
- counting the _Orb_?"
- I reflected.
- "Well, of course, I do a certain amount of odd work, but lately I've
- rather narrowed it down, and concentrated my output. It seemed to me a
- better plan than sowing stuff indiscriminately through all the papers
- in London."
- "Well, how many stunts have you got? There's your serious verse--one.
- And your Society stuff--two. Any more?"
- "Novels and short stories."
- "Class them together--three. Any more?
- "No; that's all."
- "Very well, then. What you must do is to look about you, and pick
- carefully three men on whom you can rely. Divide your signed stuff
- between these three men. They will receive your copy, sign it with
- their own names, and see that it gets to wherever you want to send it.
- As far as the editorial world is concerned, and as far as the public is
- concerned, they will become actually the authors of the manuscripts
- which you have prepared for them to sign. They will forward you the
- cheques when they arrive, and keep accounts to which you will have
- access. I suppose you will have to pay them a commission on a scale to
- be fixed by mutual arrangement. As regards your unsigned work, there is
- nothing to prevent your doing that yourself--'On Your Way,' I mean,
- whenever there's any holiday work going: general articles, and light
- verse. I say, though, half a moment."
- "Why, what?"
- "I've thought of a difficulty. The editors who have been taking your
- stuff hitherto may have a respect for the name of James Orlebar
- Cloyster which they may not extend to the name of John Smith or George
- Chandos, or whoever it is. I mean, it's quite likely the withdrawal of
- the name will lead to the rejection of the manuscript."
- "Oh no; that's all right," I said. "It's the stuff they want, not the
- name. I don't say that names don't matter. They do. But only if they're
- big names. Kipling might get a story rejected if he sent it in under a
- false name, which they'd have taken otherwise just because he was
- Kipling. What they want from me is the goods. I can shove any label on
- them I like. The editor will read my ghosts' stuff, see it's what he
- wants, and put it in. He may say, 'It's rather like Cloyster's style,'
- but he'll certainly add, 'Anyhow, it's what I want.' You can scratch
- that difficulty, Julian. Any more?"
- "I think not. Of course, there's the objection that you'll lose any
- celebrity you might have got. No one'll say, 'Oh, Mr. Cloyster, I
- enjoyed your last book so much!'"
- "And no one'll say, 'Oh, do you _write_, Mr. Cloyster? How
- interesting! What have you written? You must send me a copy.'"
- "That's true. In any case, it's celebrity against the respite,
- obscurity against Miss Goodwin. While the system is in operation you
- will be free but inglorious. You choose freedom? All right, then. Pass
- the matches."
- Chapter 12
- THE FIRST GHOST
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- Such was the suggestion Julian made; and I praised its ingenuity,
- little thinking how bitterly I should come to curse it in the future.
- I was immediately all anxiety to set the scheme working.
- "Will you be one of my three middlemen, Julian?" I asked.
- He shook his head.
- "Thanks!" he said; "it's very good of you, but I daren't encroach
- further on my hours of leisure. Skeffington's Sloe Gin has already
- become an incubus."
- I could not move him from this decision.
- It is not everybody who, in a moment of emergency, can put his hand on
- three men of his acquaintance capable of carrying through a more or
- less delicate business for him. Certainly I found a difficulty in
- making my selection. I ran over the list of my friends in my mind. Then
- I was compelled to take pencil and paper, and settle down seriously to
- what I now saw would be a task of some difficulty. After half an hour I
- read through my list, and could not help smiling. I had indeed a mixed
- lot of acquaintances. First came Julian and Malim, the two pillars of
- my world. I scratched them out. Julian had been asked and had refused;
- and, as for Malim, I shrank from exposing my absurd compositions to his
- critical eye. A man who could deal so trenchantly over a pipe and a
- whisky-and-soda with Established Reputations would hardly take kindly
- to seeing my work in print under his name. I wished it had been
- possible to secure him, but I did not disguise it from myself that it
- was not.
- The rest of the list was made up of members of the Barrel Club
- (impossible because of their inherent tendency to break out into
- personal paragraphs); writers like Fermin and Gresham, above me on the
- literary ladder, and consequently unapproachable in a matter of this
- kind; certain college friends, who had vanished into space, as men do
- on coming down from the 'Varsity, leaving no address; John Hatton,
- Sidney Price, and Tom Blake.
- There were only three men in that list to whom I felt I could take my
- suggestion. Hatton was one, Price was another, and Blake was the third.
- Hatton should have my fiction, Price my Society stuff, Blake my serious
- verse.
- That evening I went off to the Temple to sound Hatton on the subject of
- signing my third book. The wretched sale of my first two had acted as
- something of a check to my enthusiasm for novel-writing. I had paused
- to take stock of my position. My first two novels had, I found on
- re-reading them, too much of the 'Varsity tone in them to be popular.
- That is the mistake a man falls into through being at Cambridge or
- Oxford. He fancies unconsciously that the world is peopled with
- undergraduates. He forgets that what appeals to an undergraduate public
- may be Greek to the outside reader and, unfortunately, not compulsory
- Greek. The reviewers had dealt kindly with my two books ("this pleasant
- little squib," "full of quiet humour," "should amuse all who remember
- their undergraduate days"); but the great heart of the public had
- remained untouched, as had the great purse of the public. I had
- determined to adopt a different style. And now my third book was ready.
- It was called, _When It Was Lurid_, with the sub-title, _A Tale
- of God and Allah_. There was a piquant admixture of love, religion,
- and Eastern scenery which seemed to point to a record number of
- editions.
- I took the type-script of this book with me to the Temple.
- Hatton was in. I flung _When It Was Lurid_ on the table, and sat
- down.
- "What's this?" inquired Hatton, fingering the brown-paper parcel. "If
- it's the corpse of a murdered editor, I think it's only fair to let you
- know that I have a prejudice against having my rooms used as a
- cemetery. Go and throw him into the river."
- "It's anything but a corpse. It's the most lively bit of writing ever
- done. There's enough fire in that book to singe your tablecloth."
- "You aren't going to read it to me out loud?" he said anxiously.
- "No."
- "Have I got to read it when you're gone?"
- "Not unless you wish to."
- "Then why, if I may ask, do you carry about a parcel which, I should
- say, weighs anything between one and two tons, simply to use it as a
- temporary table ornament? Is it the Sandow System?"
- "No," I said; "it's like this."
- And suddenly it dawned on me that it was not going to be particularly
- easy to explain to Hatton just what it was that I wanted him to do.
- I made the thing clear at last, suppressing, of course, my reasons for
- the move. When he had grasped my meaning, he looked at me rather
- curiously.
- "Doesn't it strike you," he said, "that what you propose is slightly
- dishonourable?"
- "You mean that I have come deliberately to insult you, Hatton?"
- "Our conversation seems to be getting difficult, unless you grant that
- honour is not one immovable, intangible landmark, fixed for humanity,
- but that it is a commodity we all carry with us in varying forms."
- "Personally, I believe that, as a help to identification,
- honour-impressions would be as useful as fingerprints."
- "Good! You agree with me. Now, you may have a different view; but, in
- my opinion, if I were to pose as the writer of your books, and gained
- credit for a literary skill----"
- I laughed.
- "You won't get credit for literary skill out of the sort of books I
- want you to put your name to. They're potboilers. You needn't worry
- about Fame. You'll be a martyr, not a hero."
- "You may be right. You wrote the book. But, in any case, I should be
- more of a charlatan than I care about."
- "You won't do it?" I said. "I'm sorry. It would have been a great
- convenience to me."
- "On the other hand," continued Hatton, ignoring my remark, "there are
- arguments in favour of such a scheme as you suggest."
- "Stout fellow!" I said encouragingly.
- "To examine the matter in its--er--financial--to suppose for a
- moment--briefly, what do I get out of it?"
- "Ten per cent."
- He looked thoughtful.
- "The end shall justify the means," he said. "The money you pay me can
- do something to help the awful, the continual poverty of Lambeth. Yes,
- James Cloyster, I will sign whatever you send me."
- "Good for you," I said.
- "And I shall come better out of the transaction than you."
- No one would credit the way that man--a clergyman, too--haggled over
- terms. He ended by squeezing fifteen per cent out of me.
- Chapter 13
- THE SECOND GHOST
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- The reasons which had led me to select Sidney Price as the sponsor of
- my Society dialogues will be immediately apparent to those who have
- read them. They were just the sort of things you would expect an
- insurance clerk to write. The humour was thin, the satire as cheap as
- the papers in which they appeared, and the vulgarity in exactly the
- right quantity for a public that ate it by the pound and asked for
- more. Every thing pointed to Sidney Price as the man.
- It was my intention to allow each of my three ghosts to imagine that he
- was alone in the business; so I did not get Price's address from
- Hatton, who might have wondered why I wanted it, and had suspicions. I
- applied to the doorkeeper at Carnation Hall; and on the following
- evening I rang the front-door bell of The Hollyhocks, Belmont Park
- Road, Brixton.
- Whilst I was waiting on the step, I was able to get a view through the
- slats of the Venetian blind of the front ground-floor sitting-room. I
- could scarcely restrain a cry of pure aesthetic delight at what I saw
- within. Price was sitting on a horse-hair sofa with an arm round the
- waist of a rather good-looking girl. Her eyes were fixed on his. It was
- Edwin and Angelina in real life.
- Up till then I had suffered much discomfort from the illustrated record
- of their adventures in the comic papers. "Is there really," I had often
- asked myself, "a body of men so gifted that they can construct the
- impossible details of the lives of nonexistent types purely from
- imagination? If such creative genius as theirs is unrecognized and
- ignored, what hope of recognition is there for one's own work?" The
- thought had frequently saddened me; but here at last they were--Edwin
- and Angelina in the flesh!
- I took the gallant Sidney for a fifteen-minute stroll up and down the
- length of the Belmont Park Road. Poor Angelina! He came, as he
- expressed it, "like a bird." Give him a sec. to slip on a pair of
- boots, he said, and he would be with me in two ticks.
- He was so busy getting his hat and stick from the stand in the passage
- that he quite forgot to tell the lady that he was going out, and, as we
- left, I saw her with the tail of my eye sitting stolidly on the sofa,
- still wearing patiently the expression of her comic-paper portraits.
- The task of explaining was easier than it had been with Hatton.
- "Sorry to drag you out, Price," I said, as we went down the steps.
- "Don't mention it, Mr. Cloyster," he said. "Norah won't mind a bit of a
- sit by herself. Looked in to have a chat, or is there anything I can
- do?"
- "It's like this," I said. "You know I write a good deal?"
- "Yes."
- "Well, it has occurred to me that, if I go on turning out quantities of
- stuff under my own name, there's a danger of the public getting tired
- of me."
- He nodded.
- "Now, I'm with you there, mind you," he said. "'Can't have too much of
- a good thing,' some chaps say. I say, 'Yes, you can.' Stands to reason
- a chap can't go on writing and writing without making a bloomer every
- now and then. What he wants is to take his time over it. Look at all
- the real swells--'Erbert Spencer, Marie Corelli, and what not--you
- don't find them pushing it out every day of the year. They wait a bit
- and have a look round, and then they start again when they're ready.
- Stands to reason that's the only way."
- "Quite right," I said; "but the difficulty, if you live by writing, is
- that you must turn out a good deal, or you don't make enough to live
- on. I've got to go on getting stuff published, but I don't want people
- to be always seeing my name about."
- "You mean, adopt a _nom de ploom_?"
- "That's the sort of idea; but I'm going to vary it a little."
- And I explained my plan.
- "But why me?" he asked, when he had understood the scheme. "What made
- you think of me?"
- "The fact is, my dear fellow," I said, "this writing is a game where
- personality counts to an enormous extent. The man who signs my Society
- dialogues will probably come into personal contact with the editors of
- the papers in which they appear. He will be asked to call at their
- offices. So you see I must have a man who looks as if he had written
- the stuff."
- "I see," he said complacently. "Dressy sort of chap. Chap who looks as
- if he knew a thing or two."
- "Yes. I couldn't get Alf Joblin, for instance."
- We laughed together at the notion.
- "Poor old Alf!" said Sidney Price.
- "Now you probably know a good deal about Society?"
- "Rath_er_" said Sidney. "They're a hot lot. My _word_! Saw
- _The Walls of Jericho_ three times. Gives it 'em pretty straight,
- that does. _Visits of Elizabeth_, too. Chase me! Used to think
- some of us chaps in the 'Moon' were a bit O.T., but we aren't in
- it--not in the same street. Chaps, I mean, who'd call a girl behind the
- bar by her Christian name as soon as look at you. One chap I knew used
- to give the girl at the cash-desk of the 'Mecca' he went to bottles of
- scent. Bottles of it--regular! 'Here you are, Tottie,' he used to say,
- 'here's another little donation from yours truly.' Kissed her once.
- Slap in front of everybody. Saw him do it. But, bless you, they'd think
- nothing of that in the Smart Set. Ever read 'God's Good Man'? There's a
- book! My stars! Lets you see what goes on. Scorchers they are."
- "That's just what my dialogues point out. I can count on you, then?"
- He said I could. He was an intelligent young man, and he gave me to
- understand that all would be well. He would carry the job through on
- the strict Q.T. He closely willingly with my offer of ten per cent,
- thus affording a striking contrast to the grasping Hatton. He assured
- me he had found literary chaps not half bad. Had occasionally had an
- idea of writing a bit himself.
- We parted on good terms, and I was pleased to think that I was placing
- my "Dialogues of Mayfair" and my "London and Country House Tales" in
- really competent and appreciative hands.
- Chapter 14
- THE THIRD GHOST
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- There only remained now my serious verse, of which I turned out an
- enormous quantity. It won a ready acceptance in many quarters, notably
- the _St. Stephen's Gazette_. Already I was beginning to oust from
- their positions on that excellent journal the old crusted poetesses who
- had supplied it from its foundation with verse. The prices they paid on
- the _St. Stephen's_ were in excellent taste. In the musical world,
- too, I was making way rapidly. Lyrics of the tea-and-muffin type
- streamed from my pen. "Sleep whilst I Sing, Love," had brought me in an
- astonishing amount of money, in spite of the music-pirates. It was on
- the barrel-organs. Adults hummed it. Infants crooned it in their cots.
- Comic men at music-halls opened their turns by remarking soothingly to
- the conductor of the orchestra, "I'm going to sing now, so you go to
- sleep, love." In a word, while the boom lasted, it was a little
- gold-mine to me.
- Thomas Blake was as obviously the man for me here as Sidney Price had
- been in the case of my Society dialogues. The public would find
- something infinitely piquant in the thought that its most sentimental
- ditties were given to it by the horny-handed steerer of a canal barge.
- He would be greeted as the modern Burns. People would ask him how he
- thought of his poems, and he would say, "Oo-er!" and they would hail
- him as delightfully original. In the case of Thomas Blake I saw my
- earnings going up with a bound. His personality would be a noble
- advertisement.
- He was aboard the _Ashlade_ or _Lechton_ on the Cut, so I was
- informed by Kit. Which information was not luminous to me. Further
- inquiries, however, led me to the bridge at Brentford, whence starts
- that almost unknown system of inland navigation which extends to
- Manchester and Birmingham.
- Here I accosted at a venture a ruminative bargee. "Tom Blake?" he
- repeated, reflectively. "Oh! 'e's been off this three hours on a trip
- to Braunston. He'll tie up tonight at the Shovel."
- "Where's the Shovel?"
- "Past Cowley, the Shovel is." This was spoken in a tired drawl which
- was evidently meant to preclude further chit-chat. To clinch things, he
- slouched away, waving me in an abstracted manner to the towpath.
- I took the hint. It was now three o'clock in the afternoon. Judging by
- the pace of the barges I had seen, I should catch Blake easily before
- nightfall. I set out briskly. An hour's walking brought me to Hanwell,
- and I was glad to see a regular chain of locks which must have
- considerably delayed the _Ashlade_ and _Lechton_.
- The afternoon wore on. I went steadily forward, making inquiries as to
- Thomas's whereabouts from the boats which met me, and always hearing
- that he was still ahead.
