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+The Project Gutenberg E-text of The Fortunate Youth, by William J. Locke
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fortunate Youth, by William J. Locke
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
+
+
+Title: The Fortunate Youth
+
+Author: William J. Locke
+
+Posting Date: August 1, 2009 [EBook #4379]
+Release Date: August, 2003
+First Posted: January 20, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FORTUNATE YOUTH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+THE FORTUNATE YOUTH
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+BY
+</H3>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+WILLIAM J. LOCKE
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<TABLE ALIGN="center" WIDTH="100%">
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap01">CHAPTER I</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap02">CHAPTER II</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap03">CHAPTER III</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap04">CHAPTER IV</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top" WIDTH="20%">
+<A HREF="#chap05">CHAPTER V</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap06">CHAPTER VI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap07">CHAPTER VII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap09">CHAPTER IX</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap10">CHAPTER X</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap11">CHAPTER XI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap12">CHAPTER XII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap15">CHAPTER XV</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap20">CHAPTER XX</A>
+</TD>
+</TR>
+
+<TR>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">
+<A HREF="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII</A>
+</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">&nbsp;</TD>
+<TD ALIGN="left" VALIGN="top">&nbsp;</TD>
+</TR>
+
+</TABLE>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap01"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER I
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+PAUL KEGWORTHY lived with his mother, Mrs. Button, his stepfather, Mr.
+Button, and six little Buttons, his half brothers and sisters. His was
+not an ideal home; it consisted in a bedroom, a kitchen and a scullery
+in a grimy little house in a grimy street made up of rows of exactly
+similar grimy little houses, and forming one of a hundred similar
+streets in a northern manufacturing town. Mr. and Mrs. Button worked in
+a factory and took in as lodgers grimy single men who also worked in
+factories. They were not a model couple; they were rather, in fact, the
+scandal of Budge Street, which did not itself enjoy, in Bludston, a
+reputation for holiness. Neither was good to look upon. Mr. Button, who
+was Lancashire bred and born, divided the yearnings of his spirit
+between strong drink and dog-fights. Mrs. Button, a viperous Londoner,
+yearned for noise. When Mr. Button came home drunk he punched his wife
+about the head and kicked her about the body, while they both exhausted
+the vocabulary of vituperation of North and South, to the horror and
+edification of the neighbourhood. When Mr. Button was sober Mrs. Button
+chastised little Paul. She would have done so when Mr. Button was
+drunk, but she had not the time. The periods, therefore, of his
+mother's martyrdom were those of Paul's enfranchisement. If he saw his
+stepfather come down the street with steady gait, he fled in terror; if
+he saw him reeling homeward he lingered about with light and joyous
+heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The brood of young Buttons was fed spasmodically and clad at random,
+but their meals were regular and their raiment well assorted compared
+with Paul's. Naturally they came in for clouts and thumps like all the
+children in Budge Street; it was only Paul who underwent organized
+chastisement. The little Buttons often did wrong; but in the mother's
+eyes Paul could never do right. In an animal way she was fond of the
+children of Button, and in a way equally animal she bore a venomous
+dislike to the child of Kegworthy. Who and what Kegworthy had been
+neither Paul nor any inhabitant of Bludston knew. Once the boy
+inquired, and she broke a worn frying-pan over his head. Kegworthy,
+whoever he might have been, was wrapt in mystery. She had appeared in
+the town when Paul was a year old, giving herself out as a widow. That
+she was by no means destitute was obvious from the fact that she at
+once rented the house in Budge Street, took in lodgers, and lived at
+her ease. Button, who was one of the lodgers, cast upon her the eyes of
+desire and married her. Why she married Button she could never
+determine. Perhaps she had a romantic idea&mdash;and there is romance even
+in Budge Street-that Button would support her. He very soon shattered
+any such illusion by appropriating the remainder of her fortune and
+kicking her into the factory with hobnailed boots. It would be wrong to
+say that Mrs. Button did not complain; she did. She rent the air of
+Budge Street with horrible execration; but she went to the factory,
+where, save for the intervals of retirement rendered necessary by the
+births of the little Buttons, she was contented enough to stay.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If Paul Kegworthy had been of the same fibre as the little Buttons, he
+would have felt, thought and acted as they, and this history would
+never have been written. He would have grown up to man's estate in the
+factory and have been merged an indistinguishable unit in the drab mass
+of cloth-capped humans who, at certain hours of the day, flood the
+streets of Bludston, and swarm on the roofs of clanging and shrieking
+tramcars, and on Saturday afternoons gather in clotted greyness on the
+football ground. He might have been sober and industrious-the
+proletariat of Bludston is not entirely composed of Buttons-but he
+would have taken the colour of his environment, and the world outside
+Bludston would never have heard of him. Paul, however, differed greatly
+from the little Buttons. They, children of the grey cap and the red
+shawl, resembled hundreds of thousands of little human rabbits
+similarly parented. Only the trained eye could have identified them
+among a score or two of their congeners. For the most part, they were
+dingily fair, with snub noses, coarse mouths, and eyes of an
+indeterminate blue. Of that type, once blowsily good-looking, was Mrs.
+Button herself. But Paul wandered a changeling about the Bludston
+streets. In the rows of urchins in the crowded Board School classroom
+he sat as conspicuous as any little Martian who might have been bundled
+down to earth. He had wavy black hair, of raven black, a dark olive
+complexion, flushed, in spite of haphazard nourishment and nights spent
+on the stone floor of the reeking scullery, with the warm blood of
+health, great liquid black eyes, and the exquisitely delicate features
+of a young Praxitelean god. It was this preposterous perfection which,
+while redeeming him from ridiculous beauty by giving his childish face
+a certain rigidity, differentiated him outwardly from his fellows. Mr.
+Button, to whom the unusual was anathema, declared that the sight of
+the monstrosity made him sick, and rarely suffered him in his presence;
+and one day Mrs. Button, discovering him in front of the cracked mirror
+in which Mr. Button shaved, when his hand was steady enough, on Sunday
+afternoons, smote him over the face with a pound of rump steak which
+she happened to be carrying, instinctively desirous not only to correct
+her son for vanity, but also to spoil the comeliness of which he might
+be vain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Until a wonderful and illuminating happening in his eleventh year,
+little Paul Kegworthy had taken existence with the fatalism of a child.
+Of his stepfather, who smelt lustily of sour beer, bad tobacco and
+incidentally of other things undetected by Paul's nostrils, and whom he
+saw rarely, he dwelt in mortal terror. When he heard of the Devil, at
+Sunday school, which he attended, to his stepfather's disgust, he
+pictured the Prince of Darkness not as a gentleman, not even as a
+picturesque personage with horns and tail, but as Mr. Button. As
+regards his mother, he had a confused idea that he was a living blight
+on her existence. He was not sorry, because it was not his fault, but
+in his childish way he coldly excused her, and, more from a queer
+consciousness of blighterdom than from dread of her hand and tongue, he
+avoided her as much as possible. In the little Buttons his experience
+as scapegoat taught him to take but little interest. From his earliest
+memories they were the first to be fed, clothed and bedded; to his own
+share fell the exiguous scraps. As they were much younger than himself,
+he found no pleasure in their companionship. For society he sought such
+of the youth of Budge Street as would admit him into their raucous
+fellowship. But, for some reason which his immature mind could not
+fathom, he felt a pariah even among his coevals. He could run as fast
+as Billy Goodge, the undisputed leader of the gang; he could dribble
+the rag football past him any time he desired; once he had sent him
+home to his mother with a bleeding nose, and, even in that hour of
+triumph, popular sympathy had been with Billy, not with him. It was the
+only problem in existence to which his fatalism did not supply the key.
+He knew himself to be a better man than Billy Goodge. There was no
+doubt about it. At school, where Billy was the woodenest blockhead, he
+was top of his class. He knew things about troy weight and geography
+and Isaac and the Mariners of England of which Billy did not dream. To
+Billy the football news in the Saturday afternoon edition of The
+Bludston Herald was a cryptogram; to him it was an open book. He would
+stand, acknowledged scholar, at the street corner and read out from the
+soiled copy retrieved by Chunky, the newsboy, the enthralling story of
+the football day, never stumbling over a syllable, athrill with the joy
+of being the umbilicus of a tense world, and, when the recital was
+over, he would have the mortification of seeing the throng pass away
+from him with the remorselessness of a cloud scudding from the moon.
+And he would hear Billy Goodge say exultantly:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Didn't Aw tell yo' the Wolves hadn't a dog's chance?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he would see the admiring gang slap Billy on the back, and hear
+"Good owd Billy!" and never a word of thanks to him. Then, knowing
+Billy to be a liar, he would tell him so, yelping shrilly, in
+Buttonesque vernacular (North and South):
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This morning tha said it was five to one on Sheffield United."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Listen to Susie!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The parasitic urchins would yell at the witticism&mdash;the eternal petitio
+principii of childhood, which Billy, secure in his cohort from bloody
+nose, felt justified in making. And Paul Kegworthy, the rag of a
+newspaper crumpled tight in his little hand, would watch them disappear
+and wonder at the paradox of life. In any sphere of human effort, so he
+dimly and childishly realized, he could wipe out Billy Goodge. He had a
+soul-reaching contempt for Billy Goodge, a passionate envy of him. Why
+did Billy hold his position instead of crumbling into dust before him?
+Assuredly he was a better man than Billy. When, Billy duce et auspice
+Billy, the gang played at pirates or Red Indians, it was pitiful to
+watch their ignorant endeavours. Paul, deeply read in the subject, gave
+them chapter and verse for his suggestions. But they heeded him so
+little that he would turn away contemptuously, disdaining the travesty
+of the noble game, and dream of a gang of brighter spirits whom he
+could lead to glory. Paul had many such dreams wherewith he sought to
+cheat the realities of existence: but until the Great Happening the
+dream was not better than the drink: after it came the Vision Splendid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The wonderful thing happened all because Maisie Shepherd, a slip of a
+girl of nineteen, staying at St. Luke's Vicarage, spilled a bottle of
+scent over her frock.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was the morning of the St. Luke's annual Sunday-school treat. The
+waggonette was at the vicarage door. The vicar and his wife and
+daughter waited fussily for Maisie, an unpunctual damsel. The vicar
+looked at his watch. They were three minutes late, He tut-tutted
+impatiently. The vicar's daughter ran indoors in search of Maisie and
+pounced upon her as she sat on the edge of the bed in the act of
+perfuming a handkerchief. The shock caused the bottle to slip mouth
+downward from her hand and empty the contents into her lap. She cried
+out in dismay.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never mind," said the vicar's daughter. "Come along. Dad and mother
+are prancing about downstairs."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I must change my dress!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've no time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm wet through. This is the strongest scent known. It's twenty-six
+shillings a bottle, and one little drop is enough. I shall be a walking
+pestilence."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The vicar's daughter laughed heartlessly. "You do smell strong. But
+you'll disinfect Bludston, and that will be a good thing." Whereupon
+she dragged the tearful and redolent damsel from the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the hard-featured yard of the schoolhouse the children were
+assembled-the girls on one side, the boys on the other. Curates and
+teachers hovered about the intervening space. Almost every child wore
+its Sunday best. Even the shabbiest little girls had a clean white
+pinafore to hide deficiencies beneath, and the untidiest little boy
+showed a scrubbed face. The majority of the boys wore clean collars;
+some grinned over gaudy neckties. The only one who appeared in his
+week-day grime and tatterdemalion outfit was little Paul Kegworthy. He
+had not changed his clothes, because he had no others; and he had not
+washed his face, because it had not occurred to him to do so. Moreover,
+Mrs. Button had made no attempt to improve his forlorn aspect, for the
+simple reason that she had never heard of the Sunday-school treat. It
+was part of Paul's philosophy to dispense, as far as he could, with
+parental control. On Sunday afternoons the little Buttons played in the
+streets, where Paul, had he so chosen, might have played also: but he
+put himself, so to speak, to Sunday school, where, besides learning
+lots of queer things about God and Jesus Christ which interested him
+keenly, he could shine above his fellows by recitations of collects and
+bits of Catechism, which did not interest him at all. Then he won
+scores of good-conduct cards, gaudy treasures, with pictures of Daniel
+in the Lions' Den and the Marriage of Cana and such like, which he
+secreted preciously beneath a loose slab in the scullery floor. He did
+not show them to his mother, knowing that she would tear them up and
+bang him over the head; and for similar reasons he refrained from
+telling her of the Sunday-school treat. If she came to hear of it, as
+possibly she would through one of the little Buttons, who might pick up
+the news in the street, he would be soundly beaten. But there was a
+chance of her not hearing, and he desired to be no more of a blight
+than he could help. So Paul, vagabond and self-reliant from his
+babyhood, turned up at the Sunday-school treat, hatless and coatless,
+his dirty little toes visible through the holes in his boots, and his
+shapeless and tattered breeches secured to his person by a single
+brace. The better-dressed urchins moved away from him and made rude
+remarks, after the generous manner of their kind; but Paul did not
+care. Pariahdom was his accustomed portion. He was there for his own
+pleasure. They were going to ride in a train. They were going to have a
+wonderful afternoon in a nobleman's park, a place all grass and trees,
+elusive to the imagination. There was a stupefying prospect of wondrous
+things in profusion to eat and drink-jam, ginger-beer, cake! So rumour
+had it; and to unsophisticated Paul rumour was gospel truth. With all
+these unexperienced joys before him, what cared he for the blankety
+little blanks who gibed at him? If you imagine that little Paul
+Kegworthy formulated his thoughts as would the angel choir-boy in the
+pictures, you are mistaken. The baby language of Bludston would petrify
+the foc'sle of a tramp, steamer. The North of England is justly proud
+of its virility.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Sunday school, marshalled by curates and teachers, awaited the
+party from the vicarage. The thick and darkened sunshine of Bludston
+flooded the asphalt of the yard, which sent up a reek of heat, causing
+curates to fan themselves with their black straw hats, and little boys
+in clean collars to wriggle in sticky discomfort, while in the still
+air above the ignoble town hung the heavy pall of smoke. Presently
+there was the sound of wheels and the sight of the head of the vicar's
+coachman above the coping of the schoolyard wall. Then the gates opened
+and the vicar and his wife and Miss Merewether, her daughter, and
+Maisie Shepherd appeared and were immediately greeted by curates and
+teachers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Maisie Shepherd, a stranger in a strange land, pretty, pink, blushing,
+hatefully self-conscious, detached herself, after a minute or two, from
+the group and looked with timid curiosity on the children. She was a
+London girl, her head still dancing with the delights of her first
+season, and she had never been to a Sunday-school treat in her life.
+Madge Merewether, her old schoolfellow, had told her she was to help
+amuse the little girls. Heaven knew how she was to do it. Already the
+unintelligibility of Lancashire speech had filled her with dismay. The
+array of hard-faced little girls daunted her; she turned to the boys,
+but she only saw one&mdash;the little hatless, coatless scarecrow with the
+perfect features And arresting grace, who stood out among his smug
+companions with the singularly vivid incongruity of a Greek Hermes in
+the central hall of Madame Tussaud's waxwork exhibition. Fascinated,
+she strayed down the line toward him. She halted, looked for a second
+or two into a pair of liquid black eyes and then blushed in agonized
+shyness. She stared at the beautiful boy, and the beautiful boy stared
+at her, and not a word could she find in her head to speak. She turned
+abruptly and moved away. The boy broke rank and slowly followed her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For little Paul Kegworthy the heavens had opened and flooded his
+senses, till he nearly fainted, with the perfume of celestial lands.
+The intoxicating sweetness of it bewildered his young brain. It was
+nothing delicate, evanescent, like the smell of a flower. It as thick,
+pungent, cloying, compelling. Mouth agape and nostril wide, he followed
+the exquisite source of the emanation like one in a dream, half across
+the yard. A curate laughingly and unsuspectingly brought him back to
+earth by laying hands on him and bundling him back into his place.
+There he remained, being a docile urchin; but his eyes remained fixed
+on Maisie Shepherd. She was only a rosebud beauty of an English girl,
+her beauty heightened by the colour of distress, but to Paul the
+radiance of her person almost rivalled the wonder of her perfume. It
+was his first meeting of a goddess face to face, and he surrendered his
+whole being in adoration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a few minutes the children were marched through the squalid streets,
+a strident band, to the dingy railway station, a grimy proletariat
+third-class railway station in which the sign "First Class Waiting
+Room" glared an outrage and a mockery, and were marshalled into the
+waiting train. The wonderful experience of which Paul had dreamed for
+weeks&mdash;he had never ridden in a train before&mdash;began; and soon the murky
+environs of the town were left behind and the train sped through the
+open country.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His companions in the railway carriage crowded at the windows, fighting
+vigorously for right of place; but Paul sat alone in the middle of the
+seat, unmoved by the new sensation and speed, and by the glimpses of
+blue sky and waving trees above the others' heads. The glory of the day
+was blotted out until he should see and smell the goddess again. At the
+wayside station where they descended he saw her in the distance, and
+the glory came once more. She caught his eye, smiled and nodded. He
+felt a queer thrill run through him. He had been singled out from among
+all the boys. He alone knew her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Brakes took them from the station down a country road and, after a mile
+or so, through stone gates of a stately park, where wonder after wonder
+was set out before Paul's unaccustomed eyes. On either side of this
+roadway stretched rolling grass with clumps and glades of great trees
+in their July bravery&mdash;more trees than Paul imagined could be in the
+world. There were sunlit upland patches and cool dells of shade
+carpeted with golden buttercups, where cattle fed lazily. Once a herd
+of fallow deer browsing by the wayside scuttled away at the noisy
+approach of the brakes. Only afterward did Paul learn their name and
+nature: to him then they were mythical beasts of fairyland. Once also
+the long pile-of the Tudor house came into view, flashing-white in the
+sunshine. The teacher in charge of the brake explained that it was the
+Marquis of Chudley's residence. It was more beautiful than anything
+Paul had ever seen; it was bigger than many churches put together; the
+word "Palace" came into his head&mdash;it transcended all his preconceived
+ideas of palaces: yet in such a palace only could dwell the radiant and
+sweet-smelling lady of his dream. The certainty gave him a curious
+satisfaction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They arrived at the spot where the marquees were erected, and at once
+began the traditional routine of the school treat-games for the girls,
+manlier sports for the boys. Lord Chudley, patron of the living of St.
+Luke's, Bludston, and Lord Bountiful of the feast, had provided
+swing-boats and a merry-go-round which discoursed infernal music to
+enraptured ears. Paul stood aloof for a while from these delights, his
+eye on the section of the girls among whom his goddess moved. As soon
+as she became detached and he could approach her without attracting
+notice, he crept within the magic circle of the scent and lay down
+prone, drinking in its intoxication, and, as she moved, he wriggled
+toward her on his stomach like a young snake.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After a time she came near him. "Why aren't you playing with the other
+boys?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul sat on his heels. "Dunno, miss," he said shyly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She glanced at his rapscallion attire, blushed, and blamed herself for
+the tactless question. "This is a beautiful place, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's heavenly," said Paul, with his eyes on her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One scarcely wants to do anything but just-just-well, be here." She
+smiled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He nodded and said, "Ay!" Then he grew bolder. "I like being alone," he
+declared defiantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I'll leave you," she laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The blood flushed deep under his unwashed olive skin, and he leaped to
+his feet. "Aw didn't mean that!" he protested hotly. "It wur them other
+boys."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was touched by his beauty and quick sensitiveness. "I was only
+teasing. I'm sure you like being with me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul had never heard such exquisite tones from human lips. To his ears,
+accustomed to the harsh Lancashire burr, her low, accentless voice was
+music. So another of his senses was caught in the enchantment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yo' speak so pretty," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At that moment a spruce but perspiring young teacher came up. "We're
+going to have some boys' races, miss, and we want the ladies to look
+on. His lordship has offered prizes. The first is a boys' race-under
+eleven."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can join in that, anyhow," she said to Paul. "Go along and let me
+see you win."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul scudded off, his heart aflame, his hand, as he ran, tucking in the
+shirt whose evasion from the breeches was beyond the control of the
+single brace. Besides, crawling on your stomach is dislocating even to
+the most neatly secured attire. But his action was mechanical. His
+thoughts were with his goddess. In his inarticulate mind he knew
+himself to be her champion. He sped under her consecration. He knew he
+could run. He could run like a young deer. Though despised, could he
+not outrun any of the youth in Budge Street? He took his place in the
+line of competing children. Far away in the grassy distance were two
+men holding a stretched string. On one side of him was a tubby boy with
+a freckled face and an amorphous nose on which the perspiration beaded;
+on the other a lank, consumptive creature, in Eton collar and red tie
+and a sprig of sweet William in his buttonhole, a very superior person.
+Neither of them desired his propinquity. They tried to hustle him from
+the line. But Paul, born Ishmael, had his hand against them. The fat
+boy, smitten beneath the belt, doubled up in pain and the consumptive
+person rubbed agonized shins. A curate, walking down repressing bulges
+and levelling up concavities, ordained order. The line stood tense.
+Away beyond, toward the goal, appeared a white mass, which Paul knew to
+be the ladies in their summer dresses; and among them, though he could
+not distinguish her, was she in whose eyes he was to win glory. The
+prize did not matter. It was for her that he was running. In his
+childish mind he felt passionately identified with her. He was her
+champion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The word was given. The urchins started. Paul, his little elbows
+squared behind him and his eyes fixed vacantly in space, ran with his
+soul in the toes that protruded through the ragged old boots. He knew
+not who was in front or who was behind. It was the madness of battle.
+He ran and ran, until somebody put his arms round him and stopped him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Steady on, my boy-steady on!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked round in a dazed way. "Have A' won th' race?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid not, my lad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a great effort he screwed his mind to another question. "Wheer did
+A' coom in?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"About sixth, but you ran awfully well."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sixth! He had come in sixth! Sky and grass and trees and white mass of
+ladies (among whom was the goddess) and unconsiderable men and boys
+became a shimmering blur. He seemed to stagger away, stagger miles
+away, until, finding himself quite alone, he threw himself down under a
+beech tree, and, after a few moments' vivid realization of what had
+happened, sobbed out the agony of his little soul's despair. Sixth! He
+had come in sixth! He had failed miserably in his championship. How she
+must despise him&mdash;she who had sent him forth to victory! And yet how
+'had it been possible? How had it been possible that other boys could
+beat him? He was he. An indomitable personage. Some hideous injustice
+guided human affairs. Why shouldn't he have won? He could not tell. But
+he had not won. She had sent him forth to win. He had lost. He had come
+in a sickening sixth. The disgrace devastated him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Maisie Shepherd, interested in her child champion, sought him out and
+easily found him under the beech tree. "Why, what is the matter?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he did not answer, she knelt by his side and put her hand on his
+lean shoulder. "Tell me what has happened."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the celestial fragrance overspread his senses. He checked his
+sobs and wiped his eyes with the back of his grubby hand. "Aw didn't
+win," he moaned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor little chap," she said comfortingly. "Did you want to win so very
+much?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He got up and stared at her. "Yo' told me to win."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So you ran for me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rose to her feet and looked down upon him, somewhat overwhelmed by
+her responsibility. So in ancient days might a fair maiden have
+regarded her knight who underwent entirely unnecessary batterings for
+her sake. "Then for me you've won," she said. "I wish I could give you
+a prize."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But what in the nature of a prize for a gutter imp of eleven does a
+pocketless young woman attired for the serious business of a school
+treat carry upon her person? She laughed in pretty embarrassment. "If I
+gave you something quite useless, what would you do with it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I 'u'd hide it safe, so 'ut nobody should see it," said Paul, thinking
+of his precious cards.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wouldn't you show it to anybody?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Gum!&mdash;" he checked himself suddenly. Such, he had learned, was not
+Sunday-school language. "I wouldno' show it to a dog," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Maisie Shepherd, aware of romantic foolishness, slipped a cornelian
+heart from a thin gold chain round her neck. "It's all I can give you
+for a prize, if you will have it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If he would have it? The Koh-i-Noor' in his clutch (and a knowledge of
+its value) could not have given him more thrilling rapture. He was
+speechless with amazement; Maisie, thrilled too, realized that a word
+spoken would have rung false. The boy gloated over his treasure; but
+she did not know&mdash;how could she?&mdash;what it meant to him. To Paul the
+bauble was a bit of the warm wonder that was she.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How are you going to keep it?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He hoicked a bit of his shirt-tail from his breeches and proceeded to
+knot the cornelian heart secure therein. Maisie fled rapidly on the
+verge of hysterics, After that the school treat had but one meaning for
+Paul. He fed, it is true, in Pantagruelian fashion on luscious viands,
+transcending his imagination of those which lay behind Blinks the
+confectioner's window in Bludston: there he succumbed to the animal;
+but the sports, the swing-boats, the merry-go-round, offered no
+temptation. He hovered around Maisie Shepherd like a little dog-quite
+content to keep her in sight. And every two or three minutes he fumbled
+about his breeches to see that the knotted treasure was safe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The day sank into late afternoon. The children had been fed. The weary
+elders had their tea. The vicarage party took a few moments' rest in
+the shade of a clump of firs some distance away from the marquee.
+Behind the screen lay Paul, his eyes on his goddess, his heels in the
+air, a buttercup-stalk between his teeth. He felt the comforting knot
+beneath his thigh. For the first time, perhaps, in his life, he knew
+utter happiness. He heard the talk, but did not listen. Suddenly,
+however, the sound of his own name caused him to prick his ears. Paul
+Kegworthy! They were talking about him. There could be no mistake. He
+slithered a foot or two nearer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No matter whether his people are drunkards or murderers," said the
+beloved voice, "he is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen in my
+life. Have you ever spoken to him, Winifred?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said the vicar's daughter. "Of course I've noticed him. Every one
+does-he is remarkable."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't believe he's a child of these people at all," Maisie declared.
+"He's of a different clay. He's as sensitive as-as a sensitive plant.
+You ought to keep your eye on him, Mr. Merewether. I believe he's a
+poor little prince in a fairy tale."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A freak&mdash;a lusus naturae" said the vicar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul did not know what a lusus naturae was, but it sounded mighty grand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's a fairy prince, and one day he'll come into his kingdom."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear, if you saw his mother!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I'm sure no one but a princess could be Paul Kegworthy's mother,"
+laughed Maisie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And his father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A prince too!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Paul listened and drank in his goddess's words greedily. Truth
+clear as crystal fell from her lips. A wild wonder racked his little
+soul. She had said that his mother was not his mother, and that his
+father was a prince. The tidings capped the glory of an effulgent day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he sneaked home late Mrs. Button, who had learned how he had
+misspent his time, gave him a merciless thrashing. Why should he be
+trapesing about with Sunday schools, she asked, with impolite
+embroidery, while his poor little brothers and sisters were crying in
+the street? She would learn him to Mess about with parsons and
+Sunday-school teachers. She was in process of "learning" him when Mr.
+Button entered. He swore in a manner which would have turned our armies
+in Flanders pallid, and kicked Paul into the scullery. There the boy
+remained and went supperless to his bed of sacks, aching and tearless.
+Before he slept he put his cornelian heart in his hiding-hole. What
+cared he for stripes or kicks or curses with the Vision Splendid
+glowing before his eyes?
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap02"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER II
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+FOR splenetic reasons which none but the Buttons of this world can
+appreciate, Paul was forbidden, under pain of ghastly tortures, to go
+near the Sunday school again, and, lest he should defy authority, he
+was told off on Sunday afternoons to mind the baby, either in the
+street or the scullery, according to the weather, while the other
+little Buttons were not allowed to approach him. The defection of the
+brilliant scholar having been brought to the vicar's notice, he
+ventured to call one Saturday afternoon on the Buttons, but such was
+the contumely with which he was received that the good man hastily
+retreated. In lung power he was outmatched. In repartee he was
+singularly outclassed. He then sent the superintendent of the school, a
+man of brawn and zeal, to see what muscular Christianity could
+accomplish. But muscular Christianity, losing its head, came off with a
+black eye. After that the Buttons were left alone, and no friendly hand
+drew Paul within the gates of his Sunday Paradise. He thought of it
+with aching wistfulness. The only thing that the superintendent could
+do was to give him surreptitiously a prayer-book, bidding him perfect
+himself in the Catechism in view of future Confirmation. But, as
+emulation of his fellows and not religious zeal was the mainspring of
+Paul's enthusiasm, the pious behest was disregarded. Paul dived into
+the volume occasionally, however, for intellectual entertainment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As for the fragrant and beautiful goddess, she had disappeared into
+thin air. Paul hung for a week or two about the vicarage, in the hope
+of seeing her, but in vain. As a matter of fact, Maisie Shepherd had
+left for Scotland the morning after the school treat; people don't come
+to Bludston for long and happy holidays. So Paul had to feed his ardent
+little soul on memories. That she had not been an impalpable creature
+of his fancy was proven by the precious cornelian heart. Her words,
+too, were written in fine flame across his childish mind. Paul began to
+live the life of dreams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He longed for books. The fragmentary glimpses of history and geography
+in the Board school standard whetted without satisfying his
+imagination. There was not a book in the house in Budge Street, and he
+had never a penny to buy one. Sometimes Button would bring home a dirty
+newspaper, which Paul would steal and read in secret, but its contents
+seemed to lack continuity. He thirsted for a story. Once a generous
+boy, since dead-he was too good to live had given him a handful of
+penny dreadfuls, whence he had derived his knowledge of pirates and Red
+Indians. Too careless and confident, he had left them about the
+kitchen, and his indignant mother had used them to light the fire. The
+burning of his library was an enduring tragedy. He realized that it
+must be reconstituted; but how? His nimble wit hit on a plan. Vagrant
+as an unowned dog, he could roam the streets at pleasure. Why should he
+not sell newspapers-in a quarter of the town, be it understood, remote
+from both factory and Budge Street? He sold newspapers for three weeks
+before he was found out. Then he was chastised and forced to go on
+selling newspapers with no profit to himself, for his person was
+rigorously searched and coppers confiscated as soon as he came home.
+But during the three weeks' traffic on his own account he had amassed a
+sufficient hoard of pennies for the purchase of several books in gaudy
+paper covers exposed for sale in the little stationer's shop round the
+corner. Soon he discovered that if he could batik a copper or two on
+his way home his mother would be none the wiser. The stationer became
+his banker, and when the amount of the deposit equaled the price of a
+book, Paul withdrew his money's worth. So a goodly library of amazing
+rubbish was stored by degrees under the scullery slab, until it outgrew
+safe accommodation; whereupon Paul transferred the bulk of it to a hole
+in a bit of waste ground, a deserted brickfield on the ragged outskirts
+of the town. At last misfortune befell him. One dreary afternoon of
+rain he dropped his new bundle of papers in the mud of the roadway. To
+avoid death he had to spring from the path of a thundering tramcar. A
+heavy cart ran over the bundle. While he was ruefully and hastily
+gathering the papers together, a band of street children swooped down
+and kicked them lustily about the filth. He was battling with one
+urchin when a policeman grabbed him. With an elusive twist he escaped
+and ran like a terrified hare. Disaster followed, and that was the end
+of his career as a newsvendor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Greater leisure for reading, however, compensated the loss of the
+occasional penny. He read dazzling tales of dukes with palaces (like
+Chudley Court), and countesses with ropes of diamonds in their hair,
+who all bore a resemblance to the fragrant one. And dukes and
+countesses lived the most resplendent lives, and spoke such beautiful
+language, and had such a way with them! He felt a curious pride in
+being able to enter into all their haughty emotions. Then, one day, he
+began a story about a poor little outcast boy in a slum. At first he
+did not care for it. His soaring spirit disdained boys in slums. It had
+its being on higher planes. But he read on, and, reading on, grew
+interested, until interest was intensified into absorption For the
+outcast boy in the slums, you must know, was really the kidnapped child
+of a prince and a princess, and after the most romantic adventures was
+enfolded in his parents' arms, married a duke's beauteous daughter,
+whom in his poverty he had worshipped from afar, and drove away with
+his bride in a coach-and-six.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To little Paul Kegworthy the clotted nonsense was a revelation from on
+high. He was that outcast boy. The memorable pronouncement of the
+goddess received confirmation in some kind of holy writ. The Vision
+Splendid, hitherto confused, crystallized into focus. He realized
+vividly how he differed in feature and form and intellect and character
+from the low crowd with whom he was associated. His unpopularity was
+derived from envy. His manifest superiority was gall to their base
+natures. Yes, he had got to the heart of the mystery. Mrs. Button was
+not his mother. For reasons unknown he had been kidnapped. Aware of his
+high lineage, she hated him and beat him and despitefully used him. She
+never gushed, it is true, over her offspring; but the little Buttons
+flourished under genuine motherment. They, inconsiderable brats, were
+her veritable children. Whereas he, Paul-it was as plain as daylight.
+Somewhere far away in the great world, an august and griefstricken
+pair, at that very moment, were mourning the loss of their only son.
+There they were, in their marble palace, surrounded by flunkeys all
+crimson and gold (men servants were always "gorgeously apparelled
+flunkeys" in Paul's books), sitting at a table loaded with pineapples
+on golden dishes, and eating out their hearts with longing. He could
+hear their talk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If only our beloved son were with us," said the princess, wiping away
+a tear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must be patient, my sweet Highness," replied the prince, with lofty
+resignation stamped on his noble brow. "Let us trust to Heaven to
+remove the cankerworm that is gnawing our vitals."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul felt very sorry for them, and he, too, wiped away a tear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For many years he remembered that day. He was alone in his brickfield
+on a gusty March morning-the Easter holidays had released him from
+school-squatting by his hole under the lee of a mass of earth and
+rubbish. It was a mean expanse, blackened by soot and defiled by
+refuse. Here and there bramble and stunted gorse struggled for an
+existence; but the flora mainly consisted in bits of old boots and foul
+raiment protruding grotesquely from the soil, half-buried cans, rusty
+bits of iron, and broken bottles. On one side the backs of grimy little
+houses, their yards full of fluttering drab underwear, marked the edge
+of the hopeless town which rose above them in forbidding buildings,
+belching chimney shafts and the spikes of a couple of spires. On the
+other sides it was bounded by the brick walls of factories, the
+municipal gasworks and the approach to the railway station, indicated
+by signal-posts standing out against the sky like gallows, and a
+tram-line bordered by a row of skeleton cottages. Golgotha was a grim
+garden compared with Paul's brickfield. Sometimes the children of the
+town scuttled about it like dingy little rabbits. But more often it was
+a desolate solitude. Perhaps all but the lowest of the parents of
+Bludston had put the place out of bounds, as gipsies and other dwellers
+in vans were allowed to camp there. It also bore an evil name because a
+night murder or two had been committed in its murky seclusion. Paul
+knew the exact spot, an ugly cavity toward the gasworks end, where a
+woman had been "done in," and even he, lord of the brickfield,
+preferred to remain at a purifying distance. But it was his own domain.
+He felt in it a certain pride of possession. The hollow under the lee
+of the rubbish-heap, by the side of the hole where he kept his paper
+library, was the most homelike place he knew.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For many years he remembered that day. The light that never was on sea
+or land fell upon the brickfield. He had read the story at one stretch.
+He had sat there for hours reading, for hours rapt in his Vision. At
+last material darkness began to gather round him, and he awoke with a
+start to realization that he had been sitting there most of the day.
+With a sigh he replaced his book in the hole, which he cunningly masked
+with a lump of hard clay, and, feeling stiff and cold, ran, childlike,
+homeward. In the silence of the night he took out his cornelian heart
+and fondled it. The day had been curiously like, yet utterly unlike,
+the day on which she had taken it from her neck. In a dim fashion he
+knew that the two days were of infinite significance in his life and
+were complementary. He had been waiting, as it were, for nine months
+for this day's revelation, this day's confirmation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose the next morning, a human being with a fixed idea, an
+unquestioned faith in his destiny. His star shone clear. He was born to
+great things. In those early years that followed it was not a matter of
+an imaginative child's vanity, but the unalterable, serene conviction
+of a child's soul. The prince and princess were realities, his future
+greatness a magnificent certitude. You must remember this, if you would
+understand Paul's after-life. It was built on this radiant knowledge.
+In the afternoon he met Billy Goodge and the gang. They were playing at
+soldiers, Billy distinguished by a cocked hat made out of newspaper and
+a wooden sword.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Coom on, Susie, wi be going to knock hell out of the boys in Stamford
+Street."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul folded his arms and looked at him contemptuously, as became one of
+his noble blood. "You could no' knock hell out of a bug."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's that tha says?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul repeated the insult.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Say that agen!" blustered the cocked-hatted leader.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul said it again and nothing happened, Billy received vociferous and
+sanguinary advice couched in sanguinary terms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Try and hit me!" said Billy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The scene was oddly parallel with one in the story of the outcast boy
+of the gutter. Paul, conscious of experiment, calmly went up to him and
+kicked him. He kicked him hard. The sensation was delicious. Billy
+edged away. He knew from past experience that if it came to blows he
+was no match for Paul, but hitherto, having shown fight, he had
+received the support of the gang. Now, however, there was an
+extraordinary quality in Paul's defiance which took the spirit out of
+him. Once more he was urged by the ragged brats to deeds of blood. He
+did not respond. Paul kicked him again before his followers. If he
+could have gone on kicking him for ever and ever what delirium of joy
+were eternity! Billy edged farther away. The mongrel game-cock was
+beaten. Paul, dramatically conscious of what the unrecognized prince
+would do in such a circumstance, advanced, smacked his face, plucked
+the cocked hat from his head, the sword from his hand, and invested
+himself with these insignia of leadership, Billy melted silently into
+the subfusc air of Budge Street. The ragged regiment looked around and
+there was no Billy. Paul Kegworthy, the raggedest of them all, with
+nothing to recommend him but his ridiculous exotic beauty and the paper
+and wooden spolia opima of the vanquished, stood before them, a
+tattered Caesar. The gang hung spellbound. They were ready, small band
+of heroes, to follow him against the hordes of Stamford Street. They
+only awaited his signal. Paul tasted a joy known but to few of the sons
+of men-absolute power over, and supreme contempt for, his fellows. He
+stood for a moment or two, in the grey, miserable street discordant
+with the wailings of babies and the clamour of futile little girls,
+who, after the manner of women, had no idea of political crisis, and
+the shrill objurgations of slattern mothers and the raucous cries of an
+idealist vendor of hyacinths, and, cocked hat on head and wooden sword
+in hand, he looked at his fawning army. Then came the touch of genius
+that was often to characterize his actions in after years. It was
+mimetic, as he had read of such a thing in his paper-covered
+textbooks-but it was none the less a touch of genius. He frowned on the
+dirty, ignoble little boys. What had he in common with them-he, the son
+of a prince? Nothing. He snapped his sword across his knee, tore his
+cocked hat in two, and, casting the fragments before them, marched
+proudly toward the very last place on the face of the earth that he
+desired to visit-his own home. The army remained for a few seconds
+bewildered by the dramatic and unexpected, and, leaderless, did what
+many a real army has done in similar circumstances, straggled into
+disintegration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thenceforward, Paul, had he so chosen, could have ruled despotically in
+Budge Street. But he did not choose. The games from which he used to be
+excluded, or in which he used to be allowed to join on sufferance, no
+longer appealed to him. He preferred to let Joey Meakin lead the gang,
+vice Billy Goodge deposed, while he himself remained aloof. Now and
+then he condescended to arbitrate between disputants or to kick a
+little brute of a bully, but he felt that, in doing so, he was
+derogating from his high dignity. It was his joy to feel himself a
+dark, majestic power overshadowing the street, a kind of Grand Llama
+hidden in mystery. Often he would walk through the midst of the
+children, seemingly unconscious of their existence, acting strenuously
+to himself his part of a high-born prince.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This lasted till a dark and awful day when Mr. Button pitched him into
+the factory. These were times before kindly Education Acts and Factory
+Acts decreed that no boy under twelve years of age should work in a
+factory, and that every boy under fourteen should spend half his time
+at the factory and half at school. Paul's education was considered
+complete, and he had to plunge into full time at the grim and grinding
+place. He had joined the great army of workers. A wide gulf separated
+him from the gang of Budge Street. It existed for him no more than did
+the little girls and babies. Life changed its aspect entirely. Gone
+were the days of vagabondage, the lazy, the delicious even though cold
+and hungry hours of dreaming and reading in the brickfield; gone was
+the happy freedom of the chartered libertine of the gutter. He was
+bound, a little slave, like hundreds of other little slaves and
+thousands of big ones, to a relentless machine. He entered the hopeless
+factory gate at six in the morning and left it at half-past five in the
+evening; and, his rough food swallowed, slunk to his kennel in the
+scullery like a little tired dog. And Mr. Button drank, and beat Mrs.
+Button, and Mrs. Button beat Paul whenever she felt in the humour and
+had anything handy to do it with, and, as a matter of course,
+confiscated his wages on Saturday and set him to mind the baby on
+Sunday afternoons. In the monotony, weariness and greyness of life the
+glory of the Vision began to grow dim.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the factory he was not thrown into competition with other boys. He
+was the skip, the drudge, the carrier and fetcher, the cleaner and
+polisher for a work-bench of men devoid of sentiment and blind to his
+princely qualities. He tried, indeed, by nimbleness of hand and
+intelligence, to impress them with his superiority to his predecessors,
+but they were not impressed. At the most he escaped curses. His mind
+began to work in the logic of the real. Entrance into his kingdom
+implied as a primary condition release from the factory. But how could
+such release come, when every morning a remorseless and insensate
+hook-just like a certain hook in the machinery whose deadly certainty
+of grip fascinated and terrified him, caught him from his morning sleep
+every morning of his life, save Sunday, and swung him inexorably into
+the factory? He looked around and saw that no one was released, except
+through death or illness or incompetence. And the incompetent starved.
+Any child in Budge Street with a grain of sense knew that. There was no
+release. He, son of a prince, would work for ever and ever in Bludston.
+His heart failed him. And there was no one to whom he could tell the
+tragic and romantic story of his birth. One or two happy gleams of
+brightness, however, lightened his darkness and prevented the Vision
+from fading entirely into the greyness of the factory sky. Once the
+Owner, an unspeakable god with a bald pink head and a paunch vastly
+chained with gold, conducted a party of ladies over the works. One of
+the latter, a very grand lady, noticed him at his bench and came-and
+spoke kindly to him. Her voice had the same sweet timbre as his
+goddess's. After she had left him his quick ears caught her question to
+the Owner: "Where did you get your young Apollo? Not out of Lancashire,
+surely? He's wonderful." And just before she passed out of sight she
+turned and looked at him and smiled. He learned on inquiry that she was
+the Marchioness of Chudley. The instant recognition of him by one of
+his own aristocratic caste revived his faith. The day would assuredly
+come. Suppose it had been his own mother, instead of the Marchioness?
+Stranger things happened in the books. The other gleam proceeded from
+one of the workmen at his bench, a serious and socialistic person who
+occasionally lent him something to read: Foxe's "Book of Martyrs,"
+"Mill on Liberty," Bellamy's "Looking Backward," at that time at the
+height of its popularity. And sometimes he would talk to Paul about
+collectivism and the new era that was coming when there would be no
+such words as rich and poor, because there would be no such classes as
+they denoted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul would say: "Then a prince will be no better than a factory hand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There won't be any princes, I tell thee," his friend would reply, and
+launch out into a denunciation of tyrants.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But this did not suit Paul. If there were to be no princes, where,
+would he come in? So, while grateful to the evangelist for talking to
+him and treating him as a human being, he totally rejected his gospel.
+It struck at the very foundations of his visionary destiny. He was
+afraid to argue, for his friend was vehement. Also confession of
+aristocratic prejudices might turn friendship into enmity. But his
+passionate antagonism to the communistic theory, all the more intense
+through suppression, strengthened his fantastic faith. Still, the
+transient smile of a marchioness and the political economy of a
+sour-avised operative are not enough to keep alive the romance of
+underfed, ill-clad, overdriven childhood. And after a while he was
+deprived even of the latter consolation, his friend being shifted to
+another end of the factory. In despair he turned to Ada, the eldest of
+the little Buttons, who now had reached years of comparative
+discretion, and strove to interest her in his dreams, veiling his
+identity under a fictitious name; but Ada, an unimaginative and
+practical child with a growing family to look after, either listened
+stupidly or consigned him, in the local vernacular, to perdition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But suppose 'it was me that was the unknown prince? Supposing it was
+me I've been talking about all the time? Supposing it was me that went
+away and came back in a gold coach and six horses, with a duke's
+daughter all over diamonds by my side, what would tha say?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think tha art nowt but a fool," said the elderly child of ten, "and,
+if mother heard thee, she'd lamm the life out of thee."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul had the sickening sensation of the man who has confided the high
+secrets of his soul to coarsefibred woman. He turned away, darkly
+conscious of having magnanimously given Ada a chance to mount with him
+into the upper air, which opportunity she, daughter of earth, had, in
+her purblind manner, refused. Thenceforward Ada was to him an
+unnoticeable item in the cosmos.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One hopeless month succeeded another, until a cloud seemed to close
+round Paul's brain, rendering him automatic in his actions, merely
+animal in his half-satisfied appetites. Fines and curses were his
+portion at the factory; curses and beatings&mdash;deserved if Justice held a
+hurried scale at home. Paul, who had read of suicide in The Bludston
+Herald, turned his thoughts morbidly to death. But his dramatic
+imagination always carried him beyond' his own demise to the scene in
+the household when his waxlike corpse should be discovered dangling
+from a rope fixed to the hook in the kitchen ceiling. He posed
+cadaverous before a shocked Budge Street, before a conscience-stricken
+factory; and he wept on his sack bed in the scullery because the prince
+and the princess, his august parents, would never know that he had
+died. A whit less gloomy were his imaginings of the said prince and
+princess rushing into the house, in the nick of time, just before life
+was extinct, and cutting him down. How they were to find him he did not
+know. This side-track exploration of possibilities was a symptom of
+sanity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yet, Heaven knows what would have happened to Paul, after a year or so
+at the factory, if Barney Bill, a grotesque god from the wide and
+breezy spaces of the world, had not limped into his life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill wore the cloth cap and conventional and unpicturesque,
+though shapeless and weather-stained, garment of the late nineteenth
+century. Neither horns nor goat's feet were visible; nor was the pipe
+of reed on which he played. Yet he played, in Paul's ear, the
+comforting melody of Pan, and the glory of the Vision once more flooded
+Paul's senses, and the factory and Budge Street and the Buttons and the
+scullery faded away like an evil dream.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap03"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER III
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+THE Fates arranged Barney Bill's entrance late on a Saturday afternoon
+in August. It was not dramatic. It was merely casual. They laid the
+scene in the brickfield.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had rained all day, and now there was sullen clearance. Paul, who
+had been bathing with some factory boys in the not very savoury canal a
+mile or so distant, had wandered mechanically to his brickfield
+library, which, by means of some scavenging process, he managed to keep
+meagrely replenished. Here he had settled himself with a dilapidated
+book on his knees for an hour's intellectual enjoyment. It was not a
+cheerful evening. The ground was sodden, and rank emanations rose from
+the refuse. From where he sat he could see an angry sunset like a
+black-winged dragon with belly of flame brooding over the town. The
+place wore an especial air of desolation. Paul felt depressed. Bathing
+in the pouring wet is a chilly sport, and his midday meal of cold
+potatoes had not been invigorating. These he had grabbed, and, having
+done them up hastily in newspaper, had bolted with them out of the
+house. He had been fined heavily for slackness during the week, and Mr.
+Button's inevitable wrath at docked wages he desired to undergo as late
+as possible. Then, the sun had blazed furiously during the last six
+imprisoned days, and now the long-looked for hours of freedom were
+disfigured by rain and blight. He resented the malice of things. He
+also resented the invasion of his brickfield by an alien van, a gaudy
+vehicle, yellow and red, to the exterior of which clinging wicker
+chairs, brooms, brushes and jute mats gave the impression of a
+lunatic's idea of decoration. An old horse, hobbled a few feet away,
+philosophically cropped the abominable grass. On the front of the van a
+man squatted with food and drink. Paul hated him as a trespasser and a
+gormandizer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently the man, shading his eyes with his hand, scrutinized the
+small, melancholy figure, and then, hopping from his perch, sped toward
+him with a nimble and curiously tortuous gait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He approached, a wiry, almost wizened, little man of fifty, tanned to
+gipsy brown. He had a shrewd thin face, with an oddly flattened nose,
+and little round moist dark eyes that glittered like diamonds. He wore
+cloth cap on the back of his head, showing in front a thick mass of
+closely cropped hair. His collarless shirt was open at the neck and his
+sleeves were rolled up above the elbow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're Polly Kegworthy's kid, ain't you?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Seen you afore, haven't I?" Then Paul remembered. Three or four times
+during his life, at long, long intervals, the van had passed down Budge
+Street, stopping at houses here and there. About two years ago, coming
+home, he had met it at his own door. His mother and the little man were
+talking together. The man had taken him under the chin and twisted his
+face up. "Is that the nipper?" he had asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His mother had nodded, and, releasing Paul with a clumsy gesture of
+simulated affection, had sent him with twopence for a pint of beer to
+the public-house at the end of the street. He recalled how the man had
+winked his little bright eye at his mother before putting the jug to
+his lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I browt th' beer for yo'," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You did. It was the worst beer, bar none, I've ever had. I can taste
+it now." He made a wry face. Then he cocked his head on one side. "I
+suppose you're wondering who I am?" said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul. "Who art tha?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm Barney Bill," replied the man. "Did you never hear of me? I'm
+known on the road from Taunton to Newcastle and from Hereford to
+Lowestoft. You can tell yer mother that you seed me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A smile curled round Paul's lips at the comic idea of giving his mother
+unsolicited information. "Barney Bill?" said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yuss," said the man. Then, after a pause, "What are you doing of
+there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Reading," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let's have a look at it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul regarded him suspiciously; but there was kindliness in the
+twinkling glance. He handed him the sorry apology for a book.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill turned it over. 'Why, said he, "it ain't got no beginning
+and no end. It's all middle. 'Kenilworth.' Do yer like it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay!" said Paul. "It's foine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who do yer think wrote it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As both cover and a hundred pages at the beginning, including the
+title-page, to say nothing of a hundred pages at the end, were missing,
+Paul had no clue to the authorship.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dunno," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir Walter Scott."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul jumped to his feet. Sir Walter Scott, he knew not why or how, was
+one of those bright names that starred in his historical darkness, like
+Caesar and Napoleon and Ridley and Latimer and W. G. Grace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tha' art sure? Sir Water Scott?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shock of meeting Sir Walter in the flesh could not have been
+greater. The man nodded. "Think I'd tell yer a lie? I do a bit of
+reading myself in the old 'bus there"-he jerked a thumb&mdash;"I've got some
+books now. Would yer like to see 'em?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Would a mouse like cheese? Paul started off with his new companion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it wasn't for a book or two, I'd go melancholy mad and bust
+myself," the latter remarked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul's spirit leaped toward a spiritual brother. It was precisely his
+own case.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll find a lot of chaps that don't hold with books. Dessay you've
+met 'em?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed, precipient of irony.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill continued: "I've heard some on 'em say: 'What's the good of
+books? Give me nature,' and they goes and asks for it at the
+public-'ouse. Most say nothing at all, but just booze."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Like father," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Eh?" cried his friend sharply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sam Button, what married mother."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ali! so he boozes a lot, does he?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul drew an impressionistic and lurid picture of Mr. Button.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And they fight?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Like billy-o," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They reached the van. Barney Bill, surprisingly agile in spite of his
+twisted leg, sprang into the interior. Paul, standing between the
+shafts, looked in with curiosity. There was a rough though not unclean
+bed running down one side. Beyond, at the stern, so to speak, was a
+kind of galley containing cooking stove, kettle and pot. There were
+shelves, some filled with stock-in-trade, others with miscellaneous
+things, the nature of which he could not distinguish in the gloom.
+Barney Bill presently turned and dumped an armful of books on the
+footboard an inch or two below Paul's nose. Paul scanned the title
+pages. They were: Goldsmith's "Animated Nature," "Enquire Within Upon
+Everything," an old bound volume of "Cassell's Family Reader," "The
+Remains of Henry Kirke White," and "Martin Chuzzlewit." The owner
+looked down upon them proudly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've got some more, but I can't get at 'em."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul regarded him with envy. This was a man of great possessions. "How
+long are yo' going to stay here?" he asked hopefully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Till sunrise to-morrow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul's face fell. He seemed to have no luck nowadays.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill let himself down to a sitting position on the footboard and
+reached to the end for a huge pork pie and a clasp knife which lay
+beside a tin can. "I'll go on with my supper," said he; then noticing a
+wistful, hungry look in the child's eyes, "Have a bit?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He cut off a mighty hunk and put it into Paul's ready hand. Paul
+perched himself beside him, and they both ate for a long while in
+silence, dangling their legs. Now and again the host passed the tin of
+tea to wash down the food. The flaming dragon died into a smoky red
+above the town. A light or two already appeared in the fringe of mean
+houses. Twilight fell rapidly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oughtn't you to be getting home?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, his hunger appeased, grinned. His idea was to sneak into the
+scullery just after the public-houses closed, when his mother would be
+far too much occupied with Mr. Button to worry about him. Chastisement
+would then be postponed till the morning. Artlessly he laid the
+situation before his friend, who led him on to relate other amenities
+of his domestic life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, I'm jiggered!" said Barney Bill. "She must be a she-devil!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul cordially agreed. He had already imagined the Prince of Darkness
+in the guise of Mr. Button; Mrs. Button was in every way fit to be the
+latter's diabolical mate. Encouraged by sympathy and shrewd questions,
+he sketched in broad detail his short career, glorifying himself as the
+prize scholar and the erstwhile Grand Llama of Budge Street, and
+drawing a dismal picture of the factory. Barney Bill listened
+comprehendingly. Then, smoking a well-blackened clay, he began to utter
+maledictions on the suffocating life in towns and to extol his own
+manner of living. Having an appreciative audience, he grew eloquent
+over his lonely wanderings the length and breadth of the land; over the
+joy of country things, the sweetness of the fields, the wayside
+flowers, the vaulted highways in the leafy summer, the quiet, sleepy
+towns, the fragrant villages, the peace and cleanness of the open air.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The night had fallen, and in the cleared sky the stars shone bright.
+Paul, his head against the lintel of the van door, looked up at them,
+enthralled by the talk of Barney Bill. The vagabond merchant had the
+slight drawling inflection of the Home Counties, which gave a soothing
+effect to a naturally soft voice. To Paul it was the pipes of Pan.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It mightn't suit everybody," said Barney Bill philosophically. "Some
+folks prefer gas to laylock. I don't say that they're wrong. But I
+likes laylock."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's laylock?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His friend explained. No lilac bloomed in the blighted Springs of
+Bludston.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Does it smell sweet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yuss. So does the may and the syringa and the new-mown hay and the
+seaweed. Never smelt any of 'em?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," sighed Paul, sensuously conscious of new and vague horizons. "I
+once smelled summat sweet," he said dreamily. "It wur a lady."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"D'ye mean a woman?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. A lady. Like what yo' read of."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've heard as they do smell good; like violets&mdash;some on 'em," the
+philosopher remarked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Drawn magnetically to this spiritual brother, Paul said almost without
+volition, "She said I were the son of a prince."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Son of a WOT?" cried Barney Bill, sitting up with a jerk that shook a
+volume or two onto the ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul repeated the startling word.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lor' lumme!" exclaimed the other, "don't yer know who yer father was?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul told of his disastrous attempts to pierce the mystery of his birth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A frying-pan? Did she now? That's a mother for yer."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul disowned her. He disowned her with reprehensible emphasis.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill pulled reflectively at his pipe. Then he laid a bony hand
+on the boy's shoulder. "Who do you think yer mother was?" he asked
+gravely. "A princess?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay, why not?" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why not?" echoed Barney Bill. "Why not? You're a blooming lucky kid. I
+wish I was a missin' heir. I know what I'd do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" asked Paul, the ingenuous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd find my 'igh-born parents."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd go through the whole of England, asking all the princes I met. You
+don't meet 'em at every village pump, ye know," he added quickly, lest
+the boy, detecting the bantering note, should freeze into reserve;
+"but, if you keep yer eyes skinned and yer ears standing up, you can
+learn where they are. Lor' lumme! I wouldn't be a little nigger slave
+in a factory if I was the missin' heir. Not much. I wouldn't be starved
+and beaten by Sam and Polly Button. Not me. D'ye think yer aforesaid
+'igh-born parents are going to dive down into this stinkin' suburb of
+hell to find yer out? Not likely. You've got to find 'em sonny. Yer can
+find anybody on the 'ighroad if yer tramps long enough. What d'yer
+think?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll find 'em," said Paul, in dizzy contemplation of possibilities.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When are yer going to start?" asked Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul felt his wages jingle in his pocket. He was a capitalist. The
+thrill of independence swept him from head to foot. What time like the
+present? "I'll start now," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was night. Quite dark, save for the stars; the lights already
+disappearing in the fringe of mean houses whose outline was merged
+against the blackness of the town; the green and red and white disks
+along the railway line behind the dim mass of the gasworks; the
+occasional streak of conglomerate fireflies that was a tramcar; and the
+red, remorseless glow of here and there a furnace that never was
+extinct in the memory of man. And, save for the far shriek of trains,
+the less remote and more frequent clanging of passing tramcars along
+the road edged with the skeleton cottages, and, startlingly near, the
+vain munching and dull footfall of the old horse, all was still.
+Compared with home and Budge Street, it was the reposeful quiet of the
+tomb. Barney Bill smoked for a time in silence, while Paul sat with
+clenched fists and a beating heart. The simplicity of the high
+adventure dazed him. All he had to do was to walk away&mdash;walk and walk,
+free as a sparrow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently Barney Bill slid from the footboard. "You stay here, sonny,
+till I come back."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He limped away across the dim brickfield and sat down at the edge of
+the hollow where the woman had been murdered. He had to think; to
+decide a nice point of ethics. A vagrant seller of brooms and jute
+mats, even though he does carry about with him "Cassell's Family
+Reader" and "The Remains of Henry Kirke White," is distracted by few
+psychological problems. Sufficient for the day is the physical thereof.
+And when a man like Barney Bill is unencumbered by the continuous
+feminine, the ordinary solution of life is simple. But now the man had
+to switch his mind back to times before Paul was born, when the eternal
+feminine had played the very devil with him, when all sorts of passions
+and emotions had whirled his untrained being into dizziness. No
+passions or emotions now affected him; but their memory created an
+atmosphere of puzzledom. He had to adjust values. He had to deputize
+for Destiny. He also had to harmonize the pathetically absurd with the
+grimly real. He took off his cap and scratched his cropped head. After
+a while he damned something indefinite and hastened in his
+dot-and-carry-one fashion to the van.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quite made up yer mind to go in search of yer 'ighborn parents?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Like me to give yer a lift, say, as far as London?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul sprang to the ground and opened his mouth to speak. But his knees
+grew weak and he quivered all over like one who beholds the god. The
+abstract nebulous romance of his pilgrimage had been crystallized, in a
+flash, into the concrete. "Ay," he panted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay!" and he steadied himself with his back and elbows against the
+shafts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's all right," said Barney Bill, in a matter-of fact way, calm and
+godlike to Paul. "You can make up a bed on the floor of the old 'bus
+with some of them there mats inside and we'll turn in and have a sleep,
+and start at sunrise."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He clambered into the van, followed by Paul, and lit an oil lamp. In a
+few moments Paul's bed was made. He threw himself down. The resilient
+surface of the mats was luxury after the sacking on the scullery stone.
+Barney Bill performed his summary toilet, blew out the lamp and went to
+his couch.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently Paul started up, smitten by a pang straight through his
+heart. He sprang to his feet. "Mister," he cried in the darkness, not
+knowing how else to address his protector. "I mun go whoam."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wot?" exclaimed the other. "Thought better of it already? Well, go,
+then, yer little 'eathen 'ippocrite!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll coom back," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yer afeared, yer little rat," said Barney Bill, out of the blackness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not," retorted Paul indignantly. "I'm freeten'd of nowt."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then what d'yer want to go for? If you've made up yer mind to come
+along of me, just stay where you are. If you go home they'll nab you
+and whack you for staying out late, and lock you up, and you'll not be
+able to get out in time in the morning. And I ain't a-going to wait for
+yer, I tell yer straight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll be back," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't believe it. Good mind not to let yer go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The touch of genius suddenly brushed the boy's forehead. He drew from
+his pockets the handful of silver and copper that was his week's wages,
+and, groping in the darkness, poured it over Barney Bill. "Then keep
+that for me till I coom back."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He fumbled hurriedly for the latch of the van door, found it, and
+leaped out into the waste under the stars, just as the owner of the van
+rose with a clatter of coins. To pick up money is a deeply rooted human
+instinct. Barney Bill lit his lamp, and, uttering juicy though
+innocuous flowers of anathema, searched for the scattered treasure.
+When he had retrieved three shillings and sevenpence-halfpenny he
+peered out. Paul was far away. Barney Bill put the money on the shelf
+and looked at it in a puzzled way. Was it an earnest of the boy's
+return, or was it a bribe to let him go? The former hypothesis seemed
+untenable, for if he got nabbed his penniless condition would be such
+an aggravation of his offence as to call down upon him a more ferocious
+punishment than he need have risked. And why in the name of sanity did
+he want to go home? To kiss his sainted mother in her sleep? To pack
+his blankety portmanteau? Barney Bill's fancy took a satirical turn. On
+the latter hypothesis, the boy was in deadly fear, and preferred the
+certainty of the ferocious punishment to the terrors of an unknown
+future. Barney Bill smoked a reflective pipe, looking at the matter
+from the two points of view. Not being able to decide, he put out his
+lamp, shut his door and went to sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Dawn awoke him. He sat up and rubbed his eyes. Paul was not there. He
+did not expect him to be there. He felt sorry. The poor little kid had
+funked it. He had hoped for better stuff. He rose and stretched
+himself, put on socks and boots, lit his cooking stove, set a kettle to
+boil and, opening the door, remained for a while breathing the misty
+morning air. Then he let himself down and proceeded to the back of the
+van, where stood a pail of water and a tin basin, his simple washing
+apparatus. Having sluiced bead and neck and dried them with something
+resembling a towel, he hooked up the pail, stowed the basin in a rack,
+unslung a nosebag, which he attached to the head of the old horse, and
+went indoors to prepare his own elementary breakfast. That over, he put
+the horse into the shafts. Barney Bill was a man of his word. He was
+not going to wait for Paul; but he cast a glance round the limited
+horizon of the brickfield, hoping, against reason, to see the little
+slim figure emerge from some opening and run toward him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Darn the boy!" said Barney Bill, taking off his cap and scratching his
+wet head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A low moan broke the dead silence of the Sunday dawn. He started and
+looked about him. He listened. There was another. The moans were those
+of a sleeper. He bent down and looked under the van. There Jay Paul,
+huddled up, fast asleep on the bare ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, I'm jiggered! I'm just jiggered. Here, you&mdash;hello!" cried Barney
+Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul awakened suddenly, half sat up, grinned, grabbed at something on
+the ground beside him and wriggled out between the wheels.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How long you been there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"About two hours," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why didn't yer wake me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I didn't like to disturb thee," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did yer go home?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Into the house?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul nodded and smiled. Now, that it was all over, he could smile. But
+only afterwards, when he had greater command of language, could he
+describe the awful terror that shook his soul when he opened the front
+door, crept twice through the darkness of the sleeping kitchen and
+noiselessly closed the door again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For many months he felt the terror of his dreams. Briefly he told
+Barney Bill of his exploit. How he had to lurk in the shadow of the
+street during the end of a battle between the Buttons, in which the
+lodgers and a policeman had intervened. How he had to
+wait&mdash;interminable hours&mdash;until the house was quiet. How he had
+stumbled over things in the drunken disorder of the kitchen floor,
+dreading to arouse the four elder little Buttons who slept in the room.
+How narrowly he had missed running into the arms of the policeman who
+had passed the door some seconds before he opened it. How he had
+crouched on the pavement until the policeman turned the corner, and how
+he had fled in the opposite direction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And if yer mother had caught ye, what would she have done to yer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Half-killed me," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill twisted his head on one side and looked at him out of his
+twinkling eyes. Paul thought he resembled a grotesque bird.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wot did yer do it for?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This," said Paul, holding out a grubby palm in which lay the precious
+cornelian heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His friend blinked at it. "Wot the blazes is the good of that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a talisman," replied Paul, who, having come across the word in a
+book, had at once applied it to his treasure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lor' lumme!" cried Barney Bill. "And it was for that bit of stuff yer
+ran the risk of being flayed alive by yer loving parents?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul was quick to detect a note of admiration underlying the
+superficial contemptuousness of the words. "I'd ha' gone through fire
+and water for it," he declared theatrically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lor' lumme!" said Barney Bill again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I got summat else," said Paul, taking from his pocket his little pack
+of Sunday-school cards.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill examined them gravely. "I think you'd better do away with
+these."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They establishes yer identity," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill explained. Paul was running away from home. The police,
+informed of the fact, would raise a hue-and-cry. The cards, if found,
+would be evidence. Paul laughed. The constabulary was not popular in
+Budge Street.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mother ain't going to ha' nowt to do with the police, nor father,
+either."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He hinted that the cards might be useful later. His childish vanity
+loved the trivial encomiums inscribed thereon. They would impress
+beholders who had not the same reasons for preoccupation as Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're thinking of your 'igh-born parents," said Barney Bill. "All
+right, keep 'em. Only hide 'ern away safe. And now get in and let us
+clear out of this place. It smelts like a cheese with an escape of gas
+running through it. And you'd better stay inside and not show your face
+all day long. I don't want to be had up for kidnapping."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul jumped in. Barney Bill clambered onto the footboard and took the
+reins. The old horse started and the van jolted its way to the road, on
+which as yet no tramcars clattered. As the van turned, Paul, craning
+his neck out of the window, obtained the last glimpse of Bludston. He
+had no regrets. As far as such a thought could be formulated in his
+young mind, he wished that the place could be blotted out from his
+memory, as it was now hidden forever from his vision. He stood at the
+little window, facing south, gazing toward the unknown region at the
+end of which lay London, city of dreams. He was not quite fourteen. His
+destiny was before him, and to the fulfilment thereof he saw no
+hindrance. No more would the remorseless factory hook catch him from
+his sleep and swing him into the relentless machine. Never again, would
+he hear his mother's shrewish voice or feel her heavy, greasy hand
+about his ears. He was free&mdash;free to read, free to sleep, free to talk,
+free to drink in the beauty of the lazy hours. Vaguely he was conscious
+that one of the wonders that would come would be his own expansion. He
+would learn many things which he did not know, things that would fit
+him for his high estate. He looked down upon the foreshortened figure
+of Barney Bill, his cloth cap, his shoulders, his bare brown arms, a
+patch of knee. To the boy, at that moment, he was less a man than an
+instrument of Destiny guiding him, not knowing why, to the Promised
+Land.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last on the quiet road Paul saw a bicyclist approaching them.
+Mindful of Barney Bill's injunction, he withdrew his head. Presently he
+lay down on the couch, and, soothed by the jogging of the van and the
+pleasant creaking of the baskets, fell into the deep sleep of tired and
+happy childhood.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap04"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+IT was a day of dust and blaze. Dust lay thick on the ground, it filled
+the air, it silvered the lower branches of the wayside trees, it turned
+the old brown horse into a dappled grey, it powdered the black hair of
+Barney Bill and of Paul until they looked like vagabond millers. They
+sat side by side on the footboard while the old horse jogged on,
+whisking flies away with a scanty but persistent tail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, barefoot and barelegged, hatless, coatless, absorbed blaze and
+dust with the animal content of a young lizard. A month's summer
+wandering had baked him to gipsy brown. A month's sufficient food and
+happiness had filled gaunt hollows in his face and covered all too
+visible ribs with flesh. Since his flight from Bludston his life had
+been one sensuous trance. His hungry young soul had been gorged with
+beauty&mdash;the beauty of fields and trees and rolling country, of still,
+quivering moons and starlit nights, of exultant freedom, of
+never-failing human sympathy. He had a confused memory of everything.
+They had passed through many towns as similar to Bludston as one
+factory chimney to another, and had plied their trade in many a mean
+street, so much the counterpart of Budge Street that he had watched a
+certain window or door with involuntary trepidation, until he realized
+that it was not Budge Street, that he was a happy alien to its squalor,
+that he was a butterfly, a thing of woods and hedgerows fluttering for
+an inconsequent moment in the gloom. He came among them, none knew
+whence he was going, none knew whither. He was conscious of being a
+creature of mystery. He pitied the fettered youth of these begrimed and
+joyless towns&mdash;slaves, Men with Muckrakes (he had fished up an old
+"Pilgrim's Progress" from the lower depths of the van), who obstinately
+refused to raise their eyes to the glorious sun in heaven. In his
+childish arrogance he would ask Barney Bill, "Why don't they go away
+and leave it, like me?" And the wizened little man would reply, with
+the flicker of an eyelid unperceived by Paul, "Because they haven't no
+'igh-born parents waiting for 'em. They're born to their low estate,
+and they knows it." Which to Paul was a solution of peculiar comfort.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even the blackened lands between the towns had their charm for Paul, in
+that he had a gleeful sense of being excluded from the wrath of God,
+which fell continuously upon them and the inhabitants thereof. And here
+and there a belt of leafy country gave promise, or confirmed Barney
+Bill's promise, of the Paradise that would come. Besides, what mattered
+the perpetuations of Bludston brickfields when the Land of Beulah
+shimmered ahead in the blue distance, when "Martin Chuzzlewit" lay open
+on his knees, when the smell of the bit of steak sizzling on the
+cooking stove stung his young blood? And now they were in Warwickshire,
+county of verdant undulations and deep woods and embowered villages.
+Every promise that Barney Bill had made to him of beauty was in process
+of fulfilment. There were no more blighted towns, no more factories, no
+more chimneys belching forth smoke. This was the Earth, the real
+broad-bosomed Mother Earth. What he had left was the Hell upon Earth.
+What he was going to might be Paradise, but Paul's imagination rightly
+boggled at the conception of a Paradise more perfect. And, as Paul's
+prescient wit had conjectured, he was learning many things; the names
+of trees and wild flowers, the cries of birds, the habits of wayside
+beasts; what was good for a horse to eat and what was bad; which was
+the Waggon, and Orion's Belt and the Bunch of Keys in the heavens; how
+to fry bacon and sew up rents in his clothing; how to deal with his
+fellow-man, or, rather, with his fellow-woman, in a persuasive manner;
+how to snare a rabbit or a pheasant and convert it into food, and how,
+at the same time, to evade the terrors of the law; the differences
+between wheat and oats and barley; the main lines of cleavage between
+political parties, hitherto a puzzle to Paul, for Barney Bill was a
+politician (on the Conservative side) and read his newspaper and argued
+craftily in taverns; and the styles and titles of great landowners by
+whose estates they passed; and how to avoid the nets that were
+perpetually spread by a predatory sex before the feet of the incautious
+male. On the last point Barney Bill was eloquent; but Paul, with
+delicious memories sanctifying his young soul, turned a deaf ear to his
+misogyny. Barney Bill was very old and crooked and dried up; what
+beautiful lady would waste her blandishments on him? Even the low-born
+lasses with whom they at times consorted had scarce an eye for Barney
+Bill. The grapes were sour. Paul smiled indulgently on the little
+foible of his friend.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They jogged along the highroad on this blazing and dusty day. Their
+bower of wicker chairs crackled in the heat. It was too hot for
+sustained conversation. Once Barney Bill said: "If Bob"-Bob was the old
+horse's unimaginative name&mdash;"if Bob doesn't have a drink soon his
+darned old hide'll crack."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ten minutes later: "Nothing under a quart'll wash down this dust."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have a drink of water," suggested Paul, who had already adopted this
+care for drouth, with satisfactory results.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A grown man's thirst and a boy's thirst is two entirely different
+things," said Barney Bill sententiously. "To spoil this grown-up thirst
+of mine with water would be a crime."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A mile or so farther on the road he stretched out a lean brown arm and
+pointed. "See that there clump of trees? Behind that is the Little Bear
+Inn. They gives you cool china pots with blue round the edge. You can
+only have 'em if you asks for 'em, Jim Blake, the landlord, being
+pertickler-like. And if yer breaks em&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What would happen?" asked Paul, who was always very much impressed by
+Barney Bill's detailed knowledge of the roads and the inns of England.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill shook his head. "It would break 'is 'eart. Them pots was
+being used when William the Conqueror was a boy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ten-sixty-six to ten-eighty-seven," said Paul the scholar. "They mun
+be nine hundred years old."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not quite," said Barney Bill, with an air of scrupulous desire for
+veracity. "But nearly. Lor' lumme!" he exclaimed, after a pause, "it
+makes one think, doesn't it? One of them there quart mugs&mdash;suppose it
+has been filled, say, ten times a day, every day for nine hundred
+years&mdash;my Gosh! what a Pacific Ocean of beer must have been poured from
+it! It makes one come over all of religious-like when one puts it to
+one's head."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul did not reply, and reverential emotion kept Barney Bill silent
+until they reached the clump of trees and the Little Bear Inn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was set back from the road, in a kind of dusty courtyard masked off
+on one side by a gigantic elm and on the other by the fringe of an
+orchard with ruddy apples hanging patiently beneath the foliage. Close
+by the orchard stood the post bearing the signboard on which the Little
+Bear, an engaging beast, was pictured, and presiding in a ceremonious
+way over the horse-trough below. In the shade of the elm stretched a
+trestle table and two wooden benches. The old inn, gabled,
+half-timbered, its upper story overhanging the doorway, bent and
+crippled, though serene, with age, mellow in yellow and russet,
+spectacled, as befitted its years, with leaded diamond panes, crowned
+deep in secular thatch, smiled with the calm and homely peace of
+everlasting things. Its old dignity even covered the perky gilt
+inscription over the doorway, telling how James Blake was licensed to
+sell a variety of alcoholic beverages. One human figure alone was
+visible, as the chairs and mat-laden van slowly turned from the road
+toward the horse-trough&mdash;that of a young man in straw hat and grey
+flannels making a water-colour sketch of the inn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill slid off the footboard, and, looking neither to right nor
+left, bolted like a belated crab into the cool recesses of the bar in
+search of ambrosia from the blue-and-white china mug. Paul, also afoot,
+led Bob to the trough. Bob drank with the lusty moderation of beasts.
+When he had assuaged his thirst Paul backed him into the road and,
+slinging over his head a comforting nosebag, left him to his meal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man, sitting on an upturned wooden case, at the extreme edge
+of the elm tree's shade, a slender easel before him, a litter of
+paraphernalia on the ground by his side, painted assiduously. Paul idly
+crept behind him and watched in amazement the smears of wet colour,
+after a second or two of apparent irrelevance, take their place in the
+essential structure of the drawing. He stood absorbed. He knew that
+there were such things as pictures. He knew, too, that they were made
+by hands. But he had never seen one in the making. After a while the
+artist threw back his head, looked at the inn and looked at his sketch.
+There was a hot bit of thatch at the corner near the orchard, and,
+below the eaves, bold shadow. The shadow had not come right. He put in
+a touch of burnt umber and again considered the effect.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Confound it! that's all wrong," he muttered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's blue," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The artist started, twisted his head, and for the first time became
+conscious of the ragamuffin's presence. "Oh, you see it blue, do you?"
+He smiled ironically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul, with pointing finger. "Look at it. It's not brown,
+anyhow. Yon's black inside and blue outside."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man shaded his brow and gazed intently. Brilliant sunshine
+plays the deuce with tones. "My hat!" cried he, "you're right. It was
+this confounded yellow of the side of the house." He put in a few hasty
+strokes. "That better?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The artist laid down his brush, and swung round on his box, clasping
+knees. "How the devil did you manage to see that when I didn't?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dun-no!" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man stretched himself and lit a cigarette.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What are yo' doing that for, mister?" Paul asked seriously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul. "You mun have a reason."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a queer infant," laughed the artist. "Do you really want to
+know?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've asked yo'," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, if you're anxious to know, I'm an architect on a holiday, and
+I'm sketching any old thing I come across. I don't pretend to be a
+painter, my youthful virtuoso, and that's why I go wrong sometimes on
+colour. Do you know what an architect is?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Paul, eagerly. "What is it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had been baffled by the meaning of the word, which he had seen all
+his life, inscribed on a brass plate in the Bludston High Street: "E.
+Thomson, Architect & Surveyor." It had seemed to him odd, cryptically
+fascinating.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man laughed and explained; Paul listened seriously. Another
+mystery was solved. He had often wondered how the bricklayers knew
+where to lay the bricks. He grasped the idea that they were but
+instruments carrying out the conception of the architect's brain. "I'd
+like to be an architect," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Would you?" After a pause the young man continued: "Anyhow, you can
+earn a shilling. Just sit down there and let me make a sketch of you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What for?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because you're a picturesque person. Now, I suppose you'll be asking
+me what's the meaning of picturesque?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nay," said Paul. "I know. Yo' see it in books. 'Th' owd grey tower
+stood out picturesque against the crimson sky.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hullo! you're a literary gent," said the young man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," replied Paul proudly. He was greatly attracted towards this new
+acquaintance, whom, by his speech and dress and ease of manner, he
+judged to belong to the same caste as his lost but ever-remembered
+goddess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man picked up pencil and sketch-book and posed Paul at the
+end of the seat by the trestle table. "Now, then," said he, setting to
+work. "Head a little more that way. Capital. Don't move. If you're very
+quiet I'll give you a shilling." Presently he asked, "What are you? If
+you hadn't been a literary gent I'd have thought you might be a gipsy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul flushed and started. "I'm not a gipsy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Steady, steady," exclaimed the artist. "I've just said you couldn't be
+one. Italian? You don't look English."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time the idea of exotic parentage entered Paul's head. He
+dallied for a moment or two with the thought. "I dunno what I am," he
+said romantically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh? What's your father?" The young man motioned with his head toward
+the inn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yon's not my father," said Paul. "It's only Barney Bill."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only Barney Bill?" echoed the other, amused. "Well, who is your
+father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dunno," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And your mother?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dunno, either," said Paul, in a mysterious tone. "I dunno if my
+parents are living or dead. I think they're living."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's interesting. What are you doing with what's-his-name Bill?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm just travelling wi' him to London."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what are you going to do in London?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll see when I get there," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So you're out for adventure?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said the boy, a gleam of the Vision dancing before his eyes.
+"That's it. I'm going on an adventure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There, keep like that," cried the artist. "Don't stir. I do believe
+I'm getting you. Holy Moses, it will be great! If only I could catch
+the expression! There's nothing like adventure, is there? The glorious
+uncertainty of it! To wake up in the morning and know that the
+unexpected is bound to happen during the day. Exciting, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul, his face aglow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man worked tense and quick at the luminous eyes. He broke a
+long silence by asking, "What's your name?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Paul Kegworthy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Paul? That's odd." In the sphere of life to which the ragged urchin
+belonged Toms and Bills and Jims were as thick as blackberries, but
+Pauls were rare.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's odd?" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your name. How did you get it? It's uncommon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I suppose it is," said Paul. "I never thowt of it. I never knew
+anybody of that name afore."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Here was another sign and token of romantic origin suddenly revealed.
+Paul felt the thrill of it. He resisted a temptation to ask his new
+friend whether it was an appellation generally reserved for princes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look here, joking apart," said the artist, putting in the waves of the
+thick black hair, "are you really going to be dumped down in London to
+seek your fortune? Don't you know anybody there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How are you going to live?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul dived a hand into his breeches pocket and jingled coins. "I've got
+th' brass," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How much?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Three shillings and sevenpence-ha'penny," said Paul, with an opulent
+air. "And yo'r shilling will make it four and sevenpence-ha'penny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good God!" said-the young man. He went on drawing for some time in
+silence. Then he said: "My brother is a painter&mdash;rather a swell&mdash;a
+Royal Academician. He would love to paint you. So would other fellows.
+You could easily earn your living as a model&mdash;doing as a business, you
+know, what you're doing now for fun, more or less."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How much could I earn?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It all depends. Say a pound to thirty shillings a week."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul gasped and sat paralyzed. Artist, dusty road, gaudy van, distant
+cornfields and uplands were blotted from his senses. The cool waves of
+Pactolus lapped his feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come and look me up when you get to London," continued the friendly
+voice. "My name is Rowlatt-W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square. Can you
+remember it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Shall I write it down?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nay. 'W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square.' I'm noan likely to forget
+it. I never forget nowt," said Paul, life returning through a vein of
+boastfulness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell me all you remember," said Mr. Rowlatt, with a laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can say all the Kings of England, with their dates, and the counties
+and chief towns of Great Britain and Ireland, and all the weights and
+measures, and 'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold&mdash;'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Holy Moses!" cried Rowlatt. "Anything else?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay. Lots more," said Paul, anxious to stamp vividly the impression he
+saw that he was making. "I know the Plagues of Egypt."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I bet you don't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Rivers of Blood, Frogs, Lice, Flies, Murrain, Boils, Hails, Locusts,
+Darkness and Death of Firstborn," said Paul, in a breath.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jehosaphat!" cried Rowlatt. "I suppose now you'd have no difficulty in
+reciting the Thirty-nine Articles."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul puckered his forehead in thought. "D'yo' mean," he asked after a
+pause, "the Thirty-nine Articles o' Religion, as is in th' Prayerbuk? I
+ha' tried to read 'em, but couldno' understand 'em reet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt, who had not expected his facetious query to be so answered,
+stopped his drawing for a moment. "What in the name of goodness
+attracted you to the Thirty-nine Articles?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wanted to learn about things," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man looked at him and smiled. "Self-education is a jolly good
+thing," said he. "Learn all you can, and you'll be a famous fellow one
+of these days. But you must cultivate a sense of humour."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul was about to seek enlightenment as to this counsel when Barney
+Bill appeared, cool and refreshed, from the inn door, and lifted a
+cheery voice. "Let's be getting along, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt held up a detaining hand. "Just a couple of minutes, if you can
+spare them. I've nearly finished."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right, sir," said Barney Bill, limping across the yard. "Taking a
+picture of him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The artist nodded. Barney Bill looked over his shoulder. "By Gosh!" he
+cried in admiration. "By Gosh!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It has come out rather well, hasn't it?" said the artist, complacently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's the living image of 'im," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He tells me he's going up to London to seek his fortune," said
+Rowlatt, putting in the finishing touches.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And his 'igh-born parents," said Barney Bill, winking at Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul flushed and wriggled uncomfortably. Instinct deprecated crude
+revelation of the mystery of his birth to the man of refinement. He
+felt that Barney Bill was betraying confidence. Gutter-bred though he
+was, he accused his vagrant protector of a lack of good taste. Of such
+a breach he himself, son of princes, could not have been guilty.
+Luckily, and, as Paul thought, with admirable tact, Mr. Rowlatt did not
+demand explanation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A young Japhet in search of a father. Well, I hope he'll find him.
+There's nothing like romance. Without it life is flat and dead. It's
+what atmosphere is to a picture."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And onions to a stew," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quite right," said Rowlatt. "Paul, my boy, I think after all you'd
+better stick to Mr.&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Barney Bill, sir, at your service. And, if you want a comfortable
+chair, or an elegant mat, or a hearth brush at a ridiculous cheap
+price"&mdash;he waved toward the van. Rowlatt turned his head and, laughing,
+looked into the twinkling black eyes. "I don't for a moment expect you
+to buy, sir, but I was only a-satisfying of my artistic conscience."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt shut his sketch-book with a snap, and rose. "Let us have a
+drink," said he. "Artists should be better acquainted."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He whispered a message to Paul, who sped to the inn and presently
+returned with a couple of the famous blue and white mugs frothing
+deliciously at the brims. The men, their lips to the bubbles, nodded to
+each other. The still beat of the August noon enveloped their bodies,
+but a streak of heavenly coolness trickled through their souls. Paul,
+looking at them enviously, longed to be grown up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then followed a pleasant half-hour of desultory talk. Although the men
+did not make him, save for here and there a casual reference, the
+subject of their conversation, Paul, with the Vision shimmering before
+his eyes, was sensitive enough to perceive in a dim and elusive way
+that he was at the back of each man's thoughts and that, for his sake,
+each was trying to obtain the measure of the other. At last Barney
+Bill, cocking at the sun the skilled eye of the dweller in the
+wilderness, called the time for departure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Could I see th' picture?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt passed him the sketch-book. The sudden sight of oneself as one
+appears in another's eyes is always a shock, even to the most
+sophisticated sitter. To Paul it was uncanny. He had often seen his own
+reflection and was familiar with his own appearance, but this was the
+first time that he had looked at himself impersonally. The sketch was
+vivid, the likeness excellent; the motive, the picturesque and romantic.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A proud lift of the chin, an eager glance in the eye, a sensitive curve
+of the lip attracted his boyish egotism. The portrait was an ideal,
+something to live up to. Involuntarily he composed his features.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill again called time. Paul surrendered the sketch-book
+reluctantly. Rowlatt, with a cheery word, handed him the shilling fee.
+Paul, than whom none better knew the magic quality of money, hesitated
+for a second. The boy in the sketch would have refused. Paul drew
+himself up. "Nay, I'll take noan. I liked doing it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt laughed and pocketed the coin. "All right," said he, with a
+playful bow. "I'm exceedingly indebted to your courtesy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill gave Paul an approving glance. "Good for you, boy. Never
+take money you've not earned. Good day to you, sir"&mdash;he touched his
+cap. "And"&mdash;with a motion toward the empty mugs&mdash;"thank you kindly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt strolled with them to the van, Barney Bill limping a pace or
+two ahead. "Remember what I told you, my young friend," said he in a
+low voice. "I don't go back upon my word. I'll help you. But if you're
+a wise boy and know what's good for you, you'll stick to Mr. Barney
+Bill and the freedom of the high-road and the light heart of the
+vagabond. You'll have a devilish sight more happiness in the end."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Paul, who already looked upon his gipsy self as dead as his
+Bludston self, and these dead selves as stepping-stones to higher
+things, turned a deaf ear to his new friend's paradoxical philosophy.
+"I'll remember," said he. "Mr. W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young architect watched the van with its swinging, creaking
+excrescences lumber away down the hot and dusty road, and turned with a
+puzzled expression to his easel. Joy in the Little Bear Inn had for the
+moment departed. Presently he found himself scribbling a letter in
+pencil to his brother, the Royal Academician.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So you see, my dear fellow," he wrote toward the end of the epistle,
+"I am in a quandary. That the little beggar is of startling beauty is
+undeniable. That he has got his bill agape, like a young bird, for
+whatever food of beauty and emotion and knowledge comes his way is
+obvious to any fool. But whether, in what I propose, I'm giving a
+helping hand to a kind of wild genius, or whether I'm starting a vain
+boy along the primrose path in the direction of everlasting bonfire,
+I'm damned if I know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Paul jogged along by the side of Barney Bill in no such state of
+dubiety. God was in His Heaven, arranging everything for his especial
+benefit. All was well with the world where dazzling destinies like his
+were bound to be fulfilled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've heard of such things," said Barney Bill with a reflective twist
+of his head, when Paul had told him of Mr. Rowlatt's suggestion. "A
+cousin of mine married a man who knew a gal who used to stand in her
+birthday suit in front of a lot of young painter chaps-and I'm bound to
+say he used to declare she was as good a gal as his own wife,
+especially seeing as how she supported an old father what had got a
+stroke, and a houseful of young brothers and sisters. So I'm not saying
+there's any harm in it. And I wouldn't stand in your way, sonny, seeing
+as how you want to get to your 'igh-born parents. You might find 'em on
+the road, and then again you mightn't. And thirty bob a week at
+fourteen-no-it would be flying in the face of Providence to say 'don't
+do it! But what licks me is: what the blazes do they want with a little
+varmint like you? Why shouldn't they pay thirty bob a week to paint me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul did not reply, being instinctively averse from wounding
+susceptibilities. But in his heart rose a high pity for the common
+though kindly clay that was Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap05"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER V
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+WHEN they reached London in November, after circuitous wanderings,
+Barney Bill said to Paul: "You've seed enough of me, matey, to know
+that I wish yer good and not harm. I've fed yer and I've housed yer-I
+can't say as how I've done much toward clothing yer-and three months on
+the road has knocked corners off the swell toggery yer came to me in;
+but I ain't beat yer or cussed yer more than yer deserved"&mdash;whereat
+Paul grinned-"and I've spent a lot of valuable time, when I might have
+been profitably doing nothing, a-larning yer of things and, so to
+speak, completing yer eddication. Is that the truth, or am I a bloomin'
+liar?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, thus challenged, confirmed the absolute veracity of Barney Bill's
+statement. The latter continued, bending forward, his lean brown hand
+on the boy's shoulder, and looking at him earnestly: "I took yer away
+from your 'appy 'ome because, though the 'ome might have been 'appy in
+its own sweet way, you wasn't. I wanted to set yer on the track of yer
+'ighborn parents. I wanted to make a man of yer. I want to do the best
+for yer now, so I put it to yer straight: If yer likes to come along of
+me altogether, I'll pay yer wages on the next round, and when yer gets
+a little older I'll take yer into partnership and leave yer the
+business when I die. It's a man's life and a free life, and I think yer
+likes it, don't yer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul, "it's foine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"On the other hand, as I said afore, I won't stand in yer way, and if
+yer thinks you'll get nearer to your 'igh-born parents by hitching up
+with Mr. Architect, well&mdash;you're old enough to choose. I leave it to
+you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Paul had already chosen. The Road had its magical fascination, to
+which he would have surrendered all his boyish soul, had not the call
+of his destiny been more insistent. The Road led nowhither. Princes and
+princesses were as rare as hips and haws in summer-time. Their
+glittering equipages did not stop the van, nor did they stand at the
+emblazoned gateways of great parks waiting patiently for long-lost
+sons. He knew that he must seek them in their own social world, and to
+this he would surely be raised by his phantasmagorial income of thirty
+shillings a week.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You won't object to my keeping a friendly eye on yer for the next year
+or two?" asked Barney Bill, with twisted mouth and a kindly, satirical
+glance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul flushed. He had the consciousness of being a selfish,
+self-centered little beast, not half enough grateful to Barney Bill for
+delivering him out of the House of Bondage and leading him into the
+Land of Milk and Honey. He was as much stung by the delicately implied
+rebuke as touched by the solicitude as to his future welfare. Romantic
+words, such as he had read in the story-books, surged vaguely in his
+head, but he could find none to utter. He kept silent for a few
+moments, his hand in his breeches pocket. Presently he drew it forth
+rather slowly, and held out the precious cornelian heart to his
+benefactor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I 'ud like to give it thee," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill took it. "Thank 'ee, sonny. I'll remember that you gave it
+to me. But I won't keep yer talisman. 'Ere, see&mdash;" he made a pretence
+to spit on it&mdash;"that's for luck. Barney Bill's luck, and good wishes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Paul pocketed the heart again, immensely relieved by his friend's
+magnanimity, and the little sentimental episode was over.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A month later, when Barney Bill started on his solitary winter
+pilgrimage in the South of England, he left behind him a transmogrified
+Paul, a Paul, thanks to his munificence, arrayed in decent garments,
+including collar and tie (insignia of caste) and an overcoat (symbol of
+luxury), for which Paul was to repay him out of his future earnings; a
+Paul lodged in a small but comfortable third-floor-back, a bedroom all
+to himself, with a real bed, mattress, pillow, sheets, and blankets all
+complete, and a looking-glass, and a stand with ewer and basin so
+beautiful that, at first, Paul did not dare wash for fear of making the
+water dirty; a Paul already engaged for a series of sittings by Mr.
+Cyrus Rowlatt, R.A., his head swimming with the wonder of the
+fashionable painter's studio; a Paul standing in radiant confidence
+upon the brink of life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sonny," said Barney Bill, when he said good-bye, "d'yer see them there
+lovely lace-up boots you've got on?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay," said Paul, regarding them complacently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, they've got to take yer all the way up the hill, like the young
+man what's his name?&mdash;Excelsure&mdash;in the piece of poetry you recite; but
+they'll only do it if they continues to fit. Don't get too big for 'em.
+At any rate, wait till they're worn out and yer can buy another pair
+with yer own money."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul grinned, because he did not know what else to do, so as to show
+his intellectual appreciation of the parable; but in his heart, for all
+his gratitude, he thought Barney bill rather a prosy moralizer. It was
+one of the disabilities of advanced old age. Alas! what can bridge the
+gulf between fourteen and fifty?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anyhow, you've got a friend at the back of yer, sonny, and don't make
+no mistake about it. If you're in trouble let me know. I can't say
+fairer than that, can I?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That, for a season, was the end of Barney Bill, and Paul found himself
+thrillingly alone in London. At first its labyrinthine vastness
+overwhelmed him, causing him to feel an unimportant atom, which may
+have been good for his soul, but was not agreeable to his vanity. By
+degrees, however, he learned the lay of the great thoroughfares,
+especially those leading to the quarters where artists congregate, and,
+conscious of purpose and of money jingling in his pocket, he began to
+hold his head high in the crowded streets. In the house in Barn Street,
+off the Euston Road, where he lodged, he was called "Mr. Paul" by his
+landlady, Mrs. Seddon, and her thirteen-year-old daughter, Jane, which
+was comforting and stimulating. Jane, a lanky, fair, blue-eyed girl,
+who gave promise of good looks, attended to his modest wants with a
+zeal somewhat out of proportion to the payment received. Paul had the
+novel sensation of finding some one at his beck and call. He beckoned
+and called often, for the sheer pleasure of it. So great was the change
+in his life that, in these early days, it seemed as if he had already
+come into his kingdom. He strutted about, poor child, like the prince
+in a fairy tale, and, in spite of Barney Bill's precepts, he outgrew
+his boots immediately. Mrs. Seddon, an old friend of Barney Bill, whom
+she addressed and spoke as Mr. William, kept a small shop in which she
+sold newspapers and twine and penny bottles of ink. In the little
+back-parlour Mrs. Seddon and Tane and Paul had their meals, while the
+shop boy, an inconsiderable creature with a perpetual cold in his head,
+attended to the unexpected customer. To Paul, this boy, with whom a few
+months ago he would have joyously changed places, was as the dust
+beneath his feet. He sent him on errands in a lordly way, treating him
+as, indeed, he had treated the youth of Budge Street after his triumph
+over Billy Goodge, and the boy obeyed meekly. Paul believed in himself;
+the boy didn't. Almost from the beginning he usurped an ascendancy over
+the little household. For all their having lived in the great maelstrom
+of London, he found his superficial experience of life larger than that
+of mother and daughter. They had never seen machinery at work, did not
+know the difference between an elm and a beech and had never read Sir
+Walter Scott. Mrs. Seddon, thin, careworn and slackly good-natured,
+ever lamented the loss of an astonishingly brilliant husband; Jane was
+markedly the more competent of the two. She had character, and, even
+while slaving for the romantic youth, made it clear to him that for no
+other man alive would she so demean herself. Paul resolved to undertake
+her education.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The months slipped by golden with fulfilment. News of the beautiful boy
+model went the round of the studios. Those were simpler times (although
+not so very long ago) in British art than the present, and the pretty
+picture was still in vogue. As Mr. Rowlatt, the young architect, had
+foretold, Paul had no difficulty in obtaining work. Indeed, it was
+fatally easy. Mr. Cyrus Rowlatt, R.A., had launched him. Being
+fabulously paid, he thought his new profession the most aristocratic
+calling in the world. In a remarkably short time he was able to repay
+Barney Bill. The day when he purchased the postal order was the
+proudest in his life. The transaction gave him a princely feeling. He
+alone of boys, by special virtue of his origin, was capable of such a
+thing. Again, his welcome in the painting world confirmed him in the
+belief that he was a personage, born to great things. Posed on the
+model throne, the object of the painter's intense scrutiny, he swelled
+ingenuously with the conviction of his supreme importance. The lazy
+luxury of the model's life appealed to his sensuous temperament. He
+loved the warmth, the artistic setting of the studios; the pictures,
+the oriental rugs, the bits of armour, the old brocade, the rich
+cushions. If he had not been born to it, why had he not remained, like
+all 'the youth of Bludston, amid the filth and clatter of the factory?
+He loved, too, to hear the studio talk, though at first he comprehended
+little of it. The men and women for whom he sat possessed the same
+quality as his never-forgotten goddess and Lady Chudley and the young
+architect&mdash;a quality which he recognized keenly, but for which his
+limited vocabulary could find no definition. Afterward he realized that
+it was refinement in manner and speech and person. This quality he felt
+it essential to acquire. Accordingly he played the young ape to those
+who aroused his admiration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One day when Jane entered the back-parlour he sprang from his seat and
+advanced with outstretched hand to meet her: "My dear Lady Jane, how
+good of you to come! Do let me clear a chair for you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What are you playing at?" asked Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's the way to receive a lady when she calls on you.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He practised on her each newly learned social accomplishment. He minced
+his broad Lancashire, when he spoke to her, in such a way as to be
+grotesquely unintelligible. By listening to conversations he learned
+many amazing social facts; among them that the gentry had a bath every
+morning of their lives. This stirred his imagination to such a pitch
+that he commanded Jane to bring up the matutinal washtub to his
+bedroom. By instinct refined he revelled in the resultant sensation of
+cleanliness. He paid great attention to his attire, modelling himself,
+as far as he could, on young Rowlatt, the architect, on whom he
+occasionally called to report progress. He bought such neckties and
+collars as Rowlatt wore and submitted them for Jane's approval. She
+thought them vastly genteel. He also entertained her with whatever
+jargon of art talk he managed to pick up. Thus, though the urchin gave
+himself airs and invested himself with affectations, which rendered him
+intolerable to all of his own social status, except the placid Mrs.
+Seddon and the adoring Jane, he was under the continuous influence of a
+high ambition. It made him ridiculous, but it preserved him from
+vicious and vulgar things. If you are conscious of being a prince in
+disguise qualifying for butterfly entrance into your kingdom, it
+behoves you to behave in a princely manner, not to consort with lewd
+fellows and not to neglect opportunities for education. You owe to
+yourself all the good that you can extract from the world. Acting from
+this point of view, and guided by the practical advice of young
+Rowlatt, he attended evening classes, where he gulped down knowledge
+hungrily. So, what with sitting and studying and backward and forward
+journeying, and educating Jane, and practising the accomplishments of a
+prince, and sleeping the long sound sleep of a tired youngster, Paul
+had no time to think of evil. He was far too much absorbed in himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile, of Bludston not a sign. For all that he had heard of search
+being made for him, he might have been a runaway kitten. Sometimes he
+wondered what steps the Buttons had taken in order to find him. If they
+had communicated with the police, surely, at some stage of their
+journey, Barney Bill would have been held up and questioned. But had
+they even troubled to call in the police? Barney Bill thought not, and
+Paul agreed. The police were very unpopular in Budge Street&mdash;almost as
+unpopular as Paul. In all probability the Buttons were only too glad to
+be rid of him. If he found no favour in the eyes of Mrs. Button, in the
+eyes of Button he was detestable. Occasionally he spoke of them to
+Barney Bill on his rare appearances in London, but for prudential
+motives the latter had struck Bludston out of his itinerary and could
+give no information. At last Paul ceased altogether to think of them.
+They belonged to a far-distant past already becoming blurred in his
+memory.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Paul lived his queer sedulous life, month after month, year after
+year, known among the studios as a quaint oddity, drawn out indulgently
+by the men, somewhat petted, monkey-fashion, by the women, forgotten by
+both when out of their presence, but developing imperceptibly day by
+day along the self-centring line. A kindly adviser suggested a
+gymnasium to keep him in condition for professional purposes. He took
+the advice, and in the course of time became a splendid young animal, a
+being so physically perfect as to be what the good vicar of Bludston
+had called him in tired jest&mdash;a lusus naturae. But though proud of his
+body as any finely formed human may honorably be, a far higher
+arrogance saved him from Narcissus vanity. It was the inner and
+essential Paul and not the outer investiture that was born to great
+things.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his eighteenth year he gradually awoke to consciousness of change.
+One of his classmates at the Polytechnic institute, with whom he had
+picked a slight acquaintance, said one evening as they were walking
+homeward together: "I shan't be coming here after next week. I've got a
+good clerkship in the city. What are you doing?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm an artist's model," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The other, a pale and perky youth, sniffed. His name was Higgins. "Good
+Lord! What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a model in the life class of the Royal Academy School," said Paul,
+proudly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You stand up naked in front of all kinds of people for them to paint
+you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How beastly!" said Higgins.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Just that," said Higgins. "It's beastly!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A minute or two afterward he jumped on a passing omnibus, and
+thenceforward avoided Paul at the Polytechnic Institute.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This uncompromising pronouncement on the part of Higgins was a shock;
+but together with other incidents, chiefly psychological, vague,
+intangible phenomena of his spiritual development, it showed Paul the
+possibility of another point of view. He took stock of himself. From
+the picturesque boy he had grown into the physically perfect man. As a
+model he was no longer sought after for subject pieces. He was in
+clamorous demand at Life Schools, where he drew a higher rate of pay,
+but where he was as impersonal to the intently working students as the
+cast of the Greek torso which other students were copying in the next
+room. The intimacy of the studio, the warmth and the colour and the
+meretricious luxury were gone from his life. On the other hand he was
+making money. He had fifty pounds in the Savings Bank, the maximum of
+petty thrift which an incomprehensive British Government encourages,
+and a fair, though unknown, sum in an iron money-box hidden behind his
+washstand. Up to now he had had no time to learn how to spend money.
+When he took to smoking cigarettes, which he had done quite recently,
+he regarded himself as a man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Higgins's "How beastly!" rang in his head. Although he could not quite
+understand the full meaning of the brutal judgment, it brought him
+disquiet and discontent. For one thing, like the high-road, his
+profession led nowhither. The thrill of adventure had gone from it. It
+was static, and Paul's temperament was dynamic. He had also lost his
+boyish sense of importance, of being the central figure in the little
+stage. Disillusion began to creep over him. Would he do nothing else
+but this all his life? Old Erricone, the patriarchal, white-bearded
+Italian, the doyen of the models of London, came before his mind, a
+senile posturer, mumbling dreary tales of his inglorious achievements:
+how he was the Roman Emperor in this picture and Father Abraham in the
+other; how painters could not get on without him; how once he had been
+summoned from Rome to London; how Rossetti had shaken hands with him.
+Paul shivered at the thought of himself as the Erricone of a future
+generation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day was Saturday, and he had no sitting. The morning he spent
+in his small bedroom in the soothing throes of literary composition.
+Some time ago he had thought it would be a mighty fine thing to be a
+poet, and had tried his hand at verse. Finding he possessed some
+facility, he decided that he was a poet, and at once started an epic
+poem in rhyme on the Life of Nelson, the material being supplied by
+Southey. This morning he did the Battle of the Baltic.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ He put the glass to his blind eye,<BR>
+ And said "No signals do I spy,"<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+wrote Paul. Poetry taken at the gallop like this was a very simple
+affair, and Paul covered an amazing amount of ground.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the afternoon he walked abroad with Jane, who, having lengthened her
+skirts and put up her hair, was now a young woman looking older than
+her years. She too had developed. Her lank figure had rounded into
+pretty curves. Her sharp little Cockney face had filled out. She had a
+pleasant smile and a capable brow, and, correcting a tendency to
+fluffiness of hair of which she disapproved, and dressing herself
+neatly, made herself by no means unattractive. Constant association
+with Paul had fired her ambitions. Like him, she might have a destiny,
+though not such a majestic one, Accordingly she had studied stenography
+and typewriting, with a view to earning her livelihood away from the
+little shop, which did not offer the prospect of a dazzling career. At
+the back of her girlish mind was the desire to keep pace with Paul in
+his upward flight, so that he should not be ashamed of her when he sat
+upon the clouds in glory. In awful secrecy she practised the social
+accomplishments which Paul brought home. She loved her Saturday and
+Sunday excursions with Paul&mdash;of late they had gone far afield: the
+Tower, Greenwich, Richmond&mdash;exploring London and making splendid
+discoveries such as Westminster Abbey and a fourpenny tea garden at
+Putney. She scarcely knew whether she cared for these things for
+themselves; but she saw them through Paul coloured by his vivid
+personality. Once on Chelsea Bridge he had pointed out a peculiarly
+ugly stretch of low-tide mud, and said: "Look at that." She, by
+unprecedented chance, mistaking his tone, had replied: "How lovely!"
+And she had thought it lovely, until his stare of rebuke and wonderment
+brought disillusion and spurting tears, which for the life of him he
+could not understand. It is very foolish, and often suicidal, of men to
+correct women for going into rapture over mud flats. On that occasion,
+however, the only resultant harm was the conviction in the girl's heart
+that the presence of Paul turned mud flats into beds of asphodel. Then,
+just as she saw outer things through his eyes, she felt herself
+regarded by outer eyes through him. His rare and absurd beauty made him
+a cynosure whithersoever he went. London, vast and seething, could
+produce no such perfect Apollo. When she caught the admiring glances of
+others of her sex, little Jane drew herself up proudly and threw back
+insolent glances of triumph. "You would like to be where I am, wouldn't
+you?" the glance would say, with the words almost formulated in her
+mind. "But you won't. You never will be. I've got him. He's walking out
+with me and not with you. I like to see you squirm, you envious little
+cat." Jane was not a princess, she was merely a child of the people;
+but I am willing to eat my boots if it can be satisfactorily proved
+that there is a princess living on the face of the earth who would not
+be delighted at seeing another woman cast covetous eyes on the man she
+loved, and would not call her a cat (or its homonym) for doing so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On this mild March afternoon Paul and Jane walked in the Euston Road,
+he in a loose blue serge suit, floppy black tie, low collar and black
+soft felt hat (this was in the last century, please remember&mdash;epoch
+almost romantic, so fast does time fly), she in neat black braided
+jacket and sailor hat. They looked pathetically young.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where shall we go?" asked Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, in no mood for high adventure, suggested Regent's Park. "At least
+we can breathe there," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane sniffed up the fresh spring air, unconscious of the London taint,
+and laughed. "Why, what's the matter with the Euston Road?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's vulgar," said Paul. "In the Park the hyacinths and the daffodils
+will be out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What he meant he scarcely knew. When one is very young and out of tune
+with life, one is apt to speak discordantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They mounted a westward omnibus. Paul lit a cigarette and smoked almost
+in silence until they alighted by the Park gates. As they entered, he
+turned to her suddenly. "Look here, Jane, I want to ask you something.
+The other night I told a man I was an artist's model, and he said 'How
+beastly!' and turned away as if I wasn't fit for him to associate with.
+What was he driving at?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He was a nasty cad," said Jane promptly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course he was," said Paul. "But why did he say it? Do you think
+there's anything beastly in being a model?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly not." She added in modification: "That is if you like it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, supposing I don't like it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not reply for a minute or two. Then: "If you really don't like
+it, I should be rather glad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She raised a piteous face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, tell me," he insisted. "Tell me why you agree with that cad
+Higgins?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't agree with him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They fenced for a while. At last he pinned her down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, if you want to know," she declared, with a flushed cheek, "I
+don't think it's a man's job."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He bit his lip. He had asked for the truth and he had got it. His own
+dark suspicions were confirmed. Jane glanced at him fearful of offence.
+When they had walked some yards he spoke. "What would you call a man's
+job?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane hesitated for an answer. Her life had been passed in a sphere
+where men carpentered or drove horses or sold things in shops. Deeply
+impressed by the knowledge of Paul's romantic birth and high destiny
+she could not suggest any such lowly avocations, and she did not know
+what men's jobs were usually executed by scions of the nobility. A
+clerk's work was certainly genteel; but even that would be lowering to
+the hero. She glanced at him again, swiftly. No, he was too beautiful
+to be penned up in an office from nine to six-thirty every day of his
+life. On the other hand her feminine intuition appreciated keenly the
+withering criticism of Higgins. Ever since Paul had first told her of
+his engagements at the Life Schools she had shrunk from the idea. It
+was all very well for the boy; but for the man&mdash;and being younger than
+he, she regarded him now as a man&mdash;there was something in it that
+offended her nice sense of human dignity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," he said. "Tell me, what do you call a man's job?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, I don't know," she said in distress; "something you do with your
+hands or your brain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You think being a model is undignified."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So do I," said Paul. "But I'm doing things with my brain, too, you
+know," he added quickly, anxious to be seen again on his pedestal. "I
+am getting on with my epic poem. I've done a lot since you last heard
+it. I'll read you the rest when we get home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That will be lovely," said Jane, to whom the faculty of rhyming was a
+never-ceasing wonder. She would sit bemused by the jingling lines and
+wrapt in awe at the minstrel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They sat on a bench by the flower-beds, gay in their spring charm of
+belated crocus and hyacinth and daffodil, with here and there a
+precocious tulip. Paul, sensitive to beauty, discoursed on flowers. Max
+Field had a studio in St. John's Wood opening out into a garden, which
+last summer was a dream of delight. He described it. When he came into
+his kingdom he intended to have such a garden.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll let me have a peep at it sometimes, won't you?" said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lack of enthusiasm in his tone chilled the girl's heart. But she
+did not protest. In these days, in spite of occasional outspokenness
+she was still a humble little girl worshipping her brilliant companion
+from afar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How often could I come?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That," said he, in his boyish pashadom, "would depend on how good you
+were."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Obedient to the thought processes of her sex, she made a bee line to
+the particular.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, Paul, I hope you're not angry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At what?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At what I said about your being a model."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not a bit," said he. "If I hadn't wanted to know your opinion, I
+wouldn't have asked you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She brightened. "You really wanted to know what I thought?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Naturally," said Paul. "You're the most commonsense girl I've ever
+met."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul walked soberly home. Jane accompanied him&mdash;on wings.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On Monday Paul went to the Life School and stripped with a heavy heart.
+Jane was right. It was not a man's job. The fact, too, of his doing it
+lowered him in her esteem, and though he had no romantic thoughts
+whatever with regard to Jane, he enjoyed being Lord Paramount in her
+eyes. He went into the studio and took up his pose; and as he stood on
+the model throne, conspicuous, glaring, the one startling central
+object, Higgins's "How beastly!" came like a material echo and smote
+him in the face. He felt like Adam when he first proceeded to his
+primitive tailoring. A wave of shame ran through him. He looked around
+the great silent room, at the rows of students, each in front of an
+easel, using his naked body for their purposes. A phrase flashed across
+his mind&mdash;in three years his reading had brought vocabulary&mdash;they were
+using his physical body for their spiritual purposes. For the moment he
+hated them all fiercely. They were a band of vampires. Habit and
+discipline alone saved him from breaking his pose and fleeing headlong.
+But there he was fixed, like marble, in an athlete's attitude, showing
+rippling muscles of neck and chest and arms and thighs all developed by
+the gymnasium into the perfection of Greek beauty, and all useless,
+more useless even, as far as the world's work was concerned, than the
+muscles of a racehorse. There he was fixed, with outstretched limbs and
+strained loins, a human being far more alive than the peering,
+measuring throng, far more important, called by a destiny infinitely
+higher than theirs. And none of them suspected it. For the first time
+he saw himself as they saw him. They admired him as a thing, an animal
+trained especially for them, a prize bullock. As a human being they
+disregarded him. Nay, in the depth of their hearts they despised him.
+Not one of them would have stood where he did. He would have considered
+it&mdash;rightly&mdash;as degrading to his manhood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The head of the school snapped his fingers impatiently and fussed up to
+the model-stand. "What's the matter? Tired already? Take it easy for a
+minute, if you like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Paul, instinctively stiffening himself. "I'm never tired."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was his boast that he could stand longer in a given pose than any
+other model, and thereby he had earned reputation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then don't go to pieces, my boy," said the head of the school, not
+unkindly. "You're supposed to be a Greek athlete and not Venus rising
+from the sea or a jelly at a children's party."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul flushed all over, and insane anger shook him. How dared the man
+speak to him like that? He kept the pose, thinking wild thoughts. Every
+moment the strain grew less bearable, the consciousness of his
+degradation more intense. He longed for something to happen, something
+dramatic, something that would show the vampires what manner of man he
+was. He was histrionic in his anguish.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A fly settled on his back&mdash;a damp, sluggish fly that had survived the
+winter&mdash;and it crawled horribly up his spine. He bore it for a few
+moments, and then his over-excited nerves gave way and he dashed his
+hand behind him. Somebody laughed. He raised his clenched fists and
+glared at the class.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay, yo' can laugh&mdash;you can laugh till yo' bust!" he cried, falling
+back into his Lancashire accent. "But yo'll never see me, here agen.
+Never, never, never, so help me God!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rushed away. The head of the school followed him and, while he was
+dressing, reasoned with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nay," said Paul. "Never agen. Aw'm doan wi' th' whole business."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And as Paul walked home through the hurrying streets, he thought
+regretfully of twenty speeches which would have more adequately
+signified his indignant retirement from the profession.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap06"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+PAUL'S model-self being dead, he regarded it with complacency and set
+his foot on it, little doubting that it was another stepping-stone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He spoke loftily of his independence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But how are you going to earn your living?" asked Jane, the practical.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shall follow one of the arts," Paul replied. "I think I am a poet,
+but I might be a painter or a musician."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You do sing and play lovely," said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had recently purchased from a pawnshop a second-hand mandoline,
+which he had mastered by the aid of a sixpenny handbook, and he would
+play on it accompaniments to sentimental ballads which he sang in a
+high baritone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll not choose yet awhile," said Paul, disregarding the tribute.
+"Something will happen. The 'moving finger' will point&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What moving finger?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The finger of Destiny," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And, as the superb youth predicted, something did happen a day or two
+afterwards.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They were walking in Regent Street, and stopped, as was their wont,
+before a photographer's window where portraits of celebrities were
+exposed to view. Paul loved this window, had loved it from the moment
+of discovery, a couple of years before. It was a Temple of Fame. The
+fact of your portrait being exhibited, with your style and title
+printed below, marked you as one of the great ones of the earth. Often
+he had said to Jane: "When I am there you'll be proud, won't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And she had looked up to him adoringly and wondered why he was not
+there already.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was Paul's habit to scrutinize the faces of those who had achieved
+greatness, Archbishops, Field-Marshals, Cabinet Ministers, and to
+speculate on the quality of mind that had raised them to their high
+estate; and often he would shift his position, so as to obtain a
+glimpse of his own features in the plate-glass window, and compare them
+with those of the famous. Thus he would determine that he had the brow
+of the divine, the nose of the statesman and the firm lips of the
+soldier. It was a stimulating pastime. He was born to great things; but
+to what great things he knew not. The sphere in which his glory should
+be fulfilled was as yet hidden in the mists of time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But this morning, instead of roving over the illustrious gallery, his
+eye caught and was fascinated by a single portrait. He stood staring at
+it for a long time, lost in the thrill of thought.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last Jane touched his arm. "What are you looking at?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He pointed. "Do you see that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. It's&mdash;" She named an eminent actor, then in the heyday of his
+fame, of whom legend hath it that his photographs were bought in
+thousands by love-lorn maidens who slept with them beneath their
+pillows.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul drew her away from the little knot of idlers clustered round the
+window. "There's nothing that man can do that I can't do," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're twenty times better looking," said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have more intelligence," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to be an actor," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" cried Jane in sudden rapture. Then her sturdy common-sense
+asserted itself. "But can you act?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sure I could, if I tried. You've only got to have the genius to
+start with and the rest is easy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As she did not dare question his genius, she remained silent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to be an actor," said he, "and when I'm not acting I shall
+be a poet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of her adoration Jane could not forbear a shaft of raillery.
+"You'll leave yourself some time to be a musician, won't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed. His alert and retentive mind had seized, long ago, on
+Rowlatt's recommendation at the Little Bear Inn, and he had developed,
+perhaps half consciously, a half sense of humour. A whole sense,
+however, is not congruous with the fervid beliefs and soaring ambitions
+of eighteen. Your sense of humour, that delicate percipience of
+proportion, that subrident check on impulse, that touch of the divine
+fellowship with human frailty, is a thing of mellower growth. It is a
+solvent and not an excitant. It does not stimulate to sublime effort;
+but it can cool raging passion. It can take the salt from tears, the
+bitterness from judgment, the keenness from despair; but in its
+universal manifestation it would effectually stop a naval engagement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed. "You mustn't think I brag too much, Jane," said he. "For
+anybody else I know what I say would be ridiculous. But for me it's
+different. I'm going to be a great man. I know it. If I'm not going to
+be a great actor, I shall be a great something else. God doesn't put
+such things into people's heads for nothing. He didn't take me from the
+factory in Bludston and set me here with you, walking up Regent Street,
+like a gentleman, just to throw me back into the gutter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But who said you were going back to the gutter?" asked Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nobody. I wanted to get right with myself. But&mdash;that getting right
+with oneself&mdash;do you think it egotistic?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't quite know what that is."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He defined the term.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," she said seriously. "I don't think it is. Everybody has got a
+self to consider. I don't look on it as ego-what-d'-you-call-it to
+strike out for myself instead of going on helping mother to mind the
+shop. So why should you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Besides, I owe a duty to my parents, don't I?" he asked eagerly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But here Jane took her own line. "I can't see that you do, considering
+that they've done nothing for you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They've done everything for me," he protested vehemently. "They've
+made me what I am."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They didn't take much trouble about it," said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They squabbled for a while after the manner of boy and girl. At last
+she cried: "Don't you see I'm proud of you for yourself and not for
+your silly old parents? What have they got to do with me? And besides,
+you'll never find them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't think you know what you're talking about," he said loftily.
+"It is time we were getting home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He walked on for some time stiffly, his head in the air, not
+condescending to speak. She had uttered blasphemy. He would find his
+parents, he vowed to himself, if only to spite Jane. Presently his ear
+caught a little sniff, and looking down, saw her dabbing her eyes with
+her handkerchief. His heart softened at once. "Never mind," said he.
+"You didn't mean it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's only because I love you, Paul," she murmured wretchedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's all right," he said. "Let us go in here"&mdash;they were passing a
+confectioner's&mdash;"and we'll have some jam-puffs."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul went to his friend Rowlatt, who had already heard, through one of
+his assistants who had a friend in the Life School, of the dramatic end
+of the model's career.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I quite sympathize with you," Rowlatt laughed. "I've wondered how you
+stuck it so long. What are you going to do now?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going on the stage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How are you going to get there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know," said Paul, "but if I knew an actor, he would be able to
+tell me. I thought perhaps you might know an actor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do&mdash;one or two," replied Rowlatt; "but they're just ordinary
+actors&mdash;not managers; and I shouldn't think they'd be able to do
+anything for you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Except what I say," Paul persisted. "They'll tell me how one sets
+about being an actor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Rowlatt scribbled a couple of introductions on visiting cards, and Paul
+went away satisfied. He called on the two actors. The first, in
+atrabiliar mood, advised him to sweep crossings, black shoes, break
+stones by the roadside, cart manure, sell tripe or stocks and shares,
+blow out his brains rather than enter a profession over whose portals
+was inscribed the legend, Lasciate ogni speranza&mdash;he snapped his finger
+and thumb to summon memory as if it were a dog.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Voi che intrate," continued Paul, delighted at showing off the one
+Italian tag he had picked up from his reading. And filled with one of
+the purest joys of the young literary life and therefore untouched by
+pessimistic counsel, he left the despairing actor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The second, a brighter and more successful man, talked with Paul for a
+long time about all manner of things. Having no notion of his
+antecedents, he assumed him to be a friend of Rowlatt and met him on
+terms of social equality. Paul expanded like a flower to the sun. It
+was the first time he had spoken with an educated man on common
+ground&mdash;a man to whom the great imaginative English writers were
+familiar friends, who ran from Chaucer to Lamb and from Dryden to
+Browning with amazing facility. The strong wine of allusive talk
+mounted to Paul's brain. Tingling with excitement, he brought out all
+his small artillery of scholarship and acquitted himself so well that
+his host sent him off with a cordial letter to a manager of his
+acquaintance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The letter opened the difficult door of the theatre. His absurd beauty
+of face and figure, a far greater recommendation in the eyes of the
+manager who had begun rehearsals for an elaborate romantic production
+than a knowledge of The Faerie Queene, obtained for him an immediate
+engagement&mdash;to walk on as a gilded youth of Italy in two or three
+scenes at a salary of thirty shillings a week. Paul went home and
+spread himself like a young peacock before Jane, and said: "I am an
+actor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl's eyes glowed. "You are wonderful."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, not I," replied Paul modestly. "It is my star."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you got a big part?" asked Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed pityingly, sweeping back his black curls. "No, you silly, I
+haven't any lines to speak"&mdash;he had at once caught up the phrase&mdash;"I
+must begin at the beginning. Every actor has to do it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll get mother and me orders to come and see you, won't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You shall have a box," declared Paul the magnificent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus began a new phase in the career of Paul Kegworthy. After the first
+few days of bewilderment on the bare, bleak stage, where oddments of
+dilapidated furniture served to indicate thrones and staircases and
+palace doors and mossy banks; where men and women in ordinary costume
+behaved towards one another in the most ridiculous way and went through
+unintelligible actions with phantom properties; where the actor-manager
+would pause in the breath of an impassioned utterance and cry out, "Oh,
+my God! stop that hammering!" where nothing looked the least bit in the
+world like the lovely ordered picture he had been accustomed to delight
+in from the shilling gallery&mdash;after the first few days he began to
+focus this strange world and to suffer its fascination. And he was
+proud of the silent part allotted to him, a lazy lute-player in
+attendance on the great lady, who lounged about on terrace steps in
+picturesque attitudes. He was glad that he was not an unimportant
+member of the crowd of courtiers who came on in a bunch and bowed and
+nodded and pretended to talk to one another and went off again. He
+realized that he would be in sight of the audience all the time. It did
+not strike him that the manager was using him merely as a piece of
+decoration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One day, however, at rehearsal the leading lady said: "If my
+lute-player could play a few chords here&mdash;or the orchestra for him-it
+would help me tremendously. I've got all this long cross with nothing
+to say."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul seized his opportunity. "I can play the mandoline," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, can you?" said the manager, and Paul was handed over to the
+musical director, and the next day rehearsed with a real instrument
+which he twanged in the manner prescribed. He did not fail to announce
+himself to Jane as a musician.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Gradually he found his feet among the heterogeneous band who walk on at
+London theatres. Some were frankly vulgar, some were pretentiously
+genteel, a good many were young men of gentle birth from the public
+schools and universities. Paul's infallible instinct drew him into
+timid companionship with the last. He knew little of the things they
+talked about, golf and cricket prospects, and the then brain-baffling
+Ibsen, but he listened modestly, hoping to learn. He reaped the
+advantage of having played "the sedulous ape" to his patrons of the
+studios. His tricks were somewhat exaggerated; his sweep of the hat
+when ladies passed him at the stage door entrance was lower than custom
+deems necessary; he was quicker in courteous gesture than the young men
+from the universities; he bowed more deferentially to an interlocutor
+than is customary outside Court circles; but they were all the tricks
+of good breeding. More than one girl asked if he were of foreign
+extraction. He remembered Rowlatt's question of years ago, and, as
+then, he felt curiously pleased. He confessed to an exotic strain: to
+Italian origin. Italy was romantic. When he obtained a line part and he
+appeared on the bill, he took the opportunity of changing a name linked
+with unpleasant associations which he did not regard as his own.
+Kegworthy was cast into the limbo of common things, and he became Paul
+Savelli. But this was later.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He made friends at the theatre. Some of the women, by petting and
+flattery, did their best to spoil him; but Paul was too ambitious, too
+much absorbed in his dream of greatness and his dilettante literary and
+musical pursuits, too much yet of a boy to be greatly affected. What he
+prized far more highly than feminine blandishments was the new
+comradeship with his own sex. Instinctively he sought them, as a sick
+dog seeks grass, unconsciously feeling the need of them in his mental
+and moral development. Besides, the attitude of the women reminded him
+of that of the women painters in his younger days. He had no intention
+of playing the pet monkey again. His masculinity revolted. The young
+barbarian clamoured. A hard day on the river he found much more to his
+taste than sporting in the shade of a Kensington flat over tea and
+sandwiches with no matter how sentimental an Amaryllis. Jane, who had
+seen the performance, though not from a box, a couple of upper-circle
+seats being all that Paul could obtain from the acting-manager, and had
+been vastly impressed by Paul's dominating position in the stage
+fairy-world, said to him, with a sniff that choked a sigh: "Now that
+you've got all those pretty girls around you, I suppose you soon won't
+think of me any longer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul waved the dreaded houris away as though they were midges. "I'm
+sick of girls," he replied in a tone of such sincerity that Jane tossed
+her head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh? Then I suppose you lump me with the rest and are sick of me too?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't worry a fellow," said Paul. "You're not a girl-not in that
+sense, I mean. You're a pal."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anyway, they're lots prettier than what I am," she said defiantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked at her critically, after the brutal manner of obtuse boyhood,
+and beheld an object quite agreeable to the sight. Her Londoner's
+ordinarily colourless checks were flushed, her blue eyes shone bright,
+her little chin was in the air and her parted lips showed a flash of
+white teeth. She wore a neat simple blouse and skirt and held her slim,
+half-developed figure taut. Paul shook his head. "Jolly few of
+them&mdash;without grease-paint on."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you see them all painted up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He burst into laughter. "Then they're beastly, near by! You silly kid,
+don't you know? We've got to make up, otherwise no one in front would
+be able to see our mouths and noses and eyes. From the front we look
+lovely; but close to we're horrors."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, how should I know that?" asked Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You couldn't unless you saw us&mdash;or were told. But now you know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you look beastly too?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Vile," he laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad I didn't think of going on the stage,"' she said, childish
+yet very feminine unreason combining with atavistic puritanism. "I
+shouldn't like to paint my face."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You get used to it," said Paul, the experienced.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think it horrid to paint your face."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He swung to the door&mdash;they were in the little parlour behind the
+shop&mdash;a flash of anger in his eyes. "If you think everything I do
+horrid, I can't talk to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He marched out. Jane suddenly realized that she had behaved badly. She
+whipped herself. She had behaved atrociously. Of course she had been
+jealous of the theatre girls; but had he not been proving to her all
+the time in what small account he held them? And now he had gone. At
+seventeen a beloved gone for an hour is a beloved gone for ever. She
+rushed to the foot of the stairs on which his ascending steps still
+creaked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Paul!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come back! Do come back!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul came back and followed her into the parlour.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sorry," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He graciously forgave her, having already arrived at the mature
+conclusion that females were unaccountable folk whose excursions into
+unreason should be regarded by man with pitying indulgence. And, in
+spite of the seriousness with which he took himself, he was a
+sunny-tempered youth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill, putting into the Port of London, so to speak, in order to
+take in cargo, also visited the theatre towards the end of the run of
+the piece. He waited, by arrangement, for Paul outside the stage door,
+and Paul, coming out, linked arms and took him to a blazing bar in
+Piccadilly Circus and ministered to his thirst, with a princely air.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems rum," said Bill, wiping his lips with the back of his hand,
+after a mighty pull at the pint tankard&mdash;"it seems rum that you should
+be standing me drinks at a swell place like this. It seems only
+yesterday that you was a two-penn'orth of nothing jogging along o' me
+in the old 'bus."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've moved a bit since then, haven't I?" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have, sonny," said Barney Bill. "But"&mdash;he sighed and looked around
+the noisy glittering place, at the smart barmaids, the well-clad throng
+of loungers, some in evening dress, the half-dozen gorgeous ladies
+sitting with men at little tables by the window&mdash;"I thinks as how you
+gets more real happiness in a quiet village pub, and the beer is
+cheaper, and&mdash;gorblimey!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He ran his finger between his stringy neck and the frayed stand-up
+collar that would have sawn his head off but for the toughness of his
+hide. To do Paul honour he had arrayed himself in his best&mdash;a
+wondrously cut and heavily-braided morning coat and lavender-coloured
+trousers of eccentric shape, and a funny little billycock hat too small
+for him, and a thunder-and-lightning necktie, all of which he had
+purchased nearly twenty years ago to grace a certain wedding at which
+he had been best man. Since then he had worn the Nessus shirt of a
+costume not more than half-a-dozen times. The twisted, bright-eyed
+little man, so obviously ill at ease in his amazing garb, and the
+beautiful youth, debonair in his well-fitting blue serge, formed a
+queer contrast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you never long for the wind of God and the smell of the rain?"
+asked Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I haven't the time," said Paul. "I'm busy all day long."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, well," said Barney Bill, "the fellow wasn't far wrong who said
+it takes all sorts to make a world. There are some as likes electric
+light and some as likes the stars. Gimme the stars." And in his
+countryman's way he set the beer in his tankard swirling round and
+round before he put it again to his lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul sipped his beer reflectively. "You may find happiness and peace of
+soul under the stars," said he, sagely, "and if I were a free agent I'd
+join you tomorrow. But you can't find fame. You can't rise to great
+things. I want to&mdash;well, I don't quite know what I want to do," he
+laughed, "but it's something big."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yuss, my boy," said Barney Bill. "I understand. You was always like
+that. You haven't come any nearer finding your 'igh-born
+parents?"&mdash;there was a twinkle in his eyes&mdash;"'ave yer?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not going to bother any more about them, whoever they are," said
+Paul, lighting a cigarette. "When I was a kid I used to dream that they
+would find me and do everything for me. Now I'm a man with experience
+of life, I find that I've got to do everything for myself. And by
+George!"&mdash;he thumped the bar and smiled the radiant smile of the young
+Apollo&mdash;"I'm going to do it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill took off his Luke's iron crown of a billycock hat and
+scratched his cropped and grizzled head. "How old are you, sonny?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nearly nineteen," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By Gosh!" said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He put on his hat at a comfortable but rakish angle. He looked like a
+music-hall humourist. A couple of the gorgeous ladies giggled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yuss," said he, "you're a man with an experience of life&mdash;and nobody
+can do nothing for you but yerself. Poor old Barney Bill has been past
+helping you this many a year."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I owe everything to you!" cried Paul, boyishly. "If it hadn't been
+for you, I should still be working in that factory at Bludston."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bill winked and nodded acquiescence as he finished his tankard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've often wondered&mdash;since I've grown up&mdash;what induced you to take me
+away. What was it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bill cocked his head on one side and regarded him queerly. "Now you're
+arsking," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul persisted. "You must have had some reason."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I suppose I was interested in them parents of yours," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And that was all he would say on the subject.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The days went on. The piece had run through the summer and autumn, and
+Paul, a favourite with the management, was engaged for the next
+production. At rehearsal one day the author put in a couple of lines,
+of which he was given one to speak. He now was in very truth an actor.
+Jane could no longer taunt him in her naughty moods (invariably
+followed by bitter repentance) with playing a dumb part like a trained
+dog. He had a real part, typewritten and done up in a brown-paper
+cover, which was handed to him, with lack of humour, by the assistant
+stage manager.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In view of his own instantaneous success he tried to persuade Jane to
+go on the stage; but Jane had no artistic ambitions, to say nothing of
+her disinclination to paint her face. She preferred the prosaic reality
+of stenography and typewriting. No sphere could be too dazzling for
+Paul; he was born to great things, the consciousness of his high
+destiny being at once her glory and her despair; but, as regards
+herself, her outlook on life was cool and sober. Paul was peacock born;
+it was for him to strut about in iridescent plumage. She was a humble
+daw and knew her station. It must be said that Paul held out the stage
+as a career more on account of the social status that it would give to
+Jane than through a belief in her histrionic possibilities. He too,
+fond as he was of the girl with whom he had grown up, recognized the
+essential difference between them. She was as pretty, as sensible, as
+helpful a little daw as ever chattered; but the young peacock never for
+an instant forgot her daw-dom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane's profound common-sense reaped its reward the following spring
+when she found herself obliged to earn her livelihood. Her mother
+died, and the shop was sold, and an aunt in Cricklewood offered Jane a
+home, on condition that she paid for her keep. This she was soon able
+to do when she obtained a situation with a business firm in the city.
+The work was hard and the salary small; but Jane had a brave heart and
+held her head high. In her simple philosophy life was work, and
+dreaming an occasional luxury. Her mother's death grieved her deeply,
+for she was a girl of strong affections, and the breaking up of her
+life with Paul seemed an irremediable catastrophe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's just as well," said her aunt, "that there's an end of it, or
+you'd be making a fool of yourself over that young actor chap with his
+pretty face. I don't hold with any of them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Jane was too proud to reply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On their last night together in the Barn Street house they sat alone in
+the little back-parlour as they had done for the last six years&mdash;all
+their impressionable childish days. It was the only home that Paul had
+known, and he felt the tragedy of its dissolution. They sat on the old
+horsehair sofa, behind the table, very tearful, very close together in
+spirit, holding each other's hands. They talked as the young talk&mdash;and
+the old, for the matter of that. She trembled at his wants unministered
+to in his new lodgings. He waved away prospective discomfort: what did
+it matter? He was a man and could rough it. It was she herself whose
+loss would be irreparable. She sighed; he would soon forget her. He
+vowed undying remembrance by all his gods. Some beautiful creature of
+the theatre would carry him off. He laughed at such an absurdity. Jane
+would always be his confidante, his intimate. Even though they lived
+under different roofs, they would meet and have their long happy jaunts
+together. Jane said dolefully that it could only be on Sundays, as
+their respective working hours would never correspond&mdash;"And you haven't
+given me your Sundays for a year," she added. Paul slid from the dark
+theme and, to comfort her, spoke glowingly of the future, when he
+should have achieved his greatness. He would give her a beautiful house
+with carriages and servants, and she would not have to work.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But if you are not there, what's the good of anything?" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll come to see you, silly dear," he replied ingenuously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before they parted for the night she threw her arms round his neck
+impulsively. "Don't quite forget me, Paul. It would break my heart.
+I've only you left now poor mother's gone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul kissed her and vowed again. He did not vow that he would be a
+mother to her, though to the girl's heart it seemed as if he did. The
+little girl was aching for a note in his voice that never came. Now,
+ninety-nine youths in a hundred who held, at such a sentimental moment,
+a comely and not uncared-for maiden in their arms, would have lost
+their heads (and their hearts) and vowed in the desired manner. But
+Paul was different, and Jane knew it, to her sorrow. He was by no means
+temperamentally cold; far from it. But, you see, he lived intensely in
+his dream, and only on its outer fringe had Jane her place. In the
+heart of it, hidden in amethystine mist, from which only flashed the
+diadem on her hair, dwelt the exquisite, the incomparable lady, the
+princess who should share his kingdom, while he knelt at her feet and
+worshipped her and kissed the rosy tips of her calm fingers. So, as it
+never entered his head to kiss the finger tips of poor Jane, it never
+entered his head to fancy himself in love with her. Therefore, when she
+threw herself into his arms, he hugged her in a very sincere and
+brotherly way, but kissed her with a pair of cast lips of Adonis. Of
+course he would never forget her. Jane went to bed and sobbed her heart
+out. Paul slept but little. The breaking up of the home meant the end
+of many precious and gentle things, and without them he knew that his
+life would be the poorer. And he vowed once more, to himself, that he
+would never prove disloyal to Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While he remained in London he saw what he could of her, sacrificing
+many a Sunday's outing with the theatre folk. Jane, instinctively aware
+of this, and finding in his demeanour, after examining it with
+femininely jealous, microscopic eyes, nothing perfunctory, was duly
+grateful, and gave him of her girlish best. She developed very quickly
+after her entrance into the world of struggle. Very soon it was the
+woman and not the child who listened to the marvellous youth's story of
+the wonders that would be. She never again threw herself into his arms,
+and he never again called her a "little silly." She was dimly aware of
+change, though she knew that the world could hold no other man for her.
+But Paul was not.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then Paul went on tour.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap07"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+PAUL had been four years on the stage. Save as a memory they had as
+little influence on the colour of his after-life as his years at
+Bludston or his years in the studios. He was the man born to be king.
+The attainment of his kingdom alone mattered. The intermediary phases
+were of no account. It had been a period of struggle, hardship and, as
+far as the stage itself was concerned, disillusion. After the first
+year or so, the goddess Fortune, more fickle in Theatreland, perhaps,
+than anywhere else, passed him by. London had no use for his services,
+especially when it learned that he aspired to play parts. It even
+refused him the privilege of walking on and understudying. He drifted
+into the provinces, where, when he obtained an engagement, he found
+more scope for his ambitions. Often he was out, and purchased with his
+savings the bread of idleness. He knew the desolation of the agent's
+dingy stairs; he knew the heartache of the agent's dingy outer office.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was familiar, too, with bleak rehearsals, hours of listless waiting
+for his little scenes; with his powerlessness to get into his simple
+words the particular intonation required by an overdriven producer.
+Familiar, too, with long and hungry Sunday railway journeys when pious
+refreshment rooms are shut; with little mean towns like Bludston, where
+he and three or four of the company shared the same mean theatrical
+lodgings; with the dirty, insanitary theatres; with the ceaseless petty
+jealousies and bickerings of the ill-paid itinerant troupe. The
+discomforts affected Paul but little, he had never had experience of
+luxuries, and the life itself was silken ease compared with what it
+would have been but for Barney Bill's kidnapping. It never occurred to
+him to complain of nubbly bed and ill-cooked steak and crowded and
+unventilated dressing rooms; but it always struck him as being absurd
+that such should continue to be the lot of one predestined to
+greatness. There was some flaw in the working of destiny. It puzzled
+him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once indeed, being out, but having an engagement ahead, and waiting for
+rehearsals to begin, he had found himself sufficiently prosperous to
+take a third-class ticket to Paris, where he spent a glorious month.
+But the prosperity never returned, and he had to live on his memories
+of Paris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+During these years books were, as ever, his joy and his consolation. He
+taught himself French and a little German. He read history, philosophy,
+a smattering of science, and interested himself in politics. So
+aristocratic a personage naturally had passionate Tory sympathies. Now
+and again&mdash;but not often, for the theatrical profession is generally
+Conservative&mdash;he came across a furious Radical in the company and
+tasted the joy of fierce argument. Now and again too, he came across a
+young woman of high modern cultivation, and once or twice narrowly
+escaped wrecking his heart on the Scylline rock of her intellect. It
+was only when he discovered that she had lost her head over his
+romantic looks, and not over his genius and his inherited right to
+leadership, that he began to question her intellectual sincerity. And
+there is nothing to send love scuttling away with his quiver between
+his legs like a note of interrogation of that sort. The only touch of
+the morbid in Paul was his resentment at owing anything to his mere
+personal appearance. He could not escape the easy chaff of his fellows
+on his "fatal beauty." He dreaded the horrible and hackneyed phrase
+which every fresh intimacy either with man or woman would inevitably
+evoke, and he hated it beyond reason. There was a tour during which he
+longed for small-pox or a broken nose or facial paralysis, so that no
+woman should ever look at him again and no man accuse him in vulgar
+jest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He played small utility parts and understudied the leading man. On the
+rare occasions when he played the lead, he made no great hit. The
+company did not, after the generous way of theatre folks, surround him,
+when the performance was over, with a chorus of congratulation. The
+manager would say, "Quite all' right, my boy, as far as it goes, but
+still wooden. You must get more life into it." And Paul, who knew
+himself to be a better man in every way than the actor whose part he
+was playing, just as in his childhood days he knew himself to be a
+better man than Billy Goodge, could not understand the general lack of
+appreciation. Then he remembered the early struggles of the great
+actors: Edmund Kean, who on the eve of his first appearance at Drury
+Lane cried, "If I succeed I shall go mad!"; of Henry Irving (then at
+his zenith) and the five hundred parts he had played before he came to
+London; he recalled also the failure of Disraeli's first speech in the
+House of Commons and his triumphant prophecy. He had dreams of that
+manager on his bended knees, imploring him, with prayerful hands and
+streaming eyes, to play Hamlet at a salary of a thousand a week and of
+himself haughtily snapping his fingers at the paltry fellow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Well, which one of us who has ever dreamed at all has not had such
+dreams at twenty? Let him cast at Paul the first stone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, you must remember, Paul's faith in his vague but glorious
+destiny was the dynamic force of his young life. Its essential mystery
+kept him alert and buoyant. His keen, self-centred mind realized that
+his search on the stage for the true expression of his genius was only
+empirical. If he failed there, it was for him to try a hundred other
+spheres until he found the right one. But just as in his childish days
+he could not understand why he was not supreme in everything, so now he
+could not appreciate the charge of wooden inferiority brought against
+him by theatrical managers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had been on the stage about three years when for the first time in
+his emancipated life something like a calamity befell him. He lost
+Jane. Like most calamities it happened in a foolishly accidental
+manner. He received a letter from Jane during the last three weeks of a
+tour&mdash;they always kept up an affectionate but desultory
+correspondence&mdash;giving a new address. The lease of her aunt's house
+having fallen in, they were moving to the south side of London. When he
+desired to answer the letter, he found he had lost it and could not
+remember the suburb, much less the street and number, whither Jane had
+migrated. A letter posted to the old address was returned through the
+post. The tour over, and he being again in London, he went on an errand
+of inquiry to Cricklewood, found the house empty and the neighbours and
+tradespeople ignorant. The poorer classes of London in their migrations
+seldom leave a trail behind them. Their correspondence being rare, it
+is not within their habits of life to fill up post-office forms with a
+view to the forwarding of letters. He could not write to Jane because
+he did not in the least know where she was.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He reflected with dismay that Jane could, for the same reason, no
+longer write to him. Ironic chance had so arranged that the landlady
+with whom he usually lodged in town, and whose house he used as a
+permanent address, had given up letting lodgings at the beginning of
+the tour, and had drifted into the limbo of London. Jane's only guide
+to his whereabouts had been the tour card which he had sent her as
+usual, giving dates and theatres. And the tour was over. On the chance
+that Jane, not hearing from him, should address a letter to the last
+theatre on the list, he communicated at once with the local management.
+But as local managements of provincial theatres shape their existences
+so as to avoid responsibilities of any kind save the maintenance of
+their bars and the deduction of their percentages from the box-office
+receipts, Paul knew that it was ludicrous to expect it to interest
+itself in the correspondence of an obscure member of a fourth-rate
+company which had once played to tenth-rate business within its
+mildewed walls. Being young, he wrote also to the human envelope
+containing the essence of stale beer, tobacco and lethargy that was the
+stage doorkeeper. But he might just as well have written to the station
+master or the municipal gasworks. As a matter of fact Jane and he were
+as much lost to one another as if the whole of England had been
+primaeval forest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a calamity which he regarded with dismay. He had many friends of
+the easy theatrical sort, who knew him as Paul Savelli, a romantically
+visaged, bright-natured, charming, intellectual, and execrably bad
+young actor. But there was only one Jane who knew him as little Paul
+Kegworthy. No woman he had ever met&mdash;and in the theatrical world one is
+thrown willy-nilly into close contact with the whole gamut of the
+sex&mdash;gave him just the same close, intimate, comforting companionship.