- Footsore and hungry, I overtook him at Cowley. The two boats were in
- the lock. Thomas and a lady, presumably his wife, were ashore. On the
- _Ashlade_'s raised cabin cover was a baby. Two patriarchal-looking
- boys were respectively at the _Ashlade_'s and _Lechton_'s tillers.
- The lady was attending to the horse.
- The water in the lock rose gradually to a higher level.
- "Hold them tillers straight!" yelled Thomas. At which point I saluted
- him. He was a little blank at first, but when I reminded him of our
- last meeting his face lit up at once. "Why, you're the mister wot----"
- "Nuppie!" came in a shrill scream from the lady with the horse.
- "Nuppie!"
- "Yes, Ada!" answered the boy on the _Ashlade_.
- "Liz ain't tied to the can. D'you want 'er to be drownded? Didn't I
- tell you to be sure and tie her up tight?"
- "So I did, Ada. She's untied herself again. Yes, she 'as. 'Asn't she,
- Albert?"
- This appeal for corroboration was directed to the other small boy on
- the _Lechton_. It failed signally.
- "No, you did not tie Liz to the chimney. You know you never, Nuppie."
- "Wait till we get out of this lock!" said Nuppie, earnestly.
- The water pouring in from the northern sluice was forcing the tillers
- violently against the southern sluice gates.
- "If them boys," said Tom Blake in an overwrought voice, "lets them
- tillers go round, it's all up with my pair o' boats. Lemme do it,
- you----" The rest of the sentence was mercifully lost in the thump with
- which Thomas's feet bounded on the _Ashlade_'s cabin-top. He made
- Liz fast to the circular foot of iron chimney projecting from the
- boards; then, jumping back to the land, he said, more in sorrow than in
- anger: "Lazy little brats! an' they've '_ad_ their tea, too."
- Clear of the locks, I walked with Thomas and his ancient horse, trying
- to explain what I wanted done. But it was not until we had tied up for
- the night, had had beer at the Shovel, and (Nuppie and Albert being
- safely asleep in the second cabin) had met at supper that my
- instructions had been fully grasped. Thomas himself was inclined to be
- diffident, and had it not been for Ada would, I think, have let my
- offer slide. She was enthusiastic. It was she who told me of the
- cottage they had at Fenny Stratford, which they used as headquarters
- whilst waiting for a cargo.
- "That can be used as a permanent address," I said. "All you have to do
- is to write your name at the end of each typewritten sheet, enclose it
- in the stamped envelope which I will send you, and send it by post.
- When the cheques come, sign them on the back and forward them to me.
- For every ten pounds you forward me, I'll give you one for yourself. In
- any difficulty, simply write to me--here's my own address--and I'll see
- you through it."
- "We can't go to prison for it, can we, mister?" asked Ada suddenly,
- after a pause.
- "No," I said; "there's nothing dishonest in what I propose."
- "Oh, she didn't so much mean that," said Thomas, thoughtfully.
- They gave me a shakedown for the night in the cargo.
- Just before turning in, I said casually, "If anyone except me cashed
- the cheques by mistake, he'd go to prison quick."
- "Yes, mister," came back Thomas's voice, again a shade thoughtfully
- modulated.
- CHAPTER 15
- EVA EVERSLEIGH
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- With my system thus in full swing I experienced the intoxication of
- assured freedom. To say I was elated does not describe it. I walked on
- air. This was my state of mind when I determined to pay a visit to the
- Gunton-Cresswells. I had known them in my college days, but since I had
- been engaged in literature I had sedulously avoided them because I
- remembered that Margaret had once told me they were her friends.
- But now there was no need for me to fear them on that account, and
- thinking that the solid comfort of their house in Kensington would be
- far from disagreeable, thither, one afternoon in spring, I made my way.
- It is wonderful how friendly Convention is to Art when Art does not
- appear to want to borrow money.
- No. 5, Kensington Lane, W., is the stronghold of British
- respectability. It is more respectable than the most respectable
- suburb. Its attitude to Mayfair is that of a mother to a daughter who
- has gone on the stage and made a success. Kensington Lane is almost
- tolerant of Mayfair. But not quite. It admits the success, but shakes
- its head.
- Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell took an early opportunity of drawing me aside,
- and began gently to pump me. After I had responded with sufficient
- docility to her leads, she reiterated her delight at seeing me again. I
- had concluded my replies with the words, "I am a struggling journalist,
- Mrs. Cresswell." I accompanied the phrase with a half-smile which she
- took to mean--as I intended she should--that I was amusing myself by
- dabbling in literature, backed by a small, but adequate, private
- income.
- "Oh, come, James," she said, smiling approvingly, "you know you will
- make a quite too dreadfully clever success. How dare you try to deceive
- me like that? A struggling journalist, indeed."
- But I knew she liked that "struggling journalist" immensely. She would
- couple me and my own epithet together before her friends. She would
- enjoy unconsciously an imperceptible, but exquisite, sensation of
- patronage by having me at her house. Even if she discussed me with
- Margaret I was safe. For Margaret would give an altogether different
- interpretation of the smile with which I described myself as
- struggling. My smile would be mentally catalogued by her as "brave";
- for it must not be forgotten that as suddenly as my name had achieved a
- little publicity, just so suddenly had it utterly disappeared.
- * * * * *
- Towards the end of May, it happened that Julian dropped into my rooms
- about three o'clock, and found me gazing critically at a top-hat.
- "I've seen you," he remarked, "rather often in that get-up lately."
- "It _is_, perhaps, losing its first gloss," I answered, inspecting
- my hat closely. I cared not a bit for Julian's sneers; for the smell of
- the flesh-pots of Kensington had laid hold of my soul, and I was
- resolved to make the most of the respite which my system gave me.
- "What salon is to have the honour today?" he asked, spreading himself
- on my sofa.
- "I'm going to the Gunton-Cresswells," I replied.
- Julian slowly sat up.
- "Ah?" he said conversationally.
- "I've been asked to meet their niece, a Miss Eversleigh, whom they've
- invited to stop with them. Funny, by the way, that her name should be
- the same as yours."
- "Not particularly," said Julian shortly; "she's my cousin. My cousin
- Eva."
- This was startling. There was a pause. Presently Julian said, "Do you
- know, Jimmy, that if I were not the philosopher I am, I'd curse this
- awful indolence of mine."
- I saw it in a flash, and went up to him holding out my hand in
- sympathy. "Thanks," he said, gripping it; "but don't speak of it. I
- couldn't endure that, even from you, James. It's too hard for talking.
- If it was only myself whose life I'd spoilt--if it was only myself----"
- He broke off. And then, "Hers too. She's true as steel."
- I had heard no more bitter cry than that.
- I began to busy myself amongst some manuscripts to give Julian time to
- compose himself. And so an hour passed. At a quarter past four I got up
- to go out. Julian lay recumbent. It seemed terrible to leave him
- brooding alone over his misery.
- A closer inspection, however, showed me he was asleep.
- * * * * *
- Meanwhile, Eva Eversleigh and I became firm friends. Of her person
- I need simply say that it was the most beautiful that Nature ever
- created. Pressed as to details, I should add that she was _petite_,
- dark, had brown hair, very big blue eyes, a _retroussé_ nose,
- and a rather wide mouth.
- Julian had said she was "true as steel." Therefore, I felt no
- diffidence in manoeuvring myself into her society on every conceivable
- occasion. Sometimes she spoke to me of Julian, whom I admitted I knew,
- and, with feminine courage, she hid her hopeless, all-devouring
- affection for her cousin under the cloak of ingenuous levity. She
- laughed nearly every time his name was mentioned.
- About this time the Gunton-Cresswells gave a dance.
- I looked forward to it with almost painful pleasure. I had not been to
- a dance since my last May-week at Cambridge. Also No. 5, Kensington
- Lane had completely usurped the position I had previously assigned to
- Paradise. To waltz with Julian's cousin--that was the ambition which
- now dwarfed my former hankering for the fame of authorship or a
- habitation in Bohemia.
- Mrs. Goodwin once said that happiness consists in anticipating an
- impossible future. Be that as it may, I certainly thought my sensations
- were pleasant enough when at length my hansom pulled up jerkily beside
- the red-carpeted steps of No. 5, Kensington Lane. As I paid the fare, I
- could hear the murmur from within of a waltz tune--and I kept repeating
- to myself that Eva had promised me the privilege of taking her in to
- supper, and had given me the last two waltzes and the first two extras.
- I went to pay my _devoirs_ to my hostess. She was supinely
- gamesome. "Ah," she said, showing her excellent teeth, "Genius
- attendant at the revels of Terpsichore."
- "Where Beauty, Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell," I responded, cutting it, as
- though mutton, thick, "teaches e'en the humblest visitor the reigning
- Muse's art."
- "You may have this one, if you like," said Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell
- simply.
- Supper came at last, and, with supper, Eva.
- I must now write it down that she was not a type of English beauty. She
- was not, I mean, queenly, impassive, never-anything-but-her-cool-calm-self.
- Tonight, for instance, her eyes were as I had never seen them.
- There danced in them the merriest glitter, which was more than a mere
- glorification of the ordinary merry glitter--which scores of girls
- possess at every ball. To begin with, there was a diabolical abandon
- in Eva's glitter, which raised it instantly above the common herd's.
- And behind it all was that very misty mist. I don't know whether all
- men have seen that mist; but I am sure that no man has seen it more
- than once; and, from what I've seen of the average man, I doubt if
- most of them have ever seen it at all. Well, there it was for me to
- see in Eva Eversleigh's eyes that night at supper. It made me think
- of things unspeakable. I felt a rush of classic aestheticism: Arcadia,
- Helen of Troy, the happy valleys of the early Greeks. Supper: I believe
- I gave her oyster _pâtés_. But I was far away. Deep, deep, deep
- in Eva's eyes I saw a craft sighting, 'neath a cloudless azure sky,
- the dark blue Symplegades; heard in my ears the jargon, loud and near
- me, of the sailors; and faintly o'er the distance of the dead-calm sea
- rose intermittently the sound of brine-foam at the clashing rocks....
- As we sat there _tête-à-tête_, she smiled across the table at me
- with such perfect friendliness, it seemed as though a magic barrier
- separated our two selves from all the chattering, rustling crowd around
- us. When she spoke, a little quiver of feeling blended adorably with
- the low, sweet tones of her voice. We talked, indeed, of trifles, but
- with just that charming hint of intimacy which men friends have who may
- have known one another from birth, and may know one another for a
- lifetime, but never become bores, never change. Only when it comes
- between a woman and a man, it is incomparably finer. It is the talk, of
- course, of lovers who have not realised they are in love.
- "The two last waltzes," I murmured, when parting with her. She nodded.
- I roamed the Gunton-Cresswells's rooms awaiting them.
- She danced those two last waltzes with strangers.
- The thing was utterly beyond me at the time. Looking back, I am still
- amazed to what lengths deliberate coquetry can go.
- She actually took pains to elude me, and gave those waltzes to
- strangers.
- From being comfortably rocked in the dark blue waters of a Grecian sea,
- I was suddenly transported to the realities of the ballroom. My
- theoretical love for Eva was now a substantial truth. I was in an agony
- of desire, in a frenzy of jealousy. I wanted to hurl the two strangers
- to opposite corners of the ballroom, but civilisation forbade it.
- I was now in an altogether indescribable state of nerves and suspense.
- Had she definitely and for some unfathomable reason decided to cut me?
- The first extra drew languorously to a close, couples swept from the
- room to the grounds, the gallery or the conservatory. I tried to steady
- my whirling head with a cigarette and a whisky-and-soda in the
- smoking-room.
- The orchestra, like a train starting tentatively on a long run,
- launched itself mildly into the preliminary bars of _Tout Passe_.
- I sought the ballroom blinded by my feelings. Pulling myself together
- with an effort, I saw her standing alone. It struck me for the first
- time that she was clothed in cream. Her skin gleamed shining white. She
- stood erect, her arms by her sides. Behind her was a huge, black velvet
- _portière_ of many folds, supported by two dull brazen columns.
- As I advanced towards her, two or three men bowed and spoke to her. She
- smiled and dismissed them, and, still smiling pleasantly, her glance
- traversed the crowd and rested upon me. I was drawing now quite near.
- Her eyes met mine; nor did she avert them, and stooping a little to
- address her, I heard her sigh.
- "You're tired," I said, forgetting my two last dances, forgetting
- everything but that I loved her.
- "Perhaps I am," she said, taking my arm. We turned in silence to the
- _portière_ and found ourselves in the hall. The doors were opened.
- Some servants were there. At the bottom of the steps I chanced to see a
- yellow light.
- "Find out if that cab's engaged," I said to a footman.
- "The cool air----" I said to Eva.
- "The cab is not engaged, sir," said the footman, returning.
- "Yes," said Eva, in answer to my glance.
- "Drive to the corner of Sloane Street, by way of the Park," I told the
- driver.
- I have said that I had forgotten everything except that I loved her.
- Could it help remembrance now that we two sped alone through empty
- streets, her warm, palpitating body touching mine?
- Julian, his friendship for me, his love for Eva; Margaret and her love
- for me; my own honour--these things were blotted from my brain.
- "Eva!" I murmured; and I took her hand.
- "Eva."
- Her wonderful eyes met mine. The mist in them seemed to turn to dew.
- "My darling," she whispered, very low. And, the road being deserted, I
- drew her face to mine and kissed her.
- CHAPTER 16
- I TELL JULIAN
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- Is any man really honourable? I wonder. Hundreds, thousands go
- triumphantly through life with that reputation. But how far is this due
- to absence of temptation? Life, which is like cricket in so many ways,
- resembles the game in this also. A batsman makes a century, and, having
- made it, is bowled by a ball which he is utterly unable to play. What
- if that ball had come at the beginning of his innings instead of at the
- end of it? Men go through life without a stain on their honour. I
- wonder if it simply means that they had the luck not to have the good
- ball bowled to them early in their innings. To take my own case. I had
- always considered myself a man of honour. I had a code that was rigid
- compared with that of a large number of men. In theory I should never
- have swerved from it. I was fully prepared to carry out my promise and
- marry Margaret, at the expense of my happiness--until I met Eva. I
- would have done anything to avoid injuring Julian, my friend, until I
- met Eva. Eva was my temptation, and I fell. Nothing in the world
- mattered, so that she was mine. I ought to have had a revulsion of
- feeling as I walked back to my rooms in Walpole Street. The dance was
- over. The music had ceased. The dawn was chill. And at a point midway
- between Kensington Lane and the Brompton Oratory I had proposed to
- Eversleigh's cousin, his Eva, "true as steel," and had been accepted.
- Yet I had no remorse. I did not even try to justify my behaviour to
- Julian or to Margaret, or--for she must suffer, too--to Mrs.
- Gunton-Cresswell, who, I knew well, was socially ambitious for her
- niece.
- To all these things I was indifferent. I repeated softly to myself, "We
- love each other."
- From this state of coma, however, I was aroused by the appearance of my
- window-blind. I saw, in fact, that my room was illuminated. Remembering
- that I had been careful to put out my lamp before I left, I feared, as
- I opened the hall door, a troublesome encounter with a mad
- housebreaker. Mad, for no room such as mine could attract a burglar who
- has even the slightest pretensions to sanity.
- It was not a burglar. It was Julian Eversleigh, and he was lying asleep
- on my sofa.
- There was nothing peculiar in this. I roused him.
- "Julian," I said.
- "I'm glad you're back," he said, sitting up; "I've some news for you."
- "So have I," said I. For I had resolved to tell him what I had done.
- "Hear mine first. It's urgent. Miss Margaret Goodwin has been here."
- My heart seemed to leap.
- "Today?" I cried.
- "Yes. I had called to see you, and was waiting a little while on the
- chance of your coming in when I happened to look out of the window. A
- girl was coming down the street, looking at the numbers of the houses.
- She stopped here. Intuition told me she was Miss Goodwin. While she was
- ringing the bell I did all I could to increase the shabby squalor of
- your room. She was shown in here, and I introduced myself as your
- friend. We chatted. I drew an agonising picture of your struggle for
- existence. You were brave, talented, and unsuccessful. Though you went
- often hungry, you had a plucky smile upon your lips. It was a
- meritorious bit of work. Miss Goodwin cried a good deal. She is
- charming. I was so sorry for her that I laid it on all the thicker."
- "Where is she now?"
- "Nearing Guernsey. She's gone."
- "Gone!" I said. "Without seeing me! I don't understand."
- "You don't understand how she loves you, James."
- "But she's gone. Gone without a word."
- "She has gone because she loved you so. She had intended to stay with
- the Gunton-Cresswells. She knows them, it seems. They didn't know she
- was coming. She didn't know herself until this morning. She happened to
- be walking on the quay at St. Peter's Port. The outward-bound boat was
- on the point of starting for England. A wave of affection swept over
- Miss Goodwin. She felt she must see you. Scribbling a note, which she
- despatched to her mother, she went aboard. She came straight here.
- Then, when I had finished with her, when I had lied consistently about
- you for an hour, she told me she must return. 'I must not see James,'
- she said. 'You have torn my heart. I should break down.' And she said,
- speaking, I think, half to herself, 'Your courage is so noble, so
- different from mine. And I must not impose a needless strain upon it.
- You shall not see me weep for you.' And then she went away."
- Julian's voice broke. He was genuinely affected by his own recital.
- For my part, I saw that I had bludgeon work to do. It is childish to
- grumble at the part Fate forces one to play. Sympathetic or otherwise,
- one can only enact one's _rôle_ to the utmost of one's ability.
- Mine was now essentially unsympathetic, but I was determined that it
- should be adequately played.
- I went to the fireplace and poked the fire into a blaze. Then, throwing
- my hat on the table and lighting a cigarette, I regarded Julian
- cynically.
- "You're a nice sort of person, aren't you?" I said.
- "What do you mean?" asked Julian, startled, as I had meant that he
- should be, by the question.
- I laughed.
- "Aren't you just a little transparent, my dear Julian?"
- He stared blankly.
- I took up a position in front of the fire.
- "Disloyalty," I said tolerantly, "where a woman is concerned, is in the
- eyes of some people almost a negative virtue."
- "I don't know what on earth you're talking about."
- "Don't you?"
- I was sorry for him all the time. In a curiously impersonal way I could
- realise the depths to which I was sinking in putting this insult upon
- him. But my better feelings were gagged and bound that night. The one
- thought uppermost in my mind was that I must tell Julian of Eva, and
- that by his story of Margaret he had given me an opening for making my
- confession with the minimum of discomfort to myself.
- It was pitiful to see the first shaft of my insinuation slowly sink
- into him. I could see by the look in his eyes that he had grasped my
- meaning.
- "Jimmy," he gasped, "you can't think--are you joking?"
- "I am not surprised at your asking that question," I replied
- pleasantly. "You know how tolerant I am. But I'm not joking. Not that I
- blame you, my dear fellow. Margaret is, or used to be, very
- good-looking."
- "You seem to be in earnest," he said, in a dazed way.
- "My dear fellow," I said; "I have a certain amount of intuition. You
- spend an hour here alone with Margaret. She is young, and very pretty.
- You are placed immediately on terms of intimacy by the fact that you
- have, in myself, a subject of mutual interest. That breaks the ice. You
- are at cross-purposes, but your main sympathies are identical. Also,
- you have a strong objective sympathy for Margaret. I think we may
- presuppose that this second sympathy is stronger than the first. It
- pivots on a woman, not on a man. And on a woman who is present, not on
- a man who is absent. You see my meaning? At any rate, the solid fact
- remains that she stayed an hour with you, whom she had met for the
- first time today, and did not feel equal to meeting me, whom she has
- loved for two years. If you want me to explain myself further, I have
- no objection to doing so. I mean that you made love to her."
- I watched him narrowly to see how he would take it. The dazed
- expression deepened on his face.
- "You are apparently sane," he said, very wearily. "You seem to be
- sober."
- "I am both," I said.
- There was a pause.
- "It's no use for me," he began, evidently collecting his thoughts with
- a strong effort, "to say your charge is preposterous. I don't suppose
- mere denial would convince you. I can only say, instead, that the
- charge is too wild to be replied to except in one way, which is this.
- Employ for a moment your own standard of right and wrong. I know your
- love story, and you know mine. Miss Eversleigh, my cousin, is to me
- what Miss Goodwin is to you--true as steel. My loyalty and my
- friendship for you are the same as your loyalty and your friendship for
- me."
- "Well?"
- "Well, if I have spent an hour with Miss Goodwin, you have spent more
- than an hour with my cousin. What right have you to suspect me more
- than I have to suspect you? Judge me by your own standard."
- "I do," I said, "and I find myself still suspecting you."
- He stared.
- "I don't understand you."
- "Perhaps you will when you have heard the piece of news which I
- mentioned earlier in our conversation that I had for you."
- "Well?"
- "I proposed to your cousin at the Gunton-Cresswells's dance tonight,
- and she accepted me."
- The news had a surprising effect on Julian. First he blinked. Then he
- craned his head forward in the manner of a deaf man listening with
- difficulty.
- Then he left the room without a word.
- He had not been gone two minutes when there were three short, sharp
- taps at my window.
- Julian returned? Impossible. Yet who else could
- have called on me at that hour?
- I went to the front door, and opened it.
- On the steps stood the Rev. John Hatton. Beside him Sidney Price. And,
- lurking in the background, Tom Blake of the _Ashlade_ and
- _Lechton_.
- _(End of James Orlebar Cloister's narrative.)_
- Sidney Price's Narrative
- CHAPTER 17
- A GHOSTLY GATHERING
- Norah Perkins is a peach, and I don't care who knows it; but, all the
- same, there's no need to tell her every little detail of a man's past
- life. Not that I've been a Don What's-his-name. Far from it. Costs a
- bit too much, that game. You simply can't do it on sixty quid a year,
- paid monthly, and that's all there is about it. Not but what I don't
- often think of going it a bit when things are slack at the office and
- my pal in the New Business Department is out for lunch. It's the
- loneliness makes you think of going a regular plunger. More than once,
- when Tommy Milner hasn't been there to talk to, I tell you I've half a
- mind to take out some girl or other to tea at the "Cabin." I have,
- straight.
- Yet somehow when the assist. cash. comes round with the wicker tray on
- the 1st, and gives you the envelope ("Mr. Price") and you take out the
- five sovereigns--well, somehow, there's such a lot of other things
- which you don't want to buy but have just got to. Tommy Milner said the
- other day, and I quite agree with him, "When I took my clean
- handkerchief out last fortnight," he said, "I couldn't help totting up
- what a lot I spend on trifles." That's it. There you've got it in a
- nutshell. Washing, bootlaces, bus-tickets--trifles, in fact: that's
- where the coin goes. Only the other morning I bust my braces. I was
- late already, and pinning them together all but lost me the 9:16, only
- it was a bit behind time. It struck me then as I ran to the station
- that the average person would never count braces an expense.
- Trifles--that's what it is.
- No; I may have smoked a cig. too much and been so chippy next day that
- I had to go out and get a cup of tea at the A.B.C.; or I may now and
- again have gone up West of an evening for a bit of a look round; but
- beyond that I've never been really what you'd call vicious. Very likely
- it's been my friendship for Mr. Hatton that's curbed me breaking out as
- I've sometimes imagined myself doing when I've been alone in the New
- Business Room. Though I must say, in common honesty to myself, that
- there's always been the fear of getting the sack from the "Moon." The
- "Moon" isn't like some other insurance companies I could mention
- which'll take anyone. Your refs. must be A1, or you don't stand an
- earthly. Simply not an earthly. Besides, the "Moon" isn't an Insurance
- Company at all: it's an _As_surance Company. Of course, now I've
- chucked the "Moon" ("shot the moon," as Tommy Milner, who's the office
- comic, put it) and taken to Literature I could do pretty well what I
- liked, if it weren't for Norah.
- Which brings me back to what I was saying just now--that I'm not sure
- whether I shall tell her the Past. I may and I may not. I'll have to
- think it over. Anyway, I'm going to write it down first and see how it
- looks. If it's all right it can go into my autobiography. If it isn't,
- then I shall lie low about it. That's the posish.
- It all started from my friendship with Mr. Hatton--the Rev. Mr. Hatton.
- If it hadn't have been for that man I should still be working out rates
- of percentage for the "Moon" and listening to Tommy Milner's so-called
- witticisms. Of course, I've cut him now. A literary man, a man who
- supplies the _Strawberry Leaf_ with two columns of Social
- Interludes at a salary I'm not going to mention in case Norah gets to
- hear of it and wants to lash out, a man whose Society novels are
- competed for by every publisher in London and New York--well, can a man
- in that position be expected to keep up with an impudent little
- ledger-lugger like Tommy Milner? It can't be done.
- I first met the Reverend on the top of Box Hill one Saturday
- afternoon. Bike had punctured, and the Reverend gave me the
- loan of his cyclists' repairing outfit. We had our tea together.
- Watercress, bread-and-butter, and two sorts of jam--one bob per
- head. He issued an invite to his diggings in the Temple. Cocoa and
- cigs. of an evening. Regular pally, him and me was. Then he got into
- the way of taking me down to a Boys' Club that he had started.
- Terrors they were, so to put it. Fair out-and-out terrors. But they
- all thought a lot of the Reverend, and so did I. Consequently it was
- all right. The next link in the chain was a chap called Cloyster.
- James Orlebar Cloyster. The Reverend brought him down to teach
- boxing. For my own part, I don't fancy anything in the way of
- brutality. The club, so I thought, had got on very nicely with
- more intellectual pursuits: draughts, chess, bagatelle, and what-not.
- But the Rev. wanted boxing, and boxing it had to be. Not that it
- would have done for him or me to have mixed ourselves up in it. He
- had his congregation to consider, and I am often on duty at the
- downstairs counter before the very heart of the public. A black eye
- or a missing tooth wouldn't have done at all for either of us, being,
- as we were, in a sense, officials. But Cloyster never seemed to
- realise this. Not to put too fine a point upon it, Cloyster was not
- my idea of a gentleman. He had no tact.
- The next link was a confirmed dipsomaniac. A terrible phrase.
- Unavoidable, though. A very evil man is Tom Blake. Yet out of evil
- cometh good, and it was Tom Blake, who, indirectly, stopped the boxing
- lessons. The club boys never wore the gloves after drunken Blake's
- visit.
- I shall never--no, positively never forget that night in June when
- matters came to a head in Shaftesbury Avenue. Oh, I say, it was a bit
- hot--very warm.
- Each successive phase is limned indelibly--that's the sort of literary
- style I've got, if wanted--on the tablets of my memory.
- I'd been up West, and who should I run across in Oxford Street but my
- old friend, Charlie Cookson. Very good company is Charlie Cookson. See
- him at a shilling hop at the Holborn: he's pretty much all there all
- the time. Well-known follower--of course, purely as an amateur--of the
- late Dan Leno, king of comedians; good penetrating voice; writes his
- own in-between bits--you know what I mean: the funny observations on
- mothers-in-law, motors, and marriage, marked "Spoken" in the
- song-books. Fellows often tell him he'd make a mint of money in the
- halls, and there's a rumour flying round among us who knew him in the
- "Moon" that he was seen coming out of a Bedford Street Variety Agency
- the other day.
- Well, I met Charlie at something after ten. Directly he spotted me he
- was at his antics, standing stock still on the pavement in a crouching
- attitude, and grasping his umbrella like a tomahawk. His humour's
- always high-class, but he's the sort of fellow who doesn't care a blow
- what he does. Chronic in that respect, absolutely. The passers-by
- couldn't think what he was up to. "Whoop-whoop-whoop!" that's what he
- said. He did, straight. Only _yelled_ it. I thought it was going a
- bit too far in a public place. So, to show him, I just said "Good
- evening, Cookson; how are you this evening?" With all his entertaining
- ways he's sometimes slow at taking a hint. No tact, if you see what I
- mean.
- In this case, for instance, he answered at the top of his voice: "Bolly
- Golly, yah!" and pretended to scalp me with his umbrella. I immediately
- ducked, and somehow knocked my bowler against his elbow. He caught it
- as it was falling off my head. Then he said, "Indian brave give little
- pale face chief his hat." This was really too much, and I felt relieved
- when a policeman told us to move on. Charlie said: "Come and have two
- penn'orth of something."
- Well, we stayed chatting over our drinks (in fact, I was well into my
- second lemon and dash) at the Stockwood Hotel until nearly eleven. At
- five to, Charlie said good-bye, because he was living in, and I walked
- out into the Charing Cross Road, meaning to turn down Shaftesbury
- Avenue so as to get a breath of fresh air. Outside the Oxford there was
- a bit of a crowd. I asked a man standing outside a tobacconist's what
- the trouble was. "Says he won't go away without kissing the girl that
- sang 'Empire Boys,'" was the reply. "Bin shiftin' it, 'e 'as, not
- 'arf!" Sure enough, from the midst of the crowd came:
- Yew are ther boys of the Empire,
- Steady an' brave an' trew.
- Yew are the wuns
- She calls 'er sons
- An' I luv yew.
- I had gone, out of curiosity, to the outskirts of the crowd, and before
- I knew what had happened I found myself close to the centre of it. A
- large man in dirty corduroys stood with his back to me. His shape
- seemed strangely familiar. Still singing, and swaying to horrible
- angles all over the shop, he slowly pivoted round. In a moment I
- recognised the bleary features of Tom Blake. At the same time he
- recognised me. He stretched out a long arm and seized me by the
- shoulder. "Oh," he sobbed, "I thought I 'ad no friend in the wide world
- except 'er; but now I've got yew it's orlright. Yus, yus, it's
- orlright." A murmur, almost a cheer it was, circulated among the crowd.
- But a policeman stepped up to me.
- "Now then," said the policeman, "wot's all this about?"
- Yew are the wuns
- She calls 'er sons----
- shouted Blake.
- "Ho, that's yer little game, is it?" said the policeman. "Move on,
- d'yer hear? Pop off."
- "I will," said Blake. "I'll never do it again. I promise faithful never
- to do it again. I've found a fren'."
- "Do you know this covey?" asked the policeman.
- "Deny it, if yer dare," said Blake. "Jus' you deny it, that's orl, an'
- I'll tell the parson."
- "Slightly, constable," I said. "I mean, I've seen him before."
- "Then you'd better take 'im off if you don't want 'im locked up."
- "'Im want me locked up? We're bosum fren's, ain't we, old dear?" said
- Blake, linking his arm in mine and dragging me away with him. Behind
- us, the policeman was shunting the spectators. Oh, it was excessively
- displeasing to any man of culture, I can assure you.
- How we got along Shaftesbury I don't know. It's a subject I do not care
- to think about.
- By leaning heavily on my shoulder and using me, so to speak, as
- ballast, drunken Blake just managed to make progress, I cannot say
- unostentatiously, but at any rate not so noticeably as to be taken into
- custody.
- I didn't know, mind you, where we were going to, and I didn't know when
- we were going to stop.
- In this frightful manner of progression we had actually gained sight of
- Piccadilly Circus when all of a sudden a voice hissed in my ear:
- "Sidney Price, I am disappointed in you." Hissed, mind you. I tell you,
- I jumped. Thought I'd bitten my tongue off at first.
- If drunken Blake hadn't been clutching me so tight you could have
- knocked me down with a feather: bowled me over clean. It startled Blake
- a goodish bit, too. All along the Avenue he'd been making just a quiet
- sort of snivelling noise. Crikey, if he didn't speak up quite perky.
- "O, my fren'," he says. "So drunk and yet so young." Meaning me, if you
- please.
- It was too thick.
- "You blighter," I says. "You _blooming_ blighter. You talk to me
- like that. Let go of my arm and see me knock you down."