+From Jane he hid nothing. Before all the others he was conscious of
+pose. Jane, with her cockney common-sense, her shrewdness, her
+outspoken criticism of follies, her unfailing sympathy in essentials,
+was welded into the very structure of his being. Only when he had lost
+her did he realize this. Amidst all the artificialities and pretences
+and pseudo-emotionalities of his young actor's life, she was the one
+thing that was real. She alone knew of Bludston, of Barney Bill, of the
+model days the memory of which made him shiver. She alone (save Barney
+Bill) knew of his high destiny&mdash;for Paul, quick to recognize the
+cynical scepticism of an indifferent world, had not revealed the Vision
+Splendid to any of his associates. To her he could write; to her, when
+he was in London, he could talk; to her he could outpour all the jumble
+of faith, vanity, romance, egotism and poetry that was his very self,
+without thought of miscomprehension. And of late she had mastered the
+silly splenetics of childhood. He had an uncomfortable yet comforting
+impression that latterly she had developed an odd, calm wisdom, just as
+she had developed a calm, generous personality. The last time he had
+seen her, his quick sensitiveness had noted the growth from girl to
+woman. She was large, full-bosomed, wide-browed, clear-eyed. She had
+not worried him about other girls. She had reproved him for confessed
+follies in just the way that man loves to be reproved. She had mildly
+soared with him into the empyrean of his dreams. She had enjoyed
+whole-heartedly, from the back row of the dress-circle, the play to
+which he had taken her&mdash;as a member of the profession he had, in Jane's
+eyes, princely privileges&mdash;and on the top of the Cricklewood omnibus
+she had eaten, with the laughter and gusto of her twenty years, the
+exotic sandwiches he had bought at the delicatessen shop in Leicester
+Square. She was the ideal sister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And now she was gone, like a snow-flake on a river. For a long while it
+seemed absurd, incredible. He went on all sorts of preposterous
+adventures to find her. He walked through the city day after day at the
+hours when girls and men pour out of their honeycombs of offices into
+the streets. She had never told him where she was employed, thinking
+the matter of little interest; and he, in his careless way, had never
+inquired. Once he had suggested calling for her at her office, and she
+had abruptly vetoed the suggestion. Paul was too remarkable a young man
+to escape the notice of her associates; her feelings towards him were
+too fine to be scratched by jocular allusion. After a time, having
+failed to meet her in the human torrents of Cheapside and Cannon
+Street, Paul gave up the search. Jane was lost, absolutely lost&mdash;and,
+with her, Barney Bill. He went on tour again, heavy-hearted. He felt
+that, in losing these two, he had committed an act of base ingratitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had been four years on the stage and had grown from youth into
+manhood. But one day at three-and-twenty he found himself as poor in
+pence, though as rich in dreams, as at thirteen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Necessity had compelled him to take what he could get. This time it was
+a leading part; but a leading part in a crude melodrama in a fit-up
+company. They had played in halls and concert rooms, on pier pavilions,
+in wretched little towns. It was glorious July Weather and business was
+bad&mdash;so bad that the manager abruptly closed the treasury and
+disappeared, leaving the company stranded a hundred and fifty miles
+from London, with a couple of weeks' salary unpaid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul was packing his clothes in the portmanteau that lay on the narrow
+bed in his tiny back bedroom, watched disconsolately by a sallow,
+careworn man who sat astride the one cane chair, his hat on the back of
+his head, the discoloured end of a cigarette between his lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's all very well for you to take it cheerfully," said the latter.
+"You're young. You're strong. You're rich. You've no one but yourself.
+You haven't a wife and kids depending on you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know it makes a devil of a difference," replied Paul, disregarding
+the allusion to his wealth. As the leading man, he was the most highly
+paid member of the disastrous company, and he had acquired sufficient
+worldly wisdom to know that to him who has but a penny the possessor of
+a shilling appears arrogantly opulent. "But still," said he, "what can
+we do? We must get back to London and try again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If there was justice in this country that son of a thief would get
+fifteen years for it. I never trusted the skunk. A fortnight's salary
+gone and no railway fare to London. I wish to God I had never taken it
+on. I could have gone with Garbutt in The White Woman&mdash;he's straight
+enough&mdash;only this was a joint engagement. Oh, the swine!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rose with a clatter, threw his cigarette on the floor and stamped on
+it violently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's a pretty bad wrong 'un," said Paul. "We hadn't been going a
+fortnight before he asked me to accept half salary, swearing he would
+make it up, with a rise, as soon as business got better. Like an idiot,
+I consented."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His friend sat down again hopelessly. "I don't know what's going to
+become of us. The missus has pawned everything she has got, poor old
+girl! Oh, it's damned hard! We had been out six months."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor old chap!" said Paul, sitting on the bed beside his portmanteau.
+"How does Mrs. Wilmer take it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's knocked endways. You see," cried Wilmer desperately, "we've had
+to send home everything we could scrape together to keep the
+kids&mdash;there's five of them; and now&mdash;and now there's nothing left. I'm
+wrong. There's that." He fished three or four coppers from his pocket
+and held them out with a harsh laugh. "There's that after twenty years'
+work in this profession."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor old chap!" said Paul again. He liked Wilmer, a sober, earnest,
+ineffectual man, and his haggard, kindly-natured wife. They had put on
+a brave face all through the tour, letting no one suspect their
+straits, and doing both him and other members of the company many
+little acts of kindness and simple hospitality. In the lower submerged
+world of the theatrical profession in which Paul found himself he had
+met with many such instances of awful poverty. He had brushed elbows
+with Need himself. That morning he had given, out of his scanty
+resources, her railway fare to a tearful and despairing girl who played
+the low-comedy part. But he had not yet come across any position quite
+so untenable as that of Wilmer. Forty odd years old, a wife, five
+children, all his life given honestly to his calling&mdash;and threepence
+half-penny to his fortune.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, good God!" said he, after a pause, "your kiddies? If you have
+nothing&mdash;what will happen to them?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lord knows," groaned Wilmer, staring in front of him, his elbows on
+the back of the chair and his head between his fists.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Mrs. Wilmer and yourself have got to get back to London."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've got the dress suit I wear in the last act. It's fairly new. I can
+get enough on it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But that's part of your outfit&mdash;your line of business; you'll want it
+again," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilmer had played butlers up and down the land for many years. Now and
+again, when the part did not need any special characterization, he
+obtained London engagements. He was one of the known stage butlers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can hire if I'm pushed," said he. "It's hell, isn't it? Something
+told me not to go out with a fit-up. We'd never come down to it before.
+And I mistrusted Larkins&mdash;but we were out six months. Paul, my boy,
+chuck it. You're young; you're clever; you've had a swell education;
+you come of gentlefolk&mdash;my father kept a small hardware shop in
+Leicester&mdash;you have"&mdash;the smitten and generally inarticulate man
+hesitated&mdash;"well, you have extraordinary personal beauty; you have
+charm; you could do anything you like in the world, save act&mdash;and you
+can't act for toffee. Why the blazes do you stick to it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've got to earn my living just like you," said Paul, greatly
+flattered by the artless tribute to his aristocratic personality and
+not offended by the professional censure which he knew to be just.
+"I've tried all sorts of other things-music, painting, poetry,
+novel-writing&mdash;but none of them has come off."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your people don't make you an allowance?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've no people living," said Paul, with a smile&mdash;and when Paul smiled
+it was as if Eros's feathers had brushed the cheek of a Praxitelean
+Hermes; and then with an outburst half sincere, half braggart&mdash;"I've
+been on my own ever since I was thirteen."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilmer regarded him wearily. "The missus and I have always thought you
+were born with a silver spoon in your mouth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So I was," Paul declared from his innermost conviction. "But," he
+laughed, "I lost it before my teeth came and I could get a grip on it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you mean to say," exclaimed Wilmer, "that you're not doing this for
+fun?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fun?" cried Paul. "Fun? Do you call this comic?" He waved his hand
+comprehensively, indicating the decayed pink-and-purple wall-paper, the
+ragged oil-cloth on the floor, the dingy window with its dingier
+outlook, the rickety deal wash-stand with the paint peeling off, a
+horrible clothless tray on a horrible splotchy chest of drawers,
+containing the horrible scraggy remains of a meal. "Do you think I
+would have this if I could command silken sloth? I long like hell, old
+chap, for silken sloth, and if I could get it, you wouldn't see me
+here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilmer rose and stretched out his hand. "I'm sorry, dear boy," said he.
+"The wife and I thought it didn't very much matter to you. We always
+thought you were a kind of young swell doing it for amusement and
+experience&mdash;and because you never put on side, we liked you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose from the bed and put his hand on Wilmer's shoulder. "And now
+you're disappointed?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed and his eyes twinkled humorously. His vagabond life had
+taught him some worldly wisdom. The sallow and ineffectual man looked
+confused. His misery was beyond the relief of smiles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're all in the same boat, old chap," said Paul, "except that I'm
+alone and haven't got wife and kids to look after."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-bye, my boy," said Wilmer. "Better luck next time. But chuck it,
+if you can."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul held his hand for a while. Then his left hand dived into his
+waistcoat pocket and, taking the place of his right, thrust three
+sovereigns into Wilmer's palm. "For the kiddies," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilmer looked at the coins in his palm, and then at Paul, and the tears
+spurted. "I can't, my boy. You must be as broke as any of us&mdash;you&mdash;half
+salary&mdash;no, my boy, I can't. I'm old enough to be your father. It's
+damned good of you&mdash;but it's my one pride left&mdash;the pride of both of
+us&mdash;the missus and me&mdash;that we've never borrowed money&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it isn't borrowed, you silly ass," cried Paul cheerfully. "It's
+just your share of the spoils, such as they are. I wish to God it was
+more." With both hands he clasped the thin, ineffectual fingers over
+the coins and pushed the man' with his young strength out of the door.
+"It's for the kiddies. Give them my love," he cried, and slammed the
+door and locked it from the inside.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor old chap!" said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he went through his pockets and laid the contents on the narrow
+mantel-piece. These were a gold watch and chain, a cornelian heart
+fixed to the free end of the chain, a silver cigarette case, a couple
+of keys, one sovereign, four shillings, three pennies and two
+half-pennies. A trunk already fastened and filled with books and
+clothes, and the portmanteau on the bed, contained the rest of his
+possessions. In current coin his whole fortune amounted to one pound,
+four shillings and fourpence. Luckily he had paid his landlady. One
+pound four and fourpence to begin again at three-and-twenty the battle
+of life on which he had entered at thirteen. He laughed because he was
+young and strong, and knew that such reverses were foreordained
+chapters in the lives of those born to a glorious destiny. They were
+also preordained chapters in the lives of those born to failure, like
+poor old Wilmer. He was conscious of the wide difference between Wilmer
+and himself. Good Heavens! To face the world at forty-three, with wife
+and children and threepence-halfpenny, and the once attendant hope
+replaced by black-vestured doom! Poor Wilmer! He felt certain that
+Wilmer had not been able to pay his landlady, and he felt that he had
+been mean in keeping back the other sovereign.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sudden loss, however, of three-fourths of his fortune brought him
+up against practical considerations. The more he had in his pocket when
+he arrived in London, the longer could he subsist. That was important,
+because theatrical engagements are not picked up in a hurry. Now; the
+railway fare would swallow a goodly number of shillings. Obviously it
+was advisable to save the railway fare; and the only way to do this was
+to walk to London. His young blood thrilled at the notion. It was
+romantic. It was also inspiring of health and joy. He had been rather
+run down lately, and, fearful of the catastrophe which had in fact
+occurred, he had lived this last week very sparingly&mdash;-chiefly on
+herrings and tea. A hundred and fifty miles' tramp along the summer
+roads, with bread and cheese and an occasional glass of beer to keep
+him going, would be just the thing to set him up again. He looked in
+the glass. Yes, his face was a bit pinched and his eyes were rather too
+bright. A glorious tramp to London, thirty or forty miles a day in the
+blazing and beautiful sunshine, was exactly what he needed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Joyously he unpacked his trunk and took from it a Norfolk jacket suit
+and stockings, changed, and, leaving his luggage with his landlady, who
+was to obey further instructions as to its disposal, marched buoyantly
+away through the sun-filled streets of the little town, stick in hand,
+gripsack on shoulder, and the unquenchable fire of youth and hope in
+his heart.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap08"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER VIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+MISS URSULA WINWOOD, hatless, but with a cotton sunshade swinging over
+her shoulder, and with a lean, shiny, mahogany-coloured Sussex spaniel
+trailing behind, walked in her calm, deliberate way down the long
+carriage drive of Drane's Court. She was stout and florid, and had no
+scruples as to the avowal of her age, which was forty-three. She had
+clear blue eyes which looked steadily upon a complicated world of
+affairs, and a square, heavy chin which showed her capacity for dealing
+with it. Miss Ursula Winwood knew herself to be a notable person, and
+the knowledge did not make her vain or crotchety or imperious. She took
+her notability for granted, as she took her mature good looks and her
+independent fortune. For some years she had kept house for her widowed
+brother, Colonel Winwood, Conservative Member for the Division of the
+county in which they resided, and helped him efficiently in his
+political work. The little township of Morebury&mdash;half a mile from the
+great gates of Drane's Court&mdash;felt Miss Winwood's control in diverse
+ways. Another town, a little further off, with five or six millions of
+inhabitants, was also, through its newspapers, aware of Miss Winwood.
+Many leagues, societies, associations, claimed her as President,
+Vice-President, or Member of Council. She had sat on Royal Commissions.
+Her name under an appeal for charity guaranteed the deserts of the
+beneficiaries. What she did not know about housing problems, factory
+acts, female prisons, hospitals, asylums for the blind, decayed
+gentlewomen, sweated trades, dogs' homes and Friendly Societies could
+not be considered in the light of knowledge. She sat on platforms with
+Royal princesses, Archbishops welcomed her as a colleague, and Cabinet
+Ministers sought her counsel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For some distance from the porch of the red-brick, creeper-covered
+Queen-Anne house the gravel drive between the lawns blazed in the
+afternoon sun. For this reason, the sunshade. But after a while came an
+avenue of beech and plane and oak casting delectable shade on the drive
+and its double edging of grass, and the far-stretching riot of flowers
+beneath the trees, foxgloves and canterbury bells and campanulas and
+delphiniums, all blues and purples and whites, with here and there the
+pink of dog-roses and gorgeous yellow splashes of celandine. On
+entering the stately coolness, Miss Winwood closed her sunshade and
+looked at her watch, a solid timepiece harboured in her belt. A knitted
+brow betrayed mathematical calculation. It would take her five minutes
+to reach the lodge gate. The train bringing her venerable uncle,
+Archdeacon Winwood, for a week's visit would not arrive at the station
+for another three minutes, and the two fat horses would take ten
+minutes to drag from the station the landau which she had sent to meet
+him. She had, therefore, eight minutes to spare. A rustic bench invited
+repose. Graciously she accepted the invitation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now, it must be observed that it was not Miss Winwood's habit to waste
+time. Her appointments were kept to the minute, and her appointment
+(self-made on this occasion) was the welcoming of her uncle, the
+Archdeacon, on the threshold of Drane's Court. But Miss Winwood was
+making holiday and allowed herself certain relaxations. Her brother's
+health having broken down, he had paired for the rest of the session
+and gone to Contrexeville for a cure. She had therefore shut up her
+London house in Portland Place, Colonel Winwood's home while Parliament
+sat, and had come to her brother's house, Drane's Court, her home when
+her presence was not needed in London. She was tired; Drane's Court,
+where she had been born and had lived all her girlhood's life, was
+restful; and the seat in the shade of the great beech was cunningly
+curved. The shiny, mahogany-coloured spaniel, prescient of siesta,
+leaped to her side and lay down with his chin on her lap and blinked
+his yellow eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She lay back on the seat, her hand on the dog's head, looking
+contentedly at the opposite wilderness of bloom and the glimpses,
+through the screen of trees and shrubs, of the sunlit stretches of park
+beyond. She loved Drane's Court. Save for the three years of her
+brother's short married life, it had been part of herself. A Winwood, a
+very younger son of the Family&mdash;the Family being that of which the Earl
+of Harpenden is Head (these things can only be written of in capital
+letters)&mdash;had acquired wealth in the dark political days of Queen Anne,
+and had bought the land and built the house, and the property had never
+passed into alien hands. As for the name, he had used that of his wife,
+Viscountess Drane in her own right,&mdash;a notorious beauty of whom, so
+History recounts, he was senilely enamoured and on whose naughty
+account he was eventually run through the body by a young Mohawk of a
+paramour. They fought one spring dawn in the park&mdash;the traditional spot
+could be seen from where Ursula Winwood was sitting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ursula and her brother were proud of the romantic episode, and would
+relate it to guests and point out the scene of the duel. Happy and
+illusory days of Romance now dead and gone! It is not conceivable that,
+generations hence, the head of a family will exhibit with pride the
+stained newspaper cuttings containing the unsavoury details of the
+divorce case of his great-great-grandmother.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This aspect of family history seldom presented itself to Ursula
+Winwood. It did not do so this mellow and contented afternoon.
+Starlings mindful of a second brood chattered in the old walnut trees
+far away on the lawn; thrushes sang their deep-throated bugle-calls;
+finches twittered. A light breeze creeping up the avenue rustled the
+full foliage languorously. Ursula Winwood closed her eyes. A bumble-bee
+droned between visits to foxglove bells near by. She loved bumble-bees.
+They reminded her of a summer long ago when she sat, not on this
+seat&mdash;as a matter of fact it was in the old walled garden a quarter of
+a mile away&mdash;with a gallant young fellow's arms about her and her head
+on his shoulder. A bumble-bee had droned round her while they kissed.
+She could never hear a bumble-bee without thinking of it. But the
+gallant young fellow had been killed in the Soudan in eighteen
+eighty-five, and Ursula Winwood's heart had been buried in his sandy
+grave. That was the beginning and end of her sentimental history. She
+had recovered from the pain of it all and now she loved the bumble-bee
+for invoking the exquisite memory. The lithe Sussex spaniel crept
+farther on her lap and her hand caressed his polished coat. Drowsiness
+disintegrated the exquisite memories. Miss Ursula Winwood fell asleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sudden plunging of strong young paws into her body and a series of
+sharp barks and growls awakened her with a start, and, for a second,
+still dazed by the drowsy invocation of the bumble-bee, she saw
+approaching her the gallant fellow who had been pierced through the
+heart by a Soudanese spear in eighteen eighty-five. He was dark and
+handsome, and, by a trick of coincidence, was dressed in loose
+knickerbocker suit, just as he was when he had walked up that very
+avenue to say his last good-bye. She remained for a moment tense,
+passively awaiting co-ordination of her faculties. Then clear awake,
+and sending scudding the dear ghosts of the past, she sat up, and
+catching the indignant spaniel by the collar, looked with a queer,
+sudden interest at the newcomer. He was young, extraordinarily
+beautiful; but he staggered and reeled like a drunken man. The spaniel
+barked his respectable disapproval. In his long life of eighteen months
+he had seen many people, postmen and butcher boys and casual diggers in
+kitchen gardens, whose apparent permit to exist in Drane's Court had
+been an insoluble puzzle; but never had he seen so outrageous a
+trespasser. With unparalleled moral courage he told him exactly what he
+thought of him. But the trespasser did not hear. He kept on advancing.
+Miss Winwood rose, disgusted, and drew herself up. The young man threw
+out his hands towards her, tripped over the three-inch-high border of
+grass, and fell in a sprawling heap at her feet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He lay very still. Ursula Winwood looked down upon him. The shiny brown
+spaniel took up a strategic position three yards away and growled, his
+chin between his paws. But the more Miss Winwood looked, and her blue
+eyes were trained to penetrate, the more was she convinced that both
+she and the dog were wrong in their diagnosis. The young man's face was
+deadly white, his cheeks gaunt. It was evidently a grave matter. For a
+moment or so she had a qualm of fear lest he might be dead. She bent
+down, took him in her capable grip and composed his inert body
+decently, and placed the knapsack he was wearing beneath his head. The
+faintly beating heart proved him to be alive, but her touch on his brow
+discovered fever. Kneeling by his side, she wiped his lips with her
+handkerchief, and gave herself up to the fraction of a minute's
+contemplation of the most beautiful youth she had ever seen. So there
+he lay, a new Endymion, while the most modern of Dianas hung over him,
+stricken with great wonderment at his perfection.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this romantic attitude was she surprised, first by the coachman of
+the landau and pair as he swung round the bend of the drive, and then
+by the Archdeacon, who leaned over the door of the carriage. Miss
+Winwood sprang to her feet; the coachman pulled up, and the Archdeacon
+alighted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear Uncle Edward"&mdash;she wrung his hand&mdash;"I'm so glad to see you. Do
+help me grapple with an extraordinary situation."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Archdeacon smiled humorously. He was a spare man of seventy, with
+thin, pointed, clean-shaven face, and clear blue eyes like Miss
+Winwood's. "If there's a situation, my dear Ursula, with which you
+can't grapple," said he, "it must indeed be extraordinary."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She narrated what had occurred, and together they bent over the
+unconscious youth. "I would suggest," said she, "that we put him into
+the carriage, drive him up to the house, and send for Dr. Fuller."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can only support your suggestion," said the Archdeacon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So the coachman came down from his box and helped them to lift the
+young man into the landau; and his body swayed helplessly between Miss
+Winwood and the Archdeacon, whose breeches and gaiters were smeared
+with dust from his heavy boots. A few moments afterwards he was carried
+into the library and laid upon a sofa, and Miss Winwood administered
+restoratives. The deep stupor seemed to pass, and he began to moan.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood and the housekeeper stood by his side. The Archdeacon, his
+hands behind his back, paced the noiseless Turkey carpet. "I hope,"
+said he, "your doctor will not be long in coming."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It looks like a sunstroke," the housekeeper remarked, as her mistress
+scrutinized the clinical thermometer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It doesn't," said Miss Winwood bluntly. "In sunstroke the face is
+either congested or clammy. I know that much. He has a temperature of
+103."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor fellow!" said the Archdeacon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wonder who he is," said Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Perhaps this may tell us," said the Archdeacon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the knapsack, carelessly handled by the servant who had brought it
+in, had escaped a book, and the servant had laid the book on the top of
+the knapsack. The Archdeacon took it up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici and Urn Burial. On the flyleaf,
+'Paul Savelli.' An undergraduate, I should say, on a walking tour."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood took the book from his hands&mdash;a little cheap reprint. "I'm
+glad," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, my dear Ursula?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm very fond of Sir Thomas Browne, myself," she replied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently the doctor came and made his examination. He shook a grave
+head. "Pneumonia. And he has got it bad. Perhaps a touch of the sun as
+well." The housekeeper smiled discreetly. "Looks half-starved, too.
+I'll send up the ambulance at once and get him to the cottage hospital."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood, a practical woman, was aware that the doctor gave wise
+counsel. But she looked at Paul and hesitated. Paul's destiny, though
+none knew it, hung in the balance. "I disapprove altogether of the
+cottage hospital," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Eh?" said the doctor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Archdeacon raised his eyebrows. "My dear Ursula, I thought you had
+made the Morebury Cottage Hospital the model of its kind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Its kind is not for people who carry about Sir Thomas Browne in their
+pocket," retorted the disingenuous lady. "If I turned him out of my
+house, doctor, and anything happened to him, I should have to reckon
+with his people. He stays here. You'll kindly arrange for nurses. The
+red room, Wilkins,&mdash;no, the green&mdash;the one with the small oak bed. You
+can't nurse people properly in four-posters. It has a south-east
+aspect"&mdash;she turned to the doctor&mdash;"and so gets the sun most of the
+day. That's quite right, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ideal. But I warn you, Miss Winwood, you may be letting yourself in
+for a perfectly avoidable lot of trouble."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I like trouble," said Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're certainly looking for it," replied the doctor glancing at Paul
+and stuffing his stethoscope into his pocket. "And in this case, I can
+promise you worry beyond dreams of anxiety."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The word of Ursula Winwood was law for miles around. Dr. Fuller, rosy,
+fat and fifty, obeyed, like everyone else; but during the process of
+law-making he had often, before now, played the part of an urbane and
+gently satirical leader of the opposition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She flashed round on him, with a foolish pain through her heart that
+caused her to catch her breath. "Is he as bad as that?" she asked
+quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As bad as that," said the doctor, with grave significance. "How he
+managed to get here is a mystery!" Within a quarter-of-an-hour the
+unconscious Paul, clad in a suit of Colonel Winwood's silk pyjamas, lay
+in a fragrant room, hung with green and furnished in old, black oak.
+Never once, in all his life, had Paul Kegworthy lain in such a room.
+And for him a great house was in commotion. Messages went forth for
+nurses and medicines and the paraphernalia of a luxurious sick-chamber,
+and-the lady of the house being absurdly anxious&mdash;for a great London
+specialist, whose fee, in Dr. Fuller's quiet eyes, would be amusingly
+fantastic.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems horrible to search the poor boy's pockets," said Miss
+Winwood, when, after these excursions and alarms the Archdeacon and
+herself had returned to the library; "but we must try to find out who
+he is and communicate with his people. Savelli. I've never heard of
+them. I wonder who they are."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is an historical Italian family of that name," said the
+Archdeacon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was sure of it," said Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of what?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That his people&mdash;are&mdash;well&mdash;all right."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why are you sure?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ursula was very fond of her uncle. He represented to her the fine
+flower of the Church of England&mdash;a gentleman, a scholar, an ideal
+physical type of the Anglican dignitary, a man of unquestionable piety
+and Christian charity, a personage who would be recognized for what he
+was by Hottentots or Esquimaux or attendants of wagon-lits trains or
+millionaires of the Middle West of America or Parisian Apaches. In him
+the branch of the family tree had burgeoned into the perfect cleric.
+Yet sometimes, the play of light beneath the surface of those blue
+eyes, so like her own, and the delicately intoned challenges of his
+courtly voice, exasperated her beyond measure. "It's obvious to any
+idiot, my dear," she replied testily. "Just look at him. It speaks for
+itself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Archdeacon put his thin hand on her plump shoulder, and smiled. The
+old man had a very sunny smile. "I'm sorry to carry on a conversation
+so Socratically," said he. "But what is 'it'?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've never seen anything so physically beautiful, save the statues in
+the Vatican, in all my life. If he's not an aristocrat to the finger
+tips, I'll give up all my work, turn Catholic, and go into a
+nunnery&mdash;which will distress you exceedingly. And then"&mdash;she waved a
+plump hand&mdash;"and then, as I've mentioned before, he reads the Religio
+Medici. The commonplace, vulgar young man of to-day no more reads Sir
+Thomas Browne than he reads Tertullian or the Upanishads."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He also reads," said the Archdeacon, stuffing his hand into Paul's
+knapsack, against whose canvas the stiff outline of a book revealed
+itself&mdash;"he also reads"&mdash;he held up a little fat duodecimo&mdash;"the
+Chansons de Beranger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That proves it," cried Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Proves what?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His blue eyes twinkled. Having a sense of humour, she laughed and flung
+her great arm round his frail shoulders. "It proves, my venerable and
+otherwise distinguished dear, that I am right and you are wrong."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My good Ursula," said he, disengaging himself, "I have not advanced
+one argument either in favour of, or in opposition to, one single
+proposition the whole of this afternoon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She shook her head at him pityingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The housekeeper entered carrying a double handful of odds and ends
+which she laid on the library table&mdash;a watch and chain and cornelian
+heart, a cigarette case bearing the initials "P.S.," some keys, a very
+soiled handkerchief, a sovereign, a shilling and a penny. Dr. Fuller
+had sent them down with his compliments; they were the entire contents
+of the young gentleman's pockets.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not a card, not a scrap of paper with a name and address on it?" cried
+Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not a scrap, miss. The doctor and I searched most thoroughly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Perhaps the knapsack will tell us more," said the Archdeacon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The knapsack, however, revealed nothing but a few toilet necessaries, a
+hunk of stale bread and a depressing morsel of cheese, and a pair of
+stockings and a shirt declared by the housekeeper to be wet through. As
+the Beranger, like the Sir Thomas Browne, was inscribed "Paul Savelli,"
+which corresponded with the initials on the cigarette case, they were
+fairly certain of the young man's name. But that was all they could
+discover regarding him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We'll have to wait until he can tell us himself," said Miss Winwood
+later to the doctor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We'll have to wait a long time," said he.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap09"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER IX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+THE London physician arrived, sat up with Paul most of the night, and
+went away the next morning saying that he was a dead man. Dr. Fuller,
+however, advanced the uncontrovertible opinion that a man was not dead
+till he died; and Paul was not dead yet. As a matter of fact, Paul did
+not die. If he had done so, there would have been an end of him and
+this history would never have been written. He lay for many days at the
+gates of Death, and Miss Winwood, terribly fearful lest they should
+open and the mysterious, unconscious shape of beauty and youth should
+pass through, had all the trouble promised her by the doctor. But the
+gates remained shut. When Paul took a turn for the better, the London
+physician came down again and declared that he was living in defiance
+of all the laws of pathology, and with a graceful compliment left the
+case in the hands of Dr. Fuller. When his life was out of danger, Dr.
+Fuller attributed the miracle to the nurses; Ursula Winwood attributed
+it to Dr. Fuller; the London physician to Paul's superb constitution;
+and Paul himself, perhaps the most wisely, to the pleasant-faced,
+masterful lady who had concentrated on his illness all the resources of
+womanly tenderness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But it was a long time before Paul was capable of formulating such an
+opinion. It was a long time before he could formulate any opinion at
+all. When not delirious or comatose, he had the devil of pleurisy
+tearing at the wall of his lung like a wild cat. Only gradually did he
+begin to observe and to question. That noiseless woman in coot blue and
+white was a nurse. He knew that. So he must be in hospital. But the
+room was much smaller than a hospital ward; and where were the other
+patients? The question worried him for a whole morning. Then there was
+a pink-faced man in gold spectacles, Obviously the doctor. Then there
+was a sort of nurse whom he liked very much, but she was not in
+uniform. Who could she be? He realized that he was ill, as weak as a
+butterfly; and the pain when he coughed was agonizing. It was all very
+odd. How had he come here? He remembered walking along a dusty road in
+the blazing sun, his head bursting, every limb a moving ache. He also
+vaguely remembered being awakened at night by a thunder storm as he lay
+snugly asleep beneath a hedge. The German Ocean had fallen down upon
+him. He was quite sure it was the German Ocean, because he had fixed it
+in his head by repeating "the North Sea or German Ocean." Mixing up
+delirious dream with fact, he clearly remembered the green waves
+rearing themselves up first, an immeasurable wall, then spreading a
+translucent canopy beneath the firmament and then descending in awful
+deluge. He had a confused memory of morning sunshine, of a cottage, of
+a hard-featured woman, of sitting before a fire with a blanket round
+his shoulders, of a toddling child smeared to the eyebrows with dirt
+and treacle whom he had wanted to wash. Over and over again, lately, he
+had wanted to wash that child, but it had always eluded his efforts.
+Once he had thought of scraping it with a bit of hoof-iron, but it had
+turned into a Stilton cheese. It was all very puzzling. Then he had
+gone on tramping along the high road. What was that about bacon and
+eggs? The horrible smell offended his nostrils. It must have been a
+wayside inn; and a woman twenty feet high with a face like a
+cauliflower&mdash;or was it spinach?&mdash;or Brussels sprouts?&mdash;silly not to
+remember&mdash;one of the three, certainly&mdash;desired to murder him with a
+thousand eggs bubbling up against rank reefs of bacon. He had escaped
+from her somehow, and he had been very lucky. His star had saved him.
+It had also saved him from a devil on a red-hot bicycle. He had stood
+quite still, calm and undismayed, in the awful path of the straddling
+Apollyon whose head was girt around with yellow fire, and had seen him
+swerve madly and fall off the machine. And when the devil had picked
+himself up, he had tried to blast him with the Great Curse of the
+Underworld; but Paul had shown him his cornelian heart, his talisman,
+and the devil had remounted his glowing vehicle and had ridden away in
+a spume of flame. The Father of Lies had tried to pass himself off as a
+postman. The memory of the shallow pretence tickled Paul so that he
+laughed; and then he half fainted in pleuritic agony.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After the interlude with the devil he could recollect little. He was
+going up to London to make his fortune. A princess was waiting for him
+at the golden gate of London, with a fortune piled up in a
+coach-and-six. But being very sick and dizzy, he thought he would sit
+down and rest in a great green cathedral whose doors stood invitingly
+open ... and now he found himself in the hospital ward. Sometimes he
+felt a desire to question the blue-and-white nurse, but it seemed too
+much trouble to move his lips. Then in a flash came the solution of the
+puzzle, and he chuckled to himself over his cunning. Of course it was a
+dream. The nurse was a dream-nurse, who wanted to make him believe that
+she was real. But she was not clever enough. The best way to pay her
+out for her deception was to take no notice of her whatsoever. So
+comforted, he would go to sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last one morning he woke, a miserably weak but perfectly sane man,
+and he turned his head from side to side and looked wonderingly at the
+fresh and exquisite room. A bowl of Morning Glow roses stood by his
+bedside, gracious things for fevered eyes to rest upon. A few large
+photographs of famous pictures hung on the walls. In front of him was
+the Santa Barbara of Palma Vecchio, which he recognized with a smile.
+He had read about it, and knew that the original was in Venice.
+Knowledge of things like that was comforting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The nurse, noticing the change, came up to him and spoke in a soothing
+voice. "Are you feeling better?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think so," said Paul. "I suppose I've been very ill."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very ill," said the nurse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This can't be a hospital?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, no. It's the house of some very kind, good friends. You don't know
+them," she added quickly, seeing him knit a perplexed brow. "You
+stumbled into their garden and fainted. And they're very anxious for
+you to get well and strong."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who are they?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Colonel and Miss Winwood. They will be so glad to see you better&mdash;at
+least Miss Winwood will; the Colonel's not at home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She lifted his head gently and smoothed his pillows, and ordained
+silence. Presently the doctor came, and spoke kindly. "You've had a
+narrow shave, my friend, and you're not out of the wood yet," said he.
+"And you'll have to go slow and take things for granted for some time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then came Miss Winwood, whom he recognized as the puzzling but pleasant
+nurse out of uniform.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know how to thank you for taking me in, a stranger, like
+this," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She smiled. "It's Providence, not me, that you must thank. You might
+have been taken ill by the roadside far away from anybody. Providence
+guided you here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Providence or Destiny," murmured Paul, closing his eyes. It was absurd
+to feel so weak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's a theological question on which we won't enter," laughed Miss
+Winwood. "Anyhow, thank God, you're better."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A little later she came to him again. "I've been so anxious about your
+people&mdash;you see, we've had no means of communicating with them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My people?" asked Paul, surprised.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. They must be wondering what has become of you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have no people," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No people? What do you mean?" she asked sharply, for the moment
+forgetful of the sick room. She herself had hundreds of relations. The
+branches of her family tree were common to half the country families of
+England. "Have you no parents&mdash;brothers or sisters&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"None that I know of," said Paul. "I'm quite alone in the world."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you no friends to whom I could write about you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He shook his head, and his great eyes, all the greater and more
+lustrous through illness, smiled into hers. "No. None that count. At
+least&mdash;there are two friends, but I've lost sight of them for years.
+No&mdash;there's nobody who would be in the least interested to know. Please
+don't trouble. I shall be all right."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood put her cool hand on his forehead and bent over him. "You?
+You, alone like that? My poor boy!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She turned away. It was almost incredible. It was monstrously pathetic.
+The phenomenon baffled her. Tears came into her eyes. She had imagined
+him the darling of mother and sisters; the gay centre of troops of
+friends. And he was alone on the earth. Who was he? She turned again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will you tell me your name?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Savelli. Paul Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought so. It was in the two books in your knapsack. A historical
+Italian name."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," said Paul. "Noble. All dead."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He lay back, exhausted. Suddenly a thought smote him. He beckoned. She
+approached. "My heart&mdash;is it safe?" he whispered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your heart?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At the end of my watch-chain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quite safe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Could I have it near me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul closed his eyes contentedly. With his talisman in his hand, all
+would be well. For the present he need take thought of nothing. His
+presence in the beautiful room being explained, there was an end of the
+perplexity of his semi-delirium. Of payment for evident devoted service
+there could be no question. Time enough when he grew well and able to
+fare forth again, to consider the immediate future. He was too weak to
+lift his head, and something inside him hurt like the devil when he
+moved. Why worry about outer and unimportant matters? The long days of
+pain and illness slipped gradually away. Miss Winwood sat by his
+bedside and talked; but not until he was much stronger did she question
+him as to his antecedents. The Archdeacon had gone away after a week's
+visit without being able to hold any converse with Paul; Colonel
+Winwood was still at Contrexeville, whence he wrote sceptically of the
+rare bird whom Ursula had discovered; and Ursula was alone in the
+house, save for a girl friend who had no traffic with the sick-chamber.
+She had, therefore, much leisure to devote to Paul. Her brother's
+scepticism most naturally strengthened her belief in him. He was her
+discovery. He grew almost to be her invention. Just consider. Here was
+a young Greek god&mdash;everyone who had a bowing acquaintance with ancient
+sculpture immediately likened Paul to a Greek god, and Ursula was not
+so far different from her cultured fellow mortals as to liken him to
+anything else&mdash;here was a young Phoebus Apollo, all the more Olympian
+because of his freedom from earthly ties, fallen straight from the
+clouds. He had fallen at her feet. His beauty had stirred her. His
+starlike loneliness had touched her heart. His swift intelligence,
+growing more manifest each day as he grew stronger, moved her
+admiration. He had, too, she realized, a sunny and sensuous nature,
+alive to beauty&mdash;even the beauty of the trivial things in his sickroom.
+He had an odd, poetical trick of phrase. He was a paragon of young
+Greek gods. She had discovered him; and women don't discover even
+mortal paragons every day in the week. Also, she was a woman of
+forty-three, which, after all, is not wrinkled and withered eld; and
+she was not a soured woman; she radiated health and sweetness; she had
+loved once in her life, very dearly. Romance touched her with his
+golden feather and, in the most sensible and the most unreprehensible
+way in the world, she fell in love with Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wonder what made you put that Santa Barbara of Palma Vecchio just
+opposite the bed," he said one day. He had advanced so far toward
+recovery as to be able to sit up against his pillows.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you like it?" She turned in her chair by his bedside.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I worship it. Do you know, she has a strange look of you? When I was
+half off my head I used to mix you up together. She has such a generous
+and holy bigness&mdash;the generosity of the All-woman."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ursula flushed at the personal tribute, but let it pass without
+comment. "It's not a bad photograph; but the original&mdash;that is too
+lovely."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's in the Church of Santa Maria Formosa in Venice," said Paul
+quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had passed through a period of wild enthusiasm for Italian painting,
+and had haunted the National Gallery, and knew by heart Sir Charles
+Eastlake's edition of Kugler's unique textbook.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah, you know it?" said Ursula.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've never been to Venice," replied Paul, with a sigh. "It's the dream
+of my life to go there."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She straightened herself on her chair. "How do you know the name of the
+church?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled and looked round the walls, and reflected for a moment.
+"Yes," said he in answer to his own questioning, "I think I can tell
+you where all these pictures are, though I've never seen them, except
+one. The two angels by Melozzo da Forli are in St. Peter's at Rome. The
+Sposalia of Raphael is in the Breza, Milan. The Andrea del Sarto is in
+the Louvre. That's the one I've seen. That little child of Heaven,
+playing the lute, is in the predella of an altar-piece by Vittore
+Carpaccio in the&mdash;in the&mdash;please don't tell me&mdash;in the Academia of
+Venice. Am I right?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Absolutely right," said Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed, delighted. At three and twenty, one&mdash;thank goodness!&mdash;is
+very young. One hungers for recognition of the wonder-inspiring self
+that lies hidden beneath the commonplace mask of clay. "And that," said
+he&mdash;"the Madonna being crowned&mdash;the Botticelli&mdash;is in the Uffizi at
+Florence. Walter Pater talks about it&mdash;you know&mdash;in his
+'Renaissance'&mdash;the pen dropping from her hand&mdash;'the high, cold words
+that have no meaning for her&mdash;the intolerable honour'! Oh, it's
+enormous, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid I've not read my Pater as I ought," said Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, you must!" cried Paul, with the gloriously audacious faith of
+youth which has just discovered a true apostle. "Pater puts you on to
+the inner meaning of everything&mdash;in art, I mean. He doesn't wander
+about in the air like Ruskin, though, of course, if you get your mental
+winnowing machine in proper working order you can get the good grain
+out of Ruskin. 'The Stones of Venice' and 'The Seven Lamps' have taught
+me a lot. But you always have to be saying to yourself, 'Is this
+gorgeous nonsense or isn't it?' whereas in Pater there's no nonsense at
+all. You're simply carried along on a full stream of Beauty straight
+into the open Sea of Truth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Ursula Winwood, to whom Archbishops had been deferential and
+Cabinet Ministers had come for, guidance, meekly promised to send at
+once for Pater's 'Renaissance' and so fill in a most lamentable gap in
+her education.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My uncle, the Archdeacon," she said, after a while, "reminded me that
+the great Savelli was a Venetian general&mdash;of Roman family; and,
+strangely enough, his name, too, was Paul. Perhaps that's how you got
+the name."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That must be how," said Paul dreamily. He had not heard of the great
+general. He had seen the name of Savelli somewhere&mdash;also that of
+Torelli&mdash;and had hesitated between the two. Thinking it no great harm,
+he wove into words the clamour of his cherished romance. "My parents
+died when I was quite young&mdash;a baby&mdash;and then I was brought to England.
+So you see"&mdash;he smiled in his winning way&mdash;"I'm absolutely English."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you've kept your Italian love of beauty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope so," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then I suppose you were brought up by guardians," said Ursula.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A guardian," said Paul, anxious to cut down to a minimum the mythical
+personages that might be connected with his career. "But I seldom saw
+him. He lived in Paris chiefly. He's dead now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What a poor little uncared-for waif you must have been."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed. "Oh, don't pity me. I've had to think for myself a good
+deal, it is true. But it has done me good. Don't you find it's the
+things one learns for oneself&mdash;whether they are about life or old
+china&mdash;that are the most valuable?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Miss Winwood. But she sighed, womanlike, at the
+thought of the little Paul&mdash;(how beautiful he must have been as a
+child!)&mdash;being brought up by servants and hirelings in a lonely house,
+his very guardian taking no concern in his welfare.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus it came about that, from the exiguous material supplied by Paul,
+Miss Winwood, not doubting his gentle birth and breeding, constructed
+for him a wholly fictitious set of antecedents. Paul invented as little
+as possible and gratefully accepted her suggestions. They worked
+together unconsciously. Paul had to give some account of himself. He
+had blotted Bludston and his modeldom out of his existence. The
+passionate belief in his high and romantic birth was part of his being,
+and Miss Winwood's recognition was a splendid confirmation of his
+faith. It was rather the suppressio veri of which he was guilty than
+the propositio falsi. So between them his childhood was invested with a
+vague semblance of reality in which the fact of his isolation stood out
+most prominent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They had many talks together, not only on books and art, but on the
+social subjects in which Ursula was so deeply interested. She found him
+well informed, with a curiously detailed knowledge of the everyday
+lives of the poor. It did not occur to her that this knowledge came
+from his personal experience. She attributed it to the many-sided
+genius of her paragon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When you get well you must help us. There's an infinite amount to be
+done."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shall be delighted," said Paul politely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll find I'm a terrible person to deal with when once I've laid my
+hands on anybody," she said with a smile. "I drag in all kinds of
+people, and they can't escape. I sent young Harry Gostling&mdash;Lord
+Ruthmere's son, you know&mdash;to look into a working girls' club in the
+Isle of Dogs that was going wrong. He hated it at first, but now he's
+as keen as possible. And you'll be keen too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was flattering to be classified with leisured and opulent young
+Guardsmen; but what, Paul reflected with a qualm, would the kind lady
+say if she learned the real state of his present fortunes? He thought
+of the guinea that lay between him and starvation, and was amused by
+the irony of her proposition. Miss Winwood evidently took it for
+granted that he was in easy circumstances, living on the patrimony
+administered during his boyhood by a careless guardian. He shrank from
+undeceiving her. His dream was beginning to come true. He was accepted
+by one of the high caste as belonging to the world where princes and
+princesses dwelt serene. If only he could put the theatre behind him,
+as he had put the rest, and make a stepping-stone of his dead actor
+self! But that was impossible, or at least the question would have to
+be fought out between himself and fortune after he had left Drane's
+Court. In the meanwhile he glowed with the ambition to leave it in his
+newly acquired splendour, drums beating, banners flying, the young
+prince returning to his romantic and mysterious solitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The time was approaching when he should get up. He sent for his
+luggage. The battered trunk and portmanteau plastered with the labels
+of queer provincial towns did not betray great wealth. Nor did the
+contents, taken out by the man-servant and arranged in drawers by the
+nurse. His toilet paraphernalia was of the simplest and scantiest. His
+stock of frayed linen and darned underclothes made rather a poor little
+heap on the chair. He watched the unpacking somewhat wistfully from his
+bed; and, like many another poor man, inwardly resented his poverty
+being laid bare to the eyes of the servants of the rich.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The only thing that the man seemed to handle respectfully&mdash;as a
+recognized totem of a superior caste&mdash;was a brown canvas case of golf
+clubs, which he stood up in a conspicuous corner of the room. Paul had
+taken to the Ancient and Royal game when first he went on tour, and it
+had been a health-giving resource during the listless days when there
+was no rehearsal or no matinee&mdash;hundreds of provincial actors, to say
+nothing of retired colonels and such-like derelicts, owe their
+salvation of body and soul to the absurd but hygienic pastime&mdash;and with
+a naturally true eye and a harmonious body trained to all demands on
+its suppleness in the gymnasium, proficiency had come with little
+trouble. He was a born golfer; for the physically perfect human is a
+born anything physical you please. But he had not played for a long
+time. Half-crowns had been very scarce on this last disastrous tour,
+and comrades who included golf in their horizon of human possibilities
+had been rarer. When would he play again? Heaven knew! So he looked
+wistfully, too, at his set of golf clubs. He remembered how he had
+bought them&mdash;one by one.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you want this on the dressing table?" The nurse held up a little
+oblong case.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was his make-up box, luckily tied round with string.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good heavens, no!" he exclaimed. He wished he could have told her to
+burn it. He felt happier when all his belongings were stowed away out
+of sight and the old trunk and portmanteau hauled out of the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood came home and asked his sister pertinent questions. He
+was a bald, sad-looking man with a long grizzling moustache that
+drooped despondently. But he had a square, obstinate chin, and his
+eyes, though they seldom smiled, were keen and direct, like Miss
+Winwood's. Romance had passed him by long since. He did not believe in
+paragons.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I gather, my dear Ursula," said he in a dry voice, "that our guest is
+an orphan, of good Italian family, brought up in England by a guardian
+now dead who lived in France. Also that he is of prepossessing
+exterior, of agreeable manners, of considerable cultivation, and
+apparently of no acquaintance. But what I can't make out is: what he
+does for a living, how he came to be half-starved on his walking
+tour&mdash;the doctor said so, you remember&mdash;where he was going from and
+where he is going to when he leaves our house. In fact, he seems to be
+a very vague and mysterious person, of whom, for a woman of your
+character and peculiar training, you know singularly little."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood replied that she could not pry into the lad's private
+affairs. Her brother retorted that a youth, in his physically helpless
+condition, who was really ingenuous, would have poured out his life's
+history into the ears of so sympathetic a woman, and have bored her to
+tears with the inner secrets of his soul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He has high aspirations. He has told me of them. But he hasn't bored
+me a bit," said Ursula.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What does he aspire to?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What does any brilliant young fellow of two or three and twenty aspire
+to? Anything, everything. He has only to find his path."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, but what is his path?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wish you weren't so much like Uncle Edward, James," said Ursula.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's a damned clever old man," said Colonel Winwood, "and I wish he
+had stayed here long enough to be able to put our young friend through
+a searching cross-examination."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ursula lifted her finger-bowl an inch from the doiley and carefully put
+it down again. It was the evening of Colonel Winwood's arrival, and
+they were lingering over coffee in the great, picture-hung and softly
+lighted dining room. Having fixed the bowl in the exact centre of the
+doiley, she flashed round on her brother. "My dear James, do you think
+I'm an idiot?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He took his cigar from his lips and looked at her with not unhumorous
+dryness. "When the world was very young, my dear," said he, "I've no
+doubt I called you so. But not since."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She stretched out her hand and tapped his. She was very fond of him.
+"You can't help being a man, my poor boy, and thinking manly thoughts
+of me, a woman. But I'm not an idiot. Our young friend, as you call
+him, is as poor as a church mouse. I know it. No, don't say, 'How?'
+like Uncle Edward. He hasn't told me, but Nurse has&mdash;a heart-breaking
+history of socks and things. There's the doctor's diagnosis, too. I
+haven't forgotten. But the boy is too proud to cry poverty among
+strangers. He keeps his end up like a man. To hear him talk, one would
+think he not only hadn't a care in the world, but that he commanded the
+earth. How can one help admiring the boy's pluck and&mdash;that's where my
+reticence comes in&mdash;respecting the boy's reserve?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"H'm!" said Colonel Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, good gracious, Jim, dear, supposing you&mdash;or any of us&mdash;men, I
+mean&mdash;had been in this boy's extraordinary position&mdash;would you have
+acted differently? You would have died rather than give your poverty
+away to absolute strangers to whom you were indebted, in the way this
+boy is indebted to us. Good God, jim"&mdash;she sent her dessert knife
+skimming across the table&mdash;"don't you see? Any reference to poverty
+would be an invitation&mdash;a veiled request for further help. To a
+gentleman like Paul Savelli, the thing's unthinkable."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood selected a fresh cigar, clipped off the end, and lit it
+from a silver spirit lamp by his side. He blew out the first exquisite
+puff&mdash;the smoker's paradise would be the one first full and fragrant,
+virginal puff of an infinite succession of perfect cigars&mdash;looked
+anxiously at the glowing point to see that it was exactly lighted, and
+leaned back in his chair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What you say, dear," said he, "is plausible. Plausible almost to the
+point of conviction. But there's a hole somewhere in your argument, I'm
+sure, and I'm too tired after my journey to find it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus, as the stars in their courses fought against Sisera, so did they
+fight for Paul; and in both cases they used a woman as their instrument.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood, in spite of a masculine air of superiority, joined
+with the Archbishops and Cabinet Ministers above referred to in their
+appreciation of his sister's judgment. After all, what business of his
+were the private affairs of his involuntary guest? He paid him a visit
+the next day, and found him lying on a couch by the sunny window, clad
+in dressing gown and slippers. Paul rose politely, though he winced
+with pain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't get up, please. I'm Colonel Winwood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They shook hands. Paul began to wheel an armchair from the bedside, but
+Colonel Winwood insisted on his lying down again and drew up the chair
+himself. "I'm afraid," said Paul, "I've been a sad trespasser on your
+hospitality. Miss Winwood must have told you it has scarcely been my
+fault; but I don't know how to express my thanks."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Paul made it, the little speech could not have been better. Colonel
+Winwood, who (like the seniors of every age) deplored the lack of
+manners of the rising generation, was pleased by the ever so little
+elaborate courtesy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm only too glad we've pulled you round. You've had a bad time, I
+hear."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled. "Pretty bad. If it hadn't been for Miss Winwood and all
+she has done for me, I should have pegged out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My sister's a notable woman," said the Colonel. "When she sets out to
+do a thing she does it thoroughly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I owe her my life," said Paul simply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a pause. The two men, both bright-eyed, looked at each other
+for the fraction of a second. One, the aristocrat secure of his wealth,
+of his position, of himself, with no illusion left him save pride of
+birth, no dream save that of an England mighty and prosperous under
+continuous centuries of Tory rule, no memories but of stainless
+honour&mdash;he had fought gallantly for his Queen, he had lived like a
+noble gentleman, he had done his country disinterested service&mdash;no
+ambition but to keep himself on the level of the ideal which he had
+long since attained; the other the creation of nothing but of dreams,
+the child of the gutter, the adventurer, the vagabond, with no address,
+not even a back room over a sweetstuff shop in wide England, the
+possessor of a few suits of old clothes and one pound, one shilling and
+a penny, with nothing in front of him but the vast blankness of 'life,
+nothing behind him save memories of sordid struggle, with nothing to
+guide him, nothing to set him on his way with thrilling pulse and
+quivering fibres save the Vision Splendid, the glorious Hope, the
+unconquerable Faith. In the older man's eyes Paul read the calm, stern
+certainty of things both born to and achieved; and Colonel Winwood saw
+in the young man's eyes, as in a glass darkly, the reflection of the
+Vision.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And yours is a very young life," said he. "Gad! it must be wonderful
+to be twenty. 'Rich in the glory of my rising sun.' You know your
+Thackeray?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Riche de ma jeunesse,'" laughed Paul. "Thackeray went one better than
+Beranger, that time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I forgot," said Colonel Winwood. "My sister told me. You go about with
+Beranger as a sort of pocket Bible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed again. "When one is on the tramp one's choice of books is
+limited by their cubical content. One couldn't take Gibbon, for
+instance, or a complete Balzac."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood tugged at his drooping moustache and again scrutinized
+the frank and exceedingly attractive youth. His astonishing perfection
+of feature was obvious to anybody. Yet any inconsiderable human&mdash;a
+peasant of the Campagna, a Venetian gondolier, a swaggering brigand of
+Macedonia&mdash;could be astonishingly beautiful. And, being astonishingly
+beautiful, that was the beginning and end of him. But behind this
+merely physical attractiveness of his guest glowed a lambent
+intelligence, quick as lightning. There was humorous challenge in those
+laughing and lucent dark eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you know your Balzac?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, yes," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wonder if you do," said Colonel Winwood. "I'm rather a Balzacian
+myself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't say I've read all Balzac. That's a colossal order," said Paul,
+rather excited-for, in his limited acquaintance with cultivated folk,
+Colonel Winwood was the only human being who could claim acquaintance
+with one of the literary gods of his idolatry&mdash;"but I know him pretty
+well. I can't stand his 'Theatre'&mdash;that's footle&mdash;but the big
+things&mdash;'Le Pere Goriot,' 'La Cousine Bette,' 'Cesar Birotteau'&mdash;what a
+great book 'Cesar Birotteau' is!&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're right," said Colonel Winwood, forgetful of any possible
+barriers between himself and the young enthusiast. "It's one of the
+four or five great books, and very few people recognize it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Le Lys dans la Vallee,'" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's another&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And they talked for half an hour of the Baron Nucingen, and Rastignac,
+and Hulot, and Bixiou, and Lousteau, and Gobsec, and Gaudissart, and
+Vautrin, and many another vivid personage in the human comedy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That man could have gone on writing for a hundred years," cried Paul,
+"and he could have exhausted all the possibilities of human life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood smiled courteously. "We have a bond in Balzac," said
+he. "But I must go. My sister said I mustn't tire you." He rose. "We're
+having a lot of people down here this week for the shooting. There'll
+be good sport. Pity you're not well enough to join us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled. He had one of his flashes of tact, "I'm afraid," said he
+modestly, "that I've never fired off a gun in my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What?" cried the Colonel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood looked at him once more. "It's not many young men,"
+said he, "who would dare to make such a confession."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But what is the good of lying?" asked Paul, with the eyes of a cherub.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"None that I know of," replied the Colonel. He returned to his chair
+and rested his hand on the back. "You play golf, anyhow," said he,
+pointing to the brown canvas bag in the corner.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, yes," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any good?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fair to middling."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's your handicap?" asked the Colonel, an enthusiastic though
+inglorious practitioner of the game.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The deuce it is!" cried the Colonel. "Mine is fifteen. You must give
+me a lesson or two when you pull round. We've a capital course here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's very kind of you," said Paul, "but I'm afraid I shall be well
+enough for ordinary purposes long before I'm able to handle a golf
+club."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This silly pleurisy. It will hang about for ages!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll have to go my ways from here long before I can play."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any great hurry?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't go on accepting your wonderful hospitality indefinitely," said
+Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's nonsense. Stay as long as ever you like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I did that," said Paul, "I would stay on forever."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Colonel smiled and shook hands with him. In the ordinary way of
+social life this was quite an unnecessary thing to do. But he acted
+according to the impulses common to a thousand of his type&mdash;and a fine
+type&mdash;in England. Setting aside the mere romantic exterior of a
+Macedonian brigand, here was a young man of the period with
+astonishingly courteous manners, of&mdash;and this was of secondary
+consideration&mdash;of frank and winning charm, with a free-and-easy
+intimacy with Balzac, of fearless truthfulness regarding his
+deficiencies, and with a golf handicap of one. The Colonel's hand and
+heart went out in instinctive coordination. The Colonel Winwoods of
+this country are not gods; they are very humanly fallible; but of such
+is the Kingdom of England.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At any rate," said he, "you mustn't dream of leaving us yet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went downstairs and met his sister in the hall.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well?" she asked, with just a gleam of quizzicality in her eyes, for
+she knew whence he had come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One of these days I'll take him out and teach him to shoot," said the
+Colonel.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap10"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER X
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+THE shooting party came, and Paul, able to leave his room and sit in
+the sunshine and crawl about the lawn and come down to dinner, though
+early retirement was prescribed, went among the strange men and women
+of the aristocratic caste like one in a dream of bliss. Much of their
+talk, sport and personalities, was unintelligible; every man seemed to
+have killed everything everywhere and every woman seemed to know
+everybody and everybody's intimate secrets. So when conversation was
+general, Paul, who had killed nothing and knew nobody, listened in
+silent perplexity. But even the perplexity was a happiness. It was all
+so new, so fascinating. For was not this world of aristocrats&mdash;there
+were lords and ladies and great personages whose names he had read in
+the newspapers&mdash;his rightful inheritance, the sphere to which he had
+been born? And they did not always talk of things which he did not
+understand. They received him among them with kind welcome and
+courtesy. No one asked him whence he came and whither he was going.
+They took him for granted, as a guest of the Winwoods. Of course if
+Paul had seen himself on the way to rival the famous actor whose
+photograph in the window of the London Stereoscopic Company had
+inspired him with histrionic ambitions, he would have been at no pains
+to hide his profession. But between the darling of the London stage and
+a seedy member of a fit-up company lies a great gulf. He shrank from
+being associated with Mr. Vincent Crummles. One thing, however, of
+invaluable use he had brought with him from Theatreland&mdash;the dress suit
+which formed part of his stage wardrobe. There were other things, too,
+which he did not appreciate&mdash;ease of manner, victory over the lingering
+Lancastrian burr, and a knowledge of what to do with his feet and hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One day he had a great shock. The house party were assembling in the
+drawing-room, when in sailed the great lady, the ever-memorable great
+lady, the Marchioness of Chudley, who had spoken to him and smiled on
+him in the Bludston factory. Fear laid a cold grip on his heart. He
+thought of pleading weakness and running away to the safe obscurity of
+his room. But it was too late. The procession was formed immediately,
+and he found himself in his place with his partner on his arm. Dinner
+was torture. What he said to his neighbours he knew not. He dared not
+look up the table where Lady Chudley sat in full view. Every moment he
+expected&mdash;ridiculous apprehension of an accusing conscience&mdash;Colonel
+Winwood to come and tap him on the shoulder and bid him begone. But
+nothing happened. Afterwards, in the drawing-room, Fate drove him into
+a corner near Lady Chudley, whose eyes he met clear upon him. He turned
+away hurriedly and plunged into conversation with a young soldier
+standing by. Presently he heard Miss Winwood's voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Savelli, I want to introduce you to Lady Chudley."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fear gripped him harder and colder. How could he explain that he
+was occupying his rightful place in that drawing-room? But he held
+himself up and resolved to face the peril like a man. Lady Chudley
+smiled on him graciously&mdash;how well he remembered her smile!&mdash;and made
+him sit by her side. She was a dark, stately woman of forty, giving the
+impression that she could look confoundedly cold and majestic when she
+chose. She wore diamonds in her hair and a broad diamond clasp to the
+black velvet round her throat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Miss Winwood has been telling me what an awful time you've had, Mr.
+Savelli," she said pleasantly. "Now, whenever I hear of people having
+had pneumonia I always want to talk to them and sympathize with them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's very kind of you, Lady Chudley," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only a fellow-feeling. I nearly died of it once myself. I hope you're
+getting strong."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm feeling my strength returning every day. It's a queer new joy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They discussed the exhilaration of convalescence. It was a 'wonderful
+springtide. They reverted to the preceding misery.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're far luckier than I was," she remarked. "You've had a comfy
+English house to be ill in. I was in a stone-cold palazzo in
+Florence&mdash;in winter. Ugh! Shall I ever forget it? I don't want to speak
+evil of Italy to an Italian&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm only Italian by descent," exclaimed Paul, with a laugh, his first
+frank laugh during the whole of that gloomy evening. And he laughed
+louder than was necessary, for, as it suddenly dawned upon him that he
+did not in the least recall to her mind the grimy little Bludston boy,
+the cold hand of fear was dissolved in a warm gush of exultation. "You
+can abuse Italy or any country but England as much as you like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why mustn't I abuse England?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because it's the noblest country in the world," he cried; and, seeing
+approval in her eyes, he yielded to an odd temptation. "If one could
+only do something great for her!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What would you like to do?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anything. Sing for her. Work for her. Die for her. It makes one so
+impatient to sit down and do nothing. If one could only stir her up to
+a sense of her nationality!" he went on, less lyrically, though with
+the same fine enthusiasm. "She seems to be losing it, letting the
+smaller nations assert theirs to such an extent that she is running the
+risk of becoming a mere geographical expression. She has merged herself
+in the Imperial Ideal. That's magnificent; but the Empire ought to
+realize her as the great Motherheart. If England could only wake up as
+England again, what a wonderful thing it would be!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It would," said Lady Chudley. "And you would like to be the awakener?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay!" said Paul&mdash;"what a dream!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There was never a dream worth calling a dream that did not come true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you believe that, too?" he asked delightedly. "I've held to it all
+my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Winwood, who had been moving hostwise from group to group in
+the great drawing-room, where already a couple of bridge tables had
+been arranged, approached slowly. Lady Chudley gave him a laughing
+glance of dismissal. Paul's spacious Elizabethan patriotism, rare&mdash;at
+least in expression&mdash;among the young men of the day, interested and
+amused her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you dreamed all your life of being the Awakener of England?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have dreamed of being so many things," he said, anxious not to
+commit himself. For, truth to say, this new ambition was but a couple
+of minutes old.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It had sprung into life, however, like Pallas Athene, all armed and
+equipped.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And they have all come true?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His great eyes laughed and his curly head bent ever so slightly. "Those
+worth calling dreams," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A little later in the evening, when on retiring to an early bed he was
+wishing Miss Winwood good night, she said, "You're a lucky young man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know&mdash;but&mdash;" He looked smiling inquiry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lady Chudley's the most valuable woman in England for a young man to
+get on the right side of."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul went to bed dazed. The great lady who had recognized the divine
+fire in the factory boy had again recognized it in the grown man. She
+had all but said that, if he chose, he could be the Awakener of
+England. The Awakener of England! The watchword of his new-born
+ambition rang in his brain until he fell asleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The time soon came when the prospective Awakener of England awoke to
+the fact that he must fare forth into the sleeping land with but a
+guinea in his pocket. The future did not dismay him, for he knew now
+that his dreams came true. But he was terribly anxious, more anxious
+than ever, to leave Drane's Court with all the prestige of the
+prospective Awakener. Now, this final scene of the production could not
+be worked for a guinea. There were golden tips to servants, there was
+the first-class railway fare. Once in London&mdash;he could pawn things to
+keep him going, and a Bloomsbury landlady with whom he had lodged,
+since the loss of Jane, would give him a fortnight or three weeks'
+credit. But he had to get to London-to get there gloriously; so that
+when the turn of Fortune's wheel enabled him to seek again these
+wonderful friends in the aristocratic sphere to which he belonged, he
+could come among them untarnished, the conquering prince. But that
+miserable guinea! He racked his brains. There was his gold watch and
+chain, a symbol, to his young mind, of high estate. When he had bought
+it there crossed his mind the silly thought of its signification of the
+infinite leagues that lay between him and Billy Goodge. He could pawn
+it for ten pounds&mdash;it would be like pawning his heart's blood&mdash;but
+where? Not in Morebury, even supposing there was a pawnbroker's in the
+place. He had many friends in his profession, scattered up and down the
+land. But he had created round himself the atmosphere of the young
+magnifico. It was he who had lent, others who had borrowed. Rothschild
+or Rockefeller inviting any of them to lend him money would have
+produced less jaw-dropping amazement. Even if he sent his pride flying
+and appealed to the most friendly and generous, he shrank from the
+sacrifice he would call upon the poor devil to make. There was only his
+beautiful and symbolic watch and chain. The nearest great town where he
+could be sure of finding a pawnbroker was distant an hour's train
+journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So on the day before that for which, in spite of hospitable
+protestations on the part of Colonel and Miss Winwood, he had fixed his
+departure, he set forth on the plea of private business, and returned
+with a heavier pocket and a heavier heart. He had been so proud, poor
+boy, of the gold insignia across his stomach. He had had a habit of
+fingering it lovingly. Now it was gone. He felt naked&mdash;in a curious way
+dishonoured. There only remained his cornelian talisman. He got back in
+time for tea and kept his jacket closely buttoned. But in the evening
+he had perforce to appear stark and ungirt&mdash;in those days Fashion had
+not yet decreed, as it does now, the absence of watchchain on evening
+dress&mdash;and Paul shambled into the drawing-room like a guest without a
+wedding garment. There were still a few people staying in the
+house&mdash;the shooting party proper, and Lady Chudley, had long since
+gone&mdash;but enough remained to be a social microcosm for Paul. Every eye
+was upon him. In spite of himself, his accusing hand went fingering the
+inanity of his waistcoat front. He also fingered, with a horrible
+fascination, the dirty piece of card that took the place of his watch
+in his pocket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One must be twenty to realize the tragedy of it. Dans un grenier qu'on
+est bien a vingt ans! To be twenty, in a garret, with the freedom and
+the joy of it! Yes; the dear poet was right. In those "brave days" the
+poignancy of life comes not in the garret, but in the palace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To-morrow, with his jacket buttoned, he could make his exit from
+Drane's Court in the desired splendour&mdash;scattering largesse to menials
+and showing to hosts the reflected glow of the golden prospects before
+him; but for this evening the glory had departed. Besides, it was his
+last evening there, and London's welcome tomorrow would be none too
+exuberant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The little party was breaking up, the ladies retiring for the night,
+and the men about to accompany Colonel Winwood to the library for a
+final drink and cigarette. Paul shook hands with Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good night&mdash;and good-bye," she said, "if you take the early train. But
+must you really go to-morrow?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I must," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope we'll very soon be seeing you again. Give me your address." She
+moved to a bridge table and caught up the marking block, which she
+brought to him. "Now I've forgotten the pencil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've got one," said Paul, and impulsively thrusting his fingers into
+his waistcoat pocket, flicked them out with the pencil. But he also
+flicked out the mean-looking card of which he had been hatefully
+conscious all the evening. The Imp of Mischance arranged that as Miss
+Winwood stood close by his side, it should fall, unperceived by him, on
+the folds of her grey velvet train. He wrote the Bloomsbury address and
+handed her the leaf torn from the pad. She folded it up, moved away,
+turning back to smile. As she turned she happened to look downward;
+then she stooped and picked the card from her dress. A conjecture of
+horror smote Paul. He made a step forward and stretched out his hand;
+but not before she had instinctively glanced first at the writing and
+then at his barren waistcoat. She repressed a slight gasp, regarding
+him with steady, searching eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His dark face flushed crimson as he took the accursed thing, desiring
+no greater boon from Heaven than instant death. He felt sick with
+humiliation. The brightly lit room grew black. It was in a stupor of
+despair that he heard her say, "Wait a bit here, till I've got rid of
+these people."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He stumbled away and stood on the bearskin rug before the fireplace,
+while she joined the lingering group by the door. The two or three
+minutes were an eternity of agony to Paul. He had lost his great game.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood shut the door and came swiftly to him and laid her hand on
+his arm. Paul hung his head and looked into the fire. "My poor boy!"
+she said very tenderly. "What are you going to do with yourself?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If it had not been for the diabolical irony of the mishap he would have
+answered with his gay flourish. But now he could not so answer. Boyish,
+hateful tears stood in his eyes and, in spite of anguished effort of
+will, threatened to fall. He continued to look into the fire, so that
+she should not see them. "I shall go on as I always have done," he said
+as stoutly as he could.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your prospects are not very bright, I fear."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shall keep my head above water," said Paul. "Oh, please don't!" he
+cried, shivering. "You have been so good to me. I can't bear you to
+have seen that thing. I can't stand it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear boy," she said, coming a little nearer, "I don't think the
+worse of you for that. On the contrary, I admire your pluck and your
+brave attitude towards life. Indeed I do. I respect you for it. Do you
+remember the old Italian story of Ser Federigo and his falcon? How he
+hid his poverty like a knightly gentleman? You see what I mean, don't
+you? You mustn't be angry with me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her words were Gilead balm of instantaneous healing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Angry?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His voice quavered. In a revulsion of emotion he turned blindly, seized
+her hand and kissed it. It was all he could do.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I have found it out&mdash;not just now," she quickly interjected, seeing
+him wince, "but long ago&mdash;it was not your fault. You've made a gallant
+gentleman's show to the end&mdash;until I come, in a perfectly brutal way,
+and try to upset it. Tell me&mdash;I'm old enough to be your mother, and you
+must know by this time that I'm your friend&mdash;have you any resources at
+all&mdash;beyond&mdash;?" She made ever so slight a motion of her hand toward the
+hidden pawn ticket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Paul, with his sure tact and swiftly working imagination. "I
+had just come to an end of them. It's a silly story of losses and
+what-not&mdash;I needn't bother you with it. I thought I would walk to
+London, with the traditional half-crown in my pocket"&mdash;he flashed a
+wistful smile&mdash;"and seek my fortune. But I fell ill at your gates."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now that you're restored to health, you propose in the same
+debonair fashion to&mdash;well&mdash;to resume the search?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Paul, all the fighting and aristocratic instincts
+returning. "Why not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were no tears in his eyes now, and they looked with luminous
+fearlessness at Miss Winwood. He drew a chair to the edge of the
+bearskin. "Won't you sit down, Miss Winwood?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She accepted the seat. He sat down too. Before replying she played with
+her fan rather roughly&mdash;more or less as a man might have played with
+it. "What do you think of doing?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Journalism," said Paul. He had indeed thought of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you any opening?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"None," he laughed. "But that's the oyster I'm going to open."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood took a cigarette from a silver box near by. Paul sprang to
+light it. She inhaled in silence half a dozen puffs. "I'm going to ask
+you an outrageous question," she said, at last. "In the first place,
+I'm a severely business woman, and in the next I've got an uncle and a
+brother with cross-examining instincts, and, though I loathe them&mdash;the
+instincts, I mean&mdash;I can't get away from them. We're down on the
+bedrock of things, you and I. Will you tell me, straight, why you went
+away to-day to&mdash;to"&mdash;she hesitated&mdash;"to pawn your watch and chain,
+instead of waiting till you got to London?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul threw out his arms in a wide gesture. "Why&mdash;your servants&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She cast the just lighted cigarette into the fire, rose and clapped her
+hands on his shoulders, her face aflame. "Forgive me&mdash;I knew it&mdash;there
+are doubting Thomases everywhere&mdash;and I'm a woman who deals with facts,
+so that I can use them to the confusion of enemies. Now I have them.
+Ser Federigo's watch and chain. Nicht wahr?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Remember, you who judge this sensible woman of forty-three, that she
+had fallen in love with Paul in the most unreprehensible way in the
+world; and if a woman of that age cannot fall in love with a boy
+sweetly motherwise, what is the good of her? She longed to prove that
+her polyhedral crystal of a paragon radiated pure light from every one
+of his innumerable facets. It was a matter of intense joy to turn him
+round and find each facet pure. There was also much pity in her heart,
+such as a woman might feel for a wounded bird which she had picked up
+and nursed in her bosom and healed. Ursula was loath to let her bird
+fly forth into the bleak winter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My brother and I have been talking about you&mdash;he is your friend, too,"
+she said, resuming her seat. "How would it suit you to stay with us
+altogether?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul started bolt upright in his chair. "What do you mean?" he asked
+breathlessly, for the heavens had opened with dazzling unexpectedness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In some such position as confidential secretary&mdash;at a decent salary,
+of course. We've not been able to find a suitable man since Mr.
+Kinghorne left us in the spring. He got into Parliament, you know, for
+Reddington at the by-election&mdash;and we've been muddling along with
+honorary secretaries and typists. I shouldn't suggest it to you," she
+went on, so as to give him time to think, for he sat staring at her,
+openmouthed, bewildered, his breath coming quickly&mdash;"I shouldn't
+suggest it to you if there were no chances for you in it. You would be
+in the thick of public affairs, and an ambitious man might find a path
+in them that would lead him anywhere. I've had the idea in my head,"
+she smiled, "for-some time. But I've only spoken to my brother about it
+this afternoon&mdash;he has been so busy, you see&mdash;and I intended to have
+another talk with him, so as to crystallize things&mdash;duties, money, and
+so forth&mdash;before making you any proposal. I was going to write to you
+with everything cut and dried. But"&mdash;she hesitated delicately&mdash;"I'm
+glad I didn't. It's so much more simple and friendly to talk. Now, what
+do you say?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose and gripped his hands together and looked again into the
+fire. "What can I say? I could only go on my knees to you&mdash;and that&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That would be beautifully romantic and entirely absurd," she laughed.
+"Anyhow, it's settled. Tomorrow we can discuss details." She rose and
+put out her hand. "Good night, Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He bowed low. "My dearest lady," said he in a low voice, and went and
+held the door open for her to pass out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he flung up his arms wildly and laughed aloud and strode about the
+room in exultation. All he had hoped for and worked for was an exit of
+fantastic and barren glory. After which, the Deluge&mdash;anything. He had
+never dreamed of this sudden blaze of Fortune. Now, indeed, did the
+Great Things to which he was born lie to his hand. Queerly but surely
+Destiny was guiding him upward. In every way Chance had worked for him.
+His poverty had been a cloak of honour; the thrice-blessed pawn ticket
+a patent of nobility. His kingdom lay before him, its purple mountains
+looming through the mists of dawn. And he would enter into it as the
+Awakener of England. He stood thrilled. The ambition was no longer the
+wild dream of yesterday. From the heart of the great affairs in which
+he would have his being he could pluck his awakening instrument. The
+world seemed suddenly to become real. And in the midst of it was this
+wonderful, beautiful, dearest lady with her keen insight, her delicate
+sympathy, her warm humanity. With some extravagance he consecrated
+himself to her service.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After a while he sat down soberly and took from his pocket the
+cornelian heart which his first goddess had given him twelve years ago.
+What had become of her? He did not even know her name. But what
+happiness, he thought, to meet her in the plenitude of his greatness
+and show her the heart, and say, "I owe it all to you!" To her alone of
+mortals would he reveal himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then he thought of Barney Bill, who had helped him on his way; of
+Rowlatt, good fellow, who was dead; and of Jane, whom he had lost. He
+wished he could write to Jane and tell her the wonderful news. She
+would understand.... Well, well! It was time for bed. He rose and
+switched off the lights and went to his room. But as he walked through
+the great, noiseless house, he felt, in spite of Fortune's bounty, a
+loneliness of soul; also irritation at having lost Jane. What a letter
+he could have written to her! He could not say the things with which
+his heart was bursting to anyone on earth but Jane. Why had he lost
+Jane? The prospective Awakener of England wanted Jane.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap11"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+ONE morning Paul, with a clump of papers in his hand, entered his
+pleasant private room at Drane's Court, stepped briskly to the long
+Cromwellian table placed in the window bay, and sat down to his
+correspondence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was gusty outside, as could be perceived by the shower of yellow
+beech leaves that slanted across the view; but indoors a great fire
+flaming up the chimney, a Turkey carpet fading into beauty, rich
+eighteenth century mezzotints on the walls, reposeful leather-covered
+chairs and a comfortable bookcase gave an atmosphere of warmth and
+coziness. Paul lit a cigarette and attacked a pile of unopened letters.
+At last he came to an envelope, thick and faintly scented, bearing a
+crown on the flap. He opened it and read:
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+DEAR MR. SAVELLI:
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+Will you dine on Saturday and help me entertain an eminent
+Egyptologist? I know nothing of Egypt save Shepheard's Hotel, and that
+I'm afraid wouldn't interest him. Do come to my rescue. Yours, SOPHIE
+ZOBRASKA.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Paul leaned back in his chair, twiddling the letter between his
+fingers, and looked smilingly out on the grey autumn rack of clouds.
+There was a pleasant and flattering intimacy in the invitation:
+pleasant because it came from a pretty woman; flattering because the
+woman was a princess, widow of a younger son of a Royal Balkan house.
+She lived at Chetwood Park, on the other side of Morebury, and was one
+of the great ones of those latitudes. A real princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul's glance, travelling back from the sky, fell upon the brass date
+indicator on the table. It marked the 2nd of October. On that day five
+years ago he had entered on his duties at Drane's Court. He laughed
+softly. Five years ago he was a homeless wanderer. Now princesses were
+begging him to rescue them from Egyptologists. With glorious sureness
+all his dreams were coming true.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thus we see our Fortunate Youth at eight-and-twenty in the heyday of
+success. If he had strutted about under Jane's admiring eyes, like a
+peacock among daws, he now walked serene, a peacock among peacocks. He
+wore the raiment, frequented the clubs, ate the dinners of the
+undeservingly rich and the deservingly great. His charm and his
+self-confidence, which a genius of tact saved from self-assertion,
+carried him pleasantly through the social world; his sympathetic
+intelligence dealt largely and strongly with the public affairs under
+his control. He loved organizing, persuading, casting skilful nets. His
+appeal for subscriptions was irresistible. He had the magical gift of
+wringing a hundred pounds from a plutocrat with the air of conferring a
+graceful favour. In aid of the Mission to Convert the Jews he could
+have fleeced a synagogue. The societies and institutions in which the
+Colonel and Ursula Winwood were interested flourished amazingly beneath
+his touch. The Girls' Club in the Isle of Dogs, long since abandoned in
+despair by the young Guardsman, grew into a popular and sweetly
+mannered nunnery. The Central London Home for the Indigent Blind, which
+had been languishing for support, in spite of Miss Winwood's efforts,
+found itself now in a position to build a much-needed wing. There was
+also, most wonderful and, important thing of all, the Young England
+League, which was covering him with steadily increasing glory. Of this
+much hereafter. But it must be remembered. Ursula complained that he
+left her nothing to do save attend dreary committee meetings; and even
+for these Paul saved her all the trouble in hunting up information. She
+was a mere figurehead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dearest lady," Paul would say, "if you send me about my business,
+you'll write me a character, won't you, saying that you're dismissing
+me for incorrigible efficiency?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You know perfectly well," she would sigh, "that I would be a lost,
+lone woman without you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereat Paul would laugh his gay laugh. At this period of his life he
+had not a care in the world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The game of politics also fascinated him. A year or so after he joined
+the Winwoods there was a General Election. The Liberals, desiring to
+drive the old Tory from his lair, sent down a strong candidate to
+Morebury. There was a fierce battle, into which Paul threw himself,
+heart and soul. He discovered he could speak. When he first found
+himself holding a couple of hundred villagers in the grip of his
+impassioned utterance he felt that the awakening of England had begun.
+It was a delicious moment. As a canvasser he performed prodigies of
+cajolery. Extensive paper mills, a hotbed of raging Socialism,
+according to Colonel Winwood, defaced (in the Colonel's eyes) the
+outskirts of the little town.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They're wrong 'uns to a man," said the Colonel, despondently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul came back from among them with a notebook full of promises.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How did you manage it?" asked the Colonel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think I got on to the poetical side of politics," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What the deuce is that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled. "An appeal to the imagination," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Colonel Winwood got in by an increased majority, in spite of the
+wave of Liberalism that spread over the land, he gave Paul a gold
+cigarette case; and thenceforward admitted him into his political
+confidence. So Paul became familiar with the Lobby of the House of
+Commons and with the subjects before the Committees on which Colonel
+Winwood sat, and with the delicate arts of wire-pulling and intrigue,
+which appeared to him a monstrously fine diversion. There was also the
+matter of Colonel Winwood's speeches, which the methodical warrior
+wrote out laboriously beforehand and learned by heart. They were sound,
+weighty pronouncements, to which the House listened with respect; but
+they lacked the flashes which lit enthusiasm. One day he threw the
+bundle of typescript across to Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See what you think of that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul saw and made daring pencilled amendments, and took it to the
+Colonel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's all very funny," said the latter, tugging his drooping moustache,
+"but I can't say things like that in the House."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why not?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If they heard me make an epigram, they would have a fit."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Our side wouldn't. The Government might. The Government ought to have
+fits all the time until it expires in convulsions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But this is a mere dull agricultural question. The Board of
+Agriculture have brought it in, and it's such pernicious nonsense that
+I, as a county gentleman, have to speak against it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But couldn't you stick in my little joke about the pigs?" asked Paul
+pleadingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's that?" Colonel Winwood found the place in the script. "I say
+that the danger of swine fever arising from this clause in the Bill
+will affect every farmer in England."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I say," cried Paul eagerly, pointing to his note, "if this clause
+becomes law, swine fever will rage through the land like a demoniacal
+possession. The myriad pigs of Great Britain, possessed of the devils
+of Socialism, will be turned into Gadarene swine hurtling down to
+destruction. You can show how they hurtle, like this&mdash;" He flickered
+his hands. "Do try it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"H'm!" said Colonel Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sorely against his will, he tried it. To his astonishment it was a
+success. The House of Commons, like Mr. Peter Magnus's friend, is
+easily amused. The exaggeration gave a cannon-ball's weight to his
+sound argument. The Government dropped the clause&mdash;it was only a
+trivial part of a wide-reaching measure&mdash;the President of the Board of
+Agriculture saying gracefully that in the miracle he hoped to bring
+about he had unfortunately forgotten the effect it might have on the
+pigs. There was "renewed laughter," but Colonel Winwood remained the
+hero of the half-hour and received the ecstatic congratulations of
+unhumorous friends. He might have defeated the Government altogether.
+In the daily round of political life nothing is so remarkable as the
+lack of sense of proportion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was the Gadarene swine that did it," they said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And that," said Colonel Winwood honestly, "was my young devil of a
+secretary."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thenceforward the young wit and the fresh fancy of Paul played like a
+fountain over Colonel Winwood's and speeches.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look here, young man," said he one day, "I don't like it. Sometimes I
+take your confounded suggestions, because they happen to fit in; but
+I'm actually getting the reputation of a light political comedian, and
+it won't do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereupon Paul, with his swift intuition, saw that in the case of a
+proud, earnest gentleman like Colonel Winwood the tempting emendations
+of typescript would not do. In what Miss Winwood called his subtle
+Italian way, he induced his patron to discuss the speeches before the
+process of composition. These discussions, involving the swift rapier
+play of intelligences, Colonel Winwood enjoyed. They stimulated him
+magically. He sat down and wrote his speeches, delightfully unconscious
+of what in them was Paul and what was himself; and when he delivered
+them he was proud of the impression he had made upon the House.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And so, as the years passed, Paul gained influence not only in the
+little circle of Drane's Court and Portland Place, but also in the
+outer world. He was a young man of some note. His name appeared
+occasionally in the newspapers, both in connection with the Winwood
+charities and with the political machine of the Unionist party. He was
+welcomed at London dinner tables and in country houses. He was a young
+man who would go far. For the rest, he had learned to ride and shoot,
+and not to make mistakes about the genealogical relationships of
+important families. He had travelled about Europe, sometimes with the
+Winwoods, sometimes by himself. He was a young man of cultivation and
+accomplishment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On this fifth anniversary he sat gazing unseeingly at the autumn rack,
+the Princess's letter in his hand, and letting his thoughts wander down
+the years. He marvelled how valiantly the stars in their courses had
+fought for him. Even against recognition his life was charmed. Once,
+indeed, he met at the house in Portland Place a painter to whom he had
+posed. The painter looked at him keenly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Surely we have met before?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We have," said Paul with daring frankness. "I remember it gratefully.
+But if you would forget it I should be still more grateful."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The painter shook hands with him and smiled. "You may be sure I haven't
+the least idea what you're talking about."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As for Theatreland, the lower walks in the profession to which Paul had
+belonged do not cross the paths of high political society. It lay
+behind him far and forgotten. His position was secure. Here and there
+an anxious mother may have been worried as to his precise antecedents;
+but Paul was too astute to give mothers over-much cause for anxiety. He
+lived under the fascination of the Great Game. When he came into his
+kingdom he could choose; not before. His destiny was drawing him nearer
+and nearer to it, he thought, with slow and irresistible force. In a
+few years there would be Parliament, office, power, the awaking from
+stupor of an England hypnotized by malign influences. He saw himself at
+the table in the now familiar House of green benches, thundering out an
+Empire's salvation. If he thought more of the awakener than the
+awakening, it was because he was the same little Paul Kegworthy to whom
+the cornelian heart had brought the Vision Splendid in the scullery of
+the Bludston slum. The cornelian heart still lay in his waistcoat
+pocket at the end of his watch chain. He also held a real princess's
+letter in his hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A tap at the door aroused him from his day-dream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There entered a self-effacing young woman with pencil and notebook.
+"Are you ready for me, sir?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not quite. Sit down for a minute, Miss Smithers. Or, come up to the
+table if you don't mind, and help me open these envelopes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, you see, was a great man, who commanded the services of a
+shorthand typist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the mass of correspondence then opened and read he added that which
+he had brought in from Colonel and Miss Winwood. From this he sorted
+the few letters which it would be necessary to answer in his own
+handwriting, and laid them aside; then taking the great bulk, he
+planted himself on the hearthrug, with his back to the fire, and,
+cigarette in mouth, dictated to the self-effacing young woman. She took
+down his words with anxious humility, for she looked upon him as a god
+sphered on Olympian heights&mdash;and what socially insecure young woman of
+lower-middle-class England could do otherwise in the presence of a
+torturingly beautiful youth, immaculately raimented, who commanded in
+the great house with a smile more royal and debonair than that of the
+master thereof, Member of Parliament though he was, and Justice of the
+Peace and Lord of the Manor? And Paul, fresh from his retrospect,
+looked at the girl's thin shoulders and sharp, intent profile, and
+wondered a little, somewhat ironically. He knew that she regarded him
+as a kind of god, for reasons of caste. Yet she was the daughter of a
+Morebury piano tuner, of unblemished parentage for generations. She had
+never known hunger and cold and the real sting of poverty. Miss Winwood
+herself knew more of drunken squalor. He saw himself a ragged and
+unwashed urchin, his appalling breeches supported by one brace,
+addressing her in familiar terms; and he saw her transfigured air of
+lofty disgust; whereupon he laughed aloud in the middle of a most
+unhumorous sentence, much to Miss Smithers' astonishment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he had finished his dictation he dismissed her and sat down to his
+writing. After a while Miss Winwood came in. The five years had treated
+her lightly. A whitening of the hair about her brows, which really
+enhanced the comeliness of her florid complexion, a few more lines at
+corners of eyes and lips, were the only evidences of the touch of
+Time's fingers. As she entered Paul swung round from his writing chair
+and started to his feet. "Oh, Paul, I said the 20th for the Disabled
+Soldiers and Sailors, didn't I? I made a mistake. I'm engaged that
+afternoon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't think so, dearest lady," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then you've told me nothing about it," said Paul the infallible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," she said meekly. "It's all my fault. I never told you. I've
+asked the Bishop of Frome to lunch, and I can't turn him out at a
+quarter-past two, can I? What date is there free?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Together they bent over the engagement book, and after a little
+discussion the new date was fixed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm rather keen on dates to-day," said Paul, pointing to the brass
+calendar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's exactly five years since I entered your dear service," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We've worked you like a galley slave, and so I love your saying 'dear
+service,'" she replied gently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, half sitting on the edge of the Cromwellian table in the bay of
+the window, laughed. "I could say infinitely more, dearest lady, if I
+were to let myself go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She sat on the arm of a great leathern chair. Their respective
+attitudes signified a happy intimacy. "So long as you're contented, my
+dear boy&mdash;-" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Contented? Good heavens!" He waved a protesting hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're ambitious."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said he. "What would be the good of me if I wasn't?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One of these days you'll be wanting to leave the nest and&mdash;what shall
+we say?&mdash;soar upwards."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, too acute to deny the truth of this prophecy said: "I probably
+shall. But I'll be the rarissima avis, to whom the abandoned nest will
+always be the prime object of his life's consideration."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pretty,"' said Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sure of it," she said pleasantly. "Besides, if you didn't leave
+the nest and make a name for yourself, you wouldn't be able to carry on
+our work. My brother and I, you see, are of the older generation&mdash;you
+of the younger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're the youngest woman I know," Paul declared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shan't be in a few years, and my brother is a good deal older than
+I."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, I can't get into Parliament right away," said Paul. "For one
+thing, I couldn't afford it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must find you a nice girl with plenty of money," she said, half in
+jest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, please don't. I should detest the sight of her. By the way, shall
+you want me on Saturday evening?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No&mdash;unless it would be to take Miss Durning in to dinner."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now Miss Durning being an elderly, ugly heiress, it pleased Miss
+Winwood to be quizzical. He looked at her in mock reproof. "Dearest
+lady that you are, I don't feel safe in your hands just now. I shall
+dine with the Princess on Saturday."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An enigmatic smile flitted across Ursula Winwood's clear eyes. "What
+does she want you for?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To entertain an Egyptologist," assured Paul. He waved his hand toward
+the letter on the table. "There it is in black and white."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I suppose for the next few days you'll be cramming hard."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It would be the polite thing to do, wouldn't it?" said Paul blandly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood shook her head and went away, and Paul happily resumed his
+work. In very truth she was to him the dearest of ladies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess Zobraska was standing alone by the fireplace at the end of
+the long drawing-room when Paul was announced on Saturday evening. She
+was a distinguished-looking woman in the late twenties brown-haired,
+fresh-complexioned, strongly and at the same time delicately featured.
+Her dark blue eyes, veiled by lashes, smiled on him lazily as he
+approached; and lazily, too, her left arm stretched out, the palm of
+the hand downward, and she did not move. He kissed her knuckles, in
+orthodox fashion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is very good of you to come, Mr. Savelli," she said in a sweetly
+foreign accent, "and leave your interesting company at Drane's Court."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any company without you, Princess, is chaos," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Grand flatteur, va,&mdash;' said she.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"C'est que vous etes irresistible, Princesse, surlout dans ce
+costume-la."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She touched his arm with an ostrich feather fan. "When it comes to
+massacring languages, Mr. Savelli, let me be the assassin."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I laid the tribute of my heart at your feet in the most irreproachable
+grammar," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But with the accent of John Bull. That's the only thing of John Bull
+you have about you. For the sake of my ears I must give you some
+lessons."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll find me such a pupil as never teacher had in the world before.
+When shall we begin?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aux Kalendes Grecques."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah que vous etes femme!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She put her hands to her ears. "Listen. Que-vous-etes-femme" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Que-vous-etes-femme," Paul repeated parrotwise. "Is that better?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A little."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see the Greek Kalends have begun," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mechant, you have caught me in a trap," said she.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And they both laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From which entirely foolish conversation it may be gathered that
+between our Fortunate Youth and the Princess some genial sun had melted
+the icy barriers of formality. He had known her for eighteen months,
+ever since she had bought Chetwood Park and settled down as the great
+personage of the countryside. He had met her many times, both in London
+and in Morebury; he had dined in state at her house; he had shot her
+partridges; he had danced with her; he had sat out dances with her,
+notably on one recent June night, in a London garden, where they lost
+themselves for an hour in the discussion of the relative parts that
+love played in a woman's life and in a man's. The Princess was French,
+ancien regime, of the blood of the Coligny, and she had married, in the
+French practical way, the Prince Zobraska, in whose career the only
+satisfactory incident history has to relate is the mere fact of his
+early demise. The details are less exhilarating. The poor little
+Princess, happily widowed at one-and-twenty, had shivered the idea of
+love out of her system for some years. Then, as is the way of woman,
+she regained her curiosities. Great lady, of enormous fortune, she
+could have satisfied them, had she so chosen, with the large cynicism
+of a Catherine of Russia. She could also, had she so chosen, have
+married one of a hundred sighing and decorous gentlemen; but with none
+of them had she fallen ever so little in love, and without love she
+determined to try no more experiments; her determination, however, did
+not involve surrender of interest in the subject. Hence the notable
+discussion on the June night. Hence, perhaps, after a few other
+meetings of a formal character, the prettily intimate invitation she
+had sent to Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They were still laughing at the turn of the foolish conversation when
+the other guests began to enter the drawing-room. First came Edward
+Doon, the Egyptologist, a good-looking man of forty, having the air of
+a spruce don, with a pretty young wife, Lady Angela Doon; then Count
+Lavretsky, of the Russian Embassy, and Countess Lavretsky; Lord Bantry,
+a young Irish peer with literary ambitions; and a Mademoiselle de
+Cressy, a convent intimate of the Princess and her paid companion,
+completed the small party.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Dinner was served at a round table, and Paul found himself between Lady
+Angela Doon, whom he took in, and the Countess Lavretsky. Talk was
+general and amusing. As Doon did not make, and apparently did not
+expect anyone to make any reference to King Qa or Amenhotep or
+Rameses&mdash;names vaguely floating in Paul's brain&mdash;but talked in a
+sprightly way about the French stage and the beauty of Norwegian
+fiords, Paul perceived that the Princess's alleged reason for her
+invitation was but a shallow pretext. Doon did not need any
+entertainment at all. Lady Angela, however, spoke of her dismay at the
+prospect of another winter in the desert; and drew a graphic little
+sketch of the personal discomforts to which Egyptologists were
+subjected.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I always thought Egyptologists and suchlike learned folk were stuffy
+and snuffy with goggles and ragged old beards," laughed Paul. "Your
+husband is a revelation."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, he's quite human, isn't he?" she said with an affectionate glance
+across the table. "He's dead keen on his work, but he realizes&mdash;as many
+of his stuffy and snuffy confreres don't&mdash;that there's a jolly,
+vibrating, fascinating, modern world in which one lives."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad to hear you say that about the modern world," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is Lady Angela saying about the modern world?" asked the
+Princess, separated from Paul's partner only by Count Lavretsky.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Singing paeans in praise of it," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is there in it so much to rejoice at?" asked the diplomatist, in
+a harsh voice. He was a man prematurely old, and looked at the world
+from beneath heavy, lizard-like eyelids.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not only is it the best world we've got, but it's the best world we've
+ever had," cried Paul. "I don't know any historical world which would
+equal the modern, and as for the prehistoric&mdash;well, Professor Doon can
+tell us&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As a sphere of amenable existence," said Doon with a smile, "give me
+Chetwood Park and Piccadilly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is mere hedonism," said Count Lavretsky. "You happen, like us all
+here, to command the creature comforts of modern wealthy conditions,
+which I grant are exceedingly superior to those commanded by the great
+Emperors of ancient times. But we are in a small minority. And even if
+we were not&mdash;is that all?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We have a finer appreciation of our individualities," said the
+Princess. "We lead a wider intellectual life. We are in instant touch,
+practically, with the thought of the habitable globe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And with the emotive force of mankind," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is that?" asked Lady Angela.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Why Paul, after the first glance of courtesy at the speaker, should
+exchange a quick glance with the Princess would be difficult to say. It
+was instinctive; as instinctive as the reciprocal flash of mutual
+understanding.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think I know, but tell us," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, challenged, defined it as the swift wave of sympathy that surged
+over the earth. A famine in India, a devastating earthquake in Mexico,
+a bid for freedom on the part of an oppressed population, a deed of
+heroism at sea&mdash;each was felt within practically a few moments,
+emotionally, in an English, French or German village. Our hearts were
+throbbing continuously at the end of telegraph wires.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you call that pleasure?" asked Count Lavretsky.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It isn't hedonism, at any rate," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I call it life," said the Princess. "Don't you?"&mdash;she turned to Doon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think what Mr. Savelli calls the emotive force of mankind helps to
+balance our own personal emotions," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Or isn't it rather a wear and tear on the nervous system?" laughed his
+wife.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems so to me," said Count Lavretsky. "Perhaps, being a Russian, I
+am more primitive and envy a nobleman of the time of Pharaoh who never
+heard of devastations in Mexico, did not feel his heart called upon to
+pulsate at anything beyond his own concerns. But he in his wisdom at
+his little world was vanity and was depressed. We moderns, with our
+infinitely bigger world and our infinitely greater knowledge, have no
+more wisdom than the Egyptian, and we see that the world is all the
+more vanity and are all the more overwhelmed with despair."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But&mdash;" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But&mdash;" cried the Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Both laughed, and paused. Paul bowed with a slight gesture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am not overwhelmed with despair," the Princess continued.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Neither am I," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am keeping my end up wonderfully," said Lady Angela.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am in a nest of optimists," Count Lavretsky groaned. "But was it not
+you, Lady Angela, who talked of wear and tear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was only to contradict my husband."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is all this about?" asked the Countess Lavretsky, who had been
+discussing opera with Lord Bantry and Mademoiselle de Cressy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Doon scientifically crystallized the argument. It held the octette,
+while men-servants in powder and gold-laced livery offered poires
+Zobraska, a subtle creation of the chef. Lord Bantry envied the
+contemplative calm which unexciting circumstances allowed the literary
+ancient. Mademoiselle de Cressy advanced the feminist view in favour of
+the modern world. The talk became the light and dancing interplay of
+opinion and paradox common to thousands of twentieth-century
+dinner-tables.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All the same," said Count Lavretsky, "they wear you out, these emotive
+forces. Nobody is young nowadays. Youth is a lost art."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"On the contrary," cried Mademoiselle de Cressy in French. "Everybody
+is young to-day. This pulsation of the heart keeps you young. It is the
+day of the young woman of forty-five."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Count Lavretsky, who was fifty-nine, twirled a grey moustache. "I am
+one of the few people in the world who do not regret their youth. I do
+not regret mine, with its immaturity, its follies and subsequent
+headaches. I would sooner be the scornful philosopher of sixty than the
+credulous lover of twenty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He always talks like that," said the Countess to Paul; "but when he
+met me first he was thirty-five&mdash;and"&mdash;she laughed&mdash;"and now voila&mdash;for
+him there is no difference between twenty and sixty. Expliquez-moi ca."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's very simple," declared Paul. "In this century the thirties,
+forties, and fifties don't exist. You're either twenty or sixty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope I shall always be twenty," said the Princess lightly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you find your youth so precious, then?" asked Count Lavretsky.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"More than I ever did!" She laughed and again met Paul's eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This time she flushed faintly as she held them for a fraction of a
+second. He had time to catch a veiled soft gleam intimate and
+disquieting. For some time he did not look again in her direction; when
+he did, he met in her eyes only the lazy smile with which she regarded
+all and sundry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Later in the evening she said to him: "I'm glad you opposed Lavretsky.
+He makes me shiver. He was born old and wrinkled. He has never had a
+thrill in his life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And if you don't have thrills when you're young, you can't expect to
+have them when you're old," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He would ask what was the good of thrills."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't expect me to answer, Princess."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We know because we're young."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They stood laughing in the joy of their full youth, a splendid couple,
+some distance away from the others, ostensibly inspecting a luminous
+little Cima on the wall. The Princess loved it as the bright jewel of
+her collection, and Paul, with his sense of beauty and knowledge of
+art, loved it too. Yet, instead of talking of the picture, they talked
+of Lavretsky, who was looking at them sardonically from beneath his
+heavy eyelids.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap12"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+A FEW days afterwards you might have seen Paul dashing through the
+quiet main street of Morebury in a high dog-cart, on his way to call on
+the Princess. A less Fortunate Youth might have had to walk, risking
+boots impolitely muddy, or to hire a funereal cab from the local
+job-master; but Paul had only to give an order, and the cart and showy
+chestnut were brought round to the front door of Drane's Court. He
+loved to drive the showy chestnut, whose manifold depravities were the
+terror of Miss Winwood's life. Why didn't he take the cob? It was so
+much safer. Whereupon he would reply gaily that in the first place he
+found no amusement in driving woolly lambs, and in the second that if
+he did not take some of the devil out of the chestnut it would become
+the flaming terror of the countryside. So Paul, spruce in hard felt hat
+and box-cloth overcoat, clattered joyously through the Morebury
+streets, returning the salutations of the little notabilities of the
+town with the air of the owner not only of horse and cart, but of half
+the hearts in the place. He was proud of his popularity, and it
+scarcely entered his head that he was not the proprietor of his
+equipage. Besides, he was going to call on the Princess. He hoped that
+she would be alone: not that he had anything particular to say to her,
+or had any defined idea of love-making; but he was eight-and-twenty, an
+age at which desire has not yet failed and there is not the sign of a
+burdensome grasshopper anywhere about.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the Princess was not alone. He found Mademoiselle de Cressy in
+charge of the tea-table and the conversation. Like many Frenchwomen,
+she had a high-pitched voice; she also had definite opinions on
+matter-of-fact subjects. Now when you have come to talk gossamer with
+an attractive and sympathetic woman, it is irritating to have to
+discuss Tariff Reform and the position of the working classes in
+Germany with somebody else, especially when the attractive and pretty
+woman does not give you in any way to understand that she would prefer
+gossamer to such arid topics. The Princess was as gracious as you
+please. She made him feel that he was welcome in her cosy boudoir; but
+there was no further exchange of mutually understanding glances. If a
+great lady entertaining a penniless young man can be demure, then
+demure was the Princess Sophie Zobraska. Paul, who prided himself on
+his knowledge of feminine subtlety, was at fault; but who was he to
+appreciate the repressive influence of a practical-minded convent
+friend, quickly formative and loudly assertive of opinions, on an
+impressionable lady awakening to curiosities? He was just a dunderhead,
+like any one of us&mdash;just as much as the most eminent feminine
+psychologist alive&mdash;which is saying a good deal. So he drove away
+disappointed, the sobriety of the chestnut's return trot through
+Morebury contrasting oddly with the dashing clatter of the former
+journey.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was some time before he met the Princess again, for an autumn
+session of Parliament required migration to Portland Place. The
+Princess, indeed, came to London, shortly afterwards, to her great
+house in Berkeley Square; but it was not till late November that he was
+fortunate enough to see her. Then it was only a kiss of the hand and a
+hurried remark or two, at a large dinner-party at the Winwoods'. You
+see, there are such forces as rank and precedence at London
+dinner-parties, to which even princesses and fortunate youths have to
+yield.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On this occasion, as he bent over her hand, he murmured: "May I say how
+beautiful you are to-night, Princess?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She wore a costume of silver and deep blue, and the blue intensified
+the blue depths of her eyes. "I am delighted to please monsieur," she
+said in French.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And that was their meeting. On parting she said again in French: "When
+are you coming to see me, fickle one?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Whenever you ask me. I have called in vain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have a card for my reception next Tuesday?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have replied that I do myself the honour of accepting the Princess's
+gracious invitation."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't like London, do you?" she asked, allowing a touch of
+wistfulness to inflect her voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It has its charms. A row on the Serpentine, for instance, or a bicycle
+ride in Battersea Park."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How lovely it would be," she said, between laugh and sigh, "if only it
+could be kept out of the newspapers! I see it from here under the
+Fashionable Intelligence. 'The beautiful Princess Zobraska was observed
+in a boat on the ornamental water in Regent's Park with the
+well-known&mdash;tiens&mdash;what are you?&mdash;politician, say&mdash;with the well-known
+young politician, Mr. Paul Savelli.' Quel scandale, hein?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I must content myself with kissing your finger tips at your
+reception," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She smiled. "We will find a means," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At her reception, an assemblage glittering with the diamonds and orders
+of the great ones of the earth, she found only time to say: "Come
+to-morrow at five. I shall be alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Darkness descended on Paul as he replied: "Impossible, Princess.
+Colonel Winwood wants me at the House."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next morning, greatly daring, he rang her up; for a telephone stood
+on the Fortunate Youth's table in his private sitting-room in Portland
+Place.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is I, Princess, Paul Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What have you to say for yourself, Paul Savelli?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am at your feet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why can't you come to-day?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He explained.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But tell Colonel Winwood that I want you"&mdash;the voice was imperious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Would that be wise, Princess?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wise?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Don't you see?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited for an answer. There was blank electric current whirring
+faintly on his ear. He thought she had rung off&mdash;rung off not only this
+conversation, but all converse in the future. At last, after the
+waiting of despair, came the voice, curiously meek. "Can you come
+Friday?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"With joy and delight." The words gushed out tempestuously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good. At five o'clock. And leave your John Bull wisdom on the
+doorstep."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rang off abruptly, and Paul stood ruminating puzzlewise on the
+audacious behest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On Friday he presented himself at her house in Berkeley Square. He
+found her gracious, but ironical in attitude, very much on the
+defensive. She received him in the Empire drawing room&mdash;very stiff and
+stately in its appointments. It had the charm (and the intrinsic value)
+of a museum; it was as cosy as a room (under present arrangements) at
+Versailles. The great wood fire alone redeemed it from artistic
+bleakness. Tea was brought in by portentous, powdered footmen in
+scarlet and gold. She was very much the princess; the princess in her
+state apartments, a different personage from the pretty woman in a
+boudoir. Paul, sensitive as far as it is given man to be, saw that if
+he had obeyed her and left his John Bull wisdom on the doorstep, he
+would have regretted it. Obviously she was punishing him; perhaps
+herself; perhaps both of them. She kept a wary, appraising eye on him,
+as they talked their commonplaces. Paul's attitude had the correctness
+of a young diplomatist paying a first formal call. It was only when he
+rose to go that her glance softened. She laughed a queer little laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hear that you are going to address a meeting in the North of London
+next week."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is so," said Paul; "but how can my unimportant engagements have
+come to the ears of Your Highness?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I read my newspapers like everybody else. Did you not know that there
+were announcements?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed. "I put them in myself. You see," he explained, "we want
+our Young England League to be as widely known as possible. The more
+lambs we can get into the fold, the better."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Perhaps if you asked me very prettily," she said, "I might come and
+bear you speak."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Princess!" His olive cheek flushed with pleasure and his eyes
+sparkled. "It would be an undreamed-of honour. It is such things that
+angels do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Eh bien, je viendrai. You ought to speak well. Couldn't you persuade
+them to give the place a better name? Hickney Heath! It hurts the roof
+of one's mouth. Tiens&mdash;would it help the Young England League if you
+announced my name in the newspapers?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dear Princess, you overwhelm me. But&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, don't ask me if it is wise." She smiled in mockery. "You print
+the names of other people who are supporting you. Mr. John Felton,
+M.P., who will take the chair, Colonel Winwood, M.P., and Miss Winwood,
+the Dean of Halifax and Lady Harbury, et cetera, et cetera. Why not
+poor Princess Sophie Zobraska?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have a good memory, Princess."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She regarded him lazily. "Sometimes. When does the meeting begin?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At eight. Oh, I forget." His face fell. "How can you manage it? You'll
+have to dine at an unearthly hour."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What does it matter even if one doesn't dine&mdash;in a good cause?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are everything that is perfect," said Paul fervently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She dismissed a blissful youth. The Princess Zobraska cared as much for
+the Young England League as for an Anti-Nose-Ring Society in Central
+Africa. Would it help the Young England League, indeed! He laughed
+aloud on the lamp-lit pavement of decorous Berkeley Square. For what
+other man in the world would she dine at six and spend the evening in a
+stuffy hall in North London? He felt fired to great achievement. He
+would make her proud of him, his Princess, his own beautiful, stately,
+royal Princess. The dream had come true. He loved a Princess; and
+she&mdash;? If she cared naught for him, why was she cheerfully
+contemplating a six-o'clock dinner? And why did she do a thousand other
+things which crowded on his memory? Was he loved? The thought thrilled
+him. Here was no beautiful seductress of suspect title such as he had
+heard of during his sojourn in the Gotha Almanack world, but the lineal
+descendant of a princely house, the widow of a genuinely royal, though
+deboshed personage. Perhaps you may say that the hero of a fairy-tale
+never thinks of the mere rank of his beloved princess. If you do, you
+are committing all sorts of fallacies in your premises. For one thing,
+who said that Paul was a hero? For another, who said this was a
+fairy-tale? For yet another, I am not so sure that the swineherd is not
+impressed by the rank of his beloved. You must remember the insistent,
+lifelong dream of the ragged urchin. You must also reflect that the
+heart of any high-born youth in the land might well have been fluttered
+by signs of peculiar favour from Princess Sophie Zobraska. Why, then,
+should Paul be blamed for walking on air instead of greasy pavement on
+the way from Berkeley Square to Portland Place? Moreover, as sanity
+returned to him, his quick sense recognized in his Princess's offer to
+support him, a lovely indiscretion. Foreign ladies of high position
+must be chary of their public appearances. Between the row-boat on the
+Serpentine and the platform in the drill hall, Hickney Heath, the
+difference was but one of degree. And for him alone was this
+indiscretion about to be committed. His exultation was tempered by
+tender solicitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At dinner that evening&mdash;he was dining alone with the Winwoods&mdash;he said:
+"I've persuaded the Princess to come to our meeting on Friday. Isn't it
+good of her?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very good," replied Colonel Winwood. "But what interest can she take
+in the lower walks of English politics?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It isn't English politics," said Paul. "It's world politics. The
+Princess is an aristocrat and is tremendously keen on the Conservative
+principle. She thinks our scheme for keeping the youth of the nation
+free from the taint of Socialism is magnificent."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"H'm!" said the Colonel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I thought Miss Winwood would be pleased if I inveigled Her
+Highness on to the platform," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, of course it's a good thing," assented the Colonel. "But how the
+deuce did you get her?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, how?" asked Miss Winwood, with a smile in her straight blue eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How does one get anything one wants in this world," said Paul, "except
+by going at it, hammer and tongs?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A little later, when Paul opened the dining-room for her to pass out,
+she touched his shoulder affectionately and laughed. "Hammer and tongs
+to Sophie Zobraska! Oh, Paul, aren't you a bit of a humbug?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Perhaps he was. But he was ingenuous in his desire to shield his
+Princess's action from vain conjecture. It were better that he should
+be supposed, in vulgar phrase, to have roped her in, as he had roped in
+a hundred other celebrities in his time. For there the matter ended. On
+the other hand, if he proclaimed the lady's spontaneous offer, it might
+be subjected to heaven knew how many interpretations. Paul owed much of
+his success in the world to such instinctive delicacies. He worked far
+into the night, composing his speech on England's greatness to the
+beautiful eyes of his French Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Young England League was his pet political interest. It had been
+inaugurated some years before he joined the Winwoods. Its objects were
+the training of the youth, the future electorate of England, in the
+doctrines of Imperialism, Constitutionalism and sound civicism, as
+understood by the intellectual Conservatives. Its mechanical aims were
+to establish lodges throughout the country. Every town and rural
+district should have its lodge, in connection wherewith should be not
+only addresses on political and social subjects, but also football and
+cricket clubs, entertainments for both sexes such as dances,
+whist-drives, excursions of archaeological and educational interest,
+and lantern (and, later, cinematographic) lectures on the wide aspects
+of Imperial Britain. Its appeal was to the young, the recruit in the
+battle of life, who in a year or two would qualify for a vote and,
+except for blind passion and prejudice, not know what the deuce to do
+with it. The octogenarian Earl of Watford was President; Colonel
+Winwood was one of a long list of Vice-Presidents; Miss Winwood was on
+the Council; a General Hankin, a fussy, incompetent person past his
+prime, was Honorary Secretary.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul worked with his employers for a year on the League thinking little
+of its effectiveness. One day, when they spoke despairingly of
+progress, he said, not in so many words, but in effect: "Don't you see
+what's wrong? This thing is run for young people, and you've got old
+fossils like Lord Watford and General Hankin running it. Let me be
+Assistant Secretary to Hankin' and I'll make things hum."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And thinking the words of the youth were wise, they used their
+influence with the Council, and Paul became Assistant Secretary, and
+after a year or two things began to hum so disconcertingly that General
+Hankin resigned in order to take the Presidency of the Wellingtonian
+Defence Association, and almost automatically Paul slipped into his
+place. With the instinct of the man of affairs he persuaded the Council
+to change his title. An Honorary Secretary is but a dilettante, an
+amateur carrying no weight, whereas an Organizing Secretary is a devil
+of a fellow professedly dynamic. So Paul became Organizing Secretary of
+the Young England League, and made things hum all the louder. He put
+fresh life into local Committees and local Secretaries by a paternal
+interest in their doings, making them feel the pulsations of the
+throbbing heart of headquarters. If a local lodge was in need of
+speakers, he exercised his arts of persuasion and sent them down in
+trainloads. He visited personally as many lodges as his other work
+permitted. In fact, he was raising the League from a jejune experiment
+into a flourishing organization. To his secret delight, old Lord
+Watford resigned the chairmanship owing to the infirmities of old age,
+and Lord Harbury, a young and energetic peer whom Paul had recently
+driven into the ranks of the Vice-Presidents, was elected in his stead.
+Paul felt the future of the League was assured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a real Member of Parliament to preside, a real dean to propose
+the vote of thanks, another Member of Parliament and two ex-mayors of
+the borough to add silent dignity to the proceedings, well-known
+ladies, including, now, a real Princess to grace the assembly, this
+meeting of the Hickney Heath Lodge was the most important occasion on
+which Paul had appeared in public.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope you won't be nervous," said Miss Winwood, on the morning of the
+meeting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I nervous?" He laughed. "What is there to be nervous about?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've had over twenty years' experience of public speaking, and I'm
+always nervous when I get UP."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's only because you persistently refuse to realize what a wonderful
+woman you are," he said affectionately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you," she teased, "are you always realizing what a wonderful man
+you are?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He cried with his sunny boldness: "Why not? It's faith in oneself and
+one's destiny that gets things done."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The drill hall was full. Party feeling ran high in those days at
+Hickney Heath, for a Liberal had ousted a Unionist from a safe seat at
+the last General Election, and the stalwarts of the defeated party,
+thirsting for revenge, supported the new movement. If a child was not
+born a Conservative, he should be made one. That was the watchword of
+the League. They were also prepared to welcome the new star that had
+arisen to guide the younger generation out of the darkness. When,
+therefore, the Chairman, Mr. John Felton, M.P., who had held minor
+office in the last administration, had concluded his opening remarks,
+having sketched briefly the history of the League and introduced Mr.
+Paul Savelli, in the usual eulogistic terms, as their irresistible
+Organizing Secretary, and Paul in his radiant young manhood sprang up
+before them, the audience greeted him with enthusiastic applause. They
+had expected, as an audience does expect in an unknown speaker, any one
+of the usual types of ordinary looking politicians&mdash;perhaps bald,
+perhaps grey headed, perhaps pink and fat&mdash;it did not matter; but they
+did not expect the magnetic personality of this young man of
+astonishing beauty, with his perfect features, wavy black hair,
+athletic build and laughing eyes, who seemed the embodiment of youth
+and joy and purpose and victory.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before he spoke a word, he knew that he had them under his control, and
+he felt the great thrill of it. Physically he had the consciousness of
+a blaze of light, of a bare barn of an ungalleried place, of
+thickly-set row upon row of faces, and a vast confused flutter of
+beating hands. The applause subsided. He turned with his "Mr. Chairman,
+Your Highness, Ladies and Gentlemen," to the circle behind him, caught
+Miss Winwood, his dearest lady's smile, caught and held for a hundredth
+part of a second the deep blue eyes of the Princess&mdash;she wore a great
+hat with a grey feather and a chinchilla coat thrown open, and looked
+the incarnation of all the beauty and all the desires of all his
+dreams&mdash;and with a flash of gladness faced the audience and plunged
+into his speech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It began with a denunciation of the Little Englander. At that period
+one heard, perhaps, more of the Little Englander than one does
+nowadays&mdash;which to some people's way of thinking is a pity. The Little
+Englander (according to Paul) was a purblind creature, with political
+vision ice-bound by the economic condition of the labouring classes in
+Great Britain. The Little Englander had no sense of patriotism. The
+Little Englander had no sense of Empire. He had no sense of India,
+Australia, Canada. He had no sense of foreign nations' jealousy of
+England's secular supremacy. He had a distinct idea, however, of three
+nationalities; those of Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The inhabitants of
+those three small nations took peculiar pains to hammer that idea into
+his head. But of England he had no conception save as a mere
+geographical expression, a little bit of red on a map of Europe, a
+vague place where certain sections of the population clamoured for-much
+pay and little work. His dream was a parochial Utopia where the Irish
+peasant, the Welsh farmer and the Scottish crofter should live in
+luxury, and when these were satisfied, the English operative should
+live in moderate comfort. The Little Englander, in his insensate
+altruism, dreamed of these three nations entirely independent of
+England, except in the trivial matter of financial support. He wanted
+Australia, Canada, South Africa, to sever their links from him and take
+up with America, Germany, Switzerland&mdash;anybody so long as they did not
+interfere with his gigantic scheme for providing tramps in Cromarty
+with motor cars and dissolute Welsh shepherds with champagne. As for
+India, why not give it up to a benign native government which would
+depend upon the notorious brotherly love between Hindoo and Mussulman?
+If Russia, foolish, unawakened Russia, took possession of it, what
+would it matter to the miner of Merthyr Tydvil? As for England,
+provided such a country existed, she would be perfectly happy. The rich
+would provide for the poor&mdash;and what did anyone want further? Paul took
+up the Little Englander in his arms and tossed him in the air, threw
+him on the ground and jumped upon him. He cast his mutilated fragments
+with rare picturesqueness upon a Guy Fawkes bonfire. The audience
+applauded vociferously. He waited with a gay smile for silence,
+scanning them closely for the first time; and suddenly the smile faded
+from his face. In the very centre of the third row sat two people who
+did not applaud. They were Barney Bill and Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked at them fascinated. There could be no mistake. Barney Bill's
+cropped, shoe-brush hair was white as the driven snow; but the wry,
+bright-eyed face was unchanged. And Jane, quietly and decently dressed,
+her calm eyes fixed on him, was&mdash;Jane. These two curiously detached
+themselves against the human background. It was only the sudden
+stillness of the exhausted applause that brought him to consciousness
+of his environment; that, and a heaven-sent fellow at the back of the
+audience who shouted: "Go on, sonny!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereupon he plucked himself together with a swift toss of the head,
+and laughed his gay laugh. "Of course I'm going on, if you will let me.
+This is only the beginning of what I've got to tell you of the
+Englishman who fouls the nest of England&mdash;who fouls the nest of all
+that matters in the future history of mankind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was more applause. It was the orator's appeal to the mass. It set
+Paul back into the stream of his argument. He forgot Barney Bill and
+Jane, and went on with his speech, pointedly addressing the young,
+telling them what England was, what England is, what Englishmen, if
+they are true to England, shall be. It was for the young, those who
+came fresh to life with the glories of England fresh in their memories,
+from Crecy to the Armada, from the Armada to Waterloo, to keep the
+banner of England flying over their topmost roofs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a fighting, enthusiastic, hyperbolic speech, glowing, as did the
+young face of the speaker, with the divine fire of youth. It ended
+triumphantly. He sat down to an ovation. Smiles and handshakes and
+words of praise surrounded him on the platform. Miss Winwood pressed
+his hand and said, "Well done." The Princess regarded him with flushed
+cheeks and starry eyes. It was only when silence fell on the opening
+words of the Dean of Halifax that he searched the rows in front for
+Barney Bill and Jane. They were still there. Impulsively he scribbled a
+few lines on a scrap of paper torn from his rough notes: "I must see
+you. Wait outside the side entrance for me after the meeting is over.
+Love to you both. Paul." A glance round showed him an attendant of the
+hall lurking at the back of the platform. He slipped quietly from his
+seat by the Chairman's side and gave the man the paper with directions
+as to its destination. Then he returned. Just before the Dean ended, he
+saw the note delivered. Jane read it, whispered its contents to Bill
+and seemed to nod acquiescence. It was fitting that these two dear
+ghosts of the past should appear for the first time in his hour of
+triumph. He longed to have speech with them, The Dean of Halifax was
+brief, the concluding ceremonies briefer. The audience gave Paul a
+parting cheer and dispersed, while Paul, the hero of the evening,
+received the congratulations of his friends.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Those are things that needed saying, but we're too cautious to say
+them," remarked the Chairman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We've got to be," said Colonel Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The glory of irresponsibility," smiled the Dean.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't often get this kind of audience," Paul answered with a
+laugh. "A political infants' school. One has to treat things in broad
+splashes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You almost persuade me to be an Englishwoman," said the Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul bowed. "But what more beautiful thing can there be than a
+Frenchwoman with England in her heart? Je ne demande pas mieux."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the Princess did not put her hands to her ears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The group passed slowly from the platform through a sort of committee
+room at the back, and reached the side entrance, Here they lingered,
+exchanging farewells. The light streamed dimly through the door on the
+strip of pavement between two hedges of spectators, and on the
+panelling and brass-work of an automobile by the curb. A chauffeur,
+with rug on arm, stepped forward and touched his cap, as the Princess
+appeared, and opened the door of the car. Paul, bare-headed,
+accompanied her across the pavement. Halt way she stopped for a second
+to adjust a slipping fur. He aided her quickly and received a bright
+smile of thanks. She entered the car&mdash;held out her hand for, his kiss.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come and see me soon. I'll write or telephone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The car rolled away. The Winwoods' carriage drove up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a fighting, enthusiastic, hyperbolic speech, glowing with the
+divine fire of youth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can we give you a lift home, Paul?" asked Miss Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No thanks, dearest lady. There are one or two little things I must do
+before I go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good night, Paul," said Colonel Winwood, shaking hands. "A thundering
+good speech."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap13"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+PAUL looked from side to side at the palely lit faces of the
+spectators, trying to distinguish Barney Bill and Jane. But he did not
+see them. He was disappointed and depressed, seized with a curious
+yearning for his own people. Vehicle after vehicle drew up and carried
+away the remainder of the platform group, and Paul was left in the
+doorway with the President and Honorary Secretary of the local lodge.
+The little crowd began to melt away. Suddenly his heart leaped and,
+after a hasty good night to the two officials, he sprang forward and,
+to their astonishment, gripped the hand of a bent and wizened old man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Barney Bill! This is good. Where is Jane?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Close by," said Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The President and Honorary Secretary waved farewells and marched away.
+Out of the gloom came Jane, somewhat shyly. He took both her hands and
+looked upon her, and laughed. "My dear Jane! What ages since we lost
+each other!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Seven years, Mr. Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Mr. Savelli!' Rubbish! Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Begging your pardon," said Barney Bill, "but I've got a pal 'ere what
+I've knowed long before you was born, and he'd like to tell yer how he
+enjoyed your speech."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A tall man, lean and bearded, and apparently very well dressed, came
+forward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is my old pal, Silas Finn," said Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Delighted to meet you, Mr. Finn," said Paul, shaking hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I too," said the man gravely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Silas Finn's a Councillor of the Borough," said Bill proudly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You should have been on the platform," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I attended in my private capacity," replied Mr. Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He effaced himself. Paul found himself laughing into Barney Bill's
+twinkling eyes. "Dear old Bill," he cried, clapping his old friend on
+the shoulder. "How are things going? How's the caravan? I've looked out
+for it on so many country roads."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm thinking of retiring," said Bill. "I can only do a few summer
+months now&mdash;and things isn't what they was."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Jane?" He turned to her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm Mr. Finn's secretary."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh," said Paul. Mr. Finn, then, was an important person.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The drill hall attendant shut the door, and save for the street lamps
+they were in gloom. There was an embarrassed little silence. Paul broke
+it by saying: "We must exchange addresses, and fix up a meeting for a
+nice long talk."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you would like to have a talk with your old friends now, my house
+is at your disposal," said Mr. Finn, in a soft, melancholy voice. "It
+is not far from here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's very kind of you&mdash;but I couldn't trespass on your hospitality."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gor bless you," exclaimed Barney Bill. "Nothing of the kind. Didn't I
+tell yer I've knowed him since we was lads together? And Jane lives
+there."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed. "In that case&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll be most welcome," said Mr. Finn. "This way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went ahead with Barney Bill, whose queer side limp awoke poignant
+memories of the Bludston brickfield. Paul followed with Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what have you been doing?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Typewriting. Then Bill came across Mr. Finn, whom he hadn't seen for
+years, and got me the position of secretary. Otherwise I've been doing
+nothing particular."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you knew what a hunt I had years ago to find you," he said, and
+began to explain the set of foolish circumstances when they turned the
+corner of the drill hall and found a four-wheeled cab waiting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had already engaged it for my friends and myself," Mr. Finn
+explained. "Will you get in?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane and Paul and Mr. Finn entered the cab. Barney Bill, who liked air
+and for whom the raw November night was filled apparently with balmy
+zephyrs, clambered in his crablike way next the driver. They started.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What induced you to come to-night?" Paul asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We saw the announcement in the newspapers," replied Jane. "Barney Bill
+said the Mr. Paul Savelli could be no one else but you. I said it
+couldn't."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?" he asked sharply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There are heaps of people of the same name."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you didn't think I was equal to it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed a short laugh. "That's just how you used to talk. You
+haven't changed much."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope I haven't," replied Paul earnestly. "And I don't think you've
+changed either."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very little has happened to change me," said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cab lumbered on through dull, dimly lit, residential roads. Only by
+the swinging gleam of an occasional street lamp could Paul distinguish
+the faces of his companions. "I hope you're on our side, Mr. Finn," he
+said politely to his host, who sat on the small back seat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't disagree with much that you said to-night. But you are on the
+side of wealth and aristocracy. I am on the side of the downtrodden and
+oppressed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But so am I," cried Paul. "The work of every day of my life tends to
+help them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a Conservative and I'm a Radical."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do labels matter? We're both attacking the same problem, only
+from different angles."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very likely, Mr. Savelli; but you'll pardon me if, according to my
+political creed, I regard your angle as an obtuse one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul wondered greatly who he could be, this grave, intelligent friend
+of Barney Bill's, who spoke with such dignity and courtesy. In his
+speech was a trace of rough accent; but his words were chosen with
+precision.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You think we glance off, whereas your attack is more direct," laughed
+Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is so. I hope you don't mind my saying it. You were the
+challenger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was. But anyhow we're not going to be enemies."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God forbid," said Mr. Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently the cab stopped before a fairly large detached house standing
+back from the road. A name which Paul could not decipher was painted on
+the top bar of the gate. They trooped through and up some steps to the
+front door, which Mr. Finn opened with his latchkey. The first
+impression that Paul had on entering a wide vestibule was a blaze of
+gilt frames containing masses of bright, fresh paint. A parlour-maid
+appeared, and helped with hats and coats.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We are having a very simple supper, Mr. Savelli. Will you join us?"
+said Mr. Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"With the greatest pleasure," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The host threw open the dining-room door on the right. Jane and Paul
+entered; were alone for a few moments, during which Paul heard Barney
+Bill say in a hoarse whisper: "Let me have my hunk of bread and beef in
+the kitchen, Silas. You know as how I hates a fork and I likes to eat
+in my shirt sleeves."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul seized Jane by the arms and regarded her luminously. He murmured:
+"Did you hear? The dear old chap!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She raised clear, calm eyes. "Aren't you shocked?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He shook her. "What do you take me for?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane was rebellious. "For what girls in my position generally call a
+'toff.' You&mdash;-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're horrid," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The word's horrid, not me. You're away up above us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Us' seems to be very prosperous, anyhow," said Paul, looking round
+him. Jane watched him jealously and saw his face change. The dining
+room, spaciously proportioned, was, like the vestibule, a mass of gilt
+frames and staring paint. Not an inch of wall above the oak dado was
+visible. Crude landscapes, wooden portraits, sea studies with waves of
+corrugated iron, subject pictures of childishly sentimental appeal,
+blinded the eyes. It looked as if a kindergarten had been the selecting
+committee for an exhibition of the Royal Academy. It looked also as if
+the kindergarten had replaced the hanging committee also. It was a
+conglomerate massacre. It was pictorial anarchy. It was individualism
+baresark, amok, crazily frantic. And an execrably vile,
+nerve-destroying individualism at that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul released Jane, who kept cool, defiant eyes on him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you think of it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He smiled. "A bit disconcerting."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The whole house is like this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's so new," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked about him again. The long table was plainly laid for three at
+the far end. The fare consisted of a joint of cold beef, a cold tart
+suggestive of apple, a bit of Cheshire cheese, and celery in a glass
+vase. Of table decoration of any kind there was no sign. A great walnut
+monstrosity meagrely equipped performed the functions of a sideboard.
+The chairs, ten straight-backed, and two easy by the fireplace, of
+which one was armless, were upholstered in saddlebag, yellow and green.
+In the bay of the red-curtained window was a huge terra-cotta bust of
+an ivy-crowned and inane Austrian female. There was a great fireplace
+in which a huge fire blazed cheerily, and on the broad, deep hearth
+stood little coloured plaster figures of stags, of gnomes, of rabbits,
+one ear dropping, the other ear cocked, of galloping hounds unknown to
+the fancy, scenting and pursuing an invisible foe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She watched him as he scanned the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who is Mr. Finn?" he asked in a low voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Many years ago he was 'Finn's Fried Fish.' Now he's 'Fish Palaces,
+Limited.' They're all over London. You can't help seeing them even from
+a motor car."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've seen them," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The argument outside the door having ended in a victory for the host,
+he entered the room, pushing Barney Bill gently in front of him. For
+the first time Paul saw him in the full light. He beheld a man sharply
+featured, with hair and beard, once raven-black, irregularly streaked
+with white&mdash;there seemed to be no intermediary shades of grey&mdash;and deep
+melancholy eyes. There hung about him the atmosphere of infinite,
+sorrowful patience that might mark a Polish patriot. As the runner of a
+successful fried fish concern he was an incongruity. As well, thought
+Paul, picture the late Cardinal Newman sharpening knife on steel
+outside a butcher's shop, and crying, "buy, buy," in lusty invitation.
+Then Paul noticed that he was oddly apparelled. He wore the black
+frock-coat suit of a Methodist preacher at the same time as the rainbow
+tie, diamond tie-pin, heavy gold watch-chain, diamond ring and natty
+spats of a professional bookmaker. The latter oddities, however, did
+not detract from the quiet, mournful dignity of his face and manner.
+Paul felt himself in the presence of an original personality.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The maid came in and laid a fourth place. Mr. Finn waved Paul to a seat
+on his right, Barney Bill to one next Paul; Jane sat on his left.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will ask a blessing," said Mr. Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He asked one for two minutes in the old-fashioned Evangelical way,
+bringing his guest into his address to the Almighty with an almost
+pathetic courtesy. "I am afraid, Mr. Savelli," said he, when he sat
+down and began to carve the beef, "I have neither wine nor spirits to
+offer you. I am a strict teetotaller; and so is Miss Seddon. But as I
+knew my old friend Simmons would be unhappy without his accustomed
+glass of beer&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's me," said Barney Bill, nudging Paul with his elbow. "Simmons.
+You never knowed that afore, did yer? Beg pardon, guv'nor, for
+interrupting."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, there's a jug of beer&mdash;and that is all at this hour, except
+water, that I can put before you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul declared that beer was delicious and peculiarly acceptable after
+public speaking, and demonstrated his appreciation by draining the
+glass which the maid poured out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You wanted that badly, sonny," said Barney Bill. "The next thing to
+drinking oneself is to see another chap what enjoys swallering it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bill!" said Jane reprovingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill cocked his white poll across the table with the perkiness
+of a quaint bird&mdash;Paul saw that the years had brought a striation of
+tiny red filaments to his weather-beaten face&mdash;and fixed her with his
+little glittering eyes. "Bill what? You think I'm 'urting his
+feelings?" He jerked a thumb towards his host. "I ain't. He thinks good
+drink's bad because bad has come of it to him&mdash;not that he ever took a
+drop too much, mind yer&mdash;but bad has come of it to him, and I think
+good drink's good because nothing but good has come of it to me. And
+we've agreed to differ. Ain't we, Silas?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If every man were as moderate as you, and I am sure as Mr. Savelli, I
+should have nothing to say against it. Why should I? But the working
+man, unhappily, is not moderate."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see," said Paul. "You preach, or advocate&mdash;I think you preach&mdash;total
+abstinence, and so feel it your duty to abstain yourself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is so," said Mr. Finn, helping himself to mustard. "I don't wish
+to bore you with my concerns; but I'm a fairly large employer of
+labour. Now I have found that by employing only pledged abstainers I
+get extraordinary results. I exact a very high rate of insurance,
+towards a fund&mdash;I need not go into details&mdash;to which I myself
+contribute a percentage&mdash;a far higher rate than would be possible if
+they spent their earnings on drink. I invest the whole lot in my
+business&mdash;their stoppages from wages and my contributions. I guarantee
+them 3 per cent.; I give them, actually, the dividends that accrue to
+the holders of ordinary stock in my company. They also have the general
+advantages of insurance&mdash;sickness, burial, maternity, and so
+forth&mdash;that they would get from an ordinary benefit society."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But that's enormous," cried Paul, with keen interest. "On the face of
+it, it seems impossible. It seems entirely uneconomic. Co-operative
+trading is one thing; private insurance another. But how can you
+combine the two?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The whole secret lies in the marvellously increased efficiency of the
+employee." He developed his point.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul listened attentively. "But," said he, when his host concluded,
+"isn't it rather risky? Supposing, for the sake of argument, your
+business failed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Finn held up the lean, brown hand on which the diamond sparkled.
+"My business cannot fail."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul started. The assertion had a strange solemnity. "Without
+impertinence," said he, "why can't it fail?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because God is guiding it," said Silas Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fanatic spoke. Paul regarded him with renewed interest. The black
+hair streaked with white, banging over the temples on the side away
+from the parting, the queerly streaked beard, the clear-cut ascetic
+features, the deep, mournful eyes in whose depths glowed a soul on
+fire, gave him the appearance of a mad but sanctified apostle. Barney
+Bill, who profoundly distrusted all professional drinkers of water,
+such as Mr. Finn's employees, ate his cold beef silently, in the happy
+surmise that no one was paying the least attention to his
+misperformances with knife, fork and fingers. Jane looked steadily from
+Paul to Silas and from Silas to Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul said: "How do you know God is guiding it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the back of his mind was an impulse of mirth&mdash;there was a touch of
+humorous blasphemy in the conception of the Almighty as managing
+director of "Fish Palaces, Limited"&mdash;but the nominal earthly managing
+director saw not the slightest humour in the proposition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who is guiding you in your brilliant career?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul threw out his hands, in the once practised and now natural foreign
+gesture. "I'm not an atheist. Of course I believe in God, and I thank
+Him for all His mercies&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, yes," said his host. "That I shouldn't question. But a successful
+man's thanks to God are most often merely conventional. Don't think I
+wish to be offensive. I only want to get at the root of things. You are
+a young man, eight-and-twenty&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How do you know that?" laughed Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, your friends have told me. You are young. You have a brilliant
+position. You have a brilliant future. Were you born to it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was Jane on the opposite side of the table, entirely uninterested
+in her food, looking at him in her calm, clear way. She was so
+wholesome, so sane, in her young yet mature English lower-class beauty.
+She had broad brows. Her mass of dark brown hair was rather too
+flawlessly arranged. He felt a second's irritation at not catching any
+playfully straying strand. She was still the Jane of his boyhood, but a
+Jane developed, a Jane from whom no secrets were hid, a searching,
+questioning and quietly disturbing Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A man is born to his destiny, whatever destiny may be," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is Mohammedan fatalism," said Mr. Finn, "unless one means by
+destiny the guiding hand of the Almighty. Do you believe that you're
+under the peculiar care of God?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you, Mr. Finn?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have said so. I ask you. Do you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In a general way, yes," said Paul. "In your particular sense, no. You
+question me frankly and I answer frankly. You would not like me to
+answer otherwise."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly not," said his host.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then," Paul continued, with a smile, "I must say that from my
+childhood I have been fired with a curious certainty that I would
+succeed in life. Chance has helped me. How far a divine hand has been
+specially responsible, it isn't for me to conjecture. But I know that
+if I hadn't believed in myself I shouldn't have had my small measure of
+success."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You believe in yourself?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. And I believe in making others believe in me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is strange&mdash;very strange." Mr. Finn fixed him with his deep,
+sorrowful eyes. "You believe that you're predestined to a great
+position. You believe that you have in you all that is needful to
+attain it. That has carried you through. Strange!" He put his hand to
+his temple, elbow on table, and still regarded Paul. "But there's God
+behind it all. Mr. Savelli," he said earnestly, after a slight pause,
+"you are twenty-eight; I am fifty-eight; so I'm more than old enough to
+be your father. You'll forgive my taking up the attitude of the older
+man. I have lived a life such as your friends on the platform
+to-night&mdash;honorable, clean, sweet people&mdash;I've nothing to say against
+them&mdash;have no conception. I am English, of course&mdash;London born. My
+father was an Englishman; but my mother was a Sicilian. She used to go
+about with a barrel-organ&mdash;my father ran away with her. I have that
+violent South in my blood, and I've lived nearly all my days in London.
+I've had to pay dearly for my blood. The only compensation it has given
+me is a passion for art"&mdash;he waved his lean, bediamonded hand towards
+the horrific walls. "That is external&mdash;in a way&mdash;mere money has enabled
+me to gratify my tastes; but, as I was saying, I have lived a life of
+strange struggle, material, physical, and"&mdash;he brought down his free
+hand with a bang on the table&mdash;"it is only by the grace of God and the
+never-ceasing presence of Our Lord Jesus Christ by my side, that&mdash;that
+I am able to offer you my modest hospitality this evening."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul felt greatly drawn to the man. He was beyond doubt sincere. He
+wore the air of one who had lived fiercely, who had suffered, who had
+conquered; but the air of one whose victory was barren, who was looking
+into the void for the things unconquerable yet essential to salvation.
+Paul made a little gesture of attention. He could find no words to
+reply. A man's deep profession of faith is unanswerable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah," said Barney Bill, "you ought to have come along o' me, Silas,
+years ago in the old 'bus. You mightn't have got all these bright
+pictures, but you wouldn't have had these 'ere gloomy ideas. I don't
+say as how I don't hold with Gawd," he explained, with uplifted
+forefinger and cocked head; "but if ever I thinks of Him, I like to
+feel that He's in the wind or in the crickle-crackle of the earth, just
+near and friendly like, but not a-worrying of a chap, listening for
+every cuss-word as he uses to his old horse, and measuring every
+half-pint he pours down his dusty throat. No. That ain't my idea of
+Gawd. But then I ain't got religion."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Still the same old pagan," laughed Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, not the same, sonny," said Barney Bill, holding up his knife,
+which supported a morsel of cheese. "Old. Rheumaticky. Got to live in a
+'ouse when it rains&mdash;me who never keered whether I was baked to a
+cinder or wet through! I ain't a pagan no more. I'm a crock."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane smiled affectionately at the old man, and her face was lit with
+rare sweetness when she smiled. "He really is just the same," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He hasn't changed much in forty years," said Mr. Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was a good Conservative then, as I am now," said Bill. "That's one
+thing, anyhow. So was you, Silas. But you had Radical leanings."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill's remark set the talk on political lines. Paul learned that
+his host had sat for a year or more as a Progressive on the Hickney
+Heath Borough Council and aspired to a seat in Parliament.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Kingdom of Heaven," said he, not unctuously or hypocritically, but
+in his grave tone of conviction, "is not adequately represented in the
+House."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul pointed out that in the House of Lords one had the whole bench of
+Bishops.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not a member of the Established Church, Mr. Savelli," replied Mr.
+Finn. "I'm a Dissenter&mdash;a Free Zionist."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've heard him conduc' the service," said Barney Bill. "He built the
+Meeting House close by, yer know. I goes sometimes to try and get
+converted. But I'm too old and stiff in the j'ints. No longer a pagan,
+but a crock, sonny. But I likes to listen to him. Gorbli&mdash;bless me,
+it's a real bean feast&mdash;that's what it is. He talks straight from the
+shoulder, he does, just as you talked to-night. Lets 'em 'ave it
+bing-bang in the eye. Don't he, Jane?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bill means," she explained, with the shadow of a smile, for Paul's
+benefit, "that Mr. Finn is an eloquent preacher."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"D'yer suppose he didn't understand what I meant?" he exclaimed,
+setting down the beer glass which he was about to raise to his lips.
+"Him, what I discovered reading Sir Walter Scott with the cover off
+when he was a nipper with no clothes on? You understood, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course I did." He laughed gaily and turned to his host, who had
+suffered Barney Bill's queer eulogy with melancholy indulgence. "One of
+these days I should like to come and hear you preach."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any Sunday, at ten and six. You would be more than welcome."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The meal was over. Barney Bill pulled a blackened clay pipe from his
+waistcoat pocket and a paper of tobacco.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a non-smoker," said Mr. Finn to Paul, "and I'm sorry I've nothing
+to offer you&mdash;I see little company, so I don't keep cigars in the
+house&mdash;but if you would care to smoke&mdash;-" he waved a courteous and
+inviting hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul whipped out his cigarette case. It was of gold&mdash;a present last
+Christmas from the Winwood fitting part of the equipment of a Fortunate
+Youth. He opened it, offered a cigarette to Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Garn!" said the old man. "I smokes terbakker," and he filled his pipe
+with shag.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Finn rose from the table. "Will you excuse me, Mr. Savelli, if I
+leave you? I get up early to attend to my business. I must be at
+Billingsgate at half-past five to buy my fish. Besides, I have been
+preventing your talk with our friends. So pray don't go. Good-night,
+Mr. Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he shook hands Paul met the sorrowful liquid eyes fixed on him with
+strange earnestness. "I must thank you for your charming hospitality. I
+hope you'll allow me to come and see you again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My house is yours."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a phrase&mdash;a phrase of Castilian politeness&mdash;oddly out of place
+in the mouth of a Free Zionist purveyor of fried fish. But it seemed to
+have more than a Castilian, more than a Free Zionist significance. He
+was still pondering over it when Mr. Finn, having bidden Jane and
+Barney Bill good-night, disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah!" said Barney Bill, lifting up the beer jug in order to refill his
+glass, and checked whimsically by the fact of its emptiness. "Ah," said
+he, setting down the jug and limping round the table, "let us hear as
+how you've been getting on, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They drew their chairs about the great hearth, in which the idiotic
+little Viennese plaster animals sported in movement eternally arrested,
+and talked of the years that had passed. Paul explained once more his
+loss of Jane and his fruitless efforts to find her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We didn't know," said Jane. "We thought that either you were dead or
+had forgotten us&mdash;or had grown too big a man for us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Axing your pardon," said Barney Bill, taking his blackened clay from
+his lips and holding it between his gnarled fingers, "you said so. I
+didn't. I always held that, if he wasn't dead, the time would come
+when, as it was to-night, the three of us would be sitting round
+together. I maintained," he added solemnly after a puff or two, "that
+his heart was in the right place. I'm a broken-down old crock, no
+longer a pagan; but I'm right. Ain't I, sonny?" He thrust an arm into
+the ribs of Paul, who was sitting between them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked at Jane. "I think this proves it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She returned his look steadily. "I own I was wrong. But a woman only
+proves herself to be right by always insisting that she is wrong."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear Jane," cried Paul. "Since when have you become so
+psychological?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gorblime," said Barney Bill, "what in thunder's that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," said Jane. "You"&mdash;to Paul&mdash;"were good enough to begin my
+education. I've tried since to go on with it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's nothing to do with edication," said Barney Bill. "It's fac's.