- I must have been a bit excited, you see, to say that. Then I looked
- round to see who the other individual was. You'll hardly credit me when
- I tell you it was the Reverend. But it was. Honest truth, it was the
- Rev. John Hatton and no error. His face fairly frightened me. Simply
- blazing: red: fair scarlet. He kept by the side of us and let me have
- it all he could. "I thought you knew better, Price," that's what he
- said. "I thought you knew better. Here are you, a friend of mine, a
- member of the Club, a man I've trusted, going about the streets of
- London in a bestial state of disgusting intoxication. That's enough in
- itself. But you've done worse than that. You've lured poor Blake into
- intemperance. Yes, with all your advantages of education and
- up-bringing, you deliberately set to work to put temptation in the way
- of poor, weak, hard-working Blake. Drunkenness is Blake's besetting
- sin, and you----"
- Blake had been silently wagging his head, as pleased as Punch at being
- called hardworking. But here he shoved in his oar.
- "'Ow dare yer!" he burst out. "I ain't never tasted a drop o' beer in
- my natural. Born an' bred teetotal, that's wot I was, and don't yew
- forget it, neither."
- "Blake," said the Reverend, "that's not the truth."
- "Call me a drunkard, do yer?" replied Blake. "Go on. Say it again. Say
- I'm a blarsted liar, won't yer? Orlright, then I shall run away."
- And with that he wrenched himself away from me and set off towards the
- Circus. He was trying to run, but his advance took the form of
- semi-circular sweeps all over the pavement. He had circled off so
- unexpectedly that he had gained some fifty yards before we realised
- what was happening. "We must stop him," said the Reverend.
- "As I'm intoxicated," I said, coldly (being a bit fed up with things),
- "I should recommend you stopping him, Mr. Hatton."
- "I've done you an injustice," said the Reverend.
- "You have," said I.
- Blake was now nearing a policeman. "Stop him!" we both shouted,
- starting to run forward.
- The policeman brought Blake to a standstill.
- "Friend of yours?" said the constable when we got up to him.
- "Yes," said the Reverend.
- "You ought to look after him better," said the constable.
- "Well, really, I like that!" said the Reverend; but he caught my eye
- and began laughing. "Our best plan," he said, "is to get a four-wheeler
- and go down to the Temple. There's some supper there. What do you say?"
- "I'm on," I said, and to the Temple we accordingly journeyed.
- Tom Blake was sleepy and immobile. We spread him without hindrance on a
- sofa, where he snored peacefully whilst the Reverend brought eggs and a
- slab of bacon out of a cupboard in the kitchen. He also brought a
- frying-pan, and a bowl of fat.
- "Is your cooking anything extra good?" he asked.
- "No, Mr. Hatton," I answered, rather stiff; "I've never cooked anything
- in my life." I may not be in a very high position in the "Moon," but
- I've never descended to menial's work yet.
- For about five minutes after that the Reverend was too busy to speak.
- Then he said, without turning his head away from the hissing pan, "I
- wish you'd do me a favour, Price."
- "Certainly," I said.
- "Look in the cupboard and see whether there are any knives, forks,
- plates, and a loaf and a bit of butter, will you?"
- I looked, and, sure enough, they were there.
- "Yes, they're all here," I called to him.
- "And is there a tray?"
- "Yes, there's a tray."
- "Now, it's a funny thing that my laundress," he shouted back, "can't
- bring in breakfast things for more than one on that particular tray.
- She's always complaining it's too small, and says I ought to buy a
- bigger one."
- "Nonsense," I exclaimed, "she's quite wrong about that. You watch what
- I can carry in one load." And I packed the tray with everything he had
- mentioned.
- "What price that?" I said, putting the whole boiling on the
- sitting-room table.
- The Reverend began to roar with laughter. "It's ridiculous," he
- chuckled. "I shall tell her it's ridiculous. She ought to be ashamed of
- herself."
- Shortly after we had supper, previously having aroused Blake.
- The drunken fellow seemed completely restored by his repose. He ate
- more than his share of the eggs and bacon, and drank five cups of tea.
- Then he stretched himself, lit a clay pipe, and offered us his tobacco
- box, from which the Reverend filled his briar. I remained true to my
- packet of "Queen of the Harem." I shall think twice before chucking up
- cig. smoking as long as "Queen of the Harem" don't go above
- tuppence-half-penny per ten.
- We were sitting there smoking in front of the fire--it was a shade
- parky for the time of year--and not talking a great deal, when the
- Reverend said to Blake, "Things are looking up on the canal, aren't
- they, Tom?"
- "No," said Blake; "things ain't lookin' up on the canal."
- "Got a little house property," said the Reverend, "to spend when you
- feel like it?"
- "No," said the other; "I ain't got no 'ouse property to spend."
- "Ah." said the Reverend, cheesing it, and sucking his pipe.
- "Dessay yer think I'm free with the rhino?" said Blake after a while.
- "I was only wondering," said the Reverend.
- Blake stared first at the Reverend and then at me.
- "Ever remember a party of the name of Cloyster, Mr. James Orlebar
- Cloyster?" he inquired.
- "Yes," we both said.
- "'E's a good man," said Blake.
- "Been giving you money?" asked the Reverend.
- "'E's put me into the way of earning it. It's the sorfest job ever I
- struck. 'E told me not to say nothin', and I said as 'ow I wouldn't.
- But it ain't fair to Mr. Cloyster, not keeping of it dark ain't. Yew
- don't know what a noble 'eart that man's got, an' if you weren't fren'
- of 'is I couldn't have told you. But as you are fren's of 'is, as we're
- all fren's of 'is, I'll take it on myself to tell you wot that
- noble-natured man is giving me money for. Blowed if 'e shall 'ide his
- bloomin' light under a blanky bushel any longer." And then he explained
- that for putting his name to a sheet or two of paper, and addressing a
- few envelopes, he was getting more money than he knew what to do with.
- "Mind you," he said, "I play it fair. I only take wot he says I'm to
- take. The rest goes to 'im. My old missus sees to all that part of it
- 'cos she's quicker at figures nor wot I am."
- While he was speaking, I could hardly contain myself. The Reverend was
- listening so carefully to every word that I kept myself from
- interrupting; but when he'd got it off his chest, I clutched the
- Reverend's arm, and said, "What's it mean?"
- "Can't say," said he, knitting his brows.
- "Is he straight?" I said, all on the jump.
- "I hope so."
- "'Hope so.' You don't think there's a doubt of it?"
- "I suppose not. But surely it's very unselfish of you to be so
- concerned over Blake's business."
- "Blake's business be jiggered," I said. "It's my business, too. I'm
- doing for Mister James Orlebar Cloyster exactly what Blake's doing. And
- I'm making money. You don't understand."
- "On the contrary, I'm just beginning to understand. You see, I'm doing
- for Mr. James Orlebar Cloyster exactly the same service as you and
- Blake. And I'm getting money from him, too."
- CHAPTER 18
- ONE IN THE EYE
- _(Sidney Price's narrative continued)_
- "Serpose I oughtn't ter 'ave let on, that's it, ain't it?" from Tom
- Blake.
- "Seemed to me that if one of the three gave the show away to the other
- two, the compact made by each of the other two came to an end
- automatically," from myself.
- "The reason I have broken my promise of secrecy is this: that I'm
- determined we three shall make a united demand for a higher rate of
- payment. You, of course, have your own uses for the money, I need mine
- for those humanitarian objects for which my whole life is lived," from
- the Reverend.
- "Wot 'o," said Blake. "More coin. Wot 'o. Might 'ave thought o' that
- before."
- "I'm with you, sir," said I. "We're entitled to a higher rate, I'll
- make a memo to that effect."
- "No, no," said the Reverend. "We can do better than that. We three
- should have a personal interview with Cloyster and tell him our
- decision."
- "When?" I asked.
- "Now. At once. We are here together, and I see no reason to prevent our
- arranging the matter within the hour."
- "But he'll be asleep," I objected.
- "He won't be asleep much longer."
- "Yus, roust 'im outer bed. That's wot I say. Wot 'o for more coin."
- It was now half-past two in the morning. I'd missed the 12:15 back to
- Brixton slap bang pop hours ago, so I thought I might just as well make
- a night of it. We jumped into our overcoats and hats, and hurried to
- Fleet Street. We walked towards the Strand until we found a
- four-wheeler. We then drove to No. 23, Walpole Street.
- The clocks struck three as the Reverend paid the cab.
- "Hullo!" said he. "Why, there's a light in Cloyster's sitting-room. He
- can't have gone to bed yet. His late hours save us a great deal of
- trouble." And he went up the two or three steps which led to the front
- door.
- A glance at Tom Blake showed me that the barge-driver was alarmed. He
- looked solemn and did not speak. I felt funny, too. Like when I first
- handed round the collection-plate in our parish church. Sort of empty
- feeling.
- But the Reverend was all there, spry and business-like.
- He leaned over the area railing and gave three short, sharp taps on the
- ground floor window with his walking-stick.
- Behind the lighted blind appeared the shadow of a man's figure.
- "It's he!" "It's him!" came respectively and simultaneously from the
- Reverend and myself.
- After a bit of waiting the latch clicked and the door opened. The door
- was opened by Mr. Cloyster himself. He was in evening dress and
- hysterics. I thought I had heard a rummy sound from the other side of
- the door. Couldn't account for it at the time. Must have been him
- laughing.
- At the sight of us he tried to pull himself together. He half succeeded
- after a bit, and asked us to come in.
- To say his room was plainly furnished doesn't express it. The apartment
- was like a prison cell. I've never been in gaol, of course. But I read
- "Convict 99" when it ran in a serial. The fire was out, the chairs were
- hard, and the whole thing was uncomfortable. Never struck such a shoddy
- place in my natural, ever since I called on a man I know slightly who
- was in "The Hand of Blood" travelling company No. 3 B.
- "Delighted to see you, I'm sure," said Mr. Cloyster. "In fact, I was
- just going to sit down and write to you."
- "Really," said the Reverend. "Well, we've come of our own accord, and
- we've come to talk business." Then turning to Blake and me he added,
- "May I state our case?"
- "Most certainly, sir," I answered. And Blake gave a nod.
- "Briefly, then," said the Reverend, "our mission is this: that we three
- want our contracts revised."
- "What contracts?" said Mr. Cloyster.
- "Our contracts connected with your manuscripts."
- "Since when have the several matters of business which I arranged
- privately with each of you become public?"
- "Tonight. It was quite unavoidable. We met by chance. We are not to
- blame. Tom Blake was----"
- "Yes, he looks as if he had been."
- "Our amended offer is half profits."
- "More coin," murmured Blake huskily. "Wot 'o!"
- "I regret that you've had your journey for nothing."
- "You refuse?"
- "Absolutely."
- "My dear Cloyster, I had expected you to take this attitude; but surely
- it's childish of you. You are bound to accede. Why not do so at once?"
- "Bound to accede? I don't follow you."
- "Yes, bound. The present system which you are working is one you cannot
- afford to destroy. That is clear, because, had it not been so, you
- would never have initiated it. I do not know for what reason you were
- forced to employ this system, but I do know that powerful circumstances
- must have compelled you to do so. You are entirely in our hands."
- "I said just now I was delighted to see you, and that I had intended to
- ask you to come to me. One by one, of course; for I had no idea that
- the promise of secrecy which you gave me had been broken."
- The Reverend shrugged his shoulders.
- "Do you know why I wanted to see you?"
- "No."
- "To tell you that I had decided to abandon my system. To notify you
- that you would, in future, receive no more of my work."
- There was a dead silence.
- "I think I'll go home to bed," said the Reverend.
- Blake and myself followed him out.
- Mr. Cloyster thanked us all warmly for the excellent way in which we
- had helped him. He said that he was now engaged to be married, and had
- to save every penny. "Otherwise, I should have tried to meet you in
- this affair of the half-profits." He added that we had omitted to
- congratulate him on his engagement.
- His words came faintly to our ears as we tramped down Walpole Street;
- nor did we, as far as I can remember, give back any direct reply.
- Tell you what it was just like. Reminded me of it even at the time:
- that picture of Napoleon coming back from Moscow. The Reverend was
- Napoleon, and we were the generals; and if there were three humpier men
- walking the streets of London at that moment I should have liked to
- have seen them.
- Chapter 19
- IN THE SOUP
- _(Sidney Price's narrative continued)_
- They give you a small bonus at the "Moon" if you get through a quarter
- without being late, which just shows the sort of scale on which the
- "Moon" does things. Cookson, down at the Oxford Street Emporium, gets
- fined regular when he's late. Shilling the first hour and twopence
- every five minutes after. I've known gentlemen in banks, railway
- companies, dry goods, and woollen offices, the Indian trade, jute,
- tea--every manner of shop--but they all say the same thing, "We are
- ruled by fear." It's fear that drags them out of bed in the morning;
- it's fear that makes them bolt, or even miss, their sausages; it's fear
- that makes them run to catch their train. But the "Moon's" method is of
- a different standard. The "Moon" does not intimidate; no, it entwines
- itself round, it insinuates itself into, the hearts of its employees.
- It suggests, in fact, that we should not be late by offering us this
- small bonus. No insurance office and, up to the time of writing, no
- other assurance office has been able to boast as much. The same cause
- is at the bottom of the "Moon's" high reputation, both inside and
- outside. It does things in a big way. It's spacious.
- The "Moon's" timing system is great, too. Great in its simplicity. The
- regulation says you've got to be in the office by ten o'clock. Suppose
- you arrive with ten minutes to spare. You go into the outer office
- (there's only one entrance--the big one in Threadneedle Street) and
- find on the right-hand side of the circular counter a ledger. The
- ledger is open: there is blotting-paper and a quill pen beside it.
- Everyone's name is written in alphabetical order on the one side of the
- ledger and on the other side there is a blank page ruled down the
- middle with a red line. Having made your appearance at ten to ten, you
- put your initials in a line with your name on the page opposite and to
- the left of the division. If, on the other hand, you've missed your
- train, and don't turn up till ten minutes _past_ ten, you've got
- to initial your name on the other side of the red line. In the space on
- the right of the line, a thick black dash has been drawn by Leach, the
- cashier. He does this on the last stroke of ten. It makes the page look
- neat, he says. Which is quite right and proper. I see his point of view
- entirely. The ledger must look decent in an office like the "Moon."
- Tommy Milner agrees with me. He says that not only does it look better,
- but it prevents unfortunate mistakes on the part of those who come in
- late. They might forget and initial the wrong side.
- After ten the book goes into Mr. Leach's private partition, and you've
- got to go in there to sign.
- It was there when I came into the office on the morning after we'd been
- to talk business with Mr. Cloyster. It had been there about an hour and
- a half.
- "Lost your bonus, Price, my boy," said genial Mr. Leach. And the
- General Manager, Mr. Fennell, who had stepped out of his own room close
- by, heard him say it.
- "I do not imagine that Mr. Price is greatly perturbed on that account.
- He will, no doubt, shortly be forsaking us for literature. What
- Commerce loses, Art gains," said the G.M.
- He may have meant to be funny, or he may not. Some of those standing
- near took him one way, others the other. Some gravely bowed their
- heads, others burst into guffaws. The G.M. often puzzled his staff in
- that way. All were anxious to do the right thing by him, but he made it
- so difficult to tell what the right thing was.
- But, as I went down the basement stairs to change my coat in the
- clerks' locker-room, I understood from the G.M.'s words how humiliating
- my position was.
- I had always been a booky sort of person. At home it had been a
- standing joke that, when a boy, I would sooner spend a penny on
- _Tit-Bits_ than liquorice. And it was true. Not that I disliked
- liquorice. I liked _Tit-Bits_ better, though. So the thing had
- gone on. I advanced from _Deadwood Dick_ to Hall Caine and Guy
- Boothby; and since I had joined the "Moon" I had actually gone a buster
- and bought _Omar Khayyam_ in the Golden Treasury series. Added to
- which, I had recently composed a little lyric for a singer at the
- "Moon's" annual smoking concert. The lines were topical and were
- descriptive of our Complete Compensation Policy. Tommy Milner was the
- vocalist. He sang my composition to a hymn tune. The refrain went:
- Come and buy a C.C.Pee-ee!
- If you want immunitee-ee
- From the accidents which come
- Please plank down your premium.
- Life is diff'rent, you'll agree
- _Repeat_ When you've got a C.C.P.
- The Throne Room of the Holborn fairly rocked with applause.