+Let's have fac's. Jane and I have been tramping the same old high-road,
+but you've been climbing mountains&mdash;yer and yer gold cigarette cases.
+Let's hear about it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Paul told his story, and as he told it, it seemed to him, in its
+improbability, more like a fairy-tale than the sober happenings of real
+life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've said nothing about the princess," Jane remarked, when he had
+ended.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The princess?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Where does she come in?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Princess Zobraska is a friend of my employers."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you and she are great friends," Jane persisted quietly. "That's
+obvious to anybody. I was standing quite close when you helped her into
+the motor car."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I didn't see you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I took care you didn't. She looks charming."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Most princesses are charming&mdash;when they've no particular reason to be
+otherwise," said Paul. "It is their metier&mdash;their profession."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a little silence. Jane, cheek on hand, looked thoughtfully
+into the fire. Barney Bill knocked' the ashes out of his pipe and
+thrust it in his pocket. "It's getting late, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked at his watch. It was past one o'clock. He jumped up. "I
+hope to goodness you haven't to begin work at half-past five," he said
+to Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. At eight." She rose as he stretched out his hand. "You don't know
+what it is to see you again, Paul. I can't tell you. Some things are
+upsetting. But I'm glad. Oh, yes, I'm glad, Paul dear. Don't think I'm
+not."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her voice broke a little. They were the first gentle words she had
+given him all the evening. Paul smiled and kissed her hand as he had
+kissed that of the princess, and, still holding it, said: "Don't I know
+you of old? And if you suppose I haven't thought of you and felt the
+need of you, you're very much mistaken. Now I've found you, I'm not
+going to let you go again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She turned her head aside and looked down; there was the slightest
+movement of her plump shoulders. "What's the good? I can't do anything
+for you now, and you can't do anything for me. You're on the way to
+becoming a great man. To me, you're a great man already. Don't you see?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear, I was an embryonic Shelley, Raphael, Garrick, and Napoleon
+when you first met me," he said jestingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But then you didn't belong to their&mdash;to their sphere. Now you do. Your
+friends are lords and ladies and&mdash;and princesses&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My friends," cried Paul, "are people with great true hearts&mdash;like the
+Winwoods&mdash;and the princess, if you like&mdash;and you, and Barney Bill."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's a sentiment as does you credit," said the old man. "Great true
+hearts! Now if you ain't satisfied, my dear, you're a damn criss-cross
+female. And yer ain't, are yer?' She laughed and Paul laughed. The
+little spell of intensity was broken. There were pleasant leave-takings.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll set you on your road a bit," said Barney Bill. "I live in the
+neighbourhood. Good-bye, Jane."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She went with them to the front door, and stood in the gusty air
+watching them until they melted into the darkness.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap14"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+BETWEEN the young man of immaculate vesture, of impeccable manners, of
+undeniable culture, of instinctive sympathy with the great world where
+great things are done, of unerring tact, of mythological beauty and
+charm, of boundless ambition, of resistless energy, of incalculable
+promise, in outer semblance and in avowed creed the fine flower of
+aristocratic England, professing the divine right of the House of Lords
+and the utilitarian sanctity of the Church of England&mdash;between Paul,
+that is to say, and the Radical, progressive councillor of Hickney
+Heath, the Free Zionist dissenter (not even Congregationalist or
+Baptist or Wesleyan, or any powerfully organized Non-conformist whose
+conscience archbishops consult with astute patronage), the purveyor of
+fried fish, the man of crude, uncultivated taste, there should have
+been a gulf fixed as wide as the Pacific Ocean. As a matter of fact,
+whatever gulf lay between them was narrow enough to be bridged
+comfortably over by mutual esteem. Paul took to visiting Mr. Finn.
+Accustomed to the somewhat tired or conventional creeds of his
+political world, he found refreshment in the man's intense faith. He
+also found pathetic attraction in the man's efforts towards
+self-expression. Mr. Finn, who lived a life of great
+loneliness&mdash;scarcely a soul, said Jane, crossed his threshold from
+month's end to month's end&mdash;seemed delighted to have a sympathetic
+visitor to whom he could display his painted treasures. When he was
+among them the haunting pain vanished from his eyes, as sometimes one
+has seen it vanish from those of an unhappy woman among her flowers. He
+loved to take Paul through his collection and point out the beauties
+and claim his admiration. He had converted a conservatory running along
+one side of the house into a picture gallery, and this was filled with
+his masterpieces of pictorial villainy. Here Paul was at first
+astonished at recognizing replicas of pictures which hung in other
+rooms. Mr. Finn explained.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"These," said he, "are the originals."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul pondered over the dark saying for a moment or two until he came
+upon a half-finished canvas on an easel. It was the copy of a landscape
+on the wall. He turned questioningly to his host. The latter smiled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a bit of an artist myself," he said. "But as I've never had time
+for lessons in painting, I teach myself by copying good pictures. It's
+a Saunders"&mdash;a name unknown to Paul&mdash;"and a very good example. It's
+called Noontide. The cow is particularly good, isn't it? But it's
+exceedingly difficult. That fore-shortening&mdash;I can't get it quite right
+yet. But I go on and on till I succeed. The only way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul acquiesced and asked him where he had picked up his Saunders.
+Indeed, where had he picked up all the others? Not an exhibition in
+London would have admitted one of them. This "Saunders" represented a
+wooden cow out of drawing lying in the shade of a conventional tree. It
+was peculiarly bad.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I bought it direct from the artist," replied Mr. Finn. "He's an
+unrecognized genius, and now he's getting old, poor fellow. Years ago
+he offended the Royal Academy, and they never forgot it. He says
+they've kept him under all his life. I have a great many of his
+pictures." He looked admiringly at the cow for a while, and added: "I
+gave him four pounds ten for this one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul could not forbear saying, though his tone betrayed no irony: "A
+good price."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think so," replied Mr. Finn. "That's what he asked. I could never
+haggle with an artist. His work is of the spirit, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Paul marvelled at the childlike simplicity of the man, the son of
+the Sicilian woman who went about with a barrel-organ, who, starting in
+the race on a level with Barney Bill, had made a fortune in the
+exploitation of fried fish. To disturb his faith in the genius of
+Saunders were a crime&mdash;as base a crime as proving to a child the
+non-existence of fairies. For Paul saw that Silas Finn found in this
+land of artistic illusion a refuge from many things; not only from the
+sordid cares of a large business, but perhaps also from the fierce
+intensity of his religion, from his driving and compelling deity. Here
+God entered gently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was another reason, which Paul scarcely confessed to himself, for
+the pleasure he found in the older man's company. The veil which he had
+thrown so adroitly over his past history, which needed continuous
+adroitness to maintain, was useless in this house. Both Barney Bill and
+Jane had spoken of him freely. Silas Finn knew of Bludston, of his
+modeldom, of his inglorious career on the stage. He could talk openly
+once more, without the never-absent subconscious sense of reserve. He
+was still, in his own, eyes, the prince out of the fairy-tale; but
+Silas Finn and the two others alone of his friends shared the knowledge
+of the days when he herded swine. Now a prince out of a fairy-tale who
+has herded swine is a romantic figure. Paul did not doubt that he was
+one. Even Jane, in spite of her direct common sense, admitted it.
+Barney Bill proclaimed it openly, slapping him on the back and taking
+much credit to himself for helping the prince on the way to his
+kingdom. And Mr. Finn, even in the heat of political discussion or
+theological asseveration, treated him with a curious and pathetic
+deference.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile Paul pursued his own career of glory. The occasional visits
+to Hickney Heath were, after all, but rare, though distinct, episodes
+in his busy life. He had his parliamentary work for Colonel Winwood,
+his work for Miss Winwood, his work for the Young England League. He
+had his social engagements. He had the Princess Zobraska. He also began
+to write, in picturesque advocacy of his views, for serious weekly and
+monthly publications. Then Christmas came and he found himself at
+Drane's Court, somewhat gasping for breath. A large houseparty,
+however, including Lord Francis Ayres, the chief Opposition Whip,
+threatened to keep him busy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess drove over from Chetwood Park for dinner on Christmas Day.
+He had to worship from afar; for a long spell of the evening to worship
+with horrible jealousy. Lord Francis Ayres, a bachelor and a man of
+winning charm, as men must be whose function it is to keep Members of
+Parliament good and pleased with themselves and sheeplike, held the
+Princess captive, in a remote corner, with his honeyed tongue. She
+looked at him seductively out of her great, slumberous blue eyes, even
+as she had looked, on occasion, at him, Paul. He hated Lord Francis,
+set himself up against him, as of old he had set himself up against
+Billy Goodge. He was a better man than Frank Ayres. Frank Ayres was
+only a popinjay. Beneath the tails of his coat he snapped his fingers
+at Frank Ayres, while he listened, with his own agreeable smile, to
+Mademoiselle de Cressy's devilled gossip.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was very frigid and courtly when he bade the Princess good night at
+the door of her limousine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah, que vous etes bete!" she laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went to bed very angry. She had told him to his face that he was a
+silly fool. And so he was. He thought of all the brilliantly dignified
+things he might have said, if the relentless engine had not whirred her
+away down the drive. But the next morning Lord Francis met him in the
+wintry garden and smiled and held out a winning hand. Paul hid his
+hatred beneath the mask of courtesy. They talked for a few moments of
+indifferent matters. Then Frank Ayres suddenly said: "Have you ever
+thought of standing for Parliament?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, who had been sauntering between flowerless beds with his
+companion, stood stock still. The Chief Whip of a political party is a
+devil of a fellow. To the aspiring young politician he is much more a
+devil of a fellow than the Prime Minister or any Secretary of State. If
+a Chief Whip breathes the suggestion that a man might possibly stand
+for election as a Member of Parliament, it means that at any suitable
+vacancy, or at a general election, he will, with utter certainty, have
+his chance as a candidate with the whole force of his party behind him.
+It is part of the business of Chief Whips to find candidates.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Paul, rather stupidly. "Eventually. One of these
+days."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But soon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Soon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul's head reeled. What did he mean by soon? "Well," Lord Francis
+laughed, "not to-morrow. But pretty soon. Look here, Savelli. I'm going
+to speak frankly. The party's in for a long period out of office.
+That's obvious. Look at the majority against us. We want the young
+blood&mdash;not the old hacks&mdash;so that when we come in again we shall have a
+band of trained men in the heyday of their powers. Of course I
+know&mdash;it's my business to know&mdash;what generally you have done for the
+Young England League, but I missed your speech at Flickney Heath in the
+autumn. You had an immense success, hadn't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They seemed pleased with what I had to say," replied Paul modestly.
+"When did you hear about it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Last night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Winwoods are the dearest people in the world," said Paul, walking
+warily, "but they are prejudiced in my favour."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It wasn't the Winwoods."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The beautiful truth flashed upon Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then it was the Princess Zobraska."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The other laughed. "Never mind. I know all about it. It isn't often one
+has to listen to speeches at second-hand. The question is: Would you
+care to stand when the time comes?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should just think I would," cried Paul boyishly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+All his jealous resentment had given place to exultation. It was the
+Princess who had told Frank Ayres. If she had been laying him under the
+spell of her seduction it was on his, Paul's, account. She had had the
+splendid audacity to recite his speech to the Chief Whip. Frank Ayres
+was suddenly transformed from a popinjay into an admirable fellow. The
+Princess herself sat enthroned more adorable than ever.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The only difficulty," said Paul, "is that I have to earn my living."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That might be arranged," said Lord Francis.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Paul, as soon as he found an opportunity, danced over to Chetwood
+Park and told his Princess all about it, and called her a tutelary
+goddess and an angel and all manner of pretty names. And the Princess,
+who was alone, poured for him her priceless Russian tea into egg-shell
+China tea-cups and fed him on English crumpets, and, in her French and
+feminine way, gave him the outer fringe of her heart to play with&mdash;a
+very dangerous game. She had received him, not as once before in the
+state drawing room, but in the intimacy of her own boudoir, a place all
+soft lights and cushions and tapestries and gleaming bits of sculpture.
+After tea and crumpets had been consumed, the dangerous game proceeded
+far enough for Paul to confess his unjust dislike of Frank Ayres.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gros jaloux," said the Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was why you said que vous etes bete," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Partly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What were the other reasons?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any woman has a thousand reasons for calling any man stupid."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell me some of them at any rate."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, isn't it stupid of a man to try to quarrel with his best friend
+when he won't be seeing her again for three or four months?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're not going away soon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Next week."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh!" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. I go to Paris, then to my villa at Mont Boron. I have the
+nostalgia of my own country, you see. Then to Venice at Easter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked at her wistfully, for life seemed suddenly very blank and
+dismal. "What shall I do all that time without my best friend?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will probably find another and forget her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was lying back among cushions, pink and terra-cotta, and a round
+black cushion framed her delicate head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul said in a low voice, bending forward: "Do you think you are a
+woman whom men forget?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Their eyes met. The game had grown very perilous. "Men may remember the
+princess," she replied, "but forget the woman."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it weren't for the woman inside the princess; what reason should I
+have for remembering?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She fenced. "But, as it is, you don't see me very often."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know. But you are here&mdash;to be seen&mdash;not when I want you, for that
+would be every hour of the day&mdash;but, at least, in times of emergency.
+You are here, all the same, in the atmosphere of my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And if I go abroad I shall no longer be in that atmosphere? Did I not
+say you would forget?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed. Then quickly started forward, and, elbow on knee and chin
+on palm, regarded him brightly. "We are talking like a couple of people
+out of Mademoiselle de Scudery," she said before he had time to reply.
+"And we are in the twentieth century, mon pauvre ami. We must be
+sensible. I know that you will miss me. And I will miss you too. Mais
+que voulez-vous? We have to obey the laws of the world we live in."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Need we?" asked Paul daringly. "Why need we?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We must. I must go away to my own country. You must stay in yours and
+work and fulfill your ambitions." She paused. "I want you to be a great
+man," she said, with a strange tenderness in her voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"With you by my side," said he, "I feel I could conquer the earth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As your good friend I shall always be by your side. Vous voyez, mon
+cher Paul," she went on quickly in French. "I am not quite as people
+see me. I am a woman who is lonely and not too happy, who has had
+disillusions which have embittered her life. You know my history. It is
+public property. But I am young. And my heart is healed&mdash;and it craves
+faith and tenderness and&mdash;and friendship. I have many to flatter me. I
+am not too ugly. Many men pay their court to me, but they do not touch
+my heart. None of them even interest me. I don't know why. And then I
+have my rank, which imposes on me its obligations. Sometimes I wish I
+were a little woman of nothing at all, so that I could do as I like.
+Mais enfin, I do what I can. You have come, Paul Savelli, with your
+youth and your faith and your genius, and you pay your court to me like
+the others. Yes, it is true&mdash;and as long as it was amusing, I let it go
+on. But now that you interest me, it is different. I want your success.
+I want it with all my heart. It is a little something in my life&mdash;I
+confess it&mdash;quelque chose de tres joli&mdash;and I will not spoil it. So let
+us be good friends, frank and loyal&mdash;without any Scudery." She looked
+at him with eyes that had lost their languor&mdash;a sweet woman's eyes, a
+little moist, very true. "And now," she said, "will you be so kind as
+to put a log on the fire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose and threw a log on the glowing embers, and stood by her side.
+He was deeply moved. Never before had she so spoken. Never before had
+she afforded a glimpse of the real woman. Her phrases, so natural, so
+sincere, in her own tongue, and so caressive, stirred the best in him.
+The glamour passed from the royal lady; only the sweet and beautiful
+woman remained.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will be what you will, my Princess," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At that moment he could not say more. For the first time in his life he
+was mute in a woman's presence; and the reason was that for the first
+time in his life love for a woman had gripped his heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rose and smiled at him. "Bons amis, francs et loyaux?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Francs et loyaux."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She gave him her hand in friendship; but she gave him her eyes in love.
+It is the foolish way of women.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"May a frank and loyal friend write to you sometimes?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, yes. And a frank and loyal friend will answer."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And when shall I see you again?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did I not tell you," she said, moving to the bell, for this was
+leave-taking&mdash;"that I shall be in Venice at Easter?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul went out into the frosty air, and the bright wintry stars shone
+down on him. Often on such nights he had looked up, wondering which was
+his star, the star that guided his destiny. But to-night no such fancy
+crossed his mind. He did not think of the stars. He did not think of
+his destiny. His mind and soul were drenched in thought of one woman.
+It had come at last, the great passion, the infinite desire. It had
+come in a moment, wakened into quivering being by the caressive notes
+of the dear French voice&mdash;"mais je suis jeune, et mon coeur est gueri,
+et il lui manque affreusement de la foi, de la tendresse,
+de&mdash;de"&mdash;adorable catch of emotion&mdash;"de l'amitie." Friendship, indeed!
+For amitie all but her lips said amour. He walked beneath the wintry
+stars, a man in a perfect dream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Till then she had been but his Princess, the exquisite lady whom it had
+amused to wander with him into the pays du tendre. She had been as far
+above him as the now disregarded stars. She had come down with a
+carnival domino over her sidereal raiment, and had met him on carnival
+equality. He beau masque! He, knowing her, had fallen beneath her
+starry spell. He was Paul Kegworthy, Paul Savelli, what you like; Paul
+the adventurer, Paul the man born to great things. She was a beautiful
+woman, bearing the title of Princess, the title that had haunted his
+life since first the Vision Splendid dawned upon him as he lay on his
+stomach eavesdropping and heard the words of the divinely-smelling
+goddess who had given him his talisman, the cornelian heart. To "rank
+himself with princes" had been the intense meaning of his life since
+ragged and fiercely imaginative childhood. Odd circumstances had ranked
+him with Sophie Zobraska. The mere romance of it had carried him off
+his feet. She was a princess. She was charming. She frankly liked his
+society. She seemed interested in his adventurous career. She was
+romantic. He too. She was his Egeria. He had worshipped her
+romantically, in a mediaeval, Italian way, and she had accepted the
+homage. It had all been deliciously artificial. It had all been
+Mademoiselle de Scudery. But to-day the real woman, casting off her
+carnival domino, casting off too the sidereal raiment, had spoken, for
+the first time, in simple womanhood, and her betraying eyes had told
+things that they had told to no other man living or dead. And all that
+was artificial, all that was fantastic, all that was glamour, was
+stripped away from Paul in the instant of her self-revelation. He loved
+her as man loves woman. He laughed aloud as his young feet struck the
+frozen road. She knew and was not angry. She, in her wonder, gave him
+leave to love her. It was obvious that she loved him to love her. Dear
+God! He could go on loving her like this for the rest of his life. What
+more did he want? To the clean man of nine-and-twenty, sufficient for
+the day is the beauty thereof.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An inspired youth took his place at the Winwoods' dinner table that
+evening. The elderly, ugly heiress, Miss Durning, concerning whom Miss
+Winwood had, with gentle malice, twitted him some months before, sat by
+his side. He sang her songs of Araby and tales of far Cashmere&mdash;places
+which in the commonplace way of travel he had never visited. What
+really happened in the drawing room between the departure of the ladies
+and the entrance of the men no one knows. But before the ladies went to
+bed Miss Winwood took Paul aside.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Paul dear," she said, "you're never going to marry an old woman for
+money, are you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good God, no! Dearest lady, what do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His cry was so sincere that she laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothing," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you must mean something." He threw out his hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you aware that you've been flirting disgracefully with Lizzle
+Durning?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I?" said Paul, clapping a hand to his shirt-front.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He smiled his sunny smile into the clear, direct eyes of his dearest
+lady&mdash;all the more dear because of the premature white of her hair. "I
+would flirt to-night with Xantippe, or Kerenhappuch, or Queen
+Victoria," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed, and although none of the standing and lingering company had
+overheard them, he gently led her to the curtained embrasure of the
+drawing-room window.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is perhaps the biggest day of my life. I've not had an
+opportunity of telling you. This morning Frank Ayres offered me a seat
+in Parliament."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad," said Ursula Winwood; but her eyes hardened. "And so&mdash;Lizzie
+Durning&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He took both her elbows in his hands&mdash;only a Fortunate Youth, with his
+laughing charm, would have dared to grip Ursula Winwood's elbows and
+cut her short. "Dearest lady," said he, "to-day there are but two women
+in the world for me. You are one. The other&mdash;well&mdash;it isn't Miss
+Durning."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She searched him through and through, "This afternoon?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Paul!" She withdrew from his grasp. In her voice was a touch of
+reproach.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dearest lady," said he, "I would die rather than marry a rich woman,
+ugly or beautiful, if I could not bring her something big in
+return&mdash;something worth living for."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've fold me either too much or too little. Am I not entitled to
+know how things stand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're entitled to know the innermost secrets of my heart," he cried;
+and he told thereof as far as his love for the Princess was concerned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, my poor boy," said Ursula tenderly, "how is it all going to end?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's never going to end," cried Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ursula Winwood smiled on him and sighed a little; for she remembered
+the gallant young fellow who had been killed in the Soudan in eighteen
+eighty-five.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap15"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XV
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+IT would never end. Why should it? Could a Great Wonder be merely a
+transient thrill? Absurd. Dawn followed night, day after day, and the
+wonder had not faded. It would never fade. Letter followed letter, each
+more precious than the last.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She began with "Mon cher Paul." Then "Mon cher," then sometimes "Paul."
+She set the tone of the frank and loyal friendship in a style very
+graceful, very elusive, a word of tenderness melting away in a laugh;
+she took the friendship, pulled it to pieces and reconstructed it in
+ideal form; then she tied blue ribbon round its neck, and showed him
+how beautiful it was. She sat on the veranda of her villa and looked
+out on the moonlit Mediterranean and wanted to cry&mdash;"J'avais envie de
+Pleurer"&mdash;because she was all alone, having entertained at dinner a
+heap of dull and ugly people. She had spent a day on the yacht of a
+Russian Grand-Duke. "Il m'a fait une cour effrenee"&mdash;Paul thirsted
+immediately for the blood of this Grand-Duke, who had dared to make
+violent love to her. But when, a few lines farther on, he found that
+she had guessed his jealousy and laughed at it, he laughed too. "Don't
+be afraid. I have had enough of these people." She wanted une ame
+sincere et candide; and Paul laid the flattering unction to his own
+sincere and candid soul. Then she spoke prettily of his career. He was
+to be the flambeau eveilleur, the awakening torch in the darkness
+before the daybreak. But he musn't overwork. His health was precious.
+There was a blot and erasure in the sentence. He took the letter to the
+light, lover-wise, and looked at it through a magnifying glass&mdash;and his
+pulses thrilled when it told him that she had originally written,
+"Votre sante m'est precieuse," and had scrabbled out the "m." "Your
+health is precious to me." That is what her heart had said. Did lover
+ever have a dearer mistress? He kissed the blot, and the thick French
+ink coming off on his lips was nectar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he began his letters with "My dear Princess;" then it was "Dearest
+Princess;" then "My Princess." Then she rallied him on the matter. It
+came to "Mais enfin j'ai un petit nom comme tout le monde." In common
+with the rest of humanity she had a Christian name&mdash;and she was
+accustomed to be called by it by her frank and loyal friends. "And they
+are so few." Paul heard the delicate little sigh and saw the delicate
+rise and fall of the white bosom. And again he fed on purple ink. So he
+began his next letter with "Dear Sophie." But he could not pour the
+same emotion into "Dear Sophie" as he could into "My Princess"&mdash;and "My
+Sophie" was a step beyond the bounds of frank and loyal friendship. So
+it came to his apostrophizing her as "Dear" and scattering "Sophies"
+deliciously through the text. And so the frank and loyal friendship
+went on its appointed course, as every frank and loyal friendship
+between two young and ardent souls who love each other has proceeded
+since the beginning of a sophisticated world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The first three months of that year were a period of enchantment. He
+lived supremely. The daily round of work was trivial play. He rose at
+seven, went to bed at two, crowded the nineteen hours of wakefulness
+with glorious endeavour. He went all over the country with his flambeau
+eveilleur, awakening the Youth of England, finding at last the great
+artistic gift the gods had given him, the gift of oratory. One day he
+reminded Jane of a talk long ago when he had fled from the studios:
+"You asked me how I was going to earn my living. I said I was going to
+follow one of the Arts."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I remember," said Jane, regarding him full-eyed. "You said you thought
+you were a poet&mdash;but you might be a musician or painter. Finally you
+decided you were an actor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed his gay laugh. "I was an infernally bad actor," he
+acknowledged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then he explained his failure on the stage. He was impatient of other
+people's inventions, wanting to play not Hamlet or Tom or Dick or Romeo
+or Harry, but himself. Now he could play himself. It was acting in a
+way. Anyhow it was an Art; so his boyish prophecy had come true. He had
+been struggling from childhood for a means of self-expression. He had
+tried most of them save this. Here he had found it. He loved to play
+upon a crowd as if they were so many notes of a vast organ.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On this occasion Jane said: "And my means of self-expression is to play
+on the keys of a typewriter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your time hasn't come," he replied. "When you have found your means
+you will express yourself all the more greatly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Which was ingenious on the part of Paul, but ironically consoling to
+Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One week-end during the session he spent at the Marchioness of
+Chudley's place in Lancashire. He drove in a luxurious automobile
+through the stately park, which once he had traversed in the brakeful
+of urchins, the raggedest of them all, and his heart swelled with
+pardonable exultation. He had passed through Bludston and he had caught
+a glimpse of what had once been his brickfield, now the site of more
+rows of mean little houses, and he had seen the grim factory chimneys
+still smoking, smoking.... The little Buttons, having grown up into big
+Buttons, were toiling away their lives in those factories. And Button
+himself, the unspeakable Button? Was he yet alive? And Mrs. Button, who
+had been Polly Kegworthy and called herself his mother? It was
+astonishing how seldom he thought of her.... He had run away a
+scarecrow boy in a gipsy van. He came back a formative force in the
+land, the lover of a princess, the honoured guest of the great palace
+of the countryside. He slipped his hand into his waistcoat pocket and
+felt the cornelian heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Yes, in the great palace he found himself an honoured guest. His name
+was known independently of his work for the Winwoods. He was doing good
+service to his party. The word had gone abroad&mdash;perhaps Frank Ayres had
+kindly spoken it&mdash;that he was the coming man. Lady Chudley said: "I
+wonder if you remember what we talked about when I first met you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed, for she did not refer to the first meeting of all. "I'm
+afraid I was very young and fatuous," said he. "It was years ago. I
+hadn't grown up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never mind. We talked about waking the country from its sleep."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you gave me a phrase, Lady Chudley&mdash;'the Awakener of England.' It
+stuck. It crystallized all sorts of vague ambitions. I've never
+forgotten it for five consecutive minutes. But how can you remember a
+casual act of graciousness to an unimportant boy?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No boy who dreams of England's greatness is unimportant," she said.
+"You've proved me to be right. Your dreams are coming true&mdash;see, I
+don't forget!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I owe you far more than you could possibly imagine," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, no. Don't. Don't exaggerate. A laughing phrase&mdash;that's nothing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is something. Even a great deal. But it's not all," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What else is there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were one of the two or three," he said earnestly, thinking of the
+Bludston factory, "who opened new horizons for me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a proud woman," said Lady Chudley.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day, Sunday, old Lord Chudley dragged him into his own private
+den. He had a very red, battered, clean-shaven face and very red hair
+and side whiskers; and he was a very honest gentleman, believing
+implicitly in God and the King and the House of Lords, and Foxes, and
+the Dutch School of Painting, and his responsibility as a great
+landowner toward the two or three thousand human beings with whom he
+had business relations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look here, Savelli. I've looked into your League. It's a damned good
+thing. About the only thing that has been invented which can stem the
+tide of Socialism. Catch 'em young. That's the way. But you want the
+sinews of war. You get subscriptions, but not enough; I've seen your
+last balance sheet. You want a little army of&mdash;what the devil shall we
+call 'em?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Big Englanders," Paul suggested at a venture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good. We want an army of 'em to devote their whole time to the work.
+Open a special fund. You and Ursula Winwood will know how to work it.
+What Ursula Winwood doesn't know in this sort of business isn't worth
+knowing&mdash;and here's something to head the list with."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he handed Paul a cheque, which after a dazed second or two he
+realized to be one for five thousand pounds.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That was the beginning of the financial prosperity and the real
+political importance of the Young England League. Paul organized a
+great public dinner with the Leader of the Opposition in the chair and
+an amazing band of notables around the tables. Speeches were made, the
+Marquis of Chudley's patriotism extolled, and subscription lists filled
+up and handed to a triumphant organizing secretary.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A powerful daily newspaper took up the cause and made strong appeal.
+The Lodges made simultaneous efforts in their respective districts.
+Money flowed into the League's coffers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Parliament rose for the Easter recess Paul, the most tired, yet
+the most blissful, youth among the Fortunate, flew straight to Venice,
+where a happy-eyed princess welcomed him. She was living in a Palazzo
+on the Grand Canal, lent to her&mdash;that is the graceful Italian way of
+putting it&mdash;by some Venetian friends; and there, with Mademoiselle de
+Cressy to keep off the importunate, she received such acquaintance as
+floated from the ends of the earth through the enchanted city.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have started by seeing as few people as I can," she said. "That's
+all on account of you, monsieur."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He pressed her hand. "I hope we don't see a single soul we know as long
+as I'm here," he declared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His hope was gratified, not completely, but enough to remove grounds
+for lover's fretfulness. He passed idyllic days in halcyon weather.
+Often she would send her gondola to fetch him from the Grand Hotel,
+where he was staying. Now and then, most graciously audacious of
+princesses, she would come herself. On such occasions he would sit
+awaiting her with beating heart, juvenis fortunatus nimium, on the
+narrow veranda of the hotel, regardless of the domed white pile of
+Santa Maria della Salute opposite, or the ceaseless life on the water,
+or the sunshine, or anything else in Venice, his gaze fixed on the bend
+of the canal; and then at last would appear the tall curved prow, and
+then the white-clad, red-sashed Giacomo bending to his oar, and then
+the white tenda with the dear form beneath, vaguely visible, and then
+Felipe, clad like Giacomo and bending, too, rhythmically with the
+foremost figure. Slowly, all too slowly, the gondola would near the
+steps, and beneath the tenda would smile the dearest face in the world,
+and the cheeks would be delicately flushed and the eyes tender and
+somewhat shy. And Paul would stand, smiling too, a conquering young
+figure with green Marienbad hat tilted with ever so tiny a shade of
+jauntiness, the object of frankly admiring and curious glances from a
+lone woman or two on the veranda, until the gondola was brought up to
+the wave-washed steps, and the hotel porter had fixed the bridge of
+plank. Then, with Giacomo supporting his elbow, he would board the
+black craft and would creep under the tenda and sink on the low seat by
+her side with a sense of daring and delicious intimacy, and the gondola
+would glide away into fairyland.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let us be real tourists and do Venice thoroughly," she had said. "I
+have never seen it properly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you've been here many times before."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. But&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She hesitated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Eh bien?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Je ne peux pas le dire. Il faut deviner."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will you forgive me if I guess right? Our great Shakespeare says:
+'Love lends a precious seeing to the eye.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That&mdash;that's very pretty," said the Princess in French. "I love much
+your Shakespeare."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereupon Paul recognized her admission of the correctness of his
+conjecture; and so, with the precious vision they had borrowed, they
+went about tourist-wise to familiar churches and palaces, and
+everything they saw was lit with exceeding loveliness. And they saw the
+great pictures of the world, and Paul, with his expert knowledge,
+pointed out beauties she had not dreamed of hitherto, and told her
+tales of the painters and discoursed picturesquely on Venetian history,
+and she marvelled at his insight and learning and thought him the most
+wonderful man that had ever dropped, ready-made, from heaven. And he,
+in the flush of his new love, was thrilled by her touch and the low
+tones of her voice when she plucked him by the sleeve and murmured:
+"Ah, Paul, regardez-moi ca. It is so beautiful one wants to weep with
+joy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They spoke now half in French, half in English, and she no longer
+protested against his murderous accent, which, however, he strove to
+improve. Love must have lent its precious hearing too, for she vowed
+she loved to hear him speak her language.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the great Council Chamber of the Ducal Palace they looked at the
+seventy-six portraits of the illustrious succession of Doges&mdash;with the
+one tragic vacant space, the missing portrait of Marino Faliero, the
+Rienzi of Venice, the man before his time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seizes one's heart, doesn't it?" said the Princess, with her
+impulsive touch on his sleeve. "All these men were kings&mdash;sovereigns of
+a mighty nation. And how like they are to one another&mdash;in this
+essential quality one would say they were brothers of a great family."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why, yes," he cried, scanning the rows of severe and subtle faces.
+"It's true. Illuminatingly true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He slid up his wrist quickly so that his hand met hers; he held it.
+"How swift your perception is! And what is that quality&mdash;that quality
+common to them all&mdash;that quality of leadership? Let us try to find it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Unconsciously he gripped her hand, and she returned his pressure; and
+they stood, as chance willed it, alone, free from circumambulant
+tourists, in the vast chamber, vivid with Paul Veronese's colour on
+wall and ceilings, with Tintoretto and Bassano' with the arrogant
+splendour of the battles and the pomp and circumstance of victorious
+armies of the proud and conquering republic, and their eyes were drawn
+from all this painted and riotous wonder by the long arresting frieze
+of portraits of serene, masterful and subtle faces.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The common factor&mdash;that's what we want, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," she breathed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And as they stood, hand in hand, the unspoken thought vibrating between
+them, the memory came to him of a day long ago when he had stood with
+another woman&mdash;a girl then&mdash;before the photographs in the window of the
+London Stereoscopic Company in Regent Street, and he had scanned faces
+of successful men. He laughed&mdash;he could not help it&mdash;and drew his
+Princess closer to him. Between the analogous then and the wonderful
+now, how immense a difference! As he laughed she looked swiftly up into
+his face.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know why you laugh."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, my Princess. Impossible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mais oui. Tell me. All these great princes"&mdash;she swept her little
+gloved hand toward the frieze. "What is their common factor?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, forgetful of his mirth, looked round. "'Indomitable will," said
+he seriously. "Unconquerable ambition, illimitable faith. They all seem
+to be saying their creed. 'I believe in myself almighty, and in Venice
+under my control, and in God who made us both, and in the inferiority
+of the remnant of the habitable globe.' Or else: 'In the beginning God
+created Venice. Then He created the rest of the world. Then He created
+Me. Then He retired and left me to deal with the situation.' Or else:
+'I am an earthly Trinity. I am myself. I am Venice. I am God.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is magnificent!" she cried. "How you understand them! How you
+understand the true aristocratic spirit! They are all, what you call,
+leaders of men. I did not expect an analysis so swift and so true. But,
+Paul"&mdash;her voice sank adorably&mdash;"all these men lack
+something&mdash;something that you have. And that is why I thought you
+laughed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He smiled down on her. "Do you think I was measuring myself with these
+men?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Naturally. Why should you not?" she asked proudly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what have I got that they lack?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Happiness," said the Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul was silent for a while, as they moved slowly away to the balcony
+which overlooks the lagoon and San Giorgio Maggiore glowing warm in the
+sunshine, and then he said: "Yet most of those men loved passionately
+in their time, and were loved by beautiful women."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Their love was a thing of the passions, not of the spirit. You cannot
+see a woman, that is to say happiness, behind any of their faces."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He whispered: "Can you see a woman behind mine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you look like that," she replied, with a contented little laugh,
+"the whole world can see it." And so their talk drifted far away from
+Doges, just as their souls were drifting far from the Golden Calf of
+the Frank and Loyal Friendship which Sophie the Princess had set up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How could they help it&mdash;and in Venice of all places in the world? If
+she had determined on maintaining the friendship calm and austere, why
+in Minerva's name had she bidden him hither? Sophie Zobraska passed for
+a woman of sense. None knew better than she the perils of moonlit
+canals and the sensuous splash of water against a gondola, and the sad
+and dreamy beauty which sets the lonely heart aching for love. Why had
+she done it? Some such questions must Mademoiselle de Cressy have
+asked, for the Princess told him that Stephanie had lectured her
+severely for going about so much in public alone with a beau jeune
+homme.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But we don't always want Stephanie with us," she argued, "and she is
+not sympathetic in Venice. She likes restaurants and people. Besides,
+she is always with her friends at Danielli's, so if it weren't for you
+I should be doing nothing all by myself in the lonely palazzo.
+Forcement we go about together."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Which was all sophistical and nonsensical; and she knew it, for there
+was a mischievous little gleam in her eye as she spoke. But none the
+less, shutting her ears to the unsympathetic Stephanie, did she
+continue to show herself alone in public with the beautiful youth. She
+had thrown her crown over the windmills for a few happy days; for a few
+happy days she was feeding her starved nature, drinking in her fill of
+beauty and colour and the joy of life. And the pair, thus forcibly
+thrown together, drifted through the narrow canals beneath the old
+crumbling palaces, side by side, and hand in hand while Giacomo and
+Felipe, disregarded automata, bent to their oars.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One afternoon, one mellow and memorable afternoon, they were returning
+from Murano. Not a breath of wind ruffled the lagoon. The islands in
+their spring verdure slumbered peacefully. Far away the shipping in the
+bacino lay still like enchanted craft. Only a steamer or two, and here
+and there the black line of a gondola with its standing, solitary
+rower, broke the immobility of things. And Venice, russet and rose and
+grey, brooded in the sunset, a city of dreams. They murmured words of
+wonder and regret. Instinctively they drew near and their shoulders
+touched. Their clasp of fingers tightened and their breath came
+quickly, and for a long time they were silent. Then at last he
+whispered her name, in the old foolish and inevitable way. And she
+turned her face to him, and met his eyes and said "Paul," and her lips
+as she said it seemed to speak a kiss. And all the earth was wrapped in
+glory too overwhelming for speech.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was only when they entered the Grand Canal and drew up by the
+striped posts of the palazzo that she said: "I have those Roman people
+and the Heatherfields coming to dinner. I wish I hadn't." She sighed.
+"Would you care to come?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He smiled into her eyes. "No, my Princess, not to-night. I should do
+silly things. To-night I will go and talk to the moon. To-morrow, when
+can I come?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Early. As early as you like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Paul went away and talked to the moon, and the next morning, his
+heart tumultuous, presented himself at the palazzo. He was shown into
+the stiff Italian drawing-room, with its great Venetian glass
+chandelier, its heavy picture-hung walls, its Empire furniture covered
+in yellow silk. Presently the door opened and she entered, girlish in
+blouse and skirt, fresh as the morning. "Bon jour, Paul. I've not had
+time to put on my hat, but&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not end, for he strode toward her and with a little laugh of
+triumph took her in his arms and kissed her. And so what had to be came
+to pass.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap16"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+"I LOVE you too much, my Sophie, to be called the Princess Zobraska's
+husband."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I love you too much, dear, to wish to be called anything else than
+Paul Savelli's wife."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That was their position, perfectly defined, perfectly understood. They
+had arrived at it after many arguments and kisses and lovers'
+protestations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Such as I am I am," cried Paul. "A waif and stray, an unknown figure
+coming out of the darkness. I have nothing to give you but my love."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are there titles or riches on earth of equal value?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I must give you more. The name Paul Savelli itself must be a title
+of honour."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is becoming that," said the Princess. "And we can wait a little,
+Paul, can't we? We are so happy like this. Ah!" she sighed. "I have
+never been so happy in my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nor I," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And am I really the first?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The first. Believe it or not as you like. But it's a fact. I've told
+you my life's dream. I never sank below it; and that is why perhaps it
+has come true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For once the assertion was not the eternal lie. Paul came fresh-hearted
+to his Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wish I were a young girl, Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are a star turned woman. The Star of my Destiny in which I always
+believed. The great things will soon come."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They descended to more commonplace themes. Until the great things came,
+what should be their mutual attitude before Society?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Until I can claim you, let it be our dear and beautiful secret," said
+Paul. "I would not have it vulgarized by the chattering world for
+anything in life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Paul proved himself to be a proud and delicate lover, and when
+London with its season and its duties and its pleasures absorbed them,
+he had his reward. For it was sweet to see her in great assemblies,
+shining like a queen and like a queen surrounded by homage, and to know
+that he alone of mortals was enthroned in her heart. It was sweet to
+meet her laughing glance, dear fellow-conspirator. It was sweet every
+morning and night to have the intimate little talk through the
+telephone. And it was sweetest of all to snatch a precious hour with
+her alone. Of such vain and foolish things is made all that is most
+beautiful in life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He took his dearest lady&mdash;though Miss Winwood, now disclaimed the
+title&mdash;into his confidence. So did the Princess. It was very comforting
+to range Miss Winwood on their side; and to feel themselves in close
+touch with her wisdom and sympathy. And her sympathy manifested itself
+in practical ways&mdash;those of the woman confidante of every love affair
+since the world began. Why should the Princess Zobraska not interest
+herself in some of the philanthropic schemes of which the house in
+Portland Place was the headquarters? There was one, a Forlorn Widows'
+Fund, the presidency of which she would be willing to resign in favour
+of the Princess. The work was trivial: it consisted chiefly in
+consultation with Mr. Savelli and in signing letters. The Princess
+threw her arms round her neck, laughing and blushing and calling her
+delicieuse. You see it was obvious that Mr. Savelli could not be
+consulted in his official capacity or official letters signed elsewhere
+than in official precincts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll do what I can for the pair of you," said Miss Winwood to Paul.
+"But it's the most delightfully mad and impossible thing I've ever put
+my hand to."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Accepting the fact of their romance, however, she could not but approve
+Paul's attitude. It was the proud attitude of the boy who nearly six
+years ago was going, without a word, penniless and debonair out of her
+house. All the woman in her glowed over him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not going to be called an adventurer," he had declared. "I shall
+not submit Sophie to the indignity of trailing a despised husband after
+her. I'm not going to use her rank and wealth as a stepping-stone to my
+ambitions. Let me first attain an unassailable position. I shall have
+owed it to you, to myself, to anybody you like&mdash;but not to my marriage.
+I shall be somebody. The rest won't matter. The marriage will then be a
+romantic affair, and romantic affairs are not unpopular dans le monde
+ou l'on s'ennuie."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This declaration was all very well; the former part all very noble, the
+latter exhibiting a knowledge of the world rather shrewd for one so
+young. But when would he be able to attain his unassailable position?
+Some years hence. Would Sophie Zobraska, who was only a few months
+younger than he, be content to sacrifice these splendid and
+irretrievable years of her youth? Ursula Winwood looked into the
+immediate future, and did not see it rosy. The first step toward an
+unassailable position was flight from the nest. This presupposed an
+income. If the party had been in power it would not have been difficult
+to find him a post. She worried herself exceedingly, for in her sweet
+and unreprehensible way she was more than ever in love with Paul.
+Meeting Frank Ayres one night at a large reception, she sought his
+advice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you mind a wrench?" he asked. "No? Well, then&mdash;you and Colonel
+Winwood send him about his business and get another secretary. Let
+Savelli give all his time to his Young England League. Making him mug
+up material for Winwood's speeches and write letters to constituents
+about football clubs is using a razor to cut butter. His League's the
+thing. It can surely afford to pay him a decent salary. If it can't
+I'll see to a guarantee."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The last thing we see, my dear Frank," she said after she had thanked
+him, "is that which is right under our noses."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day she went to Paul full of the scheme. Had he ever thought
+of it? He took her hands and smiled in his gay, irresistible way. "Of
+course, dearest lady," he said frankly. "But I would have cut out my
+tongue sooner than suggest it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know that, my dear boy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And yet," said he, "I can't bear the idea of tearing myself away from
+you. It seems like black ingratitude."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It isn't. You forget that James and I have our little ambitions
+too&mdash;the ambition of a master for a favourite pupil. If you were a
+failure we should both be bitterly disappointed. Don't you see? And as
+for leaving us&mdash;why need you? We should miss you horribly. You've never
+been quite our paid servant. And now you're something like our son."
+Tears started in the sweet lady's clear eyes. "Even if you did go to
+your own chambers, I shouldn't let our new secretary have this
+room"&mdash;they were in what the household called "the office"&mdash;really
+Paul's luxuriously furnished private sitting room, which contained his
+own little treasures of books and pictures and bits of china and glass
+accumulated during the six years of easeful life&mdash;"He will have the
+print room, which nobody uses from one year's end to another, and which
+is far more convenient for the street door. And the same at Drane's
+Court. So when you no longer work for us, my dear boy, our home will be
+yours, as long as you're content to stay, just because we love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her hand was on his shoulder and his head was bent. "God grant," said
+he, "that I may be worthy of your love."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked up and met her eyes. Her hand was still on his shoulder. Then
+very simply he bent down and kissed her on the cheek.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He told his Princess all about it. She listened with dewy eyes. "Ah,
+Paul," she said. "That 'precious seeing' of love&mdash;I never had it till
+you came. I was blind. I never knew that there were such beautiful
+souls as Ursula Winwood in the world."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dear, how I love you for saying that!" cried Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it's true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is why," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So the happiest young man in London worked and danced through the
+season, knowing that the day of emancipation was at hand. His
+transference from the Winwoods to the League was fixed for October 1.
+He made great plans for an extension of the League's, activities,
+dreamed of a palace for headquarters with the banner of St. George
+flying proudly over it, an object-lesson for the nation. One day in
+July while he was waiting for Colonel Winwood in the lobby of the House
+of Commons, Frank Ayres stopped in the middle of a busy rush and shook
+hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Been down to Hickney Heath again? I would if I were you. Rouse 'em up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As the words of a Chief Whip are apt to be significant, Paul closeted
+himself with the President of the Hickney Heath Lodge, who called the
+Secretary of the local Conservative Association to the interview. The
+result was that Paul was invited to speak at an anti-Budget meeting
+convened by the Association. He spoke, and repeated his success. The
+Conservative newspapers the next morning gave a resume of his speech.
+His Sophie, coming to sign letters in her presidential capacity,
+brought him the cuttings, a proceeding which he thought adorable. The
+season ended triumphantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a while he lost his Princess. She went to Cowes, then to stay with
+French relations in a chateau in the Dordogne. Paul went off yachting
+with the Chudleys and returned for the shooting to Drane's Court. In
+the middle of September the Winwoods' new secretary arrived and
+received instruction in his duties. Then came the Princess to Morebury
+Park. "Dearest," she said, in his arms, "I never want to leave you
+again. France is no longer France for me since I have England in my
+heart."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You remember that? My wonderful Princess!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found her more woman, more expansive, more bewitchingly caressing.
+Absence had but brought her nearer. When she laid her head on his
+shoulder and murmured in the deep and subtle tones of her own language:
+"My Paul, it seems such a waste of time to be apart," it took all his
+pride and will to withstand the maddening temptation. He vowed that the
+time would soon come when he could claim her, and went away in feverish
+search for worlds to conquer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then came October and London once more.
+</P>
+
+<HR ALIGN="center" WIDTH="60%">
+
+<P>
+Paul was dressing for dinner one evening when a reply-paid telegram was
+brought to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If selected by local committee will you stand for Hickney Heath?
+Ayres."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat on his bed, white and trembling, and stared at the simple
+question. The man-servant stood imperturbable, silver tray in hand.
+Seeing the reply-paid form, he waited for a few moments.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is there an answer, sir?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul nodded, asked for a pencil, and with a shaky hand wrote the reply.
+"Yes," was all he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then with reaction came the thrill of mighty exultation, and, throwing
+on his clothes, he rushed to the telephone in his sitting room. Who
+first to hear the wondrous news but his Princess? That there was a
+vacancy in Hickney Heath he knew, as all Great Britain knew; for
+Ponting, the Radical Member, had died suddenly the day before. But it
+had never entered his head that he could be chosen as a candidate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mais j'y ai bien pense, moi," came the voice through the telephone.
+"Why did Lord Francis tell you to go to Hickney Heath last July?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+How a woman leaps at things! With all his ambition, his astuteness,
+his political intuition, he had not seen the opportunity. But it had
+come. Verily the stars in their courses were fighting for him. Other
+names, he was aware, were before the Committee of the Local
+Association, perhaps a great name suggested by the Central Unionist
+Organization; there was also that of the former Tory member, who,
+smarting under defeat at the General Election, had taken but a lukewarm
+interest in the constituency and was now wandering in the Far East. But
+Paul, confident in his destiny, did not doubt that he would be
+selected. And then, within the next fortnight&mdash;for bye-elections during
+a Parliamentary session are matters of sweeping swiftness&mdash;would come
+the great battle, the great decisive battle of his life, and he would
+win. He must win. His kingdom was at stake&mdash;the dream kingdom of his
+life into which he would enter with his loved and won Princess on his
+arm. He poured splendid foolishness through the telephone into an
+enraptured ear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lack of a sense of proportion is a charge often brought against
+women; but how often do men (as they should) thank God for it? Here was
+Sophie Zobraska, reared from childhood in the atmosphere of great
+affairs, mixing daily with folk who guided the destiny of nations,
+having two years before refused in marriage one of those who held the
+peace of Europe in his hands, moved to tense excitement of heart and
+brain and soul by the news that an obscure young man might possibly be
+chosen to contest a London Borough for election to the British
+Parliament, and thrillingly convinced that now was imminent the great
+momentous crisis in the history of mankind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a lack of the same sense of proportion, equal in kind, though
+perhaps not so passionate in degree, did Miss Winwood receive the
+world-shaking tidings. She wept, and, thinking Paul a phoenix, called
+Frank Ayres an angel. Colonel Winwood tugged his long, drooping
+moustache and said very little; but he committed the astounding
+indiscretion of allowing his glass to be filled with champagne;
+whereupon he lifted it, and said, "Here's luck, my dear boy," and
+somewhat recklessly gulped down the gout-compelling liquid. And after
+dinner, when Miss Winwood had left them together, he lighted a long
+Corona instead of his usual stumpy Bock, and discussed with Paul
+electioneering ways and means.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the next day or two Paul lived in a whirl of telephones, telegrams,
+letters, scurryings across London, interviews, brain-racking
+questionings and reiterated declarations of political creed. But his
+selection was a foregone conclusion. His youth, his absurd beauty, his
+fire and eloquence, his unswerving definiteness of aim, his magic that
+had inspired so many with a belief in him and had made him the
+Fortunate Youth, captivated the imagination of the essentially
+unimaginative. Before a committee of wits and poets, Paul perhaps would
+not have had a dog's chance. But he appealed to the hard-headed
+merchants and professional men who chose him very much as the hero of
+melodrama appeals to a pit and gallery audience. He symbolized to them
+hope and force and predestined triumph. One or two at first sniffed
+suspiciously at his lofty ideals; but as there was no mistaking his
+political soundness, they let the ideals pass, as a natural and
+evanescent aroma.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So, in his thirtieth year, Paul was nominated as Unionist candidate for
+the Borough of Hickney Heath, and he saw himself on the actual
+threshold of the great things to which he was born. He wrote a little
+note to Jane telling her the news. He also wrote to Barney Bill: "You
+dear old Tory&mdash;did you ever dream that ragamuffin little Paul was going
+to represent you in Parliament? Get out the dear old 'bus and paint it
+blue, with 'Paul Savelli forever' in gold letters, and, instead of
+chairs and mats, hang it with literature, telling what a wonderful
+fellow P. S. is. And go through the streets of Hickney Heath with it,
+and say if you like: 'I knew him when' he was a nipper&mdash;that high.' And
+if you like to be mysterious and romantic you can say: 'I, Barney Bill,
+gave him his first chance,' as you did, my dear old friend, and Paul's
+not the man to forget it. Oh, Barney, it's too wonderful"&mdash;his heart
+went out to the old man. "If I get in I will tell you something that
+will knock you flat. It will be the realization of all the silly
+rubbish I talked in the old brickfield at Bludston. But, dear old
+friend, it was you and the open road that first set me on the patriotic
+lay, and there's not a voter in Hickney Heath who can vote as you
+can&mdash;for his own private and particular trained candidate."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane, for reasons unconjectured, did not reply. But from Barney Bill,
+who, it must be remembered, had leanings toward literature, he received
+a postcard with the following inscription: "Paul, Hif I can help you
+konker the Beastes of Effesus I will. Bill."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then began the furious existence of an electioneering campaign. His
+side had a clear start of the Radicals, who found some hitch in the
+choice of their candidate. The Young England League leaped into
+practical enthusiasm over their champion. Seldom has young candidate
+had so glad a welcome. And behind him stood his Sophie, an inspiring
+goddess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It so happened that for a date a few days hence had been fixed the
+Annual General Meeting of the Forlorn Widows' Fund, when Report and
+Balance Sheet were presented to the society. The control of this
+organization Paul had not allowed to pass into the alien hands of
+Townsend, the Winwoods' new secretary. Had not his Princess, for the
+most delicious reasons in the world, been made President? He scorned
+Ursula Winwood's suggestion that for this year he would allow Townsend
+to manage affairs. "What!" cried he, "leave my Princess in the lurch on
+her first appearance? Never!" By telephone he arranged an hour for the
+next day, when they could all consult together over this important
+matter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, my dear boy," said Miss Winwood, "your time is not your own.
+Suppose you're detained at Hickney Heath?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Conqueror," he cried, with a gay laugh, "belongs to the
+Detainers&mdash;not the Detained."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked at him out of her clear eyes, and shook an indulgent head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," said he, meeting her glance shrewdly. "He has got to use his
+detaining faculty with discretion. I've made a study of the little ways
+of conquerors. Ali! Dearest lady!" he burst out suddenly, in his
+impetuous way, "I'm talking nonsense; but I'm so uncannily happy!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It does me good to look at you," she said.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap17"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+PAUL leaned back in his leather writing chair, smoking a cigarette and
+focussing the electioneering situation. Beside a sheet of foolscap on
+which he had been jotting down notes lay in neat piles the typewritten
+Report of the Forlorn Widows' Fund, the account book and the banker's
+pass book. He had sat up till three o'clock in the morning preparing
+for his Princess. Nothing now remained but the formal "examined and
+found correct" report of the auditors. For the moment the Forlorn
+Widows stood leagues away from Paul's thoughts. He had passed a
+strenuous day at Hickney Heath, lunching in the committee room on
+sandwiches and whisky and soda obtained from the nearest tavern,
+talking, inventing, dictating, writing, playing upon dull minds the
+flashes of his organizing genius. His committee was held up for the
+while by a dark rift in the Radical camp. They had not yet chosen their
+man. Nothing was known, save that a certain John Questerhayes, K. C.,
+an eminent Chancery barrister, who had of late made himself conspicuous
+in the constituency, had been turned down on the ground that he was not
+sufficiently progressive. Now for comfort to the Radical the term
+"Progressive" licks the blessed word Mesopotamia into a cocked hat.
+Under the Progressive's sad-coloured cloak he need not wear the red tie
+of the socialist. Apparently Mr. Questerhayes objected to the
+sad-coloured cloak, the mantle of Elijah, M. P., the late member for
+Hickney Heath. "Wanted: an Elisha," seemed to be the cry of the Radical
+Committee.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul leaned back, his elbows on the arms of his chair, his finger tips
+together, a cigarette between his lips, lost in thought. The early
+November twilight deepened in the room. He was to address a meeting
+that night. In order to get ready for his speech he had not allowed
+himself to be detained, and had come home early. His speech had been
+prepared; but the Radical delay was a new factor of which he might take
+triumphant advantage. Hence the pencil notes on the sheet of foolscap,
+before him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A man-servant came in, turned on the electric light, pulled the
+curtains together and saw to the fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tea's in the drawing-room, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bring me some here in a breakfast cup&mdash;nothing to eat," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Even his dearest lady could not help him in his meditated attack on the
+enemy whom the Lord was delivering into his hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man-servant went away. Presently Paul heard him reenter the room;
+the door was at his back. He threw out an impatient hand behind him.
+"Put it down anywhere, Wilton, I'll have it when I want it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I beg pardon, sir," said the man, coming forward, "but it's not the
+tea. There's a gentleman and a lady and another person would like to
+see you. I said that you were busy, sir, but&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He put the silver salver, with its card, in front of Paul. Printed on
+the card was, "Mr. Silas Finn." In pencil was written: "Miss Seddon,
+Mr. William Simmons."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked at the card in some bewilderment. What in the name of
+politics or friendship were they doing in Portland Place? Not to
+receive them, however, was unthinkable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Show them in," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn, Jane and Barney Bill! It was odd. He laughed and took out
+his watch. Yes, he could easily give them half an hour or so. But why
+had they come? He had found time to call once at the house in Hickney
+Heath since his return to town, and then he had seen Jane and Silas
+Finn together and they had talked, as far as he could remember, of the
+Disestablishment of the Anglican Church and the elevating influence of
+landscape painting on the human soul. Why had they come? It could not
+be to offer their services during the election, for Silas Finn in
+politics was a fanatical enemy. The visit stirred a lively curiosity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They entered: Mr. Finn in his usual black with many-coloured tie and
+diamond ring, looking more mournfully grave than ever; Jane wearing an
+expression half of anxiety and half of defiance; Barney Bill, very
+uncomfortable in his well-preserved best suit, very restless and
+nervous. They gave the impression of a deputation coming to announce
+the death of a near relative. Paul received them cordially. But why in
+the world, thought he, were they all so solemn? He pushed forward
+chairs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I got your postcard, Bill. Thanks so much for it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bill grunted and embraced his hard felt hat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I ought to have written to you," said Jane&mdash;"but&mdash;-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She felt restrained by her duty towards me," said Mr. Finn. "I hope
+you did not think it was discourteous on her part."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear sir," Paul laughed, seating himself in his writing chair,
+which he twisted away from the table, "Jane and I are too old friends
+for that. In her heart I know she wishes me luck. And I hope you do
+too, Mr. Finn," he added pleasantly&mdash;"although I know you're on the
+other side."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm afraid my principles will not allow me to wish you luck in this
+election, Mr. Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, well," said Paul. "It doesn't matter. If you vote against me
+I'll not bear malice."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am not going to vote against you, Mr. Savelli," said Mr. Finn,
+looking at him with melancholy eyes. "I am going to stand against you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul sprang forward in his chair. Here was fantastic news indeed!
+"Stand against me? You? You're the Radical candidate?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed boyishly. "Why, it's capital! I'm awfully glad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was asked this morning," said Mr. Finn gravely. "I prayed God for
+guidance. He answered, and I felt it my duty to come to you at once,
+with our two friends."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill cocked his head on one side. "I did my best to persuade him
+not to, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But why shouldn't he?" cried Paul courteously&mdash;though why he should
+puzzled him exceedingly. "It's very good of you, Mr. Finn. I'm sure
+your side," he went on, "could not have chosen a better man. You're
+well known in the constituency&mdash;I am jolly lucky to have a man like you
+as an opponent."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Savelli," said Mr. Finn, "it was precisely so that we should not
+be opponents that I have taken this unusual step."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't quite understand," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Finn wants you to retire in favour of some other Conservative
+candidate," said Jane calmly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Retire? I retire?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked at her, then at Barney Bill, who nodded his white head,
+then at Mr. Finn, whose deep eyes met his with a curious tragical
+mournfulness. The proposal took his breath away. It was crazily
+preposterous. But for their long faces he would have burst into
+laughter. "Why on earth do you want me to retire?" he asked
+good-humouredly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will tell you," said Mr. Finn. "Because you will have God against
+you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul saw a gleam of light in the dark mystery of the visit. "You may
+believe it, Mr. Finn, but I don't. I believe that my war cry, 'God for
+England, Savelli and Saint George,' is quite as acceptable to, the
+Almighty as yours."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Finn stretched out two hands in earnest deprecation. "Forgive me if
+I say it; but you don't know what you're talking about. God has not
+revealed Himself to you. He has to me. When my fellow-citizens asked me
+to stand as the Liberal candidate, I thought it was because they knew
+me to be an upright man, who had worked hard on their council, an
+active apostle in the cause of religion, temperance and the suppression
+of vice. I thought I had merely deserved well in their opinion. When I
+fell on my knees and prayed the glory of the Lord spread about me and I
+knew that they had been divinely inspired. It was revealed to me that
+this was a Divine Call to represent the Truth in the Parliament of the
+nation."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I remember your saying, when I first had the pleasure of meeting you,"
+Paul remarked, with unwonted dryness, "that the Kingdom of Heaven was
+not adequately represented in the House of Commons."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have not changed my opinion, Mr Savelli. The hand of God has guided
+my business. The hand of God is placing me in the House of Commons to
+work His will. You cannot oppose God's purpose, Paul Savelli&mdash;and that
+is why I beg you not to stand against me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You see, he likes yer," interjected Barney Bill, with anxiety in his
+glittering eyes. "That's why he's a-doing of it. He says to hisself,
+says he, 'ere's a young chap what I likes with his first great chance
+in front of him, with the eyes of the country sot on him&mdash;now if I
+comes in and smashes him, as I can't help myself from doing, it'll be
+all u-p with that young chap's glorious career. But if I warns him in
+time, then he can retire&mdash;find an honourable retreat&mdash;that's what he
+wants yer to have&mdash;an honourable retreat. Isn't that it, Silas?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Those are the feelings by which I am actuated," said Mr. Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul stretched himself out in his chair, his ankles crossed, and
+surveyed his guests. "What do you think of it, Jane?" said he, not
+without a touch of irony.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had been looking into the fire, her face in profile. Addressed, she
+turned. "Mr. Finn has your interests very deep at heart," she answered
+tonelessly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul jumped to his feet and laughed his fresh laugh. It was all so
+comic, so incredible, so mad. Yet none of them appeared to see any
+humour in the situation. There sat Jane and Barney Bill cowering under
+the influence of their crazy fishmongering apostle; and there,
+regarding him with a world of appeal in his sorrowful eyes, sat the
+apostle himself, bolt upright in his chair, an odd figure with his
+streaked black and white hair, ascetic face and Methodistico-Tattersall
+raiment. And they all seemed to expect him to obey this quaint person's
+fanatical whimsy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's very kind indeed of you, Mr. Finn, to consult my interests in
+this manner," said he. "And I'm most indebted to you for your
+consideration. But, as I said before, I've as much reason for believing
+God to be on my side as you have. And I honestly believe I'm going to
+win this election. So I certainly won't withdraw."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I implore you to do so. I will go on my knees and beseech you," said
+Mr. Finn, with hands clasped in front of him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked round. "I'm afraid, Bill," said he, "that this is getting
+rather painful."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is painful. It's more than painful. It's horrible! It's ghastly!"
+cried Mr. Finn, in sudden shrill crescendo, leaping to his feet. In an
+instant the man's demeanour had changed. The mournful apostle had
+become a wild, vibrating creature with flashing eyes and fingers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Easy, now, Silas. Whoa! Steady!" said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn advanced on Paul and clapped his hands on his shoulders and
+shouted hoarsely: "For the love of God&mdash;don't thwart me in this. You
+can't thwart me. You daren't thwart me. You daren't thwart God."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul disengaged himself impatiently. The humour had passed from the
+situation. The man was a lunatic, a religious maniac. Again he
+addressed Barney Bill. "As I can't convince Mr. Finn of the absurdity
+of his request, I must ask you to do so for me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Young man," cried Silas, quivering with passion, "do not speak to
+God's appointed in your vanity and your arrogance. You&mdash;you&mdash;of all
+human beings&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Both Jane and Barney Bill closed round him. Jane clutched his arm.
+"Come away. Do come away."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Steady now, Silas," implored Barney Bill. "You see it's no use. I told
+you so. Come along."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Leave me alone," shouted Finn, casting them off. "What have I to do
+with you? It is that young man there who defies God and me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Finn," said Paul, very erect, "if I have hurt your feelings I am
+sorry. But I fight this election. That's final. The choice no longer
+rests with me. I'm the instrument of my party. I desire to be courteous
+in every way, but you must see that it would be useless to prolong this
+discussion." And he moved to the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come away now, for Heaven's sake. Can't you realize it's no good?"
+said Jane, white to the lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn again cast her off and railed and raved at her. "I will not
+go away," he cried in wild passion. "I will not allow my own son to
+raise an impious hand against the Almighty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lor' lumme!" gasped Barney Bill, dropping his hat. "He's done it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a silence. Silas Finn stood shaking in the middle of the
+room, the sweat streaming down his forehead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul turned at the door and walked slowly up to him. "Your son? What do
+you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane, with wringing hands and tense, uplifted face, said in a queer
+cracked voice: "He promised us not to speak. He has broken his promise."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You broke your sacred word," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man's face grew haggard. His passion left him as suddenly as it had
+seized him. He collapsed, a piteous wreck, looked wide of the three,
+and threw out his hands helplessly. "I broke my promise. May God
+forgive me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's neither here nor there," said Paul, standing over him. "You
+must answer my question. What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill limped a step or two toward him and cleared his throat.
+"He's quite correct, sonny. Silas Kegworthy's your father right enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Kegworthy?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Changed his name for business&mdash;and other reasons."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He?" said Paul, half dazed for the moment and pointing at Silas Finn.
+"His name is Kegworthy and he is my father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, sonny. 'Tain't my fault, or Jane's. He took his Bible oath he
+wouldn't tell yer. We was afraid, so we come with him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then?" queried Paul, jerking a thumb toward Lancashire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Polly Kegworthy? Yes. She was yer mother."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul set his teeth and drew a deep breath&mdash;not of air, but of a million
+sword points, Jane watched him out of frightened eyes. She alone, with
+her all but life-long knowledge of him, and with her woman's intuition,
+realized the death-blow that he had received. And when she saw him take
+it unflinching and stand proud and stern, her heart leaped toward him,
+though she knew that the woman in the great chased silver photograph
+frame on the mantelpiece, the great and radiant lady, the high and
+mighty and beautiful and unapproachable Princess, was the woman he
+loved. Paul touched his father on the wrist, and motioned to a chair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please sit down. You too, please,"&mdash;he waved a hand, and himself
+resumed his seat in his writing chair. He turned it so that he could
+rest his elbow on his table and his forehead in his palm. "You claim to
+be my father," said he. "Barney Bill, in whom I have implicit
+confidence, confirms it. He says that Mrs. Button is my mother&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She has been dead these six years," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why didn't you tell me?" asked Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I didn't think it would interest yer, sonny," replied Barney Bill, in
+great distress. "Yer see, we conspirated together for yer never to know
+nothing at all about all this. Anyway, she's dead and won't worry yer
+any more."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She was a bad mother to me. She is a memory of terror. I don't pretend
+to be grieved," said Paul; "any more than I pretend to be overcome by
+filial emotion at the present moment. But, if you are my father, I
+should be glad to know&mdash;in fact, I think I'm entitled to know&mdash;why
+you've taken thirty years to reveal yourself, and why"&mdash;a sudden fury
+swept him&mdash;"why you've come now to play hell with my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is the will of God," said Silas Finn, in deep dejection.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul snapped three or four fingers. "Bah!" he cried. "Talk sense. Talk
+facts. Leave God out of the question for a while. It's blasphemy to
+connect Him with a sordid business like this. Tell me about myself&mdash;my
+parentage&mdash;let me know where I am."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're with three people as loves yer, sonny," said Barney Bill. "What
+passes in this room will never be known to another soul on earth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That I swear," said Silas Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can publish it broadcast in every newspaper in England," said
+Paul. "I'm making no bargains. Good God! I'm asking for nothing but the
+truth. What use I make of it is my affair. You can do&mdash;the three of
+you&mdash;what you like. Let the world know. It doesn't matter. It's I that
+matter&mdash;my life and my conscience and my soul that matter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't be too hard upon me," Silas besought him very humbly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell me about myself," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn wiped his forehead with his handkerchief and covered his
+eyes with his hand. "That can only mean telling you about myself," he
+said. "It's raking up a past which I had hoped, with God's help, to
+bury. But I have sinned to-night, and it is my punishment to tell you.
+And you have a right to know. My father was a porter in Covent Garden
+Market. My mother&mdash;I've already mentioned&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes&mdash;the Sicilian and the barrel organ&mdash;I remember," said Paul, with a
+shiver.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had a hard boyhood. But I rose a little above my class. I educated
+myself more or less. At last I became assistant in a fishmonger's shop.
+Our friend Simmons here and I were boys together. We fell in love with
+the same girl. I married her. Not long afterward she gave way to drink.
+I found that in all kinds of ways I had mistaken her character. I can't
+describe your own mother to you. She had a violent temper. So had I. My
+life was a hell upon earth. One day she goaded me beyond my endurance
+and I struck at her with a knife. I meant at the bloodred instant to
+kill her. But I didn't. I nearly killed her. I went to prison for three
+years. When I came out she had vanished, taking you with her. In prison
+I found the Grace of God and I vowed it should be my guide through
+life. As soon as I was free from police supervision I changed my
+name&mdash;I believe it's a good old Devonshire name; my father came from
+there&mdash;the prison taint hung about it. Then, when I found I could
+extend a miserable little business I had got together, I changed it
+again to suit my trade. That's about all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a spell of dead silence. The shrunken man, stricken with a
+sense of his sin of oath-breaking, had Spoken without change of
+attitude, his hand over his eyes. Paul, too, sat motionless, and
+neither Jane nor Barney Bill spoke. Presently Silas Finn continued:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For many years I tried to find my wife and son&mdash;but it was not God's
+will. I have lived with the stain of murder on my soul"&mdash;his voice
+sank&mdash;"and it has never been washed away. Perhaps it will be in God's
+good time.... And I had condemned my son to a horrible existence&mdash;for I
+knew my wife was not capable of bringing you up in the way of clean
+living. I was right. Simmons has since told me&mdash;and I was crushed
+beneath the burden of my sins."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After a pause he raised a drawn face and went on to tell of his
+meeting, the year before, with Barney Bill, of whom he had lost track
+when the prison doors had closed behind him. It had been in one of his
+Fish Palaces where Bill was eating. They recognized each other. Barney
+Bill told his tale: how he had run across Polly Kegworthy after a dozen
+years' wandering; how, for love of his old friend, he had taken Paul,
+child of astonishing promise, away from Bludston&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you remember, sonny, when I left you alone that night and went to
+the other side of the brickfield? It was to think it out," said Bill.
+"To think out my duty as a man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul nodded. He was listening, with death in his heart. The whole
+fantastic substructure of his life had been suddenly kicked away, and
+his life was an inchoate ruin. Gone was the glamour of romance in which
+since the day of the cornelian heart he had had his essential being. Up
+to an hour ago he had never doubted his mysterious birth. No real
+mother could have pursued an innocent child with Polly Kegworthy's
+implacable hatred. His passionate repudiation of her had been a
+cardinal article of his faith. On the other hand, the prince and
+princess theory he had long ago consigned to the limbo of childish
+things; but the romance of his birth, the romance of his high destiny,
+remained a vital part of his spiritual equipment. His looks, his
+talents, his temperament, his instincts, his dreams had been
+irrefutable confirmations. His mere honesty, his mere integrity, had
+been based on this fervent and unshakable creed. And now it had gone.
+No more romance. No more glamour. No more Vision Splendid now faded
+into the light of common and sordid day. Outwardly listening, his gay,
+mobile face turned to iron, he lived in a molten intensity of thought,
+his acute brain swiftly coordinating the ironical scraps of history. He
+was the son of Polly Kegworthy. So far he was unclean; but hitherto her
+blood had not manifested itself in him. He was the son of this violent
+and pathetic fanatic, this ex-convict; he had his eyes, his refined
+face; perhaps he inherited from him the artistic temperament&mdash;he
+recalled grimly the daubs on the man's walls, and his purblind gropings
+toward artistic self-expression; and all this&mdash;the Southern
+handsomeness, and Southern love of colour, had come from his Sicilian
+grandmother, the nameless drab, with bright yellow handkerchief over
+swarthy brows, turning the handle of a barrel organ in the London
+streets. Instinct had been right in its promptings to assume an Italian
+name; but the irony of it was of the quality that makes for humour in
+hell. And his very Christian name&mdash;Paul&mdash;the exotic name which Polly
+Kegworthy would not have given to a brat of hers&mdash;was but a natural one
+for a Silas to give his son, a Silas born of generations of evangelical
+peasants. His eyes rested on the photograph of his Princess. She, first
+of all, was gone with the Vision. An adventurer he had possibly been;
+but an adventurer of romance, carried high by his splendid faith, and
+regarding his marriage with the Princess but as a crowning of his
+romantic destiny. But now he beheld himself only as a base-born
+impostor. His Princess was gone from his life. Death was in his heart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He saw his familiar, luxurious room as in a dream, and Jane,
+anxious-eyed, looking into the fire, and Barney Bill a little way off,
+clutching his hard felt hat against his body; but his eyes were fixed
+on the strange, many-passioned, unbalanced man who claimed to be&mdash;nay,
+who was&mdash;his father.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When I first met you that night my heart went out to you," he was
+saying. "It overflowed in thankfulness to God that He had delivered you
+out of the power of the Dog, and in His inscrutable mercy had condoned
+that part of my sin as a father and had set you in high places."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the fringe of his brain Paul recognized, for the first time, how
+he brought into ordinary talk the habits of speech acquired in
+addressing a Free Zionist congregation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was only the self-restraint," Silas continued, "taught me by bitter
+years of agony and a message from God that it was part of my punishment
+not to acknowledge you as my son&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what I told you, and what Jane told you about him," said Barney
+Bill. "Remember that, Silas."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I remember it&mdash;it was these influences that kept me silent. But we
+were drawn together, Paul." He bent forward in his chair. "You liked
+me. In spite of all our differences of caste and creed&mdash;you liked me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, I was drawn to you," said Paul, and a strange, unknown note in
+his voice caused Jane to glance at him swiftly. "You seemed to be a man
+of many sorrows and deep enthusiasms&mdash;and I admit I was in close
+sympathy with you." He paused, not moving from his rigid attitude, and
+then went on: "What you have told me of your sufferings&mdash;and I know,
+with awful knowledge, the woman who was my mother&mdash;has made me
+sympathize with you all the more. But to express that sympathy in any
+way you must give me time. I said you had played hell with my life.
+It's true. One of these days I may be able to explain. Not now. There's
+no time. We're caught up in the wheels of an inexorable political
+machine. I address my party in the constituency to-night." It was a
+cold intelligence that spoke, and once more Jane flashed a
+half-frightened glance at him. "What I shall say to them, in view of
+all this, I don't quite know. I must have half an hour to think."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know I oughtn't to interfere, Paul," said Jane, "but you mustn't
+blame Mr. Finn too much. Although he differs from you in politics and
+so on, he loves you and is proud of you&mdash;as we all are&mdash;and looks
+forward to your great career&mdash;I know it only too well. And now he has
+this deep conviction that he has a call from on High to ruin your
+career at the very beginning. Do understand, Paul, that he feels
+himself in a very terrible position."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do," said Mr. Finn. "God knows that if it weren't for His command, I
+should myself withdraw."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I appreciate your position, perfectly," replied Paul, "but that
+doesn't relieve me of my responsibilities."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn rose and locked the fingers of both hands together and stood
+before Paul, with appealing eyes. "My son, after what I have said, you
+are not going to stand against me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose too. A sudden craze of passion swept him. "My country has
+been my country for thirty years. You have been my father for five
+minutes. I stand by my country."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn turned away and waved a haphazard hand. "And I must stand by
+my God."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very well. That brings us to our original argument. 'Political foes.
+Private friends.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas turned again and looked into the young man's eyes. "But father
+and son, Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All the more honourable. There'll be no mud-throwing. The cleanest
+election of the century."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The elder man again covered his face with both hands, and his black and
+white streaked hair fell over his fingers and the great diamond in his
+ring flashed oddly, and he rocked his head for a while to and fro.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had a call," he wailed. "I had a call. I had a call from God. It was
+clear. It was absolute. But you don't understand these things. His will
+must prevail. It was terrible to think of crushing your career&mdash;my only
+son's career. I brought these two friends to help me persuade you not
+to oppose me. I did my best, Paul. I promised them not to resort to the
+last argument. But flesh is weak. For the first time since&mdash;you
+know&mdash;the knife&mdash;your mother&mdash;I lost self-control. I shall have to
+answer for it to my God&mdash;" He stretched out his arms and looked
+haggardly at Paul. "But it is God's will. It is God's will that I
+should voice His message to the Empire. Paul, Paul, my beloved son&mdash;you
+cannot flout Almighty God."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your God doesn't happen to be my God," said Paul, once more
+suspicious&mdash;and now hideously so&mdash;of religious mania. "And possibly the
+real God is somebody else's God altogether. Anyway, England's the only
+God I've got left, and I'm going to fight for her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The door opened and Wilton, the man-servant, appeared. He looked round.
+"I beg your pardon, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul crossed the room. "What is it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Her Highness, sir," he said in his well-trained, low voice, "and the
+Colonel and Miss Winwood. I told them you were engaged. But they've
+been waiting for over half-an-hour, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul drew himself up. "Why did you not tell me before? Her Highness is
+not to be kept waiting. Present my respectful compliments to Her
+Highness, and ask her and Colonel and Miss Winwood to have the kindness
+to come upstairs."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We had better go," cried Jane in sudden fear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said he. "I want you all to stay."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap18"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XVIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+IN the tense silence of the few moments of waiting Paul passed from the
+boy to whom the earth had been a fairyland to the man grappling with
+great realities. In those few moments he lived through his past life
+and faced an adumbration of the future.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The door was thrown open and the Princess appeared, smiling, happy, a
+black ostrich feather in her hat and a sable stole hanging loose from
+her shoulders; a great and radiant lady. Behind her came the Colonel
+and Ursula Winwood. Paul bent over the Princess's, outstretched hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A thousand pardons for keeping you waiting. I did not know you had
+come. I was engaged with my friends. May I have the honour of
+presenting them? Princess, this is Mr. Silas Finn, the managing
+director of Fish Palaces Limited. These are two very dear friends, Miss
+Seddon&mdash;Mr. Simmons. Miss Winwood&mdash;Colonel Winwood, may I?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waved an introductory hand. The Princess: bowed; then, struck by
+their unsmiling faces and by Paul's strange manner, turned to him
+quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Qu'est ce qu'il y a?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Je vais vous le dire."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He pushed a chair. She sat down. Ursula Winwood sat in Paul's writing
+chair. The others remained standing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Finn called to inform me that he has been adopted as the Liberal
+candidate for Hickney Heath."' "My felicitations," said the Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas bowed to her gravely and addressed Colonel Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We have been, sir&mdash;Mr. Savelli and I&mdash;for some time on terms of
+personal friendship in the constituency."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see, I see," replied the Colonel, though he was somewhat puzzled.
+"Very polite and friendly, I'm sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Finn also urges me to withdraw my candidature," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess gave a little incredulous laugh. Ursula Winwood rose and,
+with a quick protective step, drew nearer Paul. Colonel Winwood frowned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Withdraw? In Heaven's name why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas Finn tugged at his black-and-white-streaked beard and looked at
+his son.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Need we go into it again? There are religious reasons, which perhaps,
+Madam"&mdash;Silas addressed the Princess&mdash;"you might misunderstand. Mr.
+Savelli possibly thinks I am a fanatic. I can't help it. I have warned
+him. That is enough. Good-bye, Mr. Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He held out his hand; but Paul did not take it. "You forget, Mr. Finn,
+that I asked you to stay." He clutched the sides of his jacket till his
+knuckles grew white, and he set his teeth. "Mr. Finn has another reason
+for wishing me not to oppose him&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That reason you need never give," cried Silas in a loud voice, and
+starting forward. "You know that I make no claims whatsoever."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know that," said Paul, coldly; "but I am going to give it all the
+same." He paused, held up his hand and looked at the Princess. "Mr.
+Silas Finn happens to be my father."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good God!" gasped the Colonel, after a flash of silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess caught a quick breath and sat erect in her chair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Votre Pere, Paul?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Princess. Until half an hour ago I did not know it. Never in my
+life did I know that I had a father living. My friends there can bear
+witness that what I say is true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, Paul dear," said Miss Winwood, laying her kind fingers on his arm
+and searching his face, "you told us that your parents were dead and
+that they were Italians."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I lied," replied Paul calmly. "But I honestly believed the woman who
+was my mother not to be my mother, and I had never heard of my father.
+I had to account for myself to you. Your delicacy, Miss Winwood,
+enabled me to invent as little as possible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But your name&mdash;Savelli?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I took it when I went on the stage&mdash;I had a few years' obscure and
+unsuccessful struggle. You will remember I came to you starving and
+penniless."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess grew white and her delicate nostrils quivered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Et monsieur votre pere&mdash;" she checked herself. "And your father, what
+do you say he is?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul motioned to Silas to speak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I, Madam," said the latter, "am a self-made man, and by the
+establishment of fried-fish shops all over London and the great
+provincial towns, have, by the grace of God, amassed a considerable
+fortune."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fried fish?" said the Princess in a queer voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas looked at her out of his melancholy and unhumorous eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, Madam."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have also learned," said Paul, "that my grandmother was a Sicilian
+who played a street-organ. Hence my Italian blood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane, standing by the door with Barney Bill, most agonized of old men,
+wholly nervous, twisting with gnarled fingers the broken rim of his
+hard felt hat, turned aside so that no one but Bill should see a sudden
+gush of tears. For she had realized how drab and unimportant she was in
+the presence of the great and radiant lady; also how the great and
+radiant lady was the God-sent mate for Paul, never so great a man as
+now when he was cutting out his heart for truth's sake.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should like to tell you what my life has been," continued Paul, "in
+the presence of those who know it already. That's why I asked them to
+stay. Until an hour ago I lived in dreams. In my own fashion I was an
+honest man. But now I've got this knowledge of my origin, the dreams
+are swept away and I stand naked to myself. If I left you, Miss
+Winwood, and Colonel Winwood, who have been so good to me&mdash;and Her
+Highness, who has deigned to honour me with her friendship&mdash;in a
+moment's doubt as to my antecedents I should be an impostor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, no, my boy," said Colonel Winwood, who was standing with hands
+deep in trouser pockets and his head bent, staring at the carpet. "No
+words like that in this house. Besides, why should we want to go into
+all this?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had the Englishman's detestation of unpleasant explanations. Ursula
+Winwood supported him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, why?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it would be very interesting," said the Princess slowly, cutting
+her words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul met her eyes, which she had hardened, and saw beneath them pain
+and anger and wounded pride and repulsion. For a second he allowed an
+agonized appeal to flash through his. He knew that he was deliberately
+killing the love in her heart. He felt the monstrous cruelty of it. A
+momentary doubt shook him. Was he justified? A short while ago she had
+entered the room her face alight with love; now her face was as stern
+and cold as his own. Had he the right to use the knife like this? Then
+certainty came. It had to be. The swifter the better. She of all human
+beings must no longer be deceived. Before her, at supreme cost, he must
+stand clean.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not very interesting," said he. "And it's soon told. I was a
+ragged boy in a slum in a Lancashire town. I slept on sacking in a
+scullery, and very seldom had enough to eat. The woman whom I didn't
+think was my mother ill-treated me. I gather now that she hated me
+because she hated my father. She deserted him when I was a year old and
+disappeared; she never spoke of him. I don't know exactly how old I am.
+I chose a birthday at random. As a child I worked in a factory. You
+know what child-labour in factories was some years ago. I might have
+been there still, if my dear old friend there hadn't helped me when I
+was thirteen to run away. He used to go through the country in a van
+selling mats and chairs. He brought me to London, and found me a
+lodging with Miss Seddon's mother. So, Miss Seddon and I were children
+together. I became an artist's model. When I grew too old for that to
+be a dignified occupation, I went on the stage. Then one day, starving
+and delirious, I stumbled through the gates of Drane's Court and fell
+at Miss Winwood's feet. That's all."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Since we've begun, we may as well finish and get it over," said
+Colonel Winwood, still with bent head, but looking at Paul from beneath
+his eyebrows. "When and how did you come across this gentleman who you
+say is your father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul told the story in a few words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now that you have heard everything," said he, "would you think me
+justified in withdrawing my candidature?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly not," said the Colonel. "You've got your duty to the Party."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you, Miss Winwood?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can you ask? You have your duty to the country."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you, Princess?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She met his challenging eyes and rose in a stately fashion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am not equal to these complications of English politics, Mr.
+Savelli," she said. She held herself very erect, but her lips trembled
+and tears were very near her eyes. She turned to Miss Winwood and held
+out her hand. "I am afraid we must postpone our discussion of the
+Forlorn Widows. It is getting late. Au revoir, Colonel Winwood&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will see you to your carriage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the threshold she turned, included Paul in a vague bow to the
+company, and passed through the door which Colonel Winwood held open.
+Paul watched her until she disappeared&mdash;disappeared haughtily out of
+his life, taking his living heart with her, leaving him with a stone
+very heavy, very cold, dead. And he was smitten as with a great
+darkness. He remained quite still for a few moments after the door had
+closed, then with a sudden jerk he drew himself up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Finn," said he, "as I've told you, I address my first meeting
+to-night. I am going to make public the fact that I'm your son."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Silas put his hand to his head and looked at him wildly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, no," he muttered hoarsely&mdash;"no."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see no reason," said Miss Winwood gently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see every reason," said Paul. "I must live in the light now. The
+truth or nothing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then obey your conscience, Paul," she answered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Silas came forward with his outstretched hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can't do it. You can't do it, I tell you. It's impossible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He replied in an odd voice, and with a glance at Miss Winwood. "I must
+tell you afterwards."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will leave you," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mr. Finn"&mdash;she shook hands with him&mdash;"I hope you're proud of your
+son." And then she shook hands with Jane and Barney Bill. "I'm glad to
+meet such old friends of Paul." And to Paul, as he held the door open,
+she said, her clear kind eyes full on him, "Remember, we want men in
+England."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank God, we've got women," said he, with lips from which he could
+not keep a sudden quiver.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He closed the door and came up to his father standing on the hearthrug.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now, why shouldn't I speak? Why shouldn't I be an honest man
+instead of an impostor?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Out of pity for me, my son."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pity? Why, what harm would it do you? There's nothing dishonourable in
+father and son fighting an election." He laughed without much mirth.
+"It's what some people would call sporting. As for me, personally, I
+don't see why you should be ashamed of owning me. My record is clean
+enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But mine isn't, Paul," said Silas mournfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time Paul bowed his head. "I'm sorry," said he. "I
+forgot." Then he raised it again. "But that's all over and buried in
+the past."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It may be unburied."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you see?" cried Jane. "Even I can. If you spring your
+relationship upon the public, it will create an enormous sensation&mdash;it
+will set the place on fire with curiosity. They'll dig up everything
+they can about you&mdash;everything they can about him. Oh, Paul, don't you
+see.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's up agin a man, sonny," said Barney Bill, limping towards them,
+"it's up agin a candidate, you understand, him not being a Fenian or a
+Irish patriot, that he's been in gaol. Penal servitude ain't a nice
+state of life to be reminded of, sonny. Whereas if you leaves things as
+they is, nobody's going to ask no questions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's my point," said Silas Finn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked from one to the other, darkly. In a kind of dull fierce
+passion he had made up his mind to clear himself before the world, to
+rend to tatters his garments of romance, to snap his fingers at the
+stars and destiny and such-like deluding toys, to stand a young Ajax
+defying the thunderbolts. Here came the first check.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If they found out as how he'd done time, they'd find out for why,"
+said Bill, cocking his head earnestly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Paul, engaged in sombre thought, made no reply, Silas turned away,
+his hands uplifted in supplication, and prayed aloud. He had sinned in
+giving way to his anger. He prostrated himself before the divine
+vengeance. If this was his apportioned punishment, might God give him
+meekness and strength to bear it. The tremulous, crying voice, the
+rapt, fanatical face, and the beseeching attitude struck a bizarre note
+in the comfortable and worldly room. Supported on either side by Jane,
+helpless and anxious, and Barney Bill, crooked, wrinkled, with his
+close-cropped white hair and little liquid diamond eyes, still
+nervously tearing his hat-brim, he looked almost grotesque. To Paul he
+seemed less a man than a creation of another planet, with unknown and
+incalculable instincts and impulses, who had come to earth and with
+foolish hand had wiped out the meaning of existence. Yet he felt no
+resentment, but rather a weary pity for the stranger blundering through
+an unsympathetic world. As soon as there came a pause in the prayer, he
+said not ungently:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Almighty is not going to use me as an instrument to punish you, if
+I can help it. I quite appreciate your point. I'll say nothing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill jerked his thumb towards the chair where the Princess had
+been sitting:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She won't give it away?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled sadly. "No, old man. She'll keep it to herself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That marked the end of the interview. Paul accompanied the three
+downstairs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I meant to act for the best, Paul," said Silas piteously, on parting.
+"Tell me that I haven't made you my enemy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God forbid," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He went slowly up to his room again and threw himself in his writing
+chair. His eye fell upon the notes on the sheet of foolscap. The
+Radical candidate having been chosen, they were no longer relevant to
+his speech. He crumpled up the paper and threw it into the waste-paper
+basket. His speech! He held his head in both hands. A couple of hours
+hence he would be addressing a vast audience, the centre of the hopes
+of thousands of his fellow countrymen. The thought beat upon his brain.
+He had had the common nightmare of standing with conductor's baton in
+front of a mighty orchestra and being paralyzed by sense of impotence.
+No less a nightmare was his present position. A couple of hours ago he
+was athrill with confidence and joy of battle. But then he was a
+different man. The morning stars, the stars of his destiny, sang
+together in the ever-deepening glamour of the Vision Splendid. He was
+entering into the lists of Camelot to fight for his Princess. He was
+the Mysterious Knight, parented in fairy-far Avilion, the Fortunate
+Youth, the Awakener of England. Now he was but a base-born young man
+who had attained a high position by false pretences; an ordinary
+adventurer with a glib tongue; a self-educated, self-seeking,
+commonplace fellow. At least, so he saw himself in his Princess's eyes.
+And he had meant that she should thus behold him. No longer was he
+entering lists to fight for her. For what hopeless purpose was he
+entering them? To awaken England? The awakener must have his heart full
+of dreams and visions and glamour and joy and throbbing life; and in
+his heart there was death.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drew out the little cornelian talisman at the end of his watch-chain
+and looked at it bitterly. It was but a mocking symbol of illusion. He
+unhooked it and laid it on the table. He would carry it about with him
+no longer. He would throw it away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ursula Winwood quietly entered the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must come down and have something to eat before the meeting."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose. "I don't want anything, thank you, Miss Winwood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But James and I do. So come and join us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you coming to the meeting?" he asked in surprise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course." She lifted her eyebrows. "Why not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"After what you have heard?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All the more reason for us to go." She smiled as she had smiled on
+that memorable evening six years ago when she had stood with the
+horrible pawn-ticket in her hand. "James has to support the Party. I
+have to support you. James will do the same as I in a day or two. Just
+give him time. His mind doesn't work very quickly, not as quickly as a
+woman's. Come," she said. "When we have a breathing space you can tell
+me all about it. But in the meantime I'm pretty sure I understand."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How can you?" he asked wearily. "You have other traditions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know about traditions; but I don't give my love and take it
+away again. I set rather too much value on it. I understand because I
+love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Others with the same traditions can't understand."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not proposing to marry you," she said bluntly. "That makes a
+difference."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It does," said he, meeting her eyes unflinchingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you weren't a brave man, I shouldn't say such a thing to you.
+Anyhow I understand you're the last man in the world who should take me
+for a fool."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God!" said Paul in a choky voice. "What can I do to thank you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Win the election."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are still my dearest lady&mdash;my very very dearest lady," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her shrewd eyes fell upon the cornelian heart. She picked it up and
+held it out to him on her plump palm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why have you taken this off your watch-chain?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a little false god," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's the first thing yon asked for when you recovered from your
+illness. You said you had kept it since you were a tiny boy. See? I
+remember. You set great value on it then?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I believed in it," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now you don't? But a woman gave it to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," said Paul, wondering, in his masculine way, how the deuce she
+knew that. "I was a brat of eleven."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then keep it. Put it on your chain again. I'm sure it's a true little
+god. Take it back to please me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As there was nothing, from lapping up Eisel to killing a crocodile,
+that Paul would not have done, in the fulness of his wondering
+gratitude, for his dearest lady, he meekly attached the heart to his
+chain and put it in his pocket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I must tell you," said he, "that the lady&mdash;she seemed a goddess to me
+then&mdash;chose me as her champion in a race, a race of urchins at a Sunday
+school treat, and I didn't win. But she gave me the cornelian heart as
+a prize."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But as my champion you will win," said Miss Winwood. "My dear boy,"
+she said, and her eyes grew very tender as she laid her hand on the
+young man's arm, "believe what an old woman is telling you is true.
+Don't throw away any little shred of beauty you've ever had in your
+life. The beautiful things are really the true ones, though they may
+seem to be illusions. Without the trinket or what it stood for, would
+you be here now?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know," replied Paul. "I might have taken a more honest road to
+get here."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We took you to ourselves as a bright human being, Paul&mdash;not for what
+you might or might not have been. By the way, what have you decided as
+regards making public the fact of your relationship?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My father, for his own reasons, has urged me not to do so."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood drew a long breath.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad to hear it," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Paul, comforted by one woman's amazing loyalty, went out that
+evening and addressed his great meeting. But the roar of applause that
+welcomed him echoed through void spaces of his being. He felt neither
+thrill nor fear. The speech prepared by the Fortunate Youth was
+delivered by a stranger to it, glowing and dancing eloquence. The words
+came trippingly enough, but the informing Spirit was gone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Those in the audience familiar with the magic of his smile were
+disappointed. The soundness of his policy satisfied the hard-headed,
+but he made no appeal to the imaginative. If his speech did not fall
+flat, it was not the clarion voice that his supporters had anticipated.
+They whispered together with depressed headshakings. Their man was not
+in form. He was nervous. What he said was right enough, but his
+utterance lacked fire. It carried conviction to those already
+convinced; but it could make no proselytes. Had they been mistaken in
+their choice? Too young a man, hadn't he bitten off a hunk greater
+than he could chew? So the inner ring of local politicians. An election
+audience, however, brings its own enthusiasms, and it must be a very
+dull dog indeed who damps their ardour. They cheered prodigiously when
+Paul sat down, and a crowd of zealots waiting outside the building
+cheered him again as he drove off. But Paul knew that he had been a
+failure. He had delivered another man's speech. To-morrow and the day
+after and the day after that, and ever afterwards, if he held to the
+political game, he would have to speak in his own new person. What kind
+of a person would the new Paul be?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drove back almost in silence with the Colonel and Miss Winwood,
+vainly seeking to solve the problem. The foundations of his life had
+been swept away. His foot rested on nothing solid save his own manhood.
+That no shock should break down. He would fight. He would win the
+election. He set his lips in grim determination. If life held no higher
+meaning, it at least offered this immediate object for existence.
+Besides he owed the most strenuous effort of his soul to the devoted
+and loyal woman whose face he saw dimly opposite. Afterwards come what
+might. The Truth at any rate. Magna est veritas et praevalebit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These were "prave 'orts" and valorous protestations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But when their light supper was over and Colonel Winwood had retired,
+Ursula Winwood lingered in the dining room, her heart aching for the
+boy who looked so stern and haggard. She came behind him and touched
+his hair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poor boy," she murmured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Paul&mdash;he was very young, barely thirty&mdash;broke down, as perhaps she
+meant that he should, and, elbows sprawling amid the disarray of the
+meal, poured out all the desolation of his soul, and for the first time
+cried out in anguish for the woman he had lost. So, as love lay
+a-bleeding mortally pierced, Ursula Winwood wept unaccustomed tears
+and with tender fingers strove to staunch the wound.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap19"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XIX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+DAYS of strain followed: days of a thousand engagements, a thousand
+interviews, a thousand journeyings, a thousand speeches; days in which
+he was reduced to an unresisting automaton, mechanically uttering the
+same formulas; days in which the irresistible force of the campaign
+swept him along without volition. And day followed day and not a sign
+came from the Princess Zobraska either of condonation or resentment. It
+was as though she had gathered her skirts around her and gone
+disdainfully out of his life for ever. If speaking were to be done, it
+was for her to speak. Paul could not plead. It was he who, in a way,
+had cast her off. In effect he had issued the challenge: "I am a child
+of the gutter, an adventurer masquerading under an historical name, and
+you are a royal princess. Will you marry me now?" She had given her
+answer, by walking out of the room, her proud head in the air. It was
+final, as far as he was concerned. He could do nothing&mdash;not even beg
+his dearest lady to plead for him. Besides, rumour had it that the
+Princess had cancelled her town engagements and gone to Morebury. So he
+walked in cold and darkness, uninspired, and though he worked with
+feverish energy, the heart and purpose of his life were gone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As in his first speech, so in his campaign, he failed. He had been
+chosen for his youth, his joyousness, his magnetism, his radiant
+promise of great things to come. He went about the constituency an
+anxious, haggard man, working himself to death without being able to
+awaken a spark of emotion in the heart of anybody. He lost ground
+daily. On the other hand, Silas Finn, with his enthusiasms, and his
+aspect of an inspired prophet, made alarming progress. He swept the
+multitude. Paul Savelli, the young man of the social moment, had an
+army of helpers, members of Parliament making speeches, friends on the
+Unionist press writing flamboyant leaders, fair ladies in automobiles
+hunting for voters through the slums of Hickney Heath. Silas Finn had
+scarcely a personal friend. But hope reigned among his official
+supporters, whereas depression began to descend over Paul's brilliant
+host.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They want stirring up a bit," said the Conservative agent
+despondently. "I hear old Finn's meetings go with a bang. They nearly
+raised the roof off last night. We want some roof-raising on this side."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do my best," said Paul coldly, but the reproach cut deep. He was a
+failure. No nervous or intellectual effort could save him now, though
+he spent himself to the last heartbeat. He was the sport of a mocking
+Will o' the Wisp which he had taken for Destiny.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Once on coming out of his headquarters he met Silas, who was walking up
+the street with two or three of his committee-men. In accordance with
+the ordinary amenities of English political life, the two candidates
+shook hands, and withdrew a pace or two aside to chat for a while. This
+was the first time they had come together since the afternoon of
+revelation, and there was a moment of constraint during which Silas
+tugged at his streaked beard and looked with mournful wistfulness at
+his son.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wish I were not your opponent, Paul," said he in a low voice, so as
+not to be overheard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That doesn't matter a bit," Paul replied courteously. "I see you're
+putting up an excellent fight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's the Lord's battle. If it weren't, do you think I would not let
+you win?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The same old cry. Through sheer repetition, Paul began almost to
+believe in it. He felt very weary. In his father's eyes he recognized,
+with a pang, the glow of a faith which he had lost. Their likeness
+struck him, and he saw himself, his old self, beneath the unquestioning
+though sorrowful eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's the advantage of a belief in the Almighty's personal interest,"
+he answered, with a touch of irony: "whatever happens, one is not
+easily disillusioned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is true, my son," said Silas.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jane is well?" Paul asked, after an instant's pause, breaking off the
+profitless discussion.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very well."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Barney Bill?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He upbraids me bitterly for what I have said."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled at the curiously stilted phrase.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell him from me not to do it. My love to them both."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They shook hands again, and Paul drove off in the motor car that had
+been placed at his disposal during the election, and Silas continued
+his sober walk with his committee-men up the muddy street. Whereupon
+Paul conceived a sudden hatred for the car. It was but the final
+artistic touch to this comedy of mockery of which he had been the
+victim.... Perhaps God was on his father's side, after all&mdash;on the side
+of them who humbly walked and not of them who rode in proud chariots.
+But his political creed, his sociological convictions rose in protest.
+How could the Almighty be in league with all that was subversive of
+social order, all that was destructive to Imperial cohesion, all that
+which inevitably tended to England's downfall?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned suddenly to his companion, the Conservative agent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you think God has got common sense?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The agent, not being versed in speculations regarding the attributes of
+the Deity, stared; then, disinclined to commit himself, took refuge in
+platitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"God moves in a mysterious way, Mr. Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's rot," said Paul. "If there's an Almighty, He must move in a
+common-sense way; otherwise the whole of this planet would have busted
+up long ago. Do you think it's common sense to support the present
+Government?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly not," said the agent, fervently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then if God supported it, it wouldn't be common sense on His part. It
+would be merely mysterious?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I see what you're driving at," said the agent. "Our opponent
+undoubtedly has been making free with the name of the Almighty in his
+speeches. As a matter of fact he's rather crazy on the subject. I don't
+think it would be a bad move to make a special reference to it. It's
+all damned hypocrisy. There's a chap in the old French play&mdash;what's his
+name?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tartuffe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's it. Well, there you are. That speech of his yesterday&mdash;now why
+don't you take it and wring religiosity and hypocrisy and Tartuffism
+out of it? You know how to do that sort of thing. You can score
+tremendously. I never thought of it before. By George! you can get him
+in the neck if you like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I don't like," said Paul. "I happen to know that Mr. Finn is
+sincere in his convictions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, my dear sir, what does his supposed sincerity matter in political
+contest?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's the difference between dirt and cleanliness," said Paul.
+"Besides, as I told you at the outset, Mr. Finn and I are close
+personal friends, and I have the highest regard for his character. He
+has seen that his side has scrupulously refrained from personalities
+with regard to me, and I insist on the same observance with regard to
+him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"With all due deference to you, Mr. Savelli, you were called only the
+day before yesterday 'the spoiled darling of Duchesses' boudoirs.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It wasn't with Mr. Finn's cognizance. I've found that out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," said the agent, leaning back-in the luxurious limousine, "I
+don't see why somebody, without your cognizance, shouldn't call Mr.
+Finn the spoiled minion of the Almighty's ante-chamber. That's a
+devilish good catch-phrase," he added, starting forward in the joy of
+his newborn epigram: "Devilish good. 'The spoiled minion of the
+Almighty's ante-chamber.' It'll become historical."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it does," said Paul, "it will be associated with the immediate
+retirement of the Conservative candidate."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you really mean that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was Paul's turn to start forward. "My dear Wilson," said he, "if you
+or anybody else thinks I'm a man to talk through his hat, I'll retire
+at once. I don't care a damn about myself. Not a little tuppenny damn.
+What the devil does it matter to me whether I get into Parliament or
+not? Nothing. Not a tuppenny damn. You can't understand. It's the party
+and the country. For myself, personally, the whole thing can go to
+blazes. I'm in earnest, dead earnest," he continued, with a vehemence
+incomprehensible to Wilson. "If anybody doesn't think so, I'll clear
+out at once"&mdash;he snapped his fingers. "But while I'm candidate
+everything I say I mean. I mean it intensely&mdash;with all my soul. And I
+say that if there's a single insulting reference to Mr. Finn during
+this election, you'll be up against the wreck of your own political
+career."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The agent watched the workings of his candidate's dark clear-cut face.
+He was very proud of his candidate, and found it difficult to realize
+that there were presumably sane people who would not vote for him on
+sight. A lingering memory of grammar school days flashed on him when he
+told his wife later of the conversation, and he likened Paul to a
+wrathful Apollo. Anxious to appease the god, he said humbly:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was the merest of suggestions, Mr. Savelli. Heaven knows we don't
+want to descend to personalities, and your retirement would be an
+unqualifiable disaster. But&mdash;you'll pardon my mentioning it&mdash;you began
+this discussion by asking me whether the Almighty had common sense."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, has He or not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then we're going to win this election," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If he could have met enthusiasm with enthusiasm, all would have been
+well. The awakener of England could have captivated hearts by glowing
+pictures of a great and glorious future. It would have been a
+counter-blaze to that lit by his opponent, which flamed in all the
+effulgence of a reckless reformer's promise, revealing a Utopia in
+which there would be no drunkenness, no crime, no poverty, and in which
+the rich, apparently, would have to work very hard in order to support
+the poor in comfortable idleness. But beyond proving fallacies, Paul
+could do nothing&mdash;and even then, has there ever been a mob since the
+world began susceptible to logical argument? So, all through the wintry
+days of the campaign, Silas Finn carried his fiery cross through the
+constituency, winning frenzied adherents, while Paul found it hard to
+rally the faithful round the drooping standard of St. George.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The days went on. Paul addressed his last meeting on the eve of the
+poll. By a supreme effort he regained some of his former fire and
+eloquence. He drove home exhausted, and going straight to bed slept
+like a dog till morning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The servant who woke him brought a newspaper to the bedside.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Something to interest you, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked at the headline indicated by the man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hickney Heath Election. Liberal Candidate's Confession. Extraordinary
+Scene."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He glanced hurriedly down the column and read with amazement and
+stabbing pain the matter that was of interest. The worst had
+happened&mdash;the thing which during all his later life Silas Finn had
+feared. The spectre of the prison had risen up against him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Towards the end of Silas Finn's speech, at his last great meeting, a
+man, sitting in the body of the hall near the platform, got up and
+interrupted him. "What about your own past life? What about your three
+years' penal servitude?" All eyes were turned from the man&mdash;a common
+looking, evil man&mdash;to the candidate, who staggered as if he had been
+shot, caught at the table behind him for support and stared in
+greyfaced terror. There was an angry tumult, and the interrupter would
+have fared badly, but for Silas Finn holding up his hand and imploring
+silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I challenge the candidate to deny," said the man, as soon as he could
+be heard, "that his real name is Silas Kegworthy, and that he underwent
+three years' penal servitude for murderously assaulting his wife."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then the candidate braced himself and said: "The bare facts are true.
+But I have lived stainlessly in the fear of God and in the service of
+humanity for thirty years. I have sought absolution for a moment of mad
+anger under awful provocation in unremitting prayer and in trying to
+save the souls and raise the fortunes of my fellow-men. Is that all you
+have against me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's all," said the man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is for you, electors of Hickney Heath, to judge me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat down amid tumultuous cheers, and the man who had interrupted
+him, after some rough handling, managed to make his escape. The
+chairman then put a vote of confidence in the candidate, which was
+carried by acclamation, and the meeting broke up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Such were the essential facts in the somewhat highly coloured newspaper
+story which Paul read in stupefied horror. He dressed quickly and went
+to his sitting-room, where he rang up his father's house on the
+telephone. Jane's voice met his ear.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's Paul speaking," he replied. "I've just this moment read of last
+night. I'm shaken to my soul. How is my father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's greatly upset," came the voice. "He didn't sleep all night, and
+he's not at all well this morning. Oh, it was a cruel, cowardly blow."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dastardly. Do you know who it was?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. Don't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I? Does either of you think that I&mdash;?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, no," came the voice, now curiously tearful. "I didn't mean that. I
+forgot you've not had time to find out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who does he think it was?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some old fellow prisoner who had a grudge against him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Were you at the meeting?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. Oh, Paul, it was splendid to see him face the audience. He spoke
+so simply and with such sorrowful dignity. He had their sympathy at
+once. But it has broken him. I'm afraid he'll never be the same man
+again. After all these years it's dreadful."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's all that's damnable. It's tragic. Give him my love and tell him
+that words can't express my sorrow and indignation."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rang off. Almost immediately Wilson was announced. He came into the
+room radiant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were right about the divine common-sensicality," said he. "The
+Lord has delivered our adversary into our hands with a vengeance."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was a chubby little man of forty, with coarse black hair and scrubby
+moustache, not of the type that readily appreciates the delicacies of a
+situation. Paul conceived a sudden loathing for him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I would give anything for it not to have happened," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilson opened his eyes. "Why? It's our salvation. An ex-convict&mdash;it's
+enough to damn any candidate. But we want to make sure. Now I've got an
+idea."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul turned on him angrily. "I'll have no capital made out of it
+whatsoever. It's a foul thing to bring such an accusation up against a
+man who has lived a spotless life for thirty years. Everything in me
+goes out in sympathy with him, and I'll let it be known all through the
+constituency."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you take it that way," said Wilson, "there's no more to be done."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's nothing to be done, except to find out who put up the man to
+make the announcement."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He did it on his own," Wilson replied warmly. "None of our people
+would resort to a dirty trick like that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And yet you want me to take advantage of it now it's done."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's quite a different matter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't see much difference," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Wilson, seeing that his candidate was more unmanageable than ever,
+presently departed, and Paul sat down to breakfast. But he could not
+eat. He was both stricken with shame and moved to the depths by immense
+pity. Far removed from him as Silas Finn was in mode of life and
+ideals, he found much in common with his father. Each had made his way
+from the slum, each had been guided by an inner light&mdash;was Silas Finn's
+fantastic belief less of an ignis fatuus than his own?&mdash;each had sought
+to get away from a past, each was a child of Ishmael, each, in his own
+way, had lived romantically. Whatever resentment against his father
+lingered in his heart now melted away. He was very near him. The shame
+of the prison struck him as it had struck the old man. He saw him bowed
+down under the blow, and he clenched his hands in a torture of anger
+and indignation. And to crown all, came the intolerable conviction, in
+the formation of which Wilson's triumphant words had not been
+necessary, that if he won the election it would be due to this public
+dishonouring of his own father. He walked about the room in despair,
+and at last halted before the mantelpiece on which still stood the
+photograph of the Princess in its silver frame. Suddenly he remembered
+that he had not told her of this incident in his family history. She
+too would be reading her newspaper this morning. He saw her proud lips
+curl. The son of a gaol-bird! He tore the photograph from its frame and
+threw it into the fire and watched it burn. As the paper writhed under
+the heat, the lips seemed to twist into sad reproach. He turned away
+impatiently. That romantic madness was over and done with. He had far
+sterner things to do than shriek his heart out over a woman in an alien
+star. He had his life to reconstruct in the darkness threatening and
+mocking; but at last he had truth for a foundation; on that he would
+build in defiance of the world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the midst of these fine thoughts it occurred to him that he had
+hidden the prison episode in his father's career from the Winwoods as
+well as from the Princess. His checks flushed; it was one more strain
+on the loyalty of these dear devoted friends. He went downstairs, and
+found the Colonel and Miss Winwood in the dining-room. Their faces were
+grave. He came to them with outstretched arms&mdash;a familiar gesture, one
+doubtless inherited from his Sicilian ancestry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You see what has happened. I knew all the time. I didn't tell you. You
+must forgive me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't blame you, my boy," said Colonel Winwood. "It was your
+father's secret. You had no right to tell us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're very grieved, dear, for both your sakes," Ursula added. "James
+has taken the liberty of sending round a message of sympathy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As ever, these two had gone a point beyond his anticipation of their
+loyalty. He thanked them simply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's hateful," said he, "to think I may win the election on account of
+this. It's loathsome." He shuddered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I quite agree with you," said the Colonel. "But in politics one has
+often to put up with hateful things in order to serve one's country.
+That's the sacrifice a high-minded man is called upon to make."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Besides," said Miss Winwood, "let us hope it won't affect votes. All
+the papers say that the vote of confidence was passed amid scenes of
+enthusiasm."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul smiled. They understood. A little while later they drove off with
+him to his committee room in the motor car gay with his colours. There
+was still much to be done that day.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap20"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XX
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+HICKNEY HEATH blazed with excitement. It is not every day that a thrill
+runs through a dull London borough, not even every election day. For a
+London borough, unlike a country town, has very little corporate life
+of its own. You cannot get up as much enthusiasm for Kilburn, say, as a
+social or historical entity, as you can for Winchester or Canterbury.
+You may perform civic duties, if you are public-spirited enough, with
+business-like zeal, and if you are borough councillor you may be proud
+of the nice new public baths which you have been instrumental in
+presenting to the community. But the ordinary man in the street no more
+cares for Kilburn than he does for Highgate. He would move from one to
+the other without a pang. For neither's glory would he shed a drop of
+his blood. Only at election times does it occur to him that he is one
+of a special brotherhood, isolated from the rest of London; and even
+then he regards the constituency as a convention defining geographical
+limits for the momentary range of his political passions. So that the
+day when an electric thrill ran through the whole of Hickney Heath was
+a rare one in its uninspiring annals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The dramatic had happened, touching the most sluggish imaginations. The
+Liberal candidate for Parliament, a respected Borough Councillor, a
+notorious Evangelical preacher, had publicly confessed himself an
+ex-convict. Every newspaper in London&mdash;and for the matter of that,
+every newspaper in Great Britain&mdash;rang with the story, and every man,
+woman and child in Hickney Heath read feverishly every newspaper,
+morning and evening, they could lay their hands on. Also, every man,
+woman and child in Hickney Heath asked his neighbour for further
+details. All who could leave desk and shop or factory poured into the
+streets to learn the latest, tidings. Around the various polling
+stations the crowd was thickest. Those electors who had been present at
+Silas Finn's meeting, the night before, told the story at first-hand to
+eager groups. Rumours of every sort spread through the mob. The man who
+had put the famous question was an agent of the Tories. It was a smart
+party move. Silas Finn had all the time been leading a double life.
+Depravities without number were laid to his charge. Even now the police
+were inquiring into his connection with certain burglaries that had
+taken place in the neighbourhood. And where was he that day? Who had
+seen him? He was at home drunk. He had committed suicide. Even if he
+hadn't, and was elected, he would not be allowed to take his seat in
+Parliament.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the other hand, those in whose Radical bosoms burned fierce hatred
+for the Tories, spoke loud in condemnation of their cowardly tactics.
+There was considerable free-fighting in the ordinarily dismal and
+decorous streets of Hickney Heath. Noisy acclamations hailed the
+automobiles, carriages and waggonettes bringing voters of both parties
+to the polls. Paul, driving in his gaily-decked car about the
+constituency, shared all these demonstrations and heard these rumours.
+The latter he denied and caused to be denied, as far as lay in his
+power. In the broad High Street, thronged with folk, and dissonant with
+tram cars and motor 'buses, he came upon a quarrelsome crowd looking up
+at a window above a poulterer's shop, from which hung something white,
+like a strip of wall paper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Approaching, he perceived that it bore a crude drawing of a convict and
+"Good old Dartmoor" for legend. White with anger, he stopped the car,
+leaped out on to the curb, and pushing his way through the crowd,
+entered the shop. He seized one of the white-coated assistants by the
+arm. "Show me the way to that first-floor room," he cried fiercely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The assistant, half-dragged, half-leading, and wholly astonished, took
+him through the shop and pointed to the staircase. Paul sprang up and
+dashed through the door into the room, which appeared to be some
+business office. Three or four young men, who turned grinning from the
+window, he thrust aside, and plucking the offending strip from the
+drawing-pins which secured it to the sill, he tore it across and across.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You cads! You brutes!" he shouted, trampling on the fragments. "Can't
+you fight like Englishmen?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young men, realizing the identity of the wrathful apparition,
+stared open-mouthed, turned red, and said nothing. Paul strode out,
+looking very fierce, and drove off in his car amid the cheers of the
+crowd, to which he paid no notice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It makes me sick!" he cried passionately to Wilson, who was with him.
+"I hope to God he wins in spite, of it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What about the party?" asked Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul damned the party. He was in the overwrought mood in which a man
+damns everything. Quagmire and bramble and the derision of Olympus-that
+was the end of his vanity of an existence. Suppose he was elected&mdash;what
+then? He would be a failure-the high gods in their mirth would see to
+that&mdash;a puppet in Frank Ayres' hands until the next general election,
+when he would have ignominiously to retire. Awakener of England indeed!
+He could not even awaken Hickney Heath. As he dashed through the
+streets in his triumphal car, he hated Hickney Heath, hated the wild
+"hoorays" of waggon-loads of his supporters on their way to the polls,
+hated the smug smiles of his committee-men at polling stations. He
+forgot that he did not hate England. A little black disk an inch or two
+in diameter if cunningly focussed can obscure the sun in heaven from
+human eye. There was England still behind the little black disk, though
+Paul for the moment saw it not.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilson pulled his scrubby moustache and made no retort to Paul's
+anathema. To him Paul was one of the fine flower of the Upper Classes
+to which lower middle-class England still, with considerable
+justification, believes to be imbued with incomprehensible and
+unalterable principles of conduct. The grand old name of gentleman
+still has its magic in this country&mdash;and is, by the way, not without
+its influence in one or two mighty republics wherein the equality of
+man is very loudly proclaimed. Wilson, therefore, gladly suffered
+Paul's lunatic Quixotry. For himself he approved hugely of the cartoon.
+If he could have had his way, Hickney Heath would have flamed with
+poster reproductions of it. But he had a dim appreciation of, and a
+sneaking admiration for, the aristocrat's point of view, and, being a
+practical man, evaded a discussion on the ethics of the situation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The situation was rendered more extraordinary because the Liberal
+candidate made no appearance in the constituency. Paul inquired
+anxiously. No one had seen him. After lunch he drove alone to his
+father's house. The parlour-maid showed him into the hideously
+furnished and daub-hung dining-room. The Viennese horrors of plaster
+stags, gnomes and rabbits stared fatuously on the hearth. No fire was
+in the grate. Very soon Jane entered, tidy, almost matronly in buxom
+primness, her hair as faultless as if it had come out of a convoluted
+mould, her grave eyes full of light. She gave him her capable hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's like you to come, Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's only decent. My father hasn't shown up. What's the matter with
+him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a bit of a nervous breakdown," she said, looking at him steadily.
+"Nothing serious. But the doctor&mdash;I sent for him&mdash;says he had better
+rest&mdash;and his committee people thought it wiser for him not to show
+himself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can I see him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly not." A look of alarm came into her face. "You're both too
+excited. What would you say to him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd tell him what I feel about the whole matter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes. You would fling your arms about, and he would talk about God, and
+a precious lot of good it would do to anybody. No, thank you. I'm in
+charge of Mr. Finn's health."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was the old Jane, so familiar. "I wish," said he, with a smile&mdash;"I
+wish I had had your common sense to guide me all these years."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you had, you would now be a clerk in the City earning thirty
+shillings a week."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And perhaps a happier man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bosh, my dear Paul!" she said, shaking her head slowly. "Rot! Rubbish!
+I know you too well. You adding up figures at thirty shillings a week,
+with a common sense wife for I suppose you mean that&mdash;mending your
+socks and rocking the cradle in a second-floor back in Hickney Heath!
+No, my dear"&mdash;she paused for a second or two and her lips twitched
+oddly&mdash;"common sense would have been the death of you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He laughed in spite of himself. It was so true.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Common sense might have screwed him to a thirty shillings-a-week desk:
+the fantastic had brought him to that very house, a candidate for
+Parliament, in a thousand-guinea motor car. On the other hand&mdash;and his
+laughter faded from his eyes&mdash;the fantastic in his life was dead.
+Henceforward common sense would hold him in her cold and unstimulating
+clasp. He said something of the sort to Jane. Once more she ejaculated
+"Rot, rubbish and bosh!" and they quarrelled as they had done in their
+childhood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You talk as if I didn't know you inside out, my dear Paul," she said
+in her clear, unsmiling way. "Listen. All men are donkeys, aren't they?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For the sake of argument, I agree."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well&mdash;there are two kinds of donkeys. One kind is meek and mild and
+will go wherever it is driven. The other, in order to get along, must
+always have a bunch of carrots dangling before its eyes. That's you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But confound it all!" he cried, "I've lost my carrots&mdash;can't you see?
+I'll never have any carrots again. That's the whole damned tragedy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time she smiled&mdash;the smile of the woman wiser in certain
+subtle things than the man. "My dear," she said, "carrots are cheap."
+She paused for an instant and added, "Thank God!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul squeezed her arms affectionately and they moved apart. He sighed.
+"They're the most precious things in the world," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The most precious things in the world are those which you can get for
+nothing," said Jane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a dear," said he, "and a comfort."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently he left her and returned to his weary round of the
+constituency, feeling of stouter heart, with a greater faith in the
+decent ordering of mundane things. A world containing such women as
+Jane and Ursula Winwood possessed elements of sanity. Outside one of
+the polling stations he found Barney Bill holding forth excitedly to a
+knot of working-men. He ceased as the car drove up, and cast back a
+broad proud smile at the candidate's warm greeting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I got up the old 'bus so nice and proper, with all your colours and
+posters, and it would have been a spectacular Diorama for these 'ere
+poor people; but you know for why I didn't bring it out to-day, don't
+you, sonny?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know, dear old friend," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I 'adn't the 'cart to."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What were you speechifying about when I turned up?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill jerked a backward thumb. "I was telling this pack of
+cowardly Radicals that though I've been a Tory born and bred for sixty
+odd years, and though I've voted for you, Silas Finn, for all he was in
+prison while most of them were sucking wickedness and Radicalism out of
+Nature's founts, is just as good a man as what you are. They was
+saying, yer see, they was Radicals, but on account of Silas being blown
+upon, they was going to vote for you. So I tells 'em, I says, 'Mr.
+Savelli would scorn your dirty votes. If yer feel low and Radical, vote
+Radical. Mr. Savelli wants to play fair. I know both of 'em,' I says,
+'both of 'em intimately.' And they begins to laugh, as if I was talking
+through my hat. Anyway, they see now I know you, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed and clapped the loyal old man on the shoulder. Then he
+turned to the silent but interested group. "Gentlemen," said he, "I
+don't want to inquire on which side you are; but you can take it from
+me that whatever my old friend Mr. Simmons says about Mr. Finn and
+myself is the absolute truth. If you're on Mr. Finn's side in politics,
+in God's name vote for him. He's a noble, high-souled man and I'm proud
+of his private friendship."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drew Barney Bill apart. "You're the only Tory in the place who can
+try to persuade people not to vote for me. I wish you would keep on
+doing it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've been a-doing of it ever since the polls opened this morning,"
+said Barney Bill. Then he cocked his head on one side and his little
+eyes twinkled: "It's an upside-down way of fighting an election to
+persuade people not to vote for you, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Everything is topsy-turvy with me, these days," Paul replied: "so
+we've just got to stand on our heads and make the best of it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he drove off in the gathering dusk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Night found him in the great chamber of the Town Hall, with his agent
+and members of his committee. Present too were the Liberal Agent and
+the members of the Liberal Committee. At one end of the room sat the
+Mayor of the Borough in robe and chain of office, presiding over the
+proceedings. The Returning Officer and his staff sat behind long
+tables, on which were deposited the sealed ballot boxes brought in from
+the various polling stations; and these were emptied and the votes were
+counted, the voting papers for each candidate being done up in bundles
+of fifty. Knots of committee-men of both parties stood chatting in low
+voices. In an ordinary election both candidates would have chatted
+together, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred about golf, and would
+have made an engagement to meet again in milder conflict that day week.
+But here Paul was the only candidate to appear, and he sat in a
+cane-bottomed chair apart from the lounging politicians, feeling
+curiously an interloper in this vast, solemn and scantily-filled hall.
+He was very tired, too tired in body, mind and soul to join in the
+small-talk of Wilson and his bodyguard. Besides, they all wore the air
+of anticipated victory, and for that he held them in detestation. He
+had detested them the whole day long. The faces that yesterday had been
+long and anxious to-day had been wreathed in smirks. Wherever he had
+gone he had found promise of victory in his father's disgrace.
+Passionately the young man, fronting vital issues, longed for his own
+defeat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But for the ironical interposition of the high gods, it might have been
+so different. Any other candidate against him, he himself buoyed up
+with his own old glorious faith, his Princess, dazzling meteor
+illuminating the murky streets&mdash;dear God! what would not have been the
+joy of battle during the past week, what would not have been the
+intense thrill, the living of a thousand lives in these few hours of
+suspense now so dull with dreariness and pain! He sat apart, his legs
+crossed, a hand over his eyes. Wilson and his men, puzzled by his
+apparent apathy, left him alone. It is not much use addressing a mute
+and wooden idol, no matter how physically prepossessing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The counting went on slowly, relentlessly, and the bundles of fifty on
+each side grew in bulk, and Paul's side bulked larger than Silas Finn's.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last Wilson could stand it no longer. He left the group with which
+he was talking, and came to Paul. "We're far ahead already," he cried
+excitedly. "I told you last night would do the trick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Last night," said Paul, rising and stuffing his hands in his jacket
+pockets, "my opponent's supporters passed a vote of confidence in him
+in a scene of tumultuous enthusiasm."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quite so," replied Wilson. "A crowd is generous and easily swayed. A
+theatrical audience of scalliwags and thieves will howl applause at the
+triumph of virtue and the downfall of the villain; and each separate
+member will go out into the street and begin to practise villainy and
+say 'to hell with virtue.' If last night's meeting could have polled on
+the spot, they would have been as one man. To-day they're scattered and
+each individual revises his excited opinion. Your hard-bitten Radical
+would sooner have a self-made man than an aristocrat to represent him
+in Parliament; but, damn it all, he'd sooner have an aristocrat than an
+ex-convict."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But who the devil told you I'm an aristocrat?" cried Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilson laughed. "Who wants to be told such an obvious thing? Anyhow,
+you've only got to look and you'll see how the votes are piling up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul looked and saw that Wilson spoke truly. Then he reflected that
+Wilson and the others who had worked so strenuously for him had no part
+in his own personal depression. They deserved a manifestation of
+interest, also expressions of gratitude. So Paul pulled himself
+together and went amongst them and was responsive to their prophecies
+of victory.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then just as the last votes were being counted, an official attendant
+came in with a letter for Paul. It had been brought by messenger. The
+writing on the envelope was Jane's. He tore it open and read.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Finn is dying. He has had a stroke. The doctor says he can't live
+through the night. Come as soon as you can. JANE.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Outside the Town Hall the wide street was packed with people. Men
+surged up to the hollow square of police guarding the approach to the
+flight of steps and the great entrance door. Men swarmed about the
+electric standards above the heads of their fellows. Men rose in a long
+tier with their backs to the shop-fronts on the opposite side of the
+road. In spite of the raw night the windows were open and the arc
+lights revealed a ghostly array of faces looking down on the mass
+below, whose faces in their turn were lit up by the more yellow glare
+streaming from the doors and uncurtained windows of the Town Hall. In
+the lobby behind the glass doors could be seen a few figures going and
+coming, committee-men, journalists, officials. A fine rain began to
+fall, but the crowd did not heed it. The mackintosh capes of the
+policemen glistened. It was an orderly crowd, held together by tense
+excitement: all eyes fixed on the silent illuminated building whence
+the news would come. Across one window on the second floor was a large
+white patch, blank and sphinx-like. At right angles to one end of the
+block ran the High Street and the tall, blazing trams passed up and
+down and all eyes in the trams strained for a transient glimpse of the
+patch, hoping that it would flare out into message.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Presently a man was seen to dash from the interior of the hall into the
+lobby, casting words at the waiting figures, who clamoured eagerly and
+disappeared within, just as the man broke through the folding doors and
+appeared at the top of the steps beneath the portico. The great crowd
+surged and groaned, and the word was quickly passed from rank to rank.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Savelli. Thirteen hundred and seventy majority." And then there burst
+out wild cheers and the crowd broke into a myriad little waves like a
+choppy sea. Men danced and shouted and clapped each other on the back,
+and the tall facade of the street opposite the hall was a-flutter.
+Suddenly the white patch leaped into an illumination proclaiming the
+figures.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Savelli&mdash;6,135.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Finn&mdash;4,765.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the wild cheering rose, and then the great double windows in the
+centre of the first floor of the Town Hall were flung open and Paul,
+surrounded by the mayor and officials, appeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul gripped the iron hand-rail and looked down upon the tumultuous
+scene, his ears deafened by the roar, his eyes dazed by the conflicting
+lights and the million swift reflections from moving faces and arms and
+hats and handkerchiefs. The man is not born who can receive unmoved a
+frenzied public ovation. A lump rose in his throat. After all, this
+delirium of joy was sincere. He stood for the moment the idol of the
+populace. For him this vast concourse of human beings had waited in
+rain and mud and now became a deafening, seething welter of human
+passion. He gripped the rail tighter and closed his eyes. He heard as
+in a dream the voice of the mayor behind him: "Say a few words. They
+won't hear you&mdash;but that doesn't matter."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Paul drew himself up, facing the whirling scene. He sought in his
+pockets and suddenly shot up his hand, holding a letter, and awaited a
+lull in the uproar. He was master of himself now. He had indeed words
+to say, deliberately prepared, and he knew that if he could get a
+hearing he would say them as deliberately. At last came comparative
+calm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gentlemen," said he, with a motion of the letter, "my opponent is
+dying."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He paused. The words, so unexpected, so strangely different from the
+usual exordium, seemed to pass from line to line through the crowd.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am speaking in the presence of death," said Paul, and paused again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And a hush spread like a long wave across the street, and the thronged
+windows, last of all, grew still and silent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will ask you to hear me out, for I have something very grave to
+say." And his voice rang loud and clear. "Last night my opponent was
+forced to admit that nearly thirty years ago he suffered a term of
+penal servitude. The shock, after years of reparation, of spotless
+life, spent in the service of God and his fellow-creatures, has killed
+him. I desire publicly to proclaim that I, as his opponent, had no
+share in the dastardly blow that has struck him down. And I desire to
+proclaim the reason. He is my own father; I, Paul Savelli, am my
+opponent, Silas Finn's son."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A great gasp and murmur rose from the wonder-stricken throng, but only
+momentarily, for the spell of drama was on them. Paul continued.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will make public later on the reasons for our respective changes of
+name. For the present it is enough to state the fact of our
+relationship and of our mutual affection and respect. That I thank you
+for electing me goes without saying; and I will do everything in my
+power to advance the great cause you have enabled me to represent. I
+regret I cannot address you in another place to-night, as I had
+intended. I must ask you of your kindness to let me go quietly where my
+duty and my heart call me to my father's death-bed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He bowed and waved a dignified gesture of farewell, and turning into
+the hall met the assemblage of long, astounded faces. From outside came
+the dull rumbling of the dispersing crowd. The mayor, the first to
+break the silence, murmured a platitude.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul thanked him gravely. Then he went to Wilson. "Forgive me," said
+he, "for all that has been amiss with me to-day. It has been a strain
+of a very peculiar kind."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can well imagine it," said Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You see I'm not an aristocrat, after all," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Wilson looked the young man in the face and saw the steel beneath the
+dark eyes, and the Proud setting of the lips. With a sudden impulse he
+wrung his hand. "I don't care a damn!" said he. "You are."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul said, unsmiling: "I can face the music. That's all." He drew a
+note from his pocket. "Will you do me a final service? Go round to the
+Conservative Club at once, and tell the meeting what has happened, and
+give this to Colonel Winwood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"With pleasure," said Wilson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Paul shook hands with all his fellow-workers and thanked them in
+his courtly way, and, pleading for solitude, went through the door of
+the great chamber and, guided by an attendant, reached the exit in a
+side street where his car awaited him. A large concourse of people
+stood drawn up in line on each side of the street, marshalled by
+policemen. A familiar crooked figure limped from the shadow of the
+door, holding a hard felt hat, his white poll gleaming in the shaft of
+light. "God bless you, sonny," he said in a hoarse whisper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul took the old man by the arm and drew him across the pavement to
+the car. "Get in," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill hung back. "No, sonny; no."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not the first time we've driven together. Get in. I want you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Barney Bill allowed himself to be thrust into the luxurious car, and
+Paul followed. And perhaps for the first time in the history of great
+elections the successful candidate drove away from the place where the
+poll was declared in dead silence, attended only by the humblest of his
+constituents. But every man in the throng bared his head.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap21"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXI
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+"HE had the stroke in the night," said Barney Bill suddenly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul turned sharply on him. "Why wasn't I told?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Could you have cured him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course not."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Could you have done him any good?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I ought to have been told."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You had enough of worries before you for one day, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was my business," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Jane and I, being as it were responsible parties, took the liberty, so
+to speak, of thinking it our business too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul drummed impatiently on his knees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yer ain't angry, are you, sonny?" the old man asked plaintively.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No&mdash;not angry&mdash;with you and Jane&mdash;certainly not. I know you acted for
+the best, out of love for me. But you shouldn't have deceived me. I
+thought it was a mere nervous breakdown&mdash;the strain and shock. You
+never said a word about it, and Jane, when I talked to her this
+morning, never gave me to dream there was anything serious amiss. So I
+say you two have deceived me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I'm a telling of yer, sonny&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, yes, I know. I don't reproach you. But don't you see? I'm sick of
+lies. Dead sick. I've been up to my neck in a bog of falsehood ever
+since I was a child and I'm making a hell of a struggle to get on to
+solid ground. The Truth for me now. By God! nothing but the Truth!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill, sitting forward, hunched up, on the seat of the car, just
+as he used to sit on the footboard of his van, twisted his head round.
+"I'm not an eddicated person," said he, "although if I hadn't done a
+bit of reading in my time I'd have gone dotty all by my lones in the
+old 'bus, but I've come to one or two conclusions in my, so to speak,
+variegated career, and one is that if you go on in that 'ere mad way
+for Truth in Parliament, you'll be a bull in a china shop, and they'll
+get sticks and dawgs to hustle you out. Sir Robert Peel, old Gladstone,
+Dizzy, the whole lot of the old Yuns was up against it. They had to
+compromise. It's compromise"&mdash;the old man dwelt lovingly, as usual, on
+the literary word&mdash;"it's compromise you must have in Parliament."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll see Parliament damned first!" cried Paul, his nerves on edge.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You'll have to wait a long time, sonny," said Barney Bill, wagging a
+sage head. "Parliament takes a lot of damning."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anyhow," said Paul, not eager to continue the argument, but
+unconsciously caught in the drift of Barney Bill's philosophy, "my
+private life isn't politics, and there's not going to be another lie in
+my private life as long as I live."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old man broke a short silence with a dry chuckle. "How it takes one
+back!" he said reflectively. "Lor lumme! I can hear yer speaking
+now&mdash;just in the same tone&mdash;the night what yer run away with me. Yer
+hadn't a seat to yer breeches then, and now you've a seat in
+Parliament." He chuckled again at his joke. "But"&mdash;he gripped the young
+man's knee in his bony clasp&mdash;"you're just the same Paul, sonny, God
+bless yer&mdash;and you'll come out straight all right. Here we are."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The car drew up before Silas Finn's house. They entered. Jane,
+summoned, came down at once and met them in the dreadful dining-room,
+where a simple meal was spread.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I haven't heard&mdash;" she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm in."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My father&mdash;?" he asked curtly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked at him wide-eyed for a second or two as he stood, his
+fur-lined coat with astrachan collar thrown open, his hand holding a
+soft felt hat on his hip, his absurdly beautiful head thrown back, to
+casual glance the Fortunate Youth of a month or two ago. But to Jane's
+jealous eye he was not even the man she had seen that afternoon. He
+looked many years older. She confessed afterwards to surprise at not
+finding his hair grey at the temples, thus manifesting her ordered
+sense of the harmonious. She confessed, too, that she was
+frightened&mdash;Jane who, for any other reason than the mere saving of her
+own skin, would have stolidly faced Hyrcanean tigers&mdash;at the stern eyes
+beneath the contracted brows. He was a different Paul altogether. And
+here we have the divergence between the masculine and the feminine
+point of view. Jane saw a new avatar; Barney Bill the ragged urchin of
+the Bludston brick-fields. She shifted her glance to the old man. He,
+standing crookedly, cocked his head and nodded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He knows all about it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, yes," said Paul. "How is my father?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane threw out her hands in the Englishwoman's insignificant gesture.
+"He's unconscious&mdash;has been for hours&mdash;the nurse is up with him&mdash;the
+end may come any moment. I hid it from you till the last for your own
+sake. Would you care to go upstairs?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She moved to the door. Paul threw off his overcoat and, followed by
+Barney Bill, accompanied her. On the landing they were met by the nurse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is all over," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will go in for a moment," said Paul. "I should like to be alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a room hung like the rest of the house with gaudy pictures he stood
+for a short while looking at the marble face of the strange-souled,
+passionate being that had been his father. The lids had closed for ever
+over the burning, sorrowful eyes; the mobile lips were for ever mute.
+In his close sympathy with the man Paul knew what had struck him down.
+It was not the blow of the nameless enemy, but the stunning realization
+that he was not, after all, the irresistible nominee of the Almighty.
+His great faith had not suffered; for the rigid face was serene, as
+though he had accepted this final chastisement and purification before
+entrance into the Eternal Kingdom; but his high pride, the mainspring
+of his fanatical life, had been broken and the workings of the physical
+organism had been arrested. In those few moments of intense feeling, in
+the presence of death, it was given to Paul to tread across the
+threshold of the mystery of his birth. Here lay stiff and cold no base
+clay such as that of which Polly Kegworthy had been formed. It had been
+the tenement of a spirit beautiful and swift. No matter to what things
+he himself had been born&mdash;he had put that foolishness behind him&mdash;at
+all events his dream bad come partly true. His father had been one of
+the great ones, one of the conquerors, one of the high princes of men.
+Multitudes of kings had not been so parented. Outwardly a successful
+business man and a fanatical Dissenter&mdash;there were thousands like Silas
+Finn. But Paul knew his inner greatness, the terrific struggle of his
+soul, the warrings between fierce blood and iron will, the fervent
+purpose, the lofty aspirations and the unwavering conduct of his life
+of charity and sorrow. He stretched out his hand and with his finger
+tips lightly touched the dead man's forehead. "I'm proud to be your
+son," he murmured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then the nurse came in and Paul went downstairs. Barney Bill waylaid
+him in the hall, and led him into the dining-room. "Have a little food
+and drink, sonny. You look as if yer need it&mdash;especially drink. 'Ere."
+He seized a decanter of whisky&mdash;since Paul's first visit, Silas had
+always kept it in the house for his son's comforting&mdash;and would have
+filled the tumbler had not Paul restrained him. He squirted in the
+soda. "Drink it down and you'll feel better."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul swallowed a great gulp. "Yes," he agreed. "There are times when it
+does help a man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Liquor is like a dawg," said Bill. "Keep it in subjection, so to
+speak, and it's yer faithful friend."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Where's Jane?" Paul asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She's busy. Half the borough seem to be calling, or telephoning"&mdash;and
+even at that moment Paul could hear the maid tripping across the hall
+and opening the front door&mdash;"I've told her what occurred. She seemed
+half skeered. She's had a dreadful day, pore gal."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She has indeed," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He threw himself into a chair, dead beat, at the end of emotional
+strain, and remained talking with the old man of he scarce knew what.
+But these two&mdash;Jane and the old man&mdash;were linked to him by imperishable
+ties, and he could not leave them yet awhile in the house of death.
+Barney Bill stirred the fire, which blazed up, making the perky animals
+on the hearth cast faint and fantastic shadows.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's funny how he loved those darned little beasts, isn't it now? I
+remember of him telling me as how they transported him into magic
+something&mdash;or the other&mdash;medi&mdash;he had a word for it&mdash;I dunno&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mediaeval?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's it, sonny. Mediaeval forests. It means back of old times, don't
+it? King Arthur and his Round Table&mdash;I done a bit of reading, yer
+know." The old man took out pouch and pipe. "That's what drew us
+together, sonny, our taste for literature. Remember?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can I ever forget?" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, he was like that too. He had lots of po'try in him&mdash;not the
+stuff that rhymes, yer know, like 'The Psalm of Life' and so forth, but
+real po'try. I wish I could tell yer what I mean&mdash;" His face was
+puckered into a thousand wrinkles with the intellectual effort, and his
+little diamond eyes gleamed. "He could take a trumpery common thing
+like that there mug-faced, lop-eared hare and make it stand for the
+medi-what-you-call-it-forest. I've said to him, 'Come out with me on
+the old 'bus if you want green and loneliness and nature.' And he has
+said&mdash;I recollect one talk in particular&mdash;he said, 'I'd love to hear'
+something about a pipe&mdash;I'm getting old, sonny&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Pipes of Pan?" Paul suggested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The very words. Lor lumme! how did you guess it?" He paused, his
+fingers holding the lighted match, which went out before he could apply
+it to his tobacco. "Yus. 'The Pipes of Pan.' I don't know what it
+means. Anyway, he said he'd love to hear them in the real forest, but
+duty kept him to bricks and mortar and so he had to hear them in
+imagination. He said that all them footling little beasts were
+a-listening to 'em, and they told him all about it. I remember he told
+me more about the woods than I know myself&mdash;and I reckon I could teach
+his business to any gamekeeper or poacher in England. I don't say as
+how he knew the difference between a stoat and a weasel&mdash;he didn't. A
+cock-pheasant and a hen-partridge would have been the same to him. But
+the spirit of it&mdash;the meaning of it&mdash;he fair raised my hair off&mdash;he
+knew it a darned sight better nor I. And that's what I set out for to
+say, sonny. He had po'try in him. And all this"&mdash;he swept an
+all-inclusive hand&mdash;"all this meant to him something that you and I
+can't tumble to, sonny. It meant something different to what it looked
+like&mdash;ah!" and impatient at his impotence to express philosophic
+thought, he cast another lighted match angrily into the fire.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, high product of modern culture, sat in wonder at the common old
+fellow's clarity of vision. Tears rolled down his cheek. "I know, dear
+old Bill, what you're trying to say. Only one man has ever been able to
+say it. A mad poet called Blake.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="poem">
+ 'To see a world in a grain of sand,<BR>
+ And a heaven in a wild flower;<BR>
+ Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,<BR>
+ And eternity in an hour'."<BR>
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill started forward in his chair and clapped his hand on the
+young man's knee. "By gum! you've got it. That's what I was a-driving
+at. That's Silas. I call to mind when he was a boy&mdash;pretty dirty and
+ragged he was too&mdash;as he used to lean over the parapet of Blackfriars
+Bridge and watch the current sort of swirling round the piers, and he
+used to say as how he could hear what the river was saying. I used to
+think him loony. But it was po'try, sonny, all the time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The old man, thus started on reminiscence, continued, somewhat
+garrulous, and Paul, sunk in the armchair by the fire, listened
+indulgently, waiting for Jane. She, meanwhile, was occupied upstairs
+and in the library answering telephone messages and sending word out to
+callers by the maid. For, on the heels of Paul, as Barney Bill had
+said, many had come on errand of inquiry and condolence and all the
+news agencies and newspapers of London seemed to be on the telephone.