- Well, it was shortly afterwards that I had received a visit from Mr.
- Cloyster--the visit which ended in my agreeing to sign whatever
- manuscripts he sent me, and forward him all cheques for a consideration
- of ten per cent. Softest job ever a man had. Easy money. Kudos--I had
- almost too much of it. Which takes me back to the G.M.'s remark about
- my leaving the office. Since he's bought that big house at Regent's
- Park he's done a lot of entertaining at the restaurants. His name's
- always cropping up in the "Here and There" column, and naturally he's a
- subscriber to the _Strawberry Leaf_. The G.M. has everything of
- the best and plenty of it. (You don't see the G.M. with memo. forms
- tucked round his cuffs: he wears a clean shirt every morning of his
- life. All tip-top people have their little eccentricities.) And the
- _Strawberry Leaf_, the smartest, goeyest, personalest weekly, is
- never missing from his drawing-room what-not. Every week it's there,
- regular as clockwork. That's what started my literary reputation among
- the fellows at the "Moon." Mr. Cloyster was contributing a series of
- short dialogues to the _Strawberry Leaf_--called, "In Town."
- These, on publication, bore my own signature. As a matter of fact, I
- happened to see the G.M. showing the first of the series to Mr. Leach
- in his private room. I've kept it by me, and I don't wonder the news
- created a bit of a furore. This was it:----
- IN TOWN
- BY SIDNEY PRICE
- No. I.--THE SECRECY OF THE BALLET
- (You are standing under the shelter of the Criterion's awning.
- It is 12.30 of a summer's morning. It is pouring in torrents.
- A quick and sudden rain storm. It won't last long, and it
- doesn't mean any harm. But what's sport to it is death to you.
- You were touring the Circus in a new hat. Brand new. Couldn't
- spot your tame cabby. Hadn't a token. Spied the Cri's awning.
- Dashed at it. But it leaks. Not so much as the sky though. Just
- enough, however, to do your hat no good. You mention this to
- Friendly Creature with umbrella, and hint that you would like
- to share that weapon.)
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Can't give you all, boysie. Mine's new, too.
- YOU. _(in your charming way)_. Well, of course. You wouldn't
- be a woman if you hadn't a new hat.
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Do women always have new hats?
- YOU. _(edging under the umbrella)_. Women have new hats.
- New women have hats.
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Don't call me a woman, ducky; I'm a lady.
- YOU. I must be careful. If I don't flatter you, you'll take your
- umbrella away.
- FRIENDLY CREATURE _(changing subject)_. There's Matilda.
- YOU. Where?
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Coming towards us in that landaulette.
- YOU. Looks fit, doesn't she?
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Her! She's a blooming rotter.
- YOU. Not so loud. She'll hear you.
- FRIENDLY CREATURE _(raising her voice)_. Good job. I want her
- to. _Stumer_!
- YOU. S-s-s-sh! What _are_ you saying? Matilda's a duchess now.
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. I know.
- YOU. But you mustn't say "Stumer" to a duchess unless----
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Well?
- YOU. Unless you're a duchess yourself?
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. I am. At least I was. Only I chucked it.
- YOU. But you said you were a lady.
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. So I am. An extra lady--front row, second O.P.
- YOU. How rude of me. Of course you were a duchess. I know you
- perfectly. Gorell Barnes said----
- FRIENDLY CREATURE. Drop it. What's the good of the secrecy of
- the ballet if people are going to remember every single thing
- about you?
- (At this point the rain stops. By an adroit flanking movement
- you get away without having to buy her a lunch.)
- Everyone congratulated me. "Always knew he had it in him," "Found his
- vocation," "A distinctly clever head," "Reaping in the shekels"--that
- was the worst part. The "Moon," to a man, was bent on finding out "how
- much Sidney Price makes out of his bits in the papers." Some dropped
- hints--the G.M., Leach, and the men at the counter. Others, like Tommy
- Milner, asked slap out. You may be sure I didn't tell them a fixed sum.
- But it was hopeless to say I was getting the small sum which my ten per
- cent. commission worked out at. On the other hand, I dared not pretend
- I was being paid at the usual rates. I should have gone broke in
- twenty-four hours. You have no idea how constantly I was given the
- opportunity of lending five shillings to important members of the
- "Moon" staff. It struck me then--and I have found out for certain
- since--that there is a popular anxiety to borrow from a man who earns
- money by writing. The earnings of a successful writer are, to the
- common intelligence, something he ought not really to have. And anyone,
- in default of abstracting his income, may fall back upon taking up his
- time.
- It did, no doubt, appear that I was coining the ready. Besides the
- _Strawberry Leaf_, _Features_, and _The Key of the Street_ were
- printing my signed contributions in weekly series. _The Mayfair_, too,
- had announced on its placards, "A Story in Dialogue, by Sidney Price."
- This, then, was my position on the morning when I was late at the
- "Moon" and lost my bonus.
- Whilst I went up in the lift to the New Business Room, and whilst I was
- entering the names and addresses of inquirers in the Proposal Book, I
- was trying to gather courage to meet what was in store.
- For the future held this: that my name would disappear from the papers
- as suddenly as it had arrived there. People would want to know why I
- had given up writing. "Written himself out," "No staying power," "As
- short-lived as a Barnum monstrosity": these would be the remarks which
- would herald ridicule and possibly pity.
- And I should be in just the same beastly fix at the "Hollyhocks" as I
- was at the "Moon." What would my people say? What would Norah say?
- There was another reason, too, why a stoppage of the ten per cent.
- cheques would be a whack in the eye. You see, I had been doing myself
- well on them--uncommonly well. I had ordered, as a present to my
- parents, new furniture for the drawing-room. I had pressed my father to
- have a small greenhouse put up at my expense. He had always wanted one,
- but had never been able to run to it. And I had taken Norah about a
- good deal. Our weekly visit to a matinée (upper circle and ices),
- followed by tea at the Cabin or Lyons' Popular, had become an
- institution. We had gone occasionally to a ball at the Town Hall.
- What would Norah say when all this ended abruptly without any
- explanation?
- There was no getting away from it. Sidney Price was in the soup.
- Chapter 20
- NORAH WINS HOME
- _(Sidney Price's narrative continued)_
- My signed work had run out. For two weeks nothing
- had been printed over my signature. So far no comment had been raised.
- But it was only a question of days. But then one afternoon it all came
- right. It was like this.
- I was sitting eating my lunch at Eliza's in Birchin Lane. Twenty
- minutes was the official allowance for the meal, and I took my twenty
- minutes at two o'clock. The _St. Stephen's Gazette_ was lying near
- me. I picked it up. Anything to distract my thoughts from the trouble
- to come. That was how I felt. Reading mechanically the front page, I
- saw a poem, and started violently. This was the poem:--
- A CRY
- Hands at the tiller to steer:
- A star in the murky sky:
- Water and waste of mere:
- Whither and why?
- Sting of absorbent night:
- Journey of weal or woe:
- And overhead the light:
- We go--we go?
- Darkness a mortal's part,
- Mortals of whom we are:
- Come to a mortal's heart,
- Immortal star.
- _Thos. Blake._
- _June 6th._
- "Rummy, very rummy," I exclaimed. The poem was dated yesterday. Had
- Mr. Cloyster, then, continued to work his system with Thomas Blake to
- the exclusion of the Reverend and myself?
- Still worrying over the thing, I turned over the pages of the paper
- until I chanced to see the following paragraph:
- LITERARY GOSSIP
- Few will be surprised to learn that the Rev. John Hatton intends
- to publish another novel in the immediate future. Mr. Hatton's
- first book, _When It Was Lurid_, created little less than
- a furore. The work on which he is now engaged, which will bear
- the title of _The Browns of Brixton_, is a tender sketch of
- English domesticity. This new vein of Mr. Hatton's will, doubtless,
- be distinguished by the naturalness of dialogue and sanity of
- characterisation of his first novel. Messrs. Prodder and Way are
- to publish it in the autumn.
- "He's running the Reverend again, is he?" said I to myself. "And I'm
- the only one left out. It's a bit thick."
- That night I wrote to Blake and to the Reverend asking whether they had
- been taken on afresh, and if so, couldn't I get a look in, as things
- were pretty serious.
- The Reverend's reply arrived first:
- THE TEMPLE,
- _June 7th._
- _Dear Price_,--
- As you have seen, I am hard at work at my new novel. The leisure
- of a novelist is so scanty that I know you'll forgive my writing
- only a line. I am in no way associated with James Orlebar Cloyster,
- nor do I wish to be. Rather I would forget his very existence.
- You are aware of the interests which I have at heart: social
- reform, the education of the submerged, the physical needs of
- the young--there is no necessity for me to enumerate my ideals
- further. To get quick returns from philanthropy, to put remedial
- organisation into speedy working order wants capital. Cloyster's
- system was one way of obtaining some of it, but when that failed
- I had to look out for another. I'm glad I helped in the system,
- for it made me realise how large an income a novelist can obtain.
- I'm glad it failed because its failure suggested that I should try
- to get for myself those vast sums which I had been getting for the
- selfish purse of an already wealthy man. Unconsciously, he has
- played into my hands. I read his books before I signed them, and I
- find that I have thoroughly absorbed those tricks of his, of style
- and construction, which opened the public's coffers to him. _The
- Browns of Brixton_ will eclipse anything that Cloyster has
- previously done, for this reason, that it will out-Cloyster
- Cloyster. It is Cloyster with improvements.
- In thus abducting his novel-reading public I shall feel no
- compunction. His serious verse and his society dialogues bring him
- in so much that he cannot be in danger of financial embarrassment.
- _Yours sincerely, John Hatton_.
- Now this letter set my brain buzzing like the engine of a stationary
- Vanguard. I, too, had been in the habit of reading Mr. Cloyster's
- dialogues before I signed and sent them off. I had often thought to
- myself, also, that they couldn't take much writing, that it was all a
- knack; and the more I read of them the more transparent the knack
- appeared to me to be. Just for a lark, I sat down that very evening and
- had a go at one. Taking the Park for my scene, I made two or three
- theatrical celebrities whose names I had seen in the newspapers talk
- about a horse race. At least, one talked about a horse race, and the
- others thought she was gassing about a new musical comedy, the name of
- the play being the same as the name of the horse, "The Oriental Belle."
- A very amusing muddle, with lots of _doubles entendres_, and heaps
- of adverbial explanation in small print. Such as:
- Miss Adeline Genée
- (with the faint, incipient blush which
- Mrs. Adair uses to test her Rouge Imperial).
- That sort of thing.
- I had it typed, and I said, "Price, my boy, there's more Mr. Cloyster
- in this than ever Mr. Cloyster could have put into it." And the editor
- of the _Strawberry Leaf_ printed it next issue as a matter of
- course. I say, "as a matter of course" with intention, because the
- fellows at the "Moon" took it as a matter of course, too. You see, when
- it first appeared, I left the copy about the desk in the New Business
- Room, hoping Tommy Milner or some of them would rush up and
- congratulate me. But they didn't. They simply said, "Don't litter the
- place up, old man. Keep your papers, if you _must_ bring 'em here,
- in your locker downstairs." One of them _did_ say, I fancy,
- something about its "not being quite up to my usual." They didn't know
- it was my maiden effort at original composition, and I couldn't tell
- them. It was galling, you'll admit.
- However, I quickly forgot my own troubles in wondering what Mr.
- Cloyster was doing. No editor, I foresaw, would accept his society
- stuff as long as mine was in the market. They wouldn't pay for Cloyster
- whilst they were offered the refusal of super-Cloyster. Wasn't likely.
- You must understand I wasn't over-easy in my conscience about the
- affair. I had, in a manner of speaking, pinched Mr. Cloyster's job. But
- then, I argued to myself, he was earning quite as much as was good for
- any one man by his serious verse.
- And at that very minute our slavey, little Ethelbertina, knocked at my
- bedroom door and gave me a postcard. It was addressed to me in thick,
- straggly writing, and was so covered with thumb-marks that a Bertillon
- expert would have gone straight off his nut at the sight of it. "My
- usbend," began the postcard, "as received yourn. E as no truk wif the
- other man E is a pots imself an e can do a job of potry as orfen as e
- 'as a mine to your obegent servent Ada Blake. P.S. me an is ole ant do
- is writin up for im."
- So then I saw how that "Cry" thing in the _St. Stephen's_ had come
- there.
- * * * * *
- You heard me give my opinion about telling Norah my past life. Well,
- you'll agree with me now that there's practically nothing to tell her.
- There _is_, of course, little Miss Richards, the waitress in the
- smoking-room of the Piccadilly Cabin. Her, I mean, with the fuzzy
- golden hair done low. You've often exchanged "Good evening" with her,
- I'm sure. Her hair's done low: she used to make rather a point of
- telling me that. Why, I don't know, especially as it was always tidy
- and well off her shoulders.
- And then there was the haughty lady who sold programmes in the
- Haymarket Amphitheatre--but she's got the sack, so Cookson informs me.
- Therefore, as I shall tell Norah plainly that I disapprove of the
- Cabin, the past can hatch no egg of discord in the shape of the
- Cast-Off Glove.
- The only thing that I can think of as needing suppression is the part I
- played in Mr. Cloyster's system.
- There's no doubt that the Reverend, Blake and I have, between us, put a
- fairly considerable spoke in Mr. Cloyster's literary wheel. But what am
- I to do? To begin with, it's no use my telling Norah about the affair,
- because it would do her no good, and might tend possibly to lessen her
- valuation of my capabilities. At present, my dialogues dazzle her; and
- once your _fiancée_ is dazzled the basis of matrimonial happiness
- is assured. Again, looking at it from Mr. Cloyster's point of view,
- what good would it be to him if I were to stop writing? Both the editor
- and the public have realised by now that his work is only second-rate.
- He can never hope to get a tenth of his original prices, even if his
- work is accepted, which it won't be; for directly I leave his market
- clear, someone else will collar it slap off.
- Besides, I've no right to stop my dialogues. My duty to Norah is
- greater than my duty to Mr. Cloyster. Unless I continue to be paid by
- literature I shall not be able to marry Norah until three years next
- quarter. The "Moon" has passed a rule about it, and an official who
- marries on an income not larger than eighty pounds per annum is liable
- to dismissal without notice.
- Norah's mother wouldn't let her wait three years, and though fellows
- have been known to have had a couple of kids at the time of their
- official marriage, I personally couldn't stand the wear and tear of
- that hole-and-corner business. It couldn't be done.
- _(End of Sidney Price's narrative_.)
- Julian Eversleigh's Narrative
- Chapter 21
- THE TRANSPOSITION OF SENTIMENT
- It is all very, very queer. I do not understand it at all. It makes me
- sleepy to think about it.
- A month ago I hated Eva. Tomorrow I marry her by special licence.
- Now, what _about_ this?
- My brain is not working properly. I am becoming jerky.
- I tried to work the thing out algebraically. I wrote it down as an
- equation, thus:--
- HATRED, denoted by x + Eva.
- REVERSE OF HATRED, " " y + Eva
- ONE MONTH " " z.
- From which we get:--
- x + Eva = (y + Eva)z.
- And if anybody can tell me what that means (if it means anything--which
- I doubt) I shall be grateful. As I said before, my brain is not working
- properly.
- There is no doubt that my temperament has changed, and in a very short
- space of time. A month ago I was soured, cynical, I didn't brush my
- hair, and I slept too much. I talked a good deal about Life. Now I am
- blithe and optimistic. I use pomade, part in the middle, and sleep
- eight hours and no more. I have not made an epigram for days. It is all
- very queer.
- I took a new attitude towards life at about a quarter to three on the
- morning after the Gunton-Cresswells's dance. I had waited for James in
- his rooms. He had been to the dance.
- Examine me for a moment as I wait there.
- I had been James' friend for more than two years and a half. I had
- watched his career from the start. I knew him before he had located
- exactly the short cut to Fortune. Our friendship embraced the whole
- period of his sudden, extraordinary success.
- Had not envy by that time been dead in me, it might have been pain to
- me to watch him accomplish unswervingly with his effortless genius the
- things I had once dreamt I, too, would laboriously achieve.