+Some of the latter tried for speech with the newly elected candidate
+whom they understood to be in the house, but Jane denied them firmly.
+She had had some training as a politician's private secretary. At last
+the clanging bell ceased ringing, and the maid ceased running to and
+from the street door, and the doctor had come and given his certificate
+and gone, and Jane joined the pair in the dining-room. She brought in
+from the hall a tray of visiting cards and set it on the table. "I
+suppose it was kind of them all to come," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She sat down listlessly in a straight-backed chair, and then, at a
+momentary end of her fine strength suddenly broke into tears and sobs
+and buried her head on her arms. Paul rose, bent over her and clasped
+her shoulders comfortingly. Presently she turned and blindly sought his
+embrace. He raised her to her feet, and they stood as they had done
+years ago, when, boy and girl, they had come to the parting of their
+ways. She cried silently for a while, and then she said miserably:
+"I've only you left, dear."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this hour of spent effort and lassitude it was a queer physical
+comfort, very pure and sweet, to feel the close contact of her young,
+strong body. She, too, out of the wreck, was all that he had left. His
+clasp tightened, and he murmured soothing words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, my dear, I am so tired," she said, giving herself up, for her part
+also, to the foolish solace of his arms. "I wish I could stay here
+always, Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He whispered: "Why not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Indeed, why not? Instinct spoke. His people were her people and her
+people his. And she had proved herself a brave, true woman. Before him
+no longer gleamed the will-o'-the-wisp leading him a fantastic dance
+through life. Before him lay only darkness. Jane and he, hand in hand,
+could walk through it fearless and undismayed. And her own great love,
+shown unashamed in the abandonment of this moment of intense emotion'
+made his pulses throb. He whispered again: "Why not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For answer she nestled closer. "If only you could love me a little,
+little bit?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I do," said Paul hoarsely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She shook her head and sobbed afresh, and they stood in close embrace
+at the end of the room by the door, regardless of the presence of the
+old man who sat, his back to them, smoking his pipe and looking, with
+his birdlike crook of the neck, meditatively into the fire. "No, no,"
+said Jane, at last. "It's silly of me. Forgive me. We mustn't talk of
+such things. Neither of us is fit to&mdash;and to-night it's not becoming. I
+have lost my father and you are only my brother, Paul dear."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill broke in suddenly; and at the sound of his voice they moved
+apart. "Think over it, sonny. Don't go and do anything rash."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you think it would be wise for Jane to marry me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ay&mdash;for Jane."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not for me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's only wise for a man to marry a woman what he loves," said Barney
+Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You said, when we was a-driving here, as you are going to live for the
+Truth and nothing but the Truth. I only mention it," added the old man
+drily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane recovered herself, with a gulp in the throat, and before Paul
+could answer said: "We too had a talk to-day, Paul. Remember," her
+voice quavered a little&mdash;"about carrots."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were right in essence," said Paul, looking at her gravely. "But I
+should have my incentive. I know my own mind. My affection for you is
+of the deepest. That is Truth&mdash;I needn't tell you. We could lead a
+happy and noble life together."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We belong to two different social classes, Paul," she said gently,
+again sitting in the straight-backed chair by the table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We don't," he replied. "I repudiated my claims to the other class this
+evening. I was admitted into what is called high society, partly
+because people took it for granted that I was a man of good birth. Now
+that I've publicly proclaimed that I'm not&mdash;and the newspapers will
+pretty soon find out all about me now&mdash;I'll drop out of that same high
+society. I shan't seek readmittance."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"People will seek you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't know the world," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It must be mean and horrid."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, no. It's very just and honourable. I shan't blame it a bit for not
+wanting me. Why should I? I don't belong to it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you do, dear Paul," she cried earnestly. "Even if you could get
+rid of your training and mode of thought, you can't get rid of your
+essential self. You've always been an aristocrat, and I've always been
+a small shop-keeper's daughter and shall continue to be one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And I say," Paul retorted, "that we've both sprung from the people,
+and are of the people. You've raised yourself above the small
+shop-keeping class just as much as I have. Don't let us have any sham
+humility about it. Whatever happens you'll always associate with folk
+of good-breeding and education. You couldn't go back to Barn Street. It
+would be idiotic for me to contemplate such a thing for my part. But
+between Barn Street and Mayfair there's a refined and intellectual land
+where you and I can meet on equal ground and make our social position.
+What do you say?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She did not look at him, but fingered idly the cards on the tray.
+"To-morrow you will think differently. To-night you're all on the
+strain."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And, axing yer pardon, sonny, for chipping in," said the old man,
+holding up his pipe in his gnarled fingers, "you haven't told her as
+how you loves her&mdash;not as how a young woman axed in marriage ought to
+be told."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've spoken the Truth, dear old friend," said Paul. "I've got down to
+bed-rock to-night. I have a deep and loyal affection for Jane. I shan't
+waver in it all my life long. I'll soon find my carrot, as she calls
+it&mdash;it will be England's greatness. She is the woman that will help me
+on my path. I've finished with illusions for ever and ever. Jane is the
+bravest and grandest of realities. To-night's work has taught me that.
+For me, Jane stands for the Truth. Jane&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned to her, but she had risen from her chair, staring at a card
+which she held in her hand. Her clear eyes met his for an instant as
+she threw the card on the table before him. "No, dear. For you, that's
+the Truth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He took it up and looked at it stupidly. It bore a crown and the
+inscription: "The Princess Sophie Zobraska," and a pencilled line, in
+her handwriting: "With anxious inquiries." He reeled, as if someone had
+dealt him a heavy blow on the head. He recovered to see Jane regarding
+him with her serene gravity. "Did you know about this?" he asked dully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. I've just seen the card. I found it at the bottom of the pile."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How did it come?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane rang the bell. "I don't know. If Annie's still up, we can find
+out. As it was at the bottom, it must have been one of the first."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How could the news have travelled so fast?" said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The maid came in. Questioned, she said that just after Paul had gone
+upstairs, and while Jane was at the telephone, a chauffeur had
+presented the card. He belonged to a great lighted limousine in which
+sat a lady in hat and dark veil. According to her orders, she had said
+that Mr. Finn was dead, and the chauffeur had gone away and she had
+shut the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The maid was dismissed. Paul stood on the hearthrug with bent brows,
+his hands in his jacket pockets. "I can't understand it," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She must ha' come straight from the Town Hall," said Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But she wasn't there," cried Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sonny," said the old fellow, "if you're always dead sure of where a
+woman is and where a woman isn't, you're a wiser man than Solomon with
+all his wives and other domestic afflictions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul threw the card into the fire. "It doesn't matter where she was,"
+said he. "It was a very polite&mdash;even a gracious act to send in her card
+on her way home. But it makes no difference to what I was talking
+about. What have I got to do with princesses? They're out of my sphere.
+So are Naiads and Dryads and Houris and Valkyrie and other fabulous
+ladies. The Princess Zobraska has nothing to do with the question."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He made a step towards Jane and, his hand on her shoulder, looked at
+her in his new, masterful way. "I come in the most solemn hour and in
+the crisis of my life to ask you to marry me. My father, whom I've only
+learned to love and revere to-night, is lying dead upstairs. To-night I
+have cut away all bridges behind me. I go into the unknown. We'll have
+to fight, but we'll fight together. You have courage, and I at least
+have that. There's a seat in Parliament which I'll have to fight for
+afterwards like a dog for a bone, and an official position which brings
+in enough bread and-butter&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And there's a fortune remarked Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you mean?" Paul swung round sharply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yer father's fortune, sonny. Who do yer suppose he was a-going to
+leave it to? 'Omes for lost 'orses or Free Zionists? I don't know as
+'ow I oughter talk of it, him not buried yet&mdash;but I seed his will when
+he made it a month or two ago, and barring certain legacies to Free
+Zionists and such-like lunatic folk, not to speak of Jane ere being
+left comfortably off, you're the residuary legatee, sonny&mdash;with
+something like a hundred thousand pounds. There's no talk of earning
+bread-and-butter, sonny."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It never entered my head," said Paul, rather dazed. "I suppose a
+father would leave his money to his son. I didn't realize it." He
+passed his hand over his eyes. "So many things have happened to-night.
+Anyhow," he said, smiling queerly, in his effort to still a whirling
+brain, "if there are no anxieties as to ways and means, so much the
+better for Jane and me. I am all the more justified in asking you to
+marry me. Will you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Before I answer you, Paul dear," she replied steadily, "you must
+answer me. I've known about the will, just like Bill, all the time&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She has that," confirmed the old man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So this isn't news to me, dear, and can't alter anything from me to
+you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why should it?" asked Paul. "But it makes my claim a little stronger."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, no," she replied, shaking her head. "It only&mdash;only confuses
+issues. Money has nothing to do with what I'm going to ask you. You
+said to-night you were going to live for the Truth&mdash;the real naked
+Truth. Now, Paul dear, I want the real, naked Truth. Do you love that
+woman?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At her question she seemed to have grown from the common sense,
+clear-eyed Jane into a great and commanding presence. She had drawn
+herself to her full height. Her chin was in the air, her generous bust
+thrown forward, her figure imperious, her eyes intense. And Paul too
+drew himself up and looked at her in his new manhood. And they stood
+thus for a while, beloved enemies.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you want the Truth&mdash;yes, I do love her," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then how dare you ask me to be your wife?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because the one is nonsensical and illusory and the other is real and
+practical."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She flashed out angrily: "Do you suppose I can live my woman's life on
+the real and practical? What kind of woman do you take me for? An
+Amelia, a Patient Griselda, a tabby cat?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul said: "You know very well; I take you for one of the
+greatest-hearted of women. I've already said it to-night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you think I'm a greater-hearted woman than she? Wait, I've not
+finished," she cried in a loud voice. "Your Princess&mdash;you cut her heart
+into bits the other day, when you proclaimed yourself a low-born
+impostor. She thought you a high-born gentleman, and you told her of
+the gutter up north and the fried-fish shop and the Sicilian
+organ-grinding woman. She, royalty&mdash;you of the scum! She left you. This
+morning she learned worse. She learned that you were the son of a
+convict. What does she do? She comes somehow&mdash;I don't know how&mdash;to
+Hickney Heath and hears you publicly give yourself away&mdash;and she drives
+straight here with a message for you. It's for you, the message. Who
+else?" She stood before Paul, a flashing Jane unknown. "Would a woman
+who didn't love you come to this house to-night? She wouldn't, Paul.
+You know it! Dear old Bill here, who hasn't moved in royal circles,
+knows it. No, my dear man," she said regally, "I've given you all my
+love&mdash;everything that is in me&mdash;since I was a child of thirteen. You
+will always have it. It's my great joy that you'll always have it. But,
+by God, Paul, I'm not going to exchange it for anything less. Can you
+give me the same?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You know I can't," said Paul. "But I can give you that which would
+make our marriage a happy one. I believe the experience of the world
+has shown it to be the securest basis."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was on the point of breaking out, but turned away, with clenched
+hands, and, controlling herself, faced him again. "You're an honourable
+and loyal man, Paul, and you're saying this to save your face. I know
+that you would marry me. I know that you would be faithful to me in
+thought and word and act. I know that you would be good and kind and
+never give me a moment's cause for complaint. But your heart would be
+with the other woman. Whether she's out of your sphere or not&mdash;what
+does it matter to me? You love her and she loves you. I know it. I
+should always know it. You'd be living in hell and so should I. I
+should prefer to remain in purgatory, which, after all, is quite
+bearable&mdash;I'm used to it&mdash;and I love you enough to wish to see you in
+paradise."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She turned away with a wide gesture and an upward inflexion of her
+voice. Barney Bill refilled his pipe and fixed Paul with his twinkling
+diamond eyes. "It's a pity, sonny&mdash;a dodgasted pity!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're up against the Truth, old man, the unashamed and naked truth,"
+said Paul, with a sigh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jane caught Paul's fur-lined coat and hat from the chair on which he
+had thrown it and came to him. "It's time for you to go and rest, dear.
+We're all of us exhausted."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She helped him on with the heavy coat, and for farewell put both her
+hands on his shoulders. "You must forget a lot of things I've said
+to-night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't help remembering them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, dear. Forget them." She drew his face down and kissed him on the
+lips. Then she led him out to the front door and accompanied him down
+the steps to the kerb where the car with its weary chauffeur was
+waiting. The night had cleared and the stars shone bright in the sky.
+She pointed to one, haphazard. "Your star, Paul. Believe in it still."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He drove off. She entered the house, and, flinging herself on the floor
+by Barney Bill, buried her head on the old man's knees and sobbed her
+brave heart out.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap22"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+THE next morning amazement fluttered over a million breakfast tables
+and throbbed in a million railway carriages. For all the fierceness of
+political passions, parliamentary elections are but sombre occurrences
+to the general public. Rarely are they attended by the picturesque, the
+dramatic, the tragic. But already the dramatic had touched the election
+of Hickney Heath, stimulating interest in the result. Thousands,
+usually apathetic as to political matters, opened their newspapers to
+see how the ex-convict candidate had fared. They read, with a gasp,
+that he was dead; that his successful opponent had proclaimed himself
+to be his son. They had the dramatic value of cumulative effect. If
+Paul had ever sought notoriety he had it now. His name rang through the
+length and breadth of the land. The early editions of the London
+afternoon papers swelled the chorus of amazed comment and conjecture.
+Some had even routed out a fact or two, Heaven knows whence, concerning
+father and son. According to party they meted out praise or blame.
+Some, unversed in the law, declared the election invalid. The point was
+discussed in a hundred clubs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was consternation in the social world. The Duchesses' boudoirs
+with which Paul had been taunted hummed with indignation. They had
+entertained an adventurer unawares. They had entrusted the sacred ark
+of their political hopes to a charlatan. Their daughters had danced
+with the offspring of gaol and gutter. He must be cast out from the
+midst of them. So did those that were foolish furiously rage together
+and imagine many a vain thing. The Winwoods came in for pity. They had
+been villainously imposed upon. And the Young England League to which
+they had all subscribed so handsomely&mdash;where were its funds? Was it
+safe to leave them at the disposal of so unprincipled a fellow? Then
+germs of stories crept in from the studios and the stage and grew
+perversely in the overheated atmosphere. Paul's reputation began to
+assume a pretty colour. On the other hand, there were those who, while
+deploring the deception, were impressed by the tragedy and by Paul's
+attitude. He had his defenders. Among the latter first sprang forward
+Lord Francis Ayres, the Chief Whip, officially bound to protect his own
+pet candidate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He called early at the house in Portland Place, a distressed and
+anxious man. The door was besieged by reporters from newspapers, vainly
+trying to gain, entrance. His arrival created a sensation. At any rate
+there was a headline "Opposition Whip calls on Savelli." One or two
+attempted to interview him on the doorstep. He excused himself
+courteously. As-yet he knew as much or as little as they. The door
+opened. The butler snatched him in hurriedly. He asked to see the
+Winwoods. He found them in the library.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Here's an awful mess," said he, throwing up his hands. "I thought I'd
+have a word or two with you before I tackle Savelli. Have you seen him
+this morning?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, yes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, what do you think about it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think," said Ursula, "that the best thing I can do is to take him
+away with me for a rest as soon as possible. He's at the end of his
+tether."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You seem to take it pretty calmly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How do you expect us to take it, my dear Frank?" she asked. "We always
+expected Paul to do the right thing when the time came, and we consider
+that he has done it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Chief Whip smoothed a perplexed brow. "I don't quite follow. Were
+you, vulgarly speaking, in the know all the time?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sit down, and I'll tell you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So he sat down and Miss Winwood quietly told him all she knew about
+Paul and what had happened during the past few weeks, while the Colonel
+sat by his desk and tugged his long moustache and here and there
+supplemented her narrative.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's all very interesting," Ayres remarked when she had finished,
+"and you two have acted like bricks. I also see that he must have had a
+devil of a time of it. But I've got to look at things from an official
+point of view."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's no question of invalidity, is there?" asked Colonel Winwood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No. He was known as Paul Savelli, nominated as Paul Savelli, and
+elected as Paul Savelli by the electors of Hickney Heath. So he'll sit
+as Paul Savelli. That's all right. But how is the House going to
+receive him when he is introduced? How will it take him afterwards?
+What use will he be to the party? We only ran him because he seemed to
+be the most brilliant of the young outsiders. We hoped great things of
+him. Hasn't he smashed up himself socially? Hasn't he smashed up his
+career at the very beginning? All that is what I want to know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So do I," groaned Colonel Winwood. "I didn't have a wink of sleep last
+night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I didn't either," said Ursula, "but I don't think it will matter a row
+of pins to Paul in his career."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It will always be up against him," said Ayres.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because he has acted like a man?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's the touch of Ruy Blas that I'm afraid of."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must remember that he wasn't aware of his relation to the dead man
+until the eve of the election."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But he was aware that he wasn't a descendant of a historical Italian
+family, which everyone thought him to be. I don't speak for myself,"
+said Ayres. "I'm fond of the chap. One can't help it. He has the charm
+of the great gentleman, confound him, and it's all natural. The cloven
+hoof has never appeared, because I personally believe there's no cloven
+hoof. The beggar was born well bred, and, as to performance&mdash;well&mdash;he
+has been a young meteor across the political sky. Until this election.
+Then he was a disappointment. I frankly confess it. I didn't know what
+he was playing at. Now I do. Poor chap. I personally am sympathetic.
+But what about the cold-blooded other people, who don't know what
+you've told me? To them he's the son of an ex-convict&mdash;a vendor of
+fried fish&mdash;I put it brutally from their point of view&mdash;who has been
+masquerading as a young St. George on horseback. Will he ever be
+forgiven? Officially, have I any use for him? You see, I'm responsible
+to the party."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Any party," said Ursula, "would be a congregation of imbeciles who
+didn't do their best to develop the genius of Paul Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm fond of Paul," said Colonel Winwood, in his tired way, "but I
+don't know that I would go as far as that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's only because you're a limited male, my dear James. I suppose
+Caesar was the only man who really crossed the Rubicon. And the fuss he
+made about it! Women jump across with the utmost certainty. My dear
+Frank, we're behind Paul, whatever happens. He has been fighting for
+his own hand ever since he was a child, it is true. But he has fought
+gallantly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear Miss Winwood," said Frank Ayres, "if there's a man to be
+envied, it's the one who has you for his champion!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anyone, my dear Frank, is to be envied," she retorted, "who is
+championed by common-sense."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All these fireworks illuminate nothing," said Colonel Winwood. "I
+think we had better ask Paul to come down and see Frank. Would you like
+to see him alone?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had rather you stayed," said Frank Ayres.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A message was sent to Paul, and presently he appeared, very pale and
+haggard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Frank Ayres met him with outstretched hand, spoke a courteous word of
+sympathy, apologized for coming in the hour of tragic bereavement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul thanked him with equal courtesy. "I was about to write to you,
+Lord Francis," he continued, "a sort of statement in explanation of
+what happened last night&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Our friends have told me all, I think, that you may have to say."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I shall still write it," said Paul, "so that you can have it in black
+and white. At present, I've given the press nothing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quite right," said Frank Ayres. "For God's sake, let us work together
+as far as the press is concerned. That's one of the reasons why I've
+forced myself upon you. It's horrible, my dear fellow, to intrude at
+such a time. I hate it, as you can well imagine. But it's my duty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course it is," said Paul. There was a span of awkward silence.
+"Well," said he, with a wan smile, "we're facing, not a political, but
+a very unimportant party situation. Don't suppose I haven't a sense of
+proportion. I have. What for me is the end of the world is the
+unruffled continuance of the cosmic scheme for the rest of mankind. But
+there are relative things to consider. You have to consider the party.
+I'm sort of fly-blown. Am I any use? Let us talk straight. Am I or am I
+not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear chap," said Frank Ayres, with perplexed knitting of the brows,
+"I don't quite know what to say. You yourself have invited me to talk
+straight. Well! Forgive me if I do. There may be a suggestion in
+political quarters that you have won this election under false
+pretences."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you want me to resign my seat?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The two men looked deep into each other's eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A Unionist in is a Liberal out," said Frank Ayres, "and counts two on
+division. That's one way of looking at it. We want all we can get from
+the enemy. On the other hand, you'd come in for a lot of criticism and
+hostility. You'd have to start not only from the beginning, but with a
+handicap. Are you strong enough to face it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not going to run away from anything," said Paul. "But I'll tell
+you what I'm prepared to do. I'll resign and fight the constituency
+again, under my real name of Kegworthy, provided, of course, the local
+people are willing to adopt me&mdash;on the understanding, however, that the
+party support me, or, at least, don't put forward another candidate.
+I'm not going to turn berserk."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's a sporting offer, at any rate. But, pardon me&mdash;we're talking
+business&mdash;where is the money for another election to come from?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My poor father's death makes me a wealthy man," replied Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Winwood started forward in her chair. "My dear, you never told us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There were so many other things to talk about this morning," he said
+gently; "but of course I would have told you later. I only mention it
+now"&mdash;he turned to the Chief Whip&mdash;"in answer to your direct and very
+pertinent question."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Now between a political free-lance adopting a parliamentary career in
+order to fight for his own hand, as all Paul's supporters were frankly
+aware that he was doing, and a wealthy, independent and brilliant young
+politician lies a wide gulf. The last man on earth, in his private
+capacity, to find his estimate of his friends influenced by their
+personal possessions was the fine aristocrat Lord Francis Ayres. But he
+was a man of the world, the very responsible head of the executive of a
+great political party. As that executive head he was compelled to
+regard Paul from a different angle. The millions of South Africa or the
+Middle West might vainly knock at his own front door till the crack of
+doom, while Paul the penniless sauntered in an honoured guest. But in
+his official room in the House of Commons more stern and worldly
+considerations had to prevail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course I can't give you an answer now," said he. "I'll have to
+discuss the whole matter with the powers that be. But a seat's a seat,
+and though I appreciate your Quixotic offer, I don't see why we should
+risk it. It's up to you to make good. It's more in your own interest
+that I'm speaking now. Can you go through with it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul, with his unconquerable instinct for the dramatic, hauled out the
+little cornelian heart at the end of his watch-chain. "My dear fellow,"
+said he. "Do you see that? It was given to me for failing to win a race
+at a Sunday-school treat, when I was a very little boy. I didn't
+possess coat or stockings, and my toes came out through the ends of my
+boots, and in order to keep the thing safe I knotted it up in the tail
+of my shirt, which waggled out of the seat of my breeches. It was given
+to me by a beautiful lady, who, I remember, smelled like all the
+perfumes of Araby. She awakened my aesthetic sense by the divine and
+intoxicating odour that emanated from her. Since then I have never met
+woman so&mdash;so like a scented garden of all the innocences. To me she was
+a goddess. I overheard her prophesy things about me. My life began from
+that moment. I kept the cornelian heart all my life, as a talisman. It
+has brought me through all kinds of things. Once I was going to throw
+it away and Miss Winwood would not let me. I kept it, somewhat against
+my will, for I thought it was a lying talisman. It had told me, in the
+sweet-scented lady's words, that I was the son of a prince. Give me
+half an hour to-morrow or the day after," he said, seeing a puzzled
+look in Frank Ayres's face, "and I'll tell you a true psychological
+fairy tale&mdash;the apologia pro vita mea. I say, anyhow, that lately,
+until last night, I thought this little cornelian heart was a lying
+talisman. Then I knew it didn't lie. I was the son of a prince, a
+prince of men, although he had been in gaol and spent his days
+afterwards in running emotional Christianity and fried-fish shops. His
+name was Silas. Mine is Paul. Something significant about it, isn't
+there? Anyhow"&mdash;he balanced the heart in the palm of his hand&mdash;"this
+hasn't lied. It has carried me through all my life. When I thought it
+failed, I found it at the purest truth of its prophecy. It's not going
+to fail me now. If it's right for me to take my seat I'll take
+it&mdash;whether I make good politically, or not, is on the knees of the
+gods. But you may take it from me that there's nothing in this wide
+world that I won't face or go through with, if I've set my mind to it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So the child who had kicked Billy Goodge and taken the spolia opima of
+paper cocked hat and wooden sword spoke through the man. As then, in a
+queer way, he found himself commanding a situation; and as then,
+commanding it rightfully, through sheer personal force. Again, at a
+sign, he would have broken the sword across his knee. But the sign did
+not come.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Speaking quite unofficially," said Frank Ayres, "I think, if you feel
+like that, you would be a fool to give up your seat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Very well," said Paul, "I thank you. And now, perhaps, it would be
+wise to draw up that statement for the press, if you can spare the
+time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Paul made a draft and Frank Ayres revised it, and it was sent
+upstairs to be typed. When the typescript came down, Paul signed and
+dispatched it and gave the Chief Whip a duplicate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," said the latter, shaking hands, "the best of good luck!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whereupon he went home feeling that though there would be the deuce to
+pay, Paul Savelli would find himself perfectly solvent; and meeting the
+somewhat dubious Leader of the Opposition later in the day he said:
+"Anyhow, this 'far too gentlemanly party' has got someone picturesque,
+at last, to touch the popular imagination."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A new young Disraeli?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why not?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Leader made a faint gesture of philosophic doubt. "The mould is
+broken," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We'll see," said Frank Ayres, confidently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile, Paul returned to his room and wrote a letter, three words of
+which he had put on paper&mdash;"My dear Princess"&mdash;when the summons to meet
+the Chief Whip had come. The unblotted ink had dried hard. He took
+another sheet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear Princess," he began.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He held his head in his hand. What could he say? Ordinary courtesy
+demanded an acknowledgment of the Princess's message of inquiry. But to
+write to her whom he had held close in his arms, whose lips had clung
+maddeningly to his, in terms of polite convention seemed impossible.
+What had she meant by her message? If she had gone scornfully out of
+his life, she had gone, and there was an end on't. Her coming back
+could bear only one interpretation&mdash;that of Jane's passionate
+statement. In spite of all, she loved him. But now, stripped and naked
+and at war with the world, for all his desire, he would have none of
+her love. Not he.... At last he wrote:
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+PRINCESS,&mdash;A thousand grateful thanks for last night's gracious
+act&mdash;the act of the very great lady that I have the privilege of
+knowing you to be.
+<BR><BR>
+PAUL SAVELLI.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rang for a servant and ordered the note to be sent by hand, and then
+went out to Hickney Heath to see to the burying of his dead. On his
+return he found a familiar envelope with the crown on the flap awaiting
+him. It contained but few words:
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="letter">
+PAUL, come and see me. I will stay at home all day.
+<BR><BR>
+SOPHIE.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His pulses throbbed. Her readiness to await his pleasure proved a
+humility of spirit rare in Princess Sophie Zobraska. Her hands were
+held out towards him. But he hardened his heart. The fairy-tale was
+over. Nothing but realities lay before him. The interview was perilous;
+but he was not one to shirk danger. He went out, took a cab and drove
+to Berkeley Square.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rose shyly as he entered and advanced to meet him. He kissed her
+hand, but when he sought to release it he found his held in her warm
+clasp. "Mon Dieu! How ill you are looking!" she said, and her lips
+quivered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm only tired."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You look so old. Ah!" She moved away from him with a sigh. "Sit down.
+I suppose you can guess why I've asked you to come," she continued
+after a pause. "But it is a little hard to say. I want you to forgive
+me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is nothing to forgive," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't be ungenerous; you know there is. I left you to bear everything
+alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were more than justified. You found me an impostor. You were
+wounded in everything you held sacred. I wounded you deliberately. You
+could do nothing else but go away. Heaven forbid that I should have
+thought of blaming you. I didn't. I understood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But it was I who did not understand," she said, looking at the rings
+on her fingers. "Yes. You are right. I was wounded&mdash;like an animal, I
+hid myself in the country, and I hoped you would write, which was
+foolish, for I knew you wouldn't. Then I felt that if I had loved you
+as I ought, I should never have gone away."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought it best to kill your love outright," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She lay back on her cushions, very fair, very alluring, very sad. From
+where he sat he saw her face in its delicate profile, and he had a
+mighty temptation to throw himself on his knees by her side.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought, too, you had killed it," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Still think so," said Paul, in a low voice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She raised herself, bent forward, and he met the blue depths of her
+gaze. "And you? Your love?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I never did anything to kill it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I did."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No, you couldn't. I shall love you to the hour of my death." He saw
+the light leap into her eyes. "I only say it," he added somewhat
+coldly, "because I will lie to you no longer. But it's a matter that
+concerns me alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How you alone? Am not I to be considered?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He rose and stood on the hearthrug, facing her. "I consider you all the
+time," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Listen, mon cher ami," she said, looking up at him. "Let us understand
+one another. Is there anything about you, your birth or your life that
+I still don't know&mdash;I mean, anything essential?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothing that matters," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then let us speak once and for all, soul to soul. You and I are of
+those who can do it. Eh bien. I am a woman of old family, princely rank
+and fortune&mdash;you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"By my father's death," said Paul, for the second time that day, "I am
+a rich man. We can leave out the question of fortune&mdash;except that the
+money I inherit was made out of a fried-fish shop business. That
+business was conducted by my father on lines of peculiar idealism. It
+will be my duty to carry on his work&mdash;at least"&mdash;he inwardly and
+conscientiously repudiated the idea of buying fish at Billingsgate at
+five o'clock in the morning&mdash;"as far as the maintenance of his
+principles is concerned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Soit," said the Princess, "we leave out the question of fortune. You
+are then a man of humble birth, and the rank you have gained for
+yourself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am a man of no name and of tarnished reputation. Good God!" he
+blazed out suddenly, losing control. "What is the good of torturing
+ourselves like this? If I wouldn't marry you&mdash;before&mdash;until I had done
+something in the front of the world to make you proud of me, what do
+you think I'll do now, lying in the gutter for every one to kick me?
+Would it be to the happiness of either of us for me to sneak through
+society behind your rank? It would be the death of me and you would
+come to hate me as a mean hound."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You? A mean hound?" Her voice broke and the tears welled up in her
+eyes. "You have done nothing for me to be proud of? You? You who did
+what you did last night? Yes, I was there. I saw and heard. Listen!"
+She rose to her feet and stood opposite to him, her eyes all stars, her
+figure trembling and her hands moving in her Frenchwoman's passionate
+gestures. "When I saw in the newspapers about your father, my heart was
+wrung for you. I knew what it meant. I knew how you must suffer. I came
+up straight to town. I wanted to be near you. I did not know how. I did
+not want you to see me. I called in my steward. 'How can I see the
+election?' We talked a little. He went and hired a room opposite the
+Town Hall. I waited there in the darkness. I thought it would last
+forever. And then came the result and the crowd cheered and I thought I
+should choke. I sobbed, I sobbed, I sobbed&mdash;and then you came. And I
+heard, and then I held out my arms to you alone in the dark room&mdash;like
+this&mdash;and cried: 'Paul, Paul!"' Woman conquered. Madness surged through
+him and he flung his arms about her and they kissed long and
+passionately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Whether you do me the honour of marrying me or not," she said a while
+later' flushed and triumphant, "our lives are joined together."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Paul, still shaken by the intoxication of her lips and hair and
+clinging pressure of her body, looked at her intensely with the eyes of
+a man's longing. But he said: "Nothing can alter what I said a few
+minutes ago&mdash;not all the passion and love in the world. You and I are
+not of the stuff, thank God, to cut ourselves adrift and bury ourselves
+in some romantic island and give up our lives to a dream. We're young.
+We're strong. We both know that life is a different sort of thing
+altogether from that. We're not of the sort that shirks its
+responsibilities. We've got to live in the world, you and I, and do the
+world's work."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Parfaitement, mon bien aime." She smiled at him serenely. "I would not
+bury myself with you in an Ionian island for more than two months in a
+year for anything on earth. On my part, it would be the unforgivable
+sin. No woman has the right, however much she loves him, to ruin a man,
+any more than a man has the right to ruin a woman. But if you won't
+marry me, I'm perfectly willing to spend two months a year in an Ionian
+island with you," and she looked at him, very proud and fearless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul took her by the shoulders and shook her, more roughly than he
+realized. "Sophie, don't tempt me to a madness that we should both
+regret."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed, wincing yet thrilled, under the rude handling, and freed
+herself. "But what more can a woman offer the man who loves her&mdash;that
+is to say if he does love her?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I not love you?" He threw up his hands&mdash;"Dear God!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She waved him away and retreated a step or two, still laughing, as he
+advanced. "Then why won't you marry me? You're afraid."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," he cried. "It's the only thing on this earth that I'm afraid of."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The sneers. First you'd hate them. Then you'd hate and despise me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She grew serious. "Calme-toi, my dearest. Just consider things
+practically. Who is going to sneer at a great man?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I the first," replied Paul bitterly, his self-judgment warped by the
+new knowledge of the vanities and unsubstantialities on which his life
+had been founded. "I a great man, indeed!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A very great man. A brilliant man I knew long ago. A brave man I have
+known, in spite of my pride, these last two or three awful weeks. But
+last night I knew you were a great man&mdash;a very great man. Ah, mon Paul.
+La canaille, whether it lives in Whitechapel or Park Lane, what does it
+matter to us?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The riff-raff, unfortunately," said Paul, "forms the general judgment
+of society."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess drew herself up in all her aristocratic dignity. "My Paul
+well-beloved," said she, "you have still one or two things to learn.
+People of greatness and rank march with their peers, and they can spit
+upon the canaille. There is canaille in your House of Lords, upon
+which, the day after to-morrow, you can spit, and it will take off its
+coronet and thank you&mdash;and now," she said, resuming her seat on the
+sofa, among the cushions, "let us stop arguing. If there is any more
+arguing to be done, let us put it off to another occasion. Let us
+dismiss the questions of marriage and Ionian islands altogether, and
+let us talk pleasantly like dear friends who are reconciled."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And with the wit of the woman who loves and the subtlety of the woman
+of the world she took Paul in her delicate hands and held him before
+her smiling eyes and made him tell her of all the things she wanted to
+know. And so Paul told her of all his life, of Bludston, of Barney
+Bill, of the model days, of the theatre, of Jane, of his father; and he
+showed her the cornelian heart and expounded its significance; and he
+talked of his dearest lady, Miss Winwood, and his work on the Young
+England League, and his failure to grip in this disastrous election,
+and he went back to the brickfield and his flight from the Life School,
+and his obsessing dream of romantic parentage and the pawning of his
+watch at Drane's Court; and in the full tide of it all a perturbed
+butler appeared at the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can I speak a word to Your Highness?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rose. The butler spoke the word. She burst out laughing. "My dear,"
+she cried, "it's past nine o'clock. The household is in a state of
+agitation about dinner. We'll have it at once, Wilkins."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The butler bowed and retired.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess laughed again. "Of course you'll stay. I left Stephanie at
+Morebury."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Paul stayed to dinner, and though, observing the flimsy compact,
+they dismissed the questions of Ionian islands and marriage, they
+talked till midnight of matters exceedingly pleasant.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="chap23"></A>
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+CHAPTER XXIII
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+SO the lovers were reconciled, although the question of marriage was
+farther off than ever, and the Princess and Miss Winwood wept on each
+other's shoulders after the way of good women, and Paul declared that
+he needed no rest, and was eager to grapple with the world. He had much
+to do. First, he buried his dead, the Princess sending a great wreath
+and her carriage, after having had a queer interview with Jane, of
+which neither woman would afterwards speak a word; but it was evident
+that they had parted on terms of mutual respect and admiration. Then
+Paul went through the task of settling his father's affairs. Jane
+having expressed a desire to take over the management of a certain
+department of the business, he gladly entrusted it to her capable
+hands. He gave her the house at Hickney Heath, and Barney Bill took up
+his residence there as a kind of old watch-dog. Meanwhile, introduced
+by Frank Ayres and Colonel Winwood, he faced the ordeal of a chill
+reception by the House of Commons and took his seat. After that the
+nine-days' wonder of the scandal came to an end; the newspapers ceased
+talking of it and the general public forgot all about him. He only had
+to reckon with his fellow-members and with social forces. His own house
+too he had to put in order. He resigned his salary and position as
+Organizing Secretary of the Young England League, but as Honorary
+Secretary he retained control. To assure his position he applied for
+Royal Letters Patent and legalized his name of Savelli, Finally, he
+plunged into the affairs of Fish Palaces Limited, and learned the many
+mysteries connected with that outwardly unromantic undertaking.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These are facts in Paul's career which his chronicler is bound to
+mention. But on Paul's development they exercised but little influence.
+He walked now, with open eyes, in a world of real things. The path was
+difficult, but he was strong. Darkness lay ahead, but he neither feared
+it nor dreamed dreams of brightness beyond. The Vision Splendid had
+crystallized into an unconquerable purpose of which he felt the thrill.
+Without Sophie Zobraska's love he would have walked on doggedly,
+obstinately, with set teeth. He had proved himself fearless, scornful
+of the world's verdict. But he would have walked in wintry gloom with a
+young heart frozen dead. Now his path was lit by warm sunshine and the
+burgeon of spring was in his heart. He could laugh again in his old
+joyous way; yet the laughter was no longer that of the boy, but of the
+man who knew the place that laughter should hold in a man's life.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the day when he, as chairman, had first presided over a meeting of
+the Board of Directors of Fish Palaces Limited, he went to the Princess
+and said: "If I bring with me 'an ancient and fish-like smell, a kind
+of, not of the newest, Poor-John,' send me about my business."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She bade him not talk foolishly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm talking sense," said he. "I'm going through with it. I'm in trade.
+I know to the fraction of a penny how much fat ought to be used to a
+pound of hake, and I'm concentrating all my intellect on that fraction
+of a penny of fat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tu as raison," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"N'est-ce-pas? It's funny, isn't it? I've often told you I once thought
+myself the man born to be king. My dreams have come true. I am a king.
+The fried-fish king."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sophie looked at him from beneath her long lashes. "And I am a
+princess. We meet at last on equal terms."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul sprang forward impulsively and seized her hands. "Oh, you dear,
+wonderful woman! Doesn't it matter to you that I'm running fried-fish
+shops?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know why you're doing it," she said. "I wouldn't have you do
+otherwise. You are you, Paul. I should love to see you at it. Do you
+wait at table and hand little dishes to coster-mongers, ancien regime,
+en emigre?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed deliciously. Suddenly she paused, regarded him wide-eyed,
+with a smile on her lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tiens! I have an idea. But a wonderful ideal Why should I not be the
+fried-fish queen? Issue new shares. I buy them all up. We establish
+fish palaces all over the world? But why not? I am in trade already.
+Only yesterday my homme d'affaires sent me for signature a dirty piece
+of blue paper all covered with execrable writing and imitation red
+seals all the way down, and when I signed it I saw I was interested in
+Messrs. Jarrods Limited, and was engaged in selling hams and petticoats
+and notepaper and furniture and butter and&mdash;remark this&mdash;and fish. But
+raw fish. Now what the difference is between selling raw fish and fried
+fish, I do not know. Moi, je suis deja marchande de poissons, voila!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed and Paul laughed too. They postponed, however, to an
+indefinite date, consideration of the business proposal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Paul had foreseen, Society manifested no eagerness to receive him.
+Invitations no longer fell upon him in embarrassing showers. Nor did he
+make any attempt to pass through the once familiar doors. For one
+thing, he was proud: for another he was too busy. When the Christmas
+recess came he took a holiday, went off by himself to Algiers. He
+returned bronzed and strong, to the joy of his Sophie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear," said Miss Winwood one day to the curiously patient lady,
+"what is to come of it all? You can't go on like this for ever and
+ever."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We don't intend to," smiled the Princess. "Paul is born to great
+things. He cannot help it. It is his destiny, I believe in Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So do I," replied Ursula. "But it's obvious that it will take him a
+good many years to achieve them. You surely aren't going to wait until
+he's a Cabinet Minister."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Princess lay back among her cushions and laughed. "Mais non. It
+will all come in woman's good time. Laissez-moi faire. He will soon
+begin to believe in himself again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last Paul's opportunity arrived. The Whips had given him his chance
+to speak. His luck attended him, in so far that when his turn came he
+found a full House. It was on a matter of no vital importance; but he
+had prepared his speech carefully. He stood up for the first time in
+that strangely nerve-shaking assembly in which he had been received so
+coldly and in which he was still friendless, and saw the beginning of
+the familiar exodus into the lobbies. A sudden wave of anger swept
+through him and he tore the notes of his speech across and across, and
+again he metaphorically kicked Billy Goodge. He plunged into his
+speech, forgetful of what he had written, with a passion queerly
+hyperbolic in view of the subject. At the arresting tones of his voice
+many of the withdrawing members stopped at the bar and listened, then
+as he proceeded they gradually slipped back into their places.
+Curiosity gave place to interest. Paul had found his gift again, and
+his anger soon lost itself completely in the joy of the artist. The
+House is always generous to performance. There was something novel in
+the spectacle of this young man, who had come there under a cloud,
+standing like a fearless young Hermes before them, in the ring of his
+beautiful voice, in the instinctive picturesqueness of phrase, in the
+winning charm of his personality. It was but a little point in a
+Government Bill that he had to deal with, and he dealt with it shortly.
+But he dealt with it in an unexpected, dramatic way, and he sat down
+amid comforting applause and circumambient smiles and nods. The old
+government hand who rose to reply complimented him gracefully and
+proceeded of course to tear his argument to tatters. Then an
+ill-conditioned Socialist Member got up, and, blundering and
+unconscious agent of Destiny in a fast-emptying House, began a personal
+attack on Paul. Whereupon there were cries of "Shame!" and "Sit down!"
+and the Speaker, in caustic tones, counselled relevancy, and the
+sympathy of the House went out to the Fortunate Youth; so that when he
+went soon afterwards into the outer lobby&mdash;it was the dinner hour&mdash;he
+found himself surrounded by encouraging friends. He did not wait long
+among them, for up in the Ladies' Gallery was his Princess. He tore up
+the stairs and met her outside. Her face was pale with anger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The brute!" she whispered. "The cowardly brute!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He snapped his fingers. "Canaille, canaille! He counts for nothing. But
+I've got them!" he cried exultingly, holding out clenched fists. "By
+God, darling, I've got them! They'll listen to me now!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She looked at him and the sudden tears came. "Thank God," she said, "I
+can hear you talk like that at last."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He escorted her down the stone stairs and through the lobby to her car,
+and they were objects of many admiring eyes. When they reached it she
+said, with a humorous curl of the lip, "Veux-tu m'epouser maintenant?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wait, only wait," said he. "These are only fireworks. Very soon we'll
+get to the real thing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We shall, I promise you," she replied enigmatically; and she drove off.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One morning, a fortnight later, she rang him up. "You're coming to dine
+with me on Friday, as usual, aren't you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," said he. "Why do you ask?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Just to make sure. And yes&mdash;also&mdash;to tell you not to come till
+half-past eight."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She rang off. Paul thought no more of the matter. Ever since he had
+taken his seat in the House he had dined with her alone every Friday
+evening. It was their undisturbed hour of intimacy and gladness in the
+busy week. Otherwise they rarely met, for Paul was a pariah in her
+social world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the Friday in question his taxi drew up before an unusual-looking
+house in Berkeley Square. An awning projected from the front door and a
+strip of carpet ran across the pavement. At the sound of the taxi, the
+door opened and revealed the familiar figures of the Princess's footmen
+in their state livery. He entered, somewhat dazed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Her Highness has a party?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes, sir. A very large dinner party."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul passed his hand over his forehead. What did it mean? "This is
+Friday, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul grew angry. It was a woman's trap to force him on society. For a
+moment he struggled with the temptation to walk away after telling the
+servant that it was a mistake and that he had not been invited. At
+once, however, came realization of social outrage. He surrendered hat
+and coat and let himself be announced. The noise of thirty voices
+struck his ear as he entered the great drawing-room. He was confusedly
+aware of a glitter of jewels, and bare arms and shoulders and the black
+and white of men. But radiant in the middle of the room stood his
+Princess, with a tiara of diamonds on her head, and beside her stood a
+youngish man whose face seemed oddly familiar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul advanced, kissed her hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She laughed gaily. "You are late, Paul."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You said half-past, Princess. I am here to the minute."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Je te dirai apres," she said, and the daring of the intimate speech
+took his breath away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your Royal Highness," she turned to the young man beside her&mdash;and then
+Paul suddenly recognized a prince of the blood royal of England&mdash;"may I
+present Mr. Savelli."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm very pleased to meet you," said the Prince graciously. "Your Young
+England League has interested me greatly. We must have a talk about it
+one of these days, if you can spare the time. And I must congratulate
+you on your speech the other night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are far too kind, sir," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They chatted for a minute or two. Then the Princess said: "You'll take
+in the Countess of Danesborough. I don't think you've met her; but
+you'll find she's an old friend."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Old friend?" echoed Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She smiled and turned to a pretty and buxom woman of forty standing
+near. "My dear Lady Danesborough. Here is Mr. Savelli, whom you are so
+anxious to meet."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul bowed politely. His head being full of his Princess, he was
+vaguely puzzled as to the reasons for which Lady Danesborough desired
+his acquaintance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't remember me," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked at her squarely for the first time; then started back. "Good
+God!" he cried involuntarily. "Good God! I've been wanting to find you
+all my life. I never knew your name. But here's the proof."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he whipped out the cornelian heart from his waistcoat pocket. She
+took it in her hand, examined it, handed it back to him with a smile, a
+very sweet and womanly smile, with just the suspicion of mist veiling
+her eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know. The Princess has told me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But how did she find you out&mdash;I mean as my first patroness?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She wrote to the vicar, Mr. Merewether&mdash;he is still at
+Bludston&mdash;asking who his visitor was that year and what had become of
+her. So she found out it was I. I've known her off and on ever since my
+marriage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were wonderfully good to me," said Paul. "I must have been a funny
+little wretch."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've travelled far since then."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was you that gave me my inspiration," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The announcement of dinner broke the thread of the talk. Paul looked
+around him and saw that the room was filled with very great people
+indeed. There were chiefs of his party and other exalted personages.
+There was Lord Francis Ayres. Also the Winwoods. The procession was
+formed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've often wondered about you," said Lady Danesborough, as they were
+walking down the wide staircase. "Several things happened to mark that
+day. For one, I had spilled a bottle of awful scent all over my dress
+and I was in a state of odoriferous misery."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed boyishly. "The mystery of my life is solved at last." He
+explained, to her frank delight. "You've not changed a bit," said he.
+"And oh! I can't tell you how good it is to meet you after all these
+years."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm very, very glad you feel so," she said significantly. "More than
+glad. I was wondering ... but our dear Princess was right."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems to me that the Princess has been playing conspirator," said
+Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They entered the great dining-room, very majestic with its long,
+glittering table, its service of plate, its stately pictures, its
+double row of powdered and liveried footmen, and Paul learned, to his
+amazement, that in violation of protocols and tables of precedence, his
+seat was on the right hand of the Princess. Conspiracy again. Hitherto
+at her parties he had occupied his proper place. Never before had she
+publicly given him especial mark of her favour.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you think she's right in doing this?" he murmured to Lady
+Danesborough.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seemed so natural that he should ask her&mdash;as though she were fully
+aware of all his secrets.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think so," she smiled&mdash;as though she too were in the conspiracy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They halted at their places, and there, at the centre of the long
+table, on the right of the young Prince stood the Princess, with
+flushed face and shining eyes, looking very beautiful and radiantly
+defiant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mechante," Paul whispered, as they sat down. "This is a trap."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Je le sais. Tu est bien prise, petite souris."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It pleased her to be gay. She confessed unblushingly. Her little mouse
+was well caught. The little mouse grew rather stern, and when the great
+company had settled down, and the hum of talk arisen, he deliberately
+scanned the table. He met some friendly glances&mdash;a Cabinet Minister
+nodded pleasantly. He also met some that were hostile. His Sophie had
+tried a dangerous experiment. In Lady Danesborough, the Maisie Shepherd
+of his urchindom, whose name he had never known, she had assured him a
+sympathetic and influential partner. Also, although he had tactfully
+not taken up that lady's remark, he felt proud of his Princess's
+glorious certainty that he would have no false and contemptible shame
+in the encounter. She had known that it would be a joy to him; and it
+was. The truest of the man was stirred. They talked and laughed about
+the far-off day. Incidents flaming in his mind had faded from hers. He
+recalled forgotten things. Now and then she said: "Yes, I know that.
+The Princess has told me." Evidently his Sophie was a conspirator of
+deepest dye.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now you're the great Paul Savelli," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Great?" He laughed. "In what way?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Before this election you were a personage. I've never run across you
+because we've been abroad so much, you know&mdash;my husband has a depraved
+taste for governing places&mdash;but a year or two ago we were asked to the
+Chudleys, and you were held out as an inducement."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good Lord!" said Paul, astonished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And now, of course, you're the most-discussed young man in London. Is
+he damned or isn't he? You know what I refer to."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, am I?' he asked pleasantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad to see you take it like that. It's not the way of the little
+people. Personally, I've stuck up for you, not knowing in the least who
+you were. I thought you did the big, spacious thing. It gave me a
+thrill when I read about it. Your speech in the House has helped you a
+lot. Altogether&mdash;and now considering our early acquaintance&mdash;I think
+I'm justified in calling you 'the great Paul Savelli.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then came the shifting of talk. The Prince turned to his left-hand
+neighbour; Lady Danesborough to her right. Paul and the Princess had
+their conventional opportunity for conversation. She spoke in French,
+daringly using the intimate "tu"; but of all sorts of things&mdash;books,
+theatres, picture shows. Then tactfully she drew the Prince and his
+neighbour and Lady Danesborough into their circle, and, pulling the
+strings, she at last brought Paul and the Prince into a discussion over
+the pictures of the Doges in the Ducal Palace in Venice. The young
+Prince was gracious. Paul, encouraged to talk and stimulated by
+precious memories, grew interesting. The Princess managed to secure a
+set of listeners at the opposite side of the table. Suddenly, as if
+carrying on the theme, she said in a deliberately loud voice,
+compelling attention: "Your Royal Highness, I am in a dilemma."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She paused, looked round and widened her circle. "For the past year I
+have been wanting Mr. Savelli to ask me to marry him, and he
+obstinately refuses to do so. Will you tell me, sir, what a poor woman
+is to do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She addressed herself exclusively to the young Prince; but her voice,
+with its adorable French intonation, rang high and clear. Paul,
+suddenly white and rigid, clenched the hand of the Princess which
+happened to lie within immediate reach. A wave of curiosity, arresting
+talk, spread swiftly down. There was an uncanny, dead silence, broken
+only by a raucous voice proceeding from a very fat Lord of Appeal some
+distance away:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"After my bath I always lie flat on my back and bring my knees up to my
+chin."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a convulsive, shrill gasp of laughter, which would have
+instantly developed into an hysterical roar, had not the young Prince,
+with quick, tactful disregard of British convention, sprung to his
+feet, and with one hand holding champagne glass, and the other
+uplifted, commanded silence. So did the stars in their courses still
+fight for Paul. "My lords, ladies and gentlemen," said the Prince, "I
+have the pleasure to announce the engagement of Her Highness the
+Princess Sophie Zobraska and Mr. Paul Savelli. I ask you to drink to
+their health and wish them every happiness."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He bowed to the couple, lifted his glass, and standing, swept a quick
+glance round the company, and at the royal command the table rose,
+dukes and duchesses and Cabinet Ministers, the fine flowers of England,
+and drank to Paul and his Princess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Attrape!" she whispered, as they got up together, hand in hand. And as
+they stood, in their superb promise of fulfilment, they conquered. The
+Princess said: "Mais dis quelque chose, toi."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Paul met the flash in her eyes, and he smiled. "Your Royal
+Highness, my lords, ladies and gentlemen," said he, while all the
+company were racking their brains to recall a precedent for such
+proceedings at a more than formal London dinner party; "the Princess
+and myself thank you from our hearts. For me this might almost seem the
+end of the fairy-tale of my life, in which&mdash;when I was eleven years
+old&mdash;her ladyship the Countess of Danesborough" (he bowed to the Maisie
+of years ago), "whom I have not seen from that day to this, played the
+part of Fairy Godmother. She gave me a talisman then to help me in my
+way through the world. I have it still." He held up the cornelian
+heart. "It guided my steps to my dearest lady, Miss Winwood, in whose
+beloved service I lived so long. It has brought me to the feet of my
+Fairy Princess. But now the fairy-tale is over. I begin where the
+fairy-tales end"&mdash;he laughed into his Sophie's eyes&mdash;"I begin in the
+certain promise of living happy ever afterwards."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this supreme hour of his destiny there spoke the old, essential
+Paul, the believer in the Vision Splendid. The instinctive appeal to
+the romantic ringing so true and so sincere awoke responsive chords in
+hearts which, after all, as is the simple way of hearts of men and
+women, were very human.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat down a made man, amid pleasant laughter and bowings and lifting
+of glasses, the length of the long table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lady Danesborough said gently: "It was charming of you to bring me in.
+But I shall be besieged with questions. What on earth shall I tell
+them?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth," he replied.
+"What do the Princess and I care?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Later in the evening he managed to find himself alone for a moment with
+the Princess. "My wonderful Sophie, what can I say to you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She smiled victoriously. "Cry quits. Confess that you have not the
+monopoly of the grand manner. You have worked in your man's way&mdash;I in
+my woman's way."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You took a great risk," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her eyes softened adorably. "Non, mon Paul, cheri. C'etait tout
+arrange. It was a certainty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, Paul's dearest lady came up and pressed both their hands. "I
+am so glad. Oh, so glad." The tears started. "But it is something like
+a fairy-tale, isn't it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Well, as far as his chronicler can say at present, that is the end of
+the Fortunate Youth. But it is really only a beginning. Although his
+party is still in opposition, he is still young; his sun is rising and
+he is rich in the glory thereof. A worldful of great life lies before
+him and his Princess. What limit can we set to their achievement? Of
+course he was the Fortunate Youth. Of that there is no gainsaying. He
+had his beauty, his charm, his temperament, his quick southern
+intelligence&mdash;all his Sicilian heritage&mdash;and a freakish chance had
+favoured him from the day that, vagabond urchin, he attended his first
+and only Sunday-school treat. But personal gifts and favouring chance
+are not everything in this world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the day before his wedding he had a long talk with Barney Bill.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sonny," said the old man, scratching his white poll, "when yer used to
+talk about princes and princesses, I used to larf&mdash;larf fit to bust
+myself. I never let yer seen me do it, sonny, for all the time you was
+so dead serious. And now it has come true. And d'yer know why it's come
+true, sonny?" He cocked his head on one side, his little diamond eyes
+glittering, and laid a hand on Paul's knee. "D'yer know why? Because
+yer believed in it. I ain't had much religion, not having, so to speak,
+much time for it, also being an old crock of a pagan&mdash;but I do remember
+as what Christ said about faith&mdash;just a mustard seed of it moving
+mountains. That's it, sonny. I've observed lots of things going round
+in the old 'bus. Most folks believe in nothing. What's the good of 'em?
+Move mountains? They're paralytic in front of a dunghill. I know what
+I'm talking about, bless yer. Now you come along believing in yer
+'igh-born parents. I larfed, knowing as who yer parents were. But you
+believed, and I had to let you believe. And you believed in your
+princes and princesses, and your being born to great things. And I
+couldn't sort of help believing in it too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed. "Things happen to have come out all right, but God knows
+why."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He does," said Barney Bill very seriously. "That's just what He does
+know. He knows you had faith."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you, dear old man?" asked Paul, "what have you believed in?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My honesty, sonny," replied Barney Bill, fixing him with his bright
+eyes. "'Tain't much. 'Tain't very ambitious-like. But I've had my
+temptations. I never drove a crooked bargain in my life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul rose and walked a step or two.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're a better man than I am, Bill."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Barney Bill rose too, rheumatically, and laid both hands on the young
+man's shoulders. "Have you ever been false to what you really believed
+to be true?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not essentially," said Paul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then it's all right, sonny," said the old man very earnestly, his
+bent, ill-clad figure, his old face wizened by years of exposure to
+suns and frosts, contrasting oddly with the young favourite of fortune.
+"It's all right. Your father believed in one thing. I believe in
+another. You believe in something else. But it doesn't matter a
+tuppenny damn what one believes in, so long as it's worth believing in.
+It's faith, sonny, that does it. Faith and purpose."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You're right," said Paul. "Faith and purpose."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I believed in yer from the very first, when you were sitting down
+reading Sir Walter with the bead and tail off. And I believed in yer
+when yer used to tell about being 'born to great things!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Paul laughed. "That was all childish rubbish," said he.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Rubbish?" cried the old man, his head more crooked, his eyes more
+bright, his gaunt old figure more twisted than ever. "Haven't yer got
+the great things yer believed yer were born to? Ain't yer rich? Ain't
+yer famous? Ain't yer a Member of Parliament? Ain't yer going to marry
+a Royal Princess? Good God Almighty! what more d'yer want?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothing in the wide, wide world!" laughed Paul.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fortunate Youth, by William J. Locke
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fortunate Youth, by William J. Locke
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
+
+
+Title: The Fortunate Youth
+
+Author: William J. Locke
+
+Posting Date: August 1, 2009 [EBook #4379]
+Release Date: August, 2003
+First Posted: January 20, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE FORTUNATE YOUTH ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Aldarondo. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE FORTUNATE YOUTH
+
+
+BY
+
+WILLIAM J. LOCKE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+PAUL KEGWORTHY lived with his mother, Mrs. Button, his stepfather, Mr.
+Button, and six little Buttons, his half brothers and sisters. His was
+not an ideal home; it consisted in a bedroom, a kitchen and a scullery
+in a grimy little house in a grimy street made up of rows of exactly
+similar grimy little houses, and forming one of a hundred similar
+streets in a northern manufacturing town. Mr. and Mrs. Button worked in
+a factory and took in as lodgers grimy single men who also worked in
+factories. They were not a model couple; they were rather, in fact, the
+scandal of Budge Street, which did not itself enjoy, in Bludston, a
+reputation for holiness. Neither was good to look upon. Mr. Button, who
+was Lancashire bred and born, divided the yearnings of his spirit
+between strong drink and dog-fights. Mrs. Button, a viperous Londoner,
+yearned for noise. When Mr. Button came home drunk he punched his wife
+about the head and kicked her about the body, while they both exhausted
+the vocabulary of vituperation of North and South, to the horror and
+edification of the neighbourhood. When Mr. Button was sober Mrs. Button
+chastised little Paul. She would have done so when Mr. Button was
+drunk, but she had not the time. The periods, therefore, of his
+mother's martyrdom were those of Paul's enfranchisement. If he saw his
+stepfather come down the street with steady gait, he fled in terror; if
+he saw him reeling homeward he lingered about with light and joyous
+heart.
+
+The brood of young Buttons was fed spasmodically and clad at random,
+but their meals were regular and their raiment well assorted compared
+with Paul's. Naturally they came in for clouts and thumps like all the
+children in Budge Street; it was only Paul who underwent organized
+chastisement. The little Buttons often did wrong; but in the mother's
+eyes Paul could never do right. In an animal way she was fond of the
+children of Button, and in a way equally animal she bore a venomous
+dislike to the child of Kegworthy. Who and what Kegworthy had been
+neither Paul nor any inhabitant of Bludston knew. Once the boy
+inquired, and she broke a worn frying-pan over his head. Kegworthy,
+whoever he might have been, was wrapt in mystery. She had appeared in
+the town when Paul was a year old, giving herself out as a widow. That
+she was by no means destitute was obvious from the fact that she at
+once rented the house in Budge Street, took in lodgers, and lived at
+her ease. Button, who was one of the lodgers, cast upon her the eyes of
+desire and married her. Why she married Button she could never
+determine. Perhaps she had a romantic idea--and there is romance even
+in Budge Street-that Button would support her. He very soon shattered
+any such illusion by appropriating the remainder of her fortune and
+kicking her into the factory with hobnailed boots. It would be wrong to
+say that Mrs. Button did not complain; she did. She rent the air of
+Budge Street with horrible execration; but she went to the factory,
+where, save for the intervals of retirement rendered necessary by the
+births of the little Buttons, she was contented enough to stay.
+
+If Paul Kegworthy had been of the same fibre as the little Buttons, he
+would have felt, thought and acted as they, and this history would
+never have been written. He would have grown up to man's estate in the
+factory and have been merged an indistinguishable unit in the drab mass
+of cloth-capped humans who, at certain hours of the day, flood the
+streets of Bludston, and swarm on the roofs of clanging and shrieking
+tramcars, and on Saturday afternoons gather in clotted greyness on the
+football ground. He might have been sober and industrious-the
+proletariat of Bludston is not entirely composed of Buttons-but he
+would have taken the colour of his environment, and the world outside
+Bludston would never have heard of him. Paul, however, differed greatly
+from the little Buttons. They, children of the grey cap and the red
+shawl, resembled hundreds of thousands of little human rabbits
+similarly parented. Only the trained eye could have identified them
+among a score or two of their congeners. For the most part, they were
+dingily fair, with snub noses, coarse mouths, and eyes of an
+indeterminate blue. Of that type, once blowsily good-looking, was Mrs.
+Button herself. But Paul wandered a changeling about the Bludston
+streets. In the rows of urchins in the crowded Board School classroom
+he sat as conspicuous as any little Martian who might have been bundled
+down to earth. He had wavy black hair, of raven black, a dark olive
+complexion, flushed, in spite of haphazard nourishment and nights spent
+on the stone floor of the reeking scullery, with the warm blood of
+health, great liquid black eyes, and the exquisitely delicate features
+of a young Praxitelean god. It was this preposterous perfection which,
+while redeeming him from ridiculous beauty by giving his childish face
+a certain rigidity, differentiated him outwardly from his fellows. Mr.
+Button, to whom the unusual was anathema, declared that the sight of
+the monstrosity made him sick, and rarely suffered him in his presence;
+and one day Mrs. Button, discovering him in front of the cracked mirror
+in which Mr. Button shaved, when his hand was steady enough, on Sunday
+afternoons, smote him over the face with a pound of rump steak which
+she happened to be carrying, instinctively desirous not only to correct
+her son for vanity, but also to spoil the comeliness of which he might
+be vain.
+
+Until a wonderful and illuminating happening in his eleventh year,
+little Paul Kegworthy had taken existence with the fatalism of a child.
+Of his stepfather, who smelt lustily of sour beer, bad tobacco and
+incidentally of other things undetected by Paul's nostrils, and whom he
+saw rarely, he dwelt in mortal terror. When he heard of the Devil, at
+Sunday school, which he attended, to his stepfather's disgust, he
+pictured the Prince of Darkness not as a gentleman, not even as a
+picturesque personage with horns and tail, but as Mr. Button. As
+regards his mother, he had a confused idea that he was a living blight
+on her existence. He was not sorry, because it was not his fault, but
+in his childish way he coldly excused her, and, more from a queer
+consciousness of blighterdom than from dread of her hand and tongue, he
+avoided her as much as possible. In the little Buttons his experience
+as scapegoat taught him to take but little interest. From his earliest
+memories they were the first to be fed, clothed and bedded; to his own
+share fell the exiguous scraps. As they were much younger than himself,
+he found no pleasure in their companionship. For society he sought such
+of the youth of Budge Street as would admit him into their raucous
+fellowship. But, for some reason which his immature mind could not
+fathom, he felt a pariah even among his coevals. He could run as fast
+as Billy Goodge, the undisputed leader of the gang; he could dribble
+the rag football past him any time he desired; once he had sent him
+home to his mother with a bleeding nose, and, even in that hour of
+triumph, popular sympathy had been with Billy, not with him. It was the
+only problem in existence to which his fatalism did not supply the key.
+He knew himself to be a better man than Billy Goodge. There was no
+doubt about it. At school, where Billy was the woodenest blockhead, he
+was top of his class. He knew things about troy weight and geography
+and Isaac and the Mariners of England of which Billy did not dream. To
+Billy the football news in the Saturday afternoon edition of The
+Bludston Herald was a cryptogram; to him it was an open book. He would
+stand, acknowledged scholar, at the street corner and read out from the
+soiled copy retrieved by Chunky, the newsboy, the enthralling story of
+the football day, never stumbling over a syllable, athrill with the joy
+of being the umbilicus of a tense world, and, when the recital was
+over, he would have the mortification of seeing the throng pass away
+from him with the remorselessness of a cloud scudding from the moon.
+And he would hear Billy Goodge say exultantly:
+
+"Didn't Aw tell yo' the Wolves hadn't a dog's chance?"
+
+And he would see the admiring gang slap Billy on the back, and hear
+"Good owd Billy!" and never a word of thanks to him. Then, knowing
+Billy to be a liar, he would tell him so, yelping shrilly, in
+Buttonesque vernacular (North and South):
+
+"This morning tha said it was five to one on Sheffield United."
+
+"Listen to Susie!"
+
+The parasitic urchins would yell at the witticism--the eternal petitio
+principii of childhood, which Billy, secure in his cohort from bloody
+nose, felt justified in making. And Paul Kegworthy, the rag of a
+newspaper crumpled tight in his little hand, would watch them disappear
+and wonder at the paradox of life. In any sphere of human effort, so he
+dimly and childishly realized, he could wipe out Billy Goodge. He had a
+soul-reaching contempt for Billy Goodge, a passionate envy of him. Why
+did Billy hold his position instead of crumbling into dust before him?
+Assuredly he was a better man than Billy. When, Billy duce et auspice
+Billy, the gang played at pirates or Red Indians, it was pitiful to
+watch their ignorant endeavours. Paul, deeply read in the subject, gave
+them chapter and verse for his suggestions. But they heeded him so
+little that he would turn away contemptuously, disdaining the travesty
+of the noble game, and dream of a gang of brighter spirits whom he
+could lead to glory. Paul had many such dreams wherewith he sought to
+cheat the realities of existence: but until the Great Happening the
+dream was not better than the drink: after it came the Vision Splendid.
+
+The wonderful thing happened all because Maisie Shepherd, a slip of a
+girl of nineteen, staying at St. Luke's Vicarage, spilled a bottle of
+scent over her frock.
+
+It was the morning of the St. Luke's annual Sunday-school treat. The
+waggonette was at the vicarage door. The vicar and his wife and
+daughter waited fussily for Maisie, an unpunctual damsel. The vicar
+looked at his watch. They were three minutes late, He tut-tutted
+impatiently. The vicar's daughter ran indoors in search of Maisie and
+pounced upon her as she sat on the edge of the bed in the act of
+perfuming a handkerchief. The shock caused the bottle to slip mouth
+downward from her hand and empty the contents into her lap. She cried
+out in dismay.
+
+"Never mind," said the vicar's daughter. "Come along. Dad and mother
+are prancing about downstairs."
+
+"But I must change my dress!"
+
+"You've no time."
+
+"I'm wet through. This is the strongest scent known. It's twenty-six
+shillings a bottle, and one little drop is enough. I shall be a walking
+pestilence."
+
+The vicar's daughter laughed heartlessly. "You do smell strong. But
+you'll disinfect Bludston, and that will be a good thing." Whereupon
+she dragged the tearful and redolent damsel from the room.
+
+In the hard-featured yard of the schoolhouse the children were
+assembled-the girls on one side, the boys on the other. Curates and
+teachers hovered about the intervening space. Almost every child wore
+its Sunday best. Even the shabbiest little girls had a clean white
+pinafore to hide deficiencies beneath, and the untidiest little boy
+showed a scrubbed face. The majority of the boys wore clean collars;
+some grinned over gaudy neckties. The only one who appeared in his
+week-day grime and tatterdemalion outfit was little Paul Kegworthy. He
+had not changed his clothes, because he had no others; and he had not
+washed his face, because it had not occurred to him to do so. Moreover,
+Mrs. Button had made no attempt to improve his forlorn aspect, for the
+simple reason that she had never heard of the Sunday-school treat. It
+was part of Paul's philosophy to dispense, as far as he could, with
+parental control. On Sunday afternoons the little Buttons played in the
+streets, where Paul, had he so chosen, might have played also: but he
+put himself, so to speak, to Sunday school, where, besides learning
+lots of queer things about God and Jesus Christ which interested him
+keenly, he could shine above his fellows by recitations of collects and
+bits of Catechism, which did not interest him at all. Then he won
+scores of good-conduct cards, gaudy treasures, with pictures of Daniel
+in the Lions' Den and the Marriage of Cana and such like, which he
+secreted preciously beneath a loose slab in the scullery floor. He did
+not show them to his mother, knowing that she would tear them up and
+bang him over the head; and for similar reasons he refrained from
+telling her of the Sunday-school treat. If she came to hear of it, as
+possibly she would through one of the little Buttons, who might pick up
+the news in the street, he would be soundly beaten. But there was a
+chance of her not hearing, and he desired to be no more of a blight
+than he could help. So Paul, vagabond and self-reliant from his
+babyhood, turned up at the Sunday-school treat, hatless and coatless,
+his dirty little toes visible through the holes in his boots, and his
+shapeless and tattered breeches secured to his person by a single
+brace. The better-dressed urchins moved away from him and made rude
+remarks, after the generous manner of their kind; but Paul did not
+care. Pariahdom was his accustomed portion. He was there for his own
+pleasure. They were going to ride in a train. They were going to have a
+wonderful afternoon in a nobleman's park, a place all grass and trees,
+elusive to the imagination. There was a stupefying prospect of wondrous
+things in profusion to eat and drink-jam, ginger-beer, cake! So rumour
+had it; and to unsophisticated Paul rumour was gospel truth. With all
+these unexperienced joys before him, what cared he for the blankety
+little blanks who gibed at him? If you imagine that little Paul
+Kegworthy formulated his thoughts as would the angel choir-boy in the
+pictures, you are mistaken. The baby language of Bludston would petrify
+the foc'sle of a tramp, steamer. The North of England is justly proud
+of its virility.
+
+The Sunday school, marshalled by curates and teachers, awaited the
+party from the vicarage. The thick and darkened sunshine of Bludston
+flooded the asphalt of the yard, which sent up a reek of heat, causing
+curates to fan themselves with their black straw hats, and little boys
+in clean collars to wriggle in sticky discomfort, while in the still
+air above the ignoble town hung the heavy pall of smoke. Presently
+there was the sound of wheels and the sight of the head of the vicar's
+coachman above the coping of the schoolyard wall. Then the gates opened
+and the vicar and his wife and Miss Merewether, her daughter, and
+Maisie Shepherd appeared and were immediately greeted by curates and
+teachers.
+
+Maisie Shepherd, a stranger in a strange land, pretty, pink, blushing,
+hatefully self-conscious, detached herself, after a minute or two, from
+the group and looked with timid curiosity on the children. She was a
+London girl, her head still dancing with the delights of her first
+season, and she had never been to a Sunday-school treat in her life.
+Madge Merewether, her old schoolfellow, had told her she was to help
+amuse the little girls. Heaven knew how she was to do it. Already the
+unintelligibility of Lancashire speech had filled her with dismay. The
+array of hard-faced little girls daunted her; she turned to the boys,
+but she only saw one--the little hatless, coatless scarecrow with the
+perfect features And arresting grace, who stood out among his smug
+companions with the singularly vivid incongruity of a Greek Hermes in
+the central hall of Madame Tussaud's waxwork exhibition. Fascinated,
+she strayed down the line toward him. She halted, looked for a second
+or two into a pair of liquid black eyes and then blushed in agonized
+shyness. She stared at the beautiful boy, and the beautiful boy stared
+at her, and not a word could she find in her head to speak. She turned
+abruptly and moved away. The boy broke rank and slowly followed her.
+
+For little Paul Kegworthy the heavens had opened and flooded his
+senses, till he nearly fainted, with the perfume of celestial lands.
+The intoxicating sweetness of it bewildered his young brain. It was
+nothing delicate, evanescent, like the smell of a flower. It as thick,
+pungent, cloying, compelling. Mouth agape and nostril wide, he followed
+the exquisite source of the emanation like one in a dream, half across
+the yard. A curate laughingly and unsuspectingly brought him back to
+earth by laying hands on him and bundling him back into his place.
+There he remained, being a docile urchin; but his eyes remained fixed
+on Maisie Shepherd. She was only a rosebud beauty of an English girl,
+her beauty heightened by the colour of distress, but to Paul the
+radiance of her person almost rivalled the wonder of her perfume. It
+was his first meeting of a goddess face to face, and he surrendered his
+whole being in adoration.
+
+In a few minutes the children were marched through the squalid streets,
+a strident band, to the dingy railway station, a grimy proletariat
+third-class railway station in which the sign "First Class Waiting
+Room" glared an outrage and a mockery, and were marshalled into the
+waiting train. The wonderful experience of which Paul had dreamed for
+weeks--he had never ridden in a train before--began; and soon the murky
+environs of the town were left behind and the train sped through the
+open country.
+
+His companions in the railway carriage crowded at the windows, fighting
+vigorously for right of place; but Paul sat alone in the middle of the
+seat, unmoved by the new sensation and speed, and by the glimpses of
+blue sky and waving trees above the others' heads. The glory of the day
+was blotted out until he should see and smell the goddess again. At the
+wayside station where they descended he saw her in the distance, and
+the glory came once more. She caught his eye, smiled and nodded. He
+felt a queer thrill run through him. He had been singled out from among
+all the boys. He alone knew her.
+
+Brakes took them from the station down a country road and, after a mile
+or so, through stone gates of a stately park, where wonder after wonder
+was set out before Paul's unaccustomed eyes. On either side of this
+roadway stretched rolling grass with clumps and glades of great trees
+in their July bravery--more trees than Paul imagined could be in the
+world. There were sunlit upland patches and cool dells of shade
+carpeted with golden buttercups, where cattle fed lazily. Once a herd
+of fallow deer browsing by the wayside scuttled away at the noisy
+approach of the brakes. Only afterward did Paul learn their name and
+nature: to him then they were mythical beasts of fairyland. Once also
+the long pile-of the Tudor house came into view, flashing-white in the
+sunshine. The teacher in charge of the brake explained that it was the
+Marquis of Chudley's residence. It was more beautiful than anything
+Paul had ever seen; it was bigger than many churches put together; the
+word "Palace" came into his head--it transcended all his preconceived
+ideas of palaces: yet in such a palace only could dwell the radiant and
+sweet-smelling lady of his dream. The certainty gave him a curious
+satisfaction.
+
+They arrived at the spot where the marquees were erected, and at once
+began the traditional routine of the school treat-games for the girls,
+manlier sports for the boys. Lord Chudley, patron of the living of St.
+Luke's, Bludston, and Lord Bountiful of the feast, had provided
+swing-boats and a merry-go-round which discoursed infernal music to
+enraptured ears. Paul stood aloof for a while from these delights, his
+eye on the section of the girls among whom his goddess moved. As soon
+as she became detached and he could approach her without attracting
+notice, he crept within the magic circle of the scent and lay down
+prone, drinking in its intoxication, and, as she moved, he wriggled
+toward her on his stomach like a young snake.
+
+After a time she came near him. "Why aren't you playing with the other
+boys?" she asked.
+
+Paul sat on his heels. "Dunno, miss," he said shyly.
+
+She glanced at his rapscallion attire, blushed, and blamed herself for
+the tactless question. "This is a beautiful place, isn't it?"
+
+"It's heavenly," said Paul, with his eyes on her.
+
+"One scarcely wants to do anything but just-just-well, be here." She
+smiled.
+
+He nodded and said, "Ay!" Then he grew bolder. "I like being alone," he
+declared defiantly.
+
+"Then I'll leave you," she laughed.
+
+The blood flushed deep under his unwashed olive skin, and he leaped to
+his feet. "Aw didn't mean that!" he protested hotly. "It wur them other
+boys."
+
+She was touched by his beauty and quick sensitiveness. "I was only
+teasing. I'm sure you like being with me."
+
+Paul had never heard such exquisite tones from human lips. To his ears,
+accustomed to the harsh Lancashire burr, her low, accentless voice was
+music. So another of his senses was caught in the enchantment.
+
+"Yo' speak so pretty," said he.
+
+At that moment a spruce but perspiring young teacher came up. "We're
+going to have some boys' races, miss, and we want the ladies to look
+on. His lordship has offered prizes. The first is a boys' race-under
+eleven."
+
+"You can join in that, anyhow," she said to Paul. "Go along and let me
+see you win."
+
+Paul scudded off, his heart aflame, his hand, as he ran, tucking in the
+shirt whose evasion from the breeches was beyond the control of the
+single brace. Besides, crawling on your stomach is dislocating even to
+the most neatly secured attire. But his action was mechanical. His
+thoughts were with his goddess. In his inarticulate mind he knew
+himself to be her champion. He sped under her consecration. He knew he
+could run. He could run like a young deer. Though despised, could he
+not outrun any of the youth in Budge Street? He took his place in the
+line of competing children. Far away in the grassy distance were two
+men holding a stretched string. On one side of him was a tubby boy with
+a freckled face and an amorphous nose on which the perspiration beaded;
+on the other a lank, consumptive creature, in Eton collar and red tie
+and a sprig of sweet William in his buttonhole, a very superior person.
+Neither of them desired his propinquity. They tried to hustle him from
+the line. But Paul, born Ishmael, had his hand against them. The fat
+boy, smitten beneath the belt, doubled up in pain and the consumptive
+person rubbed agonized shins. A curate, walking down repressing bulges
+and levelling up concavities, ordained order. The line stood tense.
+Away beyond, toward the goal, appeared a white mass, which Paul knew to
+be the ladies in their summer dresses; and among them, though he could
+not distinguish her, was she in whose eyes he was to win glory. The
+prize did not matter. It was for her that he was running. In his
+childish mind he felt passionately identified with her. He was her
+champion.
+
+The word was given. The urchins started. Paul, his little elbows
+squared behind him and his eyes fixed vacantly in space, ran with his
+soul in the toes that protruded through the ragged old boots. He knew
+not who was in front or who was behind. It was the madness of battle.
+He ran and ran, until somebody put his arms round him and stopped him.
+
+"Steady on, my boy-steady on!"
+
+Paul looked round in a dazed way. "Have A' won th' race?"
+
+"I'm afraid not, my lad."
+
+With a great effort he screwed his mind to another question. "Wheer did
+A' coom in?"
+
+"About sixth, but you ran awfully well."
+
+Sixth! He had come in sixth! Sky and grass and trees and white mass of
+ladies (among whom was the goddess) and unconsiderable men and boys
+became a shimmering blur. He seemed to stagger away, stagger miles
+away, until, finding himself quite alone, he threw himself down under a
+beech tree, and, after a few moments' vivid realization of what had
+happened, sobbed out the agony of his little soul's despair. Sixth! He
+had come in sixth! He had failed miserably in his championship. How she
+must despise him--she who had sent him forth to victory! And yet how
+'had it been possible? How had it been possible that other boys could
+beat him? He was he. An indomitable personage. Some hideous injustice
+guided human affairs. Why shouldn't he have won? He could not tell. But
+he had not won. She had sent him forth to win. He had lost. He had come
+in a sickening sixth. The disgrace devastated him.
+
+Maisie Shepherd, interested in her child champion, sought him out and
+easily found him under the beech tree. "Why, what is the matter?"
+
+As he did not answer, she knelt by his side and put her hand on his
+lean shoulder. "Tell me what has happened."
+
+Again the celestial fragrance overspread his senses. He checked his
+sobs and wiped his eyes with the back of his grubby hand. "Aw didn't
+win," he moaned.
+
+"Poor little chap," she said comfortingly. "Did you want to win so very
+much?"
+
+He got up and stared at her. "Yo' told me to win."
+
+"So you ran for me?"
+
+"Ay!"
+
+She rose to her feet and looked down upon him, somewhat overwhelmed by
+her responsibility. So in ancient days might a fair maiden have
+regarded her knight who underwent entirely unnecessary batterings for
+her sake. "Then for me you've won," she said. "I wish I could give you
+a prize."
+
+But what in the nature of a prize for a gutter imp of eleven does a
+pocketless young woman attired for the serious business of a school
+treat carry upon her person? She laughed in pretty embarrassment. "If I
+gave you something quite useless, what would you do with it?"
+
+"I 'u'd hide it safe, so 'ut nobody should see it," said Paul, thinking
+of his precious cards.
+
+"Wouldn't you show it to anybody?"
+
+"By Gum!--" he checked himself suddenly. Such, he had learned, was not
+Sunday-school language. "I wouldno' show it to a dog," said he.
+
+Maisie Shepherd, aware of romantic foolishness, slipped a cornelian
+heart from a thin gold chain round her neck. "It's all I can give you
+for a prize, if you will have it."
+
+If he would have it? The Koh-i-Noor' in his clutch (and a knowledge of
+its value) could not have given him more thrilling rapture. He was
+speechless with amazement; Maisie, thrilled too, realized that a word
+spoken would have rung false. The boy gloated over his treasure; but
+she did not know--how could she?--what it meant to him. To Paul the
+bauble was a bit of the warm wonder that was she.
+
+"How are you going to keep it?" she asked.
+
+He hoicked a bit of his shirt-tail from his breeches and proceeded to
+knot the cornelian heart secure therein. Maisie fled rapidly on the
+verge of hysterics, After that the school treat had but one meaning for
+Paul. He fed, it is true, in Pantagruelian fashion on luscious viands,
+transcending his imagination of those which lay behind Blinks the
+confectioner's window in Bludston: there he succumbed to the animal;
+but the sports, the swing-boats, the merry-go-round, offered no
+temptation. He hovered around Maisie Shepherd like a little dog-quite
+content to keep her in sight. And every two or three minutes he fumbled
+about his breeches to see that the knotted treasure was safe.
+
+The day sank into late afternoon. The children had been fed. The weary
+elders had their tea. The vicarage party took a few moments' rest in
+the shade of a clump of firs some distance away from the marquee.
+Behind the screen lay Paul, his eyes on his goddess, his heels in the
+air, a buttercup-stalk between his teeth. He felt the comforting knot
+beneath his thigh. For the first time, perhaps, in his life, he knew
+utter happiness. He heard the talk, but did not listen. Suddenly,
+however, the sound of his own name caused him to prick his ears. Paul
+Kegworthy! They were talking about him. There could be no mistake. He
+slithered a foot or two nearer.
+
+"No matter whether his people are drunkards or murderers," said the
+beloved voice, "he is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen in my
+life. Have you ever spoken to him, Winifred?"
+
+"No," said the vicar's daughter. "Of course I've noticed him. Every one
+does-he is remarkable."
+
+"I don't believe he's a child of these people at all," Maisie declared.
+"He's of a different clay. He's as sensitive as-as a sensitive plant.
+You ought to keep your eye on him, Mr. Merewether. I believe he's a
+poor little prince in a fairy tale."
+
+"A freak--a lusus naturae" said the vicar.
+
+Paul did not know what a lusus naturae was, but it sounded mighty grand.
+
+"He's a fairy prince, and one day he'll come into his kingdom."
+
+"My dear, if you saw his mother!"
+
+"But I'm sure no one but a princess could be Paul Kegworthy's mother,"
+laughed Maisie.
+
+"And his father?"
+
+"A prince too!"
+
+And Paul listened and drank in his goddess's words greedily. Truth
+clear as crystal fell from her lips. A wild wonder racked his little
+soul. She had said that his mother was not his mother, and that his
+father was a prince. The tidings capped the glory of an effulgent day.
+
+When he sneaked home late Mrs. Button, who had learned how he had
+misspent his time, gave him a merciless thrashing. Why should he be
+trapesing about with Sunday schools, she asked, with impolite
+embroidery, while his poor little brothers and sisters were crying in
+the street? She would learn him to Mess about with parsons and
+Sunday-school teachers. She was in process of "learning" him when Mr.
+Button entered. He swore in a manner which would have turned our armies
+in Flanders pallid, and kicked Paul into the scullery. There the boy
+remained and went supperless to his bed of sacks, aching and tearless.
+Before he slept he put his cornelian heart in his hiding-hole. What
+cared he for stripes or kicks or curses with the Vision Splendid
+glowing before his eyes?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+FOR splenetic reasons which none but the Buttons of this world can
+appreciate, Paul was forbidden, under pain of ghastly tortures, to go
+near the Sunday school again, and, lest he should defy authority, he
+was told off on Sunday afternoons to mind the baby, either in the
+street or the scullery, according to the weather, while the other
+little Buttons were not allowed to approach him. The defection of the
+brilliant scholar having been brought to the vicar's notice, he
+ventured to call one Saturday afternoon on the Buttons, but such was
+the contumely with which he was received that the good man hastily
+retreated. In lung power he was outmatched. In repartee he was
+singularly outclassed. He then sent the superintendent of the school, a
+man of brawn and zeal, to see what muscular Christianity could
+accomplish. But muscular Christianity, losing its head, came off with a
+black eye. After that the Buttons were left alone, and no friendly hand
+drew Paul within the gates of his Sunday Paradise. He thought of it
+with aching wistfulness. The only thing that the superintendent could
+do was to give him surreptitiously a prayer-book, bidding him perfect
+himself in the Catechism in view of future Confirmation. But, as
+emulation of his fellows and not religious zeal was the mainspring of
+Paul's enthusiasm, the pious behest was disregarded. Paul dived into
+the volume occasionally, however, for intellectual entertainment.
+
+As for the fragrant and beautiful goddess, she had disappeared into
+thin air. Paul hung for a week or two about the vicarage, in the hope
+of seeing her, but in vain. As a matter of fact, Maisie Shepherd had
+left for Scotland the morning after the school treat; people don't come
+to Bludston for long and happy holidays. So Paul had to feed his ardent
+little soul on memories. That she had not been an impalpable creature
+of his fancy was proven by the precious cornelian heart. Her words,
+too, were written in fine flame across his childish mind. Paul began to
+live the life of dreams.
+
+He longed for books. The fragmentary glimpses of history and geography
+in the Board school standard whetted without satisfying his
+imagination. There was not a book in the house in Budge Street, and he
+had never a penny to buy one. Sometimes Button would bring home a dirty
+newspaper, which Paul would steal and read in secret, but its contents
+seemed to lack continuity. He thirsted for a story. Once a generous
+boy, since dead-he was too good to live had given him a handful of
+penny dreadfuls, whence he had derived his knowledge of pirates and Red
+Indians. Too careless and confident, he had left them about the
+kitchen, and his indignant mother had used them to light the fire. The
+burning of his library was an enduring tragedy. He realized that it
+must be reconstituted; but how? His nimble wit hit on a plan. Vagrant
+as an unowned dog, he could roam the streets at pleasure. Why should he
+not sell newspapers-in a quarter of the town, be it understood, remote
+from both factory and Budge Street? He sold newspapers for three weeks
+before he was found out. Then he was chastised and forced to go on
+selling newspapers with no profit to himself, for his person was
+rigorously searched and coppers confiscated as soon as he came home.
+But during the three weeks' traffic on his own account he had amassed a
+sufficient hoard of pennies for the purchase of several books in gaudy
+paper covers exposed for sale in the little stationer's shop round the
+corner. Soon he discovered that if he could batik a copper or two on
+his way home his mother would be none the wiser. The stationer became
+his banker, and when the amount of the deposit equaled the price of a
+book, Paul withdrew his money's worth. So a goodly library of amazing
+rubbish was stored by degrees under the scullery slab, until it outgrew
+safe accommodation; whereupon Paul transferred the bulk of it to a hole
+in a bit of waste ground, a deserted brickfield on the ragged outskirts
+of the town. At last misfortune befell him. One dreary afternoon of
+rain he dropped his new bundle of papers in the mud of the roadway. To
+avoid death he had to spring from the path of a thundering tramcar. A
+heavy cart ran over the bundle. While he was ruefully and hastily
+gathering the papers together, a band of street children swooped down
+and kicked them lustily about the filth. He was battling with one
+urchin when a policeman grabbed him. With an elusive twist he escaped
+and ran like a terrified hare. Disaster followed, and that was the end
+of his career as a newsvendor.
+
+Greater leisure for reading, however, compensated the loss of the
+occasional penny. He read dazzling tales of dukes with palaces (like
+Chudley Court), and countesses with ropes of diamonds in their hair,
+who all bore a resemblance to the fragrant one. And dukes and
+countesses lived the most resplendent lives, and spoke such beautiful
+language, and had such a way with them! He felt a curious pride in
+being able to enter into all their haughty emotions. Then, one day, he
+began a story about a poor little outcast boy in a slum. At first he
+did not care for it. His soaring spirit disdained boys in slums. It had
+its being on higher planes. But he read on, and, reading on, grew
+interested, until interest was intensified into absorption For the
+outcast boy in the slums, you must know, was really the kidnapped child
+of a prince and a princess, and after the most romantic adventures was
+enfolded in his parents' arms, married a duke's beauteous daughter,
+whom in his poverty he had worshipped from afar, and drove away with
+his bride in a coach-and-six.
+
+To little Paul Kegworthy the clotted nonsense was a revelation from on
+high. He was that outcast boy. The memorable pronouncement of the
+goddess received confirmation in some kind of holy writ. The Vision
+Splendid, hitherto confused, crystallized into focus. He realized
+vividly how he differed in feature and form and intellect and character
+from the low crowd with whom he was associated. His unpopularity was
+derived from envy. His manifest superiority was gall to their base
+natures. Yes, he had got to the heart of the mystery. Mrs. Button was
+not his mother. For reasons unknown he had been kidnapped. Aware of his
+high lineage, she hated him and beat him and despitefully used him. She
+never gushed, it is true, over her offspring; but the little Buttons
+flourished under genuine motherment. They, inconsiderable brats, were
+her veritable children. Whereas he, Paul-it was as plain as daylight.
+Somewhere far away in the great world, an august and griefstricken
+pair, at that very moment, were mourning the loss of their only son.
+There they were, in their marble palace, surrounded by flunkeys all
+crimson and gold (men servants were always "gorgeously apparelled
+flunkeys" in Paul's books), sitting at a table loaded with pineapples
+on golden dishes, and eating out their hearts with longing. He could
+hear their talk.
+
+"If only our beloved son were with us," said the princess, wiping away
+a tear.
+
+"We must be patient, my sweet Highness," replied the prince, with lofty
+resignation stamped on his noble brow. "Let us trust to Heaven to
+remove the cankerworm that is gnawing our vitals."
+
+Paul felt very sorry for them, and he, too, wiped away a tear.
+
+For many years he remembered that day. He was alone in his brickfield
+on a gusty March morning-the Easter holidays had released him from
+school-squatting by his hole under the lee of a mass of earth and
+rubbish. It was a mean expanse, blackened by soot and defiled by
+refuse. Here and there bramble and stunted gorse struggled for an
+existence; but the flora mainly consisted in bits of old boots and foul
+raiment protruding grotesquely from the soil, half-buried cans, rusty
+bits of iron, and broken bottles. On one side the backs of grimy little
+houses, their yards full of fluttering drab underwear, marked the edge
+of the hopeless town which rose above them in forbidding buildings,
+belching chimney shafts and the spikes of a couple of spires. On the
+other sides it was bounded by the brick walls of factories, the
+municipal gasworks and the approach to the railway station, indicated
+by signal-posts standing out against the sky like gallows, and a
+tram-line bordered by a row of skeleton cottages. Golgotha was a grim
+garden compared with Paul's brickfield. Sometimes the children of the
+town scuttled about it like dingy little rabbits. But more often it was
+a desolate solitude. Perhaps all but the lowest of the parents of
+Bludston had put the place out of bounds, as gipsies and other dwellers
+in vans were allowed to camp there. It also bore an evil name because a
+night murder or two had been committed in its murky seclusion. Paul
+knew the exact spot, an ugly cavity toward the gasworks end, where a
+woman had been "done in," and even he, lord of the brickfield,
+preferred to remain at a purifying distance. But it was his own domain.
+He felt in it a certain pride of possession. The hollow under the lee
+of the rubbish-heap, by the side of the hole where he kept his paper
+library, was the most homelike place he knew.
+
+For many years he remembered that day. The light that never was on sea
+or land fell upon the brickfield. He had read the story at one stretch.
+He had sat there for hours reading, for hours rapt in his Vision. At
+last material darkness began to gather round him, and he awoke with a
+start to realization that he had been sitting there most of the day.
+With a sigh he replaced his book in the hole, which he cunningly masked
+with a lump of hard clay, and, feeling stiff and cold, ran, childlike,
+homeward. In the silence of the night he took out his cornelian heart
+and fondled it. The day had been curiously like, yet utterly unlike,
+the day on which she had taken it from her neck. In a dim fashion he
+knew that the two days were of infinite significance in his life and
+were complementary. He had been waiting, as it were, for nine months
+for this day's revelation, this day's confirmation.
+
+Paul rose the next morning, a human being with a fixed idea, an
+unquestioned faith in his destiny. His star shone clear. He was born to
+great things. In those early years that followed it was not a matter of
+an imaginative child's vanity, but the unalterable, serene conviction
+of a child's soul. The prince and princess were realities, his future
+greatness a magnificent certitude. You must remember this, if you would
+understand Paul's after-life. It was built on this radiant knowledge.
+In the afternoon he met Billy Goodge and the gang. They were playing at
+soldiers, Billy distinguished by a cocked hat made out of newspaper and
+a wooden sword.
+
+"Coom on, Susie, wi be going to knock hell out of the boys in Stamford
+Street."
+
+Paul folded his arms and looked at him contemptuously, as became one of
+his noble blood. "You could no' knock hell out of a bug."
+
+"What's that tha says?"
+
+Paul repeated the insult.
+
+"Say that agen!" blustered the cocked-hatted leader.
+
+Paul said it again and nothing happened, Billy received vociferous and
+sanguinary advice couched in sanguinary terms.
+
+"Try and hit me!" said Billy.
+
+The scene was oddly parallel with one in the story of the outcast boy
+of the gutter. Paul, conscious of experiment, calmly went up to him and
+kicked him. He kicked him hard. The sensation was delicious. Billy
+edged away. He knew from past experience that if it came to blows he
+was no match for Paul, but hitherto, having shown fight, he had
+received the support of the gang. Now, however, there was an
+extraordinary quality in Paul's defiance which took the spirit out of
+him. Once more he was urged by the ragged brats to deeds of blood. He
+did not respond. Paul kicked him again before his followers. If he
+could have gone on kicking him for ever and ever what delirium of joy
+were eternity! Billy edged farther away. The mongrel game-cock was
+beaten. Paul, dramatically conscious of what the unrecognized prince
+would do in such a circumstance, advanced, smacked his face, plucked
+the cocked hat from his head, the sword from his hand, and invested
+himself with these insignia of leadership, Billy melted silently into
+the subfusc air of Budge Street. The ragged regiment looked around and
+there was no Billy. Paul Kegworthy, the raggedest of them all, with
+nothing to recommend him but his ridiculous exotic beauty and the paper
+and wooden spolia opima of the vanquished, stood before them, a
+tattered Caesar. The gang hung spellbound. They were ready, small band
+of heroes, to follow him against the hordes of Stamford Street. They
+only awaited his signal. Paul tasted a joy known but to few of the sons
+of men-absolute power over, and supreme contempt for, his fellows. He
+stood for a moment or two, in the grey, miserable street discordant
+with the wailings of babies and the clamour of futile little girls,
+who, after the manner of women, had no idea of political crisis, and
+the shrill objurgations of slattern mothers and the raucous cries of an
+idealist vendor of hyacinths, and, cocked hat on head and wooden sword
+in hand, he looked at his fawning army. Then came the touch of genius
+that was often to characterize his actions in after years. It was
+mimetic, as he had read of such a thing in his paper-covered
+textbooks-but it was none the less a touch of genius. He frowned on the
+dirty, ignoble little boys. What had he in common with them-he, the son
+of a prince? Nothing. He snapped his sword across his knee, tore his
+cocked hat in two, and, casting the fragments before them, marched
+proudly toward the very last place on the face of the earth that he
+desired to visit-his own home. The army remained for a few seconds
+bewildered by the dramatic and unexpected, and, leaderless, did what
+many a real army has done in similar circumstances, straggled into
+disintegration.
+
+Thenceforward, Paul, had he so chosen, could have ruled despotically in
+Budge Street. But he did not choose. The games from which he used to be
+excluded, or in which he used to be allowed to join on sufferance, no
+longer appealed to him. He preferred to let Joey Meakin lead the gang,
+vice Billy Goodge deposed, while he himself remained aloof. Now and
+then he condescended to arbitrate between disputants or to kick a
+little brute of a bully, but he felt that, in doing so, he was
+derogating from his high dignity. It was his joy to feel himself a
+dark, majestic power overshadowing the street, a kind of Grand Llama
+hidden in mystery. Often he would walk through the midst of the
+children, seemingly unconscious of their existence, acting strenuously
+to himself his part of a high-born prince.
+
+This lasted till a dark and awful day when Mr. Button pitched him into
+the factory. These were times before kindly Education Acts and Factory
+Acts decreed that no boy under twelve years of age should work in a
+factory, and that every boy under fourteen should spend half his time
+at the factory and half at school. Paul's education was considered
+complete, and he had to plunge into full time at the grim and grinding
+place. He had joined the great army of workers. A wide gulf separated
+him from the gang of Budge Street. It existed for him no more than did
+the little girls and babies. Life changed its aspect entirely. Gone
+were the days of vagabondage, the lazy, the delicious even though cold
+and hungry hours of dreaming and reading in the brickfield; gone was
+the happy freedom of the chartered libertine of the gutter. He was
+bound, a little slave, like hundreds of other little slaves and
+thousands of big ones, to a relentless machine. He entered the hopeless
+factory gate at six in the morning and left it at half-past five in the
+evening; and, his rough food swallowed, slunk to his kennel in the
+scullery like a little tired dog. And Mr. Button drank, and beat Mrs.
+Button, and Mrs. Button beat Paul whenever she felt in the humour and
+had anything handy to do it with, and, as a matter of course,
+confiscated his wages on Saturday and set him to mind the baby on
+Sunday afternoons. In the monotony, weariness and greyness of life the
+glory of the Vision began to grow dim.
+
+In the factory he was not thrown into competition with other boys. He
+was the skip, the drudge, the carrier and fetcher, the cleaner and
+polisher for a work-bench of men devoid of sentiment and blind to his
+princely qualities. He tried, indeed, by nimbleness of hand and
+intelligence, to impress them with his superiority to his predecessors,
+but they were not impressed. At the most he escaped curses. His mind
+began to work in the logic of the real. Entrance into his kingdom
+implied as a primary condition release from the factory. But how could
+such release come, when every morning a remorseless and insensate
+hook-just like a certain hook in the machinery whose deadly certainty
+of grip fascinated and terrified him, caught him from his morning sleep
+every morning of his life, save Sunday, and swung him inexorably into
+the factory? He looked around and saw that no one was released, except
+through death or illness or incompetence. And the incompetent starved.
+Any child in Budge Street with a grain of sense knew that. There was no
+release. He, son of a prince, would work for ever and ever in Bludston.
+His heart failed him. And there was no one to whom he could tell the
+tragic and romantic story of his birth. One or two happy gleams of
+brightness, however, lightened his darkness and prevented the Vision
+from fading entirely into the greyness of the factory sky. Once the
+Owner, an unspeakable god with a bald pink head and a paunch vastly
+chained with gold, conducted a party of ladies over the works. One of
+the latter, a very grand lady, noticed him at his bench and came-and
+spoke kindly to him. Her voice had the same sweet timbre as his
+goddess's. After she had left him his quick ears caught her question to
+the Owner: "Where did you get your young Apollo? Not out of Lancashire,
+surely? He's wonderful." And just before she passed out of sight she
+turned and looked at him and smiled. He learned on inquiry that she was
+the Marchioness of Chudley. The instant recognition of him by one of
+his own aristocratic caste revived his faith. The day would assuredly
+come. Suppose it had been his own mother, instead of the Marchioness?
+Stranger things happened in the books. The other gleam proceeded from
+one of the workmen at his bench, a serious and socialistic person who
+occasionally lent him something to read: Foxe's "Book of Martyrs,"
+"Mill on Liberty," Bellamy's "Looking Backward," at that time at the
+height of its popularity. And sometimes he would talk to Paul about
+collectivism and the new era that was coming when there would be no
+such words as rich and poor, because there would be no such classes as
+they denoted.
+
+Paul would say: "Then a prince will be no better than a factory hand?"
+
+"There won't be any princes, I tell thee," his friend would reply, and
+launch out into a denunciation of tyrants.
+
+But this did not suit Paul. If there were to be no princes, where,
+would he come in? So, while grateful to the evangelist for talking to
+him and treating him as a human being, he totally rejected his gospel.
+It struck at the very foundations of his visionary destiny. He was
+afraid to argue, for his friend was vehement. Also confession of
+aristocratic prejudices might turn friendship into enmity. But his
+passionate antagonism to the communistic theory, all the more intense
+through suppression, strengthened his fantastic faith. Still, the
+transient smile of a marchioness and the political economy of a
+sour-avised operative are not enough to keep alive the romance of
+underfed, ill-clad, overdriven childhood. And after a while he was
+deprived even of the latter consolation, his friend being shifted to
+another end of the factory. In despair he turned to Ada, the eldest of
+the little Buttons, who now had reached years of comparative
+discretion, and strove to interest her in his dreams, veiling his
+identity under a fictitious name; but Ada, an unimaginative and
+practical child with a growing family to look after, either listened
+stupidly or consigned him, in the local vernacular, to perdition.
+
+"But suppose 'it was me that was the unknown prince? Supposing it was
+me I've been talking about all the time? Supposing it was me that went
+away and came back in a gold coach and six horses, with a duke's
+daughter all over diamonds by my side, what would tha say?"
+
+"I think tha art nowt but a fool," said the elderly child of ten, "and,
+if mother heard thee, she'd lamm the life out of thee."
+
+Paul had the sickening sensation of the man who has confided the high
+secrets of his soul to coarsefibred woman. He turned away, darkly
+conscious of having magnanimously given Ada a chance to mount with him
+into the upper air, which opportunity she, daughter of earth, had, in
+her purblind manner, refused. Thenceforward Ada was to him an
+unnoticeable item in the cosmos.
+
+One hopeless month succeeded another, until a cloud seemed to close
+round Paul's brain, rendering him automatic in his actions, merely
+animal in his half-satisfied appetites. Fines and curses were his
+portion at the factory; curses and beatings--deserved if Justice held a
+hurried scale at home. Paul, who had read of suicide in The Bludston
+Herald, turned his thoughts morbidly to death. But his dramatic
+imagination always carried him beyond' his own demise to the scene in
+the household when his waxlike corpse should be discovered dangling
+from a rope fixed to the hook in the kitchen ceiling. He posed
+cadaverous before a shocked Budge Street, before a conscience-stricken
+factory; and he wept on his sack bed in the scullery because the prince
+and the princess, his august parents, would never know that he had
+died. A whit less gloomy were his imaginings of the said prince and
+princess rushing into the house, in the nick of time, just before life
+was extinct, and cutting him down. How they were to find him he did not
+know. This side-track exploration of possibilities was a symptom of
+sanity.
+
+Yet, Heaven knows what would have happened to Paul, after a year or so
+at the factory, if Barney Bill, a grotesque god from the wide and
+breezy spaces of the world, had not limped into his life.
+
+Barney Bill wore the cloth cap and conventional and unpicturesque,
+though shapeless and weather-stained, garment of the late nineteenth
+century. Neither horns nor goat's feet were visible; nor was the pipe
+of reed on which he played. Yet he played, in Paul's ear, the
+comforting melody of Pan, and the glory of the Vision once more flooded
+Paul's senses, and the factory and Budge Street and the Buttons and the
+scullery faded away like an evil dream.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE Fates arranged Barney Bill's entrance late on a Saturday afternoon
+in August. It was not dramatic. It was merely casual. They laid the
+scene in the brickfield.
+
+It had rained all day, and now there was sullen clearance. Paul, who
+had been bathing with some factory boys in the not very savoury canal a
+mile or so distant, had wandered mechanically to his brickfield
+library, which, by means of some scavenging process, he managed to keep
+meagrely replenished. Here he had settled himself with a dilapidated
+book on his knees for an hour's intellectual enjoyment. It was not a
+cheerful evening. The ground was sodden, and rank emanations rose from
+the refuse. From where he sat he could see an angry sunset like a
+black-winged dragon with belly of flame brooding over the town. The
+place wore an especial air of desolation. Paul felt depressed. Bathing
+in the pouring wet is a chilly sport, and his midday meal of cold
+potatoes had not been invigorating. These he had grabbed, and, having
+done them up hastily in newspaper, had bolted with them out of the
+house. He had been fined heavily for slackness during the week, and Mr.
+Button's inevitable wrath at docked wages he desired to undergo as late
+as possible. Then, the sun had blazed furiously during the last six
+imprisoned days, and now the long-looked for hours of freedom were
+disfigured by rain and blight. He resented the malice of things. He
+also resented the invasion of his brickfield by an alien van, a gaudy
+vehicle, yellow and red, to the exterior of which clinging wicker
+chairs, brooms, brushes and jute mats gave the impression of a
+lunatic's idea of decoration. An old horse, hobbled a few feet away,
+philosophically cropped the abominable grass. On the front of the van a
+man squatted with food and drink. Paul hated him as a trespasser and a
+gormandizer.
+
+Presently the man, shading his eyes with his hand, scrutinized the
+small, melancholy figure, and then, hopping from his perch, sped toward
+him with a nimble and curiously tortuous gait.
+
+He approached, a wiry, almost wizened, little man of fifty, tanned to
+gipsy brown. He had a shrewd thin face, with an oddly flattened nose,
+and little round moist dark eyes that glittered like diamonds. He wore
+cloth cap on the back of his head, showing in front a thick mass of
+closely cropped hair. His collarless shirt was open at the neck and his
+sleeves were rolled up above the elbow.
+
+"You're Polly Kegworthy's kid, ain't you?" he asked.
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Seen you afore, haven't I?" Then Paul remembered. Three or four times
+during his life, at long, long intervals, the van had passed down Budge
+Street, stopping at houses here and there. About two years ago, coming
+home, he had met it at his own door. His mother and the little man were
+talking together. The man had taken him under the chin and twisted his
+face up. "Is that the nipper?" he had asked.
+
+His mother had nodded, and, releasing Paul with a clumsy gesture of
+simulated affection, had sent him with twopence for a pint of beer to
+the public-house at the end of the street. He recalled how the man had
+winked his little bright eye at his mother before putting the jug to
+his lips.
+
+"I browt th' beer for yo'," said Paul.
+
+"You did. It was the worst beer, bar none, I've ever had. I can taste
+it now." He made a wry face. Then he cocked his head on one side. "I
+suppose you're wondering who I am?" said he.
+
+"Ay," said Paul. "Who art tha?"
+
+"I'm Barney Bill," replied the man. "Did you never hear of me? I'm
+known on the road from Taunton to Newcastle and from Hereford to
+Lowestoft. You can tell yer mother that you seed me."
+
+A smile curled round Paul's lips at the comic idea of giving his mother
+unsolicited information. "Barney Bill?" said he.
+
+"Yuss," said the man. Then, after a pause, "What are you doing of
+there?"
+
+"Reading," said Paul.
+
+"Let's have a look at it."
+
+Paul regarded him suspiciously; but there was kindliness in the
+twinkling glance. He handed him the sorry apology for a book.
+
+Barney Bill turned it over. 'Why, said he, "it ain't got no beginning
+and no end. It's all middle. 'Kenilworth.' Do yer like it?"
+
+"Ay!" said Paul. "It's foine."
+
+"Who do yer think wrote it?"
+
+As both cover and a hundred pages at the beginning, including the
+title-page, to say nothing of a hundred pages at the end, were missing,
+Paul had no clue to the authorship.
+
+"Dunno," said he.
+
+"Sir Walter Scott."
+
+Paul jumped to his feet. Sir Walter Scott, he knew not why or how, was
+one of those bright names that starred in his historical darkness, like
+Caesar and Napoleon and Ridley and Latimer and W. G. Grace.
+
+"Tha' art sure? Sir Water Scott?"
+
+The shock of meeting Sir Walter in the flesh could not have been
+greater. The man nodded. "Think I'd tell yer a lie? I do a bit of
+reading myself in the old 'bus there"-he jerked a thumb--"I've got some
+books now. Would yer like to see 'em?"
+
+Would a mouse like cheese? Paul started off with his new companion.
+
+"If it wasn't for a book or two, I'd go melancholy mad and bust
+myself," the latter remarked.
+
+Paul's spirit leaped toward a spiritual brother. It was precisely his
+own case.
+
+"You'll find a lot of chaps that don't hold with books. Dessay you've
+met 'em?"
+
+Paul laughed, precipient of irony.
+
+Barney Bill continued: "I've heard some on 'em say: 'What's the good of
+books? Give me nature,' and they goes and asks for it at the
+public-'ouse. Most say nothing at all, but just booze."
+
+"Like father," said Paul.
+
+"Eh?" cried his friend sharply.
+
+"Sam Button, what married mother."
+
+"Ali! so he boozes a lot, does he?"
+
+Paul drew an impressionistic and lurid picture of Mr. Button.
+
+"And they fight?"
+
+"Like billy-o," said Paul.
+
+They reached the van. Barney Bill, surprisingly agile in spite of his
+twisted leg, sprang into the interior. Paul, standing between the
+shafts, looked in with curiosity. There was a rough though not unclean
+bed running down one side. Beyond, at the stern, so to speak, was a
+kind of galley containing cooking stove, kettle and pot. There were
+shelves, some filled with stock-in-trade, others with miscellaneous
+things, the nature of which he could not distinguish in the gloom.
+Barney Bill presently turned and dumped an armful of books on the
+footboard an inch or two below Paul's nose. Paul scanned the title
+pages. They were: Goldsmith's "Animated Nature," "Enquire Within Upon
+Everything," an old bound volume of "Cassell's Family Reader," "The
+Remains of Henry Kirke White," and "Martin Chuzzlewit." The owner
+looked down upon them proudly.
+
+"I've got some more, but I can't get at 'em."
+
+Paul regarded him with envy. This was a man of great possessions. "How
+long are yo' going to stay here?" he asked hopefully.
+
+"Till sunrise to-morrow."
+
+Paul's face fell. He seemed to have no luck nowadays.
+
+Barney Bill let himself down to a sitting position on the footboard and
+reached to the end for a huge pork pie and a clasp knife which lay
+beside a tin can. "I'll go on with my supper," said he; then noticing a
+wistful, hungry look in the child's eyes, "Have a bit?" he asked.
+
+He cut off a mighty hunk and put it into Paul's ready hand. Paul
+perched himself beside him, and they both ate for a long while in
+silence, dangling their legs. Now and again the host passed the tin of
+tea to wash down the food. The flaming dragon died into a smoky red
+above the town. A light or two already appeared in the fringe of mean
+houses. Twilight fell rapidly.
+
+"Oughtn't you to be getting home?"
+
+Paul, his hunger appeased, grinned. His idea was to sneak into the
+scullery just after the public-houses closed, when his mother would be
+far too much occupied with Mr. Button to worry about him. Chastisement
+would then be postponed till the morning. Artlessly he laid the
+situation before his friend, who led him on to relate other amenities
+of his domestic life.
+
+"Well, I'm jiggered!" said Barney Bill. "She must be a she-devil!"
+
+Paul cordially agreed. He had already imagined the Prince of Darkness
+in the guise of Mr. Button; Mrs. Button was in every way fit to be the
+latter's diabolical mate. Encouraged by sympathy and shrewd questions,
+he sketched in broad detail his short career, glorifying himself as the
+prize scholar and the erstwhile Grand Llama of Budge Street, and
+drawing a dismal picture of the factory. Barney Bill listened
+comprehendingly. Then, smoking a well-blackened clay, he began to utter
+maledictions on the suffocating life in towns and to extol his own
+manner of living. Having an appreciative audience, he grew eloquent
+over his lonely wanderings the length and breadth of the land; over the
+joy of country things, the sweetness of the fields, the wayside
+flowers, the vaulted highways in the leafy summer, the quiet, sleepy
+towns, the fragrant villages, the peace and cleanness of the open air.
+
+The night had fallen, and in the cleared sky the stars shone bright.
+Paul, his head against the lintel of the van door, looked up at them,
+enthralled by the talk of Barney Bill. The vagabond merchant had the
+slight drawling inflection of the Home Counties, which gave a soothing
+effect to a naturally soft voice. To Paul it was the pipes of Pan.
+
+"It mightn't suit everybody," said Barney Bill philosophically. "Some
+folks prefer gas to laylock. I don't say that they're wrong. But I
+likes laylock."
+
+"What's laylock?" asked Paul.
+
+His friend explained. No lilac bloomed in the blighted Springs of
+Bludston.
+
+"Does it smell sweet?"
+
+"Yuss. So does the may and the syringa and the new-mown hay and the
+seaweed. Never smelt any of 'em?"
+
+"No," sighed Paul, sensuously conscious of new and vague horizons. "I
+once smelled summat sweet," he said dreamily. "It wur a lady."
+
+"D'ye mean a woman?"
+
+"No. A lady. Like what yo' read of."
+
+"I've heard as they do smell good; like violets--some on 'em," the
+philosopher remarked.
+
+Drawn magnetically to this spiritual brother, Paul said almost without
+volition, "She said I were the son of a prince."
+
+"Son of a WOT?" cried Barney Bill, sitting up with a jerk that shook a
+volume or two onto the ground.
+
+Paul repeated the startling word.
+
+"Lor' lumme!" exclaimed the other, "don't yer know who yer father was?"
+
+Paul told of his disastrous attempts to pierce the mystery of his birth.
+
+"A frying-pan? Did she now? That's a mother for yer."
+
+Paul disowned her. He disowned her with reprehensible emphasis.
+
+Barney Bill pulled reflectively at his pipe. Then he laid a bony hand
+on the boy's shoulder. "Who do you think yer mother was?" he asked
+gravely. "A princess?"
+
+"Ay, why not?" said Paul.
+
+"Why not?" echoed Barney Bill. "Why not? You're a blooming lucky kid. I
+wish I was a missin' heir. I know what I'd do."
+
+"What?" asked Paul, the ingenuous.
+
+"I'd find my 'igh-born parents."
+
+"How?" asked Paul.
+
+"I'd go through the whole of England, asking all the princes I met. You
+don't meet 'em at every village pump, ye know," he added quickly, lest
+the boy, detecting the bantering note, should freeze into reserve;
+"but, if you keep yer eyes skinned and yer ears standing up, you can
+learn where they are. Lor' lumme! I wouldn't be a little nigger slave
+in a factory if I was the missin' heir. Not much. I wouldn't be starved
+and beaten by Sam and Polly Button. Not me. D'ye think yer aforesaid
+'igh-born parents are going to dive down into this stinkin' suburb of
+hell to find yer out? Not likely. You've got to find 'em sonny. Yer can
+find anybody on the 'ighroad if yer tramps long enough. What d'yer
+think?"
+
+"I'll find 'em," said Paul, in dizzy contemplation of possibilities.
+
+"When are yer going to start?" asked Barney Bill.
+
+Paul felt his wages jingle in his pocket. He was a capitalist. The
+thrill of independence swept him from head to foot. What time like the
+present? "I'll start now," said he.
+
+It was night. Quite dark, save for the stars; the lights already
+disappearing in the fringe of mean houses whose outline was merged
+against the blackness of the town; the green and red and white disks
+along the railway line behind the dim mass of the gasworks; the
+occasional streak of conglomerate fireflies that was a tramcar; and the
+red, remorseless glow of here and there a furnace that never was
+extinct in the memory of man. And, save for the far shriek of trains,
+the less remote and more frequent clanging of passing tramcars along
+the road edged with the skeleton cottages, and, startlingly near, the
+vain munching and dull footfall of the old horse, all was still.
+Compared with home and Budge Street, it was the reposeful quiet of the
+tomb. Barney Bill smoked for a time in silence, while Paul sat with
+clenched fists and a beating heart. The simplicity of the high
+adventure dazed him. All he had to do was to walk away--walk and walk,
+free as a sparrow.
+
+Presently Barney Bill slid from the footboard. "You stay here, sonny,
+till I come back."
+
+He limped away across the dim brickfield and sat down at the edge of
+the hollow where the woman had been murdered. He had to think; to
+decide a nice point of ethics. A vagrant seller of brooms and jute
+mats, even though he does carry about with him "Cassell's Family
+Reader" and "The Remains of Henry Kirke White," is distracted by few
+psychological problems. Sufficient for the day is the physical thereof.
+And when a man like Barney Bill is unencumbered by the continuous
+feminine, the ordinary solution of life is simple. But now the man had
+to switch his mind back to times before Paul was born, when the eternal
+feminine had played the very devil with him, when all sorts of passions
+and emotions had whirled his untrained being into dizziness. No
+passions or emotions now affected him; but their memory created an
+atmosphere of puzzledom. He had to adjust values. He had to deputize
+for Destiny. He also had to harmonize the pathetically absurd with the
+grimly real. He took off his cap and scratched his cropped head. After
+a while he damned something indefinite and hastened in his
+dot-and-carry-one fashion to the van.
+
+"Quite made up yer mind to go in search of yer 'ighborn parents?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Like me to give yer a lift, say, as far as London?"
+
+Paul sprang to the ground and opened his mouth to speak. But his knees
+grew weak and he quivered all over like one who beholds the god. The
+abstract nebulous romance of his pilgrimage had been crystallized, in a
+flash, into the concrete. "Ay," he panted.
+
+"Ay!" and he steadied himself with his back and elbows against the
+shafts.
+
+"That's all right," said Barney Bill, in a matter-of fact way, calm and
+godlike to Paul. "You can make up a bed on the floor of the old 'bus
+with some of them there mats inside and we'll turn in and have a sleep,
+and start at sunrise."
+
+He clambered into the van, followed by Paul, and lit an oil lamp. In a
+few moments Paul's bed was made. He threw himself down. The resilient
+surface of the mats was luxury after the sacking on the scullery stone.
+Barney Bill performed his summary toilet, blew out the lamp and went to
+his couch.
+
+Presently Paul started up, smitten by a pang straight through his
+heart. He sprang to his feet. "Mister," he cried in the darkness, not
+knowing how else to address his protector. "I mun go whoam."
+
+"Wot?" exclaimed the other. "Thought better of it already? Well, go,
+then, yer little 'eathen 'ippocrite!"
+
+"I'll coom back," said Paul.
+
+"Yer afeared, yer little rat," said Barney Bill, out of the blackness.
+
+"I'm not," retorted Paul indignantly. "I'm freeten'd of nowt."
+
+"Then what d'yer want to go for? If you've made up yer mind to come
+along of me, just stay where you are. If you go home they'll nab you
+and whack you for staying out late, and lock you up, and you'll not be
+able to get out in time in the morning. And I ain't a-going to wait for
+yer, I tell yer straight."
+
+"I'll be back," said Paul.
+
+"Don't believe it. Good mind not to let yer go."
+
+The touch of genius suddenly brushed the boy's forehead. He drew from
+his pockets the handful of silver and copper that was his week's wages,
+and, groping in the darkness, poured it over Barney Bill. "Then keep
+that for me till I coom back."
+
+He fumbled hurriedly for the latch of the van door, found it, and
+leaped out into the waste under the stars, just as the owner of the van
+rose with a clatter of coins. To pick up money is a deeply rooted human
+instinct. Barney Bill lit his lamp, and, uttering juicy though
+innocuous flowers of anathema, searched for the scattered treasure.
+When he had retrieved three shillings and sevenpence-halfpenny he
+peered out. Paul was far away. Barney Bill put the money on the shelf
+and looked at it in a puzzled way. Was it an earnest of the boy's
+return, or was it a bribe to let him go? The former hypothesis seemed
+untenable, for if he got nabbed his penniless condition would be such
+an aggravation of his offence as to call down upon him a more ferocious
+punishment than he need have risked. And why in the name of sanity did
+he want to go home? To kiss his sainted mother in her sleep? To pack
+his blankety portmanteau? Barney Bill's fancy took a satirical turn. On
+the latter hypothesis, the boy was in deadly fear, and preferred the
+certainty of the ferocious punishment to the terrors of an unknown
+future. Barney Bill smoked a reflective pipe, looking at the matter
+from the two points of view. Not being able to decide, he put out his
+lamp, shut his door and went to sleep.
+
+Dawn awoke him. He sat up and rubbed his eyes. Paul was not there. He
+did not expect him to be there. He felt sorry. The poor little kid had
+funked it. He had hoped for better stuff. He rose and stretched
+himself, put on socks and boots, lit his cooking stove, set a kettle to
+boil and, opening the door, remained for a while breathing the misty
+morning air. Then he let himself down and proceeded to the back of the
+van, where stood a pail of water and a tin basin, his simple washing
+apparatus. Having sluiced bead and neck and dried them with something
+resembling a towel, he hooked up the pail, stowed the basin in a rack,
+unslung a nosebag, which he attached to the head of the old horse, and
+went indoors to prepare his own elementary breakfast. That over, he put
+the horse into the shafts. Barney Bill was a man of his word. He was
+not going to wait for Paul; but he cast a glance round the limited
+horizon of the brickfield, hoping, against reason, to see the little
+slim figure emerge from some opening and run toward him.
+
+"Darn the boy!" said Barney Bill, taking off his cap and scratching his
+wet head.
+
+A low moan broke the dead silence of the Sunday dawn. He started and
+looked about him. He listened. There was another. The moans were those
+of a sleeper. He bent down and looked under the van. There Jay Paul,
+huddled up, fast asleep on the bare ground.
+
+"Well, I'm jiggered! I'm just jiggered. Here, you--hello!" cried Barney
+Bill.
+
+Paul awakened suddenly, half sat up, grinned, grabbed at something on
+the ground beside him and wriggled out between the wheels.
+
+"How long you been there?"
+
+"About two hours," said Paul.
+
+"Why didn't yer wake me?"
+
+"I didn't like to disturb thee," said Paul.
+
+"Did yer go home?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Into the house?"
+
+Paul nodded and smiled. Now, that it was all over, he could smile. But
+only afterwards, when he had greater command of language, could he
+describe the awful terror that shook his soul when he opened the front
+door, crept twice through the darkness of the sleeping kitchen and
+noiselessly closed the door again.
+
+For many months he felt the terror of his dreams. Briefly he told
+Barney Bill of his exploit. How he had to lurk in the shadow of the
+street during the end of a battle between the Buttons, in which the
+lodgers and a policeman had intervened. How he had to
+wait--interminable hours--until the house was quiet. How he had
+stumbled over things in the drunken disorder of the kitchen floor,
+dreading to arouse the four elder little Buttons who slept in the room.
+How narrowly he had missed running into the arms of the policeman who
+had passed the door some seconds before he opened it. How he had
+crouched on the pavement until the policeman turned the corner, and how
+he had fled in the opposite direction.
+
+"And if yer mother had caught ye, what would she have done to yer?"
+
+"Half-killed me," said Paul.
+
+Barney Bill twisted his head on one side and looked at him out of his
+twinkling eyes. Paul thought he resembled a grotesque bird.
+
+"Wot did yer do it for?" he asked.
+
+"This," said Paul, holding out a grubby palm in which lay the precious
+cornelian heart.
+
+His friend blinked at it. "Wot the blazes is the good of that?"
+
+"It's a talisman," replied Paul, who, having come across the word in a
+book, had at once applied it to his treasure.
+
+"Lor' lumme!" cried Barney Bill. "And it was for that bit of stuff yer
+ran the risk of being flayed alive by yer loving parents?"
+
+Paul was quick to detect a note of admiration underlying the
+superficial contemptuousness of the words. "I'd ha' gone through fire
+and water for it," he declared theatrically.
+
+"Lor' lumme!" said Barney Bill again.
+
+"I got summat else," said Paul, taking from his pocket his little pack
+of Sunday-school cards.
+
+Barney Bill examined them gravely. "I think you'd better do away with
+these."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"They establishes yer identity," said Barney Bill.
+
+"What's that?"
+
+Barney Bill explained. Paul was running away from home. The police,
+informed of the fact, would raise a hue-and-cry. The cards, if found,
+would be evidence. Paul laughed. The constabulary was not popular in
+Budge Street.
+
+"Mother ain't going to ha' nowt to do with the police, nor father,
+either."
+
+He hinted that the cards might be useful later. His childish vanity
+loved the trivial encomiums inscribed thereon. They would impress
+beholders who had not the same reasons for preoccupation as Barney Bill.
+
+"You're thinking of your 'igh-born parents," said Barney Bill. "All
+right, keep 'em. Only hide 'ern away safe. And now get in and let us
+clear out of this place. It smelts like a cheese with an escape of gas
+running through it. And you'd better stay inside and not show your face
+all day long. I don't want to be had up for kidnapping."
+
+Paul jumped in. Barney Bill clambered onto the footboard and took the
+reins. The old horse started and the van jolted its way to the road, on
+which as yet no tramcars clattered. As the van turned, Paul, craning
+his neck out of the window, obtained the last glimpse of Bludston. He
+had no regrets. As far as such a thought could be formulated in his
+young mind, he wished that the place could be blotted out from his
+memory, as it was now hidden forever from his vision. He stood at the
+little window, facing south, gazing toward the unknown region at the
+end of which lay London, city of dreams. He was not quite fourteen. His
+destiny was before him, and to the fulfilment thereof he saw no
+hindrance. No more would the remorseless factory hook catch him from
+his sleep and swing him into the relentless machine. Never again, would
+he hear his mother's shrewish voice or feel her heavy, greasy hand
+about his ears. He was free--free to read, free to sleep, free to talk,
+free to drink in the beauty of the lazy hours. Vaguely he was conscious
+that one of the wonders that would come would be his own expansion. He
+would learn many things which he did not know, things that would fit
+him for his high estate. He looked down upon the foreshortened figure
+of Barney Bill, his cloth cap, his shoulders, his bare brown arms, a
+patch of knee. To the boy, at that moment, he was less a man than an
+instrument of Destiny guiding him, not knowing why, to the Promised
+Land.
+
+At last on the quiet road Paul saw a bicyclist approaching them.
+Mindful of Barney Bill's injunction, he withdrew his head. Presently he
+lay down on the couch, and, soothed by the jogging of the van and the
+pleasant creaking of the baskets, fell into the deep sleep of tired and
+happy childhood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IT was a day of dust and blaze. Dust lay thick on the ground, it filled
+the air, it silvered the lower branches of the wayside trees, it turned
+the old brown horse into a dappled grey, it powdered the black hair of
+Barney Bill and of Paul until they looked like vagabond millers. They
+sat side by side on the footboard while the old horse jogged on,
+whisking flies away with a scanty but persistent tail.
+
+Paul, barefoot and barelegged, hatless, coatless, absorbed blaze and
+dust with the animal content of a young lizard. A month's summer
+wandering had baked him to gipsy brown. A month's sufficient food and
+happiness had filled gaunt hollows in his face and covered all too
+visible ribs with flesh. Since his flight from Bludston his life had
+been one sensuous trance. His hungry young soul had been gorged with
+beauty--the beauty of fields and trees and rolling country, of still,
+quivering moons and starlit nights, of exultant freedom, of
+never-failing human sympathy. He had a confused memory of everything.
+They had passed through many towns as similar to Bludston as one
+factory chimney to another, and had plied their trade in many a mean
+street, so much the counterpart of Budge Street that he had watched a
+certain window or door with involuntary trepidation, until he realized
+that it was not Budge Street, that he was a happy alien to its squalor,
+that he was a butterfly, a thing of woods and hedgerows fluttering for
+an inconsequent moment in the gloom. He came among them, none knew
+whence he was going, none knew whither. He was conscious of being a
+creature of mystery. He pitied the fettered youth of these begrimed and
+joyless towns--slaves, Men with Muckrakes (he had fished up an old
+"Pilgrim's Progress" from the lower depths of the van), who obstinately
+refused to raise their eyes to the glorious sun in heaven. In his
+childish arrogance he would ask Barney Bill, "Why don't they go away
+and leave it, like me?" And the wizened little man would reply, with
+the flicker of an eyelid unperceived by Paul, "Because they haven't no
+'igh-born parents waiting for 'em. They're born to their low estate,
+and they knows it." Which to Paul was a solution of peculiar comfort.
+
+Even the blackened lands between the towns had their charm for Paul, in
+that he had a gleeful sense of being excluded from the wrath of God,
+which fell continuously upon them and the inhabitants thereof. And here
+and there a belt of leafy country gave promise, or confirmed Barney
+Bill's promise, of the Paradise that would come. Besides, what mattered
+the perpetuations of Bludston brickfields when the Land of Beulah
+shimmered ahead in the blue distance, when "Martin Chuzzlewit" lay open
+on his knees, when the smell of the bit of steak sizzling on the
+cooking stove stung his young blood? And now they were in Warwickshire,
+county of verdant undulations and deep woods and embowered villages.
+Every promise that Barney Bill had made to him of beauty was in process
+of fulfilment. There were no more blighted towns, no more factories, no
+more chimneys belching forth smoke. This was the Earth, the real
+broad-bosomed Mother Earth. What he had left was the Hell upon Earth.
+What he was going to might be Paradise, but Paul's imagination rightly
+boggled at the conception of a Paradise more perfect. And, as Paul's
+prescient wit had conjectured, he was learning many things; the names
+of trees and wild flowers, the cries of birds, the habits of wayside
+beasts; what was good for a horse to eat and what was bad; which was
+the Waggon, and Orion's Belt and the Bunch of Keys in the heavens; how
+to fry bacon and sew up rents in his clothing; how to deal with his
+fellow-man, or, rather, with his fellow-woman, in a persuasive manner;
+how to snare a rabbit or a pheasant and convert it into food, and how,
+at the same time, to evade the terrors of the law; the differences
+between wheat and oats and barley; the main lines of cleavage between
+political parties, hitherto a puzzle to Paul, for Barney Bill was a
+politician (on the Conservative side) and read his newspaper and argued
+craftily in taverns; and the styles and titles of great landowners by
+whose estates they passed; and how to avoid the nets that were
+perpetually spread by a predatory sex before the feet of the incautious
+male. On the last point Barney Bill was eloquent; but Paul, with
+delicious memories sanctifying his young soul, turned a deaf ear to his
+misogyny. Barney Bill was very old and crooked and dried up; what
+beautiful lady would waste her blandishments on him? Even the low-born
+lasses with whom they at times consorted had scarce an eye for Barney
+Bill. The grapes were sour. Paul smiled indulgently on the little
+foible of his friend.
+
+They jogged along the highroad on this blazing and dusty day. Their
+bower of wicker chairs crackled in the heat. It was too hot for
+sustained conversation. Once Barney Bill said: "If Bob"-Bob was the old
+horse's unimaginative name--"if Bob doesn't have a drink soon his
+darned old hide'll crack."
+
+Ten minutes later: "Nothing under a quart'll wash down this dust."
+
+"Have a drink of water," suggested Paul, who had already adopted this
+care for drouth, with satisfactory results.
+
+"A grown man's thirst and a boy's thirst is two entirely different
+things," said Barney Bill sententiously. "To spoil this grown-up thirst
+of mine with water would be a crime."
+
+A mile or so farther on the road he stretched out a lean brown arm and
+pointed. "See that there clump of trees? Behind that is the Little Bear
+Inn. They gives you cool china pots with blue round the edge. You can
+only have 'em if you asks for 'em, Jim Blake, the landlord, being
+pertickler-like. And if yer breaks em--"
+
+"What would happen?" asked Paul, who was always very much impressed by
+Barney Bill's detailed knowledge of the roads and the inns of England.
+
+Barney Bill shook his head. "It would break 'is 'eart. Them pots was
+being used when William the Conqueror was a boy."
+
+"Ten-sixty-six to ten-eighty-seven," said Paul the scholar. "They mun
+be nine hundred years old."
+
+"Not quite," said Barney Bill, with an air of scrupulous desire for
+veracity. "But nearly. Lor' lumme!" he exclaimed, after a pause, "it
+makes one think, doesn't it? One of them there quart mugs--suppose it
+has been filled, say, ten times a day, every day for nine hundred
+years--my Gosh! what a Pacific Ocean of beer must have been poured from
+it! It makes one come over all of religious-like when one puts it to
+one's head."
+
+Paul did not reply, and reverential emotion kept Barney Bill silent
+until they reached the clump of trees and the Little Bear Inn.
+
+It was set back from the road, in a kind of dusty courtyard masked off
+on one side by a gigantic elm and on the other by the fringe of an
+orchard with ruddy apples hanging patiently beneath the foliage. Close
+by the orchard stood the post bearing the signboard on which the Little
+Bear, an engaging beast, was pictured, and presiding in a ceremonious
+way over the horse-trough below. In the shade of the elm stretched a
+trestle table and two wooden benches. The old inn, gabled,
+half-timbered, its upper story overhanging the doorway, bent and
+crippled, though serene, with age, mellow in yellow and russet,
+spectacled, as befitted its years, with leaded diamond panes, crowned
+deep in secular thatch, smiled with the calm and homely peace of
+everlasting things. Its old dignity even covered the perky gilt
+inscription over the doorway, telling how James Blake was licensed to
+sell a variety of alcoholic beverages. One human figure alone was
+visible, as the chairs and mat-laden van slowly turned from the road
+toward the horse-trough--that of a young man in straw hat and grey
+flannels making a water-colour sketch of the inn.
+
+Barney Bill slid off the footboard, and, looking neither to right nor
+left, bolted like a belated crab into the cool recesses of the bar in
+search of ambrosia from the blue-and-white china mug. Paul, also afoot,
+led Bob to the trough. Bob drank with the lusty moderation of beasts.
+When he had assuaged his thirst Paul backed him into the road and,
+slinging over his head a comforting nosebag, left him to his meal.
+
+The young man, sitting on an upturned wooden case, at the extreme edge
+of the elm tree's shade, a slender easel before him, a litter of
+paraphernalia on the ground by his side, painted assiduously. Paul idly
+crept behind him and watched in amazement the smears of wet colour,
+after a second or two of apparent irrelevance, take their place in the
+essential structure of the drawing. He stood absorbed. He knew that
+there were such things as pictures. He knew, too, that they were made
+by hands. But he had never seen one in the making. After a while the
+artist threw back his head, looked at the inn and looked at his sketch.
+There was a hot bit of thatch at the corner near the orchard, and,
+below the eaves, bold shadow. The shadow had not come right. He put in
+a touch of burnt umber and again considered the effect.
+
+"Confound it! that's all wrong," he muttered.
+
+"It's blue," said Paul.
+
+The artist started, twisted his head, and for the first time became
+conscious of the ragamuffin's presence. "Oh, you see it blue, do you?"
+He smiled ironically.
+
+"Ay," said Paul, with pointing finger. "Look at it. It's not brown,
+anyhow. Yon's black inside and blue outside."
+
+The young man shaded his brow and gazed intently. Brilliant sunshine
+plays the deuce with tones. "My hat!" cried he, "you're right. It was
+this confounded yellow of the side of the house." He put in a few hasty
+strokes. "That better?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+The artist laid down his brush, and swung round on his box, clasping
+knees. "How the devil did you manage to see that when I didn't?"
+
+"Dun-no!" said Paul.
+
+The young man stretched himself and lit a cigarette.
+
+"What are yo' doing that for, mister?" Paul asked seriously.
+
+"That?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul. "You mun have a reason."
+
+"You're a queer infant," laughed the artist. "Do you really want to
+know?"
+
+"I've asked yo'," said Paul.
+
+"Well, if you're anxious to know, I'm an architect on a holiday, and
+I'm sketching any old thing I come across. I don't pretend to be a
+painter, my youthful virtuoso, and that's why I go wrong sometimes on
+colour. Do you know what an architect is?"
+
+"No," said Paul, eagerly. "What is it?"
+
+He had been baffled by the meaning of the word, which he had seen all
+his life, inscribed on a brass plate in the Bludston High Street: "E.
+Thomson, Architect & Surveyor." It had seemed to him odd, cryptically
+fascinating.
+
+The young man laughed and explained; Paul listened seriously. Another
+mystery was solved. He had often wondered how the bricklayers knew
+where to lay the bricks. He grasped the idea that they were but
+instruments carrying out the conception of the architect's brain. "I'd
+like to be an architect," he said.
+
+"Would you?" After a pause the young man continued: "Anyhow, you can
+earn a shilling. Just sit down there and let me make a sketch of you."
+
+"What for?" asked Paul.
+
+"Because you're a picturesque person. Now, I suppose you'll be asking
+me what's the meaning of picturesque?"
+
+"Nay," said Paul. "I know. Yo' see it in books. 'Th' owd grey tower
+stood out picturesque against the crimson sky.'"
+
+"Hullo! you're a literary gent," said the young man.
+
+"Ay," replied Paul proudly. He was greatly attracted towards this new
+acquaintance, whom, by his speech and dress and ease of manner, he
+judged to belong to the same caste as his lost but ever-remembered
+goddess.
+
+The young man picked up pencil and sketch-book and posed Paul at the
+end of the seat by the trestle table. "Now, then," said he, setting to
+work. "Head a little more that way. Capital. Don't move. If you're very
+quiet I'll give you a shilling." Presently he asked, "What are you? If
+you hadn't been a literary gent I'd have thought you might be a gipsy."
+
+Paul flushed and started. "I'm not a gipsy."
+
+"Steady, steady," exclaimed the artist. "I've just said you couldn't be
+one. Italian? You don't look English."
+
+For the first time the idea of exotic parentage entered Paul's head. He
+dallied for a moment or two with the thought. "I dunno what I am," he
+said romantically.
+
+"Oh? What's your father?" The young man motioned with his head toward
+the inn.
+
+"Yon's not my father," said Paul. "It's only Barney Bill."
+
+"Only Barney Bill?" echoed the other, amused. "Well, who is your
+father?"
+
+"Dunno," said Paul.
+
+"And your mother?"
+
+"Dunno, either," said Paul, in a mysterious tone. "I dunno if my
+parents are living or dead. I think they're living."
+
+"That's interesting. What are you doing with what's-his-name Bill?"
+
+"I'm just travelling wi' him to London."
+
+"And what are you going to do in London?"
+
+"I'll see when I get there," said Paul.
+
+"So you're out for adventure?"
+
+"Ay," said the boy, a gleam of the Vision dancing before his eyes.
+"That's it. I'm going on an adventure."
+
+"There, keep like that," cried the artist. "Don't stir. I do believe
+I'm getting you. Holy Moses, it will be great! If only I could catch
+the expression! There's nothing like adventure, is there? The glorious
+uncertainty of it! To wake up in the morning and know that the
+unexpected is bound to happen during the day. Exciting, isn't it?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul, his face aglow.
+
+The young man worked tense and quick at the luminous eyes. He broke a
+long silence by asking, "What's your name?"
+
+"Paul Kegworthy."
+
+"Paul? That's odd." In the sphere of life to which the ragged urchin
+belonged Toms and Bills and Jims were as thick as blackberries, but
+Pauls were rare.
+
+"What's odd?" said Paul.
+
+"Your name. How did you get it? It's uncommon."
+
+"I suppose it is," said Paul. "I never thowt of it. I never knew
+anybody of that name afore."
+
+Here was another sign and token of romantic origin suddenly revealed.
+Paul felt the thrill of it. He resisted a temptation to ask his new
+friend whether it was an appellation generally reserved for princes.
+
+"Look here, joking apart," said the artist, putting in the waves of the
+thick black hair, "are you really going to be dumped down in London to
+seek your fortune? Don't you know anybody there?"
+
+"No," said Paul.
+
+"How are you going to live?"
+
+Paul dived a hand into his breeches pocket and jingled coins. "I've got
+th' brass," said he.
+
+"How much?"
+
+"Three shillings and sevenpence-ha'penny," said Paul, with an opulent
+air. "And yo'r shilling will make it four and sevenpence-ha'penny."
+
+"Good God!" said-the young man. He went on drawing for some time in
+silence. Then he said: "My brother is a painter--rather a swell--a
+Royal Academician. He would love to paint you. So would other fellows.
+You could easily earn your living as a model--doing as a business, you
+know, what you're doing now for fun, more or less."
+
+"How much could I earn?"
+
+"It all depends. Say a pound to thirty shillings a week."
+
+Paul gasped and sat paralyzed. Artist, dusty road, gaudy van, distant
+cornfields and uplands were blotted from his senses. The cool waves of
+Pactolus lapped his feet.
+
+"Come and look me up when you get to London," continued the friendly
+voice. "My name is Rowlatt-W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square. Can you
+remember it?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Shall I write it down?"
+
+"Nay. 'W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square.' I'm noan likely to forget
+it. I never forget nowt," said Paul, life returning through a vein of
+boastfulness.
+
+"Tell me all you remember," said Mr. Rowlatt, with a laugh.
+
+"I can say all the Kings of England, with their dates, and the counties
+and chief towns of Great Britain and Ireland, and all the weights and
+measures, and 'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the fold--'"
+
+"Holy Moses!" cried Rowlatt. "Anything else?"
+
+"Ay. Lots more," said Paul, anxious to stamp vividly the impression he
+saw that he was making. "I know the Plagues of Egypt."
+
+"I bet you don't."
+
+"Rivers of Blood, Frogs, Lice, Flies, Murrain, Boils, Hails, Locusts,
+Darkness and Death of Firstborn," said Paul, in a breath.
+
+"Jehosaphat!" cried Rowlatt. "I suppose now you'd have no difficulty in
+reciting the Thirty-nine Articles."
+
+Paul puckered his forehead in thought. "D'yo' mean," he asked after a
+pause, "the Thirty-nine Articles o' Religion, as is in th' Prayerbuk? I
+ha' tried to read 'em, but couldno' understand 'em reet."
+
+Rowlatt, who had not expected his facetious query to be so answered,
+stopped his drawing for a moment. "What in the name of goodness
+attracted you to the Thirty-nine Articles?"
+
+"I wanted to learn about things," said Paul.
+
+The young man looked at him and smiled. "Self-education is a jolly good
+thing," said he. "Learn all you can, and you'll be a famous fellow one
+of these days. But you must cultivate a sense of humour."
+
+Paul was about to seek enlightenment as to this counsel when Barney
+Bill appeared, cool and refreshed, from the inn door, and lifted a
+cheery voice. "Let's be getting along, sonny."
+
+Rowlatt held up a detaining hand. "Just a couple of minutes, if you can
+spare them. I've nearly finished."
+
+"All right, sir," said Barney Bill, limping across the yard. "Taking a
+picture of him?"
+
+The artist nodded. Barney Bill looked over his shoulder. "By Gosh!" he
+cried in admiration. "By Gosh!"
+
+"It has come out rather well, hasn't it?" said the artist, complacently.
+
+"It's the living image of 'im," said Barney Bill.
+
+"He tells me he's going up to London to seek his fortune," said
+Rowlatt, putting in the finishing touches.
+
+"And his 'igh-born parents," said Barney Bill, winking at Paul.
+
+Paul flushed and wriggled uncomfortably. Instinct deprecated crude
+revelation of the mystery of his birth to the man of refinement. He
+felt that Barney Bill was betraying confidence. Gutter-bred though he
+was, he accused his vagrant protector of a lack of good taste. Of such
+a breach he himself, son of princes, could not have been guilty.
+Luckily, and, as Paul thought, with admirable tact, Mr. Rowlatt did not
+demand explanation.
+
+"A young Japhet in search of a father. Well, I hope he'll find him.
+There's nothing like romance. Without it life is flat and dead. It's
+what atmosphere is to a picture."
+
+"And onions to a stew," said Barney Bill.
+
+"Quite right," said Rowlatt. "Paul, my boy, I think after all you'd
+better stick to Mr.--?"
+
+"Barney Bill, sir, at your service. And, if you want a comfortable
+chair, or an elegant mat, or a hearth brush at a ridiculous cheap
+price"--he waved toward the van. Rowlatt turned his head and, laughing,
+looked into the twinkling black eyes. "I don't for a moment expect you
+to buy, sir, but I was only a-satisfying of my artistic conscience."
+
+Rowlatt shut his sketch-book with a snap, and rose. "Let us have a
+drink," said he. "Artists should be better acquainted."
+
+He whispered a message to Paul, who sped to the inn and presently
+returned with a couple of the famous blue and white mugs frothing
+deliciously at the brims. The men, their lips to the bubbles, nodded to
+each other. The still beat of the August noon enveloped their bodies,
+but a streak of heavenly coolness trickled through their souls. Paul,
+looking at them enviously, longed to be grown up.
+
+Then followed a pleasant half-hour of desultory talk. Although the men
+did not make him, save for here and there a casual reference, the
+subject of their conversation, Paul, with the Vision shimmering before
+his eyes, was sensitive enough to perceive in a dim and elusive way
+that he was at the back of each man's thoughts and that, for his sake,
+each was trying to obtain the measure of the other. At last Barney
+Bill, cocking at the sun the skilled eye of the dweller in the
+wilderness, called the time for departure.
+
+"Could I see th' picture?" asked Paul.
+
+Rowlatt passed him the sketch-book. The sudden sight of oneself as one
+appears in another's eyes is always a shock, even to the most
+sophisticated sitter. To Paul it was uncanny. He had often seen his own
+reflection and was familiar with his own appearance, but this was the
+first time that he had looked at himself impersonally. The sketch was
+vivid, the likeness excellent; the motive, the picturesque and romantic.
+
+A proud lift of the chin, an eager glance in the eye, a sensitive curve
+of the lip attracted his boyish egotism. The portrait was an ideal,
+something to live up to. Involuntarily he composed his features.
+
+Barney Bill again called time. Paul surrendered the sketch-book
+reluctantly. Rowlatt, with a cheery word, handed him the shilling fee.
+Paul, than whom none better knew the magic quality of money, hesitated
+for a second. The boy in the sketch would have refused. Paul drew
+himself up. "Nay, I'll take noan. I liked doing it."
+
+Rowlatt laughed and pocketed the coin. "All right," said he, with a
+playful bow. "I'm exceedingly indebted to your courtesy."
+
+Barney Bill gave Paul an approving glance. "Good for you, boy. Never
+take money you've not earned. Good day to you, sir"--he touched his
+cap. "And"--with a motion toward the empty mugs--"thank you kindly."
+
+Rowlatt strolled with them to the van, Barney Bill limping a pace or
+two ahead. "Remember what I told you, my young friend," said he in a
+low voice. "I don't go back upon my word. I'll help you. But if you're
+a wise boy and know what's good for you, you'll stick to Mr. Barney
+Bill and the freedom of the high-road and the light heart of the
+vagabond. You'll have a devilish sight more happiness in the end."
+
+But Paul, who already looked upon his gipsy self as dead as his
+Bludston self, and these dead selves as stepping-stones to higher
+things, turned a deaf ear to his new friend's paradoxical philosophy.
+"I'll remember," said he. "Mr. W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square."
+
+The young architect watched the van with its swinging, creaking
+excrescences lumber away down the hot and dusty road, and turned with a
+puzzled expression to his easel. Joy in the Little Bear Inn had for the
+moment departed. Presently he found himself scribbling a letter in
+pencil to his brother, the Royal Academician.
+
+"So you see, my dear fellow," he wrote toward the end of the epistle,
+"I am in a quandary. That the little beggar is of startling beauty is
+undeniable. That he has got his bill agape, like a young bird, for
+whatever food of beauty and emotion and knowledge comes his way is
+obvious to any fool. But whether, in what I propose, I'm giving a
+helping hand to a kind of wild genius, or whether I'm starting a vain
+boy along the primrose path in the direction of everlasting bonfire,
+I'm damned if I know."
+
+But Paul jogged along by the side of Barney Bill in no such state of
+dubiety. God was in His Heaven, arranging everything for his especial
+benefit. All was well with the world where dazzling destinies like his
+were bound to be fulfilled.
+
+"I've heard of such things," said Barney Bill with a reflective twist
+of his head, when Paul had told him of Mr. Rowlatt's suggestion. "A
+cousin of mine married a man who knew a gal who used to stand in her
+birthday suit in front of a lot of young painter chaps-and I'm bound to
+say he used to declare she was as good a gal as his own wife,
+especially seeing as how she supported an old father what had got a
+stroke, and a houseful of young brothers and sisters. So I'm not saying
+there's any harm in it. And I wouldn't stand in your way, sonny, seeing
+as how you want to get to your 'igh-born parents. You might find 'em on
+the road, and then again you mightn't. And thirty bob a week at
+fourteen-no-it would be flying in the face of Providence to say 'don't
+do it! But what licks me is: what the blazes do they want with a little
+varmint like you? Why shouldn't they pay thirty bob a week to paint me?"
+
+Paul did not reply, being instinctively averse from wounding
+susceptibilities. But in his heart rose a high pity for the common
+though kindly clay that was Barney Bill.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+WHEN they reached London in November, after circuitous wanderings,
+Barney Bill said to Paul: "You've seed enough of me, matey, to know
+that I wish yer good and not harm. I've fed yer and I've housed yer-I
+can't say as how I've done much toward clothing yer-and three months on
+the road has knocked corners off the swell toggery yer came to me in;
+but I ain't beat yer or cussed yer more than yer deserved"--whereat
+Paul grinned-"and I've spent a lot of valuable time, when I might have
+been profitably doing nothing, a-larning yer of things and, so to
+speak, completing yer eddication. Is that the truth, or am I a bloomin'
+liar?"
+
+Paul, thus challenged, confirmed the absolute veracity of Barney Bill's
+statement. The latter continued, bending forward, his lean brown hand
+on the boy's shoulder, and looking at him earnestly: "I took yer away
+from your 'appy 'ome because, though the 'ome might have been 'appy in
+its own sweet way, you wasn't. I wanted to set yer on the track of yer
+'ighborn parents. I wanted to make a man of yer. I want to do the best
+for yer now, so I put it to yer straight: If yer likes to come along of
+me altogether, I'll pay yer wages on the next round, and when yer gets
+a little older I'll take yer into partnership and leave yer the
+business when I die. It's a man's life and a free life, and I think yer
+likes it, don't yer?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul, "it's foine."
+
+"On the other hand, as I said afore, I won't stand in yer way, and if
+yer thinks you'll get nearer to your 'igh-born parents by hitching up
+with Mr. Architect, well--you're old enough to choose. I leave it to
+you."
+
+But Paul had already chosen. The Road had its magical fascination, to
+which he would have surrendered all his boyish soul, had not the call
+of his destiny been more insistent. The Road led nowhither. Princes and
+princesses were as rare as hips and haws in summer-time. Their
+glittering equipages did not stop the van, nor did they stand at the
+emblazoned gateways of great parks waiting patiently for long-lost
+sons. He knew that he must seek them in their own social world, and to
+this he would surely be raised by his phantasmagorial income of thirty
+shillings a week.
+
+"You won't object to my keeping a friendly eye on yer for the next year
+or two?" asked Barney Bill, with twisted mouth and a kindly, satirical
+glance.
+
+Paul flushed. He had the consciousness of being a selfish,
+self-centered little beast, not half enough grateful to Barney Bill for
+delivering him out of the House of Bondage and leading him into the
+Land of Milk and Honey. He was as much stung by the delicately implied
+rebuke as touched by the solicitude as to his future welfare. Romantic
+words, such as he had read in the story-books, surged vaguely in his
+head, but he could find none to utter. He kept silent for a few
+moments, his hand in his breeches pocket. Presently he drew it forth
+rather slowly, and held out the precious cornelian heart to his
+benefactor.
+
+"I 'ud like to give it thee," said Paul.
+
+Barney Bill took it. "Thank 'ee, sonny. I'll remember that you gave it
+to me. But I won't keep yer talisman. 'Ere, see--" he made a pretence
+to spit on it--"that's for luck. Barney Bill's luck, and good wishes."
+
+So Paul pocketed the heart again, immensely relieved by his friend's
+magnanimity, and the little sentimental episode was over.
+
+A month later, when Barney Bill started on his solitary winter
+pilgrimage in the South of England, he left behind him a transmogrified
+Paul, a Paul, thanks to his munificence, arrayed in decent garments,
+including collar and tie (insignia of caste) and an overcoat (symbol of
+luxury), for which Paul was to repay him out of his future earnings; a
+Paul lodged in a small but comfortable third-floor-back, a bedroom all
+to himself, with a real bed, mattress, pillow, sheets, and blankets all
+complete, and a looking-glass, and a stand with ewer and basin so
+beautiful that, at first, Paul did not dare wash for fear of making the
+water dirty; a Paul already engaged for a series of sittings by Mr.
+Cyrus Rowlatt, R.A., his head swimming with the wonder of the
+fashionable painter's studio; a Paul standing in radiant confidence
+upon the brink of life.
+
+"Sonny," said Barney Bill, when he said good-bye, "d'yer see them there
+lovely lace-up boots you've got on?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul, regarding them complacently.
+
+"Well, they've got to take yer all the way up the hill, like the young
+man what's his name?--Excelsure--in the piece of poetry you recite; but
+they'll only do it if they continues to fit. Don't get too big for 'em.
+At any rate, wait till they're worn out and yer can buy another pair
+with yer own money."
+
+Paul grinned, because he did not know what else to do, so as to show
+his intellectual appreciation of the parable; but in his heart, for all
+his gratitude, he thought Barney bill rather a prosy moralizer. It was
+one of the disabilities of advanced old age. Alas! what can bridge the
+gulf between fourteen and fifty?
+
+"Anyhow, you've got a friend at the back of yer, sonny, and don't make
+no mistake about it. If you're in trouble let me know. I can't say
+fairer than that, can I?"
+
+That, for a season, was the end of Barney Bill, and Paul found himself
+thrillingly alone in London. At first its labyrinthine vastness
+overwhelmed him, causing him to feel an unimportant atom, which may
+have been good for his soul, but was not agreeable to his vanity. By
+degrees, however, he learned the lay of the great thoroughfares,
+especially those leading to the quarters where artists congregate, and,
+conscious of purpose and of money jingling in his pocket, he began to
+hold his head high in the crowded streets. In the house in Barn Street,
+off the Euston Road, where he lodged, he was called "Mr. Paul" by his
+landlady, Mrs. Seddon, and her thirteen-year-old daughter, Jane, which
+was comforting and stimulating. Jane, a lanky, fair, blue-eyed girl,
+who gave promise of good looks, attended to his modest wants with a
+zeal somewhat out of proportion to the payment received. Paul had the
+novel sensation of finding some one at his beck and call. He beckoned
+and called often, for the sheer pleasure of it. So great was the change
+in his life that, in these early days, it seemed as if he had already
+come into his kingdom. He strutted about, poor child, like the prince
+in a fairy tale, and, in spite of Barney Bill's precepts, he outgrew
+his boots immediately. Mrs. Seddon, an old friend of Barney Bill, whom
+she addressed and spoke as Mr. William, kept a small shop in which she
+sold newspapers and twine and penny bottles of ink. In the little
+back-parlour Mrs. Seddon and Tane and Paul had their meals, while the
+shop boy, an inconsiderable creature with a perpetual cold in his head,
+attended to the unexpected customer. To Paul, this boy, with whom a few
+months ago he would have joyously changed places, was as the dust
+beneath his feet. He sent him on errands in a lordly way, treating him
+as, indeed, he had treated the youth of Budge Street after his triumph
+over Billy Goodge, and the boy obeyed meekly. Paul believed in himself;
+the boy didn't. Almost from the beginning he usurped an ascendancy over
+the little household. For all their having lived in the great maelstrom
+of London, he found his superficial experience of life larger than that
+of mother and daughter. They had never seen machinery at work, did not
+know the difference between an elm and a beech and had never read Sir
+Walter Scott. Mrs. Seddon, thin, careworn and slackly good-natured,
+ever lamented the loss of an astonishingly brilliant husband; Jane was
+markedly the more competent of the two. She had character, and, even
+while slaving for the romantic youth, made it clear to him that for no
+other man alive would she so demean herself. Paul resolved to undertake
+her education.
+
+The months slipped by golden with fulfilment. News of the beautiful boy
+model went the round of the studios. Those were simpler times (although
+not so very long ago) in British art than the present, and the pretty
+picture was still in vogue. As Mr. Rowlatt, the young architect, had
+foretold, Paul had no difficulty in obtaining work. Indeed, it was
+fatally easy. Mr. Cyrus Rowlatt, R.A., had launched him. Being
+fabulously paid, he thought his new profession the most aristocratic
+calling in the world. In a remarkably short time he was able to repay
+Barney Bill. The day when he purchased the postal order was the
+proudest in his life. The transaction gave him a princely feeling. He
+alone of boys, by special virtue of his origin, was capable of such a
+thing. Again, his welcome in the painting world confirmed him in the
+belief that he was a personage, born to great things. Posed on the
+model throne, the object of the painter's intense scrutiny, he swelled
+ingenuously with the conviction of his supreme importance. The lazy
+luxury of the model's life appealed to his sensuous temperament. He
+loved the warmth, the artistic setting of the studios; the pictures,
+the oriental rugs, the bits of armour, the old brocade, the rich
+cushions. If he had not been born to it, why had he not remained, like
+all 'the youth of Bludston, amid the filth and clatter of the factory?
+He loved, too, to hear the studio talk, though at first he comprehended
+little of it. The men and women for whom he sat possessed the same
+quality as his never-forgotten goddess and Lady Chudley and the young
+architect--a quality which he recognized keenly, but for which his
+limited vocabulary could find no definition. Afterward he realized that
+it was refinement in manner and speech and person. This quality he felt
+it essential to acquire. Accordingly he played the young ape to those
+who aroused his admiration.
+
+One day when Jane entered the back-parlour he sprang from his seat and
+advanced with outstretched hand to meet her: "My dear Lady Jane, how
+good of you to come! Do let me clear a chair for you."
+
+"What are you playing at?" asked Jane.
+
+"That's the way to receive a lady when she calls on you.
+
+"Oh!" said Jane.
+
+He practised on her each newly learned social accomplishment. He minced
+his broad Lancashire, when he spoke to her, in such a way as to be
+grotesquely unintelligible. By listening to conversations he learned
+many amazing social facts; among them that the gentry had a bath every
+morning of their lives. This stirred his imagination to such a pitch
+that he commanded Jane to bring up the matutinal washtub to his
+bedroom. By instinct refined he revelled in the resultant sensation of
+cleanliness. He paid great attention to his attire, modelling himself,
+as far as he could, on young Rowlatt, the architect, on whom he
+occasionally called to report progress. He bought such neckties and
+collars as Rowlatt wore and submitted them for Jane's approval. She
+thought them vastly genteel. He also entertained her with whatever
+jargon of art talk he managed to pick up. Thus, though the urchin gave
+himself airs and invested himself with affectations, which rendered him
+intolerable to all of his own social status, except the placid Mrs.
+Seddon and the adoring Jane, he was under the continuous influence of a
+high ambition. It made him ridiculous, but it preserved him from
+vicious and vulgar things. If you are conscious of being a prince in
+disguise qualifying for butterfly entrance into your kingdom, it
+behoves you to behave in a princely manner, not to consort with lewd
+fellows and not to neglect opportunities for education. You owe to
+yourself all the good that you can extract from the world. Acting from
+this point of view, and guided by the practical advice of young
+Rowlatt, he attended evening classes, where he gulped down knowledge
+hungrily. So, what with sitting and studying and backward and forward
+journeying, and educating Jane, and practising the accomplishments of a
+prince, and sleeping the long sound sleep of a tired youngster, Paul
+had no time to think of evil. He was far too much absorbed in himself.
+
+Meanwhile, of Bludston not a sign. For all that he had heard of search
+being made for him, he might have been a runaway kitten. Sometimes he
+wondered what steps the Buttons had taken in order to find him. If they
+had communicated with the police, surely, at some stage of their
+journey, Barney Bill would have been held up and questioned. But had
+they even troubled to call in the police? Barney Bill thought not, and
+Paul agreed. The police were very unpopular in Budge Street--almost as
+unpopular as Paul. In all probability the Buttons were only too glad to
+be rid of him. If he found no favour in the eyes of Mrs. Button, in the
+eyes of Button he was detestable. Occasionally he spoke of them to
+Barney Bill on his rare appearances in London, but for prudential
+motives the latter had struck Bludston out of his itinerary and could
+give no information. At last Paul ceased altogether to think of them.
+They belonged to a far-distant past already becoming blurred in his
+memory.
+
+So Paul lived his queer sedulous life, month after month, year after
+year, known among the studios as a quaint oddity, drawn out indulgently
+by the men, somewhat petted, monkey-fashion, by the women, forgotten by
+both when out of their presence, but developing imperceptibly day by
+day along the self-centring line. A kindly adviser suggested a
+gymnasium to keep him in condition for professional purposes. He took
+the advice, and in the course of time became a splendid young animal, a
+being so physically perfect as to be what the good vicar of Bludston
+had called him in tired jest--a lusus naturae. But though proud of his
+body as any finely formed human may honorably be, a far higher
+arrogance saved him from Narcissus vanity. It was the inner and
+essential Paul and not the outer investiture that was born to great
+things.
+
+In his eighteenth year he gradually awoke to consciousness of change.
+One of his classmates at the Polytechnic institute, with whom he had
+picked a slight acquaintance, said one evening as they were walking
+homeward together: "I shan't be coming here after next week. I've got a
+good clerkship in the city. What are you doing?"
+
+"I'm an artist's model," said Paul.
+
+The other, a pale and perky youth, sniffed. His name was Higgins. "Good
+Lord! What do you mean?"
+
+"I'm a model in the life class of the Royal Academy School," said Paul,
+proudly.
+
+"You stand up naked in front of all kinds of people for them to paint
+you?"
+
+"Of course," said Paul.
+
+"How beastly!" said Higgins.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Just that," said Higgins. "It's beastly!"
+
+A minute or two afterward he jumped on a passing omnibus, and
+thenceforward avoided Paul at the Polytechnic Institute.
+
+This uncompromising pronouncement on the part of Higgins was a shock;
+but together with other incidents, chiefly psychological, vague,
+intangible phenomena of his spiritual development, it showed Paul the
+possibility of another point of view. He took stock of himself. From
+the picturesque boy he had grown into the physically perfect man. As a
+model he was no longer sought after for subject pieces. He was in
+clamorous demand at Life Schools, where he drew a higher rate of pay,
+but where he was as impersonal to the intently working students as the
+cast of the Greek torso which other students were copying in the next
+room. The intimacy of the studio, the warmth and the colour and the
+meretricious luxury were gone from his life. On the other hand he was
+making money. He had fifty pounds in the Savings Bank, the maximum of
+petty thrift which an incomprehensive British Government encourages,
+and a fair, though unknown, sum in an iron money-box hidden behind his
+washstand. Up to now he had had no time to learn how to spend money.
+When he took to smoking cigarettes, which he had done quite recently,
+he regarded himself as a man.
+
+Higgins's "How beastly!" rang in his head. Although he could not quite
+understand the full meaning of the brutal judgment, it brought him
+disquiet and discontent. For one thing, like the high-road, his
+profession led nowhither. The thrill of adventure had gone from it. It
+was static, and Paul's temperament was dynamic. He had also lost his
+boyish sense of importance, of being the central figure in the little
+stage. Disillusion began to creep over him. Would he do nothing else
+but this all his life? Old Erricone, the patriarchal, white-bearded
+Italian, the doyen of the models of London, came before his mind, a
+senile posturer, mumbling dreary tales of his inglorious achievements:
+how he was the Roman Emperor in this picture and Father Abraham in the
+other; how painters could not get on without him; how once he had been
+summoned from Rome to London; how Rossetti had shaken hands with him.
+Paul shivered at the thought of himself as the Erricone of a future
+generation.
+
+The next day was Saturday, and he had no sitting. The morning he spent
+in his small bedroom in the soothing throes of literary composition.
+Some time ago he had thought it would be a mighty fine thing to be a
+poet, and had tried his hand at verse. Finding he possessed some
+facility, he decided that he was a poet, and at once started an epic
+poem in rhyme on the Life of Nelson, the material being supplied by
+Southey. This morning he did the Battle of the Baltic.
+
+ He put the glass to his blind eye,
+ And said "No signals do I spy,"
+
+wrote Paul. Poetry taken at the gallop like this was a very simple
+affair, and Paul covered an amazing amount of ground.
+
+In the afternoon he walked abroad with Jane, who, having lengthened her
+skirts and put up her hair, was now a young woman looking older than
+her years. She too had developed. Her lank figure had rounded into
+pretty curves. Her sharp little Cockney face had filled out. She had a
+pleasant smile and a capable brow, and, correcting a tendency to
+fluffiness of hair of which she disapproved, and dressing herself
+neatly, made herself by no means unattractive. Constant association
+with Paul had fired her ambitions. Like him, she might have a destiny,
+though not such a majestic one, Accordingly she had studied stenography
+and typewriting, with a view to earning her livelihood away from the
+little shop, which did not offer the prospect of a dazzling career. At
+the back of her girlish mind was the desire to keep pace with Paul in
+his upward flight, so that he should not be ashamed of her when he sat
+upon the clouds in glory. In awful secrecy she practised the social
+accomplishments which Paul brought home. She loved her Saturday and
+Sunday excursions with Paul--of late they had gone far afield: the
+Tower, Greenwich, Richmond--exploring London and making splendid
+discoveries such as Westminster Abbey and a fourpenny tea garden at
+Putney. She scarcely knew whether she cared for these things for
+themselves; but she saw them through Paul coloured by his vivid
+personality. Once on Chelsea Bridge he had pointed out a peculiarly
+ugly stretch of low-tide mud, and said: "Look at that." She, by
+unprecedented chance, mistaking his tone, had replied: "How lovely!"
+And she had thought it lovely, until his stare of rebuke and wonderment
+brought disillusion and spurting tears, which for the life of him he
+could not understand. It is very foolish, and often suicidal, of men to
+correct women for going into rapture over mud flats. On that occasion,
+however, the only resultant harm was the conviction in the girl's heart
+that the presence of Paul turned mud flats into beds of asphodel. Then,
+just as she saw outer things through his eyes, she felt herself
+regarded by outer eyes through him. His rare and absurd beauty made him
+a cynosure whithersoever he went. London, vast and seething, could
+produce no such perfect Apollo. When she caught the admiring glances of
+others of her sex, little Jane drew herself up proudly and threw back
+insolent glances of triumph. "You would like to be where I am, wouldn't
+you?" the glance would say, with the words almost formulated in her
+mind. "But you won't. You never will be. I've got him. He's walking out
+with me and not with you. I like to see you squirm, you envious little
+cat." Jane was not a princess, she was merely a child of the people;
+but I am willing to eat my boots if it can be satisfactorily proved
+that there is a princess living on the face of the earth who would not
+be delighted at seeing another woman cast covetous eyes on the man she
+loved, and would not call her a cat (or its homonym) for doing so.
+
+On this mild March afternoon Paul and Jane walked in the Euston Road,
+he in a loose blue serge suit, floppy black tie, low collar and black
+soft felt hat (this was in the last century, please remember--epoch
+almost romantic, so fast does time fly), she in neat black braided
+jacket and sailor hat. They looked pathetically young.
+
+"Where shall we go?" asked Jane.
+
+Paul, in no mood for high adventure, suggested Regent's Park. "At least
+we can breathe there," said he.
+
+Jane sniffed up the fresh spring air, unconscious of the London taint,
+and laughed. "Why, what's the matter with the Euston Road?"
+
+"It's vulgar," said Paul. "In the Park the hyacinths and the daffodils
+will be out."
+
+What he meant he scarcely knew. When one is very young and out of tune
+with life, one is apt to speak discordantly.
+
+They mounted a westward omnibus. Paul lit a cigarette and smoked almost
+in silence until they alighted by the Park gates. As they entered, he
+turned to her suddenly. "Look here, Jane, I want to ask you something.
+The other night I told a man I was an artist's model, and he said 'How
+beastly!' and turned away as if I wasn't fit for him to associate with.
+What was he driving at?"
+
+"He was a nasty cad," said Jane promptly.
+
+"Of course he was," said Paul. "But why did he say it? Do you think
+there's anything beastly in being a model?"
+
+"Certainly not." She added in modification: "That is if you like it."
+
+"Well, supposing I don't like it?"
+
+She did not reply for a minute or two. Then: "If you really don't like
+it, I should be rather glad."
+
+"Why?" asked Paul.
+
+She raised a piteous face.
+
+"Yes, tell me," he insisted. "Tell me why you agree with that cad
+Higgins?"
+
+"I don't agree with him."
+
+"You must."
+
+They fenced for a while. At last he pinned her down.
+
+"Well, if you want to know," she declared, with a flushed cheek, "I
+don't think it's a man's job."
+
+He bit his lip. He had asked for the truth and he had got it. His own
+dark suspicions were confirmed. Jane glanced at him fearful of offence.
+When they had walked some yards he spoke. "What would you call a man's
+job?"
+
+Jane hesitated for an answer. Her life had been passed in a sphere
+where men carpentered or drove horses or sold things in shops. Deeply
+impressed by the knowledge of Paul's romantic birth and high destiny
+she could not suggest any such lowly avocations, and she did not know
+what men's jobs were usually executed by scions of the nobility. A
+clerk's work was certainly genteel; but even that would be lowering to
+the hero. She glanced at him again, swiftly. No, he was too beautiful
+to be penned up in an office from nine to six-thirty every day of his
+life. On the other hand her feminine intuition appreciated keenly the
+withering criticism of Higgins. Ever since Paul had first told her of
+his engagements at the Life Schools she had shrunk from the idea. It
+was all very well for the boy; but for the man--and being younger than
+he, she regarded him now as a man--there was something in it that
+offended her nice sense of human dignity.
+
+"Well," he said. "Tell me, what do you call a man's job?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know," she said in distress; "something you do with your
+hands or your brain."
+
+"You think being a model is undignified."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"So do I," said Paul. "But I'm doing things with my brain, too, you
+know," he added quickly, anxious to be seen again on his pedestal. "I
+am getting on with my epic poem. I've done a lot since you last heard
+it. I'll read you the rest when we get home."
+
+"That will be lovely," said Jane, to whom the faculty of rhyming was a
+never-ceasing wonder. She would sit bemused by the jingling lines and
+wrapt in awe at the minstrel.
+
+They sat on a bench by the flower-beds, gay in their spring charm of
+belated crocus and hyacinth and daffodil, with here and there a
+precocious tulip. Paul, sensitive to beauty, discoursed on flowers. Max
+Field had a studio in St. John's Wood opening out into a garden, which
+last summer was a dream of delight. He described it. When he came into
+his kingdom he intended to have such a garden.
+
+"You'll let me have a peep at it sometimes, won't you?" said Jane.
+
+"Of course," said Paul.
+
+The lack of enthusiasm in his tone chilled the girl's heart. But she
+did not protest. In these days, in spite of occasional outspokenness
+she was still a humble little girl worshipping her brilliant companion
+from afar.
+
+"How often could I come?" she asked.
+
+"That," said he, in his boyish pashadom, "would depend on how good you
+were."
+
+Obedient to the thought processes of her sex, she made a bee line to
+the particular.
+
+"Oh, Paul, I hope you're not angry."
+
+"At what?"
+
+"At what I said about your being a model."
+
+"Not a bit," said he. "If I hadn't wanted to know your opinion, I
+wouldn't have asked you."
+
+She brightened. "You really wanted to know what I thought?"
+
+"Naturally," said Paul. "You're the most commonsense girl I've ever
+met."
+
+Paul walked soberly home. Jane accompanied him--on wings.
+
+On Monday Paul went to the Life School and stripped with a heavy heart.
+Jane was right. It was not a man's job. The fact, too, of his doing it
+lowered him in her esteem, and though he had no romantic thoughts
+whatever with regard to Jane, he enjoyed being Lord Paramount in her
+eyes. He went into the studio and took up his pose; and as he stood on
+the model throne, conspicuous, glaring, the one startling central
+object, Higgins's "How beastly!" came like a material echo and smote
+him in the face. He felt like Adam when he first proceeded to his
+primitive tailoring. A wave of shame ran through him. He looked around
+the great silent room, at the rows of students, each in front of an
+easel, using his naked body for their purposes. A phrase flashed across
+his mind--in three years his reading had brought vocabulary--they were
+using his physical body for their spiritual purposes. For the moment he
+hated them all fiercely. They were a band of vampires. Habit and
+discipline alone saved him from breaking his pose and fleeing headlong.
+But there he was fixed, like marble, in an athlete's attitude, showing
+rippling muscles of neck and chest and arms and thighs all developed by
+the gymnasium into the perfection of Greek beauty, and all useless,
+more useless even, as far as the world's work was concerned, than the
+muscles of a racehorse. There he was fixed, with outstretched limbs and
+strained loins, a human being far more alive than the peering,
+measuring throng, far more important, called by a destiny infinitely
+higher than theirs. And none of them suspected it. For the first time
+he saw himself as they saw him. They admired him as a thing, an animal
+trained especially for them, a prize bullock. As a human being they
+disregarded him. Nay, in the depth of their hearts they despised him.
+Not one of them would have stood where he did. He would have considered
+it--rightly--as degrading to his manhood.
+
+The head of the school snapped his fingers impatiently and fussed up to
+the model-stand. "What's the matter? Tired already? Take it easy for a
+minute, if you like."
+
+"No," said Paul, instinctively stiffening himself. "I'm never tired."
+
+It was his boast that he could stand longer in a given pose than any
+other model, and thereby he had earned reputation.
+
+"Then don't go to pieces, my boy," said the head of the school, not
+unkindly. "You're supposed to be a Greek athlete and not Venus rising
+from the sea or a jelly at a children's party."
+
+Paul flushed all over, and insane anger shook him. How dared the man
+speak to him like that? He kept the pose, thinking wild thoughts. Every
+moment the strain grew less bearable, the consciousness of his
+degradation more intense. He longed for something to happen, something
+dramatic, something that would show the vampires what manner of man he
+was. He was histrionic in his anguish.
+
+A fly settled on his back--a damp, sluggish fly that had survived the
+winter--and it crawled horribly up his spine. He bore it for a few
+moments, and then his over-excited nerves gave way and he dashed his
+hand behind him. Somebody laughed. He raised his clenched fists and
+glared at the class.
+
+"Ay, yo' can laugh--you can laugh till yo' bust!" he cried, falling
+back into his Lancashire accent. "But yo'll never see me, here agen.
+Never, never, never, so help me God!"
+
+He rushed away. The head of the school followed him and, while he was
+dressing, reasoned with him.
+
+"Nay," said Paul. "Never agen. Aw'm doan wi' th' whole business."
+
+And as Paul walked home through the hurrying streets, he thought
+regretfully of twenty speeches which would have more adequately
+signified his indignant retirement from the profession.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+PAUL'S model-self being dead, he regarded it with complacency and set
+his foot on it, little doubting that it was another stepping-stone.
+
+He spoke loftily of his independence.
+
+"But how are you going to earn your living?" asked Jane, the practical.
+
+"I shall follow one of the arts," Paul replied. "I think I am a poet,
+but I might be a painter or a musician."
+
+"You do sing and play lovely," said Jane.
+
+He had recently purchased from a pawnshop a second-hand mandoline,
+which he had mastered by the aid of a sixpenny handbook, and he would
+play on it accompaniments to sentimental ballads which he sang in a
+high baritone.
+
+"I'll not choose yet awhile," said Paul, disregarding the tribute.
+"Something will happen. The 'moving finger' will point--"
+
+"What moving finger?"
+
+"The finger of Destiny," said Paul.
+
+And, as the superb youth predicted, something did happen a day or two
+afterwards.
+
+They were walking in Regent Street, and stopped, as was their wont,
+before a photographer's window where portraits of celebrities were
+exposed to view. Paul loved this window, had loved it from the moment
+of discovery, a couple of years before. It was a Temple of Fame. The
+fact of your portrait being exhibited, with your style and title
+printed below, marked you as one of the great ones of the earth. Often
+he had said to Jane: "When I am there you'll be proud, won't you?"
+
+And she had looked up to him adoringly and wondered why he was not
+there already.
+
+It was Paul's habit to scrutinize the faces of those who had achieved
+greatness, Archbishops, Field-Marshals, Cabinet Ministers, and to
+speculate on the quality of mind that had raised them to their high
+estate; and often he would shift his position, so as to obtain a
+glimpse of his own features in the plate-glass window, and compare them
+with those of the famous. Thus he would determine that he had the brow
+of the divine, the nose of the statesman and the firm lips of the
+soldier. It was a stimulating pastime. He was born to great things; but
+to what great things he knew not. The sphere in which his glory should
+be fulfilled was as yet hidden in the mists of time.
+
+But this morning, instead of roving over the illustrious gallery, his
+eye caught and was fascinated by a single portrait. He stood staring at
+it for a long time, lost in the thrill of thought.
+
+At last Jane touched his arm. "What are you looking at?"
+
+He pointed. "Do you see that?"
+
+"Yes. It's--" She named an eminent actor, then in the heyday of his
+fame, of whom legend hath it that his photographs were bought in
+thousands by love-lorn maidens who slept with them beneath their
+pillows.
+
+Paul drew her away from the little knot of idlers clustered round the
+window. "There's nothing that man can do that I can't do," said Paul.
+
+"You're twenty times better looking," said Jane.
+
+"I have more intelligence," said Paul.
+
+"Of course," said Jane.
+
+"I'm going to be an actor," said Paul.
+
+"Oh!" cried Jane in sudden rapture. Then her sturdy common-sense
+asserted itself. "But can you act?"
+
+"I'm sure I could, if I tried. You've only got to have the genius to
+start with and the rest is easy."
+
+As she did not dare question his genius, she remained silent.
+
+"I'm going to be an actor," said he, "and when I'm not acting I shall
+be a poet."
+
+In spite of her adoration Jane could not forbear a shaft of raillery.
+"You'll leave yourself some time to be a musician, won't you?"
+
+He laughed. His alert and retentive mind had seized, long ago, on
+Rowlatt's recommendation at the Little Bear Inn, and he had developed,
+perhaps half consciously, a half sense of humour. A whole sense,
+however, is not congruous with the fervid beliefs and soaring ambitions
+of eighteen. Your sense of humour, that delicate percipience of
+proportion, that subrident check on impulse, that touch of the divine
+fellowship with human frailty, is a thing of mellower growth. It is a
+solvent and not an excitant. It does not stimulate to sublime effort;
+but it can cool raging passion. It can take the salt from tears, the
+bitterness from judgment, the keenness from despair; but in its
+universal manifestation it would effectually stop a naval engagement.
+
+Paul laughed. "You mustn't think I brag too much, Jane," said he. "For
+anybody else I know what I say would be ridiculous. But for me it's
+different. I'm going to be a great man. I know it. If I'm not going to
+be a great actor, I shall be a great something else. God doesn't put
+such things into people's heads for nothing. He didn't take me from the
+factory in Bludston and set me here with you, walking up Regent Street,
+like a gentleman, just to throw me back into the gutter."
+
+"But who said you were going back to the gutter?" asked Jane.
+
+"Nobody. I wanted to get right with myself. But--that getting right
+with oneself--do you think it egotistic?"
+
+"I don't quite know what that is."
+
+He defined the term.
+
+"No," she said seriously. "I don't think it is. Everybody has got a
+self to consider. I don't look on it as ego-what-d'-you-call-it to
+strike out for myself instead of going on helping mother to mind the
+shop. So why should you?"
+
+"Besides, I owe a duty to my parents, don't I?" he asked eagerly.
+
+But here Jane took her own line. "I can't see that you do, considering
+that they've done nothing for you."
+
+"They've done everything for me," he protested vehemently. "They've
+made me what I am."
+
+"They didn't take much trouble about it," said Jane.
+
+They squabbled for a while after the manner of boy and girl. At last
+she cried: "Don't you see I'm proud of you for yourself and not for
+your silly old parents? What have they got to do with me? And besides,
+you'll never find them."
+
+"I don't think you know what you're talking about," he said loftily.
+"It is time we were getting home."
+
+He walked on for some time stiffly, his head in the air, not
+condescending to speak. She had uttered blasphemy. He would find his
+parents, he vowed to himself, if only to spite Jane. Presently his ear
+caught a little sniff, and looking down, saw her dabbing her eyes with
+her handkerchief. His heart softened at once. "Never mind," said he.
+"You didn't mean it."
+
+"It's only because I love you, Paul," she murmured wretchedly.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "Let us go in here"--they were passing a
+confectioner's--"and we'll have some jam-puffs."
+
+Paul went to his friend Rowlatt, who had already heard, through one of
+his assistants who had a friend in the Life School, of the dramatic end
+of the model's career.
+
+"I quite sympathize with you," Rowlatt laughed. "I've wondered how you
+stuck it so long. What are you going to do now?"
+
+"I'm going on the stage."
+
+"How are you going to get there?"
+
+"I don't know," said Paul, "but if I knew an actor, he would be able to
+tell me. I thought perhaps you might know an actor."
+
+"I do--one or two," replied Rowlatt; "but they're just ordinary
+actors--not managers; and I shouldn't think they'd be able to do
+anything for you."
+
+"Except what I say," Paul persisted. "They'll tell me how one sets
+about being an actor."
+
+Rowlatt scribbled a couple of introductions on visiting cards, and Paul
+went away satisfied. He called on the two actors. The first, in
+atrabiliar mood, advised him to sweep crossings, black shoes, break
+stones by the roadside, cart manure, sell tripe or stocks and shares,
+blow out his brains rather than enter a profession over whose portals
+was inscribed the legend, Lasciate ogni speranza--he snapped his finger
+and thumb to summon memory as if it were a dog.
+
+"Voi che intrate," continued Paul, delighted at showing off the one
+Italian tag he had picked up from his reading. And filled with one of
+the purest joys of the young literary life and therefore untouched by
+pessimistic counsel, he left the despairing actor.
+
+The second, a brighter and more successful man, talked with Paul for a
+long time about all manner of things. Having no notion of his
+antecedents, he assumed him to be a friend of Rowlatt and met him on
+terms of social equality. Paul expanded like a flower to the sun. It
+was the first time he had spoken with an educated man on common
+ground--a man to whom the great imaginative English writers were
+familiar friends, who ran from Chaucer to Lamb and from Dryden to
+Browning with amazing facility. The strong wine of allusive talk
+mounted to Paul's brain. Tingling with excitement, he brought out all
+his small artillery of scholarship and acquitted himself so well that
+his host sent him off with a cordial letter to a manager of his
+acquaintance.
+
+The letter opened the difficult door of the theatre. His absurd beauty
+of face and figure, a far greater recommendation in the eyes of the
+manager who had begun rehearsals for an elaborate romantic production
+than a knowledge of The Faerie Queene, obtained for him an immediate
+engagement--to walk on as a gilded youth of Italy in two or three
+scenes at a salary of thirty shillings a week. Paul went home and
+spread himself like a young peacock before Jane, and said: "I am an
+actor."
+
+The girl's eyes glowed. "You are wonderful."
+
+"No, not I," replied Paul modestly. "It is my star."
+
+"Have you got a big part?" asked Jane.
+
+He laughed pityingly, sweeping back his black curls. "No, you silly, I
+haven't any lines to speak"--he had at once caught up the phrase--"I
+must begin at the beginning. Every actor has to do it."
+
+"You'll get mother and me orders to come and see you, won't you?"
+
+"You shall have a box," declared Paul the magnificent.
+
+Thus began a new phase in the career of Paul Kegworthy. After the first
+few days of bewilderment on the bare, bleak stage, where oddments of
+dilapidated furniture served to indicate thrones and staircases and
+palace doors and mossy banks; where men and women in ordinary costume
+behaved towards one another in the most ridiculous way and went through
+unintelligible actions with phantom properties; where the actor-manager
+would pause in the breath of an impassioned utterance and cry out, "Oh,
+my God! stop that hammering!" where nothing looked the least bit in the
+world like the lovely ordered picture he had been accustomed to delight
+in from the shilling gallery--after the first few days he began to
+focus this strange world and to suffer its fascination. And he was
+proud of the silent part allotted to him, a lazy lute-player in
+attendance on the great lady, who lounged about on terrace steps in
+picturesque attitudes. He was glad that he was not an unimportant
+member of the crowd of courtiers who came on in a bunch and bowed and
+nodded and pretended to talk to one another and went off again. He
+realized that he would be in sight of the audience all the time. It did
+not strike him that the manager was using him merely as a piece of
+decoration.
+
+One day, however, at rehearsal the leading lady said: "If my
+lute-player could play a few chords here--or the orchestra for him-it
+would help me tremendously. I've got all this long cross with nothing
+to say."
+
+Paul seized his opportunity. "I can play the mandoline," said he.
+
+"Oh, can you?" said the manager, and Paul was handed over to the
+musical director, and the next day rehearsed with a real instrument
+which he twanged in the manner prescribed. He did not fail to announce
+himself to Jane as a musician.
+
+Gradually he found his feet among the heterogeneous band who walk on at
+London theatres. Some were frankly vulgar, some were pretentiously
+genteel, a good many were young men of gentle birth from the public
+schools and universities. Paul's infallible instinct drew him into
+timid companionship with the last. He knew little of the things they
+talked about, golf and cricket prospects, and the then brain-baffling
+Ibsen, but he listened modestly, hoping to learn. He reaped the
+advantage of having played "the sedulous ape" to his patrons of the
+studios. His tricks were somewhat exaggerated; his sweep of the hat
+when ladies passed him at the stage door entrance was lower than custom
+deems necessary; he was quicker in courteous gesture than the young men
+from the universities; he bowed more deferentially to an interlocutor
+than is customary outside Court circles; but they were all the tricks
+of good breeding. More than one girl asked if he were of foreign
+extraction. He remembered Rowlatt's question of years ago, and, as
+then, he felt curiously pleased. He confessed to an exotic strain: to
+Italian origin. Italy was romantic. When he obtained a line part and he
+appeared on the bill, he took the opportunity of changing a name linked
+with unpleasant associations which he did not regard as his own.
+Kegworthy was cast into the limbo of common things, and he became Paul
+Savelli. But this was later.
+
+He made friends at the theatre. Some of the women, by petting and
+flattery, did their best to spoil him; but Paul was too ambitious, too
+much absorbed in his dream of greatness and his dilettante literary and
+musical pursuits, too much yet of a boy to be greatly affected. What he
+prized far more highly than feminine blandishments was the new
+comradeship with his own sex. Instinctively he sought them, as a sick
+dog seeks grass, unconsciously feeling the need of them in his mental
+and moral development. Besides, the attitude of the women reminded him
+of that of the women painters in his younger days. He had no intention
+of playing the pet monkey again. His masculinity revolted. The young
+barbarian clamoured. A hard day on the river he found much more to his
+taste than sporting in the shade of a Kensington flat over tea and
+sandwiches with no matter how sentimental an Amaryllis. Jane, who had
+seen the performance, though not from a box, a couple of upper-circle
+seats being all that Paul could obtain from the acting-manager, and had
+been vastly impressed by Paul's dominating position in the stage
+fairy-world, said to him, with a sniff that choked a sigh: "Now that
+you've got all those pretty girls around you, I suppose you soon won't
+think of me any longer?"
+
+Paul waved the dreaded houris away as though they were midges. "I'm
+sick of girls," he replied in a tone of such sincerity that Jane tossed
+her head.
+
+"Oh? Then I suppose you lump me with the rest and are sick of me too?"
+
+"Don't worry a fellow," said Paul. "You're not a girl-not in that
+sense, I mean. You're a pal."
+
+"Anyway, they're lots prettier than what I am," she said defiantly.
+
+He looked at her critically, after the brutal manner of obtuse boyhood,
+and beheld an object quite agreeable to the sight. Her Londoner's
+ordinarily colourless checks were flushed, her blue eyes shone bright,
+her little chin was in the air and her parted lips showed a flash of
+white teeth. She wore a neat simple blouse and skirt and held her slim,
+half-developed figure taut. Paul shook his head. "Jolly few of
+them--without grease-paint on."
+
+"But you see them all painted up."
+
+He burst into laughter. "Then they're beastly, near by! You silly kid,
+don't you know? We've got to make up, otherwise no one in front would
+be able to see our mouths and noses and eyes. From the front we look
+lovely; but close to we're horrors."
+
+"Well, how should I know that?" asked Jane.
+
+"You couldn't unless you saw us--or were told. But now you know."
+
+"Do you look beastly too?"
+
+"Vile," he laughed.
+
+"I'm glad I didn't think of going on the stage,"' she said, childish
+yet very feminine unreason combining with atavistic puritanism. "I
+shouldn't like to paint my face."
+
+"You get used to it," said Paul, the experienced.
+
+"I think it horrid to paint your face."
+
+He swung to the door--they were in the little parlour behind the
+shop--a flash of anger in his eyes. "If you think everything I do
+horrid, I can't talk to you."
+
+He marched out. Jane suddenly realized that she had behaved badly. She
+whipped herself. She had behaved atrociously. Of course she had been
+jealous of the theatre girls; but had he not been proving to her all
+the time in what small account he held them? And now he had gone. At
+seventeen a beloved gone for an hour is a beloved gone for ever. She
+rushed to the foot of the stairs on which his ascending steps still
+creaked.
+
+"Paul!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Come back! Do come back!"
+
+Paul came back and followed her into the parlour.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said.
+
+He graciously forgave her, having already arrived at the mature
+conclusion that females were unaccountable folk whose excursions into
+unreason should be regarded by man with pitying indulgence. And, in
+spite of the seriousness with which he took himself, he was a
+sunny-tempered youth.
+
+Barney Bill, putting into the Port of London, so to speak, in order to
+take in cargo, also visited the theatre towards the end of the run of
+the piece. He waited, by arrangement, for Paul outside the stage door,
+and Paul, coming out, linked arms and took him to a blazing bar in
+Piccadilly Circus and ministered to his thirst, with a princely air.
+
+"It seems rum," said Bill, wiping his lips with the back of his hand,
+after a mighty pull at the pint tankard--"it seems rum that you should
+be standing me drinks at a swell place like this. It seems only
+yesterday that you was a two-penn'orth of nothing jogging along o' me
+in the old 'bus."
+
+"I've moved a bit since then, haven't I?" said Paul.
+
+"You have, sonny," said Barney Bill. "But"--he sighed and looked around
+the noisy glittering place, at the smart barmaids, the well-clad throng
+of loungers, some in evening dress, the half-dozen gorgeous ladies
+sitting with men at little tables by the window--"I thinks as how you
+gets more real happiness in a quiet village pub, and the beer is
+cheaper, and--gorblimey!"
+
+He ran his finger between his stringy neck and the frayed stand-up
+collar that would have sawn his head off but for the toughness of his
+hide. To do Paul honour he had arrayed himself in his best--a
+wondrously cut and heavily-braided morning coat and lavender-coloured
+trousers of eccentric shape, and a funny little billycock hat too small
+for him, and a thunder-and-lightning necktie, all of which he had
+purchased nearly twenty years ago to grace a certain wedding at which
+he had been best man. Since then he had worn the Nessus shirt of a
+costume not more than half-a-dozen times. The twisted, bright-eyed
+little man, so obviously ill at ease in his amazing garb, and the
+beautiful youth, debonair in his well-fitting blue serge, formed a
+queer contrast.
+
+"Don't you never long for the wind of God and the smell of the rain?"
+asked Barney Bill.
+
+"I haven't the time," said Paul. "I'm busy all day long."
+
+"Well, well," said Barney Bill, "the fellow wasn't far wrong who said
+it takes all sorts to make a world. There are some as likes electric
+light and some as likes the stars. Gimme the stars." And in his
+countryman's way he set the beer in his tankard swirling round and
+round before he put it again to his lips.
+
+Paul sipped his beer reflectively. "You may find happiness and peace of
+soul under the stars," said he, sagely, "and if I were a free agent I'd
+join you tomorrow. But you can't find fame. You can't rise to great
+things. I want to--well, I don't quite know what I want to do," he
+laughed, "but it's something big."
+
+"Yuss, my boy," said Barney Bill. "I understand. You was always like
+that. You haven't come any nearer finding your 'igh-born
+parents?"--there was a twinkle in his eyes--"'ave yer?"
+
+"I'm not going to bother any more about them, whoever they are," said
+Paul, lighting a cigarette. "When I was a kid I used to dream that they
+would find me and do everything for me. Now I'm a man with experience
+of life, I find that I've got to do everything for myself. And by
+George!"--he thumped the bar and smiled the radiant smile of the young
+Apollo--"I'm going to do it."
+
+Barney Bill took off his Luke's iron crown of a billycock hat and
+scratched his cropped and grizzled head. "How old are you, sonny?"
+
+"Nearly nineteen," said Paul.
+
+"By Gosh!" said Barney Bill.
+
+He put on his hat at a comfortable but rakish angle. He looked like a
+music-hall humourist. A couple of the gorgeous ladies giggled.
+
+"Yuss," said he, "you're a man with an experience of life--and nobody
+can do nothing for you but yerself. Poor old Barney Bill has been past
+helping you this many a year."
+
+"But I owe everything to you!" cried Paul, boyishly. "If it hadn't been
+for you, I should still be working in that factory at Bludston."
+
+Bill winked and nodded acquiescence as he finished his tankard.
+
+"I've often wondered--since I've grown up--what induced you to take me
+away. What was it?"
+
+Bill cocked his head on one side and regarded him queerly. "Now you're
+arsking," said he.
+
+Paul persisted. "You must have had some reason."
+
+"I suppose I was interested in them parents of yours," said Barney Bill.
+
+And that was all he would say on the subject.
+
+The days went on. The piece had run through the summer and autumn, and
+Paul, a favourite with the management, was engaged for the next
+production. At rehearsal one day the author put in a couple of lines,
+of which he was given one to speak. He now was in very truth an actor.
+Jane could no longer taunt him in her naughty moods (invariably
+followed by bitter repentance) with playing a dumb part like a trained
+dog. He had a real part, typewritten and done up in a brown-paper
+cover, which was handed to him, with lack of humour, by the assistant
+stage manager.
+
+In view of his own instantaneous success he tried to persuade Jane to
+go on the stage; but Jane had no artistic ambitions, to say nothing of
+her disinclination to paint her face. She preferred the prosaic reality
+of stenography and typewriting. No sphere could be too dazzling for
+Paul; he was born to great things, the consciousness of his high
+destiny being at once her glory and her despair; but, as regards
+herself, her outlook on life was cool and sober. Paul was peacock born;
+it was for him to strut about in iridescent plumage. She was a humble
+daw and knew her station. It must be said that Paul held out the stage
+as a career more on account of the social status that it would give to
+Jane than through a belief in her histrionic possibilities. He too,
+fond as he was of the girl with whom he had grown up, recognized the
+essential difference between them. She was as pretty, as sensible, as
+helpful a little daw as ever chattered; but the young peacock never for
+an instant forgot her daw-dom.
+
+Jane's profound common-sense reaped its reward the following spring
+when she found herself obliged to earn her livelihood. Her mother
+died, and the shop was sold, and an aunt in Cricklewood offered Jane a
+home, on condition that she paid for her keep. This she was soon able
+to do when she obtained a situation with a business firm in the city.
+The work was hard and the salary small; but Jane had a brave heart and
+held her head high. In her simple philosophy life was work, and
+dreaming an occasional luxury. Her mother's death grieved her deeply,
+for she was a girl of strong affections, and the breaking up of her
+life with Paul seemed an irremediable catastrophe.
+
+"It's just as well," said her aunt, "that there's an end of it, or
+you'd be making a fool of yourself over that young actor chap with his
+pretty face. I don't hold with any of them."
+
+But Jane was too proud to reply.
+
+On their last night together in the Barn Street house they sat alone in
+the little back-parlour as they had done for the last six years--all
+their impressionable childish days. It was the only home that Paul had
+known, and he felt the tragedy of its dissolution. They sat on the old
+horsehair sofa, behind the table, very tearful, very close together in
+spirit, holding each other's hands. They talked as the young talk--and
+the old, for the matter of that. She trembled at his wants unministered
+to in his new lodgings. He waved away prospective discomfort: what did
+it matter? He was a man and could rough it. It was she herself whose
+loss would be irreparable. She sighed; he would soon forget her. He
+vowed undying remembrance by all his gods. Some beautiful creature of
+the theatre would carry him off. He laughed at such an absurdity. Jane
+would always be his confidante, his intimate. Even though they lived
+under different roofs, they would meet and have their long happy jaunts
+together. Jane said dolefully that it could only be on Sundays, as
+their respective working hours would never correspond--"And you haven't
+given me your Sundays for a year," she added. Paul slid from the dark
+theme and, to comfort her, spoke glowingly of the future, when he
+should have achieved his greatness. He would give her a beautiful house
+with carriages and servants, and she would not have to work.
+
+"But if you are not there, what's the good of anything?" she said.
+
+"I'll come to see you, silly dear," he replied ingenuously.
+
+Before they parted for the night she threw her arms round his neck
+impulsively. "Don't quite forget me, Paul. It would break my heart.
+I've only you left now poor mother's gone."
+
+Paul kissed her and vowed again. He did not vow that he would be a
+mother to her, though to the girl's heart it seemed as if he did. The
+little girl was aching for a note in his voice that never came. Now,
+ninety-nine youths in a hundred who held, at such a sentimental moment,
+a comely and not uncared-for maiden in their arms, would have lost
+their heads (and their hearts) and vowed in the desired manner. But
+Paul was different, and Jane knew it, to her sorrow. He was by no means
+temperamentally cold; far from it. But, you see, he lived intensely in
+his dream, and only on its outer fringe had Jane her place. In the
+heart of it, hidden in amethystine mist, from which only flashed the
+diadem on her hair, dwelt the exquisite, the incomparable lady, the
+princess who should share his kingdom, while he knelt at her feet and
+worshipped her and kissed the rosy tips of her calm fingers. So, as it
+never entered his head to kiss the finger tips of poor Jane, it never
+entered his head to fancy himself in love with her. Therefore, when she
+threw herself into his arms, he hugged her in a very sincere and
+brotherly way, but kissed her with a pair of cast lips of Adonis. Of
+course he would never forget her. Jane went to bed and sobbed her heart
+out. Paul slept but little. The breaking up of the home meant the end
+of many precious and gentle things, and without them he knew that his
+life would be the poorer. And he vowed once more, to himself, that he
+would never prove disloyal to Jane.
+
+While he remained in London he saw what he could of her, sacrificing
+many a Sunday's outing with the theatre folk. Jane, instinctively aware
+of this, and finding in his demeanour, after examining it with
+femininely jealous, microscopic eyes, nothing perfunctory, was duly
+grateful, and gave him of her girlish best. She developed very quickly
+after her entrance into the world of struggle. Very soon it was the
+woman and not the child who listened to the marvellous youth's story of
+the wonders that would be. She never again threw herself into his arms,
+and he never again called her a "little silly." She was dimly aware of
+change, though she knew that the world could hold no other man for her.
+But Paul was not.
+
+And then Paul went on tour.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PAUL had been four years on the stage. Save as a memory they had as
+little influence on the colour of his after-life as his years at
+Bludston or his years in the studios. He was the man born to be king.
+The attainment of his kingdom alone mattered. The intermediary phases
+were of no account. It had been a period of struggle, hardship and, as
+far as the stage itself was concerned, disillusion. After the first
+year or so, the goddess Fortune, more fickle in Theatreland, perhaps,
+than anywhere else, passed him by. London had no use for his services,
+especially when it learned that he aspired to play parts. It even
+refused him the privilege of walking on and understudying. He drifted
+into the provinces, where, when he obtained an engagement, he found
+more scope for his ambitions. Often he was out, and purchased with his
+savings the bread of idleness. He knew the desolation of the agent's
+dingy stairs; he knew the heartache of the agent's dingy outer office.
+
+He was familiar, too, with bleak rehearsals, hours of listless waiting
+for his little scenes; with his powerlessness to get into his simple
+words the particular intonation required by an overdriven producer.
+Familiar, too, with long and hungry Sunday railway journeys when pious
+refreshment rooms are shut; with little mean towns like Bludston, where
+he and three or four of the company shared the same mean theatrical
+lodgings; with the dirty, insanitary theatres; with the ceaseless petty
+jealousies and bickerings of the ill-paid itinerant troupe. The
+discomforts affected Paul but little, he had never had experience of
+luxuries, and the life itself was silken ease compared with what it
+would have been but for Barney Bill's kidnapping. It never occurred to
+him to complain of nubbly bed and ill-cooked steak and crowded and
+unventilated dressing rooms; but it always struck him as being absurd
+that such should continue to be the lot of one predestined to
+greatness. There was some flaw in the working of destiny. It puzzled
+him.
+
+Once indeed, being out, but having an engagement ahead, and waiting for
+rehearsals to begin, he had found himself sufficiently prosperous to
+take a third-class ticket to Paris, where he spent a glorious month.
+But the prosperity never returned, and he had to live on his memories
+of Paris.
+
+During these years books were, as ever, his joy and his consolation. He
+taught himself French and a little German. He read history, philosophy,
+a smattering of science, and interested himself in politics. So
+aristocratic a personage naturally had passionate Tory sympathies. Now
+and again--but not often, for the theatrical profession is generally
+Conservative--he came across a furious Radical in the company and
+tasted the joy of fierce argument. Now and again too, he came across a
+young woman of high modern cultivation, and once or twice narrowly
+escaped wrecking his heart on the Scylline rock of her intellect. It
+was only when he discovered that she had lost her head over his
+romantic looks, and not over his genius and his inherited right to
+leadership, that he began to question her intellectual sincerity. And
+there is nothing to send love scuttling away with his quiver between
+his legs like a note of interrogation of that sort. The only touch of
+the morbid in Paul was his resentment at owing anything to his mere
+personal appearance. He could not escape the easy chaff of his fellows
+on his "fatal beauty." He dreaded the horrible and hackneyed phrase
+which every fresh intimacy either with man or woman would inevitably
+evoke, and he hated it beyond reason. There was a tour during which he
+longed for small-pox or a broken nose or facial paralysis, so that no
+woman should ever look at him again and no man accuse him in vulgar
+jest.
+
+He played small utility parts and understudied the leading man. On the
+rare occasions when he played the lead, he made no great hit. The
+company did not, after the generous way of theatre folks, surround him,
+when the performance was over, with a chorus of congratulation. The
+manager would say, "Quite all' right, my boy, as far as it goes, but
+still wooden. You must get more life into it." And Paul, who knew
+himself to be a better man in every way than the actor whose part he
+was playing, just as in his childhood days he knew himself to be a
+better man than Billy Goodge, could not understand the general lack of
+appreciation. Then he remembered the early struggles of the great
+actors: Edmund Kean, who on the eve of his first appearance at Drury
+Lane cried, "If I succeed I shall go mad!"; of Henry Irving (then at
+his zenith) and the five hundred parts he had played before he came to
+London; he recalled also the failure of Disraeli's first speech in the
+House of Commons and his triumphant prophecy. He had dreams of that
+manager on his bended knees, imploring him, with prayerful hands and
+streaming eyes, to play Hamlet at a salary of a thousand a week and of
+himself haughtily snapping his fingers at the paltry fellow.
+
+Well, which one of us who has ever dreamed at all has not had such
+dreams at twenty? Let him cast at Paul the first stone.
+
+And then, you must remember, Paul's faith in his vague but glorious
+destiny was the dynamic force of his young life. Its essential mystery
+kept him alert and buoyant. His keen, self-centred mind realized that
+his search on the stage for the true expression of his genius was only
+empirical. If he failed there, it was for him to try a hundred other
+spheres until he found the right one. But just as in his childish days
+he could not understand why he was not supreme in everything, so now he
+could not appreciate the charge of wooden inferiority brought against
+him by theatrical managers.
+
+He had been on the stage about three years when for the first time in
+his emancipated life something like a calamity befell him. He lost
+Jane. Like most calamities it happened in a foolishly accidental
+manner. He received a letter from Jane during the last three weeks of a
+tour--they always kept up an affectionate but desultory
+correspondence--giving a new address. The lease of her aunt's house
+having fallen in, they were moving to the south side of London. When he
+desired to answer the letter, he found he had lost it and could not
+remember the suburb, much less the street and number, whither Jane had
+migrated. A letter posted to the old address was returned through the
+post. The tour over, and he being again in London, he went on an errand
+of inquiry to Cricklewood, found the house empty and the neighbours and
+tradespeople ignorant. The poorer classes of London in their migrations
+seldom leave a trail behind them. Their correspondence being rare, it
+is not within their habits of life to fill up post-office forms with a
+view to the forwarding of letters. He could not write to Jane because
+he did not in the least know where she was.
+
+He reflected with dismay that Jane could, for the same reason, no
+longer write to him. Ironic chance had so arranged that the landlady
+with whom he usually lodged in town, and whose house he used as a
+permanent address, had given up letting lodgings at the beginning of
+the tour, and had drifted into the limbo of London. Jane's only guide
+to his whereabouts had been the tour card which he had sent her as
+usual, giving dates and theatres. And the tour was over. On the chance
+that Jane, not hearing from him, should address a letter to the last
+theatre on the list, he communicated at once with the local management.
+But as local managements of provincial theatres shape their existences
+so as to avoid responsibilities of any kind save the maintenance of
+their bars and the deduction of their percentages from the box-office
+receipts, Paul knew that it was ludicrous to expect it to interest
+itself in the correspondence of an obscure member of a fourth-rate
+company which had once played to tenth-rate business within its
+mildewed walls. Being young, he wrote also to the human envelope
+containing the essence of stale beer, tobacco and lethargy that was the
+stage doorkeeper. But he might just as well have written to the station
+master or the municipal gasworks. As a matter of fact Jane and he were
+as much lost to one another as if the whole of England had been
+primaeval forest.
+
+It was a calamity which he regarded with dismay. He had many friends of
+the easy theatrical sort, who knew him as Paul Savelli, a romantically
+visaged, bright-natured, charming, intellectual, and execrably bad
+young actor. But there was only one Jane who knew him as little Paul
+Kegworthy. No woman he had ever met--and in the theatrical world one is
+thrown willy-nilly into close contact with the whole gamut of the
+sex--gave him just the same close, intimate, comforting companionship.
+From Jane he hid nothing. Before all the others he was conscious of
+pose. Jane, with her cockney common-sense, her shrewdness, her
+outspoken criticism of follies, her unfailing sympathy in essentials,
+was welded into the very structure of his being. Only when he had lost
+her did he realize this. Amidst all the artificialities and pretences
+and pseudo-emotionalities of his young actor's life, she was the one
+thing that was real. She alone knew of Bludston, of Barney Bill, of the
+model days the memory of which made him shiver. She alone (save Barney
+Bill) knew of his high destiny--for Paul, quick to recognize the
+cynical scepticism of an indifferent world, had not revealed the Vision
+Splendid to any of his associates. To her he could write; to her, when
+he was in London, he could talk; to her he could outpour all the jumble
+of faith, vanity, romance, egotism and poetry that was his very self,
+without thought of miscomprehension. And of late she had mastered the
+silly splenetics of childhood. He had an uncomfortable yet comforting
+impression that latterly she had developed an odd, calm wisdom, just as
+she had developed a calm, generous personality. The last time he had
+seen her, his quick sensitiveness had noted the growth from girl to
+woman. She was large, full-bosomed, wide-browed, clear-eyed. She had
+not worried him about other girls. She had reproved him for confessed
+follies in just the way that man loves to be reproved. She had mildly
+soared with him into the empyrean of his dreams. She had enjoyed
+whole-heartedly, from the back row of the dress-circle, the play to
+which he had taken her--as a member of the profession he had, in Jane's
+eyes, princely privileges--and on the top of the Cricklewood omnibus
+she had eaten, with the laughter and gusto of her twenty years, the
+exotic sandwiches he had bought at the delicatessen shop in Leicester
+Square. She was the ideal sister.
+
+And now she was gone, like a snow-flake on a river. For a long while it
+seemed absurd, incredible. He went on all sorts of preposterous
+adventures to find her. He walked through the city day after day at the
+hours when girls and men pour out of their honeycombs of offices into
+the streets. She had never told him where she was employed, thinking
+the matter of little interest; and he, in his careless way, had never
+inquired. Once he had suggested calling for her at her office, and she
+had abruptly vetoed the suggestion. Paul was too remarkable a young man
+to escape the notice of her associates; her feelings towards him were
+too fine to be scratched by jocular allusion. After a time, having
+failed to meet her in the human torrents of Cheapside and Cannon
+Street, Paul gave up the search. Jane was lost, absolutely lost--and,
+with her, Barney Bill. He went on tour again, heavy-hearted. He felt
+that, in losing these two, he had committed an act of base ingratitude.
+
+He had been four years on the stage and had grown from youth into
+manhood. But one day at three-and-twenty he found himself as poor in
+pence, though as rich in dreams, as at thirteen.
+
+Necessity had compelled him to take what he could get. This time it was
+a leading part; but a leading part in a crude melodrama in a fit-up
+company. They had played in halls and concert rooms, on pier pavilions,
+in wretched little towns. It was glorious July Weather and business was
+bad--so bad that the manager abruptly closed the treasury and
+disappeared, leaving the company stranded a hundred and fifty miles
+from London, with a couple of weeks' salary unpaid.
+
+Paul was packing his clothes in the portmanteau that lay on the narrow
+bed in his tiny back bedroom, watched disconsolately by a sallow,
+careworn man who sat astride the one cane chair, his hat on the back of
+his head, the discoloured end of a cigarette between his lips.
+
+"It's all very well for you to take it cheerfully," said the latter.
+"You're young. You're strong. You're rich. You've no one but yourself.
+You haven't a wife and kids depending on you."
+
+"I know it makes a devil of a difference," replied Paul, disregarding
+the allusion to his wealth. As the leading man, he was the most highly
+paid member of the disastrous company, and he had acquired sufficient
+worldly wisdom to know that to him who has but a penny the possessor of
+a shilling appears arrogantly opulent. "But still," said he, "what can
+we do? We must get back to London and try again."
+
+"If there was justice in this country that son of a thief would get
+fifteen years for it. I never trusted the skunk. A fortnight's salary
+gone and no railway fare to London. I wish to God I had never taken it
+on. I could have gone with Garbutt in The White Woman--he's straight
+enough--only this was a joint engagement. Oh, the swine!"
+
+He rose with a clatter, threw his cigarette on the floor and stamped on
+it violently.
+
+"He's a pretty bad wrong 'un," said Paul. "We hadn't been going a
+fortnight before he asked me to accept half salary, swearing he would
+make it up, with a rise, as soon as business got better. Like an idiot,
+I consented."
+
+His friend sat down again hopelessly. "I don't know what's going to
+become of us. The missus has pawned everything she has got, poor old
+girl! Oh, it's damned hard! We had been out six months."
+
+"Poor old chap!" said Paul, sitting on the bed beside his portmanteau.
+"How does Mrs. Wilmer take it?"
+
+"She's knocked endways. You see," cried Wilmer desperately, "we've had
+to send home everything we could scrape together to keep the
+kids--there's five of them; and now--and now there's nothing left. I'm
+wrong. There's that." He fished three or four coppers from his pocket
+and held them out with a harsh laugh. "There's that after twenty years'
+work in this profession."
+
+"Poor old chap!" said Paul again. He liked Wilmer, a sober, earnest,
+ineffectual man, and his haggard, kindly-natured wife. They had put on
+a brave face all through the tour, letting no one suspect their
+straits, and doing both him and other members of the company many
+little acts of kindness and simple hospitality. In the lower submerged
+world of the theatrical profession in which Paul found himself he had
+met with many such instances of awful poverty. He had brushed elbows
+with Need himself. That morning he had given, out of his scanty
+resources, her railway fare to a tearful and despairing girl who played
+the low-comedy part. But he had not yet come across any position quite
+so untenable as that of Wilmer. Forty odd years old, a wife, five
+children, all his life given honestly to his calling--and threepence
+half-penny to his fortune.
+
+"But, good God!" said he, after a pause, "your kiddies? If you have
+nothing--what will happen to them?"
+
+"Lord knows," groaned Wilmer, staring in front of him, his elbows on
+the back of the chair and his head between his fists.
+
+"And Mrs. Wilmer and yourself have got to get back to London."
+
+"I've got the dress suit I wear in the last act. It's fairly new. I can
+get enough on it."
+
+"But that's part of your outfit--your line of business; you'll want it
+again," said Paul.
+
+Wilmer had played butlers up and down the land for many years. Now and
+again, when the part did not need any special characterization, he
+obtained London engagements. He was one of the known stage butlers.
+
+"I can hire if I'm pushed," said he. "It's hell, isn't it? Something
+told me not to go out with a fit-up. We'd never come down to it before.
+And I mistrusted Larkins--but we were out six months. Paul, my boy,
+chuck it. You're young; you're clever; you've had a swell education;
+you come of gentlefolk--my father kept a small hardware shop in
+Leicester--you have"--the smitten and generally inarticulate man
+hesitated--"well, you have extraordinary personal beauty; you have
+charm; you could do anything you like in the world, save act--and you
+can't act for toffee. Why the blazes do you stick to it?"
+
+"I've got to earn my living just like you," said Paul, greatly
+flattered by the artless tribute to his aristocratic personality and
+not offended by the professional censure which he knew to be just.
+"I've tried all sorts of other things-music, painting, poetry,
+novel-writing--but none of them has come off."
+
+"Your people don't make you an allowance?"
+
+"I've no people living," said Paul, with a smile--and when Paul smiled
+it was as if Eros's feathers had brushed the cheek of a Praxitelean
+Hermes; and then with an outburst half sincere, half braggart--"I've
+been on my own ever since I was thirteen."
+
+Wilmer regarded him wearily. "The missus and I have always thought you
+were born with a silver spoon in your mouth."
+
+"So I was," Paul declared from his innermost conviction. "But," he
+laughed, "I lost it before my teeth came and I could get a grip on it."
+
+"Do you mean to say," exclaimed Wilmer, "that you're not doing this for
+fun?"
+
+"Fun?" cried Paul. "Fun? Do you call this comic?" He waved his hand
+comprehensively, indicating the decayed pink-and-purple wall-paper, the
+ragged oil-cloth on the floor, the dingy window with its dingier
+outlook, the rickety deal wash-stand with the paint peeling off, a
+horrible clothless tray on a horrible splotchy chest of drawers,
+containing the horrible scraggy remains of a meal. "Do you think I
+would have this if I could command silken sloth? I long like hell, old
+chap, for silken sloth, and if I could get it, you wouldn't see me
+here."
+
+Wilmer rose and stretched out his hand. "I'm sorry, dear boy," said he.
+"The wife and I thought it didn't very much matter to you. We always
+thought you were a kind of young swell doing it for amusement and
+experience--and because you never put on side, we liked you."
+
+Paul rose from the bed and put his hand on Wilmer's shoulder. "And now
+you're disappointed?"
+
+He laughed and his eyes twinkled humorously. His vagabond life had
+taught him some worldly wisdom. The sallow and ineffectual man looked
+confused. His misery was beyond the relief of smiles.
+
+"We're all in the same boat, old chap," said Paul, "except that I'm
+alone and haven't got wife and kids to look after."
+
+"Good-bye, my boy," said Wilmer. "Better luck next time. But chuck it,
+if you can."
+
+Paul held his hand for a while. Then his left hand dived into his
+waistcoat pocket and, taking the place of his right, thrust three
+sovereigns into Wilmer's palm. "For the kiddies," said he.
+
+Wilmer looked at the coins in his palm, and then at Paul, and the tears
+spurted. "I can't, my boy. You must be as broke as any of us--you--half
+salary--no, my boy, I can't. I'm old enough to be your father. It's
+damned good of you--but it's my one pride left--the pride of both of
+us--the missus and me--that we've never borrowed money--"
+
+"But it isn't borrowed, you silly ass," cried Paul cheerfully. "It's
+just your share of the spoils, such as they are. I wish to God it was
+more." With both hands he clasped the thin, ineffectual fingers over
+the coins and pushed the man' with his young strength out of the door.
+"It's for the kiddies. Give them my love," he cried, and slammed the
+door and locked it from the inside.
+
+"Poor old chap!" said he.
+
+Then he went through his pockets and laid the contents on the narrow
+mantel-piece. These were a gold watch and chain, a cornelian heart
+fixed to the free end of the chain, a silver cigarette case, a couple
+of keys, one sovereign, four shillings, three pennies and two
+half-pennies. A trunk already fastened and filled with books and
+clothes, and the portmanteau on the bed, contained the rest of his
+possessions. In current coin his whole fortune amounted to one pound,
+four shillings and fourpence. Luckily he had paid his landlady. One
+pound four and fourpence to begin again at three-and-twenty the battle
+of life on which he had entered at thirteen. He laughed because he was
+young and strong, and knew that such reverses were foreordained
+chapters in the lives of those born to a glorious destiny. They were
+also preordained chapters in the lives of those born to failure, like
+poor old Wilmer. He was conscious of the wide difference between Wilmer
+and himself. Good Heavens! To face the world at forty-three, with wife
+and children and threepence-halfpenny, and the once attendant hope
+replaced by black-vestured doom! Poor Wilmer! He felt certain that
+Wilmer had not been able to pay his landlady, and he felt that he had
+been mean in keeping back the other sovereign.
+
+The sudden loss, however, of three-fourths of his fortune brought him
+up against practical considerations. The more he had in his pocket when
+he arrived in London, the longer could he subsist. That was important,
+because theatrical engagements are not picked up in a hurry. Now; the
+railway fare would swallow a goodly number of shillings. Obviously it
+was advisable to save the railway fare; and the only way to do this was
+to walk to London. His young blood thrilled at the notion. It was
+romantic. It was also inspiring of health and joy. He had been rather
+run down lately, and, fearful of the catastrophe which had in fact
+occurred, he had lived this last week very sparingly---chiefly on
+herrings and tea. A hundred and fifty miles' tramp along the summer
+roads, with bread and cheese and an occasional glass of beer to keep
+him going, would be just the thing to set him up again. He looked in
+the glass. Yes, his face was a bit pinched and his eyes were rather too
+bright. A glorious tramp to London, thirty or forty miles a day in the
+blazing and beautiful sunshine, was exactly what he needed.
+
+Joyously he unpacked his trunk and took from it a Norfolk jacket suit
+and stockings, changed, and, leaving his luggage with his landlady, who
+was to obey further instructions as to its disposal, marched buoyantly
+away through the sun-filled streets of the little town, stick in hand,
+gripsack on shoulder, and the unquenchable fire of youth and hope in
+his heart.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MISS URSULA WINWOOD, hatless, but with a cotton sunshade swinging over
+her shoulder, and with a lean, shiny, mahogany-coloured Sussex spaniel
+trailing behind, walked in her calm, deliberate way down the long
+carriage drive of Drane's Court. She was stout and florid, and had no
+scruples as to the avowal of her age, which was forty-three. She had
+clear blue eyes which looked steadily upon a complicated world of
+affairs, and a square, heavy chin which showed her capacity for dealing
+with it. Miss Ursula Winwood knew herself to be a notable person, and
+the knowledge did not make her vain or crotchety or imperious. She took
+her notability for granted, as she took her mature good looks and her
+independent fortune. For some years she had kept house for her widowed
+brother, Colonel Winwood, Conservative Member for the Division of the
+county in which they resided, and helped him efficiently in his
+political work. The little township of Morebury--half a mile from the
+great gates of Drane's Court--felt Miss Winwood's control in diverse
+ways. Another town, a little further off, with five or six millions of
+inhabitants, was also, through its newspapers, aware of Miss Winwood.
+Many leagues, societies, associations, claimed her as President,
+Vice-President, or Member of Council. She had sat on Royal Commissions.
+Her name under an appeal for charity guaranteed the deserts of the
+beneficiaries. What she did not know about housing problems, factory
+acts, female prisons, hospitals, asylums for the blind, decayed
+gentlewomen, sweated trades, dogs' homes and Friendly Societies could
+not be considered in the light of knowledge. She sat on platforms with
+Royal princesses, Archbishops welcomed her as a colleague, and Cabinet
+Ministers sought her counsel.
+
+For some distance from the porch of the red-brick, creeper-covered
+Queen-Anne house the gravel drive between the lawns blazed in the
+afternoon sun. For this reason, the sunshade. But after a while came an
+avenue of beech and plane and oak casting delectable shade on the drive
+and its double edging of grass, and the far-stretching riot of flowers
+beneath the trees, foxgloves and canterbury bells and campanulas and
+delphiniums, all blues and purples and whites, with here and there the
+pink of dog-roses and gorgeous yellow splashes of celandine. On
+entering the stately coolness, Miss Winwood closed her sunshade and
+looked at her watch, a solid timepiece harboured in her belt. A knitted
+brow betrayed mathematical calculation. It would take her five minutes
+to reach the lodge gate. The train bringing her venerable uncle,
+Archdeacon Winwood, for a week's visit would not arrive at the station
+for another three minutes, and the two fat horses would take ten
+minutes to drag from the station the landau which she had sent to meet
+him. She had, therefore, eight minutes to spare. A rustic bench invited
+repose. Graciously she accepted the invitation.
+
+Now, it must be observed that it was not Miss Winwood's habit to waste
+time. Her appointments were kept to the minute, and her appointment
+(self-made on this occasion) was the welcoming of her uncle, the
+Archdeacon, on the threshold of Drane's Court. But Miss Winwood was
+making holiday and allowed herself certain relaxations. Her brother's
+health having broken down, he had paired for the rest of the session
+and gone to Contrexeville for a cure. She had therefore shut up her
+London house in Portland Place, Colonel Winwood's home while Parliament
+sat, and had come to her brother's house, Drane's Court, her home when
+her presence was not needed in London. She was tired; Drane's Court,
+where she had been born and had lived all her girlhood's life, was
+restful; and the seat in the shade of the great beech was cunningly
+curved. The shiny, mahogany-coloured spaniel, prescient of siesta,
+leaped to her side and lay down with his chin on her lap and blinked
+his yellow eyes.
+
+She lay back on the seat, her hand on the dog's head, looking
+contentedly at the opposite wilderness of bloom and the glimpses,
+through the screen of trees and shrubs, of the sunlit stretches of park
+beyond. She loved Drane's Court. Save for the three years of her
+brother's short married life, it had been part of herself. A Winwood, a
+very younger son of the Family--the Family being that of which the Earl
+of Harpenden is Head (these things can only be written of in capital
+letters)--had acquired wealth in the dark political days of Queen Anne,
+and had bought the land and built the house, and the property had never
+passed into alien hands. As for the name, he had used that of his wife,
+Viscountess Drane in her own right,--a notorious beauty of whom, so
+History recounts, he was senilely enamoured and on whose naughty
+account he was eventually run through the body by a young Mohawk of a
+paramour. They fought one spring dawn in the park--the traditional spot
+could be seen from where Ursula Winwood was sitting.
+
+Ursula and her brother were proud of the romantic episode, and would
+relate it to guests and point out the scene of the duel. Happy and
+illusory days of Romance now dead and gone! It is not conceivable that,
+generations hence, the head of a family will exhibit with pride the
+stained newspaper cuttings containing the unsavoury details of the
+divorce case of his great-great-grandmother.
+
+This aspect of family history seldom presented itself to Ursula
+Winwood. It did not do so this mellow and contented afternoon.
+Starlings mindful of a second brood chattered in the old walnut trees
+far away on the lawn; thrushes sang their deep-throated bugle-calls;
+finches twittered. A light breeze creeping up the avenue rustled the
+full foliage languorously. Ursula Winwood closed her eyes. A bumble-bee
+droned between visits to foxglove bells near by. She loved bumble-bees.
+They reminded her of a summer long ago when she sat, not on this
+seat--as a matter of fact it was in the old walled garden a quarter of
+a mile away--with a gallant young fellow's arms about her and her head
+on his shoulder. A bumble-bee had droned round her while they kissed.
+She could never hear a bumble-bee without thinking of it. But the
+gallant young fellow had been killed in the Soudan in eighteen
+eighty-five, and Ursula Winwood's heart had been buried in his sandy
+grave. That was the beginning and end of her sentimental history. She
+had recovered from the pain of it all and now she loved the bumble-bee
+for invoking the exquisite memory. The lithe Sussex spaniel crept
+farther on her lap and her hand caressed his polished coat. Drowsiness
+disintegrated the exquisite memories. Miss Ursula Winwood fell asleep.
+
+The sudden plunging of strong young paws into her body and a series of
+sharp barks and growls awakened her with a start, and, for a second,
+still dazed by the drowsy invocation of the bumble-bee, she saw
+approaching her the gallant fellow who had been pierced through the
+heart by a Soudanese spear in eighteen eighty-five. He was dark and
+handsome, and, by a trick of coincidence, was dressed in loose
+knickerbocker suit, just as he was when he had walked up that very
+avenue to say his last good-bye. She remained for a moment tense,
+passively awaiting co-ordination of her faculties. Then clear awake,
+and sending scudding the dear ghosts of the past, she sat up, and
+catching the indignant spaniel by the collar, looked with a queer,
+sudden interest at the newcomer. He was young, extraordinarily
+beautiful; but he staggered and reeled like a drunken man. The spaniel
+barked his respectable disapproval. In his long life of eighteen months
+he had seen many people, postmen and butcher boys and casual diggers in
+kitchen gardens, whose apparent permit to exist in Drane's Court had
+been an insoluble puzzle; but never had he seen so outrageous a
+trespasser. With unparalleled moral courage he told him exactly what he
+thought of him. But the trespasser did not hear. He kept on advancing.
+Miss Winwood rose, disgusted, and drew herself up. The young man threw
+out his hands towards her, tripped over the three-inch-high border of
+grass, and fell in a sprawling heap at her feet.
+
+He lay very still. Ursula Winwood looked down upon him. The shiny brown
+spaniel took up a strategic position three yards away and growled, his
+chin between his paws. But the more Miss Winwood looked, and her blue
+eyes were trained to penetrate, the more was she convinced that both
+she and the dog were wrong in their diagnosis. The young man's face was
+deadly white, his cheeks gaunt. It was evidently a grave matter. For a
+moment or so she had a qualm of fear lest he might be dead. She bent
+down, took him in her capable grip and composed his inert body
+decently, and placed the knapsack he was wearing beneath his head. The
+faintly beating heart proved him to be alive, but her touch on his brow
+discovered fever. Kneeling by his side, she wiped his lips with her
+handkerchief, and gave herself up to the fraction of a minute's
+contemplation of the most beautiful youth she had ever seen. So there
+he lay, a new Endymion, while the most modern of Dianas hung over him,
+stricken with great wonderment at his perfection.
+
+In this romantic attitude was she surprised, first by the coachman of
+the landau and pair as he swung round the bend of the drive, and then
+by the Archdeacon, who leaned over the door of the carriage. Miss
+Winwood sprang to her feet; the coachman pulled up, and the Archdeacon
+alighted.
+
+"My dear Uncle Edward"--she wrung his hand--"I'm so glad to see you. Do
+help me grapple with an extraordinary situation."
+
+The Archdeacon smiled humorously. He was a spare man of seventy, with
+thin, pointed, clean-shaven face, and clear blue eyes like Miss
+Winwood's. "If there's a situation, my dear Ursula, with which you
+can't grapple," said he, "it must indeed be extraordinary."
+
+She narrated what had occurred, and together they bent over the
+unconscious youth. "I would suggest," said she, "that we put him into
+the carriage, drive him up to the house, and send for Dr. Fuller."
+
+"I can only support your suggestion," said the Archdeacon.
+
+So the coachman came down from his box and helped them to lift the
+young man into the landau; and his body swayed helplessly between Miss
+Winwood and the Archdeacon, whose breeches and gaiters were smeared
+with dust from his heavy boots. A few moments afterwards he was carried
+into the library and laid upon a sofa, and Miss Winwood administered
+restoratives. The deep stupor seemed to pass, and he began to moan.
+
+Miss Winwood and the housekeeper stood by his side. The Archdeacon, his
+hands behind his back, paced the noiseless Turkey carpet. "I hope,"
+said he, "your doctor will not be long in coming."
+
+"It looks like a sunstroke," the housekeeper remarked, as her mistress
+scrutinized the clinical thermometer.
+
+"It doesn't," said Miss Winwood bluntly. "In sunstroke the face is
+either congested or clammy. I know that much. He has a temperature of
+103."
+
+"Poor fellow!" said the Archdeacon.
+
+"I wonder who he is," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"Perhaps this may tell us," said the Archdeacon.
+
+From the knapsack, carelessly handled by the servant who had brought it
+in, had escaped a book, and the servant had laid the book on the top of
+the knapsack. The Archdeacon took it up.
+
+"Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici and Urn Burial. On the flyleaf,
+'Paul Savelli.' An undergraduate, I should say, on a walking tour."
+
+Miss Winwood took the book from his hands--a little cheap reprint. "I'm
+glad," she said.
+
+"Why, my dear Ursula?"
+
+"I'm very fond of Sir Thomas Browne, myself," she replied.
+
+Presently the doctor came and made his examination. He shook a grave
+head. "Pneumonia. And he has got it bad. Perhaps a touch of the sun as
+well." The housekeeper smiled discreetly. "Looks half-starved, too.
+I'll send up the ambulance at once and get him to the cottage hospital."
+
+Miss Winwood, a practical woman, was aware that the doctor gave wise
+counsel. But she looked at Paul and hesitated. Paul's destiny, though
+none knew it, hung in the balance. "I disapprove altogether of the
+cottage hospital," she said.
+
+"Eh?" said the doctor.
+
+The Archdeacon raised his eyebrows. "My dear Ursula, I thought you had
+made the Morebury Cottage Hospital the model of its kind."
+
+"Its kind is not for people who carry about Sir Thomas Browne in their
+pocket," retorted the disingenuous lady. "If I turned him out of my
+house, doctor, and anything happened to him, I should have to reckon
+with his people. He stays here. You'll kindly arrange for nurses. The
+red room, Wilkins,--no, the green--the one with the small oak bed. You
+can't nurse people properly in four-posters. It has a south-east
+aspect"--she turned to the doctor--"and so gets the sun most of the
+day. That's quite right, isn't it?"
+
+"Ideal. But I warn you, Miss Winwood, you may be letting yourself in
+for a perfectly avoidable lot of trouble."
+
+"I like trouble," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"You're certainly looking for it," replied the doctor glancing at Paul
+and stuffing his stethoscope into his pocket. "And in this case, I can
+promise you worry beyond dreams of anxiety."
+
+The word of Ursula Winwood was law for miles around. Dr. Fuller, rosy,
+fat and fifty, obeyed, like everyone else; but during the process of
+law-making he had often, before now, played the part of an urbane and
+gently satirical leader of the opposition.
+
+She flashed round on him, with a foolish pain through her heart that
+caused her to catch her breath. "Is he as bad as that?" she asked
+quickly.
+
+"As bad as that," said the doctor, with grave significance. "How he
+managed to get here is a mystery!" Within a quarter-of-an-hour the
+unconscious Paul, clad in a suit of Colonel Winwood's silk pyjamas, lay
+in a fragrant room, hung with green and furnished in old, black oak.
+Never once, in all his life, had Paul Kegworthy lain in such a room.
+And for him a great house was in commotion. Messages went forth for
+nurses and medicines and the paraphernalia of a luxurious sick-chamber,
+and-the lady of the house being absurdly anxious--for a great London
+specialist, whose fee, in Dr. Fuller's quiet eyes, would be amusingly
+fantastic.
+
+"It seems horrible to search the poor boy's pockets," said Miss
+Winwood, when, after these excursions and alarms the Archdeacon and
+herself had returned to the library; "but we must try to find out who
+he is and communicate with his people. Savelli. I've never heard of
+them. I wonder who they are."
+
+"There is an historical Italian family of that name," said the
+Archdeacon.
+
+"I was sure of it," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"That his people--are--well--all right."
+
+"Why are you sure?"
+
+Ursula was very fond of her uncle. He represented to her the fine
+flower of the Church of England--a gentleman, a scholar, an ideal
+physical type of the Anglican dignitary, a man of unquestionable piety
+and Christian charity, a personage who would be recognized for what he
+was by Hottentots or Esquimaux or attendants of wagon-lits trains or
+millionaires of the Middle West of America or Parisian Apaches. In him
+the branch of the family tree had burgeoned into the perfect cleric.
+Yet sometimes, the play of light beneath the surface of those blue
+eyes, so like her own, and the delicately intoned challenges of his
+courtly voice, exasperated her beyond measure. "It's obvious to any
+idiot, my dear," she replied testily. "Just look at him. It speaks for
+itself."
+
+The Archdeacon put his thin hand on her plump shoulder, and smiled. The
+old man had a very sunny smile. "I'm sorry to carry on a conversation
+so Socratically," said he. "But what is 'it'?"
+
+"I've never seen anything so physically beautiful, save the statues in
+the Vatican, in all my life. If he's not an aristocrat to the finger
+tips, I'll give up all my work, turn Catholic, and go into a
+nunnery--which will distress you exceedingly. And then"--she waved a
+plump hand--"and then, as I've mentioned before, he reads the Religio
+Medici. The commonplace, vulgar young man of to-day no more reads Sir
+Thomas Browne than he reads Tertullian or the Upanishads."
+
+"He also reads," said the Archdeacon, stuffing his hand into Paul's
+knapsack, against whose canvas the stiff outline of a book revealed
+itself--"he also reads"--he held up a little fat duodecimo--"the
+Chansons de Beranger."
+
+"That proves it," cried Miss Winwood.
+
+"Proves what?"
+
+His blue eyes twinkled. Having a sense of humour, she laughed and flung
+her great arm round his frail shoulders. "It proves, my venerable and
+otherwise distinguished dear, that I am right and you are wrong."
+
+"My good Ursula," said he, disengaging himself, "I have not advanced
+one argument either in favour of, or in opposition to, one single
+proposition the whole of this afternoon."
+
+She shook her head at him pityingly.
+
+The housekeeper entered carrying a double handful of odds and ends
+which she laid on the library table--a watch and chain and cornelian
+heart, a cigarette case bearing the initials "P.S.," some keys, a very
+soiled handkerchief, a sovereign, a shilling and a penny. Dr. Fuller
+had sent them down with his compliments; they were the entire contents
+of the young gentleman's pockets.
+
+"Not a card, not a scrap of paper with a name and address on it?" cried
+Miss Winwood.
+
+"Not a scrap, miss. The doctor and I searched most thoroughly."
+
+"Perhaps the knapsack will tell us more," said the Archdeacon.
+
+The knapsack, however, revealed nothing but a few toilet necessaries, a
+hunk of stale bread and a depressing morsel of cheese, and a pair of
+stockings and a shirt declared by the housekeeper to be wet through. As
+the Beranger, like the Sir Thomas Browne, was inscribed "Paul Savelli,"
+which corresponded with the initials on the cigarette case, they were
+fairly certain of the young man's name. But that was all they could
+discover regarding him.
+
+"We'll have to wait until he can tell us himself," said Miss Winwood
+later to the doctor.
+
+"We'll have to wait a long time," said he.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE London physician arrived, sat up with Paul most of the night, and
+went away the next morning saying that he was a dead man. Dr. Fuller,
+however, advanced the uncontrovertible opinion that a man was not dead
+till he died; and Paul was not dead yet. As a matter of fact, Paul did
+not die. If he had done so, there would have been an end of him and
+this history would never have been written. He lay for many days at the
+gates of Death, and Miss Winwood, terribly fearful lest they should
+open and the mysterious, unconscious shape of beauty and youth should
+pass through, had all the trouble promised her by the doctor. But the
+gates remained shut. When Paul took a turn for the better, the London
+physician came down again and declared that he was living in defiance
+of all the laws of pathology, and with a graceful compliment left the
+case in the hands of Dr. Fuller. When his life was out of danger, Dr.
+Fuller attributed the miracle to the nurses; Ursula Winwood attributed
+it to Dr. Fuller; the London physician to Paul's superb constitution;
+and Paul himself, perhaps the most wisely, to the pleasant-faced,
+masterful lady who had concentrated on his illness all the resources of
+womanly tenderness.
+
+But it was a long time before Paul was capable of formulating such an
+opinion. It was a long time before he could formulate any opinion at
+all. When not delirious or comatose, he had the devil of pleurisy
+tearing at the wall of his lung like a wild cat. Only gradually did he
+begin to observe and to question. That noiseless woman in coot blue and
+white was a nurse. He knew that. So he must be in hospital. But the
+room was much smaller than a hospital ward; and where were the other
+patients? The question worried him for a whole morning. Then there was
+a pink-faced man in gold spectacles, Obviously the doctor. Then there
+was a sort of nurse whom he liked very much, but she was not in
+uniform. Who could she be? He realized that he was ill, as weak as a
+butterfly; and the pain when he coughed was agonizing. It was all very
+odd. How had he come here? He remembered walking along a dusty road in
+the blazing sun, his head bursting, every limb a moving ache. He also
+vaguely remembered being awakened at night by a thunder storm as he lay
+snugly asleep beneath a hedge. The German Ocean had fallen down upon
+him. He was quite sure it was the German Ocean, because he had fixed it
+in his head by repeating "the North Sea or German Ocean." Mixing up
+delirious dream with fact, he clearly remembered the green waves
+rearing themselves up first, an immeasurable wall, then spreading a
+translucent canopy beneath the firmament and then descending in awful
+deluge. He had a confused memory of morning sunshine, of a cottage, of
+a hard-featured woman, of sitting before a fire with a blanket round
+his shoulders, of a toddling child smeared to the eyebrows with dirt
+and treacle whom he had wanted to wash. Over and over again, lately, he
+had wanted to wash that child, but it had always eluded his efforts.
+Once he had thought of scraping it with a bit of hoof-iron, but it had
+turned into a Stilton cheese. It was all very puzzling. Then he had
+gone on tramping along the high road. What was that about bacon and
+eggs? The horrible smell offended his nostrils. It must have been a
+wayside inn; and a woman twenty feet high with a face like a
+cauliflower--or was it spinach?--or Brussels sprouts?--silly not to
+remember--one of the three, certainly--desired to murder him with a
+thousand eggs bubbling up against rank reefs of bacon. He had escaped
+from her somehow, and he had been very lucky. His star had saved him.
+It had also saved him from a devil on a red-hot bicycle. He had stood
+quite still, calm and undismayed, in the awful path of the straddling
+Apollyon whose head was girt around with yellow fire, and had seen him
+swerve madly and fall off the machine. And when the devil had picked
+himself up, he had tried to blast him with the Great Curse of the
+Underworld; but Paul had shown him his cornelian heart, his talisman,
+and the devil had remounted his glowing vehicle and had ridden away in
+a spume of flame. The Father of Lies had tried to pass himself off as a
+postman. The memory of the shallow pretence tickled Paul so that he
+laughed; and then he half fainted in pleuritic agony.
+
+After the interlude with the devil he could recollect little. He was
+going up to London to make his fortune. A princess was waiting for him
+at the golden gate of London, with a fortune piled up in a
+coach-and-six. But being very sick and dizzy, he thought he would sit
+down and rest in a great green cathedral whose doors stood invitingly
+open ... and now he found himself in the hospital ward. Sometimes he
+felt a desire to question the blue-and-white nurse, but it seemed too
+much trouble to move his lips. Then in a flash came the solution of the
+puzzle, and he chuckled to himself over his cunning. Of course it was a
+dream. The nurse was a dream-nurse, who wanted to make him believe that
+she was real. But she was not clever enough. The best way to pay her
+out for her deception was to take no notice of her whatsoever. So
+comforted, he would go to sleep.
+
+At last one morning he woke, a miserably weak but perfectly sane man,
+and he turned his head from side to side and looked wonderingly at the
+fresh and exquisite room. A bowl of Morning Glow roses stood by his
+bedside, gracious things for fevered eyes to rest upon. A few large
+photographs of famous pictures hung on the walls. In front of him was
+the Santa Barbara of Palma Vecchio, which he recognized with a smile.
+He had read about it, and knew that the original was in Venice.
+Knowledge of things like that was comforting.
+
+The nurse, noticing the change, came up to him and spoke in a soothing
+voice. "Are you feeling better?"
+
+"I think so," said Paul. "I suppose I've been very ill."
+
+"Very ill," said the nurse.
+
+"This can't be a hospital?"
+
+"Oh, no. It's the house of some very kind, good friends. You don't know
+them," she added quickly, seeing him knit a perplexed brow. "You
+stumbled into their garden and fainted. And they're very anxious for
+you to get well and strong."
+
+"Who are they?" asked Paul.
+
+"Colonel and Miss Winwood. They will be so glad to see you better--at
+least Miss Winwood will; the Colonel's not at home."
+
+She lifted his head gently and smoothed his pillows, and ordained
+silence. Presently the doctor came, and spoke kindly. "You've had a
+narrow shave, my friend, and you're not out of the wood yet," said he.
+"And you'll have to go slow and take things for granted for some time."
+
+Then came Miss Winwood, whom he recognized as the puzzling but pleasant
+nurse out of uniform.
+
+"I don't know how to thank you for taking me in, a stranger, like
+this," said Paul.
+
+She smiled. "It's Providence, not me, that you must thank. You might
+have been taken ill by the roadside far away from anybody. Providence
+guided you here."
+
+"Providence or Destiny," murmured Paul, closing his eyes. It was absurd
+to feel so weak.
+
+"That's a theological question on which we won't enter," laughed Miss
+Winwood. "Anyhow, thank God, you're better."
+
+A little later she came to him again. "I've been so anxious about your
+people--you see, we've had no means of communicating with them."
+
+"My people?" asked Paul, surprised.
+
+"Yes. They must be wondering what has become of you."
+
+"I have no people," said Paul.
+
+"No people? What do you mean?" she asked sharply, for the moment
+forgetful of the sick room. She herself had hundreds of relations. The
+branches of her family tree were common to half the country families of
+England. "Have you no parents--brothers or sisters--?"
+
+"None that I know of," said Paul. "I'm quite alone in the world."
+
+"Have you no friends to whom I could write about you?"
+
+He shook his head, and his great eyes, all the greater and more
+lustrous through illness, smiled into hers. "No. None that count. At
+least--there are two friends, but I've lost sight of them for years.
+No--there's nobody who would be in the least interested to know. Please
+don't trouble. I shall be all right."
+
+Miss Winwood put her cool hand on his forehead and bent over him. "You?
+You, alone like that? My poor boy!"
+
+She turned away. It was almost incredible. It was monstrously pathetic.
+The phenomenon baffled her. Tears came into her eyes. She had imagined
+him the darling of mother and sisters; the gay centre of troops of
+friends. And he was alone on the earth. Who was he? She turned again.
+
+"Will you tell me your name?"
+
+"Savelli. Paul Savelli."
+
+"I thought so. It was in the two books in your knapsack. A historical
+Italian name."
+
+"Yes," said Paul. "Noble. All dead."
+
+He lay back, exhausted. Suddenly a thought smote him. He beckoned. She
+approached. "My heart--is it safe?" he whispered.
+
+"Your heart?"
+
+"At the end of my watch-chain."
+
+"Quite safe."
+
+"Could I have it near me?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+Paul closed his eyes contentedly. With his talisman in his hand, all
+would be well. For the present he need take thought of nothing. His
+presence in the beautiful room being explained, there was an end of the
+perplexity of his semi-delirium. Of payment for evident devoted service
+there could be no question. Time enough when he grew well and able to
+fare forth again, to consider the immediate future. He was too weak to
+lift his head, and something inside him hurt like the devil when he
+moved. Why worry about outer and unimportant matters? The long days of
+pain and illness slipped gradually away. Miss Winwood sat by his
+bedside and talked; but not until he was much stronger did she question
+him as to his antecedents. The Archdeacon had gone away after a week's
+visit without being able to hold any converse with Paul; Colonel
+Winwood was still at Contrexeville, whence he wrote sceptically of the
+rare bird whom Ursula had discovered; and Ursula was alone in the
+house, save for a girl friend who had no traffic with the sick-chamber.
+She had, therefore, much leisure to devote to Paul. Her brother's
+scepticism most naturally strengthened her belief in him. He was her
+discovery. He grew almost to be her invention. Just consider. Here was
+a young Greek god--everyone who had a bowing acquaintance with ancient
+sculpture immediately likened Paul to a Greek god, and Ursula was not
+so far different from her cultured fellow mortals as to liken him to
+anything else--here was a young Phoebus Apollo, all the more Olympian
+because of his freedom from earthly ties, fallen straight from the
+clouds. He had fallen at her feet. His beauty had stirred her. His
+starlike loneliness had touched her heart. His swift intelligence,
+growing more manifest each day as he grew stronger, moved her
+admiration. He had, too, she realized, a sunny and sensuous nature,
+alive to beauty--even the beauty of the trivial things in his sickroom.
+He had an odd, poetical trick of phrase. He was a paragon of young
+Greek gods. She had discovered him; and women don't discover even
+mortal paragons every day in the week. Also, she was a woman of
+forty-three, which, after all, is not wrinkled and withered eld; and
+she was not a soured woman; she radiated health and sweetness; she had
+loved once in her life, very dearly. Romance touched her with his
+golden feather and, in the most sensible and the most unreprehensible
+way in the world, she fell in love with Paul.
+
+"I wonder what made you put that Santa Barbara of Palma Vecchio just
+opposite the bed," he said one day. He had advanced so far toward
+recovery as to be able to sit up against his pillows.
+
+"Don't you like it?" She turned in her chair by his bedside.
+
+"I worship it. Do you know, she has a strange look of you? When I was
+half off my head I used to mix you up together. She has such a generous
+and holy bigness--the generosity of the All-woman."
+
+Ursula flushed at the personal tribute, but let it pass without
+comment. "It's not a bad photograph; but the original--that is too
+lovely."
+
+"It's in the Church of Santa Maria Formosa in Venice," said Paul
+quickly.
+
+He had passed through a period of wild enthusiasm for Italian painting,
+and had haunted the National Gallery, and knew by heart Sir Charles
+Eastlake's edition of Kugler's unique textbook.
+
+"Ah, you know it?" said Ursula.
+
+"I've never been to Venice," replied Paul, with a sigh. "It's the dream
+of my life to go there."
+
+She straightened herself on her chair. "How do you know the name of the
+church?"
+
+Paul smiled and looked round the walls, and reflected for a moment.
+"Yes," said he in answer to his own questioning, "I think I can tell
+you where all these pictures are, though I've never seen them, except
+one. The two angels by Melozzo da Forli are in St. Peter's at Rome. The
+Sposalia of Raphael is in the Breza, Milan. The Andrea del Sarto is in
+the Louvre. That's the one I've seen. That little child of Heaven,
+playing the lute, is in the predella of an altar-piece by Vittore
+Carpaccio in the--in the--please don't tell me--in the Academia of
+Venice. Am I right?"
+
+"Absolutely right," said Miss Winwood.
+
+He laughed, delighted. At three and twenty, one--thank goodness!--is
+very young. One hungers for recognition of the wonder-inspiring self
+that lies hidden beneath the commonplace mask of clay. "And that," said
+he--"the Madonna being crowned--the Botticelli--is in the Uffizi at
+Florence. Walter Pater talks about it--you know--in his
+'Renaissance'--the pen dropping from her hand--'the high, cold words
+that have no meaning for her--the intolerable honour'! Oh, it's
+enormous, isn't it?"
+
+"I'm afraid I've not read my Pater as I ought," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"But, you must!" cried Paul, with the gloriously audacious faith of
+youth which has just discovered a true apostle. "Pater puts you on to
+the inner meaning of everything--in art, I mean. He doesn't wander
+about in the air like Ruskin, though, of course, if you get your mental
+winnowing machine in proper working order you can get the good grain
+out of Ruskin. 'The Stones of Venice' and 'The Seven Lamps' have taught
+me a lot. But you always have to be saying to yourself, 'Is this
+gorgeous nonsense or isn't it?' whereas in Pater there's no nonsense at
+all. You're simply carried along on a full stream of Beauty straight
+into the open Sea of Truth."
+
+And Ursula Winwood, to whom Archbishops had been deferential and
+Cabinet Ministers had come for, guidance, meekly promised to send at
+once for Pater's 'Renaissance' and so fill in a most lamentable gap in
+her education.
+
+"My uncle, the Archdeacon," she said, after a while, "reminded me that
+the great Savelli was a Venetian general--of Roman family; and,
+strangely enough, his name, too, was Paul. Perhaps that's how you got
+the name."
+
+"That must be how," said Paul dreamily. He had not heard of the great
+general. He had seen the name of Savelli somewhere--also that of
+Torelli--and had hesitated between the two. Thinking it no great harm,
+he wove into words the clamour of his cherished romance. "My parents
+died when I was quite young--a baby--and then I was brought to England.
+So you see"--he smiled in his winning way--"I'm absolutely English."
+
+"But you've kept your Italian love of beauty."
+
+"I hope so," said Paul.
+
+"Then I suppose you were brought up by guardians," said Ursula.
+
+"A guardian," said Paul, anxious to cut down to a minimum the mythical
+personages that might be connected with his career. "But I seldom saw
+him. He lived in Paris chiefly. He's dead now."
+
+"What a poor little uncared-for waif you must have been."
+
+Paul laughed. "Oh, don't pity me. I've had to think for myself a good
+deal, it is true. But it has done me good. Don't you find it's the
+things one learns for oneself--whether they are about life or old
+china--that are the most valuable?"
+
+"Of course," said Miss Winwood. But she sighed, womanlike, at the
+thought of the little Paul--(how beautiful he must have been as a
+child!)--being brought up by servants and hirelings in a lonely house,
+his very guardian taking no concern in his welfare.
+
+Thus it came about that, from the exiguous material supplied by Paul,
+Miss Winwood, not doubting his gentle birth and breeding, constructed
+for him a wholly fictitious set of antecedents. Paul invented as little
+as possible and gratefully accepted her suggestions. They worked
+together unconsciously. Paul had to give some account of himself. He
+had blotted Bludston and his modeldom out of his existence. The
+passionate belief in his high and romantic birth was part of his being,
+and Miss Winwood's recognition was a splendid confirmation of his
+faith. It was rather the suppressio veri of which he was guilty than
+the propositio falsi. So between them his childhood was invested with a
+vague semblance of reality in which the fact of his isolation stood out
+most prominent.
+
+They had many talks together, not only on books and art, but on the
+social subjects in which Ursula was so deeply interested. She found him
+well informed, with a curiously detailed knowledge of the everyday
+lives of the poor. It did not occur to her that this knowledge came
+from his personal experience. She attributed it to the many-sided
+genius of her paragon.
+
+"When you get well you must help us. There's an infinite amount to be
+done."
+
+"I shall be delighted," said Paul politely.
+
+"You'll find I'm a terrible person to deal with when once I've laid my
+hands on anybody," she said with a smile. "I drag in all kinds of
+people, and they can't escape. I sent young Harry Gostling--Lord
+Ruthmere's son, you know--to look into a working girls' club in the
+Isle of Dogs that was going wrong. He hated it at first, but now he's
+as keen as possible. And you'll be keen too."
+
+It was flattering to be classified with leisured and opulent young
+Guardsmen; but what, Paul reflected with a qualm, would the kind lady
+say if she learned the real state of his present fortunes? He thought
+of the guinea that lay between him and starvation, and was amused by
+the irony of her proposition. Miss Winwood evidently took it for
+granted that he was in easy circumstances, living on the patrimony
+administered during his boyhood by a careless guardian. He shrank from
+undeceiving her. His dream was beginning to come true. He was accepted
+by one of the high caste as belonging to the world where princes and
+princesses dwelt serene. If only he could put the theatre behind him,
+as he had put the rest, and make a stepping-stone of his dead actor
+self! But that was impossible, or at least the question would have to
+be fought out between himself and fortune after he had left Drane's
+Court. In the meanwhile he glowed with the ambition to leave it in his
+newly acquired splendour, drums beating, banners flying, the young
+prince returning to his romantic and mysterious solitude.
+
+The time was approaching when he should get up. He sent for his
+luggage. The battered trunk and portmanteau plastered with the labels
+of queer provincial towns did not betray great wealth. Nor did the
+contents, taken out by the man-servant and arranged in drawers by the
+nurse. His toilet paraphernalia was of the simplest and scantiest. His
+stock of frayed linen and darned underclothes made rather a poor little
+heap on the chair. He watched the unpacking somewhat wistfully from his
+bed; and, like many another poor man, inwardly resented his poverty
+being laid bare to the eyes of the servants of the rich.
+
+The only thing that the man seemed to handle respectfully--as a
+recognized totem of a superior caste--was a brown canvas case of golf
+clubs, which he stood up in a conspicuous corner of the room. Paul had
+taken to the Ancient and Royal game when first he went on tour, and it
+had been a health-giving resource during the listless days when there
+was no rehearsal or no matinee--hundreds of provincial actors, to say
+nothing of retired colonels and such-like derelicts, owe their
+salvation of body and soul to the absurd but hygienic pastime--and with
+a naturally true eye and a harmonious body trained to all demands on
+its suppleness in the gymnasium, proficiency had come with little
+trouble. He was a born golfer; for the physically perfect human is a
+born anything physical you please. But he had not played for a long
+time. Half-crowns had been very scarce on this last disastrous tour,
+and comrades who included golf in their horizon of human possibilities
+had been rarer. When would he play again? Heaven knew! So he looked
+wistfully, too, at his set of golf clubs. He remembered how he had
+bought them--one by one.
+
+"Do you want this on the dressing table?" The nurse held up a little
+oblong case.
+
+It was his make-up box, luckily tied round with string.
+
+"Good heavens, no!" he exclaimed. He wished he could have told her to
+burn it. He felt happier when all his belongings were stowed away out
+of sight and the old trunk and portmanteau hauled out of the room.
+
+Colonel Winwood came home and asked his sister pertinent questions. He
+was a bald, sad-looking man with a long grizzling moustache that
+drooped despondently. But he had a square, obstinate chin, and his
+eyes, though they seldom smiled, were keen and direct, like Miss
+Winwood's. Romance had passed him by long since. He did not believe in
+paragons.
+
+"I gather, my dear Ursula," said he in a dry voice, "that our guest is
+an orphan, of good Italian family, brought up in England by a guardian
+now dead who lived in France. Also that he is of prepossessing
+exterior, of agreeable manners, of considerable cultivation, and
+apparently of no acquaintance. But what I can't make out is: what he
+does for a living, how he came to be half-starved on his walking
+tour--the doctor said so, you remember--where he was going from and
+where he is going to when he leaves our house. In fact, he seems to be
+a very vague and mysterious person, of whom, for a woman of your
+character and peculiar training, you know singularly little."
+
+Miss Winwood replied that she could not pry into the lad's private
+affairs. Her brother retorted that a youth, in his physically helpless
+condition, who was really ingenuous, would have poured out his life's
+history into the ears of so sympathetic a woman, and have bored her to
+tears with the inner secrets of his soul.
+
+"He has high aspirations. He has told me of them. But he hasn't bored
+me a bit," said Ursula.
+
+"What does he aspire to?"
+
+"What does any brilliant young fellow of two or three and twenty aspire
+to? Anything, everything. He has only to find his path."
+
+"Yes, but what is his path?"
+
+"I wish you weren't so much like Uncle Edward, James," said Ursula.
+
+"He's a damned clever old man," said Colonel Winwood, "and I wish he
+had stayed here long enough to be able to put our young friend through
+a searching cross-examination."
+
+Ursula lifted her finger-bowl an inch from the doiley and carefully put
+it down again. It was the evening of Colonel Winwood's arrival, and
+they were lingering over coffee in the great, picture-hung and softly
+lighted dining room. Having fixed the bowl in the exact centre of the
+doiley, she flashed round on her brother. "My dear James, do you think
+I'm an idiot?"
+
+He took his cigar from his lips and looked at her with not unhumorous
+dryness. "When the world was very young, my dear," said he, "I've no
+doubt I called you so. But not since."
+
+She stretched out her hand and tapped his. She was very fond of him.
+"You can't help being a man, my poor boy, and thinking manly thoughts
+of me, a woman. But I'm not an idiot. Our young friend, as you call
+him, is as poor as a church mouse. I know it. No, don't say, 'How?'
+like Uncle Edward. He hasn't told me, but Nurse has--a heart-breaking
+history of socks and things. There's the doctor's diagnosis, too. I
+haven't forgotten. But the boy is too proud to cry poverty among
+strangers. He keeps his end up like a man. To hear him talk, one would
+think he not only hadn't a care in the world, but that he commanded the
+earth. How can one help admiring the boy's pluck and--that's where my
+reticence comes in--respecting the boy's reserve?"
+
+"H'm!" said Colonel Winwood.
+
+"But, good gracious, Jim, dear, supposing you--or any of us--men, I
+mean--had been in this boy's extraordinary position--would you have
+acted differently? You would have died rather than give your poverty
+away to absolute strangers to whom you were indebted, in the way this
+boy is indebted to us. Good God, jim"--she sent her dessert knife
+skimming across the table--"don't you see? Any reference to poverty
+would be an invitation--a veiled request for further help. To a
+gentleman like Paul Savelli, the thing's unthinkable."
+
+Colonel Winwood selected a fresh cigar, clipped off the end, and lit it
+from a silver spirit lamp by his side. He blew out the first exquisite
+puff--the smoker's paradise would be the one first full and fragrant,
+virginal puff of an infinite succession of perfect cigars--looked
+anxiously at the glowing point to see that it was exactly lighted, and
+leaned back in his chair.
+
+"What you say, dear," said he, "is plausible. Plausible almost to the
+point of conviction. But there's a hole somewhere in your argument, I'm
+sure, and I'm too tired after my journey to find it."
+
+Thus, as the stars in their courses fought against Sisera, so did they
+fight for Paul; and in both cases they used a woman as their instrument.
+
+Colonel Winwood, in spite of a masculine air of superiority, joined
+with the Archbishops and Cabinet Ministers above referred to in their
+appreciation of his sister's judgment. After all, what business of his
+were the private affairs of his involuntary guest? He paid him a visit
+the next day, and found him lying on a couch by the sunny window, clad
+in dressing gown and slippers. Paul rose politely, though he winced
+with pain.
+
+"Don't get up, please. I'm Colonel Winwood."
+
+They shook hands. Paul began to wheel an armchair from the bedside, but
+Colonel Winwood insisted on his lying down again and drew up the chair
+himself. "I'm afraid," said Paul, "I've been a sad trespasser on your
+hospitality. Miss Winwood must have told you it has scarcely been my
+fault; but I don't know how to express my thanks."
+
+As Paul made it, the little speech could not have been better. Colonel
+Winwood, who (like the seniors of every age) deplored the lack of
+manners of the rising generation, was pleased by the ever so little
+elaborate courtesy.
+
+"I'm only too glad we've pulled you round. You've had a bad time, I
+hear."
+
+Paul smiled. "Pretty bad. If it hadn't been for Miss Winwood and all
+she has done for me, I should have pegged out."
+
+"My sister's a notable woman," said the Colonel. "When she sets out to
+do a thing she does it thoroughly."
+
+"I owe her my life," said Paul simply.
+
+There was a pause. The two men, both bright-eyed, looked at each other
+for the fraction of a second. One, the aristocrat secure of his wealth,
+of his position, of himself, with no illusion left him save pride of
+birth, no dream save that of an England mighty and prosperous under
+continuous centuries of Tory rule, no memories but of stainless
+honour--he had fought gallantly for his Queen, he had lived like a
+noble gentleman, he had done his country disinterested service--no
+ambition but to keep himself on the level of the ideal which he had
+long since attained; the other the creation of nothing but of dreams,
+the child of the gutter, the adventurer, the vagabond, with no address,
+not even a back room over a sweetstuff shop in wide England, the
+possessor of a few suits of old clothes and one pound, one shilling and
+a penny, with nothing in front of him but the vast blankness of 'life,
+nothing behind him save memories of sordid struggle, with nothing to
+guide him, nothing to set him on his way with thrilling pulse and
+quivering fibres save the Vision Splendid, the glorious Hope, the
+unconquerable Faith. In the older man's eyes Paul read the calm, stern
+certainty of things both born to and achieved; and Colonel Winwood saw
+in the young man's eyes, as in a glass darkly, the reflection of the
+Vision.
+
+"And yours is a very young life," said he. "Gad! it must be wonderful
+to be twenty. 'Rich in the glory of my rising sun.' You know your
+Thackeray?"
+
+"'Riche de ma jeunesse,'" laughed Paul. "Thackeray went one better than
+Beranger, that time."
+
+"I forgot," said Colonel Winwood. "My sister told me. You go about with
+Beranger as a sort of pocket Bible."
+
+Paul laughed again. "When one is on the tramp one's choice of books is
+limited by their cubical content. One couldn't take Gibbon, for
+instance, or a complete Balzac."
+
+Colonel Winwood tugged at his drooping moustache and again scrutinized
+the frank and exceedingly attractive youth. His astonishing perfection
+of feature was obvious to anybody. Yet any inconsiderable human--a
+peasant of the Campagna, a Venetian gondolier, a swaggering brigand of
+Macedonia--could be astonishingly beautiful. And, being astonishingly
+beautiful, that was the beginning and end of him. But behind this
+merely physical attractiveness of his guest glowed a lambent
+intelligence, quick as lightning. There was humorous challenge in those
+laughing and lucent dark eyes.
+
+"Do you know your Balzac?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Paul.
+
+"I wonder if you do," said Colonel Winwood. "I'm rather a Balzacian
+myself."
+
+"I can't say I've read all Balzac. That's a colossal order," said Paul,
+rather excited-for, in his limited acquaintance with cultivated folk,
+Colonel Winwood was the only human being who could claim acquaintance
+with one of the literary gods of his idolatry--"but I know him pretty
+well. I can't stand his 'Theatre'--that's footle--but the big
+things--'Le Pere Goriot,' 'La Cousine Bette,' 'Cesar Birotteau'--what a
+great book 'Cesar Birotteau' is!--"
+
+"You're right," said Colonel Winwood, forgetful of any possible
+barriers between himself and the young enthusiast. "It's one of the
+four or five great books, and very few people recognize it."
+
+"'Le Lys dans la Vallee,'" said Paul.
+
+"There's another--"
+
+And they talked for half an hour of the Baron Nucingen, and Rastignac,
+and Hulot, and Bixiou, and Lousteau, and Gobsec, and Gaudissart, and
+Vautrin, and many another vivid personage in the human comedy.
+
+"That man could have gone on writing for a hundred years," cried Paul,
+"and he could have exhausted all the possibilities of human life."
+
+Colonel Winwood smiled courteously. "We have a bond in Balzac," said
+he. "But I must go. My sister said I mustn't tire you." He rose. "We're
+having a lot of people down here this week for the shooting. There'll
+be good sport. Pity you're not well enough to join us."
+
+Paul smiled. He had one of his flashes of tact, "I'm afraid," said he
+modestly, "that I've never fired off a gun in my life."
+
+"What?" cried the Colonel.
+
+"It's true."
+
+Colonel Winwood looked at him once more. "It's not many young men,"
+said he, "who would dare to make such a confession."
+
+"But what is the good of lying?" asked Paul, with the eyes of a cherub.
+
+"None that I know of," replied the Colonel. He returned to his chair
+and rested his hand on the back. "You play golf, anyhow," said he,
+pointing to the brown canvas bag in the corner.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Paul.
+
+"Any good?"
+
+"Fair to middling."
+
+"What's your handicap?" asked the Colonel, an enthusiastic though
+inglorious practitioner of the game.
+
+"One," said Paul.
+
+"The deuce it is!" cried the Colonel. "Mine is fifteen. You must give
+me a lesson or two when you pull round. We've a capital course here."
+
+"That's very kind of you," said Paul, "but I'm afraid I shall be well
+enough for ordinary purposes long before I'm able to handle a golf
+club."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"This silly pleurisy. It will hang about for ages!"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I'll have to go my ways from here long before I can play."
+
+"Any great hurry?"
+
+"I can't go on accepting your wonderful hospitality indefinitely," said
+Paul.
+
+"That's nonsense. Stay as long as ever you like."
+
+"If I did that," said Paul, "I would stay on forever."
+
+The Colonel smiled and shook hands with him. In the ordinary way of
+social life this was quite an unnecessary thing to do. But he acted
+according to the impulses common to a thousand of his type--and a fine
+type--in England. Setting aside the mere romantic exterior of a
+Macedonian brigand, here was a young man of the period with
+astonishingly courteous manners, of--and this was of secondary
+consideration--of frank and winning charm, with a free-and-easy
+intimacy with Balzac, of fearless truthfulness regarding his
+deficiencies, and with a golf handicap of one. The Colonel's hand and
+heart went out in instinctive coordination. The Colonel Winwoods of
+this country are not gods; they are very humanly fallible; but of such
+is the Kingdom of England.
+
+"At any rate," said he, "you mustn't dream of leaving us yet."
+
+He went downstairs and met his sister in the hall.
+
+"Well?" she asked, with just a gleam of quizzicality in her eyes, for
+she knew whence he had come.
+
+"One of these days I'll take him out and teach him to shoot," said the
+Colonel.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE shooting party came, and Paul, able to leave his room and sit in
+the sunshine and crawl about the lawn and come down to dinner, though
+early retirement was prescribed, went among the strange men and women
+of the aristocratic caste like one in a dream of bliss. Much of their
+talk, sport and personalities, was unintelligible; every man seemed to
+have killed everything everywhere and every woman seemed to know
+everybody and everybody's intimate secrets. So when conversation was
+general, Paul, who had killed nothing and knew nobody, listened in
+silent perplexity. But even the perplexity was a happiness. It was all
+so new, so fascinating. For was not this world of aristocrats--there
+were lords and ladies and great personages whose names he had read in
+the newspapers--his rightful inheritance, the sphere to which he had
+been born? And they did not always talk of things which he did not
+understand. They received him among them with kind welcome and
+courtesy. No one asked him whence he came and whither he was going.
+They took him for granted, as a guest of the Winwoods. Of course if
+Paul had seen himself on the way to rival the famous actor whose
+photograph in the window of the London Stereoscopic Company had
+inspired him with histrionic ambitions, he would have been at no pains
+to hide his profession. But between the darling of the London stage and
+a seedy member of a fit-up company lies a great gulf. He shrank from
+being associated with Mr. Vincent Crummles. One thing, however, of
+invaluable use he had brought with him from Theatreland--the dress suit
+which formed part of his stage wardrobe. There were other things, too,
+which he did not appreciate--ease of manner, victory over the lingering
+Lancastrian burr, and a knowledge of what to do with his feet and hands.
+
+One day he had a great shock. The house party were assembling in the
+drawing-room, when in sailed the great lady, the ever-memorable great
+lady, the Marchioness of Chudley, who had spoken to him and smiled on
+him in the Bludston factory. Fear laid a cold grip on his heart. He
+thought of pleading weakness and running away to the safe obscurity of
+his room. But it was too late. The procession was formed immediately,
+and he found himself in his place with his partner on his arm. Dinner
+was torture. What he said to his neighbours he knew not. He dared not
+look up the table where Lady Chudley sat in full view. Every moment he
+expected--ridiculous apprehension of an accusing conscience--Colonel
+Winwood to come and tap him on the shoulder and bid him begone. But
+nothing happened. Afterwards, in the drawing-room, Fate drove him into
+a corner near Lady Chudley, whose eyes he met clear upon him. He turned
+away hurriedly and plunged into conversation with a young soldier
+standing by. Presently he heard Miss Winwood's voice.
+
+"Mr. Savelli, I want to introduce you to Lady Chudley."
+
+The fear gripped him harder and colder. How could he explain that he
+was occupying his rightful place in that drawing-room? But he held
+himself up and resolved to face the peril like a man. Lady Chudley
+smiled on him graciously--how well he remembered her smile!--and made
+him sit by her side. She was a dark, stately woman of forty, giving the
+impression that she could look confoundedly cold and majestic when she
+chose. She wore diamonds in her hair and a broad diamond clasp to the
+black velvet round her throat.
+
+"Miss Winwood has been telling me what an awful time you've had, Mr.
+Savelli," she said pleasantly. "Now, whenever I hear of people having
+had pneumonia I always want to talk to them and sympathize with them."
+
+"That's very kind of you, Lady Chudley," said Paul.
+
+"Only a fellow-feeling. I nearly died of it once myself. I hope you're
+getting strong."
+
+"I'm feeling my strength returning every day. It's a queer new joy."
+
+"Isn't it?"
+
+They discussed the exhilaration of convalescence. It was a 'wonderful
+springtide. They reverted to the preceding misery.
+
+"You're far luckier than I was," she remarked. "You've had a comfy
+English house to be ill in. I was in a stone-cold palazzo in
+Florence--in winter. Ugh! Shall I ever forget it? I don't want to speak
+evil of Italy to an Italian--"
+
+"I'm only Italian by descent," exclaimed Paul, with a laugh, his first
+frank laugh during the whole of that gloomy evening. And he laughed
+louder than was necessary, for, as it suddenly dawned upon him that he
+did not in the least recall to her mind the grimy little Bludston boy,
+the cold hand of fear was dissolved in a warm gush of exultation. "You
+can abuse Italy or any country but England as much as you like."
+
+"Why mustn't I abuse England?"
+
+"Because it's the noblest country in the world," he cried; and, seeing
+approval in her eyes, he yielded to an odd temptation. "If one could
+only do something great for her!"
+
+"What would you like to do?" she asked.
+
+"Anything. Sing for her. Work for her. Die for her. It makes one so
+impatient to sit down and do nothing. If one could only stir her up to
+a sense of her nationality!" he went on, less lyrically, though with
+the same fine enthusiasm. "She seems to be losing it, letting the
+smaller nations assert theirs to such an extent that she is running the
+risk of becoming a mere geographical expression. She has merged herself
+in the Imperial Ideal. That's magnificent; but the Empire ought to
+realize her as the great Motherheart. If England could only wake up as
+England again, what a wonderful thing it would be!"
+
+"It would," said Lady Chudley. "And you would like to be the awakener?"
+
+"Ay!" said Paul--"what a dream!"
+
+"There was never a dream worth calling a dream that did not come true."
+
+"Do you believe that, too?" he asked delightedly. "I've held to it all
+my life."
+
+Colonel Winwood, who had been moving hostwise from group to group in
+the great drawing-room, where already a couple of bridge tables had
+been arranged, approached slowly. Lady Chudley gave him a laughing
+glance of dismissal. Paul's spacious Elizabethan patriotism, rare--at
+least in expression--among the young men of the day, interested and
+amused her.
+
+"Have you dreamed all your life of being the Awakener of England?"
+
+"I have dreamed of being so many things," he said, anxious not to
+commit himself. For, truth to say, this new ambition was but a couple
+of minutes old.
+
+It had sprung into life, however, like Pallas Athene, all armed and
+equipped.
+
+"And they have all come true?"
+
+His great eyes laughed and his curly head bent ever so slightly. "Those
+worth calling dreams," said he.
+
+A little later in the evening, when on retiring to an early bed he was
+wishing Miss Winwood good night, she said, "You're a lucky young man."
+
+"I know--but--" He looked smiling inquiry.
+
+"Lady Chudley's the most valuable woman in England for a young man to
+get on the right side of."
+
+Paul went to bed dazed. The great lady who had recognized the divine
+fire in the factory boy had again recognized it in the grown man. She
+had all but said that, if he chose, he could be the Awakener of
+England. The Awakener of England! The watchword of his new-born
+ambition rang in his brain until he fell asleep.
+
+The time soon came when the prospective Awakener of England awoke to
+the fact that he must fare forth into the sleeping land with but a
+guinea in his pocket. The future did not dismay him, for he knew now
+that his dreams came true. But he was terribly anxious, more anxious
+than ever, to leave Drane's Court with all the prestige of the
+prospective Awakener. Now, this final scene of the production could not
+be worked for a guinea. There were golden tips to servants, there was
+the first-class railway fare. Once in London--he could pawn things to
+keep him going, and a Bloomsbury landlady with whom he had lodged,
+since the loss of Jane, would give him a fortnight or three weeks'
+credit. But he had to get to London-to get there gloriously; so that
+when the turn of Fortune's wheel enabled him to seek again these
+wonderful friends in the aristocratic sphere to which he belonged, he
+could come among them untarnished, the conquering prince. But that
+miserable guinea! He racked his brains. There was his gold watch and
+chain, a symbol, to his young mind, of high estate. When he had bought
+it there crossed his mind the silly thought of its signification of the
+infinite leagues that lay between him and Billy Goodge. He could pawn
+it for ten pounds--it would be like pawning his heart's blood--but
+where? Not in Morebury, even supposing there was a pawnbroker's in the
+place. He had many friends in his profession, scattered up and down the
+land. But he had created round himself the atmosphere of the young
+magnifico. It was he who had lent, others who had borrowed. Rothschild
+or Rockefeller inviting any of them to lend him money would have
+produced less jaw-dropping amazement. Even if he sent his pride flying
+and appealed to the most friendly and generous, he shrank from the
+sacrifice he would call upon the poor devil to make. There was only his
+beautiful and symbolic watch and chain. The nearest great town where he
+could be sure of finding a pawnbroker was distant an hour's train
+journey.
+
+So on the day before that for which, in spite of hospitable
+protestations on the part of Colonel and Miss Winwood, he had fixed his
+departure, he set forth on the plea of private business, and returned
+with a heavier pocket and a heavier heart. He had been so proud, poor
+boy, of the gold insignia across his stomach. He had had a habit of
+fingering it lovingly. Now it was gone. He felt naked--in a curious way
+dishonoured. There only remained his cornelian talisman. He got back in
+time for tea and kept his jacket closely buttoned. But in the evening
+he had perforce to appear stark and ungirt--in those days Fashion had
+not yet decreed, as it does now, the absence of watchchain on evening
+dress--and Paul shambled into the drawing-room like a guest without a
+wedding garment. There were still a few people staying in the
+house--the shooting party proper, and Lady Chudley, had long since
+gone--but enough remained to be a social microcosm for Paul. Every eye
+was upon him. In spite of himself, his accusing hand went fingering the
+inanity of his waistcoat front. He also fingered, with a horrible
+fascination, the dirty piece of card that took the place of his watch
+in his pocket.
+
+One must be twenty to realize the tragedy of it. Dans un grenier qu'on
+est bien a vingt ans! To be twenty, in a garret, with the freedom and
+the joy of it! Yes; the dear poet was right. In those "brave days" the
+poignancy of life comes not in the garret, but in the palace.
+
+To-morrow, with his jacket buttoned, he could make his exit from
+Drane's Court in the desired splendour--scattering largesse to menials
+and showing to hosts the reflected glow of the golden prospects before
+him; but for this evening the glory had departed. Besides, it was his
+last evening there, and London's welcome tomorrow would be none too
+exuberant.
+
+The little party was breaking up, the ladies retiring for the night,
+and the men about to accompany Colonel Winwood to the library for a
+final drink and cigarette. Paul shook hands with Miss Winwood.
+
+"Good night--and good-bye," she said, "if you take the early train. But
+must you really go to-morrow?"
+
+"I must," said Paul.
+
+"I hope we'll very soon be seeing you again. Give me your address." She
+moved to a bridge table and caught up the marking block, which she
+brought to him. "Now I've forgotten the pencil."
+
+"I've got one," said Paul, and impulsively thrusting his fingers into
+his waistcoat pocket, flicked them out with the pencil. But he also
+flicked out the mean-looking card of which he had been hatefully
+conscious all the evening. The Imp of Mischance arranged that as Miss
+Winwood stood close by his side, it should fall, unperceived by him, on
+the folds of her grey velvet train. He wrote the Bloomsbury address and
+handed her the leaf torn from the pad. She folded it up, moved away,
+turning back to smile. As she turned she happened to look downward;
+then she stooped and picked the card from her dress. A conjecture of
+horror smote Paul. He made a step forward and stretched out his hand;
+but not before she had instinctively glanced first at the writing and
+then at his barren waistcoat. She repressed a slight gasp, regarding
+him with steady, searching eyes.
+
+His dark face flushed crimson as he took the accursed thing, desiring
+no greater boon from Heaven than instant death. He felt sick with
+humiliation. The brightly lit room grew black. It was in a stupor of
+despair that he heard her say, "Wait a bit here, till I've got rid of
+these people."
+
+He stumbled away and stood on the bearskin rug before the fireplace,
+while she joined the lingering group by the door. The two or three
+minutes were an eternity of agony to Paul. He had lost his great game.
+
+Miss Winwood shut the door and came swiftly to him and laid her hand on
+his arm. Paul hung his head and looked into the fire. "My poor boy!"
+she said very tenderly. "What are you going to do with yourself?"
+
+If it had not been for the diabolical irony of the mishap he would have
+answered with his gay flourish. But now he could not so answer. Boyish,
+hateful tears stood in his eyes and, in spite of anguished effort of
+will, threatened to fall. He continued to look into the fire, so that
+she should not see them. "I shall go on as I always have done," he said
+as stoutly as he could.
+
+"Your prospects are not very bright, I fear."
+
+"I shall keep my head above water," said Paul. "Oh, please don't!" he
+cried, shivering. "You have been so good to me. I can't bear you to
+have seen that thing. I can't stand it."
+
+"My dear boy," she said, coming a little nearer, "I don't think the
+worse of you for that. On the contrary, I admire your pluck and your
+brave attitude towards life. Indeed I do. I respect you for it. Do you
+remember the old Italian story of Ser Federigo and his falcon? How he
+hid his poverty like a knightly gentleman? You see what I mean, don't
+you? You mustn't be angry with me!"
+
+Her words were Gilead balm of instantaneous healing.
+
+"Angry?"
+
+His voice quavered. In a revulsion of emotion he turned blindly, seized
+her hand and kissed it. It was all he could do.
+
+"If I have found it out--not just now," she quickly interjected, seeing
+him wince, "but long ago--it was not your fault. You've made a gallant
+gentleman's show to the end--until I come, in a perfectly brutal way,
+and try to upset it. Tell me--I'm old enough to be your mother, and you
+must know by this time that I'm your friend--have you any resources at
+all--beyond--?" She made ever so slight a motion of her hand toward the
+hidden pawn ticket.
+
+"No," said Paul, with his sure tact and swiftly working imagination. "I
+had just come to an end of them. It's a silly story of losses and
+what-not--I needn't bother you with it. I thought I would walk to
+London, with the traditional half-crown in my pocket"--he flashed a
+wistful smile--"and seek my fortune. But I fell ill at your gates."
+
+"And now that you're restored to health, you propose in the same
+debonair fashion to--well--to resume the search?"
+
+"Of course," said Paul, all the fighting and aristocratic instincts
+returning. "Why not?"
+
+There were no tears in his eyes now, and they looked with luminous
+fearlessness at Miss Winwood. He drew a chair to the edge of the
+bearskin. "Won't you sit down, Miss Winwood?"
+
+She accepted the seat. He sat down too. Before replying she played with
+her fan rather roughly--more or less as a man might have played with
+it. "What do you think of doing?"
+
+"Journalism," said Paul. He had indeed thought of it.
+
+"Have you any opening?"
+
+"None," he laughed. "But that's the oyster I'm going to open."
+
+Miss Winwood took a cigarette from a silver box near by. Paul sprang to
+light it. She inhaled in silence half a dozen puffs. "I'm going to ask
+you an outrageous question," she said, at last. "In the first place,
+I'm a severely business woman, and in the next I've got an uncle and a
+brother with cross-examining instincts, and, though I loathe them--the
+instincts, I mean--I can't get away from them. We're down on the
+bedrock of things, you and I. Will you tell me, straight, why you went
+away to-day to--to"--she hesitated--"to pawn your watch and chain,
+instead of waiting till you got to London?"
+
+Paul threw out his arms in a wide gesture. "Why--your servants--"
+
+She cast the just lighted cigarette into the fire, rose and clapped her
+hands on his shoulders, her face aflame. "Forgive me--I knew it--there
+are doubting Thomases everywhere--and I'm a woman who deals with facts,
+so that I can use them to the confusion of enemies. Now I have them.
+Ser Federigo's watch and chain. Nicht wahr?"
+
+Remember, you who judge this sensible woman of forty-three, that she
+had fallen in love with Paul in the most unreprehensible way in the
+world; and if a woman of that age cannot fall in love with a boy
+sweetly motherwise, what is the good of her? She longed to prove that
+her polyhedral crystal of a paragon radiated pure light from every one
+of his innumerable facets. It was a matter of intense joy to turn him
+round and find each facet pure. There was also much pity in her heart,
+such as a woman might feel for a wounded bird which she had picked up
+and nursed in her bosom and healed. Ursula was loath to let her bird
+fly forth into the bleak winter.
+
+"My brother and I have been talking about you--he is your friend, too,"
+she said, resuming her seat. "How would it suit you to stay with us
+altogether?"
+
+Paul started bolt upright in his chair. "What do you mean?" he asked
+breathlessly, for the heavens had opened with dazzling unexpectedness.
+
+"In some such position as confidential secretary--at a decent salary,
+of course. We've not been able to find a suitable man since Mr.
+Kinghorne left us in the spring. He got into Parliament, you know, for
+Reddington at the by-election--and we've been muddling along with
+honorary secretaries and typists. I shouldn't suggest it to you," she
+went on, so as to give him time to think, for he sat staring at her,
+openmouthed, bewildered, his breath coming quickly--"I shouldn't
+suggest it to you if there were no chances for you in it. You would be
+in the thick of public affairs, and an ambitious man might find a path
+in them that would lead him anywhere. I've had the idea in my head,"
+she smiled, "for-some time. But I've only spoken to my brother about it
+this afternoon--he has been so busy, you see--and I intended to have
+another talk with him, so as to crystallize things--duties, money, and
+so forth--before making you any proposal. I was going to write to you
+with everything cut and dried. But"--she hesitated delicately--"I'm
+glad I didn't. It's so much more simple and friendly to talk. Now, what
+do you say?"
+
+Paul rose and gripped his hands together and looked again into the
+fire. "What can I say? I could only go on my knees to you--and that--"
+
+"That would be beautifully romantic and entirely absurd," she laughed.
+"Anyhow, it's settled. Tomorrow we can discuss details." She rose and
+put out her hand. "Good night, Paul."
+
+He bowed low. "My dearest lady," said he in a low voice, and went and
+held the door open for her to pass out.
+
+Then he flung up his arms wildly and laughed aloud and strode about the
+room in exultation. All he had hoped for and worked for was an exit of
+fantastic and barren glory. After which, the Deluge--anything. He had
+never dreamed of this sudden blaze of Fortune. Now, indeed, did the
+Great Things to which he was born lie to his hand. Queerly but surely
+Destiny was guiding him upward. In every way Chance had worked for him.
+His poverty had been a cloak of honour; the thrice-blessed pawn ticket
+a patent of nobility. His kingdom lay before him, its purple mountains
+looming through the mists of dawn. And he would enter into it as the
+Awakener of England. He stood thrilled. The ambition was no longer the
+wild dream of yesterday. From the heart of the great affairs in which
+he would have his being he could pluck his awakening instrument. The
+world seemed suddenly to become real. And in the midst of it was this
+wonderful, beautiful, dearest lady with her keen insight, her delicate
+sympathy, her warm humanity. With some extravagance he consecrated
+himself to her service.
+
+After a while he sat down soberly and took from his pocket the
+cornelian heart which his first goddess had given him twelve years ago.
+What had become of her? He did not even know her name. But what
+happiness, he thought, to meet her in the plenitude of his greatness
+and show her the heart, and say, "I owe it all to you!" To her alone of
+mortals would he reveal himself.
+
+And then he thought of Barney Bill, who had helped him on his way; of
+Rowlatt, good fellow, who was dead; and of Jane, whom he had lost. He
+wished he could write to Jane and tell her the wonderful news. She
+would understand.... Well, well! It was time for bed. He rose and
+switched off the lights and went to his room. But as he walked through
+the great, noiseless house, he felt, in spite of Fortune's bounty, a
+loneliness of soul; also irritation at having lost Jane. What a letter
+he could have written to her! He could not say the things with which
+his heart was bursting to anyone on earth but Jane. Why had he lost
+Jane? The prospective Awakener of England wanted Jane.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ONE morning Paul, with a clump of papers in his hand, entered his
+pleasant private room at Drane's Court, stepped briskly to the long
+Cromwellian table placed in the window bay, and sat down to his
+correspondence.
+
+It was gusty outside, as could be perceived by the shower of yellow
+beech leaves that slanted across the view; but indoors a great fire
+flaming up the chimney, a Turkey carpet fading into beauty, rich
+eighteenth century mezzotints on the walls, reposeful leather-covered
+chairs and a comfortable bookcase gave an atmosphere of warmth and
+coziness. Paul lit a cigarette and attacked a pile of unopened letters.
+At last he came to an envelope, thick and faintly scented, bearing a
+crown on the flap. He opened it and read:
+
+
+DEAR MR. SAVELLI:
+
+Will you dine on Saturday and help me entertain an eminent
+Egyptologist? I know nothing of Egypt save Shepheard's Hotel, and that
+I'm afraid wouldn't interest him. Do come to my rescue. Yours, SOPHIE
+ZOBRASKA.
+
+
+Paul leaned back in his chair, twiddling the letter between his
+fingers, and looked smilingly out on the grey autumn rack of clouds.
+There was a pleasant and flattering intimacy in the invitation:
+pleasant because it came from a pretty woman; flattering because the
+woman was a princess, widow of a younger son of a Royal Balkan house.
+She lived at Chetwood Park, on the other side of Morebury, and was one
+of the great ones of those latitudes. A real princess.
+
+Paul's glance, travelling back from the sky, fell upon the brass date
+indicator on the table. It marked the 2nd of October. On that day five
+years ago he had entered on his duties at Drane's Court. He laughed
+softly. Five years ago he was a homeless wanderer. Now princesses were
+begging him to rescue them from Egyptologists. With glorious sureness
+all his dreams were coming true.