- But I grudged him nothing. Rather, I had pleasure in those triumphs of
- my friend.
- There was no confidence we had withheld from one another.
- When he told me of his relations with Margaret Goodwin he had counted
- on my sympathy as naturally as he had requested and received my advice.
- To no living soul, save James, would I have confessed my own
- tragedy--my hopeless love for Eva.
- It is inconceivable that I should have misjudged a man so utterly as I
- misjudged James.
- That is the latent factor at the root of my problem. The innate
- rottenness, the cardiac villainy of James Orlebar Cloyster.
- In a measure it was my own hand that laid the train which eventually
- blew James' hidden smoulder of fire into the blazing beacon of
- wickedness, in which my friend's Satanic soul is visible in all its
- lurid nakedness.
- I remember well that evening, mild with the prelude of spring, when I
- evolved for James' benefit the System. It was a device which was to
- preserve my friend's liberty and, at the same time, to preserve my
- friend's honour. How perfect in its irony!
- Margaret Goodwin, mark you, was not to know he could afford to marry
- her, and my system was an instrument to hide from her the truth.
- He employed that system. It gave him the holiday he asked for. He went
- into Society.
- Among his acquaintances were the Gunton-Cresswells, and at their house
- he met Eva. Whether his determination to treat Eva as he had treated
- Margaret came to him instantly, or by degrees I do not know. Inwardly
- he may have had his scheme matured in embryo, but outwardly he was
- still the accomplished hypocrite. He was the soul of honour--outwardly.
- He was the essence of sympathetic tact as far as his specious exterior
- went. Then came the 27th of May. On that date the first of James
- Orlebar Cloyster's masks was removed.
- I had breakfasted earlier than usual, so that by the time I had walked
- from Rupert Court to Walpole Street it was not yet four o'clock.
- James was out. I thought I would wait for him. I stood at his window.
- Then I saw Margaret Goodwin. What features! What a complexion! "And
- James," I murmured, "is actually giving this the miss in baulk!" I
- discovered, at that instant, that I did not know James. He was a fool.
- In a few hours I was to discover he was a villain, too.
- She came in and I introduced myself to her. I almost forget what
- pretext I manufactured, but I remember I persuaded her to go back to
- Guernsey that very day. I think I said that James was spending Friday
- till Monday in the country, and had left no address. I was determined
- that they should not meet. She was far too good for a man who obviously
- did not appreciate her in the least.
- We had a very pleasant chat. She was charming. At first she was apt to
- touch on James a shade too frequently, but before long I succeeded in
- diverting our conversation into less uninteresting topics.
- She talked of Guernsey, I of London. I said I felt I had known her all
- my life. She said that one had, undeniably, one's affinities.
- I said, "Might I think of her as 'Margaret'?"
- She said it was rather unconventional, but that she could not control
- my thoughts.
- I said, "There you are wrong--Margaret."
- She said, "Oh, what are you saying, Mr. Eversleigh?"
- I said I was thinking out loud.
- On the doorstep she said, "Well, yes--Julian--you may write to
- me--sometimes. But I won't promise to answer."
- Angel!
- The next thing that awakened me was the coming of James.
- After I had given him a suitable version of Margaret's visit, he told
- me he was engaged to Eva. That was an astounding thing; but what was
- more astounding was that James had somehow got wind of the real spirit
- of my interview with Margaret.
- I have called James Orlebar Cloyster a fool; I have called him a
- villain. I will never cease to call him a genius. For by some
- marvellous capacity for introspection, by some incredible projection of
- his own mind into other people's matters, he was able to tax me to my
- face with an attempt to win his former _fiancée's_ affections. I
- tried to choke him off. I used every ounce of bluff I possessed. In
- vain. I left Walpole Street in a state approaching mental revolution.
- My exact feelings towards James were too intricate to be defined in a
- single word. Not so my feelings towards Eva. "Hate" supplied the lacuna
- in her case.
- Thus the month began.
- The next point of importance is my interview with Mrs.
- Gunton-Cresswell. She had known all along how matters stood in regard
- to Eva and myself. She had not been hostile to me on that account. She
- had only pointed out that as I could do nothing towards supporting Eva
- I had better keep away when my cousin was in London. That was many
- years ago. Since then we had seldom met. Latterly, not at all.
- Invitations still arrived from her, but her afternoon parties clashed
- with my after-breakfast pipe, and as for her evening receptions--well,
- by the time I had pieced together the various component parts of my
- dress clothes, I found myself ready for bed. That is to say, more ready
- for bed than I usually am.
- I went to Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell in a very bitter mood. I was bent on
- trouble.
- "I've come to congratulate Eva," I said.
- Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell sighed.
- "I was afraid of this," she said.
- "The announcement was the more pleasant," I went on, "because James has
- been a bosom friend of mine."
- "I'm afraid you are going to be extremely disagreeable about your
- cousin's engagement," she said.
- "I am," I answered her. "Very disagreeable. I intend to shadow the
- young couple, to be constantly meeting them, calling attention to them.
- James will most likely have to try to assault me. That may mean a black
- eye for dear James. It will certainly mean the police court. Their
- engagement will be, in short, a succession of hideous _contretemps_,
- a series of laughable scenes."
- "Julian," said Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell, "hitherto you have acted manfully
- toward Eva. You have been brave. Have you no regard for Eva?"
- "None," I said.
- "Nor for Mr. Cloyster?"
- "Not a scrap."
- "But why are you behaving in this appallingly selfish way?"
- This was a facer. I couldn't quite explain to her how things really
- were, so I said:
- "Never you mind. Selfish or not, Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell, I'm out for
- trouble."
- That night I had a letter from her. She said that in order to avoid all
- unpleasantness, Eva's engagement would be of the briefest nature
- possible. That the marriage was fixed for the twelfth of next month;
- that the wedding would be a very quiet one; and that until the day of
- the wedding Eva would not be in London.
- It amused me to find how thoroughly I had terrified Mrs.
- Gunton-Cresswell. How excellently I must have acted, for, of course, I
- had not meant a word I had said to that good lady.
- In the days preceding the twelfth of June I confess I rather softened
- to James. The _entente cordiale_ was established between us. He
- told me how irresistible Eva had been that night; mentioned how
- completely she had carried him away. Had she not carried me away in
- precisely the same manner once upon a time?
- He swore he loved her as dearly as--(I can't call to mind the simile he
- employed, though it was masterly and impressive.) I even hinted that
- the threats I had used in the presence of Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell were
- not serious. He thanked me, but said I had frightened her to such good
- purpose that the date would now have to stand. "You will not be
- surprised to hear," he added, "that I have called in all my work. I
- shall want every penny I make. The expenses of an engaged man are
- hair-raising. I send her a lot of flowers every morning--you've no
- conception how much a few orchids cost. Then, whenever I go to see her
- I take her some little present--a gold-mounted umbrella, a bicycle
- lamp, or a patent scent-bottle. I'm indebted to you, Julian, positively
- indebted to you for cutting short our engagement."
- I now go on to point two: the morning of the twelfth of June.
- Hurried footsteps on my staircase. A loud tapping at my door. The
- church clock chiming twelve. The agitated, weeping figure of Mrs.
- Gunton-Cresswell approaching my hammock. A telegram thrust into my
- hand. Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell's hysterical exclamation, "You infamous
- monster--you--you are at the bottom of this."
- All very disconcerting. All, fortunately, very unusual.
- My eyes were leaden with slumber, but I forced myself to decipher the
- following message, which had been telegraphed to West Kensington Lane:
- Wedding must be postponed.--CLOYSTER.
- "I've had no hand in this," I cried; "but," I added enthusiastically,
- "it serves Eva jolly well right."
- CHAPTER 22
- A CHAT WITH JAMES
- _(Julian Eversleigh's narrative continued)_
- Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell seemed somehow to drift away after that.
- Apparently I went to sleep again, and she didn't wait.
- When I woke, it was getting on for two o'clock. I breakfasted, with
- that magnificent telegram propped up against the teapot; had a bath,
- dressed, and shortly before five was well on my way to Walpole Street.
- The more I thought over the thing, the more it puzzled me. Why had
- James done this? Why should he wish to treat Eva in this manner? I was
- delighted that he had done so, but why had he? A very unexpected
- person, James.
- James was lying back in his shabby old armchair, smoking a pipe. There
- was tea on the table. The room seemed more dishevelled than ever. It
- would have been difficult to say which presented the sorrier spectacle,
- the room or its owner.
- He looked up as I came in, and nodded listlessly. I poured myself out a
- cup of tea, and took a muffin. Both were cold and clammy. I went to the
- bell.
- "What are you doing?" asked James.
- "Only going to ring for some more tea," I said.
- "No, don't do that. I'll go down and ask for it. You don't mind using
- my cup, do you?"
- He went out of the room, and reappeared with a jug of hot water.
- "You see," he explained, "if Mrs. Blankley brings in another cup she'll
- charge for two teas instead of one."
- "It didn't occur to me," I said. "Sorry."
- "It sounds mean," mumbled James.
- "Not at all," I said. "You're quite right not to plunge into reckless
- extravagance."
- James blushed slightly--a feat of which I was surprised to see that he
- was capable.
- "The fact is----" he began.
- I interrupted him.
- "Never mind about that," I said. "What I want to know is--what's the
- meaning of this?" And I shoved the bilious-hued telegraph form under
- his nose, just as Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell had shoved it under mine.
- "It means that I'm done," he said.
- "I don't understand."
- "I'll explain. I have postponed my marriage for the same reason that I
- refused you a clean cup--because I cannot afford luxuries."
- "It may be my dulness; but, still, I don't follow you. What exactly are
- you driving at?"
- "I'm done for. I'm on the rocks. I'm a pauper."
- "A what?"
- "A pauper."
- I laughed. The man was splendid. There was no other word for it.
- "And shall I tell you something else that you are?" I said. "You are a
- low, sneaking liar. You are playing it low down on Eva."
- He laughed this time. It irritated me unspeakably.
- "Don't try to work off the hollow, mirthless laugh dodge on me," I
- said, "because it won't do. You're a blackguard, and you know it."
- "I tell you I'm done for. I've barely a penny in the world."
- "Rot!" I said. "Don't try that on me. You've let Eva down plop, and I'm
- jolly glad; but all the same you're a skunk. Nothing can alter that.
- Why don't you marry the girl?"
- "I can't," he said. "It would be too dishonourable."
- "Dishonourable?"
- "Yes. I haven't got enough money. I couldn't ask her to share my
- poverty with me. I love her too dearly."
- I was nearly sick. The beast spoke in a sort of hushed, soft-music
- voice as if he were the self-sacrificing hero in a melodrama. The
- stained-glass expression on his face made me feel homicidal.
- "Oh, drop it," I said. "Poverty! Good Lord! Isn't two thousand a year
- enough to start on?"
- "But I haven't got two thousand a year."
- "Oh, I don't pretend to give the figures to a shilling."
- "You don't understand. All I have to live on is my holiday work at the
- _Orb_."
- "What!"
- "Oh, yes; and I'm doing some lyrics for Briggs for the second edition
- of _The Belle of Wells_. That'll keep me going for a bit, but it's
- absolutely out of the question to think of marrying anyone. If I can
- keep my own head above water till the next vacancy occurs at the
- _Orb_ I shall be lucky."
- "You're mad."
- "I'm not, though I dare say I shall be soon, if this sort of thing goes
- on."
- "I tell you you are mad. Otherwise you'd have called in your work, and
- saved yourself having to pay those commissions to Hatton and the
- others. As it is, I believe they've somehow done you out of your
- cheques, and the shock of it has affected your brain."
- "My dear Julian, it's a good suggestion, that about calling in my work.
- But it comes a little late. I called it in weeks ago."
- My irritation increased.
- "What is the use of lying like that?" I said angrily. "You don't seem
- to credit me with any sense at all. Do you think I never read the
- papers and magazines? You can't have called in your work. The stuff's
- still being printed over the signatures of Sidney Price, Tom Blake, and
- the Rev. John Hatton."
- I caught sight of a _Strawberry Leaf_ lying on the floor beside
- his chair. I picked it up.
- "Here you are," I said. "Page 324. Short story. 'Lady Mary's Mistake,'
- by Sidney Price. How about that?"
- "That's it, Julian," he said dismally; "that's just it. Those three
- devils have pinched my job. They've learned the trick of the thing
- through reading my stuff, and now they're turning it out for
- themselves. They've cut me out. My market's gone. The editors and
- publishers won't look at me. I have had eleven printed rejection forms
- this week. One editor wrote and said that he did not want
- John-Hatton-and-water. That's why I sent the wire."
- "Let's see those rejection forms."
- "You can't. They're burnt. They got on my nerves, and I burnt them."
- "Oh," I said, "they're burnt, are they?"
- He got up, and began to pace the room.
- "But I shan't give up, Julian," he cried, with a sickening return of
- the melodrama hero manner; "I shan't give up. I shall still persevere.
- The fight will be terrible. Often I shall feel on the point of despair.
- Yet I shall win through. I feel it, Julian. I have the grit in me to do
- it. And meanwhile"--he lowered his voice, and seemed surprised that the
- orchestra did not strike up the slow music--"meanwhile, I shall ask Eva
- to wait."
- To wait! The colossal, the Napoleonic impudence of the man! I have
- known men who seemed literally to exude gall, but never one so
- overflowing with it as James Orlebar Cloyster. As I looked at him
- standing there and uttering that great speech, I admired him. I ceased
- to wonder at his success in life.
- I shook my head.
- "I can't do it," I said regretfully. "I simply cannot begin to say what
- I think of you. The English language isn't equal to it. I cannot,
- off-hand, coin a new phraseology to meet the situation. All I can say
- is that you are unique."
- "What do you mean?"
- "Absolutely unique. Though I had hoped you would have known me better
- than to believe that I would swallow the ludicrous yarn you've
- prepared. Don't you ever stop and ask yourself on these occasions if
- it's good enough?"
- "You don't believe me!"
- "My dear James!" I protested. "Believe you!"
- "I swear it's all true. Every word of it."
- "You seem to forget that I've been behind the scenes. I'm not simply an
- ordinary member of the audience. I know how the illusion is produced.
- I've seen the strings pulled. Why, dash it, _I_ showed you how to
- pull them. I never came across a finer example of seething the kid in
- its mother's milk. I put you up to the system, and you turn round and
- try to take me in with it. Yes, you're a wonder, James."
- "You don't mean to say you think----!"
- "Don't be an ass, James. Of course I do. You've had the brazen audacity
- to attempt to work off on Eva the game you played on Margaret. But
- you've made a mistake. You've forgotten to count me."
- I paused, and ate a muffin. James watched me with fascinated eyes.
- "You," I resumed, "ethically, I despise. Eva, personally, I detest. It
- seems, therefore, that I may expect to extract a certain amount of
- amusement from the situation. The fun will be inaugurated by your
- telling Eva that she may have to wait five years. You will state, also,
- the amount of your present income."
- "Suppose I decline?"
- "You won't."
- "You think not?"
- "I am sure."
- "What would you do if I declined?"
- "I should call upon Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell and give her a quarter of an
- hour's entertainment by telling her of the System, and explaining to
- her, in detail, the exact method of its working and the reason why you
- set it going. Having amused Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell in this manner, I
- should make similar revelations to Eva. It would not be pleasant for
- you subsequently, I suppose, but we all have our troubles. That would
- be yours."
- He hesitated.
- "As if they'd believe it," he said, weakly.
- "I think they would."
- "They'd laugh at you. They'd think you were mad."
- "Not when I produced John Hatton, Sidney Price, and Tom Blake in a
- solid phalanx, and asked them to corroborate me."
- "They wouldn't do it," he said, snatching at a straw. "They wouldn't
- give themselves away."
- "Hatton might hesitate to, but Tom Blake would do it like a shot."
- As I did not know Tom Blake, a moment's reflection might have told
- James that this was bluff. But I had gathered a certain knowledge of
- the bargee's character from James's conversation, and I knew that he
- was a drunken, indiscreet sort of person who might be expected to
- reveal everything in circumstances such as I had described; so I risked
- the shot, and it went home. James's opposition collapsed.