+
+Thus we see our Fortunate Youth at eight-and-twenty in the heyday of
+success. If he had strutted about under Jane's admiring eyes, like a
+peacock among daws, he now walked serene, a peacock among peacocks. He
+wore the raiment, frequented the clubs, ate the dinners of the
+undeservingly rich and the deservingly great. His charm and his
+self-confidence, which a genius of tact saved from self-assertion,
+carried him pleasantly through the social world; his sympathetic
+intelligence dealt largely and strongly with the public affairs under
+his control. He loved organizing, persuading, casting skilful nets. His
+appeal for subscriptions was irresistible. He had the magical gift of
+wringing a hundred pounds from a plutocrat with the air of conferring a
+graceful favour. In aid of the Mission to Convert the Jews he could
+have fleeced a synagogue. The societies and institutions in which the
+Colonel and Ursula Winwood were interested flourished amazingly beneath
+his touch. The Girls' Club in the Isle of Dogs, long since abandoned in
+despair by the young Guardsman, grew into a popular and sweetly
+mannered nunnery. The Central London Home for the Indigent Blind, which
+had been languishing for support, in spite of Miss Winwood's efforts,
+found itself now in a position to build a much-needed wing. There was
+also, most wonderful and, important thing of all, the Young England
+League, which was covering him with steadily increasing glory. Of this
+much hereafter. But it must be remembered. Ursula complained that he
+left her nothing to do save attend dreary committee meetings; and even
+for these Paul saved her all the trouble in hunting up information. She
+was a mere figurehead.
+
+"Dearest lady," Paul would say, "if you send me about my business,
+you'll write me a character, won't you, saying that you're dismissing
+me for incorrigible efficiency?"
+
+"You know perfectly well," she would sigh, "that I would be a lost,
+lone woman without you."
+
+Whereat Paul would laugh his gay laugh. At this period of his life he
+had not a care in the world.
+
+The game of politics also fascinated him. A year or so after he joined
+the Winwoods there was a General Election. The Liberals, desiring to
+drive the old Tory from his lair, sent down a strong candidate to
+Morebury. There was a fierce battle, into which Paul threw himself,
+heart and soul. He discovered he could speak. When he first found
+himself holding a couple of hundred villagers in the grip of his
+impassioned utterance he felt that the awakening of England had begun.
+It was a delicious moment. As a canvasser he performed prodigies of
+cajolery. Extensive paper mills, a hotbed of raging Socialism,
+according to Colonel Winwood, defaced (in the Colonel's eyes) the
+outskirts of the little town.
+
+"They're wrong 'uns to a man," said the Colonel, despondently.
+
+Paul came back from among them with a notebook full of promises.
+
+"How did you manage it?" asked the Colonel.
+
+"I think I got on to the poetical side of politics," said Paul.
+
+"What the deuce is that?"
+
+Paul smiled. "An appeal to the imagination," said he.
+
+When Colonel Winwood got in by an increased majority, in spite of the
+wave of Liberalism that spread over the land, he gave Paul a gold
+cigarette case; and thenceforward admitted him into his political
+confidence. So Paul became familiar with the Lobby of the House of
+Commons and with the subjects before the Committees on which Colonel
+Winwood sat, and with the delicate arts of wire-pulling and intrigue,
+which appeared to him a monstrously fine diversion. There was also the
+matter of Colonel Winwood's speeches, which the methodical warrior
+wrote out laboriously beforehand and learned by heart. They were sound,
+weighty pronouncements, to which the House listened with respect; but
+they lacked the flashes which lit enthusiasm. One day he threw the
+bundle of typescript across to Paul.
+
+"See what you think of that."
+
+Paul saw and made daring pencilled amendments, and took it to the
+Colonel.
+
+"It's all very funny," said the latter, tugging his drooping moustache,
+"but I can't say things like that in the House."
+
+"Why not?" asked Paul.
+
+"If they heard me make an epigram, they would have a fit."
+
+"Our side wouldn't. The Government might. The Government ought to have
+fits all the time until it expires in convulsions."
+
+"But this is a mere dull agricultural question. The Board of
+Agriculture have brought it in, and it's such pernicious nonsense that
+I, as a county gentleman, have to speak against it."
+
+"But couldn't you stick in my little joke about the pigs?" asked Paul
+pleadingly.
+
+"What's that?" Colonel Winwood found the place in the script. "I say
+that the danger of swine fever arising from this clause in the Bill
+will affect every farmer in England."
+
+"And I say," cried Paul eagerly, pointing to his note, "if this clause
+becomes law, swine fever will rage through the land like a demoniacal
+possession. The myriad pigs of Great Britain, possessed of the devils
+of Socialism, will be turned into Gadarene swine hurtling down to
+destruction. You can show how they hurtle, like this--" He flickered
+his hands. "Do try it."
+
+"H'm!" said Colonel Winwood.
+
+Sorely against his will, he tried it. To his astonishment it was a
+success. The House of Commons, like Mr. Peter Magnus's friend, is
+easily amused. The exaggeration gave a cannon-ball's weight to his
+sound argument. The Government dropped the clause--it was only a
+trivial part of a wide-reaching measure--the President of the Board of
+Agriculture saying gracefully that in the miracle he hoped to bring
+about he had unfortunately forgotten the effect it might have on the
+pigs. There was "renewed laughter," but Colonel Winwood remained the
+hero of the half-hour and received the ecstatic congratulations of
+unhumorous friends. He might have defeated the Government altogether.
+In the daily round of political life nothing is so remarkable as the
+lack of sense of proportion.
+
+"It was the Gadarene swine that did it," they said.
+
+"And that," said Colonel Winwood honestly, "was my young devil of a
+secretary."
+
+Thenceforward the young wit and the fresh fancy of Paul played like a
+fountain over Colonel Winwood's and speeches.
+
+"Look here, young man," said he one day, "I don't like it. Sometimes I
+take your confounded suggestions, because they happen to fit in; but
+I'm actually getting the reputation of a light political comedian, and
+it won't do."
+
+Whereupon Paul, with his swift intuition, saw that in the case of a
+proud, earnest gentleman like Colonel Winwood the tempting emendations
+of typescript would not do. In what Miss Winwood called his subtle
+Italian way, he induced his patron to discuss the speeches before the
+process of composition. These discussions, involving the swift rapier
+play of intelligences, Colonel Winwood enjoyed. They stimulated him
+magically. He sat down and wrote his speeches, delightfully unconscious
+of what in them was Paul and what was himself; and when he delivered
+them he was proud of the impression he had made upon the House.
+
+And so, as the years passed, Paul gained influence not only in the
+little circle of Drane's Court and Portland Place, but also in the
+outer world. He was a young man of some note. His name appeared
+occasionally in the newspapers, both in connection with the Winwood
+charities and with the political machine of the Unionist party. He was
+welcomed at London dinner tables and in country houses. He was a young
+man who would go far. For the rest, he had learned to ride and shoot,
+and not to make mistakes about the genealogical relationships of
+important families. He had travelled about Europe, sometimes with the
+Winwoods, sometimes by himself. He was a young man of cultivation and
+accomplishment.
+
+On this fifth anniversary he sat gazing unseeingly at the autumn rack,
+the Princess's letter in his hand, and letting his thoughts wander down
+the years. He marvelled how valiantly the stars in their courses had
+fought for him. Even against recognition his life was charmed. Once,
+indeed, he met at the house in Portland Place a painter to whom he had
+posed. The painter looked at him keenly.
+
+"Surely we have met before?"
+
+"We have," said Paul with daring frankness. "I remember it gratefully.
+But if you would forget it I should be still more grateful."
+
+The painter shook hands with him and smiled. "You may be sure I haven't
+the least idea what you're talking about."
+
+As for Theatreland, the lower walks in the profession to which Paul had
+belonged do not cross the paths of high political society. It lay
+behind him far and forgotten. His position was secure. Here and there
+an anxious mother may have been worried as to his precise antecedents;
+but Paul was too astute to give mothers over-much cause for anxiety. He
+lived under the fascination of the Great Game. When he came into his
+kingdom he could choose; not before. His destiny was drawing him nearer
+and nearer to it, he thought, with slow and irresistible force. In a
+few years there would be Parliament, office, power, the awaking from
+stupor of an England hypnotized by malign influences. He saw himself at
+the table in the now familiar House of green benches, thundering out an
+Empire's salvation. If he thought more of the awakener than the
+awakening, it was because he was the same little Paul Kegworthy to whom
+the cornelian heart had brought the Vision Splendid in the scullery of
+the Bludston slum. The cornelian heart still lay in his waistcoat
+pocket at the end of his watch chain. He also held a real princess's
+letter in his hand.
+
+A tap at the door aroused him from his day-dream.
+
+There entered a self-effacing young woman with pencil and notebook.
+"Are you ready for me, sir?"
+
+"Not quite. Sit down for a minute, Miss Smithers. Or, come up to the
+table if you don't mind, and help me open these envelopes."
+
+Paul, you see, was a great man, who commanded the services of a
+shorthand typist.
+
+To the mass of correspondence then opened and read he added that which
+he had brought in from Colonel and Miss Winwood. From this he sorted
+the few letters which it would be necessary to answer in his own
+handwriting, and laid them aside; then taking the great bulk, he
+planted himself on the hearthrug, with his back to the fire, and,
+cigarette in mouth, dictated to the self-effacing young woman. She took
+down his words with anxious humility, for she looked upon him as a god
+sphered on Olympian heights--and what socially insecure young woman of
+lower-middle-class England could do otherwise in the presence of a
+torturingly beautiful youth, immaculately raimented, who commanded in
+the great house with a smile more royal and debonair than that of the
+master thereof, Member of Parliament though he was, and Justice of the
+Peace and Lord of the Manor? And Paul, fresh from his retrospect,
+looked at the girl's thin shoulders and sharp, intent profile, and
+wondered a little, somewhat ironically. He knew that she regarded him
+as a kind of god, for reasons of caste. Yet she was the daughter of a
+Morebury piano tuner, of unblemished parentage for generations. She had
+never known hunger and cold and the real sting of poverty. Miss Winwood
+herself knew more of drunken squalor. He saw himself a ragged and
+unwashed urchin, his appalling breeches supported by one brace,
+addressing her in familiar terms; and he saw her transfigured air of
+lofty disgust; whereupon he laughed aloud in the middle of a most
+unhumorous sentence, much to Miss Smithers' astonishment.
+
+When he had finished his dictation he dismissed her and sat down to his
+writing. After a while Miss Winwood came in. The five years had treated
+her lightly. A whitening of the hair about her brows, which really
+enhanced the comeliness of her florid complexion, a few more lines at
+corners of eyes and lips, were the only evidences of the touch of
+Time's fingers. As she entered Paul swung round from his writing chair
+and started to his feet. "Oh, Paul, I said the 20th for the Disabled
+Soldiers and Sailors, didn't I? I made a mistake. I'm engaged that
+afternoon."
+
+"I don't think so, dearest lady," said Paul.
+
+"I am."
+
+"Then you've told me nothing about it," said Paul the infallible.
+
+"I know," she said meekly. "It's all my fault. I never told you. I've
+asked the Bishop of Frome to lunch, and I can't turn him out at a
+quarter-past two, can I? What date is there free?"
+
+Together they bent over the engagement book, and after a little
+discussion the new date was fixed.
+
+"I'm rather keen on dates to-day," said Paul, pointing to the brass
+calendar.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It's exactly five years since I entered your dear service," said Paul.
+
+"We've worked you like a galley slave, and so I love your saying 'dear
+service,'" she replied gently.
+
+Paul, half sitting on the edge of the Cromwellian table in the bay of
+the window, laughed. "I could say infinitely more, dearest lady, if I
+were to let myself go."
+
+She sat on the arm of a great leathern chair. Their respective
+attitudes signified a happy intimacy. "So long as you're contented, my
+dear boy---" she said.
+
+"Contented? Good heavens!" He waved a protesting hand.
+
+"You're ambitious."
+
+"Of course," said he. "What would be the good of me if I wasn't?"
+
+"One of these days you'll be wanting to leave the nest and--what shall
+we say?--soar upwards."
+
+Paul, too acute to deny the truth of this prophecy said: "I probably
+shall. But I'll be the rarissima avis, to whom the abandoned nest will
+always be the prime object of his life's consideration."
+
+"Pretty,"' said Miss Winwood.
+
+"It's true."
+
+"I'm sure of it," she said pleasantly. "Besides, if you didn't leave
+the nest and make a name for yourself, you wouldn't be able to carry on
+our work. My brother and I, you see, are of the older generation--you
+of the younger."
+
+"You're the youngest woman I know," Paul declared.
+
+"I shan't be in a few years, and my brother is a good deal older than
+I."
+
+"Well, I can't get into Parliament right away," said Paul. "For one
+thing, I couldn't afford it."
+
+"We must find you a nice girl with plenty of money," she said, half in
+jest.
+
+"Oh, please don't. I should detest the sight of her. By the way, shall
+you want me on Saturday evening?"
+
+"No--unless it would be to take Miss Durning in to dinner."
+
+Now Miss Durning being an elderly, ugly heiress, it pleased Miss
+Winwood to be quizzical. He looked at her in mock reproof. "Dearest
+lady that you are, I don't feel safe in your hands just now. I shall
+dine with the Princess on Saturday."
+
+An enigmatic smile flitted across Ursula Winwood's clear eyes. "What
+does she want you for?"
+
+"To entertain an Egyptologist," assured Paul. He waved his hand toward
+the letter on the table. "There it is in black and white."
+
+"I suppose for the next few days you'll be cramming hard."
+
+"It would be the polite thing to do, wouldn't it?" said Paul blandly.
+
+Miss Winwood shook her head and went away, and Paul happily resumed his
+work. In very truth she was to him the dearest of ladies.
+
+The Princess Zobraska was standing alone by the fireplace at the end of
+the long drawing-room when Paul was announced on Saturday evening. She
+was a distinguished-looking woman in the late twenties brown-haired,
+fresh-complexioned, strongly and at the same time delicately featured.
+Her dark blue eyes, veiled by lashes, smiled on him lazily as he
+approached; and lazily, too, her left arm stretched out, the palm of
+the hand downward, and she did not move. He kissed her knuckles, in
+orthodox fashion.
+
+"It is very good of you to come, Mr. Savelli," she said in a sweetly
+foreign accent, "and leave your interesting company at Drane's Court."
+
+"Any company without you, Princess, is chaos," said Paul.
+
+"Grand flatteur, va,--' said she.
+
+"C'est que vous etes irresistible, Princesse, surlout dans ce
+costume-la."
+
+She touched his arm with an ostrich feather fan. "When it comes to
+massacring languages, Mr. Savelli, let me be the assassin."
+
+"I laid the tribute of my heart at your feet in the most irreproachable
+grammar," said Paul.
+
+"But with the accent of John Bull. That's the only thing of John Bull
+you have about you. For the sake of my ears I must give you some
+lessons."
+
+"You'll find me such a pupil as never teacher had in the world before.
+When shall we begin?"
+
+"Aux Kalendes Grecques."
+
+"Ah que vous etes femme!"
+
+She put her hands to her ears. "Listen. Que-vous-etes-femme" she said.
+
+"Que-vous-etes-femme," Paul repeated parrotwise. "Is that better?"
+
+"A little."
+
+"I see the Greek Kalends have begun," said he.
+
+"Mechant, you have caught me in a trap," said she.
+
+And they both laughed.
+
+From which entirely foolish conversation it may be gathered that
+between our Fortunate Youth and the Princess some genial sun had melted
+the icy barriers of formality. He had known her for eighteen months,
+ever since she had bought Chetwood Park and settled down as the great
+personage of the countryside. He had met her many times, both in London
+and in Morebury; he had dined in state at her house; he had shot her
+partridges; he had danced with her; he had sat out dances with her,
+notably on one recent June night, in a London garden, where they lost
+themselves for an hour in the discussion of the relative parts that
+love played in a woman's life and in a man's. The Princess was French,
+ancien regime, of the blood of the Coligny, and she had married, in the
+French practical way, the Prince Zobraska, in whose career the only
+satisfactory incident history has to relate is the mere fact of his
+early demise. The details are less exhilarating. The poor little
+Princess, happily widowed at one-and-twenty, had shivered the idea of
+love out of her system for some years. Then, as is the way of woman,
+she regained her curiosities. Great lady, of enormous fortune, she
+could have satisfied them, had she so chosen, with the large cynicism
+of a Catherine of Russia. She could also, had she so chosen, have
+married one of a hundred sighing and decorous gentlemen; but with none
+of them had she fallen ever so little in love, and without love she
+determined to try no more experiments; her determination, however, did
+not involve surrender of interest in the subject. Hence the notable
+discussion on the June night. Hence, perhaps, after a few other
+meetings of a formal character, the prettily intimate invitation she
+had sent to Paul.
+
+They were still laughing at the turn of the foolish conversation when
+the other guests began to enter the drawing-room. First came Edward
+Doon, the Egyptologist, a good-looking man of forty, having the air of
+a spruce don, with a pretty young wife, Lady Angela Doon; then Count
+Lavretsky, of the Russian Embassy, and Countess Lavretsky; Lord Bantry,
+a young Irish peer with literary ambitions; and a Mademoiselle de
+Cressy, a convent intimate of the Princess and her paid companion,
+completed the small party.
+
+Dinner was served at a round table, and Paul found himself between Lady
+Angela Doon, whom he took in, and the Countess Lavretsky. Talk was
+general and amusing. As Doon did not make, and apparently did not
+expect anyone to make any reference to King Qa or Amenhotep or
+Rameses--names vaguely floating in Paul's brain--but talked in a
+sprightly way about the French stage and the beauty of Norwegian
+fiords, Paul perceived that the Princess's alleged reason for her
+invitation was but a shallow pretext. Doon did not need any
+entertainment at all. Lady Angela, however, spoke of her dismay at the
+prospect of another winter in the desert; and drew a graphic little
+sketch of the personal discomforts to which Egyptologists were
+subjected.
+
+"I always thought Egyptologists and suchlike learned folk were stuffy
+and snuffy with goggles and ragged old beards," laughed Paul. "Your
+husband is a revelation."
+
+"Yes, he's quite human, isn't he?" she said with an affectionate glance
+across the table. "He's dead keen on his work, but he realizes--as many
+of his stuffy and snuffy confreres don't--that there's a jolly,
+vibrating, fascinating, modern world in which one lives."
+
+"I'm glad to hear you say that about the modern world," said Paul.
+
+"What is Lady Angela saying about the modern world?" asked the
+Princess, separated from Paul's partner only by Count Lavretsky.
+
+"Singing paeans in praise of it," said Paul.
+
+"What is there in it so much to rejoice at?" asked the diplomatist, in
+a harsh voice. He was a man prematurely old, and looked at the world
+from beneath heavy, lizard-like eyelids.
+
+"Not only is it the best world we've got, but it's the best world we've
+ever had," cried Paul. "I don't know any historical world which would
+equal the modern, and as for the prehistoric--well, Professor Doon can
+tell us--"
+
+"As a sphere of amenable existence," said Doon with a smile, "give me
+Chetwood Park and Piccadilly."
+
+"That is mere hedonism," said Count Lavretsky. "You happen, like us all
+here, to command the creature comforts of modern wealthy conditions,
+which I grant are exceedingly superior to those commanded by the great
+Emperors of ancient times. But we are in a small minority. And even if
+we were not--is that all?"
+
+"We have a finer appreciation of our individualities," said the
+Princess. "We lead a wider intellectual life. We are in instant touch,
+practically, with the thought of the habitable globe."
+
+"And with the emotive force of mankind," said Paul.
+
+"What is that?" asked Lady Angela.
+
+Why Paul, after the first glance of courtesy at the speaker, should
+exchange a quick glance with the Princess would be difficult to say. It
+was instinctive; as instinctive as the reciprocal flash of mutual
+understanding.
+
+"I think I know, but tell us," she said.
+
+Paul, challenged, defined it as the swift wave of sympathy that surged
+over the earth. A famine in India, a devastating earthquake in Mexico,
+a bid for freedom on the part of an oppressed population, a deed of
+heroism at sea--each was felt within practically a few moments,
+emotionally, in an English, French or German village. Our hearts were
+throbbing continuously at the end of telegraph wires.
+
+"And you call that pleasure?" asked Count Lavretsky.
+
+"It isn't hedonism, at any rate," said Paul.
+
+"I call it life," said the Princess. "Don't you?"--she turned to Doon.
+
+"I think what Mr. Savelli calls the emotive force of mankind helps to
+balance our own personal emotions," said he.
+
+"Or isn't it rather a wear and tear on the nervous system?" laughed his
+wife.
+
+"It seems so to me," said Count Lavretsky. "Perhaps, being a Russian, I
+am more primitive and envy a nobleman of the time of Pharaoh who never
+heard of devastations in Mexico, did not feel his heart called upon to
+pulsate at anything beyond his own concerns. But he in his wisdom at
+his little world was vanity and was depressed. We moderns, with our
+infinitely bigger world and our infinitely greater knowledge, have no
+more wisdom than the Egyptian, and we see that the world is all the
+more vanity and are all the more overwhelmed with despair."
+
+"But--" said Paul.
+
+"But--" cried the Princess.
+
+Both laughed, and paused. Paul bowed with a slight gesture.
+
+"I am not overwhelmed with despair," the Princess continued.
+
+"Neither am I," said Paul.
+
+"I am keeping my end up wonderfully," said Lady Angela.
+
+"I am in a nest of optimists," Count Lavretsky groaned. "But was it not
+you, Lady Angela, who talked of wear and tear.
+
+"That was only to contradict my husband."
+
+"What is all this about?" asked the Countess Lavretsky, who had been
+discussing opera with Lord Bantry and Mademoiselle de Cressy.
+
+Doon scientifically crystallized the argument. It held the octette,
+while men-servants in powder and gold-laced livery offered poires
+Zobraska, a subtle creation of the chef. Lord Bantry envied the
+contemplative calm which unexciting circumstances allowed the literary
+ancient. Mademoiselle de Cressy advanced the feminist view in favour of
+the modern world. The talk became the light and dancing interplay of
+opinion and paradox common to thousands of twentieth-century
+dinner-tables.
+
+"All the same," said Count Lavretsky, "they wear you out, these emotive
+forces. Nobody is young nowadays. Youth is a lost art."
+
+"On the contrary," cried Mademoiselle de Cressy in French. "Everybody
+is young to-day. This pulsation of the heart keeps you young. It is the
+day of the young woman of forty-five."
+
+Count Lavretsky, who was fifty-nine, twirled a grey moustache. "I am
+one of the few people in the world who do not regret their youth. I do
+not regret mine, with its immaturity, its follies and subsequent
+headaches. I would sooner be the scornful philosopher of sixty than the
+credulous lover of twenty."
+
+"He always talks like that," said the Countess to Paul; "but when he
+met me first he was thirty-five--and"--she laughed--"and now voila--for
+him there is no difference between twenty and sixty. Expliquez-moi ca."
+
+"It's very simple," declared Paul. "In this century the thirties,
+forties, and fifties don't exist. You're either twenty or sixty."
+
+"I hope I shall always be twenty," said the Princess lightly.
+
+"Do you find your youth so precious, then?" asked Count Lavretsky.
+
+"More than I ever did!" She laughed and again met Paul's eyes.
+
+This time she flushed faintly as she held them for a fraction of a
+second. He had time to catch a veiled soft gleam intimate and
+disquieting. For some time he did not look again in her direction; when
+he did, he met in her eyes only the lazy smile with which she regarded
+all and sundry.
+
+Later in the evening she said to him: "I'm glad you opposed Lavretsky.
+He makes me shiver. He was born old and wrinkled. He has never had a
+thrill in his life."
+
+"And if you don't have thrills when you're young, you can't expect to
+have them when you're old," said Paul.
+
+"He would ask what was the good of thrills."
+
+"You don't expect me to answer, Princess."
+
+"We know because we're young."
+
+They stood laughing in the joy of their full youth, a splendid couple,
+some distance away from the others, ostensibly inspecting a luminous
+little Cima on the wall. The Princess loved it as the bright jewel of
+her collection, and Paul, with his sense of beauty and knowledge of
+art, loved it too. Yet, instead of talking of the picture, they talked
+of Lavretsky, who was looking at them sardonically from beneath his
+heavy eyelids.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A FEW days afterwards you might have seen Paul dashing through the
+quiet main street of Morebury in a high dog-cart, on his way to call on
+the Princess. A less Fortunate Youth might have had to walk, risking
+boots impolitely muddy, or to hire a funereal cab from the local
+job-master; but Paul had only to give an order, and the cart and showy
+chestnut were brought round to the front door of Drane's Court. He
+loved to drive the showy chestnut, whose manifold depravities were the
+terror of Miss Winwood's life. Why didn't he take the cob? It was so
+much safer. Whereupon he would reply gaily that in the first place he
+found no amusement in driving woolly lambs, and in the second that if
+he did not take some of the devil out of the chestnut it would become
+the flaming terror of the countryside. So Paul, spruce in hard felt hat
+and box-cloth overcoat, clattered joyously through the Morebury
+streets, returning the salutations of the little notabilities of the
+town with the air of the owner not only of horse and cart, but of half
+the hearts in the place. He was proud of his popularity, and it
+scarcely entered his head that he was not the proprietor of his
+equipage. Besides, he was going to call on the Princess. He hoped that
+she would be alone: not that he had anything particular to say to her,
+or had any defined idea of love-making; but he was eight-and-twenty, an
+age at which desire has not yet failed and there is not the sign of a
+burdensome grasshopper anywhere about.
+
+But the Princess was not alone. He found Mademoiselle de Cressy in
+charge of the tea-table and the conversation. Like many Frenchwomen,
+she had a high-pitched voice; she also had definite opinions on
+matter-of-fact subjects. Now when you have come to talk gossamer with
+an attractive and sympathetic woman, it is irritating to have to
+discuss Tariff Reform and the position of the working classes in
+Germany with somebody else, especially when the attractive and pretty
+woman does not give you in any way to understand that she would prefer
+gossamer to such arid topics. The Princess was as gracious as you
+please. She made him feel that he was welcome in her cosy boudoir; but
+there was no further exchange of mutually understanding glances. If a
+great lady entertaining a penniless young man can be demure, then
+demure was the Princess Sophie Zobraska. Paul, who prided himself on
+his knowledge of feminine subtlety, was at fault; but who was he to
+appreciate the repressive influence of a practical-minded convent
+friend, quickly formative and loudly assertive of opinions, on an
+impressionable lady awakening to curiosities? He was just a dunderhead,
+like any one of us--just as much as the most eminent feminine
+psychologist alive--which is saying a good deal. So he drove away
+disappointed, the sobriety of the chestnut's return trot through
+Morebury contrasting oddly with the dashing clatter of the former
+journey.
+
+It was some time before he met the Princess again, for an autumn
+session of Parliament required migration to Portland Place. The
+Princess, indeed, came to London, shortly afterwards, to her great
+house in Berkeley Square; but it was not till late November that he was
+fortunate enough to see her. Then it was only a kiss of the hand and a
+hurried remark or two, at a large dinner-party at the Winwoods'. You
+see, there are such forces as rank and precedence at London
+dinner-parties, to which even princesses and fortunate youths have to
+yield.
+
+On this occasion, as he bent over her hand, he murmured: "May I say how
+beautiful you are to-night, Princess?"
+
+She wore a costume of silver and deep blue, and the blue intensified
+the blue depths of her eyes. "I am delighted to please monsieur," she
+said in French.
+
+And that was their meeting. On parting she said again in French: "When
+are you coming to see me, fickle one?"
+
+"Whenever you ask me. I have called in vain."
+
+"You have a card for my reception next Tuesday?"
+
+"I have replied that I do myself the honour of accepting the Princess's
+gracious invitation."
+
+"I don't like London, do you?" she asked, allowing a touch of
+wistfulness to inflect her voice.
+
+"It has its charms. A row on the Serpentine, for instance, or a bicycle
+ride in Battersea Park."
+
+"How lovely it would be," she said, between laugh and sigh, "if only it
+could be kept out of the newspapers! I see it from here under the
+Fashionable Intelligence. 'The beautiful Princess Zobraska was observed
+in a boat on the ornamental water in Regent's Park with the
+well-known--tiens--what are you?--politician, say--with the well-known
+young politician, Mr. Paul Savelli.' Quel scandale, hein?"
+
+"I must content myself with kissing your finger tips at your
+reception," said Paul.
+
+She smiled. "We will find a means," she said.
+
+At her reception, an assemblage glittering with the diamonds and orders
+of the great ones of the earth, she found only time to say: "Come
+to-morrow at five. I shall be alone."
+
+Darkness descended on Paul as he replied: "Impossible, Princess.
+Colonel Winwood wants me at the House."
+
+The next morning, greatly daring, he rang her up; for a telephone stood
+on the Fortunate Youth's table in his private sitting-room in Portland
+Place.
+
+"It is I, Princess, Paul Savelli."
+
+"What have you to say for yourself, Paul Savelli?"
+
+"I am at your feet."
+
+"Why can't you come to-day?"
+
+He explained.
+
+"But tell Colonel Winwood that I want you"--the voice was imperious.
+
+"Would that be wise, Princess?"
+
+"Wise?"
+
+"Yes. Don't you see?"
+
+He waited for an answer. There was blank electric current whirring
+faintly on his ear. He thought she had rung off--rung off not only this
+conversation, but all converse in the future. At last, after the
+waiting of despair, came the voice, curiously meek. "Can you come
+Friday?"
+
+"With joy and delight." The words gushed out tempestuously.
+
+"Good. At five o'clock. And leave your John Bull wisdom on the
+doorstep."
+
+She rang off abruptly, and Paul stood ruminating puzzlewise on the
+audacious behest.
+
+On Friday he presented himself at her house in Berkeley Square. He
+found her gracious, but ironical in attitude, very much on the
+defensive. She received him in the Empire drawing room--very stiff and
+stately in its appointments. It had the charm (and the intrinsic value)
+of a museum; it was as cosy as a room (under present arrangements) at
+Versailles. The great wood fire alone redeemed it from artistic
+bleakness. Tea was brought in by portentous, powdered footmen in
+scarlet and gold. She was very much the princess; the princess in her
+state apartments, a different personage from the pretty woman in a
+boudoir. Paul, sensitive as far as it is given man to be, saw that if
+he had obeyed her and left his John Bull wisdom on the doorstep, he
+would have regretted it. Obviously she was punishing him; perhaps
+herself; perhaps both of them. She kept a wary, appraising eye on him,
+as they talked their commonplaces. Paul's attitude had the correctness
+of a young diplomatist paying a first formal call. It was only when he
+rose to go that her glance softened. She laughed a queer little laugh.
+
+"I hear that you are going to address a meeting in the North of London
+next week."
+
+"That is so," said Paul; "but how can my unimportant engagements have
+come to the ears of Your Highness?"
+
+"I read my newspapers like everybody else. Did you not know that there
+were announcements?"
+
+Paul laughed. "I put them in myself. You see," he explained, "we want
+our Young England League to be as widely known as possible. The more
+lambs we can get into the fold, the better."
+
+"Perhaps if you asked me very prettily," she said, "I might come and
+bear you speak."
+
+"Princess!" His olive cheek flushed with pleasure and his eyes
+sparkled. "It would be an undreamed-of honour. It is such things that
+angels do."
+
+"Eh bien, je viendrai. You ought to speak well. Couldn't you persuade
+them to give the place a better name? Hickney Heath! It hurts the roof
+of one's mouth. Tiens--would it help the Young England League if you
+announced my name in the newspapers?"
+
+"Dear Princess, you overwhelm me. But--"
+
+"Now, don't ask me if it is wise." She smiled in mockery. "You print
+the names of other people who are supporting you. Mr. John Felton,
+M.P., who will take the chair, Colonel Winwood, M.P., and Miss Winwood,
+the Dean of Halifax and Lady Harbury, et cetera, et cetera. Why not
+poor Princess Sophie Zobraska?"
+
+"You have a good memory, Princess."
+
+She regarded him lazily. "Sometimes. When does the meeting begin?"
+
+"At eight. Oh, I forget." His face fell. "How can you manage it? You'll
+have to dine at an unearthly hour."
+
+"What does it matter even if one doesn't dine--in a good cause?"
+
+"You are everything that is perfect," said Paul fervently.
+
+She dismissed a blissful youth. The Princess Zobraska cared as much for
+the Young England League as for an Anti-Nose-Ring Society in Central
+Africa. Would it help the Young England League, indeed! He laughed
+aloud on the lamp-lit pavement of decorous Berkeley Square. For what
+other man in the world would she dine at six and spend the evening in a
+stuffy hall in North London? He felt fired to great achievement. He
+would make her proud of him, his Princess, his own beautiful, stately,
+royal Princess. The dream had come true. He loved a Princess; and
+she--? If she cared naught for him, why was she cheerfully
+contemplating a six-o'clock dinner? And why did she do a thousand other
+things which crowded on his memory? Was he loved? The thought thrilled
+him. Here was no beautiful seductress of suspect title such as he had
+heard of during his sojourn in the Gotha Almanack world, but the lineal
+descendant of a princely house, the widow of a genuinely royal, though
+deboshed personage. Perhaps you may say that the hero of a fairy-tale
+never thinks of the mere rank of his beloved princess. If you do, you
+are committing all sorts of fallacies in your premises. For one thing,
+who said that Paul was a hero? For another, who said this was a
+fairy-tale? For yet another, I am not so sure that the swineherd is not
+impressed by the rank of his beloved. You must remember the insistent,
+lifelong dream of the ragged urchin. You must also reflect that the
+heart of any high-born youth in the land might well have been fluttered
+by signs of peculiar favour from Princess Sophie Zobraska. Why, then,
+should Paul be blamed for walking on air instead of greasy pavement on
+the way from Berkeley Square to Portland Place? Moreover, as sanity
+returned to him, his quick sense recognized in his Princess's offer to
+support him, a lovely indiscretion. Foreign ladies of high position
+must be chary of their public appearances. Between the row-boat on the
+Serpentine and the platform in the drill hall, Hickney Heath, the
+difference was but one of degree. And for him alone was this
+indiscretion about to be committed. His exultation was tempered by
+tender solicitude.
+
+At dinner that evening--he was dining alone with the Winwoods--he said:
+"I've persuaded the Princess to come to our meeting on Friday. Isn't it
+good of her?"
+
+"Very good," replied Colonel Winwood. "But what interest can she take
+in the lower walks of English politics?"
+
+"It isn't English politics," said Paul. "It's world politics. The
+Princess is an aristocrat and is tremendously keen on the Conservative
+principle. She thinks our scheme for keeping the youth of the nation
+free from the taint of Socialism is magnificent."
+
+"H'm!" said the Colonel.
+
+"And I thought Miss Winwood would be pleased if I inveigled Her
+Highness on to the platform," said Paul.
+
+"Why, of course it's a good thing," assented the Colonel. "But how the
+deuce did you get her?"
+
+"Yes, how?" asked Miss Winwood, with a smile in her straight blue eyes.
+
+"How does one get anything one wants in this world," said Paul, "except
+by going at it, hammer and tongs?"
+
+A little later, when Paul opened the dining-room for her to pass out,
+she touched his shoulder affectionately and laughed. "Hammer and tongs
+to Sophie Zobraska! Oh, Paul, aren't you a bit of a humbug?"
+
+Perhaps he was. But he was ingenuous in his desire to shield his
+Princess's action from vain conjecture. It were better that he should
+be supposed, in vulgar phrase, to have roped her in, as he had roped in
+a hundred other celebrities in his time. For there the matter ended. On
+the other hand, if he proclaimed the lady's spontaneous offer, it might
+be subjected to heaven knew how many interpretations. Paul owed much of
+his success in the world to such instinctive delicacies. He worked far
+into the night, composing his speech on England's greatness to the
+beautiful eyes of his French Princess.
+
+The Young England League was his pet political interest. It had been
+inaugurated some years before he joined the Winwoods. Its objects were
+the training of the youth, the future electorate of England, in the
+doctrines of Imperialism, Constitutionalism and sound civicism, as
+understood by the intellectual Conservatives. Its mechanical aims were
+to establish lodges throughout the country. Every town and rural
+district should have its lodge, in connection wherewith should be not
+only addresses on political and social subjects, but also football and
+cricket clubs, entertainments for both sexes such as dances,
+whist-drives, excursions of archaeological and educational interest,
+and lantern (and, later, cinematographic) lectures on the wide aspects
+of Imperial Britain. Its appeal was to the young, the recruit in the
+battle of life, who in a year or two would qualify for a vote and,
+except for blind passion and prejudice, not know what the deuce to do
+with it. The octogenarian Earl of Watford was President; Colonel
+Winwood was one of a long list of Vice-Presidents; Miss Winwood was on
+the Council; a General Hankin, a fussy, incompetent person past his
+prime, was Honorary Secretary.
+
+Paul worked with his employers for a year on the League thinking little
+of its effectiveness. One day, when they spoke despairingly of
+progress, he said, not in so many words, but in effect: "Don't you see
+what's wrong? This thing is run for young people, and you've got old
+fossils like Lord Watford and General Hankin running it. Let me be
+Assistant Secretary to Hankin' and I'll make things hum."
+
+And thinking the words of the youth were wise, they used their
+influence with the Council, and Paul became Assistant Secretary, and
+after a year or two things began to hum so disconcertingly that General
+Hankin resigned in order to take the Presidency of the Wellingtonian
+Defence Association, and almost automatically Paul slipped into his
+place. With the instinct of the man of affairs he persuaded the Council
+to change his title. An Honorary Secretary is but a dilettante, an
+amateur carrying no weight, whereas an Organizing Secretary is a devil
+of a fellow professedly dynamic. So Paul became Organizing Secretary of
+the Young England League, and made things hum all the louder. He put
+fresh life into local Committees and local Secretaries by a paternal
+interest in their doings, making them feel the pulsations of the
+throbbing heart of headquarters. If a local lodge was in need of
+speakers, he exercised his arts of persuasion and sent them down in
+trainloads. He visited personally as many lodges as his other work
+permitted. In fact, he was raising the League from a jejune experiment
+into a flourishing organization. To his secret delight, old Lord
+Watford resigned the chairmanship owing to the infirmities of old age,
+and Lord Harbury, a young and energetic peer whom Paul had recently
+driven into the ranks of the Vice-Presidents, was elected in his stead.
+Paul felt the future of the League was assured.
+
+With a real Member of Parliament to preside, a real dean to propose
+the vote of thanks, another Member of Parliament and two ex-mayors of
+the borough to add silent dignity to the proceedings, well-known
+ladies, including, now, a real Princess to grace the assembly, this
+meeting of the Hickney Heath Lodge was the most important occasion on
+which Paul had appeared in public.
+
+"I hope you won't be nervous," said Miss Winwood, on the morning of the
+meeting.
+
+"I nervous?" He laughed. "What is there to be nervous about?"
+
+"I've had over twenty years' experience of public speaking, and I'm
+always nervous when I get UP."
+
+"It's only because you persistently refuse to realize what a wonderful
+woman you are," he said affectionately.
+
+"And you," she teased, "are you always realizing what a wonderful man
+you are?"
+
+He cried with his sunny boldness: "Why not? It's faith in oneself and
+one's destiny that gets things done."
+
+The drill hall was full. Party feeling ran high in those days at
+Hickney Heath, for a Liberal had ousted a Unionist from a safe seat at
+the last General Election, and the stalwarts of the defeated party,
+thirsting for revenge, supported the new movement. If a child was not
+born a Conservative, he should be made one. That was the watchword of
+the League. They were also prepared to welcome the new star that had
+arisen to guide the younger generation out of the darkness. When,
+therefore, the Chairman, Mr. John Felton, M.P., who had held minor
+office in the last administration, had concluded his opening remarks,
+having sketched briefly the history of the League and introduced Mr.
+Paul Savelli, in the usual eulogistic terms, as their irresistible
+Organizing Secretary, and Paul in his radiant young manhood sprang up
+before them, the audience greeted him with enthusiastic applause. They
+had expected, as an audience does expect in an unknown speaker, any one
+of the usual types of ordinary looking politicians--perhaps bald,
+perhaps grey headed, perhaps pink and fat--it did not matter; but they
+did not expect the magnetic personality of this young man of
+astonishing beauty, with his perfect features, wavy black hair,
+athletic build and laughing eyes, who seemed the embodiment of youth
+and joy and purpose and victory.
+
+Before he spoke a word, he knew that he had them under his control, and
+he felt the great thrill of it. Physically he had the consciousness of
+a blaze of light, of a bare barn of an ungalleried place, of
+thickly-set row upon row of faces, and a vast confused flutter of
+beating hands. The applause subsided. He turned with his "Mr. Chairman,
+Your Highness, Ladies and Gentlemen," to the circle behind him, caught
+Miss Winwood, his dearest lady's smile, caught and held for a hundredth
+part of a second the deep blue eyes of the Princess--she wore a great
+hat with a grey feather and a chinchilla coat thrown open, and looked
+the incarnation of all the beauty and all the desires of all his
+dreams--and with a flash of gladness faced the audience and plunged
+into his speech.
+
+It began with a denunciation of the Little Englander. At that period
+one heard, perhaps, more of the Little Englander than one does
+nowadays--which to some people's way of thinking is a pity. The Little
+Englander (according to Paul) was a purblind creature, with political
+vision ice-bound by the economic condition of the labouring classes in
+Great Britain. The Little Englander had no sense of patriotism. The
+Little Englander had no sense of Empire. He had no sense of India,
+Australia, Canada. He had no sense of foreign nations' jealousy of
+England's secular supremacy. He had a distinct idea, however, of three
+nationalities; those of Ireland, Scotland and Wales. The inhabitants of
+those three small nations took peculiar pains to hammer that idea into
+his head. But of England he had no conception save as a mere
+geographical expression, a little bit of red on a map of Europe, a
+vague place where certain sections of the population clamoured for-much
+pay and little work. His dream was a parochial Utopia where the Irish
+peasant, the Welsh farmer and the Scottish crofter should live in
+luxury, and when these were satisfied, the English operative should
+live in moderate comfort. The Little Englander, in his insensate
+altruism, dreamed of these three nations entirely independent of
+England, except in the trivial matter of financial support. He wanted
+Australia, Canada, South Africa, to sever their links from him and take
+up with America, Germany, Switzerland--anybody so long as they did not
+interfere with his gigantic scheme for providing tramps in Cromarty
+with motor cars and dissolute Welsh shepherds with champagne. As for
+India, why not give it up to a benign native government which would
+depend upon the notorious brotherly love between Hindoo and Mussulman?
+If Russia, foolish, unawakened Russia, took possession of it, what
+would it matter to the miner of Merthyr Tydvil? As for England,
+provided such a country existed, she would be perfectly happy. The rich
+would provide for the poor--and what did anyone want further? Paul took
+up the Little Englander in his arms and tossed him in the air, threw
+him on the ground and jumped upon him. He cast his mutilated fragments
+with rare picturesqueness upon a Guy Fawkes bonfire. The audience
+applauded vociferously. He waited with a gay smile for silence,
+scanning them closely for the first time; and suddenly the smile faded
+from his face. In the very centre of the third row sat two people who
+did not applaud. They were Barney Bill and Jane.
+
+He looked at them fascinated. There could be no mistake. Barney Bill's
+cropped, shoe-brush hair was white as the driven snow; but the wry,
+bright-eyed face was unchanged. And Jane, quietly and decently dressed,
+her calm eyes fixed on him, was--Jane. These two curiously detached
+themselves against the human background. It was only the sudden
+stillness of the exhausted applause that brought him to consciousness
+of his environment; that, and a heaven-sent fellow at the back of the
+audience who shouted: "Go on, sonny!"
+
+Whereupon he plucked himself together with a swift toss of the head,
+and laughed his gay laugh. "Of course I'm going on, if you will let me.
+This is only the beginning of what I've got to tell you of the
+Englishman who fouls the nest of England--who fouls the nest of all
+that matters in the future history of mankind."
+
+There was more applause. It was the orator's appeal to the mass. It set
+Paul back into the stream of his argument. He forgot Barney Bill and
+Jane, and went on with his speech, pointedly addressing the young,
+telling them what England was, what England is, what Englishmen, if
+they are true to England, shall be. It was for the young, those who
+came fresh to life with the glories of England fresh in their memories,
+from Crecy to the Armada, from the Armada to Waterloo, to keep the
+banner of England flying over their topmost roofs.
+
+It was a fighting, enthusiastic, hyperbolic speech, glowing, as did the
+young face of the speaker, with the divine fire of youth. It ended
+triumphantly. He sat down to an ovation. Smiles and handshakes and
+words of praise surrounded him on the platform. Miss Winwood pressed
+his hand and said, "Well done." The Princess regarded him with flushed
+cheeks and starry eyes. It was only when silence fell on the opening
+words of the Dean of Halifax that he searched the rows in front for
+Barney Bill and Jane. They were still there. Impulsively he scribbled a
+few lines on a scrap of paper torn from his rough notes: "I must see
+you. Wait outside the side entrance for me after the meeting is over.
+Love to you both. Paul." A glance round showed him an attendant of the
+hall lurking at the back of the platform. He slipped quietly from his
+seat by the Chairman's side and gave the man the paper with directions
+as to its destination. Then he returned. Just before the Dean ended, he
+saw the note delivered. Jane read it, whispered its contents to Bill
+and seemed to nod acquiescence. It was fitting that these two dear
+ghosts of the past should appear for the first time in his hour of
+triumph. He longed to have speech with them, The Dean of Halifax was
+brief, the concluding ceremonies briefer. The audience gave Paul a
+parting cheer and dispersed, while Paul, the hero of the evening,
+received the congratulations of his friends.
+
+"Those are things that needed saying, but we're too cautious to say
+them," remarked the Chairman.
+
+"We've got to be," said Colonel Winwood.
+
+"The glory of irresponsibility," smiled the Dean.
+
+"You don't often get this kind of audience," Paul answered with a
+laugh. "A political infants' school. One has to treat things in broad
+splashes."
+
+"You almost persuade me to be an Englishwoman," said the Princess.
+
+Paul bowed. "But what more beautiful thing can there be than a
+Frenchwoman with England in her heart? Je ne demande pas mieux."
+
+And the Princess did not put her hands to her ears.
+
+The group passed slowly from the platform through a sort of committee
+room at the back, and reached the side entrance, Here they lingered,
+exchanging farewells. The light streamed dimly through the door on the
+strip of pavement between two hedges of spectators, and on the
+panelling and brass-work of an automobile by the curb. A chauffeur,
+with rug on arm, stepped forward and touched his cap, as the Princess
+appeared, and opened the door of the car. Paul, bare-headed,
+accompanied her across the pavement. Halt way she stopped for a second
+to adjust a slipping fur. He aided her quickly and received a bright
+smile of thanks. She entered the car--held out her hand for, his kiss.
+
+"Come and see me soon. I'll write or telephone."
+
+The car rolled away. The Winwoods' carriage drove up.
+
+It was a fighting, enthusiastic, hyperbolic speech, glowing with the
+divine fire of youth.
+
+"Can we give you a lift home, Paul?" asked Miss Winwood.
+
+"No thanks, dearest lady. There are one or two little things I must do
+before I go."
+
+"Good night."
+
+"Good night, Paul," said Colonel Winwood, shaking hands. "A thundering
+good speech."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+PAUL looked from side to side at the palely lit faces of the
+spectators, trying to distinguish Barney Bill and Jane. But he did not
+see them. He was disappointed and depressed, seized with a curious
+yearning for his own people. Vehicle after vehicle drew up and carried
+away the remainder of the platform group, and Paul was left in the
+doorway with the President and Honorary Secretary of the local lodge.
+The little crowd began to melt away. Suddenly his heart leaped and,
+after a hasty good night to the two officials, he sprang forward and,
+to their astonishment, gripped the hand of a bent and wizened old man.
+
+"Barney Bill! This is good. Where is Jane?"
+
+"Close by," said Bill.
+
+The President and Honorary Secretary waved farewells and marched away.
+Out of the gloom came Jane, somewhat shyly. He took both her hands and
+looked upon her, and laughed. "My dear Jane! What ages since we lost
+each other!"
+
+"Seven years, Mr. Savelli."
+
+"'Mr. Savelli!' Rubbish! Paul."
+
+"Begging your pardon," said Barney Bill, "but I've got a pal 'ere what
+I've knowed long before you was born, and he'd like to tell yer how he
+enjoyed your speech."
+
+A tall man, lean and bearded, and apparently very well dressed, came
+forward.
+
+"This is my old pal, Silas Finn," said Bill.
+
+"Delighted to meet you, Mr. Finn," said Paul, shaking hands.
+
+"I too," said the man gravely.
+
+"Silas Finn's a Councillor of the Borough," said Bill proudly.
+
+"You should have been on the platform," said Paul.
+
+"I attended in my private capacity," replied Mr. Finn.
+
+He effaced himself. Paul found himself laughing into Barney Bill's
+twinkling eyes. "Dear old Bill," he cried, clapping his old friend on
+the shoulder. "How are things going? How's the caravan? I've looked out
+for it on so many country roads."
+
+"I'm thinking of retiring," said Bill. "I can only do a few summer
+months now--and things isn't what they was."
+
+"And Jane?" He turned to her.
+
+"I'm Mr. Finn's secretary."
+
+"Oh," said Paul. Mr. Finn, then, was an important person.
+
+The drill hall attendant shut the door, and save for the street lamps
+they were in gloom. There was an embarrassed little silence. Paul broke
+it by saying: "We must exchange addresses, and fix up a meeting for a
+nice long talk."
+
+"If you would like to have a talk with your old friends now, my house
+is at your disposal," said Mr. Finn, in a soft, melancholy voice. "It
+is not far from here."
+
+"That's very kind of you--but I couldn't trespass on your hospitality."
+
+"Gor bless you," exclaimed Barney Bill. "Nothing of the kind. Didn't I
+tell yer I've knowed him since we was lads together? And Jane lives
+there."
+
+Paul laughed. "In that case--"
+
+"You'll be most welcome," said Mr. Finn. "This way."
+
+He went ahead with Barney Bill, whose queer side limp awoke poignant
+memories of the Bludston brickfield. Paul followed with Jane.
+
+"And what have you been doing?" he asked.
+
+"Typewriting. Then Bill came across Mr. Finn, whom he hadn't seen for
+years, and got me the position of secretary. Otherwise I've been doing
+nothing particular."
+
+"If you knew what a hunt I had years ago to find you," he said, and
+began to explain the set of foolish circumstances when they turned the
+corner of the drill hall and found a four-wheeled cab waiting.
+
+"I had already engaged it for my friends and myself," Mr. Finn
+explained. "Will you get in?"
+
+Jane and Paul and Mr. Finn entered the cab. Barney Bill, who liked air
+and for whom the raw November night was filled apparently with balmy
+zephyrs, clambered in his crablike way next the driver. They started.
+
+"What induced you to come to-night?" Paul asked.
+
+"We saw the announcement in the newspapers," replied Jane. "Barney Bill
+said the Mr. Paul Savelli could be no one else but you. I said it
+couldn't."
+
+"Why?" he asked sharply.
+
+"There are heaps of people of the same name."
+
+"But you didn't think I was equal to it?"
+
+She laughed a short laugh. "That's just how you used to talk. You
+haven't changed much."
+
+"I hope I haven't," replied Paul earnestly. "And I don't think you've
+changed either."
+
+"Very little has happened to change me," said Jane.
+
+The cab lumbered on through dull, dimly lit, residential roads. Only by
+the swinging gleam of an occasional street lamp could Paul distinguish
+the faces of his companions. "I hope you're on our side, Mr. Finn," he
+said politely to his host, who sat on the small back seat.
+
+"I don't disagree with much that you said to-night. But you are on the
+side of wealth and aristocracy. I am on the side of the downtrodden and
+oppressed."
+
+"But so am I," cried Paul. "The work of every day of my life tends to
+help them."
+
+"You're a Conservative and I'm a Radical."
+
+"What do labels matter? We're both attacking the same problem, only
+from different angles."
+
+"Very likely, Mr. Savelli; but you'll pardon me if, according to my
+political creed, I regard your angle as an obtuse one."
+
+Paul wondered greatly who he could be, this grave, intelligent friend
+of Barney Bill's, who spoke with such dignity and courtesy. In his
+speech was a trace of rough accent; but his words were chosen with
+precision.
+
+"You think we glance off, whereas your attack is more direct," laughed
+Paul.
+
+"That is so. I hope you don't mind my saying it. You were the
+challenger."
+
+"I was. But anyhow we're not going to be enemies."
+
+"God forbid," said Mr. Finn.
+
+Presently the cab stopped before a fairly large detached house standing
+back from the road. A name which Paul could not decipher was painted on
+the top bar of the gate. They trooped through and up some steps to the
+front door, which Mr. Finn opened with his latchkey. The first
+impression that Paul had on entering a wide vestibule was a blaze of
+gilt frames containing masses of bright, fresh paint. A parlour-maid
+appeared, and helped with hats and coats.
+
+"We are having a very simple supper, Mr. Savelli. Will you join us?"
+said Mr. Finn.
+
+"With the greatest pleasure," said Paul.
+
+The host threw open the dining-room door on the right. Jane and Paul
+entered; were alone for a few moments, during which Paul heard Barney
+Bill say in a hoarse whisper: "Let me have my hunk of bread and beef in
+the kitchen, Silas. You know as how I hates a fork and I likes to eat
+in my shirt sleeves."
+
+Paul seized Jane by the arms and regarded her luminously. He murmured:
+"Did you hear? The dear old chap!"
+
+She raised clear, calm eyes. "Aren't you shocked?"
+
+He shook her. "What do you take me for?"
+
+Jane was rebellious. "For what girls in my position generally call a
+'toff.' You---"
+
+"You're horrid," said Paul.
+
+"The word's horrid, not me. You're away up above us."
+
+"'Us' seems to be very prosperous, anyhow," said Paul, looking round
+him. Jane watched him jealously and saw his face change. The dining
+room, spaciously proportioned, was, like the vestibule, a mass of gilt
+frames and staring paint. Not an inch of wall above the oak dado was
+visible. Crude landscapes, wooden portraits, sea studies with waves of
+corrugated iron, subject pictures of childishly sentimental appeal,
+blinded the eyes. It looked as if a kindergarten had been the selecting
+committee for an exhibition of the Royal Academy. It looked also as if
+the kindergarten had replaced the hanging committee also. It was a
+conglomerate massacre. It was pictorial anarchy. It was individualism
+baresark, amok, crazily frantic. And an execrably vile,
+nerve-destroying individualism at that.
+
+Paul released Jane, who kept cool, defiant eyes on him.
+
+"What do you think of it?"
+
+He smiled. "A bit disconcerting."
+
+"The whole house is like this."
+
+"It's so new," said Paul.
+
+He looked about him again. The long table was plainly laid for three at
+the far end. The fare consisted of a joint of cold beef, a cold tart
+suggestive of apple, a bit of Cheshire cheese, and celery in a glass
+vase. Of table decoration of any kind there was no sign. A great walnut
+monstrosity meagrely equipped performed the functions of a sideboard.
+The chairs, ten straight-backed, and two easy by the fireplace, of
+which one was armless, were upholstered in saddlebag, yellow and green.
+In the bay of the red-curtained window was a huge terra-cotta bust of
+an ivy-crowned and inane Austrian female. There was a great fireplace
+in which a huge fire blazed cheerily, and on the broad, deep hearth
+stood little coloured plaster figures of stags, of gnomes, of rabbits,
+one ear dropping, the other ear cocked, of galloping hounds unknown to
+the fancy, scenting and pursuing an invisible foe.
+
+She watched him as he scanned the room.
+
+"Who is Mr. Finn?" he asked in a low voice.
+
+"Many years ago he was 'Finn's Fried Fish.' Now he's 'Fish Palaces,
+Limited.' They're all over London. You can't help seeing them even from
+a motor car."
+
+"I've seen them," said Paul.
+
+The argument outside the door having ended in a victory for the host,
+he entered the room, pushing Barney Bill gently in front of him. For
+the first time Paul saw him in the full light. He beheld a man sharply
+featured, with hair and beard, once raven-black, irregularly streaked
+with white--there seemed to be no intermediary shades of grey--and deep
+melancholy eyes. There hung about him the atmosphere of infinite,
+sorrowful patience that might mark a Polish patriot. As the runner of a
+successful fried fish concern he was an incongruity. As well, thought
+Paul, picture the late Cardinal Newman sharpening knife on steel
+outside a butcher's shop, and crying, "buy, buy," in lusty invitation.
+Then Paul noticed that he was oddly apparelled. He wore the black
+frock-coat suit of a Methodist preacher at the same time as the rainbow
+tie, diamond tie-pin, heavy gold watch-chain, diamond ring and natty
+spats of a professional bookmaker. The latter oddities, however, did
+not detract from the quiet, mournful dignity of his face and manner.
+Paul felt himself in the presence of an original personality.
+
+The maid came in and laid a fourth place. Mr. Finn waved Paul to a seat
+on his right, Barney Bill to one next Paul; Jane sat on his left.
+
+"I will ask a blessing," said Mr. Finn.
+
+He asked one for two minutes in the old-fashioned Evangelical way,
+bringing his guest into his address to the Almighty with an almost
+pathetic courtesy. "I am afraid, Mr. Savelli," said he, when he sat
+down and began to carve the beef, "I have neither wine nor spirits to
+offer you. I am a strict teetotaller; and so is Miss Seddon. But as I
+knew my old friend Simmons would be unhappy without his accustomed
+glass of beer--"
+
+"That's me," said Barney Bill, nudging Paul with his elbow. "Simmons.
+You never knowed that afore, did yer? Beg pardon, guv'nor, for
+interrupting."
+
+"Well, there's a jug of beer--and that is all at this hour, except
+water, that I can put before you."
+
+Paul declared that beer was delicious and peculiarly acceptable after
+public speaking, and demonstrated his appreciation by draining the
+glass which the maid poured out.
+
+"You wanted that badly, sonny," said Barney Bill. "The next thing to
+drinking oneself is to see another chap what enjoys swallering it."
+
+"Bill!" said Jane reprovingly.
+
+Barney Bill cocked his white poll across the table with the perkiness
+of a quaint bird--Paul saw that the years had brought a striation of
+tiny red filaments to his weather-beaten face--and fixed her with his
+little glittering eyes. "Bill what? You think I'm 'urting his
+feelings?" He jerked a thumb towards his host. "I ain't. He thinks good
+drink's bad because bad has come of it to him--not that he ever took a
+drop too much, mind yer--but bad has come of it to him, and I think
+good drink's good because nothing but good has come of it to me. And
+we've agreed to differ. Ain't we, Silas?"
+
+"If every man were as moderate as you, and I am sure as Mr. Savelli, I
+should have nothing to say against it. Why should I? But the working
+man, unhappily, is not moderate."
+
+"I see," said Paul. "You preach, or advocate--I think you preach--total
+abstinence, and so feel it your duty to abstain yourself."
+
+"That is so," said Mr. Finn, helping himself to mustard. "I don't wish
+to bore you with my concerns; but I'm a fairly large employer of
+labour. Now I have found that by employing only pledged abstainers I
+get extraordinary results. I exact a very high rate of insurance,
+towards a fund--I need not go into details--to which I myself
+contribute a percentage--a far higher rate than would be possible if
+they spent their earnings on drink. I invest the whole lot in my
+business--their stoppages from wages and my contributions. I guarantee
+them 3 per cent.; I give them, actually, the dividends that accrue to
+the holders of ordinary stock in my company. They also have the general
+advantages of insurance--sickness, burial, maternity, and so
+forth--that they would get from an ordinary benefit society."
+
+"But that's enormous," cried Paul, with keen interest. "On the face of
+it, it seems impossible. It seems entirely uneconomic. Co-operative
+trading is one thing; private insurance another. But how can you
+combine the two?"
+
+"The whole secret lies in the marvellously increased efficiency of the
+employee." He developed his point.
+
+Paul listened attentively. "But," said he, when his host concluded,
+"isn't it rather risky? Supposing, for the sake of argument, your
+business failed."
+
+Mr. Finn held up the lean, brown hand on which the diamond sparkled.
+"My business cannot fail."
+
+Paul started. The assertion had a strange solemnity. "Without
+impertinence," said he, "why can't it fail?"
+
+"Because God is guiding it," said Silas Finn.
+
+The fanatic spoke. Paul regarded him with renewed interest. The black
+hair streaked with white, banging over the temples on the side away
+from the parting, the queerly streaked beard, the clear-cut ascetic
+features, the deep, mournful eyes in whose depths glowed a soul on
+fire, gave him the appearance of a mad but sanctified apostle. Barney
+Bill, who profoundly distrusted all professional drinkers of water,
+such as Mr. Finn's employees, ate his cold beef silently, in the happy
+surmise that no one was paying the least attention to his
+misperformances with knife, fork and fingers. Jane looked steadily from
+Paul to Silas and from Silas to Paul.
+
+Paul said: "How do you know God is guiding it?"
+
+At the back of his mind was an impulse of mirth--there was a touch of
+humorous blasphemy in the conception of the Almighty as managing
+director of "Fish Palaces, Limited"--but the nominal earthly managing
+director saw not the slightest humour in the proposition.
+
+"Who is guiding you in your brilliant career?" he asked.
+
+Paul threw out his hands, in the once practised and now natural foreign
+gesture. "I'm not an atheist. Of course I believe in God, and I thank
+Him for all His mercies--"
+
+"Yes, yes," said his host. "That I shouldn't question. But a successful
+man's thanks to God are most often merely conventional. Don't think I
+wish to be offensive. I only want to get at the root of things. You are
+a young man, eight-and-twenty--"
+
+"How do you know that?" laughed Paul.
+
+"Oh, your friends have told me. You are young. You have a brilliant
+position. You have a brilliant future. Were you born to it?"
+
+There was Jane on the opposite side of the table, entirely uninterested
+in her food, looking at him in her calm, clear way. She was so
+wholesome, so sane, in her young yet mature English lower-class beauty.
+She had broad brows. Her mass of dark brown hair was rather too
+flawlessly arranged. He felt a second's irritation at not catching any
+playfully straying strand. She was still the Jane of his boyhood, but a
+Jane developed, a Jane from whom no secrets were hid, a searching,
+questioning and quietly disturbing Jane.
+
+"A man is born to his destiny, whatever destiny may be," said Paul.
+
+"That is Mohammedan fatalism," said Mr. Finn, "unless one means by
+destiny the guiding hand of the Almighty. Do you believe that you're
+under the peculiar care of God?"
+
+"Do you, Mr. Finn?"
+
+"I have said so. I ask you. Do you?"
+
+"In a general way, yes," said Paul. "In your particular sense, no. You
+question me frankly and I answer frankly. You would not like me to
+answer otherwise."
+
+"Certainly not," said his host.
+
+"Then," Paul continued, with a smile, "I must say that from my
+childhood I have been fired with a curious certainty that I would
+succeed in life. Chance has helped me. How far a divine hand has been
+specially responsible, it isn't for me to conjecture. But I know that
+if I hadn't believed in myself I shouldn't have had my small measure of
+success."
+
+"You believe in yourself?"
+
+"Yes. And I believe in making others believe in me."
+
+"That is strange--very strange." Mr. Finn fixed him with his deep,
+sorrowful eyes. "You believe that you're predestined to a great
+position. You believe that you have in you all that is needful to
+attain it. That has carried you through. Strange!" He put his hand to
+his temple, elbow on table, and still regarded Paul. "But there's God
+behind it all. Mr. Savelli," he said earnestly, after a slight pause,
+"you are twenty-eight; I am fifty-eight; so I'm more than old enough to
+be your father. You'll forgive my taking up the attitude of the older
+man. I have lived a life such as your friends on the platform
+to-night--honorable, clean, sweet people--I've nothing to say against
+them--have no conception. I am English, of course--London born. My
+father was an Englishman; but my mother was a Sicilian. She used to go
+about with a barrel-organ--my father ran away with her. I have that
+violent South in my blood, and I've lived nearly all my days in London.
+I've had to pay dearly for my blood. The only compensation it has given
+me is a passion for art"--he waved his lean, bediamonded hand towards
+the horrific walls. "That is external--in a way--mere money has enabled
+me to gratify my tastes; but, as I was saying, I have lived a life of
+strange struggle, material, physical, and"--he brought down his free
+hand with a bang on the table--"it is only by the grace of God and the
+never-ceasing presence of Our Lord Jesus Christ by my side, that--that
+I am able to offer you my modest hospitality this evening."
+
+Paul felt greatly drawn to the man. He was beyond doubt sincere. He
+wore the air of one who had lived fiercely, who had suffered, who had
+conquered; but the air of one whose victory was barren, who was looking
+into the void for the things unconquerable yet essential to salvation.
+Paul made a little gesture of attention. He could find no words to
+reply. A man's deep profession of faith is unanswerable.
+
+"Ah," said Barney Bill, "you ought to have come along o' me, Silas,
+years ago in the old 'bus. You mightn't have got all these bright
+pictures, but you wouldn't have had these 'ere gloomy ideas. I don't
+say as how I don't hold with Gawd," he explained, with uplifted
+forefinger and cocked head; "but if ever I thinks of Him, I like to
+feel that He's in the wind or in the crickle-crackle of the earth, just
+near and friendly like, but not a-worrying of a chap, listening for
+every cuss-word as he uses to his old horse, and measuring every
+half-pint he pours down his dusty throat. No. That ain't my idea of
+Gawd. But then I ain't got religion."
+
+"Still the same old pagan," laughed Paul.
+
+"No, not the same, sonny," said Barney Bill, holding up his knife,
+which supported a morsel of cheese. "Old. Rheumaticky. Got to live in a
+'ouse when it rains--me who never keered whether I was baked to a
+cinder or wet through! I ain't a pagan no more. I'm a crock."
+
+Jane smiled affectionately at the old man, and her face was lit with
+rare sweetness when she smiled. "He really is just the same," she said.
+
+"He hasn't changed much in forty years," said Mr. Finn.
+
+"I was a good Conservative then, as I am now," said Bill. "That's one
+thing, anyhow. So was you, Silas. But you had Radical leanings."
+
+Barney Bill's remark set the talk on political lines. Paul learned that
+his host had sat for a year or more as a Progressive on the Hickney
+Heath Borough Council and aspired to a seat in Parliament.
+
+"The Kingdom of Heaven," said he, not unctuously or hypocritically, but
+in his grave tone of conviction, "is not adequately represented in the
+House."
+
+Paul pointed out that in the House of Lords one had the whole bench of
+Bishops.
+
+"I'm not a member of the Established Church, Mr. Savelli," replied Mr.
+Finn. "I'm a Dissenter--a Free Zionist."
+
+"I've heard him conduc' the service," said Barney Bill. "He built the
+Meeting House close by, yer know. I goes sometimes to try and get
+converted. But I'm too old and stiff in the j'ints. No longer a pagan,
+but a crock, sonny. But I likes to listen to him. Gorbli--bless me,
+it's a real bean feast--that's what it is. He talks straight from the
+shoulder, he does, just as you talked to-night. Lets 'em 'ave it
+bing-bang in the eye. Don't he, Jane?"
+
+"Bill means," she explained, with the shadow of a smile, for Paul's
+benefit, "that Mr. Finn is an eloquent preacher."
+
+"D'yer suppose he didn't understand what I meant?" he exclaimed,
+setting down the beer glass which he was about to raise to his lips.
+"Him, what I discovered reading Sir Walter Scott with the cover off
+when he was a nipper with no clothes on? You understood, sonny."
+
+"Of course I did." He laughed gaily and turned to his host, who had
+suffered Barney Bill's queer eulogy with melancholy indulgence. "One of
+these days I should like to come and hear you preach."
+
+"Any Sunday, at ten and six. You would be more than welcome."
+
+The meal was over. Barney Bill pulled a blackened clay pipe from his
+waistcoat pocket and a paper of tobacco.
+
+"I'm a non-smoker," said Mr. Finn to Paul, "and I'm sorry I've nothing
+to offer you--I see little company, so I don't keep cigars in the
+house--but if you would care to smoke---" he waved a courteous and
+inviting hand.
+
+Paul whipped out his cigarette case. It was of gold--a present last
+Christmas from the Winwood fitting part of the equipment of a Fortunate
+Youth. He opened it, offered a cigarette to Barney Bill.
+
+"Garn!" said the old man. "I smokes terbakker," and he filled his pipe
+with shag.
+
+Mr. Finn rose from the table. "Will you excuse me, Mr. Savelli, if I
+leave you? I get up early to attend to my business. I must be at
+Billingsgate at half-past five to buy my fish. Besides, I have been
+preventing your talk with our friends. So pray don't go. Good-night,
+Mr. Savelli."
+
+As he shook hands Paul met the sorrowful liquid eyes fixed on him with
+strange earnestness. "I must thank you for your charming hospitality. I
+hope you'll allow me to come and see you again."
+
+"My house is yours."
+
+It was a phrase--a phrase of Castilian politeness--oddly out of place
+in the mouth of a Free Zionist purveyor of fried fish. But it seemed to
+have more than a Castilian, more than a Free Zionist significance. He
+was still pondering over it when Mr. Finn, having bidden Jane and
+Barney Bill good-night, disappeared.
+
+"Ah!" said Barney Bill, lifting up the beer jug in order to refill his
+glass, and checked whimsically by the fact of its emptiness. "Ah," said
+he, setting down the jug and limping round the table, "let us hear as
+how you've been getting on, sonny."
+
+They drew their chairs about the great hearth, in which the idiotic
+little Viennese plaster animals sported in movement eternally arrested,
+and talked of the years that had passed. Paul explained once more his
+loss of Jane and his fruitless efforts to find her.
+
+"We didn't know," said Jane. "We thought that either you were dead or
+had forgotten us--or had grown too big a man for us."
+
+"Axing your pardon," said Barney Bill, taking his blackened clay from
+his lips and holding it between his gnarled fingers, "you said so. I
+didn't. I always held that, if he wasn't dead, the time would come
+when, as it was to-night, the three of us would be sitting round
+together. I maintained," he added solemnly after a puff or two, "that
+his heart was in the right place. I'm a broken-down old crock, no
+longer a pagan; but I'm right. Ain't I, sonny?" He thrust an arm into
+the ribs of Paul, who was sitting between them.
+
+Paul looked at Jane. "I think this proves it."
+
+She returned his look steadily. "I own I was wrong. But a woman only
+proves herself to be right by always insisting that she is wrong."
+
+"My dear Jane," cried Paul. "Since when have you become so
+psychological?"
+
+"Gorblime," said Barney Bill, "what in thunder's that?"
+
+"I know," said Jane. "You"--to Paul--"were good enough to begin my
+education. I've tried since to go on with it."
+
+"It's nothing to do with edication," said Barney Bill. "It's fac's.
+Let's have fac's. Jane and I have been tramping the same old high-road,
+but you've been climbing mountains--yer and yer gold cigarette cases.
+Let's hear about it."
+
+So Paul told his story, and as he told it, it seemed to him, in its
+improbability, more like a fairy-tale than the sober happenings of real
+life.
+
+"You've said nothing about the princess," Jane remarked, when he had
+ended.
+
+"The princess?"
+
+"Yes. Where does she come in?"
+
+"The Princess Zobraska is a friend of my employers."
+
+"But you and she are great friends," Jane persisted quietly. "That's
+obvious to anybody. I was standing quite close when you helped her into
+the motor car."
+
+"I didn't see you."
+
+"I took care you didn't. She looks charming."
+
+"Most princesses are charming--when they've no particular reason to be
+otherwise," said Paul. "It is their metier--their profession."
+
+There was a little silence. Jane, cheek on hand, looked thoughtfully
+into the fire. Barney Bill knocked' the ashes out of his pipe and
+thrust it in his pocket. "It's getting late, sonny."
+
+Paul looked at his watch. It was past one o'clock. He jumped up. "I
+hope to goodness you haven't to begin work at half-past five," he said
+to Jane.
+
+"No. At eight." She rose as he stretched out his hand. "You don't know
+what it is to see you again, Paul. I can't tell you. Some things are
+upsetting. But I'm glad. Oh, yes, I'm glad, Paul dear. Don't think I'm
+not."
+
+Her voice broke a little. They were the first gentle words she had
+given him all the evening. Paul smiled and kissed her hand as he had
+kissed that of the princess, and, still holding it, said: "Don't I know
+you of old? And if you suppose I haven't thought of you and felt the
+need of you, you're very much mistaken. Now I've found you, I'm not
+going to let you go again."
+
+She turned her head aside and looked down; there was the slightest
+movement of her plump shoulders. "What's the good? I can't do anything
+for you now, and you can't do anything for me. You're on the way to
+becoming a great man. To me, you're a great man already. Don't you see?"
+
+"My dear, I was an embryonic Shelley, Raphael, Garrick, and Napoleon
+when you first met me," he said jestingly.
+
+"But then you didn't belong to their--to their sphere. Now you do. Your
+friends are lords and ladies and--and princesses--"
+
+"My friends," cried Paul, "are people with great true hearts--like the
+Winwoods--and the princess, if you like--and you, and Barney Bill."
+
+"That's a sentiment as does you credit," said the old man. "Great true
+hearts! Now if you ain't satisfied, my dear, you're a damn criss-cross
+female. And yer ain't, are yer?' She laughed and Paul laughed. The
+little spell of intensity was broken. There were pleasant leave-takings.
+
+"I'll set you on your road a bit," said Barney Bill. "I live in the
+neighbourhood. Good-bye, Jane."
+
+She went with them to the front door, and stood in the gusty air
+watching them until they melted into the darkness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+BETWEEN the young man of immaculate vesture, of impeccable manners, of
+undeniable culture, of instinctive sympathy with the great world where
+great things are done, of unerring tact, of mythological beauty and
+charm, of boundless ambition, of resistless energy, of incalculable
+promise, in outer semblance and in avowed creed the fine flower of
+aristocratic England, professing the divine right of the House of Lords
+and the utilitarian sanctity of the Church of England--between Paul,
+that is to say, and the Radical, progressive councillor of Hickney
+Heath, the Free Zionist dissenter (not even Congregationalist or
+Baptist or Wesleyan, or any powerfully organized Non-conformist whose
+conscience archbishops consult with astute patronage), the purveyor of
+fried fish, the man of crude, uncultivated taste, there should have
+been a gulf fixed as wide as the Pacific Ocean. As a matter of fact,
+whatever gulf lay between them was narrow enough to be bridged
+comfortably over by mutual esteem. Paul took to visiting Mr. Finn.
+Accustomed to the somewhat tired or conventional creeds of his
+political world, he found refreshment in the man's intense faith. He
+also found pathetic attraction in the man's efforts towards
+self-expression. Mr. Finn, who lived a life of great
+loneliness--scarcely a soul, said Jane, crossed his threshold from
+month's end to month's end--seemed delighted to have a sympathetic
+visitor to whom he could display his painted treasures. When he was
+among them the haunting pain vanished from his eyes, as sometimes one
+has seen it vanish from those of an unhappy woman among her flowers. He
+loved to take Paul through his collection and point out the beauties
+and claim his admiration. He had converted a conservatory running along
+one side of the house into a picture gallery, and this was filled with
+his masterpieces of pictorial villainy. Here Paul was at first
+astonished at recognizing replicas of pictures which hung in other
+rooms. Mr. Finn explained.
+
+"These," said he, "are the originals."
+
+Paul pondered over the dark saying for a moment or two until he came
+upon a half-finished canvas on an easel. It was the copy of a landscape
+on the wall. He turned questioningly to his host. The latter smiled.
+
+"I'm a bit of an artist myself," he said. "But as I've never had time
+for lessons in painting, I teach myself by copying good pictures. It's
+a Saunders"--a name unknown to Paul--"and a very good example. It's
+called Noontide. The cow is particularly good, isn't it? But it's
+exceedingly difficult. That fore-shortening--I can't get it quite right
+yet. But I go on and on till I succeed. The only way."
+
+Paul acquiesced and asked him where he had picked up his Saunders.
+Indeed, where had he picked up all the others? Not an exhibition in
+London would have admitted one of them. This "Saunders" represented a
+wooden cow out of drawing lying in the shade of a conventional tree. It
+was peculiarly bad.
+
+"I bought it direct from the artist," replied Mr. Finn. "He's an
+unrecognized genius, and now he's getting old, poor fellow. Years ago
+he offended the Royal Academy, and they never forgot it. He says
+they've kept him under all his life. I have a great many of his
+pictures." He looked admiringly at the cow for a while, and added: "I
+gave him four pounds ten for this one."
+
+Paul could not forbear saying, though his tone betrayed no irony: "A
+good price."
+
+"I think so," replied Mr. Finn. "That's what he asked. I could never
+haggle with an artist. His work is of the spirit, isn't it?"
+
+And Paul marvelled at the childlike simplicity of the man, the son of
+the Sicilian woman who went about with a barrel-organ, who, starting in
+the race on a level with Barney Bill, had made a fortune in the
+exploitation of fried fish. To disturb his faith in the genius of
+Saunders were a crime--as base a crime as proving to a child the
+non-existence of fairies. For Paul saw that Silas Finn found in this
+land of artistic illusion a refuge from many things; not only from the
+sordid cares of a large business, but perhaps also from the fierce
+intensity of his religion, from his driving and compelling deity. Here
+God entered gently.
+
+There was another reason, which Paul scarcely confessed to himself, for
+the pleasure he found in the older man's company. The veil which he had
+thrown so adroitly over his past history, which needed continuous
+adroitness to maintain, was useless in this house. Both Barney Bill and
+Jane had spoken of him freely. Silas Finn knew of Bludston, of his
+modeldom, of his inglorious career on the stage. He could talk openly
+once more, without the never-absent subconscious sense of reserve. He
+was still, in his own, eyes, the prince out of the fairy-tale; but
+Silas Finn and the two others alone of his friends shared the knowledge
+of the days when he herded swine. Now a prince out of a fairy-tale who
+has herded swine is a romantic figure. Paul did not doubt that he was
+one. Even Jane, in spite of her direct common sense, admitted it.
+Barney Bill proclaimed it openly, slapping him on the back and taking
+much credit to himself for helping the prince on the way to his
+kingdom. And Mr. Finn, even in the heat of political discussion or
+theological asseveration, treated him with a curious and pathetic
+deference.
+
+Meanwhile Paul pursued his own career of glory. The occasional visits
+to Hickney Heath were, after all, but rare, though distinct, episodes
+in his busy life. He had his parliamentary work for Colonel Winwood,
+his work for Miss Winwood, his work for the Young England League. He
+had his social engagements. He had the Princess Zobraska. He also began
+to write, in picturesque advocacy of his views, for serious weekly and
+monthly publications. Then Christmas came and he found himself at
+Drane's Court, somewhat gasping for breath. A large houseparty,
+however, including Lord Francis Ayres, the chief Opposition Whip,
+threatened to keep him busy.
+
+The Princess drove over from Chetwood Park for dinner on Christmas Day.
+He had to worship from afar; for a long spell of the evening to worship
+with horrible jealousy. Lord Francis Ayres, a bachelor and a man of
+winning charm, as men must be whose function it is to keep Members of
+Parliament good and pleased with themselves and sheeplike, held the
+Princess captive, in a remote corner, with his honeyed tongue. She
+looked at him seductively out of her great, slumberous blue eyes, even
+as she had looked, on occasion, at him, Paul. He hated Lord Francis,
+set himself up against him, as of old he had set himself up against
+Billy Goodge. He was a better man than Frank Ayres. Frank Ayres was
+only a popinjay. Beneath the tails of his coat he snapped his fingers
+at Frank Ayres, while he listened, with his own agreeable smile, to
+Mademoiselle de Cressy's devilled gossip.
+
+He was very frigid and courtly when he bade the Princess good night at
+the door of her limousine.
+
+"Ah, que vous etes bete!" she laughed.
+
+He went to bed very angry. She had told him to his face that he was a
+silly fool. And so he was. He thought of all the brilliantly dignified
+things he might have said, if the relentless engine had not whirred her
+away down the drive. But the next morning Lord Francis met him in the
+wintry garden and smiled and held out a winning hand. Paul hid his
+hatred beneath the mask of courtesy. They talked for a few moments of
+indifferent matters. Then Frank Ayres suddenly said: "Have you ever
+thought of standing for Parliament?"
+
+Paul, who had been sauntering between flowerless beds with his
+companion, stood stock still. The Chief Whip of a political party is a
+devil of a fellow. To the aspiring young politician he is much more a
+devil of a fellow than the Prime Minister or any Secretary of State. If
+a Chief Whip breathes the suggestion that a man might possibly stand
+for election as a Member of Parliament, it means that at any suitable
+vacancy, or at a general election, he will, with utter certainty, have
+his chance as a candidate with the whole force of his party behind him.
+It is part of the business of Chief Whips to find candidates.
+
+"Of course," said Paul, rather stupidly. "Eventually. One of these
+days."
+
+"But soon?"
+
+"Soon?"
+
+Paul's head reeled. What did he mean by soon? "Well," Lord Francis
+laughed, "not to-morrow. But pretty soon. Look here, Savelli. I'm going
+to speak frankly. The party's in for a long period out of office.
+That's obvious. Look at the majority against us. We want the young
+blood--not the old hacks--so that when we come in again we shall have a
+band of trained men in the heyday of their powers. Of course I
+know--it's my business to know--what generally you have done for the
+Young England League, but I missed your speech at Flickney Heath in the
+autumn. You had an immense success, hadn't you?"
+
+"They seemed pleased with what I had to say," replied Paul modestly.
+"When did you hear about it?"
+
+"Last night."
+
+"The Winwoods are the dearest people in the world," said Paul, walking
+warily, "but they are prejudiced in my favour."
+
+"It wasn't the Winwoods."
+
+The beautiful truth flashed upon Paul.
+
+"Then it was the Princess Zobraska."
+
+The other laughed. "Never mind. I know all about it. It isn't often one
+has to listen to speeches at second-hand. The question is: Would you
+care to stand when the time comes?"
+
+"I should just think I would," cried Paul boyishly.
+
+All his jealous resentment had given place to exultation. It was the
+Princess who had told Frank Ayres. If she had been laying him under the
+spell of her seduction it was on his, Paul's, account. She had had the
+splendid audacity to recite his speech to the Chief Whip. Frank Ayres
+was suddenly transformed from a popinjay into an admirable fellow. The
+Princess herself sat enthroned more adorable than ever.
+
+"The only difficulty," said Paul, "is that I have to earn my living."
+
+"That might be arranged," said Lord Francis.
+
+So Paul, as soon as he found an opportunity, danced over to Chetwood
+Park and told his Princess all about it, and called her a tutelary
+goddess and an angel and all manner of pretty names. And the Princess,
+who was alone, poured for him her priceless Russian tea into egg-shell
+China tea-cups and fed him on English crumpets, and, in her French and
+feminine way, gave him the outer fringe of her heart to play with--a
+very dangerous game. She had received him, not as once before in the
+state drawing room, but in the intimacy of her own boudoir, a place all
+soft lights and cushions and tapestries and gleaming bits of sculpture.
+After tea and crumpets had been consumed, the dangerous game proceeded
+far enough for Paul to confess his unjust dislike of Frank Ayres.
+
+"Gros jaloux," said the Princess.
+
+"That was why you said que vous etes bete," said he.
+
+"Partly."
+
+"What were the other reasons?"
+
+"Any woman has a thousand reasons for calling any man stupid."
+
+"Tell me some of them at any rate."
+
+"Well, isn't it stupid of a man to try to quarrel with his best friend
+when he won't be seeing her again for three or four months?"
+
+"You're not going away soon?"
+
+"Next week."
+
+"Oh!" said Paul.
+
+"Yes. I go to Paris, then to my villa at Mont Boron. I have the
+nostalgia of my own country, you see. Then to Venice at Easter."
+
+Paul looked at her wistfully, for life seemed suddenly very blank and
+dismal. "What shall I do all that time without my best friend?"
+
+"You will probably find another and forget her."
+
+She was lying back among cushions, pink and terra-cotta, and a round
+black cushion framed her delicate head.
+
+Paul said in a low voice, bending forward: "Do you think you are a
+woman whom men forget?"
+
+Their eyes met. The game had grown very perilous. "Men may remember the
+princess," she replied, "but forget the woman."
+
+"If it weren't for the woman inside the princess; what reason should I
+have for remembering?" he asked.
+
+She fenced. "But, as it is, you don't see me very often."
+
+"I know. But you are here--to be seen--not when I want you, for that
+would be every hour of the day--but, at least, in times of emergency.
+You are here, all the same, in the atmosphere of my life."
+
+"And if I go abroad I shall no longer be in that atmosphere? Did I not
+say you would forget?"
+
+She laughed. Then quickly started forward, and, elbow on knee and chin
+on palm, regarded him brightly. "We are talking like a couple of people
+out of Mademoiselle de Scudery," she said before he had time to reply.
+"And we are in the twentieth century, mon pauvre ami. We must be
+sensible. I know that you will miss me. And I will miss you too. Mais
+que voulez-vous? We have to obey the laws of the world we live in."
+
+"Need we?" asked Paul daringly. "Why need we?"
+
+"We must. I must go away to my own country. You must stay in yours and
+work and fulfill your ambitions." She paused. "I want you to be a great
+man," she said, with a strange tenderness in her voice.
+
+"With you by my side," said he, "I feel I could conquer the earth."
+
+"As your good friend I shall always be by your side. Vous voyez, mon
+cher Paul," she went on quickly in French. "I am not quite as people
+see me. I am a woman who is lonely and not too happy, who has had
+disillusions which have embittered her life. You know my history. It is
+public property. But I am young. And my heart is healed--and it craves
+faith and tenderness and--and friendship. I have many to flatter me. I
+am not too ugly. Many men pay their court to me, but they do not touch
+my heart. None of them even interest me. I don't know why. And then I
+have my rank, which imposes on me its obligations. Sometimes I wish I
+were a little woman of nothing at all, so that I could do as I like.
+Mais enfin, I do what I can. You have come, Paul Savelli, with your
+youth and your faith and your genius, and you pay your court to me like
+the others. Yes, it is true--and as long as it was amusing, I let it go
+on. But now that you interest me, it is different. I want your success.
+I want it with all my heart. It is a little something in my life--I
+confess it--quelque chose de tres joli--and I will not spoil it. So let
+us be good friends, frank and loyal--without any Scudery." She looked
+at him with eyes that had lost their languor--a sweet woman's eyes, a
+little moist, very true. "And now," she said, "will you be so kind as
+to put a log on the fire."
+
+Paul rose and threw a log on the glowing embers, and stood by her side.
+He was deeply moved. Never before had she so spoken. Never before had
+she afforded a glimpse of the real woman. Her phrases, so natural, so
+sincere, in her own tongue, and so caressive, stirred the best in him.
+The glamour passed from the royal lady; only the sweet and beautiful
+woman remained.
+
+"I will be what you will, my Princess," he said.
+
+At that moment he could not say more. For the first time in his life he
+was mute in a woman's presence; and the reason was that for the first
+time in his life love for a woman had gripped his heart.
+
+She rose and smiled at him. "Bons amis, francs et loyaux?"
+
+"Francs et loyaux."
+
+She gave him her hand in friendship; but she gave him her eyes in love.
+It is the foolish way of women.
+
+"May a frank and loyal friend write to you sometimes?" he asked.
+
+"Why, yes. And a frank and loyal friend will answer."
+
+"And when shall I see you again?"
+
+"Did I not tell you," she said, moving to the bell, for this was
+leave-taking--"that I shall be in Venice at Easter?"
+
+Paul went out into the frosty air, and the bright wintry stars shone
+down on him. Often on such nights he had looked up, wondering which was
+his star, the star that guided his destiny. But to-night no such fancy
+crossed his mind. He did not think of the stars. He did not think of
+his destiny. His mind and soul were drenched in thought of one woman.
+It had come at last, the great passion, the infinite desire. It had
+come in a moment, wakened into quivering being by the caressive notes
+of the dear French voice--"mais je suis jeune, et mon coeur est gueri,
+et il lui manque affreusement de la foi, de la tendresse,
+de--de"--adorable catch of emotion--"de l'amitie." Friendship, indeed!
+For amitie all but her lips said amour. He walked beneath the wintry
+stars, a man in a perfect dream.
+
+Till then she had been but his Princess, the exquisite lady whom it had
+amused to wander with him into the pays du tendre. She had been as far
+above him as the now disregarded stars. She had come down with a
+carnival domino over her sidereal raiment, and had met him on carnival
+equality. He beau masque! He, knowing her, had fallen beneath her
+starry spell. He was Paul Kegworthy, Paul Savelli, what you like; Paul
+the adventurer, Paul the man born to great things. She was a beautiful
+woman, bearing the title of Princess, the title that had haunted his
+life since first the Vision Splendid dawned upon him as he lay on his
+stomach eavesdropping and heard the words of the divinely-smelling
+goddess who had given him his talisman, the cornelian heart. To "rank
+himself with princes" had been the intense meaning of his life since
+ragged and fiercely imaginative childhood. Odd circumstances had ranked
+him with Sophie Zobraska. The mere romance of it had carried him off
+his feet. She was a princess. She was charming. She frankly liked his
+society. She seemed interested in his adventurous career. She was
+romantic. He too. She was his Egeria. He had worshipped her
+romantically, in a mediaeval, Italian way, and she had accepted the
+homage. It had all been deliciously artificial. It had all been
+Mademoiselle de Scudery. But to-day the real woman, casting off her
+carnival domino, casting off too the sidereal raiment, had spoken, for
+the first time, in simple womanhood, and her betraying eyes had told
+things that they had told to no other man living or dead. And all that
+was artificial, all that was fantastic, all that was glamour, was
+stripped away from Paul in the instant of her self-revelation. He loved
+her as man loves woman. He laughed aloud as his young feet struck the
+frozen road. She knew and was not angry. She, in her wonder, gave him
+leave to love her. It was obvious that she loved him to love her. Dear
+God! He could go on loving her like this for the rest of his life. What
+more did he want? To the clean man of nine-and-twenty, sufficient for
+the day is the beauty thereof.
+
+An inspired youth took his place at the Winwoods' dinner table that
+evening. The elderly, ugly heiress, Miss Durning, concerning whom Miss
+Winwood had, with gentle malice, twitted him some months before, sat by
+his side. He sang her songs of Araby and tales of far Cashmere--places
+which in the commonplace way of travel he had never visited. What
+really happened in the drawing room between the departure of the ladies
+and the entrance of the men no one knows. But before the ladies went to
+bed Miss Winwood took Paul aside.
+
+"Paul dear," she said, "you're never going to marry an old woman for
+money, are you?"
+
+"Good God, no! Dearest lady, what do you mean?"
+
+His cry was so sincere that she laughed.
+
+"Nothing," she said.
+
+"But you must mean something." He threw out his hands.
+
+"Are you aware that you've been flirting disgracefully with Lizzle
+Durning?"
+
+"I?" said Paul, clapping a hand to his shirt-front.
+
+"You."
+
+He smiled his sunny smile into the clear, direct eyes of his dearest
+lady--all the more dear because of the premature white of her hair. "I
+would flirt to-night with Xantippe, or Kerenhappuch, or Queen
+Victoria," said he.
+
+"Why?"
+
+He laughed, and although none of the standing and lingering company had
+overheard them, he gently led her to the curtained embrasure of the
+drawing-room window.
+
+"This is perhaps the biggest day of my life. I've not had an
+opportunity of telling you. This morning Frank Ayres offered me a seat
+in Parliament."
+
+"I'm glad," said Ursula Winwood; but her eyes hardened. "And so--Lizzie
+Durning--"
+
+He took both her elbows in his hands--only a Fortunate Youth, with his
+laughing charm, would have dared to grip Ursula Winwood's elbows and
+cut her short. "Dearest lady," said he, "to-day there are but two women
+in the world for me. You are one. The other--well--it isn't Miss
+Durning."
+
+She searched him through and through, "This afternoon?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Paul!" She withdrew from his grasp. In her voice was a touch of
+reproach.
+
+"Dearest lady," said he, "I would die rather than marry a rich woman,
+ugly or beautiful, if I could not bring her something big in
+return--something worth living for."
+
+"You've fold me either too much or too little. Am I not entitled to
+know how things stand?"
+
+"You're entitled to know the innermost secrets of my heart," he cried;
+and he told thereof as far as his love for the Princess was concerned.
+
+"But, my poor boy," said Ursula tenderly, "how is it all going to end?"
+
+"It's never going to end," cried Paul.
+
+Ursula Winwood smiled on him and sighed a little; for she remembered
+the gallant young fellow who had been killed in the Soudan in eighteen
+eighty-five.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+IT would never end. Why should it? Could a Great Wonder be merely a
+transient thrill? Absurd. Dawn followed night, day after day, and the
+wonder had not faded. It would never fade. Letter followed letter, each
+more precious than the last.
+
+She began with "Mon cher Paul." Then "Mon cher," then sometimes "Paul."
+She set the tone of the frank and loyal friendship in a style very
+graceful, very elusive, a word of tenderness melting away in a laugh;
+she took the friendship, pulled it to pieces and reconstructed it in
+ideal form; then she tied blue ribbon round its neck, and showed him
+how beautiful it was. She sat on the veranda of her villa and looked
+out on the moonlit Mediterranean and wanted to cry--"J'avais envie de
+Pleurer"--because she was all alone, having entertained at dinner a
+heap of dull and ugly people. She had spent a day on the yacht of a
+Russian Grand-Duke. "Il m'a fait une cour effrenee"--Paul thirsted
+immediately for the blood of this Grand-Duke, who had dared to make
+violent love to her. But when, a few lines farther on, he found that
+she had guessed his jealousy and laughed at it, he laughed too. "Don't
+be afraid. I have had enough of these people." She wanted une ame
+sincere et candide; and Paul laid the flattering unction to his own
+sincere and candid soul. Then she spoke prettily of his career. He was
+to be the flambeau eveilleur, the awakening torch in the darkness
+before the daybreak. But he musn't overwork. His health was precious.
+There was a blot and erasure in the sentence. He took the letter to the
+light, lover-wise, and looked at it through a magnifying glass--and his
+pulses thrilled when it told him that she had originally written,
+"Votre sante m'est precieuse," and had scrabbled out the "m." "Your
+health is precious to me." That is what her heart had said. Did lover
+ever have a dearer mistress? He kissed the blot, and the thick French
+ink coming off on his lips was nectar.
+
+And he began his letters with "My dear Princess;" then it was "Dearest
+Princess;" then "My Princess." Then she rallied him on the matter. It
+came to "Mais enfin j'ai un petit nom comme tout le monde." In common
+with the rest of humanity she had a Christian name--and she was
+accustomed to be called by it by her frank and loyal friends. "And they
+are so few." Paul heard the delicate little sigh and saw the delicate
+rise and fall of the white bosom. And again he fed on purple ink. So he
+began his next letter with "Dear Sophie." But he could not pour the
+same emotion into "Dear Sophie" as he could into "My Princess"--and "My
+Sophie" was a step beyond the bounds of frank and loyal friendship. So
+it came to his apostrophizing her as "Dear" and scattering "Sophies"
+deliciously through the text. And so the frank and loyal friendship
+went on its appointed course, as every frank and loyal friendship
+between two young and ardent souls who love each other has proceeded
+since the beginning of a sophisticated world.
+
+The first three months of that year were a period of enchantment. He
+lived supremely. The daily round of work was trivial play. He rose at
+seven, went to bed at two, crowded the nineteen hours of wakefulness
+with glorious endeavour. He went all over the country with his flambeau
+eveilleur, awakening the Youth of England, finding at last the great
+artistic gift the gods had given him, the gift of oratory. One day he
+reminded Jane of a talk long ago when he had fled from the studios:
+"You asked me how I was going to earn my living. I said I was going to
+follow one of the Arts."
+
+"I remember," said Jane, regarding him full-eyed. "You said you thought
+you were a poet--but you might be a musician or painter. Finally you
+decided you were an actor."
+
+He laughed his gay laugh. "I was an infernally bad actor," he
+acknowledged.
+
+Then he explained his failure on the stage. He was impatient of other
+people's inventions, wanting to play not Hamlet or Tom or Dick or Romeo
+or Harry, but himself. Now he could play himself. It was acting in a
+way. Anyhow it was an Art; so his boyish prophecy had come true. He had
+been struggling from childhood for a means of self-expression. He had
+tried most of them save this. Here he had found it. He loved to play
+upon a crowd as if they were so many notes of a vast organ.
+
+On this occasion Jane said: "And my means of self-expression is to play
+on the keys of a typewriter."
+
+"Your time hasn't come," he replied. "When you have found your means
+you will express yourself all the more greatly."
+
+Which was ingenious on the part of Paul, but ironically consoling to
+Jane.
+
+One week-end during the session he spent at the Marchioness of
+Chudley's place in Lancashire. He drove in a luxurious automobile
+through the stately park, which once he had traversed in the brakeful
+of urchins, the raggedest of them all, and his heart swelled with
+pardonable exultation. He had passed through Bludston and he had caught
+a glimpse of what had once been his brickfield, now the site of more
+rows of mean little houses, and he had seen the grim factory chimneys
+still smoking, smoking.... The little Buttons, having grown up into big
+Buttons, were toiling away their lives in those factories. And Button
+himself, the unspeakable Button? Was he yet alive? And Mrs. Button, who
+had been Polly Kegworthy and called herself his mother? It was
+astonishing how seldom he thought of her.... He had run away a
+scarecrow boy in a gipsy van. He came back a formative force in the
+land, the lover of a princess, the honoured guest of the great palace
+of the countryside. He slipped his hand into his waistcoat pocket and
+felt the cornelian heart.
+
+Yes, in the great palace he found himself an honoured guest. His name
+was known independently of his work for the Winwoods. He was doing good
+service to his party. The word had gone abroad--perhaps Frank Ayres had
+kindly spoken it--that he was the coming man. Lady Chudley said: "I
+wonder if you remember what we talked about when I first met you."
+
+Paul laughed, for she did not refer to the first meeting of all. "I'm
+afraid I was very young and fatuous," said he. "It was years ago. I
+hadn't grown up."
+
+"Never mind. We talked about waking the country from its sleep."
+
+"And you gave me a phrase, Lady Chudley--'the Awakener of England.' It
+stuck. It crystallized all sorts of vague ambitions. I've never
+forgotten it for five consecutive minutes. But how can you remember a
+casual act of graciousness to an unimportant boy?"
+
+"No boy who dreams of England's greatness is unimportant," she said.
+"You've proved me to be right. Your dreams are coming true--see, I
+don't forget!"
+
+"I owe you far more than you could possibly imagine," said Paul.
+
+"No, no. Don't. Don't exaggerate. A laughing phrase--that's nothing."
+
+"It is something. Even a great deal. But it's not all," said he.
+
+"What else is there?"
+
+"You were one of the two or three," he said earnestly, thinking of the
+Bludston factory, "who opened new horizons for me."
+
+"I'm a proud woman," said Lady Chudley.
+
+The next day, Sunday, old Lord Chudley dragged him into his own private
+den. He had a very red, battered, clean-shaven face and very red hair
+and side whiskers; and he was a very honest gentleman, believing
+implicitly in God and the King and the House of Lords, and Foxes, and
+the Dutch School of Painting, and his responsibility as a great
+landowner toward the two or three thousand human beings with whom he
+had business relations.
+
+"Look here, Savelli. I've looked into your League. It's a damned good
+thing. About the only thing that has been invented which can stem the
+tide of Socialism. Catch 'em young. That's the way. But you want the
+sinews of war. You get subscriptions, but not enough; I've seen your
+last balance sheet. You want a little army of--what the devil shall we
+call 'em?"
+
+"Big Englanders," Paul suggested at a venture.
+
+"Good. We want an army of 'em to devote their whole time to the work.
+Open a special fund. You and Ursula Winwood will know how to work it.
+What Ursula Winwood doesn't know in this sort of business isn't worth
+knowing--and here's something to head the list with."
+
+And he handed Paul a cheque, which after a dazed second or two he
+realized to be one for five thousand pounds.
+
+That was the beginning of the financial prosperity and the real
+political importance of the Young England League. Paul organized a
+great public dinner with the Leader of the Opposition in the chair and
+an amazing band of notables around the tables. Speeches were made, the
+Marquis of Chudley's patriotism extolled, and subscription lists filled
+up and handed to a triumphant organizing secretary.
+
+A powerful daily newspaper took up the cause and made strong appeal.
+The Lodges made simultaneous efforts in their respective districts.
+Money flowed into the League's coffers.
+
+When Parliament rose for the Easter recess Paul, the most tired, yet
+the most blissful, youth among the Fortunate, flew straight to Venice,
+where a happy-eyed princess welcomed him. She was living in a Palazzo
+on the Grand Canal, lent to her--that is the graceful Italian way of
+putting it--by some Venetian friends; and there, with Mademoiselle de
+Cressy to keep off the importunate, she received such acquaintance as
+floated from the ends of the earth through the enchanted city.
+
+"I have started by seeing as few people as I can," she said. "That's
+all on account of you, monsieur."
+
+He pressed her hand. "I hope we don't see a single soul we know as long
+as I'm here," he declared.
+
+His hope was gratified, not completely, but enough to remove grounds
+for lover's fretfulness. He passed idyllic days in halcyon weather.
+Often she would send her gondola to fetch him from the Grand Hotel,
+where he was staying. Now and then, most graciously audacious of
+princesses, she would come herself. On such occasions he would sit
+awaiting her with beating heart, juvenis fortunatus nimium, on the
+narrow veranda of the hotel, regardless of the domed white pile of
+Santa Maria della Salute opposite, or the ceaseless life on the water,
+or the sunshine, or anything else in Venice, his gaze fixed on the bend
+of the canal; and then at last would appear the tall curved prow, and
+then the white-clad, red-sashed Giacomo bending to his oar, and then
+the white tenda with the dear form beneath, vaguely visible, and then
+Felipe, clad like Giacomo and bending, too, rhythmically with the
+foremost figure. Slowly, all too slowly, the gondola would near the
+steps, and beneath the tenda would smile the dearest face in the world,
+and the cheeks would be delicately flushed and the eyes tender and
+somewhat shy. And Paul would stand, smiling too, a conquering young
+figure with green Marienbad hat tilted with ever so tiny a shade of
+jauntiness, the object of frankly admiring and curious glances from a
+lone woman or two on the veranda, until the gondola was brought up to
+the wave-washed steps, and the hotel porter had fixed the bridge of
+plank. Then, with Giacomo supporting his elbow, he would board the
+black craft and would creep under the tenda and sink on the low seat by
+her side with a sense of daring and delicious intimacy, and the gondola
+would glide away into fairyland.
+
+"Let us be real tourists and do Venice thoroughly," she had said. "I
+have never seen it properly."
+
+"But you've been here many times before."
+
+"Yes. But--"
+
+She hesitated.
+
+"Eh bien?"
+
+"Je ne peux pas le dire. Il faut deviner."
+
+"Will you forgive me if I guess right? Our great Shakespeare says:
+'Love lends a precious seeing to the eye.'"
+
+"That--that's very pretty," said the Princess in French. "I love much
+your Shakespeare."
+
+Whereupon Paul recognized her admission of the correctness of his
+conjecture; and so, with the precious vision they had borrowed, they
+went about tourist-wise to familiar churches and palaces, and
+everything they saw was lit with exceeding loveliness. And they saw the
+great pictures of the world, and Paul, with his expert knowledge,
+pointed out beauties she had not dreamed of hitherto, and told her
+tales of the painters and discoursed picturesquely on Venetian history,
+and she marvelled at his insight and learning and thought him the most
+wonderful man that had ever dropped, ready-made, from heaven. And he,
+in the flush of his new love, was thrilled by her touch and the low
+tones of her voice when she plucked him by the sleeve and murmured:
+"Ah, Paul, regardez-moi ca. It is so beautiful one wants to weep with
+joy."
+
+They spoke now half in French, half in English, and she no longer
+protested against his murderous accent, which, however, he strove to
+improve. Love must have lent its precious hearing too, for she vowed
+she loved to hear him speak her language.
+
+In the great Council Chamber of the Ducal Palace they looked at the
+seventy-six portraits of the illustrious succession of Doges--with the
+one tragic vacant space, the missing portrait of Marino Faliero, the
+Rienzi of Venice, the man before his time.
+
+"It seizes one's heart, doesn't it?" said the Princess, with her
+impulsive touch on his sleeve. "All these men were kings--sovereigns of
+a mighty nation. And how like they are to one another--in this
+essential quality one would say they were brothers of a great family."
+
+"Why, yes," he cried, scanning the rows of severe and subtle faces.
+"It's true. Illuminatingly true."
+
+He slid up his wrist quickly so that his hand met hers; he held it.
+"How swift your perception is! And what is that quality--that quality
+common to them all--that quality of leadership? Let us try to find it."
+
+Unconsciously he gripped her hand, and she returned his pressure; and
+they stood, as chance willed it, alone, free from circumambulant
+tourists, in the vast chamber, vivid with Paul Veronese's colour on
+wall and ceilings, with Tintoretto and Bassano' with the arrogant
+splendour of the battles and the pomp and circumstance of victorious
+armies of the proud and conquering republic, and their eyes were drawn
+from all this painted and riotous wonder by the long arresting frieze
+of portraits of serene, masterful and subtle faces.
+
+"The common factor--that's what we want, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," she breathed.
+
+And as they stood, hand in hand, the unspoken thought vibrating between
+them, the memory came to him of a day long ago when he had stood with
+another woman--a girl then--before the photographs in the window of the
+London Stereoscopic Company in Regent Street, and he had scanned faces
+of successful men. He laughed--he could not help it--and drew his
+Princess closer to him. Between the analogous then and the wonderful
+now, how immense a difference! As he laughed she looked swiftly up into
+his face.
+
+"I know why you laugh."
+
+"No, my Princess. Impossible."
+
+"Mais oui. Tell me. All these great princes"--she swept her little
+gloved hand toward the frieze. "What is their common factor?"
+
+Paul, forgetful of his mirth, looked round. "'Indomitable will," said
+he seriously. "Unconquerable ambition, illimitable faith. They all seem
+to be saying their creed. 'I believe in myself almighty, and in Venice
+under my control, and in God who made us both, and in the inferiority
+of the remnant of the habitable globe.' Or else: 'In the beginning God
+created Venice. Then He created the rest of the world. Then He created
+Me. Then He retired and left me to deal with the situation.' Or else:
+'I am an earthly Trinity. I am myself. I am Venice. I am God.'"
+
+"It is magnificent!" she cried. "How you understand them! How you
+understand the true aristocratic spirit! They are all, what you call,
+leaders of men. I did not expect an analysis so swift and so true. But,
+Paul"--her voice sank adorably--"all these men lack
+something--something that you have. And that is why I thought you
+laughed."
+
+He smiled down on her. "Do you think I was measuring myself with these
+men?"
+
+"Naturally. Why should you not?" she asked proudly.
+
+"And what have I got that they lack?"
+
+"Happiness," said the Princess.
+
+Paul was silent for a while, as they moved slowly away to the balcony
+which overlooks the lagoon and San Giorgio Maggiore glowing warm in the
+sunshine, and then he said: "Yet most of those men loved passionately
+in their time, and were loved by beautiful women."
+
+"Their love was a thing of the passions, not of the spirit. You cannot
+see a woman, that is to say happiness, behind any of their faces."
+
+He whispered: "Can you see a woman behind mine."
+
+"If you look like that," she replied, with a contented little laugh,
+"the whole world can see it." And so their talk drifted far away from
+Doges, just as their souls were drifting far from the Golden Calf of
+the Frank and Loyal Friendship which Sophie the Princess had set up.
+
+How could they help it--and in Venice of all places in the world? If
+she had determined on maintaining the friendship calm and austere, why
+in Minerva's name had she bidden him hither? Sophie Zobraska passed for
+a woman of sense. None knew better than she the perils of moonlit
+canals and the sensuous splash of water against a gondola, and the sad
+and dreamy beauty which sets the lonely heart aching for love. Why had
+she done it? Some such questions must Mademoiselle de Cressy have
+asked, for the Princess told him that Stephanie had lectured her
+severely for going about so much in public alone with a beau jeune
+homme.
+
+"But we don't always want Stephanie with us," she argued, "and she is
+not sympathetic in Venice. She likes restaurants and people. Besides,
+she is always with her friends at Danielli's, so if it weren't for you
+I should be doing nothing all by myself in the lonely palazzo.
+Forcement we go about together."
+
+Which was all sophistical and nonsensical; and she knew it, for there
+was a mischievous little gleam in her eye as she spoke. But none the
+less, shutting her ears to the unsympathetic Stephanie, did she
+continue to show herself alone in public with the beautiful youth. She
+had thrown her crown over the windmills for a few happy days; for a few
+happy days she was feeding her starved nature, drinking in her fill of
+beauty and colour and the joy of life. And the pair, thus forcibly
+thrown together, drifted through the narrow canals beneath the old
+crumbling palaces, side by side, and hand in hand while Giacomo and
+Felipe, disregarded automata, bent to their oars.
+
+One afternoon, one mellow and memorable afternoon, they were returning
+from Murano. Not a breath of wind ruffled the lagoon. The islands in
+their spring verdure slumbered peacefully. Far away the shipping in the
+bacino lay still like enchanted craft. Only a steamer or two, and here
+and there the black line of a gondola with its standing, solitary
+rower, broke the immobility of things. And Venice, russet and rose and
+grey, brooded in the sunset, a city of dreams. They murmured words of
+wonder and regret. Instinctively they drew near and their shoulders
+touched. Their clasp of fingers tightened and their breath came
+quickly, and for a long time they were silent. Then at last he
+whispered her name, in the old foolish and inevitable way. And she
+turned her face to him, and met his eyes and said "Paul," and her lips
+as she said it seemed to speak a kiss. And all the earth was wrapped in
+glory too overwhelming for speech.
+
+It was only when they entered the Grand Canal and drew up by the
+striped posts of the palazzo that she said: "I have those Roman people
+and the Heatherfields coming to dinner. I wish I hadn't." She sighed.
+"Would you care to come?"
+
+He smiled into her eyes. "No, my Princess, not to-night. I should do
+silly things. To-night I will go and talk to the moon. To-morrow, when
+can I come?"
+
+"Early. As early as you like."
+
+And Paul went away and talked to the moon, and the next morning, his
+heart tumultuous, presented himself at the palazzo. He was shown into
+the stiff Italian drawing-room, with its great Venetian glass
+chandelier, its heavy picture-hung walls, its Empire furniture covered
+in yellow silk. Presently the door opened and she entered, girlish in
+blouse and skirt, fresh as the morning. "Bon jour, Paul. I've not had
+time to put on my hat, but--"
+
+She did not end, for he strode toward her and with a little laugh of
+triumph took her in his arms and kissed her. And so what had to be came
+to pass.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+"I LOVE you too much, my Sophie, to be called the Princess Zobraska's
+husband."
+
+"And I love you too much, dear, to wish to be called anything else than
+Paul Savelli's wife."
+
+That was their position, perfectly defined, perfectly understood. They
+had arrived at it after many arguments and kisses and lovers'
+protestations.
+
+"Such as I am I am," cried Paul. "A waif and stray, an unknown figure
+coming out of the darkness. I have nothing to give you but my love."
+
+"Are there titles or riches on earth of equal value?"
+
+"But I must give you more. The name Paul Savelli itself must be a title
+of honour."
+
+"It is becoming that," said the Princess. "And we can wait a little,
+Paul, can't we? We are so happy like this. Ah!" she sighed. "I have
+never been so happy in my life."
+
+"Nor I," said Paul.
+
+"And am I really the first?"
+
+"The first. Believe it or not as you like. But it's a fact. I've told
+you my life's dream. I never sank below it; and that is why perhaps it
+has come true."
+
+For once the assertion was not the eternal lie. Paul came fresh-hearted
+to his Princess.
+
+"I wish I were a young girl, Paul."
+
+"You are a star turned woman. The Star of my Destiny in which I always
+believed. The great things will soon come."
+
+They descended to more commonplace themes. Until the great things came,
+what should be their mutual attitude before Society?
+
+"Until I can claim you, let it be our dear and beautiful secret," said
+Paul. "I would not have it vulgarized by the chattering world for
+anything in life."
+
+Then Paul proved himself to be a proud and delicate lover, and when
+London with its season and its duties and its pleasures absorbed them,
+he had his reward. For it was sweet to see her in great assemblies,
+shining like a queen and like a queen surrounded by homage, and to know
+that he alone of mortals was enthroned in her heart. It was sweet to
+meet her laughing glance, dear fellow-conspirator. It was sweet every
+morning and night to have the intimate little talk through the
+telephone. And it was sweetest of all to snatch a precious hour with
+her alone. Of such vain and foolish things is made all that is most
+beautiful in life.
+
+He took his dearest lady--though Miss Winwood, now disclaimed the
+title--into his confidence. So did the Princess. It was very comforting
+to range Miss Winwood on their side; and to feel themselves in close
+touch with her wisdom and sympathy. And her sympathy manifested itself
+in practical ways--those of the woman confidante of every love affair
+since the world began. Why should the Princess Zobraska not interest
+herself in some of the philanthropic schemes of which the house in
+Portland Place was the headquarters? There was one, a Forlorn Widows'
+Fund, the presidency of which she would be willing to resign in favour
+of the Princess. The work was trivial: it consisted chiefly in
+consultation with Mr. Savelli and in signing letters. The Princess
+threw her arms round her neck, laughing and blushing and calling her
+delicieuse. You see it was obvious that Mr. Savelli could not be
+consulted in his official capacity or official letters signed elsewhere
+than in official precincts.
+
+"I'll do what I can for the pair of you," said Miss Winwood to Paul.
+"But it's the most delightfully mad and impossible thing I've ever put
+my hand to."
+
+Accepting the fact of their romance, however, she could not but approve
+Paul's attitude. It was the proud attitude of the boy who nearly six
+years ago was going, without a word, penniless and debonair out of her
+house. All the woman in her glowed over him.
+
+"I'm not going to be called an adventurer," he had declared. "I shall
+not submit Sophie to the indignity of trailing a despised husband after
+her. I'm not going to use her rank and wealth as a stepping-stone to my
+ambitions. Let me first attain an unassailable position. I shall have
+owed it to you, to myself, to anybody you like--but not to my marriage.
+I shall be somebody. The rest won't matter. The marriage will then be a
+romantic affair, and romantic affairs are not unpopular dans le monde
+ou l'on s'ennuie."
+
+This declaration was all very well; the former part all very noble, the
+latter exhibiting a knowledge of the world rather shrewd for one so
+young. But when would he be able to attain his unassailable position?
+Some years hence. Would Sophie Zobraska, who was only a few months
+younger than he, be content to sacrifice these splendid and
+irretrievable years of her youth? Ursula Winwood looked into the
+immediate future, and did not see it rosy. The first step toward an
+unassailable position was flight from the nest. This presupposed an
+income. If the party had been in power it would not have been difficult
+to find him a post. She worried herself exceedingly, for in her sweet
+and unreprehensible way she was more than ever in love with Paul.
+Meeting Frank Ayres one night at a large reception, she sought his
+advice.
+
+"Do you mind a wrench?" he asked. "No? Well, then--you and Colonel
+Winwood send him about his business and get another secretary. Let
+Savelli give all his time to his Young England League. Making him mug
+up material for Winwood's speeches and write letters to constituents
+about football clubs is using a razor to cut butter. His League's the
+thing. It can surely afford to pay him a decent salary. If it can't
+I'll see to a guarantee."
+
+"The last thing we see, my dear Frank," she said after she had thanked
+him, "is that which is right under our noses."
+
+The next day she went to Paul full of the scheme. Had he ever thought
+of it? He took her hands and smiled in his gay, irresistible way. "Of
+course, dearest lady," he said frankly. "But I would have cut out my
+tongue sooner than suggest it."
+
+"I know that, my dear boy."
+
+"And yet," said he, "I can't bear the idea of tearing myself away from
+you. It seems like black ingratitude."
+
+"It isn't. You forget that James and I have our little ambitions
+too--the ambition of a master for a favourite pupil. If you were a
+failure we should both be bitterly disappointed. Don't you see? And as
+for leaving us--why need you? We should miss you horribly. You've never
+been quite our paid servant. And now you're something like our son."
+Tears started in the sweet lady's clear eyes. "Even if you did go to
+your own chambers, I shouldn't let our new secretary have this
+room"--they were in what the household called "the office"--really
+Paul's luxuriously furnished private sitting room, which contained his
+own little treasures of books and pictures and bits of china and glass
+accumulated during the six years of easeful life--"He will have the
+print room, which nobody uses from one year's end to another, and which
+is far more convenient for the street door. And the same at Drane's
+Court. So when you no longer work for us, my dear boy, our home will be
+yours, as long as you're content to stay, just because we love you."
+
+Her hand was on his shoulder and his head was bent. "God grant," said
+he, "that I may be worthy of your love."
+
+He looked up and met her eyes. Her hand was still on his shoulder. Then
+very simply he bent down and kissed her on the cheek.
+
+He told his Princess all about it. She listened with dewy eyes. "Ah,
+Paul," she said. "That 'precious seeing' of love--I never had it till
+you came. I was blind. I never knew that there were such beautiful
+souls as Ursula Winwood in the world."
+
+"Dear, how I love you for saying that!" cried Paul.
+
+"But it's true."
+
+"That is why," said he.
+
+So the happiest young man in London worked and danced through the
+season, knowing that the day of emancipation was at hand. His
+transference from the Winwoods to the League was fixed for October 1.
+He made great plans for an extension of the League's, activities,
+dreamed of a palace for headquarters with the banner of St. George
+flying proudly over it, an object-lesson for the nation. One day in
+July while he was waiting for Colonel Winwood in the lobby of the House
+of Commons, Frank Ayres stopped in the middle of a busy rush and shook
+hands.
+
+"Been down to Hickney Heath again? I would if I were you. Rouse 'em up."
+
+As the words of a Chief Whip are apt to be significant, Paul closeted
+himself with the President of the Hickney Heath Lodge, who called the
+Secretary of the local Conservative Association to the interview. The
+result was that Paul was invited to speak at an anti-Budget meeting
+convened by the Association. He spoke, and repeated his success. The
+Conservative newspapers the next morning gave a resume of his speech.
+His Sophie, coming to sign letters in her presidential capacity,
+brought him the cuttings, a proceeding which he thought adorable. The
+season ended triumphantly.
+
+For a while he lost his Princess. She went to Cowes, then to stay with
+French relations in a chateau in the Dordogne. Paul went off yachting
+with the Chudleys and returned for the shooting to Drane's Court. In
+the middle of September the Winwoods' new secretary arrived and
+received instruction in his duties. Then came the Princess to Morebury
+Park. "Dearest," she said, in his arms, "I never want to leave you
+again. France is no longer France for me since I have England in my
+heart."
+
+"You remember that? My wonderful Princess!"
+
+He found her more woman, more expansive, more bewitchingly caressing.
+Absence had but brought her nearer. When she laid her head on his
+shoulder and murmured in the deep and subtle tones of her own language:
+"My Paul, it seems such a waste of time to be apart," it took all his
+pride and will to withstand the maddening temptation. He vowed that the
+time would soon come when he could claim her, and went away in feverish
+search for worlds to conquer.
+
+Then came October and London once more.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Paul was dressing for dinner one evening when a reply-paid telegram was
+brought to him.
+
+"If selected by local committee will you stand for Hickney Heath?
+Ayres."
+
+He sat on his bed, white and trembling, and stared at the simple
+question. The man-servant stood imperturbable, silver tray in hand.
+Seeing the reply-paid form, he waited for a few moments.
+
+"Is there an answer, sir?"
+
+Paul nodded, asked for a pencil, and with a shaky hand wrote the reply.
+"Yes," was all he said.
+
+Then with reaction came the thrill of mighty exultation, and, throwing
+on his clothes, he rushed to the telephone in his sitting room. Who
+first to hear the wondrous news but his Princess? That there was a
+vacancy in Hickney Heath he knew, as all Great Britain knew; for
+Ponting, the Radical Member, had died suddenly the day before. But it
+had never entered his head that he could be chosen as a candidate.
+
+"Mais j'y ai bien pense, moi," came the voice through the telephone.
+"Why did Lord Francis tell you to go to Hickney Heath last July?"
+
+How a woman leaps at things! With all his ambition, his astuteness,
+his political intuition, he had not seen the opportunity. But it had
+come. Verily the stars in their courses were fighting for him. Other
+names, he was aware, were before the Committee of the Local
+Association, perhaps a great name suggested by the Central Unionist
+Organization; there was also that of the former Tory member, who,
+smarting under defeat at the General Election, had taken but a lukewarm
+interest in the constituency and was now wandering in the Far East. But
+Paul, confident in his destiny, did not doubt that he would be
+selected. And then, within the next fortnight--for bye-elections during
+a Parliamentary session are matters of sweeping swiftness--would come
+the great battle, the great decisive battle of his life, and he would
+win. He must win. His kingdom was at stake--the dream kingdom of his
+life into which he would enter with his loved and won Princess on his
+arm. He poured splendid foolishness through the telephone into an
+enraptured ear.
+
+The lack of a sense of proportion is a charge often brought against
+women; but how often do men (as they should) thank God for it? Here was
+Sophie Zobraska, reared from childhood in the atmosphere of great
+affairs, mixing daily with folk who guided the destiny of nations,
+having two years before refused in marriage one of those who held the
+peace of Europe in his hands, moved to tense excitement of heart and
+brain and soul by the news that an obscure young man might possibly be
+chosen to contest a London Borough for election to the British
+Parliament, and thrillingly convinced that now was imminent the great
+momentous crisis in the history of mankind.
+
+With a lack of the same sense of proportion, equal in kind, though
+perhaps not so passionate in degree, did Miss Winwood receive the
+world-shaking tidings. She wept, and, thinking Paul a phoenix, called
+Frank Ayres an angel. Colonel Winwood tugged his long, drooping
+moustache and said very little; but he committed the astounding
+indiscretion of allowing his glass to be filled with champagne;
+whereupon he lifted it, and said, "Here's luck, my dear boy," and
+somewhat recklessly gulped down the gout-compelling liquid. And after
+dinner, when Miss Winwood had left them together, he lighted a long
+Corona instead of his usual stumpy Bock, and discussed with Paul
+electioneering ways and means.
+
+For the next day or two Paul lived in a whirl of telephones, telegrams,
+letters, scurryings across London, interviews, brain-racking
+questionings and reiterated declarations of political creed. But his
+selection was a foregone conclusion. His youth, his absurd beauty, his
+fire and eloquence, his unswerving definiteness of aim, his magic that
+had inspired so many with a belief in him and had made him the
+Fortunate Youth, captivated the imagination of the essentially
+unimaginative. Before a committee of wits and poets, Paul perhaps would
+not have had a dog's chance. But he appealed to the hard-headed
+merchants and professional men who chose him very much as the hero of
+melodrama appeals to a pit and gallery audience. He symbolized to them
+hope and force and predestined triumph. One or two at first sniffed
+suspiciously at his lofty ideals; but as there was no mistaking his
+political soundness, they let the ideals pass, as a natural and
+evanescent aroma.
+
+So, in his thirtieth year, Paul was nominated as Unionist candidate for
+the Borough of Hickney Heath, and he saw himself on the actual
+threshold of the great things to which he was born. He wrote a little
+note to Jane telling her the news. He also wrote to Barney Bill: "You
+dear old Tory--did you ever dream that ragamuffin little Paul was going
+to represent you in Parliament? Get out the dear old 'bus and paint it
+blue, with 'Paul Savelli forever' in gold letters, and, instead of
+chairs and mats, hang it with literature, telling what a wonderful
+fellow P. S. is. And go through the streets of Hickney Heath with it,
+and say if you like: 'I knew him when' he was a nipper--that high.' And
+if you like to be mysterious and romantic you can say: 'I, Barney Bill,
+gave him his first chance,' as you did, my dear old friend, and Paul's
+not the man to forget it. Oh, Barney, it's too wonderful"--his heart
+went out to the old man. "If I get in I will tell you something that
+will knock you flat. It will be the realization of all the silly
+rubbish I talked in the old brickfield at Bludston. But, dear old
+friend, it was you and the open road that first set me on the patriotic
+lay, and there's not a voter in Hickney Heath who can vote as you
+can--for his own private and particular trained candidate."
+
+Jane, for reasons unconjectured, did not reply. But from Barney Bill,
+who, it must be remembered, had leanings toward literature, he received
+a postcard with the following inscription: "Paul, Hif I can help you
+konker the Beastes of Effesus I will. Bill."
+
+And then began the furious existence of an electioneering campaign. His
+side had a clear start of the Radicals, who found some hitch in the
+choice of their candidate. The Young England League leaped into
+practical enthusiasm over their champion. Seldom has young candidate
+had so glad a welcome. And behind him stood his Sophie, an inspiring
+goddess.
+
+It so happened that for a date a few days hence had been fixed the
+Annual General Meeting of the Forlorn Widows' Fund, when Report and
+Balance Sheet were presented to the society. The control of this
+organization Paul had not allowed to pass into the alien hands of
+Townsend, the Winwoods' new secretary. Had not his Princess, for the
+most delicious reasons in the world, been made President? He scorned
+Ursula Winwood's suggestion that for this year he would allow Townsend
+to manage affairs. "What!" cried he, "leave my Princess in the lurch on
+her first appearance? Never!" By telephone he arranged an hour for the
+next day, when they could all consult together over this important
+matter.
+
+"But, my dear boy," said Miss Winwood, "your time is not your own.
+Suppose you're detained at Hickney Heath?"
+
+"The Conqueror," he cried, with a gay laugh, "belongs to the
+Detainers--not the Detained."
+
+She looked at him out of her clear eyes, and shook an indulgent head.
+
+"I know," said he, meeting her glance shrewdly. "He has got to use his
+detaining faculty with discretion. I've made a study of the little ways
+of conquerors. Ali! Dearest lady!" he burst out suddenly, in his
+impetuous way, "I'm talking nonsense; but I'm so uncannily happy!"
+
+"It does me good to look at you," she said.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+PAUL leaned back in his leather writing chair, smoking a cigarette and
+focussing the electioneering situation. Beside a sheet of foolscap on
+which he had been jotting down notes lay in neat piles the typewritten
+Report of the Forlorn Widows' Fund, the account book and the banker's
+pass book. He had sat up till three o'clock in the morning preparing
+for his Princess. Nothing now remained but the formal "examined and
+found correct" report of the auditors. For the moment the Forlorn
+Widows stood leagues away from Paul's thoughts. He had passed a
+strenuous day at Hickney Heath, lunching in the committee room on
+sandwiches and whisky and soda obtained from the nearest tavern,
+talking, inventing, dictating, writing, playing upon dull minds the
+flashes of his organizing genius. His committee was held up for the
+while by a dark rift in the Radical camp. They had not yet chosen their
+man. Nothing was known, save that a certain John Questerhayes, K. C.,
+an eminent Chancery barrister, who had of late made himself conspicuous
+in the constituency, had been turned down on the ground that he was not
+sufficiently progressive. Now for comfort to the Radical the term
+"Progressive" licks the blessed word Mesopotamia into a cocked hat.
+Under the Progressive's sad-coloured cloak he need not wear the red tie
+of the socialist. Apparently Mr. Questerhayes objected to the
+sad-coloured cloak, the mantle of Elijah, M. P., the late member for
+Hickney Heath. "Wanted: an Elisha," seemed to be the cry of the Radical
+Committee.
+
+Paul leaned back, his elbows on the arms of his chair, his finger tips
+together, a cigarette between his lips, lost in thought. The early
+November twilight deepened in the room. He was to address a meeting
+that night. In order to get ready for his speech he had not allowed
+himself to be detained, and had come home early. His speech had been
+prepared; but the Radical delay was a new factor of which he might take
+triumphant advantage. Hence the pencil notes on the sheet of foolscap,
+before him.
+
+A man-servant came in, turned on the electric light, pulled the
+curtains together and saw to the fire.
+
+"Tea's in the drawing-room, sir."
+
+"Bring me some here in a breakfast cup--nothing to eat," said Paul.
+
+Even his dearest lady could not help him in his meditated attack on the
+enemy whom the Lord was delivering into his hands.
+
+The man-servant went away. Presently Paul heard him reenter the room;
+the door was at his back. He threw out an impatient hand behind him.
+"Put it down anywhere, Wilton, I'll have it when I want it."
+
+"I beg pardon, sir," said the man, coming forward, "but it's not the
+tea. There's a gentleman and a lady and another person would like to
+see you. I said that you were busy, sir, but--"
+
+He put the silver salver, with its card, in front of Paul. Printed on
+the card was, "Mr. Silas Finn." In pencil was written: "Miss Seddon,
+Mr. William Simmons."
+
+Paul looked at the card in some bewilderment. What in the name of
+politics or friendship were they doing in Portland Place? Not to
+receive them, however, was unthinkable.
+
+"Show them in," said he.
+
+Silas Finn, Jane and Barney Bill! It was odd. He laughed and took out
+his watch. Yes, he could easily give them half an hour or so. But why
+had they come? He had found time to call once at the house in Hickney
+Heath since his return to town, and then he had seen Jane and Silas
+Finn together and they had talked, as far as he could remember, of the
+Disestablishment of the Anglican Church and the elevating influence of
+landscape painting on the human soul. Why had they come? It could not
+be to offer their services during the election, for Silas Finn in
+politics was a fanatical enemy. The visit stirred a lively curiosity.
+
+They entered: Mr. Finn in his usual black with many-coloured tie and
+diamond ring, looking more mournfully grave than ever; Jane wearing an
+expression half of anxiety and half of defiance; Barney Bill, very
+uncomfortable in his well-preserved best suit, very restless and
+nervous. They gave the impression of a deputation coming to announce
+the death of a near relative. Paul received them cordially. But why in
+the world, thought he, were they all so solemn? He pushed forward
+chairs.
+
+"I got your postcard, Bill. Thanks so much for it."
+
+Bill grunted and embraced his hard felt hat.
+
+"I ought to have written to you," said Jane--"but---"
+
+"She felt restrained by her duty towards me," said Mr. Finn. "I hope
+you did not think it was discourteous on her part."
+
+"My dear sir," Paul laughed, seating himself in his writing chair,
+which he twisted away from the table, "Jane and I are too old friends
+for that. In her heart I know she wishes me luck. And I hope you do
+too, Mr. Finn," he added pleasantly--"although I know you're on the
+other side."
+
+"I'm afraid my principles will not allow me to wish you luck in this
+election, Mr. Savelli."
+
+"Well, well," said Paul. "It doesn't matter. If you vote against me
+I'll not bear malice."
+
+"I am not going to vote against you, Mr. Savelli," said Mr. Finn,
+looking at him with melancholy eyes. "I am going to stand against you."
+
+Paul sprang forward in his chair. Here was fantastic news indeed!
+"Stand against me? You? You're the Radical candidate?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Paul laughed boyishly. "Why, it's capital! I'm awfully glad."
+
+"I was asked this morning," said Mr. Finn gravely. "I prayed God for
+guidance. He answered, and I felt it my duty to come to you at once,
+with our two friends."
+
+Barney Bill cocked his head on one side. "I did my best to persuade him
+not to, sonny."
+
+"But why shouldn't he?" cried Paul courteously--though why he should
+puzzled him exceedingly. "It's very good of you, Mr. Finn. I'm sure
+your side," he went on, "could not have chosen a better man. You're
+well known in the constituency--I am jolly lucky to have a man like you
+as an opponent."
+
+"Mr. Savelli," said Mr. Finn, "it was precisely so that we should not
+be opponents that I have taken this unusual step."
+
+"I don't quite understand," said Paul.
+
+"Mr. Finn wants you to retire in favour of some other Conservative
+candidate," said Jane calmly.
+
+"Retire? I retire?"
+
+Paul looked at her, then at Barney Bill, who nodded his white head,
+then at Mr. Finn, whose deep eyes met his with a curious tragical
+mournfulness. The proposal took his breath away. It was crazily
+preposterous. But for their long faces he would have burst into
+laughter. "Why on earth do you want me to retire?" he asked
+good-humouredly.
+
+"I will tell you," said Mr. Finn. "Because you will have God against
+you."
+
+Paul saw a gleam of light in the dark mystery of the visit. "You may
+believe it, Mr. Finn, but I don't. I believe that my war cry, 'God for
+England, Savelli and Saint George,' is quite as acceptable to, the
+Almighty as yours."
+
+Mr. Finn stretched out two hands in earnest deprecation. "Forgive me if
+I say it; but you don't know what you're talking about. God has not
+revealed Himself to you. He has to me. When my fellow-citizens asked me
+to stand as the Liberal candidate, I thought it was because they knew
+me to be an upright man, who had worked hard on their council, an
+active apostle in the cause of religion, temperance and the suppression
+of vice. I thought I had merely deserved well in their opinion. When I
+fell on my knees and prayed the glory of the Lord spread about me and I
+knew that they had been divinely inspired. It was revealed to me that
+this was a Divine Call to represent the Truth in the Parliament of the
+nation."
+
+"I remember your saying, when I first had the pleasure of meeting you,"
+Paul remarked, with unwonted dryness, "that the Kingdom of Heaven was
+not adequately represented in the House of Commons."
+
+"I have not changed my opinion, Mr Savelli. The hand of God has guided
+my business. The hand of God is placing me in the House of Commons to
+work His will. You cannot oppose God's purpose, Paul Savelli--and that
+is why I beg you not to stand against me."
+
+"You see, he likes yer," interjected Barney Bill, with anxiety in his
+glittering eyes. "That's why he's a-doing of it. He says to hisself,
+says he, 'ere's a young chap what I likes with his first great chance
+in front of him, with the eyes of the country sot on him--now if I
+comes in and smashes him, as I can't help myself from doing, it'll be
+all u-p with that young chap's glorious career. But if I warns him in
+time, then he can retire--find an honourable retreat--that's what he
+wants yer to have--an honourable retreat. Isn't that it, Silas?"
+
+"Those are the feelings by which I am actuated," said Mr. Finn.
+
+Paul stretched himself out in his chair, his ankles crossed, and
+surveyed his guests. "What do you think of it, Jane?" said he, not
+without a touch of irony.
+
+She had been looking into the fire, her face in profile. Addressed, she
+turned. "Mr. Finn has your interests very deep at heart," she answered
+tonelessly.
+
+Paul jumped to his feet and laughed his fresh laugh. It was all so
+comic, so incredible, so mad. Yet none of them appeared to see any
+humour in the situation. There sat Jane and Barney Bill cowering under
+the influence of their crazy fishmongering apostle; and there,
+regarding him with a world of appeal in his sorrowful eyes, sat the
+apostle himself, bolt upright in his chair, an odd figure with his
+streaked black and white hair, ascetic face and Methodistico-Tattersall
+raiment. And they all seemed to expect him to obey this quaint person's
+fanatical whimsy.
+
+"It's very kind indeed of you, Mr. Finn, to consult my interests in
+this manner," said he. "And I'm most indebted to you for your
+consideration. But, as I said before, I've as much reason for believing
+God to be on my side as you have. And I honestly believe I'm going to
+win this election. So I certainly won't withdraw."
+
+"I implore you to do so. I will go on my knees and beseech you," said
+Mr. Finn, with hands clasped in front of him.
+
+Paul looked round. "I'm afraid, Bill," said he, "that this is getting
+rather painful."
+
+"It is painful. It's more than painful. It's horrible! It's ghastly!"
+cried Mr. Finn, in sudden shrill crescendo, leaping to his feet. In an
+instant the man's demeanour had changed. The mournful apostle had
+become a wild, vibrating creature with flashing eyes and fingers.
+
+"Easy, now, Silas. Whoa! Steady!" said Barney Bill.
+
+Silas Finn advanced on Paul and clapped his hands on his shoulders and
+shouted hoarsely: "For the love of God--don't thwart me in this. You
+can't thwart me. You daren't thwart me. You daren't thwart God."
+
+Paul disengaged himself impatiently. The humour had passed from the
+situation. The man was a lunatic, a religious maniac. Again he
+addressed Barney Bill. "As I can't convince Mr. Finn of the absurdity
+of his request, I must ask you to do so for me."
+
+"Young man," cried Silas, quivering with passion, "do not speak to
+God's appointed in your vanity and your arrogance. You--you--of all
+human beings--"
+
+Both Jane and Barney Bill closed round him. Jane clutched his arm.
+"Come away. Do come away."
+
+"Steady now, Silas," implored Barney Bill. "You see it's no use. I told
+you so. Come along."
+
+"Leave me alone," shouted Finn, casting them off. "What have I to do
+with you? It is that young man there who defies God and me."
+
+"Mr. Finn," said Paul, very erect, "if I have hurt your feelings I am
+sorry. But I fight this election. That's final. The choice no longer
+rests with me. I'm the instrument of my party. I desire to be courteous
+in every way, but you must see that it would be useless to prolong this
+discussion." And he moved to the door.
+
+"Come away now, for Heaven's sake. Can't you realize it's no good?"
+said Jane, white to the lips.
+
+Silas Finn again cast her off and railed and raved at her. "I will not
+go away," he cried in wild passion. "I will not allow my own son to
+raise an impious hand against the Almighty."
+
+"Lor' lumme!" gasped Barney Bill, dropping his hat. "He's done it."
+
+There was a silence. Silas Finn stood shaking in the middle of the
+room, the sweat streaming down his forehead.
+
+Paul turned at the door and walked slowly up to him. "Your son? What do
+you mean?"
+
+Jane, with wringing hands and tense, uplifted face, said in a queer
+cracked voice: "He promised us not to speak. He has broken his promise."
+
+"You broke your sacred word," said Barney Bill.
+
+The man's face grew haggard. His passion left him as suddenly as it had
+seized him. He collapsed, a piteous wreck, looked wide of the three,
+and threw out his hands helplessly. "I broke my promise. May God
+forgive me!"
+
+"That's neither here nor there," said Paul, standing over him. "You
+must answer my question. What do you mean?"
+
+Barney Bill limped a step or two toward him and cleared his throat.
+"He's quite correct, sonny. Silas Kegworthy's your father right enough."
+
+"Kegworthy?"
+
+"Yes. Changed his name for business--and other reasons."
+
+"He?" said Paul, half dazed for the moment and pointing at Silas Finn.
+"His name is Kegworthy and he is my father?"
+
+"Yes, sonny. 'Tain't my fault, or Jane's. He took his Bible oath he
+wouldn't tell yer. We was afraid, so we come with him."
+
+"Then?" queried Paul, jerking a thumb toward Lancashire.
+
+"Polly Kegworthy? Yes. She was yer mother."
+
+Paul set his teeth and drew a deep breath--not of air, but of a million
+sword points, Jane watched him out of frightened eyes. She alone, with
+her all but life-long knowledge of him, and with her woman's intuition,
+realized the death-blow that he had received. And when she saw him take
+it unflinching and stand proud and stern, her heart leaped toward him,
+though she knew that the woman in the great chased silver photograph
+frame on the mantelpiece, the great and radiant lady, the high and
+mighty and beautiful and unapproachable Princess, was the woman he
+loved. Paul touched his father on the wrist, and motioned to a chair.
+
+"Please sit down. You too, please,"--he waved a hand, and himself
+resumed his seat in his writing chair. He turned it so that he could
+rest his elbow on his table and his forehead in his palm. "You claim to
+be my father," said he. "Barney Bill, in whom I have implicit
+confidence, confirms it. He says that Mrs. Button is my mother--"
+
+"She has been dead these six years," said Barney Bill.
+
+"Why didn't you tell me?" asked Paul.
+
+"I didn't think it would interest yer, sonny," replied Barney Bill, in
+great distress. "Yer see, we conspirated together for yer never to know
+nothing at all about all this. Anyway, she's dead and won't worry yer
+any more."
+
+"She was a bad mother to me. She is a memory of terror. I don't pretend
+to be grieved," said Paul; "any more than I pretend to be overcome by
+filial emotion at the present moment. But, if you are my father, I
+should be glad to know--in fact, I think I'm entitled to know--why
+you've taken thirty years to reveal yourself, and why"--a sudden fury
+swept him--"why you've come now to play hell with my life."
+
+"It is the will of God," said Silas Finn, in deep dejection.
+
+Paul snapped three or four fingers. "Bah!" he cried. "Talk sense. Talk
+facts. Leave God out of the question for a while. It's blasphemy to
+connect Him with a sordid business like this. Tell me about myself--my
+parentage--let me know where I am."
+
+"You're with three people as loves yer, sonny," said Barney Bill. "What
+passes in this room will never be known to another soul on earth."
+
+"That I swear," said Silas Finn.
+
+"You can publish it broadcast in every newspaper in England," said
+Paul. "I'm making no bargains. Good God! I'm asking for nothing but the
+truth. What use I make of it is my affair. You can do--the three of
+you--what you like. Let the world know. It doesn't matter. It's I that
+matter--my life and my conscience and my soul that matter."
+
+"Don't be too hard upon me," Silas besought him very humbly.
+
+"Tell me about myself," said Paul.
+
+Silas Finn wiped his forehead with his handkerchief and covered his
+eyes with his hand. "That can only mean telling you about myself," he
+said. "It's raking up a past which I had hoped, with God's help, to
+bury. But I have sinned to-night, and it is my punishment to tell you.
+And you have a right to know. My father was a porter in Covent Garden
+Market. My mother--I've already mentioned--"
+
+"Yes--the Sicilian and the barrel organ--I remember," said Paul, with a
+shiver.
+
+"I had a hard boyhood. But I rose a little above my class. I educated
+myself more or less. At last I became assistant in a fishmonger's shop.
+Our friend Simmons here and I were boys together. We fell in love with
+the same girl. I married her. Not long afterward she gave way to drink.
+I found that in all kinds of ways I had mistaken her character. I can't
+describe your own mother to you. She had a violent temper. So had I. My
+life was a hell upon earth. One day she goaded me beyond my endurance
+and I struck at her with a knife. I meant at the bloodred instant to
+kill her. But I didn't. I nearly killed her. I went to prison for three
+years. When I came out she had vanished, taking you with her. In prison
+I found the Grace of God and I vowed it should be my guide through
+life. As soon as I was free from police supervision I changed my
+name--I believe it's a good old Devonshire name; my father came from
+there--the prison taint hung about it. Then, when I found I could
+extend a miserable little business I had got together, I changed it
+again to suit my trade. That's about all."
+
+There was a spell of dead silence. The shrunken man, stricken with a
+sense of his sin of oath-breaking, had Spoken without change of
+attitude, his hand over his eyes. Paul, too, sat motionless, and
+neither Jane nor Barney Bill spoke. Presently Silas Finn continued:
+
+"For many years I tried to find my wife and son--but it was not God's
+will. I have lived with the stain of murder on my soul"--his voice
+sank--"and it has never been washed away. Perhaps it will be in God's
+good time.... And I had condemned my son to a horrible existence--for I
+knew my wife was not capable of bringing you up in the way of clean
+living. I was right. Simmons has since told me--and I was crushed
+beneath the burden of my sins."