- "I shall then," administering the _coup de grâce_, "arrange a
- meeting between the Gunton-Cresswells and old Mrs. Goodwin."
- "Thank you," said James, "but don't bother. On second thoughts I will
- tell Eva about my income and the five years' wait."
- "Thanks," I said; "it's very good of you. Good-bye."
- And I retired, chuckling, to Rupert Street.
- CHAPTER 23
- IN A HANSOM
- _(Julian Eversleigh's narrative continued)_
- I spent a pleasant week in my hammock awaiting developments.
- At the end of the week came a letter from Eva. She wrote:--
- _My Dear Julian_,--You haven't been to see us for
- ages. Is Kensington Lane beyond the pale?
- _Your affectionate cousin_,
- _Eva._
- "You vixen," I thought. "Yes; I'll come and see you fast enough. It
- will give me the greatest pleasure to see you crushed and humiliated."
- I collected my evening clothes from a man of the name of Attenborough,
- whom I employ to take care of them when they are not likely to be
- wanted; found a white shirt, which looked presentable after a little
- pruning of the cuffs with a razor; and drove to the Gunton-Cresswells's
- in time for dinner.
- There was a certain atmosphere of unrest about the house. I attributed
- this at first to the effects of the James Orlebar Cloyster bomb-shell,
- but discovered that it was in reality due to the fact that Eva was
- going out to a fancy-dress ball that night.
- She was having dinner sent up to her room, they told me, and would
- be down presently. There was a good deal of flitting about going on.
- Maids on mysterious errands shot up and down stairs. Old Mr.
- Gunton-Cresswell, looking rather wry, was taking cover in his study
- when I arrived. Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell was in the drawing-room.
- Before Eva came down I got a word alone with her. "I've had a nice,
- straight-forward letter from James," she said, "and he has done all he
- can to put things straight with us."
- "Ah!" said I.
- "That telegram, he tells me, was the outcome of a sudden panic."
- "Dear me!" I said.
- "It seems that he made some most ghastly mistake about his finances.
- What exactly happened I can't quite understand, but the gist of it is,
- he thought he was quite well off, whereas, really, his income is
- infinitesimal."
- "How odd!" I remarked.
- "It sounds odd; in fact, I could scarcely believe it until I got his
- letter of explanation. I'll show it to you. Here it is."
- I read James Orlebar Cloyster's letter with care. It was not
- particularly long, but I wish I had a copy of it; for it is the finest
- work in an imaginative vein that has ever been penned.
- "Masterly!" I exclaimed involuntarily.
- "Yes, isn't it?" she echoed. "Enables one to grasp thoroughly how the
- mistake managed to occur."
- "Has Eva seen it?"
- "Yes."
- "I notice he mentions five years as being about the period----"
- "Yes; it's rather a long engagement, but, of course, she'll wait, she
- loves him so."
- Eva now entered the room. When I caught sight of her I remembered I had
- pictured her crushed and humiliated. I had expected to gloat over a
- certain dewiness of her eyes, a patient drooping of her lips. I will
- say plainly there was nothing of that kind about Eva tonight.
- She had decided to go to the ball as Peter Pan.
- The costume had rather scandalised old Mr. Gunton-Cresswell, a venerable
- Tory who rarely spoke except to grumble. Even Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell,
- who had lately been elected to the newly-formed _Les Serfs
- d'Avenir_, was inclined to deprecate it.
- But I was sure Eva had chosen the better part. The dress suited her to
- perfection. Her legs are the legs of a boy.
- As I looked at her with
- concentrated hatred, I realised I had never seen a human soul so
- radiant, so brimming with _espièglerie_, so altogether to be
- desired.
- "Why, Julian, is it you. This _is_ good of you!"
- It was evident that the past was to be waived. I took my cue.
- "Thanks, Eva," I said; "it suits you admirably."
- Events at this point move quickly.
- Another card of invitation is produced. Would I care to use it, and
- take Eva to the ball?
- "But I'm not in fancy dress."
- Overruled. Fancy dress not an essential. Crowds of men there in
- ordinary evening clothes.
- So we drove off.
- We hardly exchanged a syllable. No one has much to say just before a
- dance.
- I looked at Eva out of the corner of my eye, trying to discover just
- what it was in her that attracted men. I knew her charm, though I
- flattered myself that I was proof against it. I wanted to analyse it.
- Her photograph is on the table before me as I write. I look at it
- critically. She is not what I should describe as exactly a type of
- English beauty. You know the sort of beauty I mean? Queenly,
- statuesque, a daughter of the gods, divinely fair. Her charm is not in
- her features. It is in her expression.
- Tonight, for instance, as we drove to the ball, there sparkled in her
- eyes a light such as I had never seen in them before. Every girl is
- animated at a ball, but this was more than mere animation. There was a
- latent devilry about her; and behind the sparkle and the glitter a
- film, a mist, as it were, which lent almost a pathos to her appearance.
- The effect it had on me was to make me tend to forget that I hated her.
- We arrive. I mutter something about having the pleasure.
- Eva says I can have the last two waltzes.
- Here comes a hiatus. I am told that I was seen dancing, was observed to
- eat an excellent supper, and was noticed in the smoking-room with a
- cigarette in my mouth.
- At last the first of my two waltzes. The Eton Boating Song--one of my
- favourites. I threaded my way through the room in search of her. She
- was in neither of the doorways. I cast my eyes about the room. Her
- costume was so distinctive that I could hardly fail to see her.
- I did see her.
- She was dancing my waltz with another man.
- The thing seemed to numb my faculties. I stood in the doorway, gaping.
- I couldn't understand it. The illogical nature of my position did not
- strike me. It did not occur to me that as I hated the girl so much, it
- was much the best thing that could happen that I should see as little
- of her as possible. My hatred was entirely concentrated on the bounder
- who had stolen my dance. He was a small, pink-faced little beast, and
- it maddened me to see that he danced better than I could ever have
- done.
- As they whirled past me she smiled at him.
- I rushed to the smoking-room.
- Whether she gave my other waltz to the same man, or whether she chose
- some other partner, or sat alone waiting for me, I do not know. When I
- returned to the ballroom the last waltz was over, and the orchestra was
- beginning softly to play the first extra. It was _"Tout Passe,"_
- an air that has always had the power to thrill me.
- My heart gave a bound. Standing in the doorway just in front of me was
- Eva.
- I drew back.
- Two or three men came up, and asked her for the dance. She sent them
- away, and my heart leaped as they went.
- She was standing with her back towards me. Now she turned. Our eyes
- met. We stood for a moment looking at one another.
- Then I heard her give a little sigh; and instantly I forgot
- everything--my hatred, my two lost dances, the pink-faced
- blighter--everything. Everything but that I loved her.
- "Tired, Eva?" I said.
- "Perhaps I am," she replied. "Yes, I am, Julian."
- "Give me this one," I whispered. "We'll sit it out."
- "Very well. It's so hot in here. We'll go and sit it out in a hansom,
- shall we? I'll get my cloak."
- I waited, numbed by her absence. Her cloak was pale pink. We walked out
- together into the starry night. A few yards off stood a hansom. "Drive
- to the corner of Sloane Street," I said to the man, "by way of the
- Park."
- The night was very still.
- I have said that I had forgotten everything except that I loved her.
- Could I remember now? Now, as we drove together through the empty
- streets alone, her warm, palpitating body touching mine.
- James, and his awful predicament, which would last till Eva gave him
- up; Eva's callous treatment of my former love for her; my own
- newly-acquired affection for Margaret; my self-respect--these things
- had become suddenly of no account.
- "Eva," I murmured; and I took her hand.
- "Eva...."
- Her wonderful eyes met mine. The mist in them seemed to turn to dew.
- "My darling," she whispered, very low.
- The road was deserted. We were alone.
- I drew her face to mine and kissed her.
- * * * * *
- My love for her grows daily.
- Old Gunton-Cresswell has introduced me to a big firm of linoleum
- manufacturers. I am taking over their huge system of advertising next
- week. My salary will be enormous. It almost frightens me. Old Mr.
- Cresswell tells me that he had had the job in his mind for me for some
- time, and had, indeed, mentioned to his wife and Eva at lunch that day
- that he intended to write to me about it. I am more grateful to him
- than I can ever make him understand. Eva, I know, cares nothing for
- money--she told me so--but it is a comfort to feel that I can keep her
- almost in luxury.
- I have given up my rooms in Rupert Street.
- I sleep in a bed.
- I do Sandow exercises.
- I am always down to breakfast at eight-thirty sharp.
- I smoke less.
- I am the happiest man on earth.
- _(End of Julian Eversleigh's narrative.)_
- Narrative Resumed
- by James Orlebar Cloyster
- CHAPTER 24
- A RIFT IN THE CLOUDS
- O perfidy of woman! O feminine inconstancy! That is the only allusion I
- shall permit to escape me on the subject of Eva Eversleigh's engagement
- to that scoundrel Julian.
- I had the news by telegraph, and the heavens darkened above me, whilst
- the solid earth rocked below.
- I had been trapped into dishonour, and even the bait had been withheld
- from me.
- But it was not the loss of Eva that troubled me most. It should have
- outweighed all my other misfortunes and made them seem of no account,
- but it did not. Man is essentially a materialist. The prospect of an
- empty stomach is more serious to him than a broken heart. A broken
- heart is the luxury of the well-to-do. What troubled me more than all
- other things at this juncture was the thought that I was face to face
- with starvation, and that only the grimmest of fights could enable me
- to avoid it. I quaked at the prospect. The early struggles of the
- writer to keep his head above water form an experience which does not
- bear repetition. The hopeless feeling of chipping a little niche for
- oneself out of the solid rock with a nib is a nightmare even in times
- of prosperity. I remembered the grey days of my literary
- apprenticeship, and I shivered at the thought that I must go through
- them again.
- I examined my position dispassionately over a cup of coffee at Groom's,
- in Fleet Street. Groom's was a recognised _Orb rendezvous_. When I
- was doing "On Your Way," one or two of us used to go down Fleet Street
- for coffee after the morning's work with the regularity of machines. It
- formed a recognised break in the day.
- I thought things over. How did I stand? Holiday work at the _Orb_
- would begin very shortly, so that I should get a good start in my race.
- Fermin would be going away in a few weeks, then Gresham, and after that
- Fane, the man who did the "People and Things" column. With luck I ought
- to get a clear fifteen weeks of regular work. It would just save me. In
- fifteen weeks I ought to have got going again. The difficulty was that
- I had dropped out. Editors had forgotten my work. John Hatton they
- knew, and Sidney Price they knew; but who was James Orlebar Cloyster?
- There would be much creaking of joints and wobbling of wheels before my
- triumphal car could gather speed again. But, with a regular salary
- coming in week by week from the _Orb_, I could endure this. I
- became almost cheerful. It is an exhilarating sensation having one's
- back against the wall.
- Then there was Briggs, the actor. The very thought of him was a tonic.
- A born fighter, with the energy of six men, he was an ideal model for
- me. If I could work with a sixth of his dash and pluck, I should be
- safe. He was giving me work. He might give me more. The new edition of
- the _Belle of Wells_ was due in another fortnight. My lyrics would
- be used, and I should get paid for them. Add this to my _Orb_
- salary, and I should be a man of substance.
- I glared over my coffee-cup at an imaginary John Hatton.
- "You thought you'd done me, did you?" I said to him. "By Gad! I'll have
- the laugh of you all yet."
- I was shaking my fist at him when the door opened. I hurriedly tilted
- back my chair, and looked out of the window.
- "Hullo, Cloyster."
- I looked round. It was Fermin. Just the man I wanted to see.
- He seemed depressed. Even embarrassed.
- "How's the column?" I asked.
- "Oh, all right," he said awkwardly. "I wanted to see you about that. I
- was going to write to you."
- "Oh, yes," I said, "of course. About the holiday work. When are you
- off?"
- "I was thinking of starting next week."
- "Good. Sorry to lose you, of course, but----"
- He shuffled his feet.
- "You're doing pretty well now at the game, aren't you, Cloyster?" he
- said.
- It was not to my interests to cry myself down, so I said that I was
- doing quite decently. He seemed relieved.
- "You're making quite a good income, I suppose? I mean, no difficulty
- about placing your stuff?"
- "Editors squeal for it."
- "Because, otherwise what I wanted to say to you might have been
- something of a blow. But it won't affect you much if you're doing
- plenty of work elsewhere."
- A cold hand seemed laid upon my heart. My mind leaped to what he
- meant. Something had gone wrong with the _Orb_ holiday work, my
- sheet-anchor.
- "Do you remember writing a par about Stickney, the butter-scotch man,
- you know, ragging him when he got his peerage?"
- "Yes."
- It was one of the best paragraphs I had ever done. A two-line thing,
- full of point and sting. I had been editing "On Your Way" that day,
- Fermin being on a holiday and Gresham ill; and I had put the paragraph
- conspicuously at the top of the column.
- "Well," said Fermin, "I'm afraid there was rather trouble about it.
- Hamilton came into our room yesterday, and asked if I should be seeing
- you. I said I thought I should. 'Well, tell him,' said Hamilton, 'that
- that paragraph of his about Stickney has only cost us five hundred
- pounds. That's all.' And he went out again. Apparently Stickney was on
- the point of advertising largely with the _Orb_, and had backed
- out in a huff. Today, I went to see him about my holiday, and he wanted
- to know who was coming in to do my work. I mentioned you, and he
- absolutely refused to have you in. I'm awfully sorry about it."
- I was silent. The shock was too great. Instead of drifting easily into
- my struggle on a comfortable weekly salary, I should have to start the
- tooth-and-nail fighting at once. I wanted to get away somewhere by
- myself, and grapple with the position.
- I said good-bye to Fermin, retaining sufficient presence of mind to
- treat the thing lightly, and walked swiftly along the restless Strand,
- marvelling at what I had suffered at the hands of Fortune. The deceiver
- of Margaret, deceived by Eva, a pauper! I covered the distance between
- Groom's and Walpole Street in sombre meditation.
- In a sort of dull panic I sat down immediately on my arrival, and tried
- to work. I told myself that I must turn out something, that it would be
- madness to waste a moment.
- I sat and chewed my pen from two o'clock till five, but not a page of
- printable stuff could I turn out. Looking back at myself at that
- moment, I am not surprised that my ideas did not flow. It would have
- been a wonderful triumph of strength of mind if I had been able to
- write after all that had happened. Dr. Johnson has laid it down that a
- man can write at any time, if he sets himself to it earnestly; but mine
- were exceptional circumstances. My life's happiness and my means for
- supporting life at all, happy or otherwise, had been swept away in a
- single morning; and I found myself utterly unable to pen a coherent
- sentence.
- At five o'clock I gave up the struggle, and rang for tea.
- While I was having tea there was a ring at the bell, and my landlady
- brought in a large parcel.
- I recognised the writing on the label. The hand was Margaret's. I
- wondered in an impersonal sort of way what Margaret could be sending to
- me. From the feel of it the contents were paper.
- It amuses me now to think that it was a good half-hour before I took
- the trouble to cut the string. Fortune and happiness were waiting for
- me in that parcel, and I would not bother to open it. I sat in my
- chair, smoking and thinking, and occasionally cast a gloomy eye at the
- parcel. But I did not open it. Then my pipe went out, and I found that
- I had no matches in my pocket. There were some at the farther end of
- the mantelpiece. I had to get up to reach them, and, once up, I found
- myself filled with a sufficient amount of energy to take a knife from
- the table and cut the string.
- Languidly I undid the brown paper. The contents were a pile of
- typewritten pages and a letter.
- It was the letter over which my glassy eyes travelled first.
- "My own dear, brave, old darling James," it began, and its purport was
- that she had written a play, and wished me to put my name to it and
- hawk it round: to pass off as my work her own amateurish effort at
- playwriting. Ludicrous. And so immoral, too. I had always imagined that
- Margaret had a perfectly flawless sense of honesty. Yet here she was
- asking me deliberately to impose on the credulity of some poor,
- trusting theatrical manager. The dreadful disillusionment of it shocked
- me.