+
+After a pause he raised a drawn face and went on to tell of his
+meeting, the year before, with Barney Bill, of whom he had lost track
+when the prison doors had closed behind him. It had been in one of his
+Fish Palaces where Bill was eating. They recognized each other. Barney
+Bill told his tale: how he had run across Polly Kegworthy after a dozen
+years' wandering; how, for love of his old friend, he had taken Paul,
+child of astonishing promise, away from Bludston--
+
+"Do you remember, sonny, when I left you alone that night and went to
+the other side of the brickfield? It was to think it out," said Bill.
+"To think out my duty as a man."
+
+Paul nodded. He was listening, with death in his heart. The whole
+fantastic substructure of his life had been suddenly kicked away, and
+his life was an inchoate ruin. Gone was the glamour of romance in which
+since the day of the cornelian heart he had had his essential being. Up
+to an hour ago he had never doubted his mysterious birth. No real
+mother could have pursued an innocent child with Polly Kegworthy's
+implacable hatred. His passionate repudiation of her had been a
+cardinal article of his faith. On the other hand, the prince and
+princess theory he had long ago consigned to the limbo of childish
+things; but the romance of his birth, the romance of his high destiny,
+remained a vital part of his spiritual equipment. His looks, his
+talents, his temperament, his instincts, his dreams had been
+irrefutable confirmations. His mere honesty, his mere integrity, had
+been based on this fervent and unshakable creed. And now it had gone.
+No more romance. No more glamour. No more Vision Splendid now faded
+into the light of common and sordid day. Outwardly listening, his gay,
+mobile face turned to iron, he lived in a molten intensity of thought,
+his acute brain swiftly coordinating the ironical scraps of history. He
+was the son of Polly Kegworthy. So far he was unclean; but hitherto her
+blood had not manifested itself in him. He was the son of this violent
+and pathetic fanatic, this ex-convict; he had his eyes, his refined
+face; perhaps he inherited from him the artistic temperament--he
+recalled grimly the daubs on the man's walls, and his purblind gropings
+toward artistic self-expression; and all this--the Southern
+handsomeness, and Southern love of colour, had come from his Sicilian
+grandmother, the nameless drab, with bright yellow handkerchief over
+swarthy brows, turning the handle of a barrel organ in the London
+streets. Instinct had been right in its promptings to assume an Italian
+name; but the irony of it was of the quality that makes for humour in
+hell. And his very Christian name--Paul--the exotic name which Polly
+Kegworthy would not have given to a brat of hers--was but a natural one
+for a Silas to give his son, a Silas born of generations of evangelical
+peasants. His eyes rested on the photograph of his Princess. She, first
+of all, was gone with the Vision. An adventurer he had possibly been;
+but an adventurer of romance, carried high by his splendid faith, and
+regarding his marriage with the Princess but as a crowning of his
+romantic destiny. But now he beheld himself only as a base-born
+impostor. His Princess was gone from his life. Death was in his heart.
+
+He saw his familiar, luxurious room as in a dream, and Jane,
+anxious-eyed, looking into the fire, and Barney Bill a little way off,
+clutching his hard felt hat against his body; but his eyes were fixed
+on the strange, many-passioned, unbalanced man who claimed to be--nay,
+who was--his father.
+
+"When I first met you that night my heart went out to you," he was
+saying. "It overflowed in thankfulness to God that He had delivered you
+out of the power of the Dog, and in His inscrutable mercy had condoned
+that part of my sin as a father and had set you in high places."
+
+With the fringe of his brain Paul recognized, for the first time, how
+he brought into ordinary talk the habits of speech acquired in
+addressing a Free Zionist congregation.
+
+"It was only the self-restraint," Silas continued, "taught me by bitter
+years of agony and a message from God that it was part of my punishment
+not to acknowledge you as my son--"
+
+"And what I told you, and what Jane told you about him," said Barney
+Bill. "Remember that, Silas."
+
+"I remember it--it was these influences that kept me silent. But we
+were drawn together, Paul." He bent forward in his chair. "You liked
+me. In spite of all our differences of caste and creed--you liked me."
+
+"Yes, I was drawn to you," said Paul, and a strange, unknown note in
+his voice caused Jane to glance at him swiftly. "You seemed to be a man
+of many sorrows and deep enthusiasms--and I admit I was in close
+sympathy with you." He paused, not moving from his rigid attitude, and
+then went on: "What you have told me of your sufferings--and I know,
+with awful knowledge, the woman who was my mother--has made me
+sympathize with you all the more. But to express that sympathy in any
+way you must give me time. I said you had played hell with my life.
+It's true. One of these days I may be able to explain. Not now. There's
+no time. We're caught up in the wheels of an inexorable political
+machine. I address my party in the constituency to-night." It was a
+cold intelligence that spoke, and once more Jane flashed a
+half-frightened glance at him. "What I shall say to them, in view of
+all this, I don't quite know. I must have half an hour to think."
+
+"I know I oughtn't to interfere, Paul," said Jane, "but you mustn't
+blame Mr. Finn too much. Although he differs from you in politics and
+so on, he loves you and is proud of you--as we all are--and looks
+forward to your great career--I know it only too well. And now he has
+this deep conviction that he has a call from on High to ruin your
+career at the very beginning. Do understand, Paul, that he feels
+himself in a very terrible position."
+
+"I do," said Mr. Finn. "God knows that if it weren't for His command, I
+should myself withdraw."
+
+"I appreciate your position, perfectly," replied Paul, "but that
+doesn't relieve me of my responsibilities."
+
+Silas Finn rose and locked the fingers of both hands together and stood
+before Paul, with appealing eyes. "My son, after what I have said, you
+are not going to stand against me?"
+
+Paul rose too. A sudden craze of passion swept him. "My country has
+been my country for thirty years. You have been my father for five
+minutes. I stand by my country."
+
+Silas Finn turned away and waved a haphazard hand. "And I must stand by
+my God."
+
+"Very well. That brings us to our original argument. 'Political foes.
+Private friends.'"
+
+Silas turned again and looked into the young man's eyes. "But father
+and son, Paul."
+
+"All the more honourable. There'll be no mud-throwing. The cleanest
+election of the century."
+
+The elder man again covered his face with both hands, and his black and
+white streaked hair fell over his fingers and the great diamond in his
+ring flashed oddly, and he rocked his head for a while to and fro.
+
+"I had a call," he wailed. "I had a call. I had a call from God. It was
+clear. It was absolute. But you don't understand these things. His will
+must prevail. It was terrible to think of crushing your career--my only
+son's career. I brought these two friends to help me persuade you not
+to oppose me. I did my best, Paul. I promised them not to resort to the
+last argument. But flesh is weak. For the first time since--you
+know--the knife--your mother--I lost self-control. I shall have to
+answer for it to my God--" He stretched out his arms and looked
+haggardly at Paul. "But it is God's will. It is God's will that I
+should voice His message to the Empire. Paul, Paul, my beloved son--you
+cannot flout Almighty God."
+
+"Your God doesn't happen to be my God," said Paul, once more
+suspicious--and now hideously so--of religious mania. "And possibly the
+real God is somebody else's God altogether. Anyway, England's the only
+God I've got left, and I'm going to fight for her."
+
+The door opened and Wilton, the man-servant, appeared. He looked round.
+"I beg your pardon, sir."
+
+Paul crossed the room. "What is it?"
+
+"Her Highness, sir," he said in his well-trained, low voice, "and the
+Colonel and Miss Winwood. I told them you were engaged. But they've
+been waiting for over half-an-hour, sir."
+
+Paul drew himself up. "Why did you not tell me before? Her Highness is
+not to be kept waiting. Present my respectful compliments to Her
+Highness, and ask her and Colonel and Miss Winwood to have the kindness
+to come upstairs."
+
+"We had better go," cried Jane in sudden fear.
+
+"No," said he. "I want you all to stay."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+IN the tense silence of the few moments of waiting Paul passed from the
+boy to whom the earth had been a fairyland to the man grappling with
+great realities. In those few moments he lived through his past life
+and faced an adumbration of the future.
+
+The door was thrown open and the Princess appeared, smiling, happy, a
+black ostrich feather in her hat and a sable stole hanging loose from
+her shoulders; a great and radiant lady. Behind her came the Colonel
+and Ursula Winwood. Paul bent over the Princess's, outstretched hand.
+
+"A thousand pardons for keeping you waiting. I did not know you had
+come. I was engaged with my friends. May I have the honour of
+presenting them? Princess, this is Mr. Silas Finn, the managing
+director of Fish Palaces Limited. These are two very dear friends, Miss
+Seddon--Mr. Simmons. Miss Winwood--Colonel Winwood, may I?"
+
+He waved an introductory hand. The Princess: bowed; then, struck by
+their unsmiling faces and by Paul's strange manner, turned to him
+quickly.
+
+"'Qu'est ce qu'il y a?"
+
+"Je vais vous le dire."
+
+He pushed a chair. She sat down. Ursula Winwood sat in Paul's writing
+chair. The others remained standing.
+
+"Mr. Finn called to inform me that he has been adopted as the Liberal
+candidate for Hickney Heath."' "My felicitations," said the Princess.
+
+Silas bowed to her gravely and addressed Colonel Winwood.
+
+"We have been, sir--Mr. Savelli and I--for some time on terms of
+personal friendship in the constituency."
+
+"I see, I see," replied the Colonel, though he was somewhat puzzled.
+"Very polite and friendly, I'm sure."
+
+"Mr. Finn also urges me to withdraw my candidature," said Paul.
+
+The Princess gave a little incredulous laugh. Ursula Winwood rose and,
+with a quick protective step, drew nearer Paul. Colonel Winwood frowned.
+
+"Withdraw? In Heaven's name why?"
+
+Silas Finn tugged at his black-and-white-streaked beard and looked at
+his son.
+
+"Need we go into it again? There are religious reasons, which perhaps,
+Madam"--Silas addressed the Princess--"you might misunderstand. Mr.
+Savelli possibly thinks I am a fanatic. I can't help it. I have warned
+him. That is enough. Good-bye, Mr. Savelli."
+
+He held out his hand; but Paul did not take it. "You forget, Mr. Finn,
+that I asked you to stay." He clutched the sides of his jacket till his
+knuckles grew white, and he set his teeth. "Mr. Finn has another reason
+for wishing me not to oppose him--"
+
+"That reason you need never give," cried Silas in a loud voice, and
+starting forward. "You know that I make no claims whatsoever."
+
+"I know that," said Paul, coldly; "but I am going to give it all the
+same." He paused, held up his hand and looked at the Princess. "Mr.
+Silas Finn happens to be my father."
+
+"Good God!" gasped the Colonel, after a flash of silence.
+
+The Princess caught a quick breath and sat erect in her chair.
+
+"Votre Pere, Paul?"
+
+"Yes, Princess. Until half an hour ago I did not know it. Never in my
+life did I know that I had a father living. My friends there can bear
+witness that what I say is true."
+
+"But, Paul dear," said Miss Winwood, laying her kind fingers on his arm
+and searching his face, "you told us that your parents were dead and
+that they were Italians."
+
+"I lied," replied Paul calmly. "But I honestly believed the woman who
+was my mother not to be my mother, and I had never heard of my father.
+I had to account for myself to you. Your delicacy, Miss Winwood,
+enabled me to invent as little as possible."
+
+"But your name--Savelli?"
+
+"I took it when I went on the stage--I had a few years' obscure and
+unsuccessful struggle. You will remember I came to you starving and
+penniless."
+
+The Princess grew white and her delicate nostrils quivered.
+
+"Et monsieur votre pere--" she checked herself. "And your father, what
+do you say he is?"
+
+Paul motioned to Silas to speak.
+
+"I, Madam," said the latter, "am a self-made man, and by the
+establishment of fried-fish shops all over London and the great
+provincial towns, have, by the grace of God, amassed a considerable
+fortune."
+
+"Fried fish?" said the Princess in a queer voice.
+
+Silas looked at her out of his melancholy and unhumorous eyes.
+
+"Yes, Madam."
+
+"I have also learned," said Paul, "that my grandmother was a Sicilian
+who played a street-organ. Hence my Italian blood."
+
+Jane, standing by the door with Barney Bill, most agonized of old men,
+wholly nervous, twisting with gnarled fingers the broken rim of his
+hard felt hat, turned aside so that no one but Bill should see a sudden
+gush of tears. For she had realized how drab and unimportant she was in
+the presence of the great and radiant lady; also how the great and
+radiant lady was the God-sent mate for Paul, never so great a man as
+now when he was cutting out his heart for truth's sake.
+
+"I should like to tell you what my life has been," continued Paul, "in
+the presence of those who know it already. That's why I asked them to
+stay. Until an hour ago I lived in dreams. In my own fashion I was an
+honest man. But now I've got this knowledge of my origin, the dreams
+are swept away and I stand naked to myself. If I left you, Miss
+Winwood, and Colonel Winwood, who have been so good to me--and Her
+Highness, who has deigned to honour me with her friendship--in a
+moment's doubt as to my antecedents I should be an impostor."
+
+"No, no, my boy," said Colonel Winwood, who was standing with hands
+deep in trouser pockets and his head bent, staring at the carpet. "No
+words like that in this house. Besides, why should we want to go into
+all this?"
+
+He had the Englishman's detestation of unpleasant explanations. Ursula
+Winwood supported him.
+
+"Yes, why?" she asked.
+
+"But it would be very interesting," said the Princess slowly, cutting
+her words.
+
+Paul met her eyes, which she had hardened, and saw beneath them pain
+and anger and wounded pride and repulsion. For a second he allowed an
+agonized appeal to flash through his. He knew that he was deliberately
+killing the love in her heart. He felt the monstrous cruelty of it. A
+momentary doubt shook him. Was he justified? A short while ago she had
+entered the room her face alight with love; now her face was as stern
+and cold as his own. Had he the right to use the knife like this? Then
+certainty came. It had to be. The swifter the better. She of all human
+beings must no longer be deceived. Before her, at supreme cost, he must
+stand clean.
+
+"It's not very interesting," said he. "And it's soon told. I was a
+ragged boy in a slum in a Lancashire town. I slept on sacking in a
+scullery, and very seldom had enough to eat. The woman whom I didn't
+think was my mother ill-treated me. I gather now that she hated me
+because she hated my father. She deserted him when I was a year old and
+disappeared; she never spoke of him. I don't know exactly how old I am.
+I chose a birthday at random. As a child I worked in a factory. You
+know what child-labour in factories was some years ago. I might have
+been there still, if my dear old friend there hadn't helped me when I
+was thirteen to run away. He used to go through the country in a van
+selling mats and chairs. He brought me to London, and found me a
+lodging with Miss Seddon's mother. So, Miss Seddon and I were children
+together. I became an artist's model. When I grew too old for that to
+be a dignified occupation, I went on the stage. Then one day, starving
+and delirious, I stumbled through the gates of Drane's Court and fell
+at Miss Winwood's feet. That's all."
+
+"Since we've begun, we may as well finish and get it over," said
+Colonel Winwood, still with bent head, but looking at Paul from beneath
+his eyebrows. "When and how did you come across this gentleman who you
+say is your father?"
+
+Paul told the story in a few words.
+
+"And now that you have heard everything," said he, "would you think me
+justified in withdrawing my candidature?"
+
+"Certainly not," said the Colonel. "You've got your duty to the Party."
+
+"And you, Miss Winwood?"
+
+"Can you ask? You have your duty to the country."
+
+"And you, Princess?"
+
+She met his challenging eyes and rose in a stately fashion.
+
+"I am not equal to these complications of English politics, Mr.
+Savelli," she said. She held herself very erect, but her lips trembled
+and tears were very near her eyes. She turned to Miss Winwood and held
+out her hand. "I am afraid we must postpone our discussion of the
+Forlorn Widows. It is getting late. Au revoir, Colonel Winwood--"
+
+"I will see you to your carriage."
+
+On the threshold she turned, included Paul in a vague bow to the
+company, and passed through the door which Colonel Winwood held open.
+Paul watched her until she disappeared--disappeared haughtily out of
+his life, taking his living heart with her, leaving him with a stone
+very heavy, very cold, dead. And he was smitten as with a great
+darkness. He remained quite still for a few moments after the door had
+closed, then with a sudden jerk he drew himself up.
+
+"Mr. Finn," said he, "as I've told you, I address my first meeting
+to-night. I am going to make public the fact that I'm your son."
+
+Silas put his hand to his head and looked at him wildly.
+
+"No, no," he muttered hoarsely--"no."
+
+"I see no reason," said Miss Winwood gently.
+
+"I see every reason," said Paul. "I must live in the light now. The
+truth or nothing."
+
+"Then obey your conscience, Paul," she answered.
+
+But Silas came forward with his outstretched hands.
+
+"You can't do it. You can't do it, I tell you. It's impossible."
+
+"Why?"
+
+He replied in an odd voice, and with a glance at Miss Winwood. "I must
+tell you afterwards."
+
+"I will leave you," she said.
+
+"Mr. Finn"--she shook hands with him--"I hope you're proud of your
+son." And then she shook hands with Jane and Barney Bill. "I'm glad to
+meet such old friends of Paul." And to Paul, as he held the door open,
+she said, her clear kind eyes full on him, "Remember, we want men in
+England."
+
+"Thank God, we've got women," said he, with lips from which he could
+not keep a sudden quiver.
+
+He closed the door and came up to his father standing on the hearthrug.
+
+"And now, why shouldn't I speak? Why shouldn't I be an honest man
+instead of an impostor?"
+
+"Out of pity for me, my son."
+
+"Pity? Why, what harm would it do you? There's nothing dishonourable in
+father and son fighting an election." He laughed without much mirth.
+"It's what some people would call sporting. As for me, personally, I
+don't see why you should be ashamed of owning me. My record is clean
+enough."
+
+"But mine isn't, Paul," said Silas mournfully.
+
+For the first time Paul bowed his head. "I'm sorry," said he. "I
+forgot." Then he raised it again. "But that's all over and buried in
+the past."
+
+"It may be unburied."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Don't you see?" cried Jane. "Even I can. If you spring your
+relationship upon the public, it will create an enormous sensation--it
+will set the place on fire with curiosity. They'll dig up everything
+they can about you--everything they can about him. Oh, Paul, don't you
+see.
+
+"It's up agin a man, sonny," said Barney Bill, limping towards them,
+"it's up agin a candidate, you understand, him not being a Fenian or a
+Irish patriot, that he's been in gaol. Penal servitude ain't a nice
+state of life to be reminded of, sonny. Whereas if you leaves things as
+they is, nobody's going to ask no questions."
+
+"That's my point," said Silas Finn.
+
+Paul looked from one to the other, darkly. In a kind of dull fierce
+passion he had made up his mind to clear himself before the world, to
+rend to tatters his garments of romance, to snap his fingers at the
+stars and destiny and such-like deluding toys, to stand a young Ajax
+defying the thunderbolts. Here came the first check.
+
+"If they found out as how he'd done time, they'd find out for why,"
+said Bill, cocking his head earnestly.
+
+As Paul, engaged in sombre thought, made no reply, Silas turned away,
+his hands uplifted in supplication, and prayed aloud. He had sinned in
+giving way to his anger. He prostrated himself before the divine
+vengeance. If this was his apportioned punishment, might God give him
+meekness and strength to bear it. The tremulous, crying voice, the
+rapt, fanatical face, and the beseeching attitude struck a bizarre note
+in the comfortable and worldly room. Supported on either side by Jane,
+helpless and anxious, and Barney Bill, crooked, wrinkled, with his
+close-cropped white hair and little liquid diamond eyes, still
+nervously tearing his hat-brim, he looked almost grotesque. To Paul he
+seemed less a man than a creation of another planet, with unknown and
+incalculable instincts and impulses, who had come to earth and with
+foolish hand had wiped out the meaning of existence. Yet he felt no
+resentment, but rather a weary pity for the stranger blundering through
+an unsympathetic world. As soon as there came a pause in the prayer, he
+said not ungently:
+
+"The Almighty is not going to use me as an instrument to punish you, if
+I can help it. I quite appreciate your point. I'll say nothing."
+
+Barney Bill jerked his thumb towards the chair where the Princess had
+been sitting:
+
+"She won't give it away?"
+
+Paul smiled sadly. "No, old man. She'll keep it to herself."
+
+That marked the end of the interview. Paul accompanied the three
+downstairs.
+
+"I meant to act for the best, Paul," said Silas piteously, on parting.
+"Tell me that I haven't made you my enemy."
+
+"God forbid," said Paul.
+
+He went slowly up to his room again and threw himself in his writing
+chair. His eye fell upon the notes on the sheet of foolscap. The
+Radical candidate having been chosen, they were no longer relevant to
+his speech. He crumpled up the paper and threw it into the waste-paper
+basket. His speech! He held his head in both hands. A couple of hours
+hence he would be addressing a vast audience, the centre of the hopes
+of thousands of his fellow countrymen. The thought beat upon his brain.
+He had had the common nightmare of standing with conductor's baton in
+front of a mighty orchestra and being paralyzed by sense of impotence.
+No less a nightmare was his present position. A couple of hours ago he
+was athrill with confidence and joy of battle. But then he was a
+different man. The morning stars, the stars of his destiny, sang
+together in the ever-deepening glamour of the Vision Splendid. He was
+entering into the lists of Camelot to fight for his Princess. He was
+the Mysterious Knight, parented in fairy-far Avilion, the Fortunate
+Youth, the Awakener of England. Now he was but a base-born young man
+who had attained a high position by false pretences; an ordinary
+adventurer with a glib tongue; a self-educated, self-seeking,
+commonplace fellow. At least, so he saw himself in his Princess's eyes.
+And he had meant that she should thus behold him. No longer was he
+entering lists to fight for her. For what hopeless purpose was he
+entering them? To awaken England? The awakener must have his heart full
+of dreams and visions and glamour and joy and throbbing life; and in
+his heart there was death.
+
+He drew out the little cornelian talisman at the end of his watch-chain
+and looked at it bitterly. It was but a mocking symbol of illusion. He
+unhooked it and laid it on the table. He would carry it about with him
+no longer. He would throw it away.
+
+Ursula Winwood quietly entered the room.
+
+"You must come down and have something to eat before the meeting."
+
+Paul rose. "I don't want anything, thank you, Miss Winwood."
+
+"But James and I do. So come and join us."
+
+"Are you coming to the meeting?" he asked in surprise.
+
+"Of course." She lifted her eyebrows. "Why not?"
+
+"After what you have heard?"
+
+"All the more reason for us to go." She smiled as she had smiled on
+that memorable evening six years ago when she had stood with the
+horrible pawn-ticket in her hand. "James has to support the Party. I
+have to support you. James will do the same as I in a day or two. Just
+give him time. His mind doesn't work very quickly, not as quickly as a
+woman's. Come," she said. "When we have a breathing space you can tell
+me all about it. But in the meantime I'm pretty sure I understand."
+
+"How can you?" he asked wearily. "You have other traditions."
+
+"I don't know about traditions; but I don't give my love and take it
+away again. I set rather too much value on it. I understand because I
+love you."
+
+"Others with the same traditions can't understand."
+
+"I'm not proposing to marry you," she said bluntly. "That makes a
+difference."
+
+"It does," said he, meeting her eyes unflinchingly.
+
+"If you weren't a brave man, I shouldn't say such a thing to you.
+Anyhow I understand you're the last man in the world who should take me
+for a fool."
+
+"My God!" said Paul in a choky voice. "What can I do to thank you?"
+
+"Win the election."
+
+"You are still my dearest lady--my very very dearest lady," said he.
+
+Her shrewd eyes fell upon the cornelian heart. She picked it up and
+held it out to him on her plump palm.
+
+"Why have you taken this off your watch-chain?"
+
+"It's a little false god," said he.
+
+"It's the first thing yon asked for when you recovered from your
+illness. You said you had kept it since you were a tiny boy. See? I
+remember. You set great value on it then?"
+
+"I believed in it," said Paul.
+
+"And now you don't? But a woman gave it to you."
+
+"Yes," said Paul, wondering, in his masculine way, how the deuce she
+knew that. "I was a brat of eleven."
+
+"Then keep it. Put it on your chain again. I'm sure it's a true little
+god. Take it back to please me."
+
+As there was nothing, from lapping up Eisel to killing a crocodile,
+that Paul would not have done, in the fulness of his wondering
+gratitude, for his dearest lady, he meekly attached the heart to his
+chain and put it in his pocket.
+
+"I must tell you," said he, "that the lady--she seemed a goddess to me
+then--chose me as her champion in a race, a race of urchins at a Sunday
+school treat, and I didn't win. But she gave me the cornelian heart as
+a prize."
+
+"But as my champion you will win," said Miss Winwood. "My dear boy,"
+she said, and her eyes grew very tender as she laid her hand on the
+young man's arm, "believe what an old woman is telling you is true.
+Don't throw away any little shred of beauty you've ever had in your
+life. The beautiful things are really the true ones, though they may
+seem to be illusions. Without the trinket or what it stood for, would
+you be here now?"
+
+"I don't know," replied Paul. "I might have taken a more honest road to
+get here."
+
+"We took you to ourselves as a bright human being, Paul--not for what
+you might or might not have been. By the way, what have you decided as
+regards making public the fact of your relationship?"
+
+"My father, for his own reasons, has urged me not to do so."
+
+Miss Winwood drew a long breath.
+
+"I'm glad to hear it," she said.
+
+So Paul, comforted by one woman's amazing loyalty, went out that
+evening and addressed his great meeting. But the roar of applause that
+welcomed him echoed through void spaces of his being. He felt neither
+thrill nor fear. The speech prepared by the Fortunate Youth was
+delivered by a stranger to it, glowing and dancing eloquence. The words
+came trippingly enough, but the informing Spirit was gone.
+
+Those in the audience familiar with the magic of his smile were
+disappointed. The soundness of his policy satisfied the hard-headed,
+but he made no appeal to the imaginative. If his speech did not fall
+flat, it was not the clarion voice that his supporters had anticipated.
+They whispered together with depressed headshakings. Their man was not
+in form. He was nervous. What he said was right enough, but his
+utterance lacked fire. It carried conviction to those already
+convinced; but it could make no proselytes. Had they been mistaken in
+their choice? Too young a man, hadn't he bitten off a hunk greater
+than he could chew? So the inner ring of local politicians. An election
+audience, however, brings its own enthusiasms, and it must be a very
+dull dog indeed who damps their ardour. They cheered prodigiously when
+Paul sat down, and a crowd of zealots waiting outside the building
+cheered him again as he drove off. But Paul knew that he had been a
+failure. He had delivered another man's speech. To-morrow and the day
+after and the day after that, and ever afterwards, if he held to the
+political game, he would have to speak in his own new person. What kind
+of a person would the new Paul be?
+
+He drove back almost in silence with the Colonel and Miss Winwood,
+vainly seeking to solve the problem. The foundations of his life had
+been swept away. His foot rested on nothing solid save his own manhood.
+That no shock should break down. He would fight. He would win the
+election. He set his lips in grim determination. If life held no higher
+meaning, it at least offered this immediate object for existence.
+Besides he owed the most strenuous effort of his soul to the devoted
+and loyal woman whose face he saw dimly opposite. Afterwards come what
+might. The Truth at any rate. Magna est veritas et praevalebit.
+
+These were "prave 'orts" and valorous protestations.
+
+But when their light supper was over and Colonel Winwood had retired,
+Ursula Winwood lingered in the dining room, her heart aching for the
+boy who looked so stern and haggard. She came behind him and touched
+his hair.
+
+"Poor boy," she murmured.
+
+Then Paul--he was very young, barely thirty--broke down, as perhaps she
+meant that he should, and, elbows sprawling amid the disarray of the
+meal, poured out all the desolation of his soul, and for the first time
+cried out in anguish for the woman he had lost. So, as love lay
+a-bleeding mortally pierced, Ursula Winwood wept unaccustomed tears
+and with tender fingers strove to staunch the wound.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+DAYS of strain followed: days of a thousand engagements, a thousand
+interviews, a thousand journeyings, a thousand speeches; days in which
+he was reduced to an unresisting automaton, mechanically uttering the
+same formulas; days in which the irresistible force of the campaign
+swept him along without volition. And day followed day and not a sign
+came from the Princess Zobraska either of condonation or resentment. It
+was as though she had gathered her skirts around her and gone
+disdainfully out of his life for ever. If speaking were to be done, it
+was for her to speak. Paul could not plead. It was he who, in a way,
+had cast her off. In effect he had issued the challenge: "I am a child
+of the gutter, an adventurer masquerading under an historical name, and
+you are a royal princess. Will you marry me now?" She had given her
+answer, by walking out of the room, her proud head in the air. It was
+final, as far as he was concerned. He could do nothing--not even beg
+his dearest lady to plead for him. Besides, rumour had it that the
+Princess had cancelled her town engagements and gone to Morebury. So he
+walked in cold and darkness, uninspired, and though he worked with
+feverish energy, the heart and purpose of his life were gone.
+
+As in his first speech, so in his campaign, he failed. He had been
+chosen for his youth, his joyousness, his magnetism, his radiant
+promise of great things to come. He went about the constituency an
+anxious, haggard man, working himself to death without being able to
+awaken a spark of emotion in the heart of anybody. He lost ground
+daily. On the other hand, Silas Finn, with his enthusiasms, and his
+aspect of an inspired prophet, made alarming progress. He swept the
+multitude. Paul Savelli, the young man of the social moment, had an
+army of helpers, members of Parliament making speeches, friends on the
+Unionist press writing flamboyant leaders, fair ladies in automobiles
+hunting for voters through the slums of Hickney Heath. Silas Finn had
+scarcely a personal friend. But hope reigned among his official
+supporters, whereas depression began to descend over Paul's brilliant
+host.
+
+"They want stirring up a bit," said the Conservative agent
+despondently. "I hear old Finn's meetings go with a bang. They nearly
+raised the roof off last night. We want some roof-raising on this side."
+
+"I do my best," said Paul coldly, but the reproach cut deep. He was a
+failure. No nervous or intellectual effort could save him now, though
+he spent himself to the last heartbeat. He was the sport of a mocking
+Will o' the Wisp which he had taken for Destiny.
+
+Once on coming out of his headquarters he met Silas, who was walking up
+the street with two or three of his committee-men. In accordance with
+the ordinary amenities of English political life, the two candidates
+shook hands, and withdrew a pace or two aside to chat for a while. This
+was the first time they had come together since the afternoon of
+revelation, and there was a moment of constraint during which Silas
+tugged at his streaked beard and looked with mournful wistfulness at
+his son.
+
+"I wish I were not your opponent, Paul," said he in a low voice, so as
+not to be overheard.
+
+"That doesn't matter a bit," Paul replied courteously. "I see you're
+putting up an excellent fight."
+
+"It's the Lord's battle. If it weren't, do you think I would not let
+you win?"
+
+The same old cry. Through sheer repetition, Paul began almost to
+believe in it. He felt very weary. In his father's eyes he recognized,
+with a pang, the glow of a faith which he had lost. Their likeness
+struck him, and he saw himself, his old self, beneath the unquestioning
+though sorrowful eyes.
+
+"That's the advantage of a belief in the Almighty's personal interest,"
+he answered, with a touch of irony: "whatever happens, one is not
+easily disillusioned."
+
+"That is true, my son," said Silas.
+
+"Jane is well?" Paul asked, after an instant's pause, breaking off the
+profitless discussion.
+
+"Very well."
+
+"And Barney Bill?"
+
+"He upbraids me bitterly for what I have said."
+
+Paul smiled at the curiously stilted phrase.
+
+"Tell him from me not to do it. My love to them both."
+
+They shook hands again, and Paul drove off in the motor car that had
+been placed at his disposal during the election, and Silas continued
+his sober walk with his committee-men up the muddy street. Whereupon
+Paul conceived a sudden hatred for the car. It was but the final
+artistic touch to this comedy of mockery of which he had been the
+victim.... Perhaps God was on his father's side, after all--on the side
+of them who humbly walked and not of them who rode in proud chariots.
+But his political creed, his sociological convictions rose in protest.
+How could the Almighty be in league with all that was subversive of
+social order, all that was destructive to Imperial cohesion, all that
+which inevitably tended to England's downfall?
+
+He turned suddenly to his companion, the Conservative agent.
+
+"Do you think God has got common sense?"
+
+The agent, not being versed in speculations regarding the attributes of
+the Deity, stared; then, disinclined to commit himself, took refuge in
+platitude.
+
+"God moves in a mysterious way, Mr. Savelli."
+
+"That's rot," said Paul. "If there's an Almighty, He must move in a
+common-sense way; otherwise the whole of this planet would have busted
+up long ago. Do you think it's common sense to support the present
+Government?"
+
+"Certainly not," said the agent, fervently.
+
+"Then if God supported it, it wouldn't be common sense on His part. It
+would be merely mysterious?"
+
+"I see what you're driving at," said the agent. "Our opponent
+undoubtedly has been making free with the name of the Almighty in his
+speeches. As a matter of fact he's rather crazy on the subject. I don't
+think it would be a bad move to make a special reference to it. It's
+all damned hypocrisy. There's a chap in the old French play--what's his
+name?"
+
+"Tartuffe."
+
+"That's it. Well, there you are. That speech of his yesterday--now why
+don't you take it and wring religiosity and hypocrisy and Tartuffism
+out of it? You know how to do that sort of thing. You can score
+tremendously. I never thought of it before. By George! you can get him
+in the neck if you like."
+
+"But I don't like," said Paul. "I happen to know that Mr. Finn is
+sincere in his convictions."
+
+"But, my dear sir, what does his supposed sincerity matter in political
+contest?"
+
+"It's the difference between dirt and cleanliness," said Paul.
+"Besides, as I told you at the outset, Mr. Finn and I are close
+personal friends, and I have the highest regard for his character. He
+has seen that his side has scrupulously refrained from personalities
+with regard to me, and I insist on the same observance with regard to
+him."
+
+"With all due deference to you, Mr. Savelli, you were called only the
+day before yesterday 'the spoiled darling of Duchesses' boudoirs.'"
+
+"It wasn't with Mr. Finn's cognizance. I've found that out."
+
+"Well," said the agent, leaning back-in the luxurious limousine, "I
+don't see why somebody, without your cognizance, shouldn't call Mr.
+Finn the spoiled minion of the Almighty's ante-chamber. That's a
+devilish good catch-phrase," he added, starting forward in the joy of
+his newborn epigram: "Devilish good. 'The spoiled minion of the
+Almighty's ante-chamber.' It'll become historical."
+
+"If it does," said Paul, "it will be associated with the immediate
+retirement of the Conservative candidate."
+
+"Do you really mean that?"
+
+It was Paul's turn to start forward. "My dear Wilson," said he, "if you
+or anybody else thinks I'm a man to talk through his hat, I'll retire
+at once. I don't care a damn about myself. Not a little tuppenny damn.
+What the devil does it matter to me whether I get into Parliament or
+not? Nothing. Not a tuppenny damn. You can't understand. It's the party
+and the country. For myself, personally, the whole thing can go to
+blazes. I'm in earnest, dead earnest," he continued, with a vehemence
+incomprehensible to Wilson. "If anybody doesn't think so, I'll clear
+out at once"--he snapped his fingers. "But while I'm candidate
+everything I say I mean. I mean it intensely--with all my soul. And I
+say that if there's a single insulting reference to Mr. Finn during
+this election, you'll be up against the wreck of your own political
+career."
+
+The agent watched the workings of his candidate's dark clear-cut face.
+He was very proud of his candidate, and found it difficult to realize
+that there were presumably sane people who would not vote for him on
+sight. A lingering memory of grammar school days flashed on him when he
+told his wife later of the conversation, and he likened Paul to a
+wrathful Apollo. Anxious to appease the god, he said humbly:
+
+"It was the merest of suggestions, Mr. Savelli. Heaven knows we don't
+want to descend to personalities, and your retirement would be an
+unqualifiable disaster. But--you'll pardon my mentioning it--you began
+this discussion by asking me whether the Almighty had common sense."
+
+"Well, has He or not?"
+
+"Of course," said Wilson.
+
+"Then we're going to win this election," said Paul.
+
+If he could have met enthusiasm with enthusiasm, all would have been
+well. The awakener of England could have captivated hearts by glowing
+pictures of a great and glorious future. It would have been a
+counter-blaze to that lit by his opponent, which flamed in all the
+effulgence of a reckless reformer's promise, revealing a Utopia in
+which there would be no drunkenness, no crime, no poverty, and in which
+the rich, apparently, would have to work very hard in order to support
+the poor in comfortable idleness. But beyond proving fallacies, Paul
+could do nothing--and even then, has there ever been a mob since the
+world began susceptible to logical argument? So, all through the wintry
+days of the campaign, Silas Finn carried his fiery cross through the
+constituency, winning frenzied adherents, while Paul found it hard to
+rally the faithful round the drooping standard of St. George.
+
+The days went on. Paul addressed his last meeting on the eve of the
+poll. By a supreme effort he regained some of his former fire and
+eloquence. He drove home exhausted, and going straight to bed slept
+like a dog till morning.
+
+The servant who woke him brought a newspaper to the bedside.
+
+"Something to interest you, sir."
+
+Paul looked at the headline indicated by the man.
+
+"Hickney Heath Election. Liberal Candidate's Confession. Extraordinary
+Scene."
+
+He glanced hurriedly down the column and read with amazement and
+stabbing pain the matter that was of interest. The worst had
+happened--the thing which during all his later life Silas Finn had
+feared. The spectre of the prison had risen up against him.
+
+Towards the end of Silas Finn's speech, at his last great meeting, a
+man, sitting in the body of the hall near the platform, got up and
+interrupted him. "What about your own past life? What about your three
+years' penal servitude?" All eyes were turned from the man--a common
+looking, evil man--to the candidate, who staggered as if he had been
+shot, caught at the table behind him for support and stared in
+greyfaced terror. There was an angry tumult, and the interrupter would
+have fared badly, but for Silas Finn holding up his hand and imploring
+silence.
+
+"I challenge the candidate to deny," said the man, as soon as he could
+be heard, "that his real name is Silas Kegworthy, and that he underwent
+three years' penal servitude for murderously assaulting his wife."
+
+Then the candidate braced himself and said: "The bare facts are true.
+But I have lived stainlessly in the fear of God and in the service of
+humanity for thirty years. I have sought absolution for a moment of mad
+anger under awful provocation in unremitting prayer and in trying to
+save the souls and raise the fortunes of my fellow-men. Is that all you
+have against me?"
+
+"That's all," said the man.
+
+"It is for you, electors of Hickney Heath, to judge me."
+
+He sat down amid tumultuous cheers, and the man who had interrupted
+him, after some rough handling, managed to make his escape. The
+chairman then put a vote of confidence in the candidate, which was
+carried by acclamation, and the meeting broke up.
+
+Such were the essential facts in the somewhat highly coloured newspaper
+story which Paul read in stupefied horror. He dressed quickly and went
+to his sitting-room, where he rang up his father's house on the
+telephone. Jane's voice met his ear.
+
+"It's Paul speaking," he replied. "I've just this moment read of last
+night. I'm shaken to my soul. How is my father?"
+
+"He's greatly upset," came the voice. "He didn't sleep all night, and
+he's not at all well this morning. Oh, it was a cruel, cowardly blow."
+
+"Dastardly. Do you know who it was?"
+
+"No. Don't you?"
+
+"I? Does either of you think that I--?"
+
+"No, no," came the voice, now curiously tearful. "I didn't mean that. I
+forgot you've not had time to find out."
+
+"Who does he think it was?"
+
+"Some old fellow prisoner who had a grudge against him."
+
+"Were you at the meeting?"
+
+"Yes. Oh, Paul, it was splendid to see him face the audience. He spoke
+so simply and with such sorrowful dignity. He had their sympathy at
+once. But it has broken him. I'm afraid he'll never be the same man
+again. After all these years it's dreadful."
+
+"It's all that's damnable. It's tragic. Give him my love and tell him
+that words can't express my sorrow and indignation."
+
+He rang off. Almost immediately Wilson was announced. He came into the
+room radiant.
+
+"You were right about the divine common-sensicality," said he. "The
+Lord has delivered our adversary into our hands with a vengeance."
+
+He was a chubby little man of forty, with coarse black hair and scrubby
+moustache, not of the type that readily appreciates the delicacies of a
+situation. Paul conceived a sudden loathing for him.
+
+"I would give anything for it not to have happened," he said.
+
+Wilson opened his eyes. "Why? It's our salvation. An ex-convict--it's
+enough to damn any candidate. But we want to make sure. Now I've got an
+idea."
+
+Paul turned on him angrily. "I'll have no capital made out of it
+whatsoever. It's a foul thing to bring such an accusation up against a
+man who has lived a spotless life for thirty years. Everything in me
+goes out in sympathy with him, and I'll let it be known all through the
+constituency."
+
+"If you take it that way," said Wilson, "there's no more to be done."
+
+"There's nothing to be done, except to find out who put up the man to
+make the announcement."
+
+"He did it on his own," Wilson replied warmly. "None of our people
+would resort to a dirty trick like that."
+
+"And yet you want me to take advantage of it now it's done."
+
+"That's quite a different matter."
+
+"I can't see much difference," said Paul.
+
+So Wilson, seeing that his candidate was more unmanageable than ever,
+presently departed, and Paul sat down to breakfast. But he could not
+eat. He was both stricken with shame and moved to the depths by immense
+pity. Far removed from him as Silas Finn was in mode of life and
+ideals, he found much in common with his father. Each had made his way
+from the slum, each had been guided by an inner light--was Silas Finn's
+fantastic belief less of an ignis fatuus than his own?--each had sought
+to get away from a past, each was a child of Ishmael, each, in his own
+way, had lived romantically. Whatever resentment against his father
+lingered in his heart now melted away. He was very near him. The shame
+of the prison struck him as it had struck the old man. He saw him bowed
+down under the blow, and he clenched his hands in a torture of anger
+and indignation. And to crown all, came the intolerable conviction, in
+the formation of which Wilson's triumphant words had not been
+necessary, that if he won the election it would be due to this public
+dishonouring of his own father. He walked about the room in despair,
+and at last halted before the mantelpiece on which still stood the
+photograph of the Princess in its silver frame. Suddenly he remembered
+that he had not told her of this incident in his family history. She
+too would be reading her newspaper this morning. He saw her proud lips
+curl. The son of a gaol-bird! He tore the photograph from its frame and
+threw it into the fire and watched it burn. As the paper writhed under
+the heat, the lips seemed to twist into sad reproach. He turned away
+impatiently. That romantic madness was over and done with. He had far
+sterner things to do than shriek his heart out over a woman in an alien
+star. He had his life to reconstruct in the darkness threatening and
+mocking; but at last he had truth for a foundation; on that he would
+build in defiance of the world.
+
+In the midst of these fine thoughts it occurred to him that he had
+hidden the prison episode in his father's career from the Winwoods as
+well as from the Princess. His checks flushed; it was one more strain
+on the loyalty of these dear devoted friends. He went downstairs, and
+found the Colonel and Miss Winwood in the dining-room. Their faces were
+grave. He came to them with outstretched arms--a familiar gesture, one
+doubtless inherited from his Sicilian ancestry.
+
+"You see what has happened. I knew all the time. I didn't tell you. You
+must forgive me."
+
+"I don't blame you, my boy," said Colonel Winwood. "It was your
+father's secret. You had no right to tell us."
+
+"We're very grieved, dear, for both your sakes," Ursula added. "James
+has taken the liberty of sending round a message of sympathy."
+
+As ever, these two had gone a point beyond his anticipation of their
+loyalty. He thanked them simply.
+
+"It's hateful," said he, "to think I may win the election on account of
+this. It's loathsome." He shuddered.
+
+"I quite agree with you," said the Colonel. "But in politics one has
+often to put up with hateful things in order to serve one's country.
+That's the sacrifice a high-minded man is called upon to make."
+
+"Besides," said Miss Winwood, "let us hope it won't affect votes. All
+the papers say that the vote of confidence was passed amid scenes of
+enthusiasm."
+
+Paul smiled. They understood. A little while later they drove off with
+him to his committee room in the motor car gay with his colours. There
+was still much to be done that day.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HICKNEY HEATH blazed with excitement. It is not every day that a thrill
+runs through a dull London borough, not even every election day. For a
+London borough, unlike a country town, has very little corporate life
+of its own. You cannot get up as much enthusiasm for Kilburn, say, as a
+social or historical entity, as you can for Winchester or Canterbury.
+You may perform civic duties, if you are public-spirited enough, with
+business-like zeal, and if you are borough councillor you may be proud
+of the nice new public baths which you have been instrumental in
+presenting to the community. But the ordinary man in the street no more
+cares for Kilburn than he does for Highgate. He would move from one to
+the other without a pang. For neither's glory would he shed a drop of
+his blood. Only at election times does it occur to him that he is one
+of a special brotherhood, isolated from the rest of London; and even
+then he regards the constituency as a convention defining geographical
+limits for the momentary range of his political passions. So that the
+day when an electric thrill ran through the whole of Hickney Heath was
+a rare one in its uninspiring annals.
+
+The dramatic had happened, touching the most sluggish imaginations. The
+Liberal candidate for Parliament, a respected Borough Councillor, a
+notorious Evangelical preacher, had publicly confessed himself an
+ex-convict. Every newspaper in London--and for the matter of that,
+every newspaper in Great Britain--rang with the story, and every man,
+woman and child in Hickney Heath read feverishly every newspaper,
+morning and evening, they could lay their hands on. Also, every man,
+woman and child in Hickney Heath asked his neighbour for further
+details. All who could leave desk and shop or factory poured into the
+streets to learn the latest, tidings. Around the various polling
+stations the crowd was thickest. Those electors who had been present at
+Silas Finn's meeting, the night before, told the story at first-hand to
+eager groups. Rumours of every sort spread through the mob. The man who
+had put the famous question was an agent of the Tories. It was a smart
+party move. Silas Finn had all the time been leading a double life.
+Depravities without number were laid to his charge. Even now the police
+were inquiring into his connection with certain burglaries that had
+taken place in the neighbourhood. And where was he that day? Who had
+seen him? He was at home drunk. He had committed suicide. Even if he
+hadn't, and was elected, he would not be allowed to take his seat in
+Parliament.
+
+On the other hand, those in whose Radical bosoms burned fierce hatred
+for the Tories, spoke loud in condemnation of their cowardly tactics.
+There was considerable free-fighting in the ordinarily dismal and
+decorous streets of Hickney Heath. Noisy acclamations hailed the
+automobiles, carriages and waggonettes bringing voters of both parties
+to the polls. Paul, driving in his gaily-decked car about the
+constituency, shared all these demonstrations and heard these rumours.
+The latter he denied and caused to be denied, as far as lay in his
+power. In the broad High Street, thronged with folk, and dissonant with
+tram cars and motor 'buses, he came upon a quarrelsome crowd looking up
+at a window above a poulterer's shop, from which hung something white,
+like a strip of wall paper.
+
+Approaching, he perceived that it bore a crude drawing of a convict and
+"Good old Dartmoor" for legend. White with anger, he stopped the car,
+leaped out on to the curb, and pushing his way through the crowd,
+entered the shop. He seized one of the white-coated assistants by the
+arm. "Show me the way to that first-floor room," he cried fiercely.
+
+The assistant, half-dragged, half-leading, and wholly astonished, took
+him through the shop and pointed to the staircase. Paul sprang up and
+dashed through the door into the room, which appeared to be some
+business office. Three or four young men, who turned grinning from the
+window, he thrust aside, and plucking the offending strip from the
+drawing-pins which secured it to the sill, he tore it across and across.
+
+"You cads! You brutes!" he shouted, trampling on the fragments. "Can't
+you fight like Englishmen?"
+
+The young men, realizing the identity of the wrathful apparition,
+stared open-mouthed, turned red, and said nothing. Paul strode out,
+looking very fierce, and drove off in his car amid the cheers of the
+crowd, to which he paid no notice.
+
+"It makes me sick!" he cried passionately to Wilson, who was with him.
+"I hope to God he wins in spite, of it!"
+
+"What about the party?" asked Wilson.
+
+Paul damned the party. He was in the overwrought mood in which a man
+damns everything. Quagmire and bramble and the derision of Olympus-that
+was the end of his vanity of an existence. Suppose he was elected--what
+then? He would be a failure-the high gods in their mirth would see to
+that--a puppet in Frank Ayres' hands until the next general election,
+when he would have ignominiously to retire. Awakener of England indeed!
+He could not even awaken Hickney Heath. As he dashed through the
+streets in his triumphal car, he hated Hickney Heath, hated the wild
+"hoorays" of waggon-loads of his supporters on their way to the polls,
+hated the smug smiles of his committee-men at polling stations. He
+forgot that he did not hate England. A little black disk an inch or two
+in diameter if cunningly focussed can obscure the sun in heaven from
+human eye. There was England still behind the little black disk, though
+Paul for the moment saw it not.
+
+Wilson pulled his scrubby moustache and made no retort to Paul's
+anathema. To him Paul was one of the fine flower of the Upper Classes
+to which lower middle-class England still, with considerable
+justification, believes to be imbued with incomprehensible and
+unalterable principles of conduct. The grand old name of gentleman
+still has its magic in this country--and is, by the way, not without
+its influence in one or two mighty republics wherein the equality of
+man is very loudly proclaimed. Wilson, therefore, gladly suffered
+Paul's lunatic Quixotry. For himself he approved hugely of the cartoon.
+If he could have had his way, Hickney Heath would have flamed with
+poster reproductions of it. But he had a dim appreciation of, and a
+sneaking admiration for, the aristocrat's point of view, and, being a
+practical man, evaded a discussion on the ethics of the situation.
+
+The situation was rendered more extraordinary because the Liberal
+candidate made no appearance in the constituency. Paul inquired
+anxiously. No one had seen him. After lunch he drove alone to his
+father's house. The parlour-maid showed him into the hideously
+furnished and daub-hung dining-room. The Viennese horrors of plaster
+stags, gnomes and rabbits stared fatuously on the hearth. No fire was
+in the grate. Very soon Jane entered, tidy, almost matronly in buxom
+primness, her hair as faultless as if it had come out of a convoluted
+mould, her grave eyes full of light. She gave him her capable hand.
+
+"It's like you to come, Paul."
+
+"It's only decent. My father hasn't shown up. What's the matter with
+him?"
+
+"It's a bit of a nervous breakdown," she said, looking at him steadily.
+"Nothing serious. But the doctor--I sent for him--says he had better
+rest--and his committee people thought it wiser for him not to show
+himself."
+
+"Can I see him?"
+
+"Certainly not." A look of alarm came into her face. "You're both too
+excited. What would you say to him?"
+
+"I'd tell him what I feel about the whole matter."
+
+"Yes. You would fling your arms about, and he would talk about God, and
+a precious lot of good it would do to anybody. No, thank you. I'm in
+charge of Mr. Finn's health."
+
+It was the old Jane, so familiar. "I wish," said he, with a smile--"I
+wish I had had your common sense to guide me all these years."
+
+"If you had, you would now be a clerk in the City earning thirty
+shillings a week."
+
+"And perhaps a happier man."
+
+"Bosh, my dear Paul!" she said, shaking her head slowly. "Rot! Rubbish!
+I know you too well. You adding up figures at thirty shillings a week,
+with a common sense wife for I suppose you mean that--mending your
+socks and rocking the cradle in a second-floor back in Hickney Heath!
+No, my dear"--she paused for a second or two and her lips twitched
+oddly--"common sense would have been the death of you."
+
+He laughed in spite of himself. It was so true.
+
+Common sense might have screwed him to a thirty shillings-a-week desk:
+the fantastic had brought him to that very house, a candidate for
+Parliament, in a thousand-guinea motor car. On the other hand--and his
+laughter faded from his eyes--the fantastic in his life was dead.
+Henceforward common sense would hold him in her cold and unstimulating
+clasp. He said something of the sort to Jane. Once more she ejaculated
+"Rot, rubbish and bosh!" and they quarrelled as they had done in their
+childhood.
+
+"You talk as if I didn't know you inside out, my dear Paul," she said
+in her clear, unsmiling way. "Listen. All men are donkeys, aren't they?"
+
+"For the sake of argument, I agree."
+
+"Well--there are two kinds of donkeys. One kind is meek and mild and
+will go wherever it is driven. The other, in order to get along, must
+always have a bunch of carrots dangling before its eyes. That's you."
+
+"But confound it all!" he cried, "I've lost my carrots--can't you see?
+I'll never have any carrots again. That's the whole damned tragedy."
+
+For the first time she smiled--the smile of the woman wiser in certain
+subtle things than the man. "My dear," she said, "carrots are cheap."
+She paused for an instant and added, "Thank God!"
+
+Paul squeezed her arms affectionately and they moved apart. He sighed.
+"They're the most precious things in the world," said he.
+
+"The most precious things in the world are those which you can get for
+nothing," said Jane.
+
+"You're a dear," said he, "and a comfort."
+
+Presently he left her and returned to his weary round of the
+constituency, feeling of stouter heart, with a greater faith in the
+decent ordering of mundane things. A world containing such women as
+Jane and Ursula Winwood possessed elements of sanity. Outside one of
+the polling stations he found Barney Bill holding forth excitedly to a
+knot of working-men. He ceased as the car drove up, and cast back a
+broad proud smile at the candidate's warm greeting.
+
+"I got up the old 'bus so nice and proper, with all your colours and
+posters, and it would have been a spectacular Diorama for these 'ere
+poor people; but you know for why I didn't bring it out to-day, don't
+you, sonny?"
+
+"I know, dear old friend," said Paul.
+
+"I 'adn't the 'cart to."
+
+"What were you speechifying about when I turned up?"
+
+Barney Bill jerked a backward thumb. "I was telling this pack of
+cowardly Radicals that though I've been a Tory born and bred for sixty
+odd years, and though I've voted for you, Silas Finn, for all he was in
+prison while most of them were sucking wickedness and Radicalism out of
+Nature's founts, is just as good a man as what you are. They was
+saying, yer see, they was Radicals, but on account of Silas being blown
+upon, they was going to vote for you. So I tells 'em, I says, 'Mr.
+Savelli would scorn your dirty votes. If yer feel low and Radical, vote
+Radical. Mr. Savelli wants to play fair. I know both of 'em,' I says,
+'both of 'em intimately.' And they begins to laugh, as if I was talking
+through my hat. Anyway, they see now I know you, sonny."
+
+Paul laughed and clapped the loyal old man on the shoulder. Then he
+turned to the silent but interested group. "Gentlemen," said he, "I
+don't want to inquire on which side you are; but you can take it from
+me that whatever my old friend Mr. Simmons says about Mr. Finn and
+myself is the absolute truth. If you're on Mr. Finn's side in politics,
+in God's name vote for him. He's a noble, high-souled man and I'm proud
+of his private friendship."
+
+He drew Barney Bill apart. "You're the only Tory in the place who can
+try to persuade people not to vote for me. I wish you would keep on
+doing it."
+
+"I've been a-doing of it ever since the polls opened this morning,"
+said Barney Bill. Then he cocked his head on one side and his little
+eyes twinkled: "It's an upside-down way of fighting an election to
+persuade people not to vote for you, isn't it?"
+
+"Everything is topsy-turvy with me, these days," Paul replied: "so
+we've just got to stand on our heads and make the best of it."
+
+And he drove off in the gathering dusk.
+
+Night found him in the great chamber of the Town Hall, with his agent
+and members of his committee. Present too were the Liberal Agent and
+the members of the Liberal Committee. At one end of the room sat the
+Mayor of the Borough in robe and chain of office, presiding over the
+proceedings. The Returning Officer and his staff sat behind long
+tables, on which were deposited the sealed ballot boxes brought in from
+the various polling stations; and these were emptied and the votes were
+counted, the voting papers for each candidate being done up in bundles
+of fifty. Knots of committee-men of both parties stood chatting in low
+voices. In an ordinary election both candidates would have chatted
+together, in ninety-nine cases out of a hundred about golf, and would
+have made an engagement to meet again in milder conflict that day week.
+But here Paul was the only candidate to appear, and he sat in a
+cane-bottomed chair apart from the lounging politicians, feeling
+curiously an interloper in this vast, solemn and scantily-filled hall.
+He was very tired, too tired in body, mind and soul to join in the
+small-talk of Wilson and his bodyguard. Besides, they all wore the air
+of anticipated victory, and for that he held them in detestation. He
+had detested them the whole day long. The faces that yesterday had been
+long and anxious to-day had been wreathed in smirks. Wherever he had
+gone he had found promise of victory in his father's disgrace.
+Passionately the young man, fronting vital issues, longed for his own
+defeat.
+
+But for the ironical interposition of the high gods, it might have been
+so different. Any other candidate against him, he himself buoyed up
+with his own old glorious faith, his Princess, dazzling meteor
+illuminating the murky streets--dear God! what would not have been the
+joy of battle during the past week, what would not have been the
+intense thrill, the living of a thousand lives in these few hours of
+suspense now so dull with dreariness and pain! He sat apart, his legs
+crossed, a hand over his eyes. Wilson and his men, puzzled by his
+apparent apathy, left him alone. It is not much use addressing a mute
+and wooden idol, no matter how physically prepossessing.
+
+The counting went on slowly, relentlessly, and the bundles of fifty on
+each side grew in bulk, and Paul's side bulked larger than Silas Finn's.
+
+At last Wilson could stand it no longer. He left the group with which
+he was talking, and came to Paul. "We're far ahead already," he cried
+excitedly. "I told you last night would do the trick."
+
+"Last night," said Paul, rising and stuffing his hands in his jacket
+pockets, "my opponent's supporters passed a vote of confidence in him
+in a scene of tumultuous enthusiasm."
+
+"Quite so," replied Wilson. "A crowd is generous and easily swayed. A
+theatrical audience of scalliwags and thieves will howl applause at the
+triumph of virtue and the downfall of the villain; and each separate
+member will go out into the street and begin to practise villainy and
+say 'to hell with virtue.' If last night's meeting could have polled on
+the spot, they would have been as one man. To-day they're scattered and
+each individual revises his excited opinion. Your hard-bitten Radical
+would sooner have a self-made man than an aristocrat to represent him
+in Parliament; but, damn it all, he'd sooner have an aristocrat than an
+ex-convict."
+
+"But who the devil told you I'm an aristocrat?" cried Paul.
+
+Wilson laughed. "Who wants to be told such an obvious thing? Anyhow,
+you've only got to look and you'll see how the votes are piling up."
+
+Paul looked and saw that Wilson spoke truly. Then he reflected that
+Wilson and the others who had worked so strenuously for him had no part
+in his own personal depression. They deserved a manifestation of
+interest, also expressions of gratitude. So Paul pulled himself
+together and went amongst them and was responsive to their prophecies
+of victory.
+
+Then just as the last votes were being counted, an official attendant
+came in with a letter for Paul. It had been brought by messenger. The
+writing on the envelope was Jane's. He tore it open and read.
+
+Mr. Finn is dying. He has had a stroke. The doctor says he can't live
+through the night. Come as soon as you can. JANE.
+
+Outside the Town Hall the wide street was packed with people. Men
+surged up to the hollow square of police guarding the approach to the
+flight of steps and the great entrance door. Men swarmed about the
+electric standards above the heads of their fellows. Men rose in a long
+tier with their backs to the shop-fronts on the opposite side of the
+road. In spite of the raw night the windows were open and the arc
+lights revealed a ghostly array of faces looking down on the mass
+below, whose faces in their turn were lit up by the more yellow glare
+streaming from the doors and uncurtained windows of the Town Hall. In
+the lobby behind the glass doors could be seen a few figures going and
+coming, committee-men, journalists, officials. A fine rain began to
+fall, but the crowd did not heed it. The mackintosh capes of the
+policemen glistened. It was an orderly crowd, held together by tense
+excitement: all eyes fixed on the silent illuminated building whence
+the news would come. Across one window on the second floor was a large
+white patch, blank and sphinx-like. At right angles to one end of the
+block ran the High Street and the tall, blazing trams passed up and
+down and all eyes in the trams strained for a transient glimpse of the
+patch, hoping that it would flare out into message.
+
+Presently a man was seen to dash from the interior of the hall into the
+lobby, casting words at the waiting figures, who clamoured eagerly and
+disappeared within, just as the man broke through the folding doors and
+appeared at the top of the steps beneath the portico. The great crowd
+surged and groaned, and the word was quickly passed from rank to rank.
+
+"Savelli. Thirteen hundred and seventy majority." And then there burst
+out wild cheers and the crowd broke into a myriad little waves like a
+choppy sea. Men danced and shouted and clapped each other on the back,
+and the tall facade of the street opposite the hall was a-flutter.
+Suddenly the white patch leaped into an illumination proclaiming the
+figures.
+
+Savelli--6,135.
+
+Finn--4,765.
+
+Again the wild cheering rose, and then the great double windows in the
+centre of the first floor of the Town Hall were flung open and Paul,
+surrounded by the mayor and officials, appeared.
+
+Paul gripped the iron hand-rail and looked down upon the tumultuous
+scene, his ears deafened by the roar, his eyes dazed by the conflicting
+lights and the million swift reflections from moving faces and arms and
+hats and handkerchiefs. The man is not born who can receive unmoved a
+frenzied public ovation. A lump rose in his throat. After all, this
+delirium of joy was sincere. He stood for the moment the idol of the
+populace. For him this vast concourse of human beings had waited in
+rain and mud and now became a deafening, seething welter of human
+passion. He gripped the rail tighter and closed his eyes. He heard as
+in a dream the voice of the mayor behind him: "Say a few words. They
+won't hear you--but that doesn't matter."
+
+Then Paul drew himself up, facing the whirling scene. He sought in his
+pockets and suddenly shot up his hand, holding a letter, and awaited a
+lull in the uproar. He was master of himself now. He had indeed words
+to say, deliberately prepared, and he knew that if he could get a
+hearing he would say them as deliberately. At last came comparative
+calm.
+
+"Gentlemen," said he, with a motion of the letter, "my opponent is
+dying."
+
+He paused. The words, so unexpected, so strangely different from the
+usual exordium, seemed to pass from line to line through the crowd.
+
+"I am speaking in the presence of death," said Paul, and paused again.
+
+And a hush spread like a long wave across the street, and the thronged
+windows, last of all, grew still and silent.
+
+"I will ask you to hear me out, for I have something very grave to
+say." And his voice rang loud and clear. "Last night my opponent was
+forced to admit that nearly thirty years ago he suffered a term of
+penal servitude. The shock, after years of reparation, of spotless
+life, spent in the service of God and his fellow-creatures, has killed
+him. I desire publicly to proclaim that I, as his opponent, had no
+share in the dastardly blow that has struck him down. And I desire to
+proclaim the reason. He is my own father; I, Paul Savelli, am my
+opponent, Silas Finn's son."
+
+A great gasp and murmur rose from the wonder-stricken throng, but only
+momentarily, for the spell of drama was on them. Paul continued.
+
+"I will make public later on the reasons for our respective changes of
+name. For the present it is enough to state the fact of our
+relationship and of our mutual affection and respect. That I thank you
+for electing me goes without saying; and I will do everything in my
+power to advance the great cause you have enabled me to represent. I
+regret I cannot address you in another place to-night, as I had
+intended. I must ask you of your kindness to let me go quietly where my
+duty and my heart call me to my father's death-bed."
+
+He bowed and waved a dignified gesture of farewell, and turning into
+the hall met the assemblage of long, astounded faces. From outside came
+the dull rumbling of the dispersing crowd. The mayor, the first to
+break the silence, murmured a platitude.
+
+Paul thanked him gravely. Then he went to Wilson. "Forgive me," said
+he, "for all that has been amiss with me to-day. It has been a strain
+of a very peculiar kind."
+
+"I can well imagine it," said Wilson.
+
+"You see I'm not an aristocrat, after all," said Paul.
+
+Wilson looked the young man in the face and saw the steel beneath the
+dark eyes, and the Proud setting of the lips. With a sudden impulse he
+wrung his hand. "I don't care a damn!" said he. "You are."
+
+Paul said, unsmiling: "I can face the music. That's all." He drew a
+note from his pocket. "Will you do me a final service? Go round to the
+Conservative Club at once, and tell the meeting what has happened, and
+give this to Colonel Winwood."
+
+"With pleasure," said Wilson.
+
+Then Paul shook hands with all his fellow-workers and thanked them in
+his courtly way, and, pleading for solitude, went through the door of
+the great chamber and, guided by an attendant, reached the exit in a
+side street where his car awaited him. A large concourse of people
+stood drawn up in line on each side of the street, marshalled by
+policemen. A familiar crooked figure limped from the shadow of the
+door, holding a hard felt hat, his white poll gleaming in the shaft of
+light. "God bless you, sonny," he said in a hoarse whisper.
+
+Paul took the old man by the arm and drew him across the pavement to
+the car. "Get in," said he.
+
+Barney Bill hung back. "No, sonny; no."
+
+"It's not the first time we've driven together. Get in. I want you."
+
+So Barney Bill allowed himself to be thrust into the luxurious car, and
+Paul followed. And perhaps for the first time in the history of great
+elections the successful candidate drove away from the place where the
+poll was declared in dead silence, attended only by the humblest of his
+constituents. But every man in the throng bared his head.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+"HE had the stroke in the night," said Barney Bill suddenly.
+
+Paul turned sharply on him. "Why wasn't I told?"
+
+"Could you have cured him?"
+
+"Of course not."
+
+"Could you have done him any good?"
+
+"I ought to have been told."
+
+"You had enough of worries before you for one day, sonny."
+
+"That was my business," said Paul.
+
+"Jane and I, being as it were responsible parties, took the liberty, so
+to speak, of thinking it our business too."
+
+Paul drummed impatiently on his knees.
+
+"Yer ain't angry, are you, sonny?" the old man asked plaintively.
+
+"No--not angry--with you and Jane--certainly not. I know you acted for
+the best, out of love for me. But you shouldn't have deceived me. I
+thought it was a mere nervous breakdown--the strain and shock. You
+never said a word about it, and Jane, when I talked to her this
+morning, never gave me to dream there was anything serious amiss. So I
+say you two have deceived me."
+
+"But I'm a telling of yer, sonny--"
+
+"Yes, yes, I know. I don't reproach you. But don't you see? I'm sick of
+lies. Dead sick. I've been up to my neck in a bog of falsehood ever
+since I was a child and I'm making a hell of a struggle to get on to
+solid ground. The Truth for me now. By God! nothing but the Truth!"
+
+Barney Bill, sitting forward, hunched up, on the seat of the car, just
+as he used to sit on the footboard of his van, twisted his head round.
+"I'm not an eddicated person," said he, "although if I hadn't done a
+bit of reading in my time I'd have gone dotty all by my lones in the
+old 'bus, but I've come to one or two conclusions in my, so to speak,
+variegated career, and one is that if you go on in that 'ere mad way
+for Truth in Parliament, you'll be a bull in a china shop, and they'll
+get sticks and dawgs to hustle you out. Sir Robert Peel, old Gladstone,
+Dizzy, the whole lot of the old Yuns was up against it. They had to
+compromise. It's compromise"--the old man dwelt lovingly, as usual, on
+the literary word--"it's compromise you must have in Parliament."
+
+"I'll see Parliament damned first!" cried Paul, his nerves on edge.
+
+"You'll have to wait a long time, sonny," said Barney Bill, wagging a
+sage head. "Parliament takes a lot of damning."
+
+"Anyhow," said Paul, not eager to continue the argument, but
+unconsciously caught in the drift of Barney Bill's philosophy, "my
+private life isn't politics, and there's not going to be another lie in
+my private life as long as I live."
+
+The old man broke a short silence with a dry chuckle. "How it takes one
+back!" he said reflectively. "Lor lumme! I can hear yer speaking
+now--just in the same tone--the night what yer run away with me. Yer
+hadn't a seat to yer breeches then, and now you've a seat in
+Parliament." He chuckled again at his joke. "But"--he gripped the young
+man's knee in his bony clasp--"you're just the same Paul, sonny, God
+bless yer--and you'll come out straight all right. Here we are."
+
+The car drew up before Silas Finn's house. They entered. Jane,
+summoned, came down at once and met them in the dreadful dining-room,
+where a simple meal was spread.
+
+"I haven't heard--" she said.
+
+"I'm in."
+
+"I'm glad."
+
+"My father--?" he asked curtly.
+
+She looked at him wide-eyed for a second or two as he stood, his
+fur-lined coat with astrachan collar thrown open, his hand holding a
+soft felt hat on his hip, his absurdly beautiful head thrown back, to
+casual glance the Fortunate Youth of a month or two ago. But to Jane's
+jealous eye he was not even the man she had seen that afternoon. He
+looked many years older. She confessed afterwards to surprise at not
+finding his hair grey at the temples, thus manifesting her ordered
+sense of the harmonious. She confessed, too, that she was
+frightened--Jane who, for any other reason than the mere saving of her
+own skin, would have stolidly faced Hyrcanean tigers--at the stern eyes
+beneath the contracted brows. He was a different Paul altogether. And
+here we have the divergence between the masculine and the feminine
+point of view. Jane saw a new avatar; Barney Bill the ragged urchin of
+the Bludston brick-fields. She shifted her glance to the old man. He,
+standing crookedly, cocked his head and nodded.
+
+"He knows all about it."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Paul. "How is my father?"
+
+Jane threw out her hands in the Englishwoman's insignificant gesture.
+"He's unconscious--has been for hours--the nurse is up with him--the
+end may come any moment. I hid it from you till the last for your own
+sake. Would you care to go upstairs?"
+
+She moved to the door. Paul threw off his overcoat and, followed by
+Barney Bill, accompanied her. On the landing they were met by the nurse.
+
+"It is all over," she said.
+
+"I will go in for a moment," said Paul. "I should like to be alone."
+
+In a room hung like the rest of the house with gaudy pictures he stood
+for a short while looking at the marble face of the strange-souled,
+passionate being that had been his father. The lids had closed for ever
+over the burning, sorrowful eyes; the mobile lips were for ever mute.
+In his close sympathy with the man Paul knew what had struck him down.
+It was not the blow of the nameless enemy, but the stunning realization
+that he was not, after all, the irresistible nominee of the Almighty.
+His great faith had not suffered; for the rigid face was serene, as
+though he had accepted this final chastisement and purification before
+entrance into the Eternal Kingdom; but his high pride, the mainspring
+of his fanatical life, had been broken and the workings of the physical
+organism had been arrested. In those few moments of intense feeling, in
+the presence of death, it was given to Paul to tread across the
+threshold of the mystery of his birth. Here lay stiff and cold no base
+clay such as that of which Polly Kegworthy had been formed. It had been
+the tenement of a spirit beautiful and swift. No matter to what things
+he himself had been born--he had put that foolishness behind him--at
+all events his dream bad come partly true. His father had been one of
+the great ones, one of the conquerors, one of the high princes of men.
+Multitudes of kings had not been so parented. Outwardly a successful
+business man and a fanatical Dissenter--there were thousands like Silas
+Finn. But Paul knew his inner greatness, the terrific struggle of his
+soul, the warrings between fierce blood and iron will, the fervent
+purpose, the lofty aspirations and the unwavering conduct of his life
+of charity and sorrow. He stretched out his hand and with his finger
+tips lightly touched the dead man's forehead. "I'm proud to be your
+son," he murmured.
+
+Then the nurse came in and Paul went downstairs. Barney Bill waylaid
+him in the hall, and led him into the dining-room. "Have a little food
+and drink, sonny. You look as if yer need it--especially drink. 'Ere."
+He seized a decanter of whisky--since Paul's first visit, Silas had
+always kept it in the house for his son's comforting--and would have
+filled the tumbler had not Paul restrained him. He squirted in the
+soda. "Drink it down and you'll feel better."
+
+Paul swallowed a great gulp. "Yes," he agreed. "There are times when it
+does help a man."
+
+"Liquor is like a dawg," said Bill. "Keep it in subjection, so to
+speak, and it's yer faithful friend."
+
+"Where's Jane?" Paul asked.
+
+"She's busy. Half the borough seem to be calling, or telephoning"--and
+even at that moment Paul could hear the maid tripping across the hall
+and opening the front door--"I've told her what occurred. She seemed
+half skeered. She's had a dreadful day, pore gal."
+
+"She has indeed," said Paul.
+
+He threw himself into a chair, dead beat, at the end of emotional
+strain, and remained talking with the old man of he scarce knew what.
+But these two--Jane and the old man--were linked to him by imperishable
+ties, and he could not leave them yet awhile in the house of death.
+Barney Bill stirred the fire, which blazed up, making the perky animals
+on the hearth cast faint and fantastic shadows.
+
+"It's funny how he loved those darned little beasts, isn't it now? I
+remember of him telling me as how they transported him into magic
+something--or the other--medi--he had a word for it--I dunno--"
+
+"Mediaeval?"
+
+"That's it, sonny. Mediaeval forests. It means back of old times, don't
+it? King Arthur and his Round Table--I done a bit of reading, yer
+know." The old man took out pouch and pipe. "That's what drew us
+together, sonny, our taste for literature. Remember?"
+
+"Can I ever forget?" said Paul.
+
+"Well, he was like that too. He had lots of po'try in him--not the
+stuff that rhymes, yer know, like 'The Psalm of Life' and so forth, but
+real po'try. I wish I could tell yer what I mean--" His face was
+puckered into a thousand wrinkles with the intellectual effort, and his
+little diamond eyes gleamed. "He could take a trumpery common thing
+like that there mug-faced, lop-eared hare and make it stand for the
+medi-what-you-call-it-forest. I've said to him, 'Come out with me on
+the old 'bus if you want green and loneliness and nature.' And he has
+said--I recollect one talk in particular--he said, 'I'd love to hear'
+something about a pipe--I'm getting old, sonny--"
+
+"The Pipes of Pan?" Paul suggested.
+
+"The very words. Lor lumme! how did you guess it?" He paused, his
+fingers holding the lighted match, which went out before he could apply
+it to his tobacco. "Yus. 'The Pipes of Pan.' I don't know what it
+means. Anyway, he said he'd love to hear them in the real forest, but
+duty kept him to bricks and mortar and so he had to hear them in
+imagination. He said that all them footling little beasts were
+a-listening to 'em, and they told him all about it. I remember he told
+me more about the woods than I know myself--and I reckon I could teach
+his business to any gamekeeper or poacher in England. I don't say as
+how he knew the difference between a stoat and a weasel--he didn't. A
+cock-pheasant and a hen-partridge would have been the same to him. But
+the spirit of it--the meaning of it--he fair raised my hair off--he
+knew it a darned sight better nor I. And that's what I set out for to
+say, sonny. He had po'try in him. And all this"--he swept an
+all-inclusive hand--"all this meant to him something that you and I
+can't tumble to, sonny. It meant something different to what it looked
+like--ah!" and impatient at his impotence to express philosophic
+thought, he cast another lighted match angrily into the fire.
+
+Paul, high product of modern culture, sat in wonder at the common old
+fellow's clarity of vision. Tears rolled down his cheek. "I know, dear
+old Bill, what you're trying to say. Only one man has ever been able to
+say it. A mad poet called Blake.
+
+ 'To see a world in a grain of sand,
+ And a heaven in a wild flower;
+ Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
+ And eternity in an hour'."
+
+Barney Bill started forward in his chair and clapped his hand on the
+young man's knee. "By gum! you've got it. That's what I was a-driving
+at. That's Silas. I call to mind when he was a boy--pretty dirty and
+ragged he was too--as he used to lean over the parapet of Blackfriars
+Bridge and watch the current sort of swirling round the piers, and he
+used to say as how he could hear what the river was saying. I used to
+think him loony. But it was po'try, sonny, all the time."
+
+The old man, thus started on reminiscence, continued, somewhat
+garrulous, and Paul, sunk in the armchair by the fire, listened
+indulgently, waiting for Jane. She, meanwhile, was occupied upstairs
+and in the library answering telephone messages and sending word out to
+callers by the maid. For, on the heels of Paul, as Barney Bill had
+said, many had come on errand of inquiry and condolence and all the
+news agencies and newspapers of London seemed to be on the telephone.
+Some of the latter tried for speech with the newly elected candidate
+whom they understood to be in the house, but Jane denied them firmly.
+She had had some training as a politician's private secretary. At last
+the clanging bell ceased ringing, and the maid ceased running to and
+from the street door, and the doctor had come and given his certificate
+and gone, and Jane joined the pair in the dining-room. She brought in
+from the hall a tray of visiting cards and set it on the table. "I
+suppose it was kind of them all to come," she said.
+
+She sat down listlessly in a straight-backed chair, and then, at a
+momentary end of her fine strength suddenly broke into tears and sobs
+and buried her head on her arms. Paul rose, bent over her and clasped
+her shoulders comfortingly. Presently she turned and blindly sought his
+embrace. He raised her to her feet, and they stood as they had done
+years ago, when, boy and girl, they had come to the parting of their
+ways. She cried silently for a while, and then she said miserably:
+"I've only you left, dear."
+
+In this hour of spent effort and lassitude it was a queer physical
+comfort, very pure and sweet, to feel the close contact of her young,
+strong body. She, too, out of the wreck, was all that he had left. His
+clasp tightened, and he murmured soothing words.
+
+"Oh, my dear, I am so tired," she said, giving herself up, for her part
+also, to the foolish solace of his arms. "I wish I could stay here
+always, Paul."
+
+He whispered: "Why not?"
+
+Indeed, why not? Instinct spoke. His people were her people and her
+people his. And she had proved herself a brave, true woman. Before him
+no longer gleamed the will-o'-the-wisp leading him a fantastic dance
+through life. Before him lay only darkness. Jane and he, hand in hand,
+could walk through it fearless and undismayed. And her own great love,
+shown unashamed in the abandonment of this moment of intense emotion'
+made his pulses throb. He whispered again: "Why not?"
+
+For answer she nestled closer. "If only you could love me a little,
+little bit?"
+
+"But I do," said Paul hoarsely.
+
+She shook her head and sobbed afresh, and they stood in close embrace
+at the end of the room by the door, regardless of the presence of the
+old man who sat, his back to them, smoking his pipe and looking, with
+his birdlike crook of the neck, meditatively into the fire. "No, no,"
+said Jane, at last. "It's silly of me. Forgive me. We mustn't talk of
+such things. Neither of us is fit to--and to-night it's not becoming. I
+have lost my father and you are only my brother, Paul dear."
+
+Barney Bill broke in suddenly; and at the sound of his voice they moved
+apart. "Think over it, sonny. Don't go and do anything rash."
+
+"Don't you think it would be wise for Jane to marry me?"
+
+"Ay--for Jane."
+
+"Not for me?"
+
+"It's only wise for a man to marry a woman what he loves," said Barney
+Bill.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"You said, when we was a-driving here, as you are going to live for the
+Truth and nothing but the Truth. I only mention it," added the old man
+drily.
+
+Jane recovered herself, with a gulp in the throat, and before Paul
+could answer said: "We too had a talk to-day, Paul. Remember," her
+voice quavered a little--"about carrots."
+
+"You were right in essence," said Paul, looking at her gravely. "But I
+should have my incentive. I know my own mind. My affection for you is
+of the deepest. That is Truth--I needn't tell you. We could lead a
+happy and noble life together."
+
+"We belong to two different social classes, Paul," she said gently,
+again sitting in the straight-backed chair by the table.
+
+"We don't," he replied. "I repudiated my claims to the other class this
+evening. I was admitted into what is called high society, partly
+because people took it for granted that I was a man of good birth. Now
+that I've publicly proclaimed that I'm not--and the newspapers will
+pretty soon find out all about me now--I'll drop out of that same high
+society. I shan't seek readmittance."
+
+"People will seek you."
+
+"You don't know the world," said he.
+
+"It must be mean and horrid."
+
+"Oh, no. It's very just and honourable. I shan't blame it a bit for not
+wanting me. Why should I? I don't belong to it."
+
+"But you do, dear Paul," she cried earnestly. "Even if you could get
+rid of your training and mode of thought, you can't get rid of your
+essential self. You've always been an aristocrat, and I've always been
+a small shop-keeper's daughter and shall continue to be one."
+
+"And I say," Paul retorted, "that we've both sprung from the people,
+and are of the people. You've raised yourself above the small
+shop-keeping class just as much as I have. Don't let us have any sham
+humility about it. Whatever happens you'll always associate with folk
+of good-breeding and education. You couldn't go back to Barn Street. It
+would be idiotic for me to contemplate such a thing for my part. But
+between Barn Street and Mayfair there's a refined and intellectual land
+where you and I can meet on equal ground and make our social position.
+What do you say?"
+
+She did not look at him, but fingered idly the cards on the tray.
+"To-morrow you will think differently. To-night you're all on the
+strain."
+
+"And, axing yer pardon, sonny, for chipping in," said the old man,
+holding up his pipe in his gnarled fingers, "you haven't told her as
+how you loves her--not as how a young woman axed in marriage ought to
+be told."
+
+"I've spoken the Truth, dear old friend," said Paul. "I've got down to
+bed-rock to-night. I have a deep and loyal affection for Jane. I shan't
+waver in it all my life long. I'll soon find my carrot, as she calls
+it--it will be England's greatness. She is the woman that will help me
+on my path. I've finished with illusions for ever and ever. Jane is the
+bravest and grandest of realities. To-night's work has taught me that.
+For me, Jane stands for the Truth. Jane--"
+
+He turned to her, but she had risen from her chair, staring at a card
+which she held in her hand. Her clear eyes met his for an instant as
+she threw the card on the table before him. "No, dear. For you, that's
+the Truth."
+
+He took it up and looked at it stupidly. It bore a crown and the
+inscription: "The Princess Sophie Zobraska," and a pencilled line, in
+her handwriting: "With anxious inquiries." He reeled, as if someone had
+dealt him a heavy blow on the head. He recovered to see Jane regarding
+him with her serene gravity. "Did you know about this?" he asked dully.
+
+"No. I've just seen the card. I found it at the bottom of the pile."
+
+"How did it come?"
+
+Jane rang the bell. "I don't know. If Annie's still up, we can find
+out. As it was at the bottom, it must have been one of the first."
+
+"How could the news have travelled so fast?" said Paul.
+
+The maid came in. Questioned, she said that just after Paul had gone
+upstairs, and while Jane was at the telephone, a chauffeur had
+presented the card. He belonged to a great lighted limousine in which
+sat a lady in hat and dark veil. According to her orders, she had said
+that Mr. Finn was dead, and the chauffeur had gone away and she had
+shut the door.
+
+The maid was dismissed. Paul stood on the hearthrug with bent brows,
+his hands in his jacket pockets. "I can't understand it," he said.
+
+"She must ha' come straight from the Town Hall," said Barney Bill.
+
+"But she wasn't there," cried Paul.
+
+"Sonny," said the old fellow, "if you're always dead sure of where a
+woman is and where a woman isn't, you're a wiser man than Solomon with
+all his wives and other domestic afflictions."
+
+Paul threw the card into the fire. "It doesn't matter where she was,"
+said he. "It was a very polite--even a gracious act to send in her card
+on her way home. But it makes no difference to what I was talking
+about. What have I got to do with princesses? They're out of my sphere.
+So are Naiads and Dryads and Houris and Valkyrie and other fabulous
+ladies. The Princess Zobraska has nothing to do with the question."
+
+He made a step towards Jane and, his hand on her shoulder, looked at
+her in his new, masterful way. "I come in the most solemn hour and in
+the crisis of my life to ask you to marry me. My father, whom I've only
+learned to love and revere to-night, is lying dead upstairs. To-night I
+have cut away all bridges behind me. I go into the unknown. We'll have
+to fight, but we'll fight together. You have courage, and I at least
+have that. There's a seat in Parliament which I'll have to fight for
+afterwards like a dog for a bone, and an official position which brings
+in enough bread and-butter--"
+
+"And there's a fortune remarked Barney Bill.
+
+"What do you mean?" Paul swung round sharply.
+
+"Yer father's fortune, sonny. Who do yer suppose he was a-going to
+leave it to? 'Omes for lost 'orses or Free Zionists? I don't know as
+'ow I oughter talk of it, him not buried yet--but I seed his will when
+he made it a month or two ago, and barring certain legacies to Free
+Zionists and such-like lunatic folk, not to speak of Jane ere being
+left comfortably off, you're the residuary legatee, sonny--with
+something like a hundred thousand pounds. There's no talk of earning
+bread-and-butter, sonny."
+
+"It never entered my head," said Paul, rather dazed. "I suppose a
+father would leave his money to his son. I didn't realize it." He
+passed his hand over his eyes. "So many things have happened to-night.
+Anyhow," he said, smiling queerly, in his effort to still a whirling
+brain, "if there are no anxieties as to ways and means, so much the
+better for Jane and me. I am all the more justified in asking you to
+marry me. Will you?"
+
+"Before I answer you, Paul dear," she replied steadily, "you must
+answer me. I've known about the will, just like Bill, all the time--"
+
+"She has that," confirmed the old man.
+
+"So this isn't news to me, dear, and can't alter anything from me to
+you."
+
+"Why should it?" asked Paul. "But it makes my claim a little stronger."
+
+"Oh, no," she replied, shaking her head. "It only--only confuses
+issues. Money has nothing to do with what I'm going to ask you. You
+said to-night you were going to live for the Truth--the real naked
+Truth. Now, Paul dear, I want the real, naked Truth. Do you love that
+woman?"
+
+At her question she seemed to have grown from the common sense,
+clear-eyed Jane into a great and commanding presence. She had drawn
+herself to her full height. Her chin was in the air, her generous bust
+thrown forward, her figure imperious, her eyes intense. And Paul too
+drew himself up and looked at her in his new manhood. And they stood
+thus for a while, beloved enemies.
+
+"If you want the Truth--yes, I do love her," said he.
+
+"Then how dare you ask me to be your wife?"
+
+"Because the one is nonsensical and illusory and the other is real and
+practical."
+
+She flashed out angrily: "Do you suppose I can live my woman's life on
+the real and practical? What kind of woman do you take me for? An
+Amelia, a Patient Griselda, a tabby cat?"
+
+Paul said: "You know very well; I take you for one of the
+greatest-hearted of women. I've already said it to-night."
+
+"Do you think I'm a greater-hearted woman than she? Wait, I've not
+finished," she cried in a loud voice. "Your Princess--you cut her heart
+into bits the other day, when you proclaimed yourself a low-born
+impostor. She thought you a high-born gentleman, and you told her of
+the gutter up north and the fried-fish shop and the Sicilian
+organ-grinding woman. She, royalty--you of the scum! She left you. This
+morning she learned worse. She learned that you were the son of a
+convict. What does she do? She comes somehow--I don't know how--to
+Hickney Heath and hears you publicly give yourself away--and she drives
+straight here with a message for you. It's for you, the message. Who
+else?" She stood before Paul, a flashing Jane unknown. "Would a woman
+who didn't love you come to this house to-night? She wouldn't, Paul.
+You know it! Dear old Bill here, who hasn't moved in royal circles,
+knows it. No, my dear man," she said regally, "I've given you all my
+love--everything that is in me--since I was a child of thirteen. You
+will always have it. It's my great joy that you'll always have it. But,
+by God, Paul, I'm not going to exchange it for anything less. Can you
+give me the same?"
+
+"You know I can't," said Paul. "But I can give you that which would
+make our marriage a happy one. I believe the experience of the world
+has shown it to be the securest basis."
+
+She was on the point of breaking out, but turned away, with clenched
+hands, and, controlling herself, faced him again. "You're an honourable
+and loyal man, Paul, and you're saying this to save your face. I know
+that you would marry me. I know that you would be faithful to me in
+thought and word and act. I know that you would be good and kind and
+never give me a moment's cause for complaint. But your heart would be
+with the other woman. Whether she's out of your sphere or not--what
+does it matter to me? You love her and she loves you. I know it. I
+should always know it. You'd be living in hell and so should I. I
+should prefer to remain in purgatory, which, after all, is quite
+bearable--I'm used to it--and I love you enough to wish to see you in
+paradise."
+
+She turned away with a wide gesture and an upward inflexion of her
+voice. Barney Bill refilled his pipe and fixed Paul with his twinkling
+diamond eyes. "It's a pity, sonny--a dodgasted pity!"
+
+"We're up against the Truth, old man, the unashamed and naked truth,"
+said Paul, with a sigh.
+
+Jane caught Paul's fur-lined coat and hat from the chair on which he
+had thrown it and came to him. "It's time for you to go and rest, dear.
+We're all of us exhausted."
+
+She helped him on with the heavy coat, and for farewell put both her
+hands on his shoulders. "You must forget a lot of things I've said
+to-night."
+
+"I can't help remembering them."
+
+"No, dear. Forget them." She drew his face down and kissed him on the
+lips. Then she led him out to the front door and accompanied him down
+the steps to the kerb where the car with its weary chauffeur was
+waiting. The night had cleared and the stars shone bright in the sky.
+She pointed to one, haphazard. "Your star, Paul. Believe in it still."
+
+He drove off. She entered the house, and, flinging herself on the floor
+by Barney Bill, buried her head on the old man's knees and sobbed her
+brave heart out.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE next morning amazement fluttered over a million breakfast tables
+and throbbed in a million railway carriages. For all the fierceness of
+political passions, parliamentary elections are but sombre occurrences
+to the general public. Rarely are they attended by the picturesque, the
+dramatic, the tragic. But already the dramatic had touched the election
+of Hickney Heath, stimulating interest in the result. Thousands,
+usually apathetic as to political matters, opened their newspapers to
+see how the ex-convict candidate had fared. They read, with a gasp,
+that he was dead; that his successful opponent had proclaimed himself
+to be his son. They had the dramatic value of cumulative effect. If
+Paul had ever sought notoriety he had it now. His name rang through the
+length and breadth of the land. The early editions of the London
+afternoon papers swelled the chorus of amazed comment and conjecture.
+Some had even routed out a fact or two, Heaven knows whence, concerning
+father and son. According to party they meted out praise or blame.
+Some, unversed in the law, declared the election invalid. The point was
+discussed in a hundred clubs.
+
+There was consternation in the social world. The Duchesses' boudoirs
+with which Paul had been taunted hummed with indignation. They had
+entertained an adventurer unawares. They had entrusted the sacred ark
+of their political hopes to a charlatan. Their daughters had danced
+with the offspring of gaol and gutter. He must be cast out from the
+midst of them. So did those that were foolish furiously rage together
+and imagine many a vain thing. The Winwoods came in for pity. They had
+been villainously imposed upon. And the Young England League to which
+they had all subscribed so handsomely--where were its funds? Was it
+safe to leave them at the disposal of so unprincipled a fellow? Then
+germs of stories crept in from the studios and the stage and grew
+perversely in the overheated atmosphere. Paul's reputation began to
+assume a pretty colour. On the other hand, there were those who, while
+deploring the deception, were impressed by the tragedy and by Paul's
+attitude. He had his defenders. Among the latter first sprang forward
+Lord Francis Ayres, the Chief Whip, officially bound to protect his own
+pet candidate.
+
+He called early at the house in Portland Place, a distressed and
+anxious man. The door was besieged by reporters from newspapers, vainly
+trying to gain, entrance. His arrival created a sensation. At any rate
+there was a headline "Opposition Whip calls on Savelli." One or two
+attempted to interview him on the doorstep. He excused himself
+courteously. As-yet he knew as much or as little as they. The door
+opened. The butler snatched him in hurriedly. He asked to see the
+Winwoods. He found them in the library.
+
+"Here's an awful mess," said he, throwing up his hands. "I thought I'd
+have a word or two with you before I tackle Savelli. Have you seen him
+this morning?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"Well, what do you think about it?"
+
+"I think," said Ursula, "that the best thing I can do is to take him
+away with me for a rest as soon as possible. He's at the end of his
+tether."
+
+"You seem to take it pretty calmly."
+
+"How do you expect us to take it, my dear Frank?" she asked. "We always
+expected Paul to do the right thing when the time came, and we consider
+that he has done it."
+
+The Chief Whip smoothed a perplexed brow. "I don't quite follow. Were
+you, vulgarly speaking, in the know all the time?"
+
+"Sit down, and I'll tell you."
+
+So he sat down and Miss Winwood quietly told him all she knew about
+Paul and what had happened during the past few weeks, while the Colonel
+sat by his desk and tugged his long moustache and here and there
+supplemented her narrative.
+
+"That's all very interesting," Ayres remarked when she had finished,
+"and you two have acted like bricks. I also see that he must have had a
+devil of a time of it. But I've got to look at things from an official
+point of view."
+
+"There's no question of invalidity, is there?" asked Colonel Winwood.
+
+"No. He was known as Paul Savelli, nominated as Paul Savelli, and
+elected as Paul Savelli by the electors of Hickney Heath. So he'll sit
+as Paul Savelli. That's all right. But how is the House going to
+receive him when he is introduced? How will it take him afterwards?
+What use will he be to the party? We only ran him because he seemed to
+be the most brilliant of the young outsiders. We hoped great things of
+him. Hasn't he smashed up himself socially? Hasn't he smashed up his
+career at the very beginning? All that is what I want to know."
+
+"So do I," groaned Colonel Winwood. "I didn't have a wink of sleep last
+night."
+
+"I didn't either," said Ursula, "but I don't think it will matter a row
+of pins to Paul in his career."
+
+"It will always be up against him," said Ayres.
+
+"Because he has acted like a man?"
+
+"It's the touch of Ruy Blas that I'm afraid of."
+
+"You must remember that he wasn't aware of his relation to the dead man
+until the eve of the election."
+
+"But he was aware that he wasn't a descendant of a historical Italian
+family, which everyone thought him to be. I don't speak for myself,"
+said Ayres. "I'm fond of the chap. One can't help it. He has the charm
+of the great gentleman, confound him, and it's all natural. The cloven
+hoof has never appeared, because I personally believe there's no cloven
+hoof. The beggar was born well bred, and, as to performance--well--he
+has been a young meteor across the political sky. Until this election.
+Then he was a disappointment. I frankly confess it. I didn't know what
+he was playing at. Now I do. Poor chap. I personally am sympathetic.
+But what about the cold-blooded other people, who don't know what
+you've told me? To them he's the son of an ex-convict--a vendor of
+fried fish--I put it brutally from their point of view--who has been
+masquerading as a young St. George on horseback. Will he ever be
+forgiven? Officially, have I any use for him? You see, I'm responsible
+to the party."
+
+"Any party," said Ursula, "would be a congregation of imbeciles who
+didn't do their best to develop the genius of Paul Savelli."
+
+"I'm fond of Paul," said Colonel Winwood, in his tired way, "but I
+don't know that I would go as far as that."
+
+"It's only because you're a limited male, my dear James. I suppose
+Caesar was the only man who really crossed the Rubicon. And the fuss he
+made about it! Women jump across with the utmost certainty. My dear
+Frank, we're behind Paul, whatever happens. He has been fighting for
+his own hand ever since he was a child, it is true. But he has fought
+gallantly."
+
+"My dear Miss Winwood," said Frank Ayres, "if there's a man to be
+envied, it's the one who has you for his champion!"
+
+"Anyone, my dear Frank, is to be envied," she retorted, "who is
+championed by common-sense."
+
+"All these fireworks illuminate nothing," said Colonel Winwood. "I
+think we had better ask Paul to come down and see Frank. Would you like
+to see him alone?"
+
+"I had rather you stayed," said Frank Ayres.
+
+A message was sent to Paul, and presently he appeared, very pale and
+haggard.
+
+Frank Ayres met him with outstretched hand, spoke a courteous word of
+sympathy, apologized for coming in the hour of tragic bereavement.
+
+Paul thanked him with equal courtesy. "I was about to write to you,
+Lord Francis," he continued, "a sort of statement in explanation of
+what happened last night--"
+
+"Our friends have told me all, I think, that you may have to say."
+
+"I shall still write it," said Paul, "so that you can have it in black
+and white. At present, I've given the press nothing."
+
+"Quite right," said Frank Ayres. "For God's sake, let us work together
+as far as the press is concerned. That's one of the reasons why I've
+forced myself upon you. It's horrible, my dear fellow, to intrude at
+such a time. I hate it, as you can well imagine. But it's my duty."
+
+"Of course it is," said Paul. There was a span of awkward silence.
+"Well," said he, with a wan smile, "we're facing, not a political, but
+a very unimportant party situation. Don't suppose I haven't a sense of
+proportion. I have. What for me is the end of the world is the
+unruffled continuance of the cosmic scheme for the rest of mankind. But
+there are relative things to consider. You have to consider the party.
+I'm sort of fly-blown. Am I any use? Let us talk straight. Am I or am I
+not?"
+
+"My dear chap," said Frank Ayres, with perplexed knitting of the brows,
+"I don't quite know what to say. You yourself have invited me to talk
+straight. Well! Forgive me if I do. There may be a suggestion in
+political quarters that you have won this election under false
+pretences."
+
+"Do you want me to resign my seat?"
+
+The two men looked deep into each other's eyes.
+
+"A Unionist in is a Liberal out," said Frank Ayres, "and counts two on
+division. That's one way of looking at it. We want all we can get from
+the enemy. On the other hand, you'd come in for a lot of criticism and
+hostility. You'd have to start not only from the beginning, but with a
+handicap. Are you strong enough to face it?"
+
+"I'm not going to run away from anything," said Paul. "But I'll tell
+you what I'm prepared to do. I'll resign and fight the constituency
+again, under my real name of Kegworthy, provided, of course, the local
+people are willing to adopt me--on the understanding, however, that the
+party support me, or, at least, don't put forward another candidate.
+I'm not going to turn berserk."
+
+"That's a sporting offer, at any rate. But, pardon me--we're talking
+business--where is the money for another election to come from?"
+
+"My poor father's death makes me a wealthy man," replied Paul.
+
+Miss Winwood started forward in her chair. "My dear, you never told us."
+
+"There were so many other things to talk about this morning," he said
+gently; "but of course I would have told you later. I only mention it
+now"--he turned to the Chief Whip--"in answer to your direct and very
+pertinent question."
+
+Now between a political free-lance adopting a parliamentary career in
+order to fight for his own hand, as all Paul's supporters were frankly
+aware that he was doing, and a wealthy, independent and brilliant young
+politician lies a wide gulf. The last man on earth, in his private
+capacity, to find his estimate of his friends influenced by their
+personal possessions was the fine aristocrat Lord Francis Ayres. But he
+was a man of the world, the very responsible head of the executive of a
+great political party. As that executive head he was compelled to
+regard Paul from a different angle. The millions of South Africa or the
+Middle West might vainly knock at his own front door till the crack of
+doom, while Paul the penniless sauntered in an honoured guest. But in
+his official room in the House of Commons more stern and worldly
+considerations had to prevail.
+
+"Of course I can't give you an answer now," said he. "I'll have to
+discuss the whole matter with the powers that be. But a seat's a seat,
+and though I appreciate your Quixotic offer, I don't see why we should
+risk it. It's up to you to make good. It's more in your own interest
+that I'm speaking now. Can you go through with it?"
+
+Paul, with his unconquerable instinct for the dramatic, hauled out the
+little cornelian heart at the end of his watch-chain. "My dear fellow,"
+said he. "Do you see that? It was given to me for failing to win a race
+at a Sunday-school treat, when I was a very little boy. I didn't
+possess coat or stockings, and my toes came out through the ends of my
+boots, and in order to keep the thing safe I knotted it up in the tail
+of my shirt, which waggled out of the seat of my breeches. It was given
+to me by a beautiful lady, who, I remember, smelled like all the
+perfumes of Araby. She awakened my aesthetic sense by the divine and
+intoxicating odour that emanated from her. Since then I have never met
+woman so--so like a scented garden of all the innocences. To me she was
+a goddess. I overheard her prophesy things about me. My life began from
+that moment. I kept the cornelian heart all my life, as a talisman. It
+has brought me through all kinds of things. Once I was going to throw
+it away and Miss Winwood would not let me. I kept it, somewhat against
+my will, for I thought it was a lying talisman. It had told me, in the
+sweet-scented lady's words, that I was the son of a prince. Give me
+half an hour to-morrow or the day after," he said, seeing a puzzled
+look in Frank Ayres's face, "and I'll tell you a true psychological
+fairy tale--the apologia pro vita mea. I say, anyhow, that lately,
+until last night, I thought this little cornelian heart was a lying
+talisman. Then I knew it didn't lie. I was the son of a prince, a
+prince of men, although he had been in gaol and spent his days
+afterwards in running emotional Christianity and fried-fish shops. His
+name was Silas. Mine is Paul. Something significant about it, isn't
+there? Anyhow"--he balanced the heart in the palm of his hand--"this
+hasn't lied. It has carried me through all my life. When I thought it
+failed, I found it at the purest truth of its prophecy. It's not going
+to fail me now. If it's right for me to take my seat I'll take
+it--whether I make good politically, or not, is on the knees of the
+gods. But you may take it from me that there's nothing in this wide
+world that I won't face or go through with, if I've set my mind to it."
+
+So the child who had kicked Billy Goodge and taken the spolia opima of
+paper cocked hat and wooden sword spoke through the man. As then, in a
+queer way, he found himself commanding a situation; and as then,
+commanding it rightfully, through sheer personal force. Again, at a
+sign, he would have broken the sword across his knee. But the sign did
+not come.
+
+"Speaking quite unofficially," said Frank Ayres, "I think, if you feel
+like that, you would be a fool to give up your seat."
+
+"Very well," said Paul, "I thank you. And now, perhaps, it would be
+wise to draw up that statement for the press, if you can spare the
+time."
+
+So Paul made a draft and Frank Ayres revised it, and it was sent
+upstairs to be typed. When the typescript came down, Paul signed and
+dispatched it and gave the Chief Whip a duplicate.
+
+"Well," said the latter, shaking hands, "the best of good luck!"
+
+Whereupon he went home feeling that though there would be the deuce to
+pay, Paul Savelli would find himself perfectly solvent; and meeting the
+somewhat dubious Leader of the Opposition later in the day he said:
+"Anyhow, this 'far too gentlemanly party' has got someone picturesque,
+at last, to touch the popular imagination."
+
+"A new young Disraeli?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+The Leader made a faint gesture of philosophic doubt. "The mould is
+broken," said he.
+
+"We'll see," said Frank Ayres, confidently.
+
+Meanwhile, Paul returned to his room and wrote a letter, three words of
+which he had put on paper--"My dear Princess"--when the summons to meet
+the Chief Whip had come. The unblotted ink had dried hard. He took
+another sheet.
+
+"My dear Princess," he began.
+
+He held his head in his hand. What could he say? Ordinary courtesy
+demanded an acknowledgment of the Princess's message of inquiry. But to
+write to her whom he had held close in his arms, whose lips had clung
+maddeningly to his, in terms of polite convention seemed impossible.
+What had she meant by her message? If she had gone scornfully out of
+his life, she had gone, and there was an end on't. Her coming back
+could bear only one interpretation--that of Jane's passionate
+statement. In spite of all, she loved him. But now, stripped and naked
+and at war with the world, for all his desire, he would have none of
+her love. Not he.... At last he wrote:
+
+PRINCESS,--A thousand grateful thanks for last night's gracious
+act--the act of the very great lady that I have the privilege of
+knowing you to be.
+
+PAUL SAVELLI.
+
+He rang for a servant and ordered the note to be sent by hand, and then
+went out to Hickney Heath to see to the burying of his dead. On his
+return he found a familiar envelope with the crown on the flap awaiting
+him. It contained but few words:
+
+PAUL, come and see me. I will stay at home all day.
+
+SOPHIE.
+
+His pulses throbbed. Her readiness to await his pleasure proved a
+humility of spirit rare in Princess Sophie Zobraska. Her hands were
+held out towards him. But he hardened his heart. The fairy-tale was
+over. Nothing but realities lay before him. The interview was perilous;
+but he was not one to shirk danger. He went out, took a cab and drove
+to Berkeley Square.
+
+She rose shyly as he entered and advanced to meet him. He kissed her
+hand, but when he sought to release it he found his held in her warm
+clasp. "Mon Dieu! How ill you are looking!" she said, and her lips
+quivered.
+
+"I'm only tired."
+
+"You look so old. Ah!" She moved away from him with a sigh. "Sit down.
+I suppose you can guess why I've asked you to come," she continued
+after a pause. "But it is a little hard to say. I want you to forgive
+me."
+
+"There is nothing to forgive," said Paul.
+
+"Don't be ungenerous; you know there is. I left you to bear everything
+alone."
+
+"You were more than justified. You found me an impostor. You were
+wounded in everything you held sacred. I wounded you deliberately. You
+could do nothing else but go away. Heaven forbid that I should have
+thought of blaming you. I didn't. I understood."
+
+"But it was I who did not understand," she said, looking at the rings
+on her fingers. "Yes. You are right. I was wounded--like an animal, I
+hid myself in the country, and I hoped you would write, which was
+foolish, for I knew you wouldn't. Then I felt that if I had loved you
+as I ought, I should never have gone away."
+
+"I thought it best to kill your love outright," said Paul.
+
+She lay back on her cushions, very fair, very alluring, very sad. From
+where he sat he saw her face in its delicate profile, and he had a
+mighty temptation to throw himself on his knees by her side.
+
+"I thought, too, you had killed it," she said.
+
+"Still think so," said Paul, in a low voice.
+
+She raised herself, bent forward, and he met the blue depths of her
+gaze. "And you? Your love?"
+
+"I never did anything to kill it."
+
+"But I did."
+
+"No, you couldn't. I shall love you to the hour of my death." He saw
+the light leap into her eyes. "I only say it," he added somewhat
+coldly, "because I will lie to you no longer. But it's a matter that
+concerns me alone."
+
+"How you alone? Am not I to be considered?"
+
+He rose and stood on the hearthrug, facing her. "I consider you all the
+time," said he.
+
+"Listen, mon cher ami," she said, looking up at him. "Let us understand
+one another. Is there anything about you, your birth or your life that
+I still don't know--I mean, anything essential?"
+
+"Nothing that matters," said Paul.
+
+"Then let us speak once and for all, soul to soul. You and I are of
+those who can do it. Eh bien. I am a woman of old family, princely rank
+and fortune--you--"
+
+"By my father's death," said Paul, for the second time that day, "I am
+a rich man. We can leave out the question of fortune--except that the
+money I inherit was made out of a fried-fish shop business. That
+business was conducted by my father on lines of peculiar idealism. It
+will be my duty to carry on his work--at least"--he inwardly and
+conscientiously repudiated the idea of buying fish at Billingsgate at
+five o'clock in the morning--"as far as the maintenance of his
+principles is concerned."
+
+"Soit," said the Princess, "we leave out the question of fortune. You
+are then a man of humble birth, and the rank you have gained for
+yourself."
+
+"I am a man of no name and of tarnished reputation. Good God!" he
+blazed out suddenly, losing control. "What is the good of torturing
+ourselves like this? If I wouldn't marry you--before--until I had done
+something in the front of the world to make you proud of me, what do
+you think I'll do now, lying in the gutter for every one to kick me?
+Would it be to the happiness of either of us for me to sneak through
+society behind your rank? It would be the death of me and you would
+come to hate me as a mean hound."
+
+"You? A mean hound?" Her voice broke and the tears welled up in her
+eyes. "You have done nothing for me to be proud of? You? You who did
+what you did last night? Yes, I was there. I saw and heard. Listen!"
+She rose to her feet and stood opposite to him, her eyes all stars, her
+figure trembling and her hands moving in her Frenchwoman's passionate
+gestures. "When I saw in the newspapers about your father, my heart was
+wrung for you. I knew what it meant. I knew how you must suffer. I came
+up straight to town. I wanted to be near you. I did not know how. I did
+not want you to see me. I called in my steward. 'How can I see the
+election?' We talked a little. He went and hired a room opposite the
+Town Hall. I waited there in the darkness. I thought it would last
+forever. And then came the result and the crowd cheered and I thought I
+should choke. I sobbed, I sobbed, I sobbed--and then you came. And I
+heard, and then I held out my arms to you alone in the dark room--like
+this--and cried: 'Paul, Paul!"' Woman conquered. Madness surged through
+him and he flung his arms about her and they kissed long and
+passionately.
+
+"Whether you do me the honour of marrying me or not," she said a while
+later' flushed and triumphant, "our lives are joined together."
+
+And Paul, still shaken by the intoxication of her lips and hair and
+clinging pressure of her body, looked at her intensely with the eyes of
+a man's longing. But he said: "Nothing can alter what I said a few
+minutes ago--not all the passion and love in the world. You and I are
+not of the stuff, thank God, to cut ourselves adrift and bury ourselves
+in some romantic island and give up our lives to a dream. We're young.
+We're strong. We both know that life is a different sort of thing
+altogether from that. We're not of the sort that shirks its
+responsibilities. We've got to live in the world, you and I, and do the
+world's work."
+
+"Parfaitement, mon bien aime." She smiled at him serenely. "I would not
+bury myself with you in an Ionian island for more than two months in a
+year for anything on earth. On my part, it would be the unforgivable
+sin. No woman has the right, however much she loves him, to ruin a man,
+any more than a man has the right to ruin a woman. But if you won't
+marry me, I'm perfectly willing to spend two months a year in an Ionian
+island with you," and she looked at him, very proud and fearless.
+
+Paul took her by the shoulders and shook her, more roughly than he
+realized. "Sophie, don't tempt me to a madness that we should both
+regret."
+
+She laughed, wincing yet thrilled, under the rude handling, and freed
+herself. "But what more can a woman offer the man who loves her--that
+is to say if he does love her?"
+
+"I not love you?" He threw up his hands--"Dear God!"
+
+She waved him away and retreated a step or two, still laughing, as he
+advanced. "Then why won't you marry me? You're afraid."
+
+"Yes," he cried. "It's the only thing on this earth that I'm afraid of."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"The sneers. First you'd hate them. Then you'd hate and despise me."
+
+She grew serious. "Calme-toi, my dearest. Just consider things
+practically. Who is going to sneer at a great man?"
+
+"I the first," replied Paul bitterly, his self-judgment warped by the
+new knowledge of the vanities and unsubstantialities on which his life
+had been founded. "I a great man, indeed!"
+
+"A very great man. A brilliant man I knew long ago. A brave man I have
+known, in spite of my pride, these last two or three awful weeks. But
+last night I knew you were a great man--a very great man. Ah, mon Paul.
+La canaille, whether it lives in Whitechapel or Park Lane, what does it
+matter to us?"
+
+"The riff-raff, unfortunately," said Paul, "forms the general judgment
+of society."
+
+The Princess drew herself up in all her aristocratic dignity. "My Paul
+well-beloved," said she, "you have still one or two things to learn.
+People of greatness and rank march with their peers, and they can spit
+upon the canaille. There is canaille in your House of Lords, upon
+which, the day after to-morrow, you can spit, and it will take off its
+coronet and thank you--and now," she said, resuming her seat on the
+sofa, among the cushions, "let us stop arguing. If there is any more
+arguing to be done, let us put it off to another occasion. Let us
+dismiss the questions of marriage and Ionian islands altogether, and
+let us talk pleasantly like dear friends who are reconciled."
+
+And with the wit of the woman who loves and the subtlety of the woman
+of the world she took Paul in her delicate hands and held him before
+her smiling eyes and made him tell her of all the things she wanted to
+know. And so Paul told her of all his life, of Bludston, of Barney
+Bill, of the model days, of the theatre, of Jane, of his father; and he
+showed her the cornelian heart and expounded its significance; and he
+talked of his dearest lady, Miss Winwood, and his work on the Young
+England League, and his failure to grip in this disastrous election,
+and he went back to the brickfield and his flight from the Life School,
+and his obsessing dream of romantic parentage and the pawning of his
+watch at Drane's Court; and in the full tide of it all a perturbed
+butler appeared at the door.
+
+"Can I speak a word to Your Highness?"
+
+She rose. The butler spoke the word. She burst out laughing. "My dear,"
+she cried, "it's past nine o'clock. The household is in a state of
+agitation about dinner. We'll have it at once, Wilkins."
+
+The butler bowed and retired.
+
+The Princess laughed again. "Of course you'll stay. I left Stephanie at
+Morebury."
+
+And Paul stayed to dinner, and though, observing the flimsy compact,
+they dismissed the questions of Ionian islands and marriage, they
+talked till midnight of matters exceedingly pleasant.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+SO the lovers were reconciled, although the question of marriage was
+farther off than ever, and the Princess and Miss Winwood wept on each
+other's shoulders after the way of good women, and Paul declared that
+he needed no rest, and was eager to grapple with the world. He had much
+to do. First, he buried his dead, the Princess sending a great wreath
+and her carriage, after having had a queer interview with Jane, of
+which neither woman would afterwards speak a word; but it was evident
+that they had parted on terms of mutual respect and admiration. Then
+Paul went through the task of settling his father's affairs. Jane
+having expressed a desire to take over the management of a certain
+department of the business, he gladly entrusted it to her capable
+hands. He gave her the house at Hickney Heath, and Barney Bill took up
+his residence there as a kind of old watch-dog. Meanwhile, introduced
+by Frank Ayres and Colonel Winwood, he faced the ordeal of a chill
+reception by the House of Commons and took his seat. After that the
+nine-days' wonder of the scandal came to an end; the newspapers ceased
+talking of it and the general public forgot all about him. He only had
+to reckon with his fellow-members and with social forces. His own house
+too he had to put in order. He resigned his salary and position as
+Organizing Secretary of the Young England League, but as Honorary
+Secretary he retained control. To assure his position he applied for
+Royal Letters Patent and legalized his name of Savelli, Finally, he
+plunged into the affairs of Fish Palaces Limited, and learned the many
+mysteries connected with that outwardly unromantic undertaking.
+
+These are facts in Paul's career which his chronicler is bound to
+mention. But on Paul's development they exercised but little influence.
+He walked now, with open eyes, in a world of real things. The path was
+difficult, but he was strong. Darkness lay ahead, but he neither feared
+it nor dreamed dreams of brightness beyond. The Vision Splendid had
+crystallized into an unconquerable purpose of which he felt the thrill.
+Without Sophie Zobraska's love he would have walked on doggedly,
+obstinately, with set teeth. He had proved himself fearless, scornful
+of the world's verdict. But he would have walked in wintry gloom with a
+young heart frozen dead. Now his path was lit by warm sunshine and the
+burgeon of spring was in his heart. He could laugh again in his old
+joyous way; yet the laughter was no longer that of the boy, but of the
+man who knew the place that laughter should hold in a man's life.
+
+On the day when he, as chairman, had first presided over a meeting of
+the Board of Directors of Fish Palaces Limited, he went to the Princess
+and said: "If I bring with me 'an ancient and fish-like smell, a kind
+of, not of the newest, Poor-John,' send me about my business."
+
+She bade him not talk foolishly.
+
+"I'm talking sense," said he. "I'm going through with it. I'm in trade.
+I know to the fraction of a penny how much fat ought to be used to a
+pound of hake, and I'm concentrating all my intellect on that fraction
+of a penny of fat."
+
+"Tu as raison," she said.
+
+"N'est-ce-pas? It's funny, isn't it? I've often told you I once thought
+myself the man born to be king. My dreams have come true. I am a king.
+The fried-fish king."
+
+Sophie looked at him from beneath her long lashes. "And I am a
+princess. We meet at last on equal terms."
+
+Paul sprang forward impulsively and seized her hands. "Oh, you dear,
+wonderful woman! Doesn't it matter to you that I'm running fried-fish
+shops?"
+
+"I know why you're doing it," she said. "I wouldn't have you do
+otherwise. You are you, Paul. I should love to see you at it. Do you
+wait at table and hand little dishes to coster-mongers, ancien regime,
+en emigre?"
+
+She laughed deliciously. Suddenly she paused, regarded him wide-eyed,
+with a smile on her lips.
+
+"Tiens! I have an idea. But a wonderful ideal Why should I not be the
+fried-fish queen? Issue new shares. I buy them all up. We establish
+fish palaces all over the world? But why not? I am in trade already.
+Only yesterday my homme d'affaires sent me for signature a dirty piece
+of blue paper all covered with execrable writing and imitation red
+seals all the way down, and when I signed it I saw I was interested in
+Messrs. Jarrods Limited, and was engaged in selling hams and petticoats
+and notepaper and furniture and butter and--remark this--and fish. But
+raw fish. Now what the difference is between selling raw fish and fried
+fish, I do not know. Moi, je suis deja marchande de poissons, voila!"
+
+She laughed and Paul laughed too. They postponed, however, to an
+indefinite date, consideration of the business proposal.
+
+As Paul had foreseen, Society manifested no eagerness to receive him.
+Invitations no longer fell upon him in embarrassing showers. Nor did he
+make any attempt to pass through the once familiar doors. For one
+thing, he was proud: for another he was too busy. When the Christmas
+recess came he took a holiday, went off by himself to Algiers. He
+returned bronzed and strong, to the joy of his Sophie.
+
+"My dear," said Miss Winwood one day to the curiously patient lady,
+"what is to come of it all? You can't go on like this for ever and
+ever."
+
+"We don't intend to," smiled the Princess. "Paul is born to great
+things. He cannot help it. It is his destiny, I believe in Paul."
+
+"So do I," replied Ursula. "But it's obvious that it will take him a
+good many years to achieve them. You surely aren't going to wait until
+he's a Cabinet Minister."
+
+The Princess lay back among her cushions and laughed. "Mais non. It
+will all come in woman's good time. Laissez-moi faire. He will soon
+begin to believe in himself again."
+
+At last Paul's opportunity arrived. The Whips had given him his chance
+to speak. His luck attended him, in so far that when his turn came he
+found a full House. It was on a matter of no vital importance; but he
+had prepared his speech carefully. He stood up for the first time in
+that strangely nerve-shaking assembly in which he had been received so
+coldly and in which he was still friendless, and saw the beginning of
+the familiar exodus into the lobbies. A sudden wave of anger swept
+through him and he tore the notes of his speech across and across, and
+again he metaphorically kicked Billy Goodge. He plunged into his
+speech, forgetful of what he had written, with a passion queerly
+hyperbolic in view of the subject. At the arresting tones of his voice
+many of the withdrawing members stopped at the bar and listened, then
+as he proceeded they gradually slipped back into their places.
+Curiosity gave place to interest. Paul had found his gift again, and
+his anger soon lost itself completely in the joy of the artist. The
+House is always generous to performance. There was something novel in
+the spectacle of this young man, who had come there under a cloud,
+standing like a fearless young Hermes before them, in the ring of his
+beautiful voice, in the instinctive picturesqueness of phrase, in the
+winning charm of his personality. It was but a little point in a
+Government Bill that he had to deal with, and he dealt with it shortly.
+But he dealt with it in an unexpected, dramatic way, and he sat down
+amid comforting applause and circumambient smiles and nods. The old
+government hand who rose to reply complimented him gracefully and
+proceeded of course to tear his argument to tatters. Then an
+ill-conditioned Socialist Member got up, and, blundering and
+unconscious agent of Destiny in a fast-emptying House, began a personal
+attack on Paul. Whereupon there were cries of "Shame!" and "Sit down!"
+and the Speaker, in caustic tones, counselled relevancy, and the
+sympathy of the House went out to the Fortunate Youth; so that when he
+went soon afterwards into the outer lobby--it was the dinner hour--he
+found himself surrounded by encouraging friends. He did not wait long
+among them, for up in the Ladies' Gallery was his Princess. He tore up
+the stairs and met her outside. Her face was pale with anger.
+
+"The brute!" she whispered. "The cowardly brute!"
+
+He snapped his fingers. "Canaille, canaille! He counts for nothing. But
+I've got them!" he cried exultingly, holding out clenched fists. "By
+God, darling, I've got them! They'll listen to me now!"
+
+She looked at him and the sudden tears came. "Thank God," she said, "I
+can hear you talk like that at last."
+
+He escorted her down the stone stairs and through the lobby to her car,
+and they were objects of many admiring eyes. When they reached it she
+said, with a humorous curl of the lip, "Veux-tu m'epouser maintenant?"
+
+"Wait, only wait," said he. "These are only fireworks. Very soon we'll
+get to the real thing."
+
+"We shall, I promise you," she replied enigmatically; and she drove off.
+
+One morning, a fortnight later, she rang him up. "You're coming to dine
+with me on Friday, as usual, aren't you?"
+
+"Of course," said he. "Why do you ask?"
+
+"Just to make sure. And yes--also--to tell you not to come till
+half-past eight."
+
+She rang off. Paul thought no more of the matter. Ever since he had
+taken his seat in the House he had dined with her alone every Friday
+evening. It was their undisturbed hour of intimacy and gladness in the
+busy week. Otherwise they rarely met, for Paul was a pariah in her
+social world.
+
+On the Friday in question his taxi drew up before an unusual-looking
+house in Berkeley Square. An awning projected from the front door and a
+strip of carpet ran across the pavement. At the sound of the taxi, the
+door opened and revealed the familiar figures of the Princess's footmen
+in their state livery. He entered, somewhat dazed.
+
+"Her Highness has a party?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, sir. A very large dinner party."
+
+Paul passed his hand over his forehead. What did it mean? "This is
+Friday, isn't it?"
+
+"Of course, sir."
+
+Paul grew angry. It was a woman's trap to force him on society. For a
+moment he struggled with the temptation to walk away after telling the
+servant that it was a mistake and that he had not been invited. At
+once, however, came realization of social outrage. He surrendered hat
+and coat and let himself be announced. The noise of thirty voices
+struck his ear as he entered the great drawing-room. He was confusedly
+aware of a glitter of jewels, and bare arms and shoulders and the black
+and white of men. But radiant in the middle of the room stood his
+Princess, with a tiara of diamonds on her head, and beside her stood a
+youngish man whose face seemed oddly familiar.
+
+Paul advanced, kissed her hand.
+
+She laughed gaily. "You are late, Paul."
+
+"You said half-past, Princess. I am here to the minute."
+
+"Je te dirai apres," she said, and the daring of the intimate speech
+took his breath away.
+
+"Your Royal Highness," she turned to the young man beside her--and then
+Paul suddenly recognized a prince of the blood royal of England--"may I
+present Mr. Savelli."
+
+"I'm very pleased to meet you," said the Prince graciously. "Your Young
+England League has interested me greatly. We must have a talk about it
+one of these days, if you can spare the time. And I must congratulate
+you on your speech the other night."
+
+"You are far too kind, sir," said Paul.
+
+They chatted for a minute or two. Then the Princess said: "You'll take
+in the Countess of Danesborough. I don't think you've met her; but
+you'll find she's an old friend."
+
+"Old friend?" echoed Paul.
+
+She smiled and turned to a pretty and buxom woman of forty standing
+near. "My dear Lady Danesborough. Here is Mr. Savelli, whom you are so
+anxious to meet."
+
+Paul bowed politely. His head being full of his Princess, he was
+vaguely puzzled as to the reasons for which Lady Danesborough desired
+his acquaintance.
+
+"You don't remember me," she said.
+
+He looked at her squarely for the first time; then started back. "Good
+God!" he cried involuntarily. "Good God! I've been wanting to find you
+all my life. I never knew your name. But here's the proof."
+
+And he whipped out the cornelian heart from his waistcoat pocket. She
+took it in her hand, examined it, handed it back to him with a smile, a
+very sweet and womanly smile, with just the suspicion of mist veiling
+her eyes.
+
+"I know. The Princess has told me."
+
+"But how did she find you out--I mean as my first patroness?"
+
+"She wrote to the vicar, Mr. Merewether--he is still at
+Bludston--asking who his visitor was that year and what had become of
+her. So she found out it was I. I've known her off and on ever since my
+marriage."
+
+"You were wonderfully good to me," said Paul. "I must have been a funny
+little wretch."
+
+"You've travelled far since then."
+
+"It was you that gave me my inspiration," said he.
+
+The announcement of dinner broke the thread of the talk. Paul looked
+around him and saw that the room was filled with very great people
+indeed. There were chiefs of his party and other exalted personages.
+There was Lord Francis Ayres. Also the Winwoods. The procession was
+formed.
+
+"I've often wondered about you," said Lady Danesborough, as they were
+walking down the wide staircase. "Several things happened to mark that
+day. For one, I had spilled a bottle of awful scent all over my dress
+and I was in a state of odoriferous misery."
+
+Paul laughed boyishly. "The mystery of my life is solved at last." He
+explained, to her frank delight. "You've not changed a bit," said he.
+"And oh! I can't tell you how good it is to meet you after all these
+years."
+
+"I'm very, very glad you feel so," she said significantly. "More than
+glad. I was wondering ... but our dear Princess was right."
+
+"It seems to me that the Princess has been playing conspirator," said
+Paul.
+
+They entered the great dining-room, very majestic with its long,
+glittering table, its service of plate, its stately pictures, its
+double row of powdered and liveried footmen, and Paul learned, to his
+amazement, that in violation of protocols and tables of precedence, his
+seat was on the right hand of the Princess. Conspiracy again. Hitherto
+at her parties he had occupied his proper place. Never before had she
+publicly given him especial mark of her favour.
+
+"Do you think she's right in doing this?" he murmured to Lady
+Danesborough.
+
+It seemed so natural that he should ask her--as though she were fully
+aware of all his secrets.
+
+"I think so," she smiled--as though she too were in the conspiracy.
+
+They halted at their places, and there, at the centre of the long
+table, on the right of the young Prince stood the Princess, with
+flushed face and shining eyes, looking very beautiful and radiantly
+defiant.
+
+"Mechante," Paul whispered, as they sat down. "This is a trap."
+
+"Je le sais. Tu est bien prise, petite souris."
+
+It pleased her to be gay. She confessed unblushingly. Her little mouse
+was well caught. The little mouse grew rather stern, and when the great
+company had settled down, and the hum of talk arisen, he deliberately
+scanned the table. He met some friendly glances--a Cabinet Minister
+nodded pleasantly. He also met some that were hostile. His Sophie had
+tried a dangerous experiment. In Lady Danesborough, the Maisie Shepherd
+of his urchindom, whose name he had never known, she had assured him a
+sympathetic and influential partner. Also, although he had tactfully
+not taken up that lady's remark, he felt proud of his Princess's
+glorious certainty that he would have no false and contemptible shame
+in the encounter. She had known that it would be a joy to him; and it
+was. The truest of the man was stirred. They talked and laughed about
+the far-off day. Incidents flaming in his mind had faded from hers. He
+recalled forgotten things. Now and then she said: "Yes, I know that.
+The Princess has told me." Evidently his Sophie was a conspirator of
+deepest dye.
+
+"And now you're the great Paul Savelli," she said.
+
+"Great?" He laughed. "In what way?"
+
+"Before this election you were a personage. I've never run across you
+because we've been abroad so much, you know--my husband has a depraved
+taste for governing places--but a year or two ago we were asked to the
+Chudleys, and you were held out as an inducement."
+
+"Good Lord!" said Paul, astonished.
+
+"And now, of course, you're the most-discussed young man in London. Is
+he damned or isn't he? You know what I refer to."
+
+"Well, am I?' he asked pleasantly.
+
+"I'm glad to see you take it like that. It's not the way of the little
+people. Personally, I've stuck up for you, not knowing in the least who
+you were. I thought you did the big, spacious thing. It gave me a
+thrill when I read about it. Your speech in the House has helped you a
+lot. Altogether--and now considering our early acquaintance--I think
+I'm justified in calling you 'the great Paul Savelli.'"
+
+Then came the shifting of talk. The Prince turned to his left-hand
+neighbour; Lady Danesborough to her right. Paul and the Princess had
+their conventional opportunity for conversation. She spoke in French,
+daringly using the intimate "tu"; but of all sorts of things--books,
+theatres, picture shows. Then tactfully she drew the Prince and his
+neighbour and Lady Danesborough into their circle, and, pulling the
+strings, she at last brought Paul and the Prince into a discussion over
+the pictures of the Doges in the Ducal Palace in Venice. The young
+Prince was gracious. Paul, encouraged to talk and stimulated by
+precious memories, grew interesting. The Princess managed to secure a
+set of listeners at the opposite side of the table. Suddenly, as if
+carrying on the theme, she said in a deliberately loud voice,
+compelling attention: "Your Royal Highness, I am in a dilemma."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+She paused, looked round and widened her circle. "For the past year I
+have been wanting Mr. Savelli to ask me to marry him, and he
+obstinately refuses to do so. Will you tell me, sir, what a poor woman
+is to do?"
+
+She addressed herself exclusively to the young Prince; but her voice,
+with its adorable French intonation, rang high and clear. Paul,
+suddenly white and rigid, clenched the hand of the Princess which
+happened to lie within immediate reach. A wave of curiosity, arresting
+talk, spread swiftly down. There was an uncanny, dead silence, broken
+only by a raucous voice proceeding from a very fat Lord of Appeal some
+distance away:
+
+"After my bath I always lie flat on my back and bring my knees up to my
+chin."
+
+There was a convulsive, shrill gasp of laughter, which would have
+instantly developed into an hysterical roar, had not the young Prince,
+with quick, tactful disregard of British convention, sprung to his
+feet, and with one hand holding champagne glass, and the other
+uplifted, commanded silence. So did the stars in their courses still
+fight for Paul. "My lords, ladies and gentlemen," said the Prince, "I
+have the pleasure to announce the engagement of Her Highness the
+Princess Sophie Zobraska and Mr. Paul Savelli. I ask you to drink to
+their health and wish them every happiness."
+
+He bowed to the couple, lifted his glass, and standing, swept a quick
+glance round the company, and at the royal command the table rose,
+dukes and duchesses and Cabinet Ministers, the fine flowers of England,
+and drank to Paul and his Princess.
+
+"Attrape!" she whispered, as they got up together, hand in hand. And as
+they stood, in their superb promise of fulfilment, they conquered. The
+Princess said: "Mais dis quelque chose, toi."
+
+And Paul met the flash in her eyes, and he smiled. "Your Royal
+Highness, my lords, ladies and gentlemen," said he, while all the
+company were racking their brains to recall a precedent for such
+proceedings at a more than formal London dinner party; "the Princess
+and myself thank you from our hearts. For me this might almost seem the
+end of the fairy-tale of my life, in which--when I was eleven years
+old--her ladyship the Countess of Danesborough" (he bowed to the Maisie
+of years ago), "whom I have not seen from that day to this, played the
+part of Fairy Godmother. She gave me a talisman then to help me in my
+way through the world. I have it still." He held up the cornelian
+heart. "It guided my steps to my dearest lady, Miss Winwood, in whose
+beloved service I lived so long. It has brought me to the feet of my
+Fairy Princess. But now the fairy-tale is over. I begin where the
+fairy-tales end"--he laughed into his Sophie's eyes--"I begin in the
+certain promise of living happy ever afterwards."
+
+In this supreme hour of his destiny there spoke the old, essential
+Paul, the believer in the Vision Splendid. The instinctive appeal to
+the romantic ringing so true and so sincere awoke responsive chords in
+hearts which, after all, as is the simple way of hearts of men and
+women, were very human.
+
+He sat down a made man, amid pleasant laughter and bowings and lifting
+of glasses, the length of the long table.
+
+Lady Danesborough said gently: "It was charming of you to bring me in.
+But I shall be besieged with questions. What on earth shall I tell
+them?"
+
+"The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth," he replied.
+"What do the Princess and I care?"
+
+Later in the evening he managed to find himself alone for a moment with
+the Princess. "My wonderful Sophie, what can I say to you?"
+
+She smiled victoriously. "Cry quits. Confess that you have not the
+monopoly of the grand manner. You have worked in your man's way--I in
+my woman's way."
+
+"You took a great risk," said he.
+
+Her eyes softened adorably. "Non, mon Paul, cheri. C'etait tout
+arrange. It was a certainty."
+
+And then, Paul's dearest lady came up and pressed both their hands. "I
+am so glad. Oh, so glad." The tears started. "But it is something like
+a fairy-tale, isn't it?"
+
+Well, as far as his chronicler can say at present, that is the end of
+the Fortunate Youth. But it is really only a beginning. Although his
+party is still in opposition, he is still young; his sun is rising and
+he is rich in the glory thereof. A worldful of great life lies before
+him and his Princess. What limit can we set to their achievement? Of
+course he was the Fortunate Youth. Of that there is no gainsaying. He
+had his beauty, his charm, his temperament, his quick southern
+intelligence--all his Sicilian heritage--and a freakish chance had
+favoured him from the day that, vagabond urchin, he attended his first
+and only Sunday-school treat. But personal gifts and favouring chance
+are not everything in this world.
+
+On the day before his wedding he had a long talk with Barney Bill.
+
+"Sonny," said the old man, scratching his white poll, "when yer used to
+talk about princes and princesses, I used to larf--larf fit to bust
+myself. I never let yer seen me do it, sonny, for all the time you was
+so dead serious. And now it has come true. And d'yer know why it's come
+true, sonny?" He cocked his head on one side, his little diamond eyes
+glittering, and laid a hand on Paul's knee. "D'yer know why? Because
+yer believed in it. I ain't had much religion, not having, so to speak,
+much time for it, also being an old crock of a pagan--but I do remember
+as what Christ said about faith--just a mustard seed of it moving
+mountains. That's it, sonny. I've observed lots of things going round
+in the old 'bus. Most folks believe in nothing. What's the good of 'em?
+Move mountains? They're paralytic in front of a dunghill. I know what
+I'm talking about, bless yer. Now you come along believing in yer
+'igh-born parents. I larfed, knowing as who yer parents were. But you
+believed, and I had to let you believe. And you believed in your
+princes and princesses, and your being born to great things. And I
+couldn't sort of help believing in it too."
+
+Paul laughed. "Things happen to have come out all right, but God knows
+why."
+
+"He does," said Barney Bill very seriously. "That's just what He does
+know. He knows you had faith."
+
+"And you, dear old man?" asked Paul, "what have you believed in?"
+
+"My honesty, sonny," replied Barney Bill, fixing him with his bright
+eyes. "'Tain't much. 'Tain't very ambitious-like. But I've had my
+temptations. I never drove a crooked bargain in my life."
+
+Paul rose and walked a step or two.
+
+"You're a better man than I am, Bill."
+
+Barney Bill rose too, rheumatically, and laid both hands on the young
+man's shoulders. "Have you ever been false to what you really believed
+to be true?"
+
+"Not essentially," said Paul.
+
+"Then it's all right, sonny," said the old man very earnestly, his
+bent, ill-clad figure, his old face wizened by years of exposure to
+suns and frosts, contrasting oddly with the young favourite of fortune.
+"It's all right. Your father believed in one thing. I believe in
+another. You believe in something else. But it doesn't matter a
+tuppenny damn what one believes in, so long as it's worth believing in.
+It's faith, sonny, that does it. Faith and purpose."
+
+"You're right," said Paul. "Faith and purpose."
+
+"I believed in yer from the very first, when you were sitting down
+reading Sir Walter with the bead and tail off. And I believed in yer
+when yer used to tell about being 'born to great things!"
+
+Paul laughed. "That was all childish rubbish," said he.
+
+"Rubbish?" cried the old man, his head more crooked, his eyes more
+bright, his gaunt old figure more twisted than ever. "Haven't yer got
+the great things yer believed yer were born to? Ain't yer rich? Ain't
+yer famous? Ain't yer a Member of Parliament? Ain't yer going to marry
+a Royal Princess? Good God Almighty! what more d'yer want?"
+
+"Nothing in the wide, wide world!" laughed Paul.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Fortunate Youth, by William J. Locke
+
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+Edited by Charles Aldarondo Aldarondo@yahoo.com
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+
+
+THE FORTUNATE YOUTH
+
+
+BY
+WILLIAM J. LOCKE
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+PAUL KEGWORTHY lived with his mother, Mrs. Button, his stepfather,
+Mr. Button, and six little Buttons, his half brothers and sisters.
+His was not an ideal home; it consisted in a bedroom, a kitchen and
+a scullery in a grimy little house in a grimy street made up of rows
+of exactly similar grimy little houses, and forming one of a hundred
+similar streets in a northern manufacturing town. Mr. and Mrs.
+Button worked in a factory and took in as lodgers grimy single men
+who also worked in factories. They were not a model couple; they
+were rather, in fact, the scandal of Budge Street, which did not
+itself enjoy, in Bludston, a reputation for holiness. Neither was
+good to look upon. Mr. Button, who was Lancashire bred and born,
+divided the yearnings of his spirit between strong drink and
+dog-fights. Mrs. Button, a viperous Londoner, yearned for noise.
+When Mr. Button came home drunk he punched his wife about the head
+and kicked her about the body, while they both exhausted the
+vocabulary of vituperation of North and South, to the horror and
+edification of the neighbourhood. When Mr. Button was sober Mrs.
+Button chastised little Paul. She would have done so when Mr. Button
+was drunk, but she had not the time. The periods, therefore, of his
+mother's martyrdom were those of Paul's enfranchisement. If he saw
+his stepfather come down the street with steady gait, he fled in
+terror; if he saw him reeling homeward he lingered about with light
+and joyous heart.
+
+The brood of young Buttons was fed spasmodically and clad at random,
+but their meals were regular and their raiment well assorted
+compared with Paul's. Naturally they came in for clouts and thumps
+like all the children in Budge Street; it was only Paul who
+underwent organized chastisement. The little Buttons often did
+wrong; but in the mother's eyes Paul could never do right. In an
+animal way she was fond of the children of Button, and in a way
+equally animal she bore a venomous dislike to the child of
+Keg-worthy. Who and what Kegworthy had been neither Paul nor any
+inhabitant of Bludston knew. Once the boy inquired, and she broke a
+worn frying-pan over his head. Kegworthy, whoever he might have
+been, was wrapt in mystery. She had appeared in the town when Paul
+was a year old, giving herself out as a widow. That she was by no
+means destitute was obvious from the fact that she at once rented
+the house in Budge Street, took in lodgers, and lived at her ease.
+Button, who was one of the lodgers, cast upon her the eyes of desire
+and married her. Why she married Button she could never determine.
+Perhaps she had a romantic idea--and there is romance even in Budge
+Street-that Button would support her. He very soon shattered any
+such illusion by appropriating the remainder of her fortune and
+kicking her into the factory with hobnailed boots. It would be wrong
+to say that Mrs. Button did not complain; she did. She tent the air
+of Budge Street with horrible execration; but she went to the
+factory, where, save for the intervals of retirement rendered
+necessary by the births of the little Buttons, she was contented
+enough to stay.
+
+If Paul Kegworthy had been of the same fibre as the little Buttons,
+he would have felt, thought and acted as they, and this history
+would never have been written. He would have grown up to man's
+estate in the factory and have been merged an indistinguishable unit
+in the drab mass of cloth-capped humans who, at certain hours of the
+day, flood the streets of Bludston, and swarm on the roofs of
+clanging and shrieking tramcars, and on Saturday afternoons gather
+in clotted greyness on the football ground. He might have been sober
+and industrious-the proletariat of Bludston is not entirely composed
+of Buttons-but he would have taken the colour of his environment,
+and the world outside Bludston would never have heard of him. Paul,
+however, differed greatly from the little Buttons. They, children of
+the grey cap and the red shawl, resembled hundreds of thousands of
+little human rabbits similarly parented. Only the trained eye could
+have identified them among a score or two of their congeners. For
+the most part, they were dingily fair, with snub noses, coarse
+mouths, and eyes of an indeterminate blue. Of that type, once
+blowsily good-looking, was Mrs. Button herself. But Paul wandered a
+changeling about the Bludston streets. In the rows of urchins in the
+crowded Board School classroom he sat as conspicuous as any little
+Martian who might have been bundled down to earth. He had wavy black
+hair, of raven black, a dark olive complexion, flushed, in spite of
+haphazard nourishment and nights spent on the stone floor of the
+reeking scullery, with the warm blood of health, great liquid black
+eyes, and the exquisitely delicate features of a young Praxitelean
+god. It was this preposterous perfection which, while redeeming him
+from ridiculous beauty by giving his childish face a certain
+rigidity, differentiated him outwardly from his fellows. Mr. Button,
+to whom the unusual was anathema, declared that the sight of the
+monstrosity made him sick, and rarely suffered him in his presence;
+and one day Mrs. Button, discovering him in front of the cracked
+mirror in which Mr. Button shaved, when his hand was steady enough,
+on Sunday afternoons, smote him over the face with a pound of rump
+steak which she happened to be carrying, instinctively desirous not
+only to correct her son for vanity, but also to spoil the comeliness
+of which he might be vain.
+
+Until a wonderful and illuminating happening in his eleventh year,
+little Paul Kegworthy had taken existence with the fatalism of a
+child. Of his stepfather, who smelt lustily of sour beer, bad
+tobacco and incidentally of other things undetected by Paul's
+nostrils, and whom he saw rarely, he dwelt in mortal terror. When he
+heard of the Devil, at Sunday school, which he attended, to his
+stepfather's disgust, he pictured the Prince of Darkness not as a
+gentleman, not even as a picturesque personage with horns and tail,
+but as Mr. Button. As regards his mother, he had a confused idea
+that he was a living blight on her existence. He was not sorry,
+because it was not his fault, but in his childish way he coldly
+excused her, and, more from a queer consciousness of blighterdom
+than from dread of her hand and tongue, he avoided her as much as
+possible. In the little Buttons his experience as scapegoat taught
+him to take but little interest. From his earliest memories they
+were the first to be fed, clothed and bedded; to his own share fell
+the exiguous scraps. As they were much younger than himself, he
+found no pleasure in their companionship. For society he sought such
+of the youth of Budge Street as would admit him into their raucous
+fellowship. But, for some reason which his immature mind could not
+fathom, he felt a pariah even among his coevals. He could run as
+fast as Billy Goodge, the undisputed leader of the gang; he could
+dribble the rag football past him any time he desired; once he had
+sent him home to his mother with a bleeding nose, and, even in that
+hour of triumph, popular sympathy had been with Billy, not with him.
+It was the only problem in existence to which his fatalism did not
+supply the key. He knew himself to be a better man than Billy
+Goodge. There was no doubt about it. At school, where Billy was the
+woodenest blockhead, he was top of his class. He knew things about
+troy weight and geography and Isaac and the Mariners of England of
+which Billy did not dream. To Billy the football news in the
+Saturday afternoon edition of The Bludston Herald was a cryptogram;
+to him it was an open book. He would stand, acknowledged scholar, at
+the street corner and read out from the soiled copy retrieved by
+Chunky, the newsboy, the enthralling story of the football day,
+never stumbling over a syllable, athrill with the joy of being the
+umbilicus of a tense world, and, when the recital was over, he would
+have the mortification of seeing the throng pass away from him with
+the remorselessness of a cloud scudding from the moon. And he would
+hear Billy Goodge say exultantly:
+
+"Didn't Aw tell yo' the Wolves hadn't a dog's chance?"