- Most men would have salved their wounded susceptibilities by putting a
- match to the manuscript without further thought or investigation.
- But I have ever been haunted by a somewhat over-strict conscience, and
- I sat down there and then to read the stupid stuff.
- At seven o'clock I was still reading.
- My dinner was brought in. I bolted it with Margaret's play propped up
- against the potato dish.
- I read on and on. I could not leave it. Incredible as it would appear
- from anyone but me, I solemnly assure you that the typewritten nonsense
- I read that evening was nothing else than _The Girl who Waited_.
- CHAPTER 25
- BRIGGS TO THE RESCUE
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- I finished the last page, and I laid down the typescript reverently.
- The thing amazed me. Unable as I was to turn out a good acting play of
- my own, I was, nevertheless, sufficiently gifted with an appreciation
- of the dramatic to be able to recognise such a play when I saw it.
- There were situations in Margaret's comedy which would grip a London
- audience, and force laughter and tears from it.... Well, the public
- side of that idiotic play is history. Everyone knows how many nights it
- ran, and the Press from time to time tells its readers what were the
- profits from it that accrued to the author.
- I turned to Margaret's letter and re-read the last page. She put the
- thing very well, very sensibly. As I read, my scruples began to vanish.
- After all, was it so very immoral, this little deception that she
- proposed?
- "I have written down the words," she said; "but the conception is
- yours. The play was inspired by you. But for you I should never have
- begun it." Well, if she put it like that----
- "You alone are able to manage the business side of the production. You
- know the right men to go to. To approach them on behalf of a stranger's
- work is far less likely to lead to success."
- (True, true.)
- "I have assumed, you will see, that the play is certain to be produced.
- But that will only be so if you adopt it as your own,"
- (There was sense in this.)
- "Claim the authorship, and all will be well."
- "I will," I said.
- I packed up the play in its brown paper, and rushed from the house. At
- the post-office, at the bottom of the King's Road, I stopped to send a
- telegram. It consisted of the words, "Accept thankfully.--Cloyster."
- Then I took a cab from the rank at Sloane Square, and told the man to
- drive to the stage-door of the Briggs Theatre in Shaftesbury Avenue.
- The cab-rank in Sloane Square is really a Home for Superannuated
- Horses. It is a sort of equine Athenaeum. No horse is ever seen there
- till it has passed well into the sere and yellow. A Sloane Square
- cab-horse may be distinguished by the dignity of its movements. It is
- happiest when walking.
- The animal which had the privilege of making history by conveying me
- and _The Girl who Waited_ to the Briggs Theatre was asthmatic,
- and, I think, sickening for the botts. I had plenty of time to cool my
- brain and think out a plan of campaign.
- Stanley Briggs, whom I proposed to try first, was the one man I should
- have liked to see in the part of James, the hero of the piece. The part
- might have been written round him.
- There was the objection, of course, that _The Girl who Waited_ was
- not a musical comedy, but I knew he would consider a straight play, and
- put it on if it suited him. I was confident that _The Girl who
- Waited_ would be just what he wanted.
- The problem was how to get him to himself for a sufficient space of
- time. When a man is doing the work of half a dozen he is likely to get
- on in the world, but he has, as a rule, little leisure for
- conversation.
- My octogenarian came to a standstill at last at the stage-door, and
- seemed relieved at having won safely through a strenuous bit of work.
- I went through in search of my man.
- His dressing-room was the first place I drew. I knew that he was not
- due on the stage for another ten minutes. Mr. Richard Belsey, his
- valet, was tidying up the room as I entered.
- "Mr. Briggs anywhere about, Richard?" I asked.
- "Down on the side, sir, I think. There's a new song in tonight for Mrs.
- Briggs, and he's gone to listen how it goes."
- "Which side, do you know?"
- "O.P., sir, I think."
- I went downstairs and through the folding-doors into the wings. The
- O.P. corner was packed--standing room only--and the overflow reached
- nearly to the doors. The Black Hole of Calcutta was roomy compared with
- the wings on the night of a new song. Everybody who had the least
- excuse for being out of his or her dressing-room at that moment was
- peering through odd chinks in the scenery. Chorus-girls, show-girls,
- chorus-men, principals, children, scene-shifters, and other theatrical
- fauna waited in a solid mass for the arrival of the music-cue.
- The atmosphere behind the scenes has always had the effect of making me
- feel as if my boots were number fourteens and my hands, if anything,
- larger. Directly I have passed the swing-doors I shuffle like one
- oppressed with a guilty conscience. Outside I may have been composed,
- even jaunty. Inside I am hangdog. Beads of perspiration form on my
- brow. My collar tightens. My boots begin to squeak. I smile vacuously.
- I shuffled, smiling vacuously and clutching the type-script of _The
- Girl who Waited_, to the O.P. corner. I caught the eye of a tall
- lady in salmon-pink, and said "Good evening" huskily--my voice is
- always husky behind the scenes: elsewhere it is like some beautiful
- bell. A piercing whisper of "Sh-h-h-!" came from somewhere close at
- hand. This sort of thing does not help bright and sparkling
- conversation. I sh-h-hed, and passed on.
- At the back of the O.P. corner Timothy Prince, the comedian, was
- filling in the time before the next entrance by waltzing with one of
- the stage-carpenters. He suspended the operation to greet me.
- "Hullo, dear heart," he said, "how goes it?"
- "Seen Briggs anywhere?" I asked.
- "Round on the prompt side, I think. He was here a second ago, but he
- dashed off."
- At this moment the music-cue was given, and a considerable section of
- the multitude passed on to the stage.
- Locomotion being rendered easier, I hurried round to the prompt side.
- But when I arrived there were no signs of the missing man.
- "Seen Mr. Briggs anywhere?" I asked.
- "Here a moment ago," said one of the carpenters. "He went out after
- Miss Lewin's song began. I think he's gone round the other side."
- I dashed round to the O.P. corner again. He had just left.
- Taking up the trail, I went to his dressing-room once more.
- "You're just too late, sir," said Richard; "he was here a moment ago."
- I decided to wait.
- "I wonder if he'll be back soon."
- "He's probably downstairs. His call is in another two minutes."
- I went downstairs, and waited on the prompt side. Sir Boyle Roche's
- bird was sedentary compared with this elusive man.
- Presently he appeared.
- "Hullo, dear old boy," he said. "Welcome to Elsmore. Come and see me
- before you go, will you? I've got an idea for a song."
- "I say," I said, as he flitted past, "can I----"
- "Tell me later on."
- And he sprang on to the stage.
- By the time I had worked my way, at the end of the performance, through
- the crowd of visitors who were waiting to see him in his dressing-room,
- I found that he had just three minutes in which to get to the Savoy to
- keep an urgent appointment. He explained that he was just dashing off.
- "I shall be at the theatre all tomorrow morning, though," he said.
- "Come round about twelve, will you?"
- * * * * *
- There was a rehearsal at half-past eleven next morning. When I got to
- the theatre I found him on the stage. He was superintending the chorus,
- talking to one man about a song and to two others about motors, and
- dictating letters to his secretary. Taking advantage of this spell of
- comparative idleness, I advanced (l.c.) with the typescript.
- "Hullo, old boy," he said, "just a minute! Sit down, won't you? Have a
- cigar."
- I sat down on the Act One sofa, and he resumed his conversations.
- "You see, laddie," he said, "what you want in a song like this is tune.
- It's no good doing stuff that your wife and family and your aunts say
- is better than Wagner. They don't want that sort of thing here--Dears,
- we simply can't get on if you won't do what you're told. Begin going
- off while you're singing the last line of the refrain, not after you've
- finished. All back. I've told you a hundred times. Do try and get it
- right--I simply daren't look at a motor bill. These fellers at the
- garage cram it on--I mean, what can you _do_? You're up against
- it--Miss Hinckel, I've got seventy-five letters I want you to take
- down. Ready? 'Mrs. Robert Boodle, Sandringham, Mafeking Road, Balham.
- Dear Madam: Mr. Briggs desires me to say that he fears that he has no
- part to offer to your son. He is glad that he made such a success at
- his school theatricals.' 'James Winterbotham, Pleasant Cottage,
- Rhodesia Terrace, Stockwell. Dear Sir: Mr. Briggs desires me to say
- that he remembers meeting your wife's cousin at the public dinner you
- mention, but that he fears he has no part at present to offer to your
- daughter.' 'Arnold H. Bodgett, Wistaria Lodge....'"
- My attention wandered.
- At the end of a quarter of an hour he was ready for me.
- "I wish you'd have a shot at it, old boy," he said, as he finished
- sketching out the idea for the lyric, "and let me have it as soon as
- you can. I want it to go in at the beginning of the second act. Hullo,
- what's that you're nursing?"
- "It's a play. I was wondering if you would mind glancing at it if you
- have time?"
- "Yours?"
- "Yes. There's a part in it that would just suit you."
- "What is it? Musical comedy?"
- "No. Ordinary comedy."
- "I shouldn't mind putting on a comedy soon. I must have a look at it.
- Come and have a bit of lunch."
- One of the firemen came up, carrying a card.
- "Hullo, what's this? Oh, confound the feller! He's always coming here.
- Look here: tell him that I'm just gone out to lunch, but can see him at
- three. Come along, old boy."
- He began to read the play over the coffee and cigars.
- He read it straight through, as I had done.
- "What rot!" he said, as he turned the last page.
- "Isn't it!" I exclaimed enthusiastically. "But won't it go?"
- "Go?" he shouted, with such energy that several lunchers spun round
- in their chairs, and a Rand magnate, who was eating peas at the next
- table, started and cut his mouth. "Go? It's the limit! This is just
- the sort of thing to get right at them. It'll hit them where they live.
- What made you think of that drivel at the end of Act Two?"
- "Genius, I suppose. What do you think of James as a part for you?"
- "Top hole. Good Lord, I haven't congratulated you! Consider it done."
- "Thanks."
- We drained our liqueur glasses to _The Girl who Waited_ and to
- ourselves.
- Briggs, after a lifetime spent in doing three things at once, is not a
- man who lets a great deal of grass grow under his feet. Before I left
- him that night the "ideal cast" of the play had been jotted down, and
- much of the actual cast settled. Rehearsals were in full swing within a
- week, and the play was produced within ten days of the demise of its
- predecessor.
- Meanwhile, the satisfactory sum which I received in advance of
- royalties was sufficient to remove any regrets as to the loss of
- the _Orb_ holiday work. With _The Girl who Waited_ in active
- rehearsal, "On Your Way" lost in importance.
- CHAPTER 26
- MY TRIUMPH
- _(James Orlebar Cloyster's narrative continued)_
- On the morning of the day for which the production had been fixed, it
- dawned upon me that I had to meet Mrs. Goodwin and Margaret at
- Waterloo. All through the busy days of rehearsal, even on those awful
- days when everything went wrong and actresses, breaking down, sobbed in
- the wings and refused to be comforted, I had dimly recognised the fact
- that when I met Margaret I should have to be honest with her. Plans for
- evasion had been half-matured by my inventive faculties, only to be
- discarded, unpolished, on account of the insistent claims of the
- endless rehearsals. To have concocted a story with which to persuade
- Margaret that I stood to lose money if the play succeeded would have
- been a clear day's work. And I had no clear days.
- But this was not all. There was another reason. Somehow my sentiments
- with regard to her were changing again. It was as if I were awaking
- from some dream. I felt as if my eyes had been blindfolded to prevent
- me seeing Margaret as she really was, and that now the bandage had been
- removed. As the day of production drew nearer, and the play began to
- take shape, I caught myself sincerely admiring the girl who could hit
- off, first shot, the exact shade of drivel which the London stage
- required. What culture, what excessive brain-power she must have. How
- absurdly _naïve_, how impossibly melodramatic, how maudlinly
- sentimental, how improbable--in fact, how altogether womanly she must
- have grown.
- Womanly! That did it. I felt that she was womanly. And it came about
- that it was my Margaret of the Cobo shrimping journeys that I was
- prepared to welcome as I drove that morning to Waterloo Station.
- And so, when the train rolled in, and the Goodwins alighted, and
- Margaret kissed me, by an extraordinarily lucky chance I found that I
- loved her more dearly than ever.
- * * * * *
- That _première_ is still fresh in my memory.
- Mrs. Goodwin, Margaret, and myself occupied the stage box, and in
- various parts of the house I could see the familiar faces of those whom
- I had invited as my guests.
- I felt it was the supreme event of my life. It was _the_ moment.
- And surely I should have spoilt it all unless my old-time friends had
- been sitting near me.
- Eva and Julian were with Mr. and Mrs. Gunton-Cresswell in the box
- opposite us. To the Barrel Club I had sent the first row of the dress
- circle. It was expensive, but worth it. Hatton and Sidney Price were in
- the stalls. Tom Blake had preferred a free pass to the gallery. Kit and
- Malim were at the back of the upper circle (this was, Malim told me,
- Kit's own choice).
- One by one the members of the orchestra took their places for the
- overture, and it was to the appropriate strains of "Land of Hope and
- Glory" that the curtain rose on the first act of my play.
- The first act, I should mention (though it is no doubt superfluous to
- do so) is bright and suggestive, but ends on a clear, firm note of
- pathos. That is why, as soon as the lights went up, I levelled my
- glasses at the eyes of the critics. Certainly in two cases, and, I
- think, in a third, I caught the glint of tear-drops. One critic was
- blowing his nose, another sobbed like a child, and I had a hurried
- vision of a third staggering out to the foyer with his hand to his
- eyes. Margaret was removing her own tears with a handkerchief. Mrs.
- Goodwin's unmoved face may have hidden a lacerated soul, but she did
- not betray herself. Hers may have been the thoughts that lie too deep
- for tears. At any rate, she did not weep. Instead, she drew from her
- reticule the fragmentary writings of an early Portuguese author. These
- she perused during the present and succeeding _entr'actes_.
- Pressing Margaret's hand, I walked round to the Gunton-Cresswells's box
- to see what effect the act had had on them. One glance at their faces
- was enough. They were long and hard. "This is a real compliment," I
- said to myself, for the whole party cut me dead. I withdrew, delighted.
- They had come, of course, to assist at my failure. I had often observed
- to Julian how curiously lacking I was in dramatic instinct, and Julian
- had predicted to Eva and her aunt and uncle a glorious fiasco. They
- were furious at their hopes being so egregiously disappointed. Had they
- dreamt of a success they would have declined to be present. Indeed,
- half-way through Act Two, I saw them creeping away into the night.
- The Barrel Club I discovered in the bar. As I approached, I heard
- Michael declare that "there'd not been such an act produced since his
- show was put on at----" He was interrupted by old Maundrell asserting
- that "the business arranged for valet reminded him of a story about
- Leopold Lewis."
- They, too, added their quota to my cup of pleasure by being distinctly
- frigid.
- Ascending to the gallery I found another compliment awaiting me. Tom
- Blake was fast asleep. The quality of Blake's intellect was in inverse
- ratio to that of Mrs. Goodwin. Neither of them appreciated the stuff
- that suited so well the tastes of the million; and it was consequently
- quite consistent that while Mrs. Goodwin dozed in spirit Tom Blake
- should snore in reality.
- With Hatton and Price I did not come into contact. I noticed, however,
- that they wore an expression of relief at the enthusiastic reception my
- play had received.
- But an encounter with Kit and Malim was altogether charming. They had
- had some slight quarrel on the way to the theatre, and had found a
- means of reconciliation in their mutual emotion at the pathos of the
- first act's finale. They were now sitting hand in hand telling each
- other how sorry they were. They congratulated me warmly.
- * * * * *
- A couple of hours more, and the curtain had fallen.
- The roar, the frenzied scene, the picture of a vast audience, half-mad
- with excitement--how it all comes back to me.
- And now, as I sit in this quiet smoking-room of a St. Peter's Port
- hotel, I hear again the shout of "Author!" I see myself again stepping
- forward from the wings. That short appearance of mine, that brief
- speech behind the footlights fixed my future....
- * * * * *
- "James Orlebar Cloyster, the plutocratic playwright, to Margaret, only
- daughter of the late Eugene Grandison Goodwin, LL.D."
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