+
+And he would see the admiring gang slap Billy on the back, and hear
+"Good owd Billy!" and never a word of thanks to him. Then, knowing
+Billy to be a liar, he would tell him so, yelping shrilly, in
+Buttonesque vernacular (North and South):
+
+"This morning tha said it was five to one on Sheffield United."
+
+"Listen to Susie!"
+
+The parasitic urchins would yell at the witticism--the eternal
+petitio principii of childhood, which Billy, secure in his cohort
+from bloody nose, felt justified in making. And Paul Kegworthy, the
+rag of a newspaper crumpled tight in his little hand, would watch
+them disappear and wonder at the paradox of life. In any sphere of
+human effort, so he dimly and childishly realized, he could wipe out
+Billy Goodge. He had a soul-reaching contempt for Billy Goodge, a
+passionate envy of him. Why did Billy hold his position instead of
+crumbling into dust before him? Assuredly he was a better man than
+Billy. When, Billy duce et auspice Billy, the gang played at pirates
+or Red Indians, it was pitiful to watch their ignorant endeavours.
+Paul, deeply read in the subject, gave them chapter and verse for
+his suggestions. But they heeded him so little that he would turn
+away contemptuously, disdaining the travesty of the noble game, and
+dream of a gang of brighter spirits whom he could lead to glory.
+Paul had many such dreams wherewith he sought to cheat the realities
+of existence: but until the Great Happening the dream was not better
+than the drink: after it came the Vision Splendid.
+
+The wonderful thing happened all because Maisie Shepherd, a slip of
+a girl of nineteen, staying at St. Luke's Vicarage, spilled a bottle
+of scent over her f rock.
+
+It was the morning of the St. Luke's annual Sunday-school treat. The
+waggonette was at the vicarage door. The vicar and his wife and
+daughter waited fussily for Maisie, an unpunctual damsel. The vicar
+looked at his watch. They were three minutes late, He tut-tutted
+impatiently. The vicar's daughter ran indoors in search of Maisie
+and pounced upon her as she sat on the edge of the bed in the act of
+perfuming a handkerchief. The shock caused the bottle to slip mouth
+downward from her hand and empty the contents into her lap. She
+cried out in dismay.
+
+"Never mind," said the vicar's daughter. "Come along. Dad and mother
+are prancing about downstairs."
+
+"But I must change my dress!"
+
+"You've no time."
+
+"I'm wet through. This is the strongest scent known. It's twenty-six
+shillings a bottle, and one little drop is enough. I shall be a
+walking pestilence."
+
+The vicar's daughter laughed heartlessly. "You do smell strong. But
+you'll disinfect Bludston, and that will be a good thing." Whereupon
+she dragged the tearful and redolent damsel from the room.
+
+In the hard-featured yard of the schoolhouse the children were
+assembled-the girls on one side, the boys on the other. Curates and
+teachers hovered about the intervening space. Almost every child
+wore its Sunday best. Even the shabbiest little girls had a clean
+white pinafore to hide deficiencies beneath, and the untidiest
+little boy showed a scrubbed face. The majority of the boys wore
+clean collars; some grinned over gaudy neckties. The only one who
+appeared in his week-day grime and tatterdemalion outfit was little
+Paul Kegworthy. He had not changed his clothes, because he had no
+others; and he had not washed his face, because it had not occurred
+to him to do so. Moreover, Mrs. Button had made no attempt to
+improve his forlorn aspect, for the simple reason that she had never
+heard of the Sunday-school treat. It was part of Paul's philosophy
+to dispense, as far as he could, with parental control. On Sunday
+afternoons the little Buttons played in the streets, where Paul, had
+he so chosen, might have played also: but he put himself, so to
+speak, to Sunday school, where, besides learning lots of queer
+things about God and Jesus Christ which interested him keenly, he
+could shine above his fellows by recitations of collects and bits of
+Catechism, which did not interest him at all. Then he won scores of
+good-conduct cards, gaudy treasures, with pictures of Daniel in the
+Lions' Den and the Marriage of Cana and such like, which he secreted
+preciously beneath a loose slab in the scullery floor. He did not
+show them to his mother, knowing that she would tear them up and
+bang him over the head; and for similar reasons he refrained from
+telling her of the Sunday-school treat. If she came to hear of it,
+as possibly she would through one of the little Buttons, who might
+pick up the news in the street, he would be soundly beaten. But
+there was a chance of her not hearing, and he desired to be no more
+of a blight than he could help. So Paul, vagabond and self-reliant
+from his babyhood, turned up at the Sunday-school treat, hatless and
+coatless, his dirty little toes visible through the holes in his
+boots, and his shapeless and tattered breeches secured to his person
+by a single brace. The better-dressed urchins moved away from him
+and made rude remarks, after the generous manner of their kind; but
+Paul did not care. Pariahdom was his accustomed portion. He was
+there for his own pleasure. They were going to ride in a train. They
+were going to have a wonderful afternoon in a nobleman's park, a
+place all grass and trees, elusive to the imagination. There was a
+stupefying prospect of wondrous things in profusion to eat and
+drink-jam, ginger-beer, cake! So rumour had it; and to
+unsophisticated Paul rumour was gospel truth. With all these
+unexperienced joys before him, what cared he for the blankety little
+blanks who gibed at him? If you imagine that little Paul Kegworthy
+formulated his thoughts as would the angel choir-boy in the
+pictures, you are mistaken. The baby language of Bludston would
+petrify the foc'sle of a tramp, steamer. The North of England is
+justly proud of its virility.
+
+The Sunday school, marshalled by curates and teachers, awaited the
+party from the vicarage. The thick and darkened sunshine of Bludston
+flooded the asphalt of the yard, which sent up a reek of heat,
+causing curates to fan themselves with their black straw hats, and
+little boys in clean collars to wriggle in sticky discomfort, while
+in the still air above the ignoble town hung the heavy pall of
+smoke. Presently there was the sound of wheels and the sight of the
+head of the vicar's coachman above the coping of the schoolyard
+wall. Then the gates opened and the vicar and his wife and Miss
+Merewether, her daughter, and Maisie Shepherd appeared and were
+immediately greeted by curates and teachers.
+
+Maisie Shepherd, a stranger in a strange land, pretty, pink,
+blushing, hatefully self-conscious, detached herself, after a minute
+or two, from the group and looked with timid curiosity on the
+children. She was a London girl, her head still dancing with the
+delights of her first season, and she had never been to a
+Sunday-school treat in her life. Madge Merewether, her old
+schoolfellow, had told her she was to help amuse the little girls.
+Heaven knew how she was to do it. Already the unintelligibility of
+Lancashire speech had filled her with dismay. The array of
+hard-faced little girls daunted her; she turned to the boys, but she
+only saw one--the little hatless, coatless scarecrow with the
+perfect features And arresting grace, who stood out among his smug
+companions with the singularly vivid incongruity of a Greek Hermes
+in the central hall of Madame Tussaud's waxwork exhibition.
+Fascinated, she strayed down the line toward him. She halted, looked
+for a second or two into a pair of liquid black eyes and then
+blushed in agonized shyness. She stared at the beautiful boy, and
+the beautiful boy stared at her, and not a word could she find in
+her head to speak. She turned abruptly and moved away. The boy broke
+rank and slowly followed her.
+
+For little Paul Kegworthy the heavens had opened and flooded his
+senses, till he nearly fainted, with the perfume of celestial lands.
+The intoxicating sweetness of it bewildered his young brain. It was
+nothing delicate, evanescent, like the smell of a flower. It as
+thick, pungent, cloying, compelling. Mouth agape and nostril wide,
+he followed the exquisite source of the emanation like one in a
+dream, half across the yard. A curate laughingly and unsuspectingly
+brought him back to earth by laying hands on him and bundling him
+back into his place. There he remained, being a docile urchin; but
+his eyes remained fixed on Maisie Shepherd. She was only a rosebud
+beauty of an English girl, her beauty heightened by the colour of
+distress, but to Paul the radiance of her person almost rivalled the
+wonder of her perfume. It was his first meeting of a goddess face to
+face, and he surrendered his whole being in adoration.
+
+In a few minutes the children were marched through the squalid
+streets, a strident band, to the dingy railway station, a grimy
+proletariat third-class railway station in which the sign "First
+Class Waiting Room" glared an outrage and a mockery, and were
+marshalled into the waiting train. The wonderful experience of which
+Paul had dreamed for weeks--he had never ridden in a train
+before--began; and soon the murky environs of the town were left
+behind and the train sped through the open country.
+
+His companions in the railway carriage crowded at the windows,
+fighting vigorously for right of place; but Paul sat alone in the
+middle of the seat, unmoved by the new sensation and speed, and by
+the glimpses of blue sky and waving trees above the others' heads.
+The glory of the day was blotted out until he should see and smell
+the goddess again. At the wayside station where they descended he
+saw her in the distance, and the glory came once more. She caught
+his eye, smiled and nodded. He felt a queer thrill run through him.
+He had been singled out from among all the boys. He alone knew her.
+
+Brakes took them from the station down a country road and, after a
+mile or so, through stone gates of a stately park, where wonder
+after wonder was set out before Paul's unaccustomed eyes. On either
+side of this roadway stretched rolling grass with clumps and glades
+of great trees in their July bravery--more trees than Paul
+imagined could be in the world. There were sunlit upland patches and
+cool dells of shade carpeted with golden buttercups, where cattle
+fed lazily. Once a herd of fallow deer browsing by the wayside
+scuttled away at the noisy approach of the brakes. Only afterward
+did Paul learn their name and nature: to him then they were mythical
+beasts of fairyland. Once also the long pile-of the Tudor house came
+into view, flashing-white in the sunshine. The teacher in charge of
+the brake explained that it was the Marquis of Chudley's residence.
+It was more beautiful than anything Paul had ever seen; it was
+bigger than many churches put together; the word "Palace" came into
+his head--it transcended all his preconceived ideas of palaces:
+yet in such a palace only could dwell the radiant and sweet-smelling
+lady of his dream. The certainty gave him a curious satisfaction.
+
+They arrived at the spot where the marquees were erected, and at
+once began the traditional routine of the school treat-games for the
+girls, manlier sports for the boys. Lord Chudley, patron of the
+living of St. Luke's, Bludston, and Lord Bountiful of the feast, had
+provided swing-boats and a merry-go-round which discoursed infernal
+music to enraptured ears. Paul stood aloof for a while from these
+delights, his eye on the section of the girls among whom his goddess
+moved. As soon as she became detached and he could approach her
+without attracting notice, he crept within the magic circle of the
+scent and lay down prone, drinking in its intoxication, and, as she
+moved, he wriggled toward her on his stomach like a young snake.
+
+After a time she came near him. "Why aren't you playing with the
+other boys?" she asked.
+
+Paul sat on his heels. "Dunno, miss," he said shyly.
+
+She glanced at his rapscallion attire, blushed, and blamed herself
+for the tactless question. "This is a beautiful place, isn't it?"
+
+"It's heavenly," said Paul, with his eyes on her.
+
+"One scarcely wants to do anything but just-just-well, be here." She
+smiled.
+
+He nodded and said, "Ay!" Then he grew bolder. "I like being alone,"
+he declared defiantly.
+
+"Then I'll leave you," she laughed.
+
+The blood flushed deep under his unwashed olive skin, and he leaped
+to his feet. "Aw didn't mean that!" he protested hotly. "It wur them
+other boys."
+
+She was touched by his beauty and quick sensitiveness. "I was only
+teasing. I'm sure you like being with me."
+
+Paul had never heard such exquisite tones from human lips. To his
+ears, accustomed to the harsh Lancashire burr, her low, accentless
+voice was music. So another of his senses was caught in the
+enchantment.
+
+"Yo' speak so pretty," said he.
+
+At that moment a spruce but perspiring young teacher came up. "We're
+going to have some boys' races, miss, and we want the ladies to look
+on. His lordship has offered prizes. The first is a boys' race-under
+eleven."
+
+"You can join in that, anyhow," she said to Paul. "Go along and let
+me see you win."
+
+Paul scudded off, his heart aflame, his hand, as he ran, tucking in
+the shirt whose evasion from the breeches was beyond the control of
+the single brace. Besides, crawling on your stomach is dislocating
+even to the most neatly secured attire. But his action was
+mechanical. His thoughts were with his goddess. In his inarticulate
+mind he knew himself to be her champion. He sped under her
+consecration. He knew he could run. He could run like a young deer.
+Though despised, could he not outrun any of the youth in Budge
+Street? He took his place in the line of competing children. Far
+away in the grassy distance were two men holding a stretched string.
+On one side of him was a tubby boy with a freckled face and an
+amorphous nose on which the perspiration beaded; on the other a
+lank, consumptive creature, in Eton collar and red tie and a sprig
+of sweet William in his buttonhole, a very superior person. Neither
+of them desired his propinquity. They tried to hustle him from the
+line. But Paul, born Ishmael, had his hand against them. The fat
+boy, smitten beneath the belt, doubled up in pain and the
+consumptive person rubbed agonized shins. A curate, walking down
+repressing bulges and levelling up concavities, ordained order. The
+line stood tense. Away beyond, toward the goal, appeared a white
+mass, which Paul knew to be the ladies in their summer dresses; and
+among them, though he could not distinguish her, was she in whose
+eyes he was to win glory. The prize did not matter. It was for her
+that he was running. In his childish mind he felt passionately
+identified with her. He was her champion.
+
+The word was given. The urchins started. Paul, his little elbows
+squared behind him and his eyes fixed vacantly in space, ran with
+his soul in the toes that protruded through the ragged old boots. He
+knew not who was in front or who was behind. It was the madness of
+battle. He ran and ran, until somebody put his arms round him and
+stopped him.
+
+"Steady on, my boy-steady on!"
+
+Paul looked round in a dazed way. "Have A' won th' race?"
+
+"I'm afraid not, my lad."
+
+With a great effort he screwed his mind to another question. "Wheer
+did A' coom in?"
+
+"About sixth, but you ran awfully well."
+
+Sixth! He had come in sixth! Sky and grass and trees and white mass
+of ladies (among whom was the goddess) and unconsiderable men and
+boys became a shimmering blur. He seemed to stagger away, stagger
+miles away, until, finding himself quite alone, he threw himself
+down under a beech tree, and, after a few moments' vivid realization
+of what had happened, sobbed out the agony of his little soul's
+despair. Sixth! He had come in sixth! He had failed miserably in his
+championship. How she must despise him--she who had sent him forth to
+victory! And yet how 'had it been possible? How had it been possible
+that other boys could beat him? He was he. An indomitable personage.
+Some hideous injustice guided human affairs. Why shouldn't he have
+won? He could not tell. But he had not won. She had sent him forth
+to win. He had lost. He had come in a sickening sixth. The disgrace
+devastated him.
+
+Maisie Shepherd, interested in her child champion, sought him out
+and easily found him under the beech tree. "Why, what is the
+matter?"
+
+As he did not answer, she knelt by his side and put her hand on his
+lean shoulder. "Tell me what has happened."
+
+Again the celestial fragrance overspread his senses. He checked his
+sobs and wiped his eyes with the back of his grubby hand. "Aw didn't
+win," he moaned.
+
+"Poor little chap," she said comfortingly. "Did you want to win so
+very much?"
+
+He got up and stared at her. "Yo' told me to win."
+
+"So you ran for me?"
+
+"Ay!"
+
+She rose to her feet and looked down upon him, somewhat overwhelmed
+by her responsibility. So in ancient days might a fair maiden have
+regarded her knight who underwent entirely unnecessary batterings
+for her sake. "Then for me you've won," she said. "I wish I could
+give you a prize."
+
+But what in the nature of a prize for a gutter imp of eleven does a
+pocketless young woman attired for the serious business of a school
+treat carry upon her person? She laughed in pretty embarrassment.
+"If I gave you something quite useless, what would you do with it?"
+
+"I 'u'd hide it safe, so 'ut nobody should see it," said Paul,
+thinking of his precious cards.
+
+"Wouldn't you show it to anybody?"
+
+"By Gum!--" he checked himself suddenly. Such, he had learned,
+was not Sunday-school language. "I wouldno' show it to a dog," said
+he.
+
+Maisie Shepherd, aware of romantic foolishness, slipped a cornelian
+heart from a thin gold chain round her neck. "It's all I can give
+you for a prize, if you will have it."
+
+If he would have it? The Koh-i-Noor' in his clutch (and a knowledge
+of its value) could not have given him more thrilling rapture. He
+was speechless with amazement; Maisie, thrilled too, realized that a
+word spoken would have rung false. The boy gloated over his
+treasure; but she did not know--how could she?--what it meant to
+him. To Paul the bauble was a bit of the warm wonder that was she.
+
+"How are you going to keep it?" she asked.
+
+He hoicked a bit of his shirt-tail from his breeches and proceeded
+to knot the cornelian heart secure therein. Maisie fled rapidly on
+the verge of hysterics, After that the school treat had but one
+meaning for Paul. He fed, it is true, in Pantagruelian fashion on
+luscious viands, transcending his imagination of those which lay
+behind Blinks the confectioner's window in Bludston: there he
+succumbed to the animal; but the sports, the swing-boats, the
+merry-go-round, offered no temptation. He hovered around Maisie
+Shepherd like a little dog-quite content to keep her in sight. And
+every two or three minutes he fumbled about his breeches to see that
+the knotted treasure was safe.
+
+The day sank into late afternoon. The children had been fed. The
+weary elders had their tea. The vicarage party took a few moments'
+rest in the shade of a clump of firs some distance away from the
+marquee. Behind the screen lay Paul, his eyes on his goddess, his
+heels in the air, a buttercup-stalk between his teeth. He felt the
+comforting knot beneath his thigh. For the first time, perhaps, in
+his life, he knew utter happiness. He heard the talk, but did not
+listen. Suddenly, however, the sound of his own name caused him to
+prick his ears. Paul Kegworthy! They were talking about him. There
+could be no mistake. He slithered a foot or two nearer.
+
+"No matter whether his people are drunkards or murderers," said the
+beloved voice, "he is the most beautiful thing I've ever seen in '
+my life. Have you ever spoken to him, Winifred?"
+
+"No," said the vicar's daughter. "Of course I've noticed him. Every
+one does-he is remarkable."
+
+"I don't believe he's a child of these people at all," Maisie
+declared. "He's of a different clay. He's as sensitive as-as a
+sensitive plant. You ought to keep your eye on him, Mr. Merewether.
+I believe he's a poor little prince in a fairy tale."
+
+"A freak--a lusus naturae" said the vicar.
+
+Paul did not know what a lusus naturae was, but it sounded mighty
+grand.
+
+"He's a fairy prince, and one day he'll come into his kingdom."
+
+"My dear, if you saw his mother!"
+
+"But I'm sure no one but a princess could be Paul Kegworthy's
+mother," laughed Maisie.
+
+"And his father?"
+
+"A prince too!"
+
+And Paul listened and drank in his goddess's words greedily. Truth
+clear as crystal fell from her lips. A wild wonder racked his little
+soul. She had said that his mother was not his mother, and that his
+father was a prince. The tidings capped the glory of an effulgent
+day.
+
+When he sneaked home late Mrs. Button, who had learned how he had
+misspent his time, gave him a merciless thrashing. Why should he be
+trapesing about with Sunday schools, she asked, with impolite
+embroidery, while his poor little brothers and sisters were crying
+in the street? She would learn him to Mess about with parsons and
+Sunday-school teachers. She was in process of "learning" him when
+Mr. Button entered. He swore in a manner which would have turned out
+armies in Flanders pallid, and kicked Paul into the scullery. There
+the boy remained and went supperless to his bed of sacks, aching and
+tearless. Before he slept he put his cornelian heart in his
+hiding-hole. What cared he for stripes or kicks or curses with the
+Vision Splendid glowing before his eyes?
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+FOR splenetic reasons which none but the Buttons of this world can
+appreciate, Paul was forbidden, under pain of ghastly tortures, to
+go near the Sunday school again, and, lest he should defy authority,
+he was told off on Sunday afternoons to mind the baby, either in the
+street or the scullery, according to the weather, while the other
+little Buttons were not allowed to approach him. The defection of
+the brilliant scholar having been brought to the vicar's notice, he
+ventured to call one Saturday afternoon on the Buttons, but such was
+the contumely with which he was received that the good man hastily
+retreated. In lung power he was outmatched. In repartee he was
+singularly outclassed. He then sent the superintendent of the
+school, a man of brawn and zeal, to see what muscular Christianity
+could accomplish. But muscular Christianity, losing its head, came
+off with a black eye. After that the Buttons were left alone, and no
+friendly hand drew Paul within the gates of his Sunday Paradise. He
+thought of it with aching wistfulness. The only thing that the
+superintendent could do was to give him surreptitiously a
+prayer-book, bidding him perfect himself in the Catechism in view of
+future Confirmation. But, as emulation of his fellows and not
+religious zeal was the mainspring of Paul's enthusiasm, the pious
+behest was disregarded. Paul dived into the volume occasionally,
+however, for intellectual entertainment.
+
+As for the fragrant and beautiful goddess, she had disappeared into
+thin air. Paul hung for a week or two about the vicarage, in the
+hope of seeing her, but in vain. As a matter of fact, Maisie
+Shepherd had left for Scotland the morning after the school treat;
+people don't come to Bludston for long and happy holidays. So Paul
+had to feed his ardent little soul on memories. That she had not
+been an impalpable creature of his fancy was proven by the precious
+cornelian heart. Her words, too, were written in fine flame across
+his childish mind. Paul began to live the life of dreams.
+
+He longed for books. The fragmentary glimpses of history and
+geography in the Board school standard whetted without satisfying
+his imagination. There was not a book in the house in Budge Street,
+and he had never a penny to buy one. Sometimes Button would bring
+home a dirty newspaper, which Paul would steal and read in secret,
+but its contents seemed to lack continuity. He thirsted for a story.
+Once a generous boy, since dead-he was too good to live had given
+him a handful of penny dreadfuls, whence he had derived his
+knowledge of pirates and Red Indians. Too careless and confident, he
+had left them about the kitchen, and his indignant mother had used
+them to light the fire. The burning of his library was an enduring
+tragedy. He realized that it must be reconstituted; but how? His
+nimble wit hit on a plan. Vagrant as an unowned dog, he could roam
+the streets at pleasure. Why should he not sell newspapers-in a
+quarter of the town, be it understood, remote from both factory and
+Budge Street? He sold newspapers for three weeks before he was found
+out. Then he was chastised and forced to go on selling newspapers
+with no profit to himself, for his person was rigorously searched
+and coppers confiscated as soon as he came home. But during the
+three weeks' traffic on his own account he had amassed a sufficient
+hoard of pennies for the purchase of several books in gaudy paper
+covers exposed for sale in the little stationer's shop round the
+corner. Soon he discovered that if he could batik a copper or two on
+his way home his mother would be none the wiser. The stationer
+became his banker, and when the amount of the deposit equaled the
+price of a book, Paul withdrew his money's worth. So a goodly
+library of amazing rubbish was stored by degrees under the scullery
+slab, until it outgrew safe accommodation; whereupon Paul
+transferred the bulk of it to a hole in a bit of waste ground, a
+deserted brickfield on the ragged outskirts of the town. At last
+misfortune befell him. One dreary afternoon of rain he dropped his
+new bundle of papers in the mud of the roadway. To avoid death he
+had to spring from the path of a thundering tramcar. A heavy cart
+ran over the bundle. While he was ruefully and hastily gathering the
+papers together, a band of street children swooped down and kicked
+them lustily about the filth. He was battling with one urchin when a
+policeman grabbed him. With an elusive twist he escaped and ran like
+a terrified hare. Disaster followed, and that was the end of his
+career as a newsvendor.
+
+Greater leisure for reading, however, compensated the loss of the
+occasional penny. He read dazzling tales of dukes with palaces (like
+Chudley Court), and countesses with ropes of diamonds in their hair,
+who all bore a resemblance to the fragrant one. And dukes and
+countesses lived the most resplendent lives, and spoke such
+beautiful language, and had such a way with them! He felt a curious
+pride in being able to enter into all their haughty emotions. Then,
+one day, he began a story about a poor little outcast boy in a slum.
+At first he did not care for it. His soaring spirit disdained boys
+in slums. It had its being on higher planes. But he read on, and,
+reading on, grew interested, until interest was intensified into
+absorption For the outcast boy in the slums, you must know, was
+really the kidnapped child of a prince and a princess, and after the
+most romantic adventures was enfolded in his parents' arms, married
+a duke's beauteous daughter, whom in his poverty he had worshipped
+from afar, and drove away with his bride in a coach-and-six.
+
+To little Paul Kegworthy the clotted nonsense was a revelation from
+on high. He was that outcast boy. The memorable pronouncement of the
+goddess received confirmation in some kind of holy writ. The Vision
+Splendid, hitherto confused, crystallized into focus. He realized
+vividly how he differed in feature and form and intellect and
+character from the low crowd with whom he was associated. His
+unpopularity was derived from envy. His manifest superiority was
+gall to their base natures. Yes, he had got to the heart of the
+mystery. Mrs. Button was not his mother. For reasons unknown he had
+been kidnapped. Aware of his high lineage, she hated him and beat
+him and despitefully used him. She never gushed, it is true, over
+her offspring; but the little Buttons flourished under genuine
+motherment. They, inconsiderable brats, were her veritable children.
+Whereas he, Paul-it was as plain as daylight. Somewhere far away in
+the great world, an august and griefstricken pair, at that very
+moment, were mourning the loss of their only son. There they were,
+in their marble palace, surrounded by flunkeys all crimson and gold
+(men servants were always "gorgeously apparelled flunkeys" in Paul's
+books), sitting at a table loaded with pineapples on golden dishes,
+and eating out their hearts with longing. He could hear their talk.
+
+"If only our beloved son were with us," said the princess, wiping
+away a tear.
+
+"We must be patient, my sweet Highness," replied the prince, with
+lofty resignation stamped on his noble brow. "Let us trust to Heaven
+to remove the cankerworm that is gnawing our vitals."
+
+Paul felt very sorry for them, and he, too, wiped away a tear.
+
+For many years he remembered that day. He was alone in his
+brickfield on a gusty March morning-the Easter holidays had released
+him from school-squatting by his hole under the lee of a mass of
+earth and rubbish. It was a mean expanse, blackened by soot and
+defiled by refuse. Here and there bramble and stunted gorse
+struggled for an existence; but the flora mainly consisted in bits
+of old boots and foul raiment protruding grotesquely from the soil,
+half-buried cans, rusty bits of iron, and broken bottles. On one
+side the backs of grimy little houses, their yards full of
+fluttering drab underwear' marked the edge of the hopeless town
+which rose above them in forbidding buildings, belching chimney
+shafts and the spikes of a couple of spires. On the other sides it
+was bounded by the brick walls of factories, the municipal gasworks
+and the approach to the railway station, indicated by signal-posts
+standing out against the sky like gallows, and a tram-line bordered
+by a row of skeleton cottages. Golgotha was a grim garden compared
+with Paul's brickfield. Sometimes the children of the town scuttled
+about it like dingy little rabbits. But more often it was a desolate
+solitude. Perhaps all but the lowest of the parents of Bludston had
+put the place out of bounds, as gipsies and other dwellers in vans
+were allowed to camp there. It also bore an evil name because a
+night murder or two had been committed in its murky seclusion. Paul
+knew the exact spot, an ugly cavity toward the gasworks end, where a
+woman had been "done in," and even he, lord of the brickfield,
+preferred to remain at a purifying distance. But it was his own
+domain. He felt in it a certain pride of possession. The hollow
+under the lee of the rubbish-heap, by the side of the hole where he
+kept his paper library, was the most homelike place he knew.
+
+For many years he remembered that day. The light that never was on
+sea or land fell upon the brickfield. He had read the story at one
+stretch. He had sat there for hours reading, for hours rapt in his
+Vision. At last material darkness began to gather round him, and he
+awoke with a start to realization that he had been sitting there
+most of the day. With a sigh he replaced his book in the hole, which
+he cunningly masked with a lump of hard clay, and, feeling stiff and
+cold, ran, childlike, homeward. In the silence of the night he took
+out his cornelian heart and fondled it. The day had been curiously
+like, yet utterly unlike, the day on which she had taken it from her
+neck. In a dim fashion he knew that the two days were of infinite
+significance in his life and were complementary. He had been
+waiting, as it were, for nine months for this day's revelation, this
+day's confirmation.
+
+Paul rose the next morning, a human being with a fixed idea, an
+unquestioned faith in his destiny. His star shone clear. He was born
+to great things. In those early years that followed it was not a
+matter of an imaginative child's vanity, but the unalterable, serene
+conviction of a child's soul. The prince and princess were
+realities, his future greatness a magnificent certitude. You must
+remember this, if you would understand Paul's after-life. It was
+built on this radiant knowledge. In the afternoon he met Billy
+Goodge and the gang. They were playing at soldiers, Billy
+distinguished by a cocked hat made out of newspaper and a wooden
+sword.
+
+"Coom on, Susie, wi be going to knock hell out of the boys in
+Stamford Street."
+
+Paul folded his arms and looked at him contemptuously, as became one
+of his noble blood. "You could no' knock hell out of a bug."
+
+"What's that tha says?"
+
+Paul repeated the insult.
+
+"Say that agen!" blustered the cocked-hatted leader.
+
+Paul said it again and nothing happened, Billy received vociferous
+and sanguinary advice couched in sanguinary terms.
+
+"Try and hit me!" said Billy.
+
+The scene was oddly parallel with one in the story of the outcast
+boy of the gutter. Paul, conscious of experiment, calmly went up to
+him and kicked him. He kicked him hard. The sensation was delicious.
+Billy edged away. He knew from past experience that if it came to
+blows he was no match for Paul, but hitherto, having shown fight, he
+had received the support of the gang. Now, however, there was an
+extraordinary quality in Paul's defiance which took the spirit out
+of him. Once more he was urged by the ragged brats to deeds of
+blood. He did not respond. Paul kicked him again before his
+followers. If he could have gone on kicking him for ever and ever
+what delirium of joy were eternity! Billy edged farther away. The
+mongrel game-cock was beaten. Paul, dramatically conscious of what
+the unrecognized prince would do in such a circumstance, advanced,
+smacked his face, plucked the cocked hat from his head, the sword
+from his hand, and invested himself with these insignia of
+leadership, Billy melted silently into the subfusc air of Budge
+Street. The ragged regiment looked around and there was no Billy.
+Paul Keg worthy, the raggedest of them all, with nothing to
+recommend him but his ridiculous exotic beauty and the paper and
+wooden spolia opima of the vanquished, stood before them, a tattered
+Caesar. The gang hung spellbound. They were ready, small band of
+heroes, to follow him against the hordes of Stamford Street. They
+only awaited his signal. Paul tasted a joy known but to few of the
+sons of men-absolute power over, and supreme contempt for, his
+fellows. He stood for a moment or two, in the grey, miserable street
+discordant with the wailings of babies and the clamour of futile
+little girls, who, after the manner of women, had no idea of
+political crisis, and the shrill objurgations of slattern mothers
+and the raucous cries of an idealist vendor of hyacinths, and,
+cocked hat on head and wooden sword in hand, he looked at his
+fawning army. Then came the touch of genius that was often to
+characterize his actions in after years. It was mimetic, as he had
+read of such a thing in his paper-covered textbooks-but it was none
+the less a touch of genius. He frowned on the dirty, ignoble little
+boys. What had he in common with them-he, the son of a prince?
+Nothing. He snapped his sword across his knee, tore his cocked hat
+in two, and, casting the fragments before them, marched proudly
+toward the very last place on the face of the earth that he desired
+to visit-his own home. The army remained for a few seconds
+bewildered by the dramatic and unexpected, and, leaderless, did what
+many a real army has done in similar circumstances, straggled into
+disintegration.
+
+Thenceforward, Paul, had he so chosen, could have ruled despotically
+in Budge Street. But he did not choose. The games from which he used
+to be excluded, or in which he used to be allowed to join on
+sufferance, no longer appealed to him. He preferred to let Joey
+Meakin lead the gang, vice Billy Goodge deposed, while he himself
+remained aloof. Now and then he condescended to arbitrate between
+disputants or to kick a little brute of a, bully, but he felt that,
+in doing so, he was derogating from his high dignity. It was his joy
+to feel himself a dark, majestic power overshadowing the street, a
+kind of Grand Llama hidden in mystery. Often he would walk through
+the midst of the children, seemingly unconscious of their existence,
+acting strenuously to himself his part of a high-born prince.
+
+This lasted till a dark and awful day when Mr. Button pitched him
+into the factory. These were times before kindly Education Acts and
+Factory Acts decreed that no boy under twelve years of age should
+work in a factory, and that every boy under fourteen should spend
+half his time at the factory and half at school. Paul's education
+was considered complete, and he had to plunge into full time at the
+grim and grinding place. He had joined the great army of workers. A
+wide gulf separated him from the gang of Budge Street. It existed
+for him no more than did the little girls and babies. Life changed
+its aspect entirely. Gone were the days of vagabondage, the lazy,
+the delicious even though cold and hungry hours of dreaming and
+reading in the brickfield; gone was the happy freedom of the
+chartered libertine of the gutter. He was bound, a little slave,
+like hundreds of other little slaves and thousands of big ones, to a
+relentless machine. He entered the hopeless factory gate at six in
+the morning and left it at half-past five in the evening; and, his
+rough food swallowed, slunk to his kennel in the scullery like a
+little tired dog. And Mr. Button drank, and beat Mrs. Button, and
+Mrs. Button beat Paul whenever she felt in the humour and had
+anything handy to do it with, and, as a matter of course,
+confiscated his wages on Saturday and set him to mind the baby on
+Sunday afternoons. In the monotony, weariness and greyness of life
+the glory of the Vision began to grow dim.
+
+In the factory he was not thrown into competition with other boys.
+He was the skip, the drudge, the carrier and fetcher, the cleaner
+and polisher for a work-bench of men devoid of sentiment and blind
+to his princely qualities. He tried, indeed, by nimbleness of hand
+and intelligence, to impress them with his superiority to his
+predecessors, but they were not impressed. At the most he escaped
+curses. His mind began to work in the logic of the real. Entrance
+into his kingdom implied as a primary condition release from the
+factory. But how could such release come, when every morning a
+remorseless and insensate hook-just like a certain hook in the
+machinery whose deadly certainty of grip fascinated and terrified
+him, caught him from his morning sleep every morning of .his life,
+save Sunday, and swung him inexorably into the factory? He looked
+around and saw that no one was released, except through death or
+illness or incompetence. And the incompetent starved. Any child in
+Budge Street with a grain of sense knew that. There was no release.
+He, son of a prince, would work for ever and ever in Bludston. His
+heart failed him. And there was no one to whom he could tell the
+tragic and romantic story of his birth. One or two happy gleams of
+brightness, however, lightened his darkness and prevented the Vision
+from fading entirely into the greyness of the factory sky. Once the
+Owner, an unspeakable god with a bald pink head and a paunch vastly
+chained with gold, conducted a party of ladies over the works. One
+of the latter, a very grand lady, noticed him at his bench and
+came-and spoke kindly to him. Her voice had the same sweet timbre as
+his goddess's. After she had left him his quick ears caught her
+question to the Owner: "Where did you get your young Apollo? Not out
+of Lancashire, surely? He's wonderful." And just before she passed
+out of sight she turned and looked at him and smiled. He learned on
+inquiry that she was the Marchioness of Chudley. The instant
+recognition of him by one of his own aristocratic caste revived his
+faith. The day would assuredly come. Suppose it had been his own
+mother, instead of the Marchioness? Stranger things happened in the
+books. The other gleam proceeded from one of the workmen at his
+bench, a serious and socialistic person who occasionally lent him
+something to read: Foxe's "Book of Martyrs," "Mill on Liberty,"
+Bellamy's "Looking Backward," at that time at the height of its
+popularity. And sometimes he would talk to Paul about collectivism
+and the new era that was coming when there would be no such words as
+rich and poor, because there would be no such classes as they
+denoted.
+
+Paul would say: "Then a prince will be no better than a factory
+hand?"
+
+"There won't be any princes, I tell thee," his friend would reply,
+and launch out into a denunciation of tyrants.
+
+But this did not suit Paul. If there were to be no princes, where,
+would he come in? So, while grateful to the evangelist for talking
+to him and treating him as a human being, he totally rejected his
+gospel. It struck at the very foundations of his visionary destiny.
+He was afraid to argue, for his friend was vehement. Also confession
+of aristocratic prejudices might turn friendship into enmity. But
+his passionate antagonism to the communistic theory, all the more
+intense through suppression, strengthened his fantastic faith.
+Still, the transient smile of a marchioness and the political
+economy of a sour-avised operative are not enough to keep alive the
+romance of underfed, ill-clad, overdriven childhood. And after a
+while he was deprived even of the latter consolation, his friend
+being shifted to another end of the factory. In despair he turned to
+Ada, the eldest of the little Buttons, who now had reached years of
+comparative discretion, and strove to interest her in his dreams,
+veiling his identity under a fictitious name; but Ada, an
+unimaginative and practical child with a growing family to look
+after, either listened stupidly or consigned him, in the local
+vernacular, to perdition.
+
+"But suppose 'it was me that was the unknown prince? Supposing it
+was me I've been talking about all the time? Supposing it was me
+that went away and came back in a gold coach and six horses, with a
+duke's daughter all over diamonds by my side, what would tha say?"
+
+"I think tha art nowt but a fool," said the elderly child of ten,
+"and, if mother heard thee, she'd lamm. the life out of thee."
+
+Paul had the sickening sensation of the man who has confided the
+high secrets of his soul to coarsefibred woman. He turned away,
+darkly conscious of having magnanimously given Ada a chance to mount
+with him into the upper air, which opportunity she, daughter of
+earth, had, in her purblind manner, refused. Thenceforward Ada was
+to him an unnoticeable item in the cosmos.
+
+One hopeless month succeeded another, until a cloud seemed to close
+round Paul's brain, rendering him automatic in his actions, merely
+animal in his half-satisfied appetites. Fines and curses were his
+portion at the factory; curses and beatings--deserved if Justice
+held a hurried scale at home. Paul, who had read of suicide in The
+Bludston Herald, turned his thoughts morbidly to death. But his
+dramatic imagination always carried him beyond' his own demise to
+the scene in the household when his waxlike corpse should be
+discovered dangling from a rope fixed to the hook in the kitchen
+ceiling. He posed cadaverous before a shocked Budge Street, before a
+conscience-stricken factory; and he wept on his sack bed in the
+scullery because the prince and the princess, his august parents,
+would never know that he had died. A whit less gloomy were his
+imaginings of the said prince and princess rushing into the house,
+in the nick of time, just before life was extinct, and cutting him
+down. How they were to find him he did not know. This side-track
+exploration of possibilities was a symptom of sanity.
+
+Yet, Heaven knows what would have happened to Paul, after a year or
+so at the factory, if Barney Bill, a grotesque god from the wide and
+breezy spaces of the world, had not limped into his life.
+
+Barney Bill wore the cloth cap and conventional and unpicturesque,
+though shapeless and weather-stained, garment of the late nineteenth
+century. Neither horns nor goat's feet were visible; nor was the
+pipe of reed on which he played. Yet he played, in Paul's ear, the
+comforting melody of Pan, and the glory of the Vision once more
+flooded Paul's senses, and the factory and Budge Street and the
+Buttons and the scullery faded away like an evil dream.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+THE Fates arranged Barney Bill's entrance late on a Saturday
+afternoon in August. It was not dramatic. It was merely casual. They
+laid the scene in the brickfield.
+
+It had rained all day, and now there was sullen clearance. Paul, who
+had been bathing with some factory boys in the not very savoury
+canal a mile or so distant, had wandered mechanically to his
+brickfield library, which, by means of some scavenging process, he
+managed to keep meagrely replenished. Here he had settled himself
+with a dilapidated book on his knees for an hour's intellectual
+enjoyment. It was not a cheerful evening. The ground was sodden, and
+rank emanations rose from the refuse. From where he sat he could see
+an angry sunset like a black-winged dragon with belly of flame
+brooding over the town. The place wore an especial air of
+desolation. Paul felt depressed. Bathing in the pouring wet is a
+chilly sport, and his midday meal of cold potatoes had not been
+invigorating. These he had grabbed, and, having done them up hastily
+in newspaper, had bolted with them out of the house. He had been
+fined heavily for slackness during the week, and Mr. Button's
+inevitable wrath at docked wages he desired to undergo as late as
+possible. Then, the sun had blazed furiously during the last six
+imprisoned days, and now the long-looked for hours of freedom were
+disfigured by rain and blight. He resented the malice of things. He
+also resented the invasion of his brickfield by an alien van, a
+gaudy vehicle, yellow and red, to the exterior of which clinging
+wicker chairs, brooms, brushes and jute mats gave the impression of
+a lunatic's idea of decoration. An old horse, hobbled a few feet
+away, philosophically cropped the abominable grass. On the front of
+the van a man squatted with food and drink. Paul hated him as a
+trespasser and a gormandizer.
+
+Presently the man, shading his eyes with his hand, scrutinized the
+small, melancholy figure, and then, hopping from his perch, sped
+toward him with a nimble and curiously tortuous gait.
+
+He approached, a wiry, almost wizened, little man of fifty, tanned
+to gipsy brown. He had a shrewd thin face, with an oddly flattened
+nose, and little round moist dark eyes that glittered like diamonds.
+He wore cloth cap on the back of his head, showing in front a thick
+mass of closely cropped hair. His collarless shirt was open at the
+neck and his sleeves were rolled up above the elbow.
+
+"You're Polly Kegworthy's kid, ain't you?" he asked.
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Seen you afore, haven't I?" Then Paul remembered. Three or four
+times during his life, at long, long intervals, the van had passed
+down Budge Street, stopping at houses here and there. About two
+years ago, coming home, he had met it at his own door. His mother
+and the little man were talking together. The man had taken him
+under the chin and twisted his face up. "Is that the nipper?" he had
+asked.
+
+His mother had nodded, and, releasing Paul with a clumsy gesture of
+simulated affection, had sent him with twopence for a pint of beer
+to the public-house at the end of the street. He recalled how the
+man had winked his little bright eye at his mother before putting
+the jug to his lips.
+
+"I browt th' beer for yo'," said Paul.
+
+"You did. It was the worst beer, bar none, I've ever had. I can
+taste it now." He made a wry face. Then he cocked his head on one
+side. "I suppose you're wondering who I am?" said he.
+
+"Ay," said Paul. "Who art tha?"
+
+"I'm Barney Bill," replied the man. "Did you never hear of me? I'm
+known on the road from Taunton to Newcastle and from Hereford to
+Lowestoft. You can tell yer mother that you seed me."
+
+A smile curled round Paul's lips at the comic idea of giving his
+mother unsolicited information. "Barney Bill?" said he.
+
+"Yuss," said the man. Then, after a pause, "What are you doing of
+there?"
+
+"Reading," said Paul.
+
+"Let's have a look at it."
+
+Paul regarded him suspiciously; but there was kindliness in the
+twinkling glance. He handed him the sorry apology for a book.
+
+Barney Bill turned it over. 'Why, said he, "it ain't got no
+beginning and no end. It's all middle. 'Kenilworth.' Do yer like
+it?"
+
+"Ay!" said Paul. "It's foine."
+
+"Who do yer think wrote it?"
+
+As both cover and a hundred pages at the beginning, including the
+title-page, to say nothing of a hundred pages at the end, were
+missing, Paul had no clue to the authorship.
+
+"Dunno," said he.
+
+"Sir Walter Scott."
+
+Paul jumped to his feet. Sir Walter Scott, he knew not why or how,
+was one of those bright names that starred in his historical
+darkness, like Caesar and Napoleon and Ridley and Latimer and W. G.
+Grace.
+
+"Tha' art sure? Sir Water Scott?"
+
+The shock of meeting Sir Walter in the flesh could not have been
+greater. The man nodded. "Think I'd tell yer a lie? I do a bit of
+reading myself in the old 'bus there"-he jerked a thumb--"I've got
+some books now. Would yer like to see 'em?"
+
+Would a mouse like cheese? Paul started off with his new companion.
+
+"If it wasn't for a book or two, I'd go melancholy mad and bust
+myself," the latter remarked.
+
+Paul's spirit leaped toward a spiritual brother. It was precisely
+his own case.
+
+"You'll find a lot of chaps that don't hold with books. Dessay
+you've met 'em?"
+
+Paul laughed, precipient of irony.
+
+Barney Bill continued: "I've heard some on 'em say: 'What's the good
+of books? Give me nature,' and they goes and asks for it at the
+public-'ouse. Most say nothing at all, but just booze."
+
+"Like father," said Paul.
+
+"Eh?" cried his friend sharply.
+
+"Sam Button, what married mother."
+
+"Ali! so he boozes a lot, does he?"
+
+Paul drew an impressionistic and lurid picture of Mr. Button.
+
+"And they fight?"
+
+"Like billy-o," said Paul.
+
+They reached the van. Barney Bill, surprisingly agile in spite of
+his twisted leg, sprang into the interior. Paul, standing between
+the shafts, looked in with curiosity. There was a rough though not
+unclean bed running down one side. Beyond, at the stern, so to
+speak, was a kind of galley containing cooking stove, kettle and
+pot. There were shelves, some filled with stock-in-trade, others
+with miscellaneous things, the nature of which he could not
+distinguish in the gloom. Barney Bill presently turned and dumped an
+armful of books on the footboard an inch or two below Paul's nose.
+Paul scanned the title pages. They were: Goldsmith's "Animated
+Nature," "Enquire Within Upon Everything," an old bound volume of
+"Cassell's Family Reader," "The Remains of Henry Kirke White," and
+"Martin Chuzzlewit." The owner looked down upon them proudly.
+
+"I've got some more, but I can't get at 'em."
+
+Paul regarded him with envy. This was a man of great possessions.
+"How long are yo' going to stay here?" he asked hopefully.
+
+"Till sunrise to-morrow."
+
+Paul's face fell. He seemed to have no luck nowadays.
+
+Barney Bill let himself down to a sitting position on the footboard
+and reached to the end for a huge pork pie and a clasp knife which
+lay beside a tin can. "I'll go on with my supper," said he; then
+noticing a wistful, hungry look in the child's eyes, "Have a bit?"
+he asked.
+
+He cut off a mighty hunk and put it into Paul's ready hand. Paul
+perched himself beside him, and they both ate for a long while in
+silence, dangling their legs. Now and again the host passed the tin
+of tea to wash down the food. The flaming dragon died into a smoky
+red above the town. A light or two already appeared in the fringe of
+mean houses. Twilight fell rapidly.
+
+"Oughtn't you to be getting home?"
+
+Paul, his hunger appeased, grinned. His idea was to sneak into the
+scullery just after the public-houses closed, when his mother would
+be far too much occupied with Mr. Button to worry about him.
+Chastisement would then be postponed till the morning. Artlessly he
+laid the situation before his friend, who led him on to relate other
+amenities of his domestic life.
+
+"Well, I'm jiggered!" said Barney Bill. "She must be a she-devil!"
+
+Paul cordially agreed. He had already imagined the Prince of
+Darkness in the guise of Mr. Button; Mrs. Button was in every way
+fit to be the latter's diabolical mate. Encouraged by sympathy and
+shrewd questions, he sketched in broad detail his short career,
+glorifying himself as the prize scholar and the erstwhile Grand
+Llama of Budge Street, and drawing a dismal picture of the factory.
+Barney Bill listened comprehendingly. Then, smoking a well-blackened
+clay, he began to utter maledictions on the suffocating life in
+towns and to extol his own manner of living. Having an appreciative
+audience, he grew eloquent over his lonely wanderings the length and
+breadth of the land; over the joy of country things, the sweetness
+of the fields, the wayside flowers, the vaulted highways in the
+leafy summer, the quiet, sleepy towns, the fragrant villages, the
+peace and cleanness of the open air.
+
+The night had fallen, and in the cleared sky the stars shone bright.
+Paul, his head against the lintel of the van door, looked up at
+them, enthralled by the talk of Barney Bill. The vagabond merchant
+had the slight drawling inflection of the Home Counties, which gave
+a soothing effect to a naturally soft voice. To Paul it was the
+pipes of Pan.
+
+"It mightn't suit everybody," said Barney Bill philosophically.
+"Some folks prefer gas to laylock. I don't say that they're wrong.
+But I likes laylock."
+
+"What's laylock?" asked Paul.
+
+His friend explained. No lilac bloomed in the blighted Springs of
+Bludston.
+
+"Does it smell sweet?"
+
+"Yuss. So does the may and the syringa and the new-mown hay and the
+seaweed. Never smelt any of 'em?"
+
+"No," sighed Paul, sensuously conscious of new and vague horizons.
+"I once smelled summat sweet," he said dreamily. "It wur a lady."
+
+"D'ye mean a woman?"
+
+"No. A lady. Like what yo' read of."
+
+"I've heard as they do smell good; like violets--some on 'em," the
+philosopher remarked.
+
+Drawn magnetically to this spiritual brother, Paul said almost
+without volition, "She said I were the son of a prince."
+
+"Son of a WOT?" cried Barney Bill, sitting up with a jerk that shook
+a volume or two onto the ground.
+
+Paul repeated the startling word.
+
+"Lor' lumme!" exclaimed the other, "don't yer know who yer father
+was?"
+
+Paul told of his disastrous attempts to pierce the mystery of his
+birth.
+
+"A frying-pan? Did she now? That's a mother for yer."
+
+Paul disowned her. He disowned her with reprehensible emphasis.
+
+Barney Bill pulled reflectively at his pipe. Then he laid a bony
+hand on the boy's shoulder. "Who do you think yer mother was?" he
+asked gravely. "A princess?"
+
+"Ay, why not?" said Paul.
+
+"Why not?" echoed Barney Bill. "Why not? You're a blooming lucky
+kid. I wish I was a missin' heir. I know what I'd do."
+
+"What?" asked Paul, the ingenuous.
+
+"I'd find my 'igh-born parents."
+
+"How?" asked Paul.
+
+"I'd go through the whole of England, asking all the princes I met.
+You don't meet 'em at every village pump, ye know," he added
+quickly, lest the boy, detecting the bantering note, should freeze
+into reserve; "but, if you keep yer eyes skinned and yer ears
+standing up, you can learn where they are. Lor' lumme! I wouldn't be
+a little nigger slave in a factory if I was the missin' heir. Not
+much. I wouldn't be starved and beaten by Sam and Polly Button. Not
+me. D'ye think yer aforesaid 'igh-born parents are going to dive
+down into this stinkin' suburb of hell to find yer out? Not likely.
+You've got to find 'em sonny. Yer can find anybody on the 'ighroad
+if yer tramps long enough. What d'yer think?"
+
+"I'll find 'em," said Paul, in dizzy contemplation of possibilities.
+
+"When are yer going to start?" asked Barney Bill.
+
+Paul felt his wages jingle in his pocket. He was a capitalist. The
+thrill of independence swept him from head to foot. What time like
+the present? "I'll start now," said he.
+
+It was night. Quite dark, save for the stars; the lights already
+disappearing in the fringe of mean houses whose outline was merged
+against the blackness of the town; the green and red and white disks
+along the railway line behind the dim mass of the gasworks; the
+occasional streak of conglomerate fireflies that was a tramcar; and
+the red, remorseless glow of here and there a furnace that never was
+extinct in the memory of man. And, save for the far shriek of
+trains, the less remote and more frequent clanging of passing
+tramcars along the road edged with the skeleton cottages, and,
+startlingly near, the vain munching and dull footfall of the old
+horse, all was still. Compared with home and Budge Street, it was
+the reposeful quiet of the tomb. Barney Bill smoked for a time in
+silence, while Paul sat with clenched fists and a beating heart. The
+simplicity of the high adventure dazed him. All he had to do was to
+walk away--walk and walk, free as a sparrow.
+
+Presently Barney Bill slid from the footboard. "You stay here,
+sonny, till I come back."
+
+He limped away across the dim brickfield and sat down at the edge of
+the hollow where the woman had been murdered. He had to think; to
+decide a nice point of ethics. A vagrant seller of brooms and jute
+mats, even though he does carry about with him "Cassell's Family
+Reader" and "The Remains of Henry Kirke White," is distracted by few
+psychological problems. Sufficient for the day is the physical
+thereof. And when a man like Barney Bill is unencumbered by the
+continuous feminine, the ordinary solution of life is simple. But
+now the man had to switch his mind back to times before Paul was
+born, when the eternal feminine had played the very devil with him,
+when all sorts of passions and emotions had whirled his untrained
+being into dizziness. No passions or emotions now affected him; but
+their memory created an atmosphere of puzzledom. He had to adjust
+values. He had to deputize for Destiny. He also had to harmonize the
+pathetically absurd with the grimly real. He took off his cap and
+scratched his cropped head. After a while he damned something
+indefinite and hastened in his dot-and-carry-one fashion to the van.
+
+"Quite made up yer mind to go in search of yer 'ighborn parents?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Like me to give yer a lift, say, as far as London?"
+
+Paul sprang to the ground and opened his mouth to speak. But his
+knees grew weak and he quivered all over like one who beholds the
+god. The abstract nebulous romance of his pilgrimage had been
+crystallized, in a flash, into the concrete. "Ay," he panted.
+
+"Ay!" and he steadied himself with his back and elbows against the
+shafts.
+
+"That's all right," said Barney Bill, in a matter-of fact way, calm
+and godlike to Paul. "You can make up a bed on the floor of the old
+'bus with some of them there mats inside and we'll turn in and have
+a sleep, and start at sunrise."
+
+He clambered into the van, followed by Paul, and lit an oil lamp. In
+a few moments Paul's bed was made. He threw himself down. The
+resilient surface of the mats was luxury after the sacking on the
+scullery stone. Barney Bill performed his summary toilet, blew out
+the lamp and went to his couch.
+
+Presently Paul started up, smitten by a pang straight through his
+heart. He sprang to his feet. "Mister," he cried in the darkness,
+not knowing how else to address his protector. "I mun go whoam."
+
+"Wot?" exclaimed the other. "Thought better of it already? Well, go,
+then, yer little 'eathen 'ippocrite!"
+
+"I'll coom back," said Paul.
+
+"Yer afeared, yer little rat," said Barney Bill, out of the
+blackness.
+
+"I'm not," retorted Paul indignantly. "I'm freeten'd of nowt."
+
+"Then what d'yer want to go for? If you've made up yer mind to come
+along of me, just stay where you are. If you go home they'll nab you
+and whack you for staying out late, and lock you up, and you'll not
+be able to get out in time in the morning. And I ain't a-going to
+wait for yer, I tell yer straight."
+
+"I'll be back," said Paul.
+
+"Don't believe it. Good mind not to let yer go."
+
+The touch of genius suddenly brushed the boy's forehead. He drew
+from his pockets the handful of silver and copper that was his
+week's wages, and, groping in the darkness, poured it over Barney
+Bill. "Then keep that for me till I coom back."
+
+He fumbled hurriedly for the latch of the van door, found it, and
+leaped out into the waste under the stars, just as the owner of the
+van rose with a clatter of coins. To pick up money is a deeply
+rooted human instinct. Barney Bill lit his lamp, and, uttering juicy
+though innocuous flowers of anathema, searched for the scattered
+treasure. When he had retrieved three shillings and
+sevenpence-halfpenny he peered out. Paul was far away. Barney Bill
+put the money on the shelf and looked at it in a puzzled way. Was it
+an earnest of the boy's return, or was it a bribe to let him go? The
+former hypothesis seemed untenable, for if he got nabbed his
+penniless condition would be such an aggravation of his offence as
+to call down upon him a more ferocious punishment than he need have
+risked. And why in the name of sanity did he want to go home? To
+kiss his sainted mother in her sleep? To pack his blankety
+portmanteau? Barney Bill's fancy took a satirical turn. On the
+latter hypothesis, the boy was in deadly fear, and preferred the
+certainty of the ferocious punishment to the terrors of an unknown
+future. Barney Bill smoked a reflective pipe, looking at the matter
+from the two points of view. Not being able to decide, he put out
+his lamp, shut his door and went to sleep.
+
+Dawn awoke him. He sat up and rubbed his eyes. Paul was not there.
+He did not expect him to be there. He felt sorry. The poor little
+kid had funked it. He had hoped for better stuff. He rose and
+stretched himself, put on socks and boots, lit his cooking stove,
+set a kettle to boil and, opening the door, remained for a while
+breathing the misty morning air. Then he let himself down and
+proceeded to the back of the van, where stood a pail of water and a
+tin basin, his simple washing apparatus. Having sluiced bead and
+neck and dried them with something resembling a towel, he hooked up
+the pail, stowed the basin in a rack, unslung a nosebag, which he
+attached to the head of the old horse, and went indoors to prepare
+his own elementary breakfast. That over, he put the horse into the
+shafts. Barney Bill was a man of his word. He was not going to wait
+for Paul; but lie cast a glance round the limited horizon of the
+brickfield, hoping, against reason, to see the little slim figure
+emerge from some opening and run toward him.
+
+"Darn the boy!" said Barney Bill, taking off his cap and scratching
+his wet head.
+
+A low moan broke the dead silence of the Sunday dawn. He started and
+looked about him. He listened. There was another. The moans were
+those of a sleeper. He bent down and looked under the van. There Jay
+Paul, huddled up, fast asleep on the bare ground.
+
+"Well, I'm jiggered! I'm just jiggered. Here, you--hello!" cried
+Barney Bill.
+
+Paul awakened suddenly, half sat up, grinned, grabbed at something
+on the ground beside him and wriggled out between the wheels.
+
+"How long you been there?"
+
+"About two hours," said Paul.
+
+"Why didn't yer wake me?"
+
+"I didn't like to disturb thee," said Paul.
+
+"Did yer go home?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Into the house?"
+
+Paul nodded and smiled. Now, that it was all over, he could smile.
+But only afterwards, when he had greater command of language, could
+he describe the awful terror that shook his soul when he opened the
+front door, crept twice through the darkness of the sleeping kitchen
+and noiselessly closed the door again.
+
+For many months he felt the terror of his dreams. Briefly he told
+Barney Bill of his exploit. How he had to lurk in the shadow of the
+street during the end of a battle between the Buttons, in which the
+lodgers and a policeman had intervened. How he had to wait--
+interminable hours--until the house was quiet. How he had stumbled
+over things in the drunken disorder of the kitchen floor, dreading
+to arouse the four elder little Buttons who slept in the room. How
+narrowly he had missed running into the arms of the policeman who
+had passed the door some seconds before he opened it. How he had
+crouched on the pavement until the policeman turned the corner, and
+how he had fled in the opposite direction.
+
+"And if yer mother had caught ye, what would she have done to yer?"
+
+"Half-killed me," said Paul.
+
+Barney Bill twisted his head on one side and looked at him out of
+his twinkling eyes. Paul thought he resembled a grotesque bird.
+
+"Wot did yer do it for?" he asked.
+
+"This," said Paul, holding out a grubby palm in which lay the
+precious cornelian heart.
+
+His friend blinked at it. "Wot the blazes is the good of that?"
+
+"It's a talisman," replied Paul, who, having come across the word in
+a book, had at once applied it to his treasure.
+
+"Lor' lumme!" cried Barney Bill. "And it was for that bit of stuff
+yer ran the risk of being flayed alive by yer loving parents?"
+
+Paul was quick to detect a note of admiration underlying the
+superficial contemptuousness of the words. "I'd ha' gone through
+fire and water for it," he declared theatrically.
+
+"Lor' lumme!" said Barney Bill again.
+
+"I got summat else," said Paul, taking from his pocket his little
+pack of Sunday-school cards.
+
+Barney Bill examined them gravely. "I think you'd better do away
+with these."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"They establishes yer identity," said Barney Bill.
+
+"What's that?"
+
+Barney Bill explained. Paul was running away from home. The police,
+informed of the fact, would raise a hue-and-cry. The cards, if
+found, would be evidence. Paul laughed. The constabulary was not
+popular in Budge Street.
+
+"Mother ain't going to ha' nowt to do with the police, nor father,
+either."
+
+He hinted that the cards might be useful later. His childish vanity
+loved the trivial encomiums inscribed thereon. They would impress
+beholders who had not the same reasons for preoccupation as Barney
+Bill.
+
+"You're thinking of your 'igh-born parents," said Barney Bill. "All
+right, keep 'em. Only hide 'ern away safe. And now get in and let us
+clear out of this place. It smelts like a cheese with an escape of
+gas running through it. And you'd better stay inside and not show
+your face all day long. I don't want to be had up for kidnapping."
+
+Paul jumped in. Barney Bill clambered onto the footboard and took
+the reins. The old horse started and the van jolted its way to the
+road, on which as yet no tramcars clattered. As the van turned,
+Paul, craning his neck out of the window, obtained the last glimpse
+of Bludston. He had no regrets. As far as such a thought could be
+formulated in his young mind, he wished that the place could be
+blotted out from his memory, as it was now hidden forever from his
+vision. He stood at the little window, facing south, gazing toward
+the unknown region at the end of which lay London, city of dreams.
+He was not quite fourteen. His destiny was before him, and to the
+fulfilment thereof he saw no hindrance. No more would the
+remorseless factory hook catch him from his sleep and swing him into
+the relentless machine. Never again, would he hear his mother's
+shrewish voice or feel her heavy, greasy hand about his ears. He was
+free--free to read, free to sleep, free to talk, free to drink in
+the beauty of the lazy hours. Vaguely he was conscious that one of
+the wonders that would come would be his own expansion. He would
+learn many things which he did not know, things that would fit him
+for his high estate. He looked down upon the foreshortened figure of
+Barney Bill, his cloth cap, his shoulders, his bare brown arms, a
+patch of knee. To the boy, at that moment, he was less a man than an
+instrument of Destiny guiding him, not knowing why, to the Promised
+Land.
+
+At last on the quiet road Paul saw a bicyclist approaching them.
+Mindful of Barney Bill's injunction, he withdrew his head. Presently
+he lay down on the couch, and, soothed by the jogging of the van and
+the pleasant creaking of the baskets, fell into the deep sleep of
+tired and happy childhood.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+IT was a day of dust and blaze. Dust lay thick on the ground, it
+filled the air, it silvered the lower branches of the wayside trees,
+it turned the old brown horse into a dappled grey, it powdered the
+black hair of Barney Bill and of Paul until they looked like
+vagabond millers. They sat side by side on the footboard while the
+old horse jogged on, whisking flies away with a scanty but
+persistent tail.
+
+Paul, barefoot and barelegged, hatless, coatless, absorbed blaze and
+dust with the animal content of a young lizard. A month's summer
+wandering had baked him to gipsy brown. A month's sufficient food
+and happiness had filled gaunt hollows in his face and covered all
+too visible ribs with flesh. Since his flight from Bludston his life
+had been one sensuous trance. His hungry young soul had been gorged
+with beauty--the beauty of fields and trees and rolling country,
+of still, quivering moons and starlit nights, of exultant freedom,
+of never-failing human sympathy. He had a confused memory of
+everything. They had passed through many towns as similar to
+Bludston as one factory chimney to another, and had plied their
+trade in many a mean street, so much the counterpart of Budge Street
+that he had watched a certain window or door with involuntary
+trepidation, until he realized that it was not Budge Street, that he
+was a happy alien to its squalor, that he was a butterfly, a thing
+of woods and hedgerows fluttering for an inconsequent moment in the
+gloom. He came among them, none knew whence he was going, none knew
+whither. He was conscious of being a creature of mystery. He pitied
+the fettered youth of these begrimed and joyless towns--slaves,
+Men with Muckrakes (he had fished up ail old "Pilgrim's Progress"
+from the lower depths of the van), who obstinately refused to raise
+their eyes to the glorious sun in heaven. In his childish arrogance
+he would ask Barney Bill, "Why don't they go away and leave it, like
+me?" And the wizened little man would reply, with the flicker of an
+eyelid unperceived by Paul, "Because they haven't no 'igh-born
+parents waiting for 'em. They're born to their low estate, and they
+knows it." Which to Paul was a solution of peculiar comfort.
+
+Even the blackened lands between the towns had their charm for Paul,
+in that he had a gleeful sense of being excluded from the wrath of
+God, which fell continuously upon them and the inhabitants thereof.
+And here and there a belt of leafy country gave promise, or
+confirmed Barney Bill's promise, of the Paradise that would come.
+Besides, what mattered the perpetuations of Bludston brickfields
+when the Land of Beulah shimmered ahead in the blue distance, when
+"Martin Chuzzlewit" lay open on his knees, when the smell of the bit
+of steak sizzling on the cooking stove stung his young blood? And
+now they were in Warwickshire, county of verdant undulations and
+deep woods and embowered villages. Every promise that Barney Bill
+had made to him of beauty was in process of fulfilment. There were
+no more blighted towns, no more factories, no more chimneys belching
+forth smoke. This was the Earth, the real broad-bosomed Mother
+Earth. What he had left was the Hell upon Earth. What he was going
+to might be Paradise, but Paul's imagination rightly boggled at the
+conception of a Paradise more perfect. And, as Paul's prescient wit
+had conjectured, he was learning many things; the names of trees and
+wild flowers, the cries of birds, the habits of wayside beasts; what
+was good for a horse to eat and what was bad; which was the Waggon,
+and Orion's Belt and the Bunch of Keys in the heavens; how to fry
+bacon and sew up rents in his clothing; how to deal with his
+fellow-man, or, rather, with his fellow-woman, in a persuasive
+manner; how to snare a rabbit or a pheasant and convert it into
+food, and how, at the same time, to evade the terrors of the law;
+the differences between wheat and oats and barley; the main lines of
+cleavage between political parties, hitherto a puzzle to Paul, for
+Barney Bill was a politician (on the Conservative side) and read his
+newspaper and argued craftily in taverns; and the styles and titles
+of great landowners by whose estates they passed; and how to avoid
+the nets that were perpetually spread by a predatory sex before the
+feet of the incautious male. On the last point Barney Bill was
+eloquent; but Paul, with delicious memories sanctifying his young
+soul, turned a deaf ear to his misogyny. Barney Bill was very old
+and crooked and dried up; what beautiful lady would waste her
+blandishments on him? Even the low-born lasses with whom they at
+times consorted had scarce an eye for Barney Bill. The grapes were
+sour. Paul smiled indulgently on the little foible of his friend.
+
+They jogged along the highroad on this blazing and dusty day. Their
+bower of wicker chairs crackled in the heat. It was too hot for
+sustained conversation. Once Barney Bill said: "If Bob"-Bob was the
+old horse's unimaginative name--"if Bob doesn't have a drink soon
+his darned old hide'll crack."
+
+Ten minutes later: "Nothing under a quart'll wash down this dust."
+
+"Have a drink of water," suggested Paul, who had already adopted
+this care for drouth, with satisfactory results.
+
+"A grown man's thirst and a boy's thirst is two entirely different
+things," said Barney Bill sententiously. "To spoil this grown-up
+thirst of mine with water would be a crime."
+
+A mile or so farther on the road he stretched out a lean brown arm
+and pointed. "See that there clump of trees? Behind that is the
+Little Bear Inn. They gives you cool china pots with blue round the
+edge. You can only have 'em if you asks for 'em, Jim Blake, the
+landlord, being pertickler-like. And if yer breaks em--"
+
+"What would happen?" asked Paul, who was always very much impressed
+by Barney Bill's detailed knowledge of the roads and the inns of
+England.
+
+Barney Bill shook his head. "It would break 'is 'eart. Them pots was
+being used when William the Conqueror was a boy."
+
+"Ten-sixty-six to ten-eighty-seven," said Paul the scholar. "They
+mun be nine hundred years old."
+
+"Not quite," said Barney Bill, with an air of scrupulous desire for
+veracity. "But nearly. Lor' lumme!" he exclaimed, after a pause, "it
+makes one think, doesn't it? One of them there quart mugs--suppose
+it has been filled, say, ten times a day, every day for nine hundred
+years--my Gosh! what a Pacific Ocean of beer must have been poured
+from it! It makes one come over all of religious-like when one puts
+it to one's head."
+
+Paul did not reply, and reverential emotion kept Barney Bill silent
+until they reached the clump of trees and the Little Bear Inn.
+
+It was set back from the road, in a kind of dusty courtyard masked
+off on one side by a gigantic elm and on the other by the fringe of
+an orchard with ruddy apples hanging patiently beneath the foliage.
+Close by the orchard stood the post bearing the signboard on which
+the Little Bear, an engaging beast, was pictured, and presiding in a
+ceremonious way over the horse-trough below. In the shade of the elm
+stretched a trestle table and two wooden benches. The old inn,
+gabled, half-timbered, its upper story overhanging the doorway, bent
+and crippled, though serene, with age, mellow in yellow and russet,
+spectacled, as befitted its years, with leaded diamond panes,
+crowned deep in secular thatch, smiled with the calm and homely
+peace of everlasting things. Its old dignity even covered the perky
+gilt inscription over the doorway, telling how James Blake was
+licensed to sell a variety of alcoholic beverages. One human figure
+alone was visible, as the chairs and mat-laden van slowly turned
+from the road toward the horse-trough--that of a young man in
+straw hat and grey flannels making a water-colour sketch of the inn.
+
+Barney Bill slid off the footboard, and, looking neither to right
+nor left, bolted like a belated crab into the cool recesses of the
+bar in search of ambrosia from the blue-and-white china mug. Paul,
+also afoot, led Bob to the trough. Bob drank with the lusty
+moderation of beasts. When he had assuaged his thirst Paul backed
+him into the road and, slinging over his head a comforting nosebag,
+left him to his meal.
+
+The young man, sitting on an upturned wooden case, at the extreme
+edge of the elm tree's shade, a slender easel before him, a litter
+of paraphernalia on the ground by his side, painted assiduously.
+Paul idly crept behind him and watched in amazement the smears of
+wet colour, after a second or two of apparent irrelevance, take
+their place in the essential structure of the drawing. He stood
+absorbed. He knew that there were such things as pictures. He knew,
+too, that they were made by hands. But he had never seen one in the
+making. After a while the artist threw back his head, looked at the
+inn and looked at his sketch. There was a hot bit of thatch at the
+corner near the orchard, and, below the eaves, bold shadow. The
+shadow had not come right. He put in a touch of burnt umber and
+again considered the effect.
+
+"Confound it! that's all wrong," he muttered.
+
+"It's blue," said Paul.
+
+The artist started, twisted his head, and for the first time became
+conscious of the ragamuffin's presence. "Oh, you see it blue, do
+you?" He smiled ironically.
+
+"Ay," said Paul, with pointing finger. "Look at it. It's not brown,
+anyhow. Yon's black inside and blue outside."
+
+The young man shaded his brow and gazed intently. Brilliant sunshine
+plays the deuce with tones. "My hat!" cried he, "you're right. It
+was this confounded yellow of the side of the house." He put in a
+few hasty strokes. "That better?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+The artist laid down his brush, and swung round on his box, clasping
+knees. "How the devil did you manage to see that when I didn't?"
+
+"Dun-no!" said Paul.
+
+The young man stretched himself and lit a cigarette.
+
+"What are yo' doing that for, mister?" Paul asked seriously.
+
+"That?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul. "You mun have a reason."
+
+"You're a queer infant," laughed the artist. "Do you really want to
+know?"
+
+"I've asked yo'," said Paul.
+
+"Well, if you're anxious to know, I'm an architect on a holiday, and
+I'm sketching any old thing I come across. I don't pretend to be a
+painter, my youthful virtuoso, and that's why I go wrong sometimes
+on colour. Do you know what an architect is?"
+
+"No," said Paul, eagerly. "What is it?"
+
+He had been baffled by the meaning of the word, which he had seen
+all his life, inscribed on a brass plate in the Bludston High
+Street: "E. Thomson, Architect & Surveyor." It had seemed to him
+odd, cryptically fascinating.
+
+The young man laughed and explained; Paul listened seriously.
+Another mystery was solved. He had often wondered how the
+bricklayers knew where to lay the bricks. He grasped the idea that
+they were but instruments carrying out the conception of the
+architect's brain. "I'd like to be an architect," he said.
+
+"Would you?" After a pause the young man continued: "Anyhow, you can
+earn a shilling. just sit down there and let me make a sketch of
+you."
+
+"What for?" asked Paul.
+
+"Because you're a picturesque person. Now, I suppose you'll be
+asking me what's the meaning of picturesque?"
+
+"Nay," said Paul. "I know. Yo' see it in books. 'Th' owd grey tower
+stood out picturesque against the crimson sky.'"
+
+"Hullo! you're a literary gent," said the young man.
+
+"Ay," replied Paul proudly. He was greatly attracted towards this
+new acquaintance, whom, by his speech and dress and ease of manner,
+he judged to belong to the same caste as his lost but
+ever-remembered goddess.
+
+The young man picked up pencil and sketch-book and posed Paul at the
+end of the seat by the trestle table. "Now, then," said he, setting
+to work. "Head a little more that way. Capital. Don't move. If
+you're very quiet I'll give you a shilling." Presently he asked,
+"What are you? If you hadn't been a literary gent I'd have thought
+you might be a gipsy."
+
+Paul flushed and started. "I'm not a gipsy."
+
+"Steady, steady," exclaimed the artist. "I've just said you couldn't
+be one. Italian? You don't look English."
+
+For the first time the idea of exotic parentage entered Paul's head.
+He dallied for a moment or two with the thought. "I dunno what I
+am," he said romantically.
+
+"Oh? What's your father?" The young man motioned with his head
+toward the inn.
+
+"Yon's not my father," said Paul. "It's only Barney Bill."
+
+"Only Barney Bill?" echoed the other, amused. "Well, who is your
+father?"
+
+"Dunno," said Paul.
+
+"And your mother?"
+
+"Dunno, either," said Paul, in a mysterious tone. "I dunno if my
+parents are living or dead. I think they're living."
+
+"That's interesting. What are you doing with what's-his-name Bill?"
+
+"I'm just travelling wi' him to London."
+
+"And what are you going to do in London?"
+
+"I'll see when I get there," said Paul.
+
+"So you're out for adventure?"
+
+"Ay," said the boy, a gleam of the Vision dancing before his eyes.
+"That's it. I'm going on an adventure."
+
+"There, keep like that," cried the artist. "Don't stir. I do believe
+I'm getting you. Holy Moses, it will be great! If only I could catch
+the expression! There's nothing like adventure, is there? The
+glorious uncertainty of it! To wake up in the morning and know that
+the unexpected is bound to happen during the day. Exciting, isn't
+it?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul, his face aglow.
+
+The young man worked tense and quick at the luminous eyes. He broke
+a long silence by asking, "What's your name?"
+
+"Paul Kegworthy."
+
+"Paul? That's odd." In the sphere of life to which the ragged urchin
+belonged Toms and Bills and Jims were as thick as blackberries, but
+Pauls were rare.
+
+"What's odd?" said Paul.
+
+"Your name. How did you get it? It's uncommon."
+
+"I suppose it is," said Paul. "I never thowt of it. I never knew
+anybody of that name afore."
+
+Here was another sign and token of romantic origin suddenly
+revealed. Paul felt the thrill of it. He resisted a temptation to
+ask his new friend whether it was an appellation generally reserved
+for princes.
+
+"Look here, joking apart," said the artist, putting in the waves of
+the thick black hair, "are you really going to be dumped down in
+London to seek your fortune? Don't you know anybody there?"
+
+"No," said Paul.
+
+"How are you going to live?"
+
+Paul dived a hand into his breeches pocket and jingled coins. "I've
+got th' brass," said he.
+
+"How much?"
+
+"Three shillings and sevenpence-ha'penny," said Paul, with an
+opulent air. "And yo'r shilling will make it four and sevenpence-
+ha'penny."
+
+"Good God!" said-the young man. He went on drawing for some time in
+silence. Then he said: "My brother is a painter--rather a swell--
+a Royal Academician. He would love to paint you. So would other
+fellows. You could easily earn your living as a model--doing as a
+business, you know, what you're doing now for fun, more or less."
+
+"How much could I earn?"
+
+"It all depends. Say a pound to thirty shillings a week."
+
+Paul gasped and sat paralyzed. Artist, dusty road, gaudy van,
+distant cornfields and uplands were blotted from his senses. The
+cool waves of Pactolus lapped his feet.
+
+"Come and look me up when you get to London," continued the friendly
+voice. "My name is Rowlatt-W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square. Can
+you remember it?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul.
+
+"Shall I write it down?"
+
+"Nay. 'W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's Inn Square.' I'm noan likely to
+forget it. I never forget nowt," said Paul, life returning through a
+vein of boastfulness.
+
+"Tell me all you remember," said Mr. Rowlatt, with a laugh.
+
+"I can say all the Kings of England, with their dates, and the
+counties and chief towns of Great Britain and Ireland, and all the
+weights and measures, and 'The Assyrian came down like a wolf on the
+fold--'"
+
+"Holy Moses!" cried Rowlatt. "Anything else?"
+
+"Ay. Lots more," said Paul, anxious to stamp vividly the impression
+he saw that he was making. "I know the Plagues of Egypt."
+
+"I bet you don't."
+
+"Rivers of Blood, Frogs, Lice, Flies, Murrain, Boils, Hails,
+Locusts, Darkness and Death of Firstborn," said Paul, in a breath.
+
+"Jehosaphat!" cried Rowlatt. "I suppose now you'd have no
+difficulty in reciting the Thirty-nine Articles."
+
+Paul puckered his forehead in thought. "D'yo' mean," he asked after
+a pause, "the Thirty-nine Articles o' Religion, as is in th'
+Prayerbuk? I ha' tried to read 'em, but couldno' understand 'em
+reet."
+
+Rowlatt, who had not expected his facetious query to be so answered,
+stopped his drawing for a moment. "What in the name of goodness
+attracted you to the Thirty-nine Articles?"
+
+"I wanted to learn about things," said Paul.
+
+The young man looked at him and smiled. "Self-education is a jolly
+good thing," said he. "Learn all you can, and you'll be a famous
+fellow one of these days. But you must cultivate a sense of humour."
+
+Paul was about to seek enlightenment as to this counsel when Barney
+Bill appeared, cool and refreshed, from the inn door, and lifted a
+cheery voice. "Let's be getting along, sonny."
+
+Rowlatt held up a detaining hand. "Just a couple of minutes, if you
+can spare them. I've nearly finished."
+
+"All right, sir," said Barney Bill, limping across the yard. "Taking
+a picture of him?"
+
+The artist nodded. Barney Bill looked over his shoulder. "By Gosh!"
+he cried in admiration. "By Gosh!"
+
+"It has come out rather well, hasn't it?" said the artist,
+complacently.
+
+"It's the living image of 'im," said Barney Bill.
+
+"He tells me he's going up to London to seek his fortune," said
+Rowlatt, putting in the finishing touches.
+
+"And his 'igh-born parents," said Barney Bill, winking at Paul.
+
+Paul flushed and wriggled uncomfortably. Instinct deprecated crude
+revelation of the mystery of his birth to the man of refinement. He
+felt that Barney Bill was betraying confidence. Gutter-bred though
+he was, he accused his vagrant protector of a lack of good taste. Of
+such a breach he himself, son of princes, could not have been
+guilty. Luckily, and, as Paul thought, with admirable tact, Mr.
+Rowlatt did not demand explanation.
+
+"A young Japhet in search of a father. Well, I hope he'll find him.
+There's nothing like romance. Without it life is flat and dead. It's
+what atmosphere is to a picture."
+
+"And onions to a stew," said Barney Bill.
+
+"Quite right," said Rowlatt. "Paul, my boy, I think after all you'd
+better stick to Mr.--?"
+
+"Barney Bill, sir, at your service. And, if you want a comfortable
+chair, or an elegant mat, or a hearth brush at a ridiculous cheap
+price"--he waved toward the van. Rowlatt turned his head and,
+laughing, looked into the twinkling black eyes. "I don't for a
+moment expect you to buy, sir, but I was only a-satisfying of my
+artistic conscience."
+
+Rowlatt shut his sketch-book with a snap, and rose. "Let us have a
+drink," said he. "Artists should be better acquainted."
+
+He whispered a message to Paul, who sped to the inn and presently
+returned with a couple of the famous blue and white mugs frothing
+deliciously at the brims. The men, their lips to the bubbles, nodded
+to each other. The still beat of the August noon enveloped their
+bodies, but a streak of heavenly coolness trickled through their
+souls. Paul, looking at them enviously, longed to be grown up.
+
+Then followed a pleasant half-hour of desultory talk. Although the
+men did not make him, save for here and there a casual reference,
+the subject of their conversation, Paul, with the Vision shimmering
+before his eyes, was sensitive enough to perceive in a dim and
+elusive way that he was at the back of each man's thoughts and that,
+for his sake, each was trying to obtain the measure of the other. At
+last Barney Bill, cocking at the sun the skilled eye of the dweller
+in the wilderness, called the time for departure.
+
+"Could I see th' picture?" asked Paul.
+
+Rowlatt passed him the sketch-book. The sudden sight of oneself as
+one appears in another's eyes is always a shock, even to the most
+sophisticated sitter. To Paul it was uncanny. He had often seen his
+own reflection and was familiar with his own appearance, but this
+was the first time that he had looked at himself impersonally. The
+sketch was vivid, the likeness excellent; the motive, the
+picturesque and romantic.
+
+A proud lift of the chin, an eager glance in the eye, a sensitive
+curve of the lip attracted his boyish egotism. The portrait was an
+ideal, something to live up to. Involuntarily he composed his
+features.
+
+Barney Bill again called time. Paul surrendered the sketch-book
+reluctantly. Rowlatt, with a cheery word, handed him the shilling
+fee. Paul, than whom none better knew the magic quality of money,
+hesitated for a second. The boy in the sketch would have refused.
+Paul drew himself up. "Nay, I'll take noan. I liked doing it."
+
+Rowlatt laughed and pocketed the coin. "All right," said he, with a
+playful bow. "I'm exceedingly indebted to your courtesy."
+
+Barney Bill gave Paul an approving glance. "Good for you, boy. Never
+take money you've not earned. Good day to you, sir"--he touched
+his cap. "And"--with a motion toward the empty mugs--"thank you
+kindly."
+
+Rowlatt strolled with them to the van, Barney Bill limping a pace or
+two ahead. "Remember what I told you, my young friend," said he in a
+low voice. "I don't go back upon my word. I'll help you. But if
+you're a wise boy and know what's good for you, you'll stick to Mr.
+Barney Bill and the freedom of the high-road and the light heart of
+the vagabond. You'll have a devilish sight more happiness in the
+end."
+
+But Paul, who already looked upon his gipsy self as dead as his
+Bludston self, and these dead selves as stepping-stones to higher
+things, turned a deaf ear to his new friend's paradoxical
+philosophy. "I'll remember," said he. "Mr. W. W. Rowlatt, 4, Gray's
+Inn Square."
+
+The young architect watched the van with its swinging, creaking
+excrescences lumber away down the hot and dusty road, and turned
+with a puzzled expression to his easel. Joy in the Little Bear Inn
+had for the moment departed. Presently he found himself scribbling a
+letter in pencil to his brother, the Royal Academician.
+
+"So you see, my dear fellow," he wrote toward the end of the
+epistle, "I am in a quandary. That the little beggar is of startling
+beauty is undeniable. That he has got his bill agape, like a young
+bird, for whatever food of beauty and emotion and knowledge comes
+his way is obvious to any fool. But whether, in what I propose, I'm
+giving a helping hand to a kind of wild genius, or whether I'm
+starting a vain boy along the primrose path in the direction of
+everlasting bonfire, I'm damned if I know."
+
+But Paul jogged along by the side of Barney Bill in no such state of
+dubiety. God was in His Heaven, arranging everything for his
+especial benefit. All was well with the world where dazzling
+destinies like his were bound to be fulfilled.
+
+"I've heard of such things," said Barney Bill with a reflective
+twist of his head, when Paul had told him of Mr. Rowlatt's
+suggestion. "A cousin of mine married a man who knew a gal who used
+to stand in her birthday suit in front of a lot of young painter
+chaps-and I'm bound to say he used to declare she was as good a gal
+as his own wife, especially seeing as how she supported an old
+father what had got a stroke, and a houseful of young brothers and
+sisters. So I'm not saying there's any harm in it. And I wouldn't
+stand in your way, sonny, seeing as how you want to get to your
+'igh-born parents. You might find 'em. on the road, and then again
+you mightn't. And thirty bob a week at fourteen-no-it would be
+flying in the face of Providence to say 'don't do it! But what licks
+me is: what the blazes do they want with a little varmint like you?
+Why shouldn't they pay thirty bob a week to paint me?"
+
+Paul did not reply, being instinctively averse from wounding
+susceptibilities. But in his heart rose a high pity for the common
+though kindly clay that was Barney Bill.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+WHEN they reached London in November, after circuitous wanderings,
+Barney Bill said to Paul: "You've seed enough of me, matey, to know
+that I wish yer good and not harm. I've fed yer and I've housed
+yer-I can't say as how I've done much toward clothing yer-and three
+months on the road has knocked corners off the swell toggery yer
+came to me in; but I ain't beat yer or cussed yer more than yer
+deserved"--whereat Paul grinned-"and I've spent a lot of valuable
+time, when I might have been profitably doing nothing, a-larning yer
+of things and, so to speak, completing yer eddication. Is that the
+truth, or am I a bloomin' liar?"
+
+Paul, thus challenged, confirmed the absolute veracity of Barney
+Bill's statement. The latter continued, bending forward, his lean
+brown hand on the boy's shoulder, and looking at him earnestly: "I
+took yer away from your 'appy 'ome because, though the 'ome might
+have been 'appy in its own sweet way, you wasn't. I wanted to set
+yer on the track of yer 'ighborn parents. I wanted to make a man of
+yer. I want to do the best for yer now, so I put it to yer straight:
+If yer likes to come along of me altogether, I'll pay yer wages on
+the next round, and when yer gets a little older I'll take yer into
+partnership and leave yer the business when I die. It's a man's life
+and a free life, and I think yer likes it, don't yer?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul, "it's foine."
+
+"On the other hand, as I said afore, I won't stand in yer way, and
+if yer thinks you'll get nearer to your 'igh-born parents by
+hitching up with Mr. Architect, well--you're old enough to choose.
+I leave it to you."
+
+But Paul had already chosen. The Road had its magical fascination,
+to which he would have surrendered all his boyish soul, had not the
+call of his destiny been more insistent. The Road led nowhither.
+Princes and princesses were as rare as hips and haws in summer-time.
+Their glittering equipages did not stop the van, nor did they stand
+at the emblazoned gateways of great parks waiting patiently for
+long-lost sons. He knew that he must seek them in their own social
+world, and to this he would surely be raised by his phantasmagorial
+income of thirty shillings a week.
+
+"You won't object to my keeping a friendly eye on yer for the next
+year or two?" asked Barney Bill, with twisted mouth and a kindly,
+satirical glance.
+
+Paul flushed. He had the consciousness of being a selfish,
+self-centered little beast, not half enough grateful to Barney Bill
+for delivering him out of the House of Bondage and leading him into
+the Land of Milk and Honey. He was as much stung by the delicately
+implied rebuke as touched by the solicitude as to his future
+welfare. Romantic words, such as he had read in the story-books,
+surged vaguely in his head, but he could find none to utter. He kept
+silent for a few moments, his hand in his breeches pocket. Presently
+he drew it forth rather slowly, and held out the precious cornelian
+heart to his benefactor.
+
+"I 'ud like to give it thee," said Paul.
+
+Barney Bill took it. "Thank 'ee, sonny. I'll remember that you gave
+it to me. But I won't keep yer talisman. 'Ere, see--" he made a
+pretence to spit on it--"that's for luck. Barney Bill's luck, and
+good wishes."
+
+So Paul pocketed the heart again, immensely relieved by his friend's
+magnanimity, and the little sentimental episode was over.
+
+A month later, when Barney Bill started on his solitary winter
+pilgrimage in the South of England, he left behind him a
+transmogrified Paul, a Paul, thanks to his munificence, arrayed in
+decent garments, including collar and tie (insignia of caste) and an
+overcoat (symbol of luxury), for which Paul was to repay him out of
+his future earnings; a Paul lodged in a small but comfortable
+third-floor-back, a bedroom all to himself, with a real bed,
+mattress, pillow, sheets, and blankets all complete, and a
+looking-glass, and a stand with ewer and basin so beautiful that, at
+first, Paul did not dare wash for fear of making the water dirty; a
+Paul already engaged for a series of sittings by Mr. Cyrus Rowlatt,
+R.A., his head swimming with the wonder of the fashionable painter's
+studio; a Paul standing in radiant confidence upon the brink of
+life.
+
+"Sonny," said Barney Bill, when he said good-bye, "d'yer see them
+there lovely lace-up boots you've got on?"
+
+"Ay," said Paul, regarding them complacently.
+
+"Well, they've got to take yer all the way up the hill, like the
+young man what's his name?--Excelsure--in the piece of poetry
+you recite; but they'll only do it if they continues to fit. Don't
+get too big for 'em. At any rate, wait till they're worn out and yer
+can buy another pair with yer own money."
+
+Paul grinned, because he did not know what else to do, so as to show
+his intellectual appreciation of the parable; but in his heart, for
+all his gratitude, he thought Barney bill rather a prosy moralizer.
+It was one of the disabilities of advanced old age. Alas! what can
+bridge the gulf between fourteen and fifty?
+
+"Anyhow, you've got a friend at the back of yer, sonny, and don't
+make no mistake about it. If you're in trouble let me know. I can't
+say fairer than that, can I?"
+
+That, for a season, was the end of Barney Bill, and Paul found
+himself thrillingly alone in London. At first its labyrinthine
+vastness overwhelmed him, causing him to feel an unimportant atom,
+which may have been good for his soul, but was not agreeable to his
+vanity. By degrees, however, he learned the lay of the great
+thoroughfares, especially those leading to the quarters where
+artists congregate, and, conscious of purpose and of money jingling
+in his pocket, he began to hold his head high in the crowded
+streets. In the house in Barn Street, off the Euston Road, where he
+lodged, he was called "Mr. Paul" by his landlady, Mrs. Seddon, and
+her thirteen-year-old daughter, Jane, which was comforting and
+stimulating. Jane, a lanky, fair, blue-eyed girl, who gave promise
+of good looks, attended to his modest wants with a zeal somewhat out
+of proportion to the payment received. Paul had the novel sensation
+of finding some one at his beck and call. He beckoned and called
+often, for the sheer pleasure of it. So great was the change in his
+life that, in these early days, it seemed a3 if he had already come
+into his kingdom. He strutted about, poor child, like the prince in
+a fairy tale, and, in spite of Barney Bill's precepts-lie outgrew
+his boots immediately. Mrs. Seddon, an old friend of Barney Bill,
+whom she addressed and spoke as Mr. William, kept a small shop in
+which she sold newspapers and twine and penny bottles of ink. In the
+little back-parlour Mrs. Seddon and Tane and Paul had their meals,
+while the shop boy, an inconsiderable creature with a perpetual cold
+in his head, attended to the unexpected customer. To Paul, this boy,
+with whom a few months ago he would have joyously changed places,
+was as the dust beneath his feet. He sent him on errands in a lordly
+way, treating him as, indeed, he had treated the youth of Budge
+Street after his triumph over Billy Goodge, and the boy obeyed
+meekly. Paul believed in himself; the boy didn't. Almost from the
+beginning he usurped an ascendancy over the little household. For
+all their having lived in the great maelstrom of London, he found
+his superficial experience of life larger than that of mother and
+daughter. They had never seen machinery at work, did not know the
+difference between an elm and a beech and had never read Sir Walter
+Scott. Mrs. Seddon, thin, careworn and slackly good-natured, ever
+lamented the loss of an astonishingly brilliant husband; Jane was
+markedly the more competent of the two. She had character, and, even
+while slaving for the romantic youth, made it clear to him that for
+no other man alive would she so demean herself. Paul resolved to
+undertake her education.
+
+The months slipped by golden with fulfilment. News of the beautiful
+boy model went the round of the studios. Those were simpler times
+(although not so very long ago) in British art than the present, and
+the pretty picture was still in vogue. As Mr. Rowlatt, the young
+architect, had foretold, Paul had no difficulty in obtaining work.
+Indeed, it was fatally easy. Mr. Cyrus Rowlatt, R.A., had launched
+him. Being fabulously paid, he thought his new profession the most
+aristocratic calling in the world. In a remarkably short time he was
+able to repay Barney Bill. The day when he purchased the postal
+order was the proudest in his life. The transaction gave him a
+princely feeling. He alone of boys, by special virtue of his origin,
+was capable of such a thing. Again, his welcome in the painting
+world confirmed him in the belief that he was a personage, born to
+great things. Posed on the model throne, the object of the painter's
+intense scrutiny, he swelled ingenuously with the conviction of his
+supreme importance. The lazy luxury of the model's life appealed to
+his sensuous temperament. He loved the warmth, the artistic setting
+of the studios; the pictures, the oriental rugs, the bits of armour,
+the old brocade, the rich cushions. If he had not been born to it,
+why had he not remained, like all 'the youth of Bludston, amid the
+filth and clatter of the factory? He loved, too, to hear the studio
+talk, though at first he comprehended little of it. The men and
+women for whom he sat possessed the same quality as his
+never-forgotten goddess and Lady Chudley and the young architect--
+a quality which he recognized keenly, but for which his limited
+vocabulary could find no definition. Afterward he realized that it
+was refinement in manner and speech and person. This quality he felt
+it essential to acquire. Accordingly he played the young ape to
+those who aroused his admiration.
+
+One day when Jane entered the back-parlour he sprang from his seat
+and advanced with outstretched hand to meet her: "My dear Lady Jane,
+how good of you to come! Do let me clear a chair for you."
+
+"What are you playing at?" asked Jane.
+
+"That's the way to receive a lady when she calls on you.
+
+"Oh!" said Jane.
+
+He practised on her each newly learned social accomplishment. He
+minced his broad Lancashire, when he spoke to her, in such a way as
+to be grotesquely unintelligible. By listening to conversations he
+learned many amazing social facts; among them that the gentry had a
+bath every morning of their lives. This stirred his imagination to
+such a pitch that he commanded Jane to bring up the matutinal
+washtub to his bedroom. By instinct refined he revelled in the
+resultant sensation of cleanliness. He paid great attention to his
+attire, modelling himself, as far as he could, on young Rowlatt, the
+architect, on whom he occasionally called to report progress. He
+bought such neckties and collars as Rowlatt wore and submitted them
+for Jane's approval. She thought them vastly genteel. He also
+entertained her with whatever jargon of art talk he managed to pick
+up. Thus, though the urchin gave himself airs and invested himself
+with affectations, which rendered him intolerable to all of his own
+social status, except the placid Mrs. Seddon and the adoring Jane,
+he was under the continuous influence of a high ambition. It made
+him ridiculous, but it preserved him from vicious and vulgar things.
+If you are conscious of being a prince in disguise qualifying for
+butterfly entrance into your kingdom, it behoves you to behave in a
+princely manner, not to consort with lewd fellows and not to neglect
+opportunities for education. You owe to yourself all the good that
+you can extract from the world. Acting from this point of view, and
+guided by the practical advice of young Rowlatt, he attended evening
+classes, where he gulped down knowledge hungrily. So, what with
+sitting and studying and backward and forward journeying, and
+educating Jane, and practising the accomplishments of a prince, and
+sleeping the long sound sleep of a tired youngster, Paul had no time
+to think of evil. He was far too much absorbed in himself.
+
+Meanwhile, of Bludston not a sign. For all that he had heard of
+search being made for him, he might have been a runaway kitten.
+Sometimes he wondered what steps the Buttons had taken in order to
+find him. If they bad communicated with the police, surely, at some
+stage of their journey, Barney Bill would have been held up and
+questioned. But had they even troubled to call in the police? Barney
+Bill thought not, and Paul agreed. The police were very unpopular in
+Budge Street--almost as unpopular as Paul. In all probability the
+Buttons were only too glad to be rid of him. If he found no favour
+in the eyes of Mrs. Button, in the eyes of Button he was detestable.
+Occasionally he spoke of them to Barney Bill on his rare appearances
+in London, but for prudential motives the latter had struck Bludston
+out of his itinerary and could give no information. At last Paul
+ceased altogether to think of them. They belonged to a far-distant
+past already becoming blurred in his memory.
+
+So Paul lived his queer sedulous life, month after month, year after
+year, known among the studios as a quaint oddity, drawn out
+indulgently by the men, somewhat petted, monkey-fashion, by the
+women, forgotten by both when out of their presence, but developing
+imperceptibly day by day along the self-centring line. A kindly
+adviser suggested a gymnasium to keep him in condition for
+professional purposes. He took the advice, and in the course of time
+became a splendid young animal, a being so physically perfect as to
+be what the good vicar of Bludston had called him in tired jest--a
+lusus naturae. But though proud of his body as any finely formed
+human may honorably be, a far higher arrogance saved him from
+Narcissus vanity. It was the inner and essential Paul and not the
+outer investiture that was born to great things.
+
+In his eighteenth year he gradually awoke to consciousness of
+change. One of his classmates at the Polytechnic institute, with
+whom be had picked a slight acquaintance, said one evening as they
+were walking homeward together: "I shan't be coming here after next
+week. I've got a good clerkship in the city. What are you doing?"
+
+"I'm an artist's model," said Paul.
+
+The other, a pale and perky youth, sniffed. His name was Higgins.
+"Good Lord! What do you mean?"
+
+"I'm a model in the life class of the Royal Academy School," said
+Paul, proudly.
+
+"You stand up naked in front of all kinds of people for them to
+paint you?"
+
+"Of course," said Paul.
+
+"How beastly!" said Higgins.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Just that," said Higgins. "It's beastly!"
+
+A minute or two afterward he jumped on a passing the omnibus, and
+thenceforward avoided Paul at the Polytechnic Institute.
+
+This uncompromising pronouncement on the part of Higgins was a
+shock; but together with other incidents, chiefly psychological,
+vague, intangible phenomena of his spiritual development, it showed
+Paul the possibility of another point of view. He took stock of
+himself. From the picturesque boy he had grown into the physically
+perfect man. As a model he was no longer sought after for subject
+pieces. He was in clamorous demand at Life Schools, where he drew a
+higher rate of pay, but where he was as impersonal to the intently
+working students as the cast of the Greek torso which other students
+were copying in the next room. The intimacy of the studio, the
+warmth and the colour and the meretricious luxury were gone from his
+life. On the other hand he was making money. He had fifty pounds in
+the Savings Bank, the maximum of petty thrift which an
+incomprehensive British Government encourages, and a fair, though
+unknown, sum in an iron money-box hidden behind his washstand. Up to
+now he had had no time to learn how to spend money. When he took to
+smoking cigarettes, which he had done quite recently, he regarded
+himself as a man.
+
+Higgins's "How beastly!" rang in his head. Although he could not
+quite understand the full meaning of the brutal judgment, it brought
+him disquiet and discontent. For one thing, like the high-road, his
+profession led nowhither. The thrill of adventure had gone from it.
+It was static, and Paul's temperament was dynamic. He had also lost
+his boyish sense of importance, of being the central figure in the
+little stage. Disillusion began to creep over him. Would he do
+nothing else but this all his life? Old Erricone, the patriarchal,
+white-bearded Italian, the doyen of the models of London, came
+before his mind, a senile posturer, mumbling dreary tales of his
+inglorious achievements: how he was the Roman Emperor in this
+picture and Father Abraham in the other; how painters could not get
+on without him; how once he had been summoned from Rome to London;
+how Rossetti had shaken hands with him. Paul shivered at the thought
+of himself as the Erricone of a future generation.
+
+The next day was Saturday, and he had no sitting. The morning he
+spent in his small bedroom in the soothing throes of literary
+composition. Some time ago he had thought it would be a mighty fine
+thing to be a poet, and had tried his hand at verse. Finding he
+possessed some facility, he decided that he was a poet, and at once
+started an epic poem in rhyme on the Life of Nelson, the material
+being supplied by Southey. This morning he did the Battle of the
+Baltic.
+
+He put the glass to his blind eye,
+And said "No signals do I spy,"
+
+wrote Paul. Poetry taken at the gallop like this was a very simple
+affair, and Paul covered an amazing amount of ground.
+
+In the afternoon he walked abroad with Jane, who, having lengthened
+her skirts and put up her hair, was now a young woman looking older
+than her years. She too had developed. Her lank figure had rounded
+into pretty curves. Her sharp little Cockney face had filled out.
+She had a pleasant smile and a capable brow, and, correcting a
+tendency to fluffiness of hair of which she disapproved, and
+dressing herself neatly, made herself by no means unattractive.
+Constant association with Paul had fired her ambitions. Like him,
+she might have a destiny, though not such a majestic one,
+Accordingly she had studied stenography and typewriting, with a view
+to earning her livelihood away from the little shop, which did not
+offer the prospect of a dazzling career. At the back of her girlish
+mind was the desire to keep pace with Paul in his upward flight, so
+that he should not be ashamed of her when he sat upon the clouds in
+glory. In awful secrecy she practised the social accomplishments
+which Paul brought home. She loved her Saturday and Sunday
+excursions with Paul--of late they had gone far afield: the Tower,
+Greenwich, Ricmond--exploring London and making splendid
+discoveries such as Westminster Abbey and a fourpenny tea garden at
+Putney. She scarcely knew whether she cared for these things for
+themselves; but she saw them through Paul coloured by his vivid
+personality. Once on Chelsea Bridge he had pointed out a peculiarly
+ugly stretch of low-tide mud, and said: "Look at that." She, by
+unprecedented chance, mistaking his tone, had replied: "How lovely!"
+And she had thought it lovely, until his stare of rebuke and
+wonderment brought disillusion and spurting tears, which for the
+life of him he could not understand. It is very foolish, and often
+suicidal, of men to correct women for going into rapture. over mud
+flats. On that occasion, however, the only resultant harm was the
+conviction in the girl's heart that the presence of Paul turned mud
+flats into beds of asphodel. Then, just as she saw outer things
+through his eyes, she felt herself regarded by outer eyes through
+him. His rare and absurd beauty made him a cynosure whithersoever he
+went. London, vast and seething, could produce no such perfect
+Apollo. When she caught the admiring glances of others of her sex,
+little Jane drew herself up proudly and threw back insolent glances
+of triumph. "You would like to be where I am, wouldn't you?" the
+glance would say, with the words almost formulated in her mind. "But
+you won't. You never will be. I've got him. He's walking out with me
+and not with you. I like to see you squirm, you envious little cat."
+Jane was not a princess, she was merely a child of the people; but I
+am willing to eat my boots if it can be satisfactorily proved that
+there is a princess living on the face of the earth who would not be
+delighted at seeing another woman cast covetous eyes on the man she
+loved, and would not call her a cat (or its homonym) for doing so.
+
+On this mild March afternoon Paul and Jane walked in the Euston
+Road, he in a loose blue serge suit, floppy black tie, low collar
+and black soft felt hat (this was in the last century, please
+remember--epoch almost romantic, so fast does time fly), she in
+neat black braided jacket and sailor hat. They looked pathetically
+young.
+
+"Where shall we go?" asked Jane.
+
+Paul, in no mood for high adventure, suggested Regent's Park. "At
+least we can breathe there," said he.
+
+Jane sniffed up the fresh spring air, unconscious of the London
+taint, and laughed. "Why, what's the matter with the Euston Road?"
+
+"It's vulgar," said Paul. "In the Park the hyacinths and the
+daffodils will be out."
+
+What he meant he scarcely knew. When one is very young and out of
+tune with life, one is apt to speak discordantly.
+
+They mounted a westward omnibus. Paul lit a cigarette and smoked
+almost in silence until they alighted by the Park gates. As they
+entered, he turned to her suddenly. "Look here, Jane, I want to ask
+you something. The other night I told a man I was an artist's model,
+and he said 'How beastly!' and turned away as if I wasn't fit for
+him to associate with. What was he driving at?"
+
+"He was a nasty cad," said Jane promptly.
+
+"Of course he was," said Paul. "But why did he say it? Do you think
+there's anything beastly in being a model?"
+
+"Certainly not." She added in modification: "That is if you like
+it."
+
+"Well, supposing I don't like it?"
+
+She did not reply for a minute or two. Then: "If you really don't
+like it, I should be rather glad."
+
+"Why?" asked Paul.
+
+She raised a piteous face.
+
+"Yes, tell me," he insisted. "Tell me why you agree with that cad
+Higgins?"
+
+"I don't agree with him."
+
+"You must."
+
+They fenced for a while. At last he pinned her down.
+
+"Well, if you want to know," she declared, with a flushed cheek, "I
+don't think it's a man's job."
+
+He bit his lip. He had asked for the truth and he had got it. His
+own dark suspicions were confirmed. Jane glanced at him fearful of
+offence. When they had walked some yards he spoke. "What would you
+call a man's job?"
+
+Jane hesitated for an answer. Her life had been passed in a sphere
+where men carpentered or drove horses or sold things in shops.
+Deeply impressed by the knowledge of Paul's romantic birth and high
+destiny she could not suggest any such lowly avocations, and she did
+not know what men's jobs were usually executed by scions of the
+nobility. A clerk's work was certainly genteel; but even that would
+be lowering to the hero. She glanced at him again, swiftly. No, he
+was too beautiful to be penned up in an office from nine to
+six-thirty every day of his life. On the other hand her feminine
+intuition appreciated keenly the withering criticism of Higgins.
+Ever since Paul had first told her of his engagements at the Life
+Schools she had shrunk from the idea. It was all very well for the
+boy; but for the man--and being younger than he, she regarded him
+now as a man--there was something in it that offended her nice
+sense of human dignity.
+
+"Well," he said. "Tell me, what do you call a man's job?"
+
+"Oh, I don't know," she said in distress; "something you do with
+your hands or your brain."
+
+"You think being a model is undignified."
+
+"Yes."
+
+"So do I," said Paul. "But I'm doing things with my brain, too, you
+know," he added quickly, anxious to be seen again on his pedestal.
+"I am getting on with my epic poem. I've done a lot since you last
+heard it. I'll read you the rest when we get home."
+
+"That will be lovely," said Jane, to whom the faculty of rhyming was
+a never-ceasing wonder. She would sit bemused by the jingling lines
+and wrapt in awe at the minstrel.
+
+They sat on a bench by the flower-beds, gay in their spring charm of
+belated crocus and hyacinth and daffodil, with here and there a
+precocious tulip. Paul, sensitive to beauty, discoursed on flowers.
+Max Field had a studio in St. John's Wood opening out into a garden,
+which last summer was a dream of delight. He described it. When he
+came into his kingdom he intended to have such a garden.
+
+"You'll let me have a peep at it sometimes, won't you?" said Jane.
+
+"Of course," said Paul.
+
+The lack of enthusiasm in his tone chilled the girl's heart. But she
+did not protest. In these days, in spite of occasional outspokenness
+she was still a humble little girl worshipping her brilliant
+companion from afar.
+
+"How often could I come?" she asked.
+
+"That," said he, in his boyish pashadom, "would depend on how good
+you were."
+
+Obedient to the thought processes of her sex, she made a bee line to
+the particular.
+
+"Oh, Paul, I hope you're not angry."
+
+"At what?"
+
+"At what I said about your being a model."
+
+"Not a bit," said he. "If I hadn't wanted to know your opinion, I
+wouldn't have asked you."
+
+She brightened. "You really wanted to know what I thought?"
+
+"Naturally," said Paul. "You're the most commonsense girl I've ever
+met."
+
+Paul walked soberly home. Jane accompanied him--on wings.
+
+On Monday Paul went to the Life School and stripped with a heavy
+heart. Jane was right. It was not a man's job. The fact, too, of his
+doing it lowered him in her esteem, and though he had no romantic
+thoughts whatever with regard to Jane, he enjoyed being Lord
+Paramount in her eyes. He went into the studio and took up his pose;
+and as he stood on the model throne, conspicuous, glaring, the one
+startling central object, Higgins's "How beastly!" came like a
+material echo and smote him in the face. He felt like Adam when he
+first proceeded to his primitive tailoring. A wave of shame ran
+through him. He looked around the great silent room, at the rows of
+students, each in front of an easel, using his naked body for their
+purposes. A phrase flashed across his mind--in three years his
+reading had brought vocabulary--they were using his physical body
+for their spiritual purposes. For the moment he hated them all
+fiercely. They were a band of vampires. Habit and discipline alone
+saved him from breaking his pose and fleeing headlong. But there he
+was fixed, like marble, in an athlete's attitude, showing rippling
+muscles of neck and chest and arms and thighs all developed by the
+gymnasium into the perfection of Greek beauty, and all useless, more
+useless even, as far as the world's work was concerned, than the
+muscles of a racehorse. There he was fixed, with outstretched limbs
+and strained loins, a human being far more alive than the peering,
+measuring throng, far more important, called by a destiny infinitely
+higher than theirs. And none of them suspected it. For the first
+time he saw himself as they saw him. They admired him as a thing, an
+animal trained especially for them, a prize bullock. As a human
+being they disregarded him. Nay, in the depth of their hearts they
+despised him. Not one of them would have stood where he did. He
+would have considered it--rightly--as degrading to his manhood.
+
+The head of the school snapped his fingers impatiently and fussed up
+to the model-stand. "What's the matter? Tired already? Take it easy
+for a minute, if you like."
+
+"No," said Paul, instinctively stiffening himself. "I'm never
+tired."
+
+It was his boast that he could stand longer in a given pose than any
+other model, and thereby he had earned reputation.
+
+"Then don't go to pieces, my boy," said the head of the school, not
+unkindly. "You're supposed to be a Greek athlete and not Venus
+rising from the sea or a jelly at a children's party."
+
+Paul flushed all over, and insane anger shook him. How dared the
+mar. speak to him like that? He kept the pose, thinking wild
+thoughts. Every moment the strain grew less bearable, the
+consciousness of his degradation more intense. He longed for
+something to happen, something dramatic, something that would show
+the vampires what manner of man he was. He was histrionic in his
+anguish.
+
+A fly settled on his back--a damp, sluggish fly that had survived
+the winter--and it crawled horribly up his spine. He bore it for a
+few moments, and then his over-excited nerves gave way and he dashed
+his hand behind him. Somebody laughed. He raised his clenched fists
+and glared at the class.
+
+"Ay, yo' can laugh--you can laugh till yo' bust!" he cried,
+falling back into his Lancashire accent. "But yo'll never see me,
+here agen. Never, never, never, so help me God!"
+
+He rushed away. The head of the school followed him and, while he
+was dressing, reasoned with him.
+
+"Nay," said Paul. "Never agen. Aw'm doan wi' th' whole business."
+
+And as Paul walked home through the hurrying streets, he thought
+regretfully of twenty speeches which would have more adequately
+signified his indignant retirement from the profession.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+PAUL'S model-self being dead, he regarded it with complacency and
+set his foot on it, little doubting that it was another
+stepping-stone.
+
+He spoke loftily of his independence.
+
+"But how are you going to earn your living?" asked Jane, the
+practical.
+
+"I shall follow one of the arts," Paul replied. "I think I am a
+poet, but I might be a painter or a musician."
+
+"You do sing and play lovely," said Jane.
+
+He had recently purchased from a pawnshop a second-hand mandoline,
+which he had mastered by the aid of a sixpenny handbook, and he
+would play on it accompaniments to sentimental ballads which he sang
+in a high baritone.
+
+"I'll not choose yet awhile," said Paul, disregarding the tribute.
+"Something will happen. The 'moving finger' will point--"
+
+"What moving finger?"
+
+"The finger of Destiny," said Paul.
+
+And, as the superb youth predicted, something did happen a day or
+two afterwards.
+
+They were walking in Regent Street, and stopped, as was their wont,
+before a photographer's window where portraits of celebrities were
+exposed to view. Paul loved this window, bad loved it from the
+moment of discovery, a couple of years before. It was a Temple of
+Fame. The fact of your portrait being exhibited, with your style and
+title printed below, marked you as one of the great ones of the
+earth. Often he had said to Jane: "When I am there you'll be proud,
+won't you?"
+
+And she had looked up to him adoringly and wondered why he was not
+there already.
+
+It was Paul's habit to scrutinize the faces of those who had
+achieved greatness, Archbishops, Field-Marshals, Cabinet Ministers,
+and to speculate on the quality of mind that had raised them to
+their high estate; and often he would shift his position, so as to
+obtain a glimpse of his own features in the plate-glass window, and
+compare them with those of the famous. Thus he would determine that
+he had the brow of the divine, the nose of the statesman and the
+firm lips of the soldier. It was a stimulating pastime. He was born
+to great things; but to what great things he knew not. The sphere in
+which his glory should be fulfilled was as yet hidden in the mists
+of time.
+
+But this morning, instead of roving over the illustrious gallery,
+his eye caught and was fascinated by a single portrait. He stood
+staring at it for a long time, lost in the thrill of thought.
+
+At last Jane touched his arm. "What are you looking at?"
+
+He pointed. "Do you see that?"
+
+"Yes. It's--" She named an eminent actor, then in the heyday of
+his fame, of whom legend hath it that his photographs were bought in
+thousands by love-lorn maidens who slept with them beneath their
+pillows.
+
+Paul drew her away from the little knot of idlers clustered round
+the window. "There's nothing that man can do that I can't do," said
+Paul.
+
+"You're twenty times better looking," said Jane.
+
+"I have more intelligence," said Paul.
+
+"Of course," said Jane.
+
+"I'm going to be an actor," said Paul.
+
+"Oh!" cried Jane in sudden rapture. Then her sturdy common-sense
+asserted itself. "But can you act?"
+
+"I'm sure I could, if I tried. You've only got to have the genius to
+start with and the rest is easy."
+
+As she did not dare question his genius, she remained silent.
+
+"I'm going to be an actor," said he, "and when I'm not acting I
+shall be a poet."
+
+In spite of her adoration Jane could not forbear a shaft of
+raillery. "You'll leave yourself some time to be a musician, won't
+you?"
+
+He laughed. His alert and retentive mind had seized, long ago, on
+Rowlatt's recommendation at the Little Bear Inn, and he had
+developed, perhaps half consciously, a half sense of humour. A whole
+sense, however, is not congruous with the fervid beliefs and soaring
+ambitions of eighteen. Your sense of humour, that delicate
+percipience of proportion, that subrident check on impulse, that
+touch of the divine fellowship with human frailty, is a thing of
+mellower growth. It is a solvent and not an excitant. It does not
+stimulate to sublime effort; but it can cool raging passion. It can
+take the salt from tears, the bitterness from judgment, the keenness
+from despair; but in its universal manifestation it would
+effectually stop a naval engagement.
+
+Paul laughed. "You mustn't think I brag too much, Jane," said he.
+"For anybody else I know what I say would be ridiculous. But for me
+it's different. I'm going to be a great man. I know it. If I'm not
+going to be a great actor, I shall be a great something else. God
+doesn't put such things into people's heads for nothing. He didn't
+take me from the factory in Bludston and set me here with you,
+walking up Regent Street, like a gentleman, just to throw me back
+into the gutter."
+
+"But who said you were going back to the gutter?" asked Jane.
+
+"Nobody. I wanted to get right with myself. But--that getting
+right with oneself--do you think it egotistic?"
+
+"I don't quite know what that is."
+
+He defined the term.
+
+"No," she said seriously. "I don't think it is. Everybody has got a
+self to consider. I don't look on it as ego-what-d'-you-call-it to
+strike out for myself instead of going on helping mother to mind the
+shop. So why should you?"
+
+"Besides, I owe a duty to my parents, don't I?" he asked eagerly.
+
+But here Jane took her own line. "I can't see that you do,
+considering that they've done nothing for you."
+
+"They've done everything for me," he protested vehemently. "They've
+made me what I am."
+
+"They didn't take much trouble about it," said Jane.
+
+They squabbled for a while after the manner of boy and girl. At last
+she cried: "Don't you see I'm proud of you for yourself and not for
+your silly old parents? What have they got to do with me? And
+besides, you'll never find them."
+
+"I don't think you know what you're talking about," he said loftily.
+"It is time we were getting home."
+
+He walked on for some time stiffly, his head in the air, not
+condescending to speak. She had uttered blasphemy. He would find his
+parents, he vowed to himself, if only to spite Jane. Presently his
+ear caught a little sniff, and looking down, saw her dabbing her
+eyes with her handkerchief. His heart softened at once. "Never
+mind," said he. "You didn't mean it."
+
+"It's only because I love you, Paul," she murmured wretchedly.
+
+"That's all right," he said. "Let us go in here"--they were
+passing a confectioner's--"and we'll have some jam-puffs."
+
+Paul went to his friend Rowlatt, who had already heard, through one
+of his assistants who had a friend in the Life School, of the
+dramatic end of the model's career.
+
+"I quite sympathize with you," Rowlatt laughed. "I've wondered how
+you stuck it so long. What are you going to do now?"
+
+"I'm going on the stage."
+
+"How are you going to get there?"
+
+"I don't know," said Paul, "but if I knew an actor, he would be able
+to tell me. I thought perhaps you might know an actor."
+
+"I do--one or two," replied Rowlatt; "but they're just ordinary
+actors--not managers; and I shouldn't think they'd be able to do
+anything for you."
+
+"Except what I say," Paul persisted. "They'll tell me how one sets
+about being an actor."
+
+Rowlatt scribbled a couple of introductions on visiting cards, and
+Paul went away satisfied. He called on the two actors. The first, in
+atrabiliar mood, advised him to sweep crossings, black shoes, break
+stones by the roadside, cart manure, sell tripe or stocks and
+shares, blow out his brains rather than enter a profession over
+whose portals was inscribed the legend, Lasciate ogni speranza--he
+snapped his finger and thumb to summon memory as if it were a dog.
+
+"Voi che intrate," continued Paul, delighted at showing off the one
+Italian tag he had picked up from his reading. And filled with one
+of the purest joys of the young literary life and therefore
+untouched by pessimistic counsel, he left the despairing actor.
+
+The second, a brighter and more successful man, talked with Paul for
+a long time about all manner of things. Having no notion of his
+antecedents, he assumed him to be a friend of Rowlatt and met him on
+terms of social equality. Paul expanded like a flower to the sun. It
+was the first time he had spoken with an educated man on common
+ground--a man to whom the great imaginative English writers were
+familiar friends, who ran from Chaucer to Lamb and from Dryden to
+Browning with amazing facility. The strong wine of allusive talk
+mounted to Paul's brain. Tingling with excitement, he brought out
+all his small artillery of scholarship and acquitted himself so well
+that his host sent him off with a cordial letter to a manager of his
+acquaintance.
+
+The letter opened the difficult door of the theatre. His absurd
+beauty of face and figure, a far greater recommendation in the eyes
+of the manager who had begun rehearsals for an elaborate romantic
+production than a knowledge of The Faerie Queene, obtained for him
+an immediate engagement--to walk on as a gilded youth of Italy in
+two or three scenes at a salary of thirty shillings a week. Paul
+went home and spread himself like a young peacock before Jane, and
+said: "I am an actor."
+
+The girl's eyes glowed. "You are wonderful."
+
+"No, not I," replied Paul modestly. "It is my star."
+
+"Have you got a big part?" asked Jane.
+
+He laughed pityingly, sweeping back his black curls. "No, you silly,
+I haven't any lines to speak"--he had at once caught up the phrase--
+"I must begin at the beginning. Every actor has to do it."
+
+"You'll get mother and me orders to come and see you, won't you?"
+
+"You shall have a box," declared Paul the magnificent.
+
+Thus began a new phase in the career of Paul Kegworthy. After the
+first few days of bewilderment on the bare, bleak stage, where
+oddments of dilapidated furniture served to indicate thrones and
+staircases and palace doors and mossy banks; where men and women in
+ordinary costume behaved towards one another in the most ridiculous
+way and went through unintelligible actions with phantom properties;
+where the actor-manager would pause in the breath of an impassioned
+utterance and cry out, "Oh, my God! stop that hammering!" where
+nothing looked the least bit in the world like the lovely ordered
+picture he had been accustomed to delight in from the shilling
+gallery--after the first few days he began to focus this strange
+world and to suffer its fascination. And he was proud of the silent
+part allotted to him, a lazy lute-player in attendance on the great
+lady, who lounged about on terrace steps in picturesque attitudes.
+He was glad that he was not an unimportant member of the crowd of
+courtiers who came on in a bunch and bowed and nodded and pretended
+to talk to one another and went off again. He realized that he would
+be in sight of the audience all the time. It did not strike him that
+the manager was using him merely as a piece of decoration.
+
+One day, however, at rehearsal the leading lady said: "If my
+lute-player could play a few chords here--or the orchestra for
+him-it would help me tremendously. I've got all this long cross with
+nothing to say."
+
+Paul seized his opportunity. "I can play the mandoline," said he.
+
+"Oh, can you?" said the manager, and Paul was handed over to the
+musical director, and the next day rehearsed with a real instrument
+which he twanged in the manner prescribed. He did not fail to
+announce himself to Jane as a musician.
+
+Gradually he found his feet among the heterogeneous band who walk on
+at London theatres. Some were frankly vulgar, some were
+pretentiously genteel, a good many were young men of gentle birth
+from the public schools and universities. Paul's infallible instinct
+drew him into timid companionship with the last. He knew little of
+the things they talked about, golf and cricket prospects, and the
+then brain-baffling Ibsen, but he listened modestly, hoping to
+learn. He reaped the advantage of having played "the sedulous ape"
+to his patrons of the studios. His tricks were somewhat exaggerated;
+his sweep of the hat when ladies passed him at the stage door
+entrance was lower than custom deems necessary; he was quicker in
+courteous gesture than the young men from the universities; he bowed
+more deferentially to an interlocutor than is customary outside
+Court circles; but they were all the tricks of good breeding. More
+than one girl asked if he were of foreign extraction. He remembered
+Rowlatt's question of years ago, and, as then, he felt curiously
+pleased. He confessed to an exotic strain: to Italian origin. Italy
+was romantic. When he obtained a line part and he appeared on the
+bill, he took the opportunity of changing a name linked with
+unpleasant associations which he did not regard as his own.
+Kegworthy was cast into the limbo of common things, and he became
+Paul Savelli. But this was later.
+
+He made friends at the theatre. Some of the women, by petting and
+flattery, did their best to spoil him; but Paul was too ambitious,
+too much absorbed in his dream of greatness and his dilettante
+literary and musical pursuits, too much yet of a boy to be greatly
+affected. What he prized far more highly than feminine blandishments
+was the new comradeship with his own sex. Instinctively he sought
+them, as a sick dog seeks grass, unconsciously feeling the need of
+them in his mental and moral development. Besides, the attitude of
+the women reminded him of that of the women painters in his younger
+days. He had no intention of playing the pet monkey again. His
+masculinity revolted. The young barbarian clamoured. A hard day on
+the river he found much more to his taste than sporting in the shade
+of a Kensington flat over tea and sandwiches with no matter how
+sentimental an Amaryllis. Jane, who had seen the performance, though
+not from a box, a couple of upper-circle seats being all that Paul
+could obtain from the acting-manager, and had been vastly impressed
+by Paul's dominating position in the stage fairy-world, said to him,
+with a sniff that choked a sigh: "Now that you've got all those
+pretty girls around you, I suppose you soon won't think of me any
+longer?"
+
+Paul waved the dreaded houris away as though they were midges. "I'm
+sick of girls," he replied in a tone of such sincerity that Jane
+tossed her head.
+
+"Oh? Then I suppose you lump me with the rest and are sick of me
+too?"
+
+"Don't worry a fellow," said Paul. "You're not a girl-not in that
+sense, I mean. You're a pal."
+
+"Anyway, they're lots prettier than what I am," she said defiantly.
+
+He looked at her critically, after the brutal manner of obtuse
+boyhood, and beheld an object quite agreeable to the sight. Her
+Londoner's ordinarily colourless checks were flushed, her blue eyes
+shone bright, her little chin was in the air and her parted lips
+showed a flash of white teeth. She wore a neat simple blouse and
+skirt and held her slim, half-developed figure taut. Paul shook his
+head. "Jolly few of them--without grease-paint on."
+
+"But you see them all painted up."
+
+He burst into laughter. "Then they're beastly, near by! You silly
+kid, don't you know? We've got to make up, otherwise no one in front
+would be able to see our mouths and noses and eyes. From the front
+we look lovely; but close to we're horrors."
+
+"Well, how should I know that?" asked Jane.
+
+"You couldn't unless you saw us--or were told. But now you know."
+
+"Do you look beastly too?"
+
+"Vile," he laughed.
+
+"I'm glad I didn't think of going on the stage,"' she said, childish
+yet very feminine unreason combining with atavistic puritanism. "I
+shouldn't like to paint my face."
+
+"You get used to it," said Paul, the experienced.
+
+"I think it horrid to paint your face."
+
+He swung to the door--they were in the little parlour behind the
+shop--a flash of anger in his eyes. "If you think everything I do
+horrid, I can't talk to you."
+
+He marched out. Jane suddenly realized that she had behaved badly.
+She whipped herself. She had behaved atrociously. Of course she had
+been jealous of the theatre girls; but had he not been proving to
+her all the time in what small account he held them? And now he had
+gone. At seventeen a beloved gone for an hour is a beloved gone for
+ever. She rushed to the foot of the stairs on which his ascending
+steps still creaked.
+
+"Paul!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Come back! Do come back!"
+
+Paul came back and followed her into the parlour.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said.
+
+He graciously forgave her, having already arrived at the mature
+conclusion that females were unaccountable folk whose excursions
+into unreason should be regarded by man with pitying indulgence.
+And, in spite of the seriousness with which he took himself, he was
+a sunny-tempered youth.
+
+Barney Bill, putting into the Port of London, so to speak, in order
+to take in cargo, also visited the theatre towards the end of the
+run of the piece. He waited, by arrangement, for Paul outside the
+stage door, and Paul, coming out, linked arms and took him to a
+blazing bar in Piccadilly Circus and ministered to his thirst, with
+a princely air.
+
+"It seems rum," said Bill, wiping his lips with the back of his
+hand, after a mighty pull at the pint tankard--"it seems rum that
+you should be standing me drinks at a swell place like this. It
+seems only yesterday that you was a two-penn'orth of nothing jogging
+along o' me in the old 'bus."
+
+"I've moved a bit since then, haven't I?" said Paul.
+
+"You have, sonny," said Barney Bill. "But"-he sighed and looked
+around the noisy glittering place, at the smart barmaids, the
+well-clad throng of loungers, some in evening dress, the half-dozen
+gorgeous ladies sitting with men at little tables by the window--
+"I thinks as how you gets more real happiness in a quiet village
+pub, and the beer is cheaper, and--gorblimey!"
+
+He ran his finger between his stringy neck and the frayed stand-up
+collar that would have sawn his head off but for the toughness of
+his hide. To do Paul honour he had arrayed himself in his best--a
+wondrously cut and heavily-braided morning coat and
+lavender-coloured trousers of eccentric shape, and a funny little
+billycock hat too small for him, and a thunder-and-lightning
+necktie, all of which he had purchased nearly twenty years ago to
+grace a certain, wedding a. which he had been best man. Since then
+he had worn the Nessus shirt of a costume not more than half-a-dozen
+times. The twisted, bright-eyed little man, so obviously ill at ease
+in his amazing garb, and the beautiful youth, debonair in his
+well-fitting blue serge, formed a queer contrast.
+
+"Don't you never long for the wind of God and the smell of the
+rain?" asked Barney Bill.
+
+"I haven't the time," said Paul. "I'm busy all day long."
+
+"Well, well," said Barney Bill, "the fellow wasn't far wrong who
+said it takes all sorts to make a world. There are some as likes
+electric light and some as likes the stars. Gimme the stars." And in
+his countryman's way he set the beer in his tankard swirling round
+and round before he put it again to his lips.
+
+Paul sipped his beer reflectively. "You may find happiness and peace
+of soul under the stars," said he, sagely, "and if I were a free
+agent I'd join you tomorrow. But you can't find fame. You can't rise
+to great things. I want to--well, I don't quite know what I want
+to do," he laughed, "but it's something big."
+
+"Yuss, my boy," said Barney Bill. "I understand. You was always like
+that. You haven't come any nearer finding your 'igh-born
+parents?"--there was a twinkle in his eyes--"'ave yer?"
+
+"I'm not going to bother any more about them, whoever they are,"
+said Paul, lighting a cigarette. "When I was a kid I used to dream
+that they would find me and do everything for me. Now I'm a man with
+experience of life, I find that I've got to do everything for
+myself. And by George!"--he thumped the bar and smiled the radiant
+smile of the young Apollo--"I'm going to do it."
+
+Barney Bill took off his Luke's iron crown of a billycock hat and
+scratched his cropped and grizzled head. "How old are you, sonny?"
+
+"Nearly nineteen," said Paul.
+
+"By Gosh!" said Barney Bill.
+
+He put on his hat at a comfortable but rakish angle. He looked like
+a music-hall humourist. A couple of the gorgeous ladies giggled.
+
+"Yuss," said he, "you're a man with an experience of life--and
+nobody can do nothing for you but yerself. Poor old Barney Bill has
+been past helping you this many a year."
+
+"But I owe everything to you!" cried Paul, boyishly. "If it hadn't
+been for you, I should still be working in that factory at
+Bludston."
+
+Bill winked and nodded acquiescence as he finished his tankard.
+
+"I've often wondered--since I've grown up--what induced you to
+take me away. What was it?"
+
+Bill cocked his head on one side and regarded him queerly. "Now
+you're arsking," said he.
+
+Paul persisted. "You must have had some reason."
+
+"I suppose I was interested in them parents of yours," said Barney
+Bill.
+
+And that was all he would say on the subject.
+
+The days went on. The piece had run through the summer and autumn,
+and Paul, a favourite with the management, was engaged for the next
+production. At rehearsal one day the author put in a couple of
+lines, of which he was given one to speak. He now was in very truth
+an actor. Jane could no longer taunt him in her naughty moods
+(invariably followed by bitter repentance) with playing a dumb part
+like a trained dog. He had a real part, typewritten and done up in a
+brown-paper cover, which was handed to him, with lack of humour, by
+the assistant stage manager.
+
+In view of his own instantaneous success he tried to persuade Jane
+to go on the stage; but Jane had no artistic ambitions, to say
+nothing of her disinclination to paint her face. She preferred the
+prosaic reality of stenography and typewriting. No sphere could be
+too dazzling for Paul; he was born to great things, the
+consciousness of his high destiny being at once her glory and her
+despair; but, as regards herself, her outlook on life was cool and
+sober. Paul was peacock born; it was for him to strut about in
+iridescent plumage. She was a humble daw and knew her station. It
+must be said that Paul held out the stage as a career more on
+account of the social status that it would give to Jane than through
+a belief in her histrionic possibilities. He too, fond as he was of
+the girl with whom he had grown up, recognized the essential
+difference between them. She was as pretty, as sensible, as helpful
+a little daw as ever chattered; but the young peacock never for an
+instant forgot her daw-dom.
+
+Jane's profound common-sense reaped its reward the following spring
+when she found herself obliged to earn her livelihood. 'Her mother
+died, and the shop was sold, and an aunt in Cricklewood offered Jane
+a home, on condition that she paid for her keep. This she was soon
+able to do when she obtained a situation with a business firm in the
+city. The work was hard and the salary small; but Jane had a brave
+heart and held her head high. In her simple philosophy life was
+work, and dreaming an occasional luxury. Her mother's death grieved
+her deeply, for she was a girl of strong affections, and the
+breaking up of her life with Paul seemed an irremediable
+catastrophe.
+
+"It's just as well," said her aunt, "that there's an end of it, or
+you'd be making a fool of yourself over that young actor chap with
+his pretty face. I don't hold with any of them."
+
+But Jane was too proud to reply.
+
+On their last night together in the Barn Street house they sat alone
+in the little back-parlour as they had done for the last six years--all
+their impressionable childish days. It was the only home that
+Paul had known, and he felt the tragedy of its dissolution. They sat
+on the old horsehair sofa, behind the table, very tearful, very
+close together in spirit, holding each other's hands. They talked as
+the young talk--and the old, for the matter of that. She trembled
+at his wants unministered to in his new lodgings. He waved away
+prospective discomfort: what did it matter? He was a man and could
+rough it. It was she herself whose loss would be irreparable. She
+sighed; he would soon forget her. He vowed undying remembrance by
+all his gods. Some beautiful creature of the theatre would carry him
+off. He laughed at such an absurdity. Jane would always be his
+confidante, his intimate. Even though they lived under different
+roofs, they would meet and have their long happy jaunts together.
+Jane said dolefully that it could only be on Sundays, as their
+respective working hours would never correspond--"And you haven't
+given me your Sundays for a year," she added. Paul slid from the
+dark theme and, to comfort her, spoke glowingly of the future, when
+he should have achieved his greatness. He would give her a beautiful
+house with carriages and servants, and she would not have to work.
+
+"But if you are not there, what's the good of anything?" she said.
+
+"I'll come to see you, silly dear," he replied ingenuously.
+
+Before they parted for the night she threw her arms round his neck
+impulsively. "Don't quite forget me, Paul. It would break my heart.
+I've only you left now poor mother's gone."
+
+Paul kissed her and vowed again. He did not vow that he would be a
+mother to her, though to the girl's heart it seemed as if he did.
+The little girl was aching for a note in his voice that never came.
+Now, ninety-nine youths in a hundred who held, at such a sentimental
+moment, a comely and not uncared-for maiden in their arms, would
+have lost their heads (and their hearts) and vowed in the desired
+manner. But Paul was different, and Jane knew it, to her sorrow. He
+was by no means temperamentally cold; far from it. But, you see, he
+lived intensely in his dream, and only on its outer fringe had Jane
+her place. In the heart of it, hidden in amethystine mist, from
+which only flashed the diadem on her hair, dwelt the exquisite, the
+incomparable lady, the princess who should share his kingdom, while
+he knelt at her feet and worshipped her and kissed the rosy tips of
+her calm fingers. So, as it never entered his head to kiss the
+finger tips of poor Jane, it never entered his head to fancy himself
+in love with her. Therefore, when she threw herself into his arms,
+he hugged her in a very sincere and brotherly way, but kissed her
+with a pair of cast lips of Adonis. Of course he would never forget
+her. Jane went to bed and sobbed her heart out. Paul slept but
+little. The breaking up of the home meant the end of many precious
+and gentle things, and without them he knew that his life would be
+the poorer. And he vowed once more, to himself, that he would never
+prove disloyal to Jane.
+
+While he remained in London he saw what he could of her, sacrificing
+many a Sunday's outing with the theatre folk. Jane, instinctively
+aware of this, and finding in his demeanour, after examining it with
+femininely jealous, microscopic eyes, nothing perfunctory, was duly
+grateful. and gave him of her girlish best. She developed very
+quickly after her entrance into the worid of struggle. Very soon it
+was the woman and not the child who listened to the marvellous
+youth's story of the wonders that would be. She never again threw
+herself into his arms, and he never again called her a "little
+silly." She was dimly aware of change, though she knew that the
+world could hold no other man for her. But Paul was not.
+
+And then Paul went on tour.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+PAUL had been four years on the stage. Save as a memory they had as
+little influence on the colour of his after-life as his years at
+Bludston or his years in the studios. He was the man born to be
+king. The attainment of his kingdom alone mattered. The intermediary
+phases were of no account. It had been a period of struggle,
+hardship and, as far as the stage itself was concerned, disillusion.
+After the first year or so, the goddess Fortune, more fickle in
+Theatreland, perhaps, than anywhere else, passed him by. London had
+no use for his services, especially when it learned that he aspired
+to play parts. It even refused him the privilege of walking on and
+understudying. He drifted into the provinces, where, when he
+obtained an engagement, he found more scope for his ambitions. Often
+he was out, and purchased with his savings the bread of idleness. He
+knew the desolation of the agent's dingy stairs; he knew the
+heartache of the agent's dingy outer office.
+
+He was familiar, too, with bleak rehearsals, hours of listless
+waiting for his little scenes; with his powerlessness to get into
+his simple words the particular intonation required by an overdriven
+producer. Familiar, too, with long and hungry Sunday railway
+journeys when pious refreshment rooms are shut; with little mean
+towns like Bludston, where he and three or four of the company
+shared the same mean theatrical lodgings; with the dirty, insanitary
+theatres; with the ceaseless petty jealousies and bickerings of the
+ill-paid itinerant troupe. The discomforts affected Paul but
+little, he had never had experience of luxuries, and the life
+itself was silken ease compared with what it would have been but for
+Barney Bill's kidnapping. It never occurred to him to complain of
+nubbly bed and ill-cooked steak and crowded and unventilated
+dressing rooms; but it always struck him as being absurd that such
+should continue to be the lot of one predestined to greatness. There
+was some flaw in the working of destiny. It puzzled him.
+
+Once indeed, being out, but having an engagement ahead, and waiting
+for rehearsals to begin, he had found himself sufficiently
+prosperous to take a third-class ticket to Paris, where he spent a
+glorious month. But the prosperity never returned, and he had to
+live on his memories of Paris.
+
+During these years books were, as ever, his joy and his consolation.
+He taught himself French and a little German. He read history,
+philosophy, a smattering of science, and interested himself in
+politics. So aristocratic a personage naturally had passionate Tory
+sympathies. Now and again--but not often, for the theatrical
+profession is generally Conservative--he came across a furious
+Radical in the company and tasted the joy of fierce argument. Now
+and again too, he came across a young woman of high modern
+cultivation, and once or twice narrowly escaped wrecking his heart
+on the Scylline rock of her intellect. It was only when he
+discovered that she had lost her head over his romantic looks, and
+not over his genius and his inherited right to leadership, that he
+began to question her intellectual sincerity. And there is nothing
+to send love scuttling away with his quiver between his legs like a
+note of interrogation of that sort. The only touch of the morbid in
+Paul was his resentment at owing anything to his mere personal
+appearance. He could not escape the easy chaff of his fellows on his
+"fatal beauty." He dreaded the horrible and hackneyed phrase which
+every fresh intimacy either with man or woman would inevitably
+evoke, and he hated it beyond reason. There was a tour during which
+he longed for small-pox or a broken nose or facial paralysis, so
+that no woman should ever look at him again and no man accuse him in
+vulgar jest.
+
+He played small utility parts and understudied the leading man. On
+the rare occasions when he played the lead, he made no great hit.
+The company did not, after the generous way of theatre folks,
+surround him, when the performance was over, with a chorus of
+congratulation. The manager would say, "Quite all' right, my boy, as
+far as it goes, but still wooden. You must get more life into it."
+And Paul, who knew himself to be a better man in every way than the
+actor whose part he was playing, just as in his childhood days he
+knew himself to be a better man than Billy Goodge, could not
+understand the general lack of appreciation. Then he remembered the
+early struggles of the great actors: Edmund Kean, who on the eve of
+his first appearance at Drury Lane cried, "If I succeed I shall go
+mad!"; of Henry Irving (then at his zenith) and the five hundred
+parts he had played before he came to London; he recalled also the
+failure of Disraeli's first speech in the House of Commons and his
+triumphant prophecy. He had dreams of that manager on his bended
+knees, imploring him, with prayerful hands and streaming eyes, to
+play Hamlet at a salary of a thousand a week and of himself
+haughtily snapping his fingers at the paltry fellow.
+
+Well, which one of us who has ever dreamed at all has not had such
+dreams at twenty? Let him cast at Paul the first stone.
+
+And then, you must remember, Paul's faith in his vague but glorious
+destiny was the dynamic force of his young life. Its essential
+mystery kept him alert and buoyant. His keen, self-centred mind
+realized that his search on the stage for the true expression of his
+genius was only empirical. If he failed there, it was for him to try
+a hundred other spheres until he found the right one. But just as in
+his childish days he could not understand why he was not supreme in
+everything, so now he could not appreciate the charge of wooden
+inferiority brought against him by theatrical managers.
+
+He had been on the stage about three years when for the first time
+in his emancipated life something like a calamity befell him. He
+lost Jane. Like most calamities it happened in a foolishly
+accidental manner. He received a letter from Jane during the last
+three weeks of a tour--they always kept up an affectionate but
+desultory correspondence--giving a new address. The lease of her
+aunt's house having fallen in, they were moving to the south side of
+London. When he desired to answer the letter, he found he had lost
+it and could not remember the suburb, much less the street and
+number, whither Jane had migrated. A letter posted to the old
+address was returned through the post. The tour over, and he being
+again in London, he went on an errand of inquiry to Cricklewood,
+found the house empty and the neighbours and tradespeople ignorant.
+The poorer classes of London in their migrations seldom leave a
+trail behind them. Their correspondence being rare, it is not within
+their habits of life to fill up post-office forms with a view to
+the forwarding of letters. He could not write to Jane because he did
+not in the least know where she was.
+
+He reflected with dismay that Jane could, for the same reason, no
+longer write to him. Ironic chance had so arranged that the landlady
+with whom he usually lodged in town, and whose house he used as a
+permanent address, had given up letting lodgings at the beginning of
+the tour, and had drifted into the limbo of London. Jane's only
+guide to his whereabouts had been the tour card which he had sent
+her as usual, giving dates and theatres. And the tour was over. On
+the chance that Jane, not hearing from him, should address a letter
+to the last theatre on the list, he communicated at once with the
+local management. But as local managements of provincial theatres
+shape their existences so as to avoid responsibilities of any kind
+save the maintenance of their bars and the deduction of their
+percentages from the box-office receipts, Paul knew that it was
+ludicrous to expect it to interest itself in the correspondence of
+an obscure member of a fourth-rate company which had once played to
+tenth-rate business within its mildewed walls. Being young, he wrote
+also to the human envelope containing the essence of stale beer,
+tobacco and lethargy that was the stage doorkeeper. But he might
+just as well have written to the station master or the municipal
+gasworks. As a matter of fact Jane and he were as much lost to one
+another as if the whole of England had been primaeval forest.
+
+It was a calamity which he regarded with dismay. He had many friends
+of the easy theatrical sort, who knew him as Paul Savelli, a
+romantically visaged, bright-natured, charming, intellectual, and
+execrably bad young actor. But there was only one Jane who knew him
+as little Paul Kegworthy. No woman he had ever met--and in the
+theatrical world one is thrown willy-nilly into close contact with
+the whole gamut of the sex--gave him just the same close, intimate,
+comforting companionship. From Jane he hid nothing. Before all
+the others he was conscious of pose. Jane, with her cockney
+common-sense, her shrewdness, her outspoken criticism of follies,
+her unfailing sympathy in essentials, was welded into the very
+structure of his being. Only when he had lost her did he realize
+this. Amidst all the artificialities and pretences and
+pseudo-emotionalities of his young actor's life, she was the one
+thing that was real. She alone knew of Bludston, of Barney Bill, of
+the model days the memory of which made him shiver. She alone (save
+Barney Bill) knew of his high destiny--for Paul, quick to
+recognize the cynical scepticism of an indifferent world, had not
+revealed the Vision Splendid to any of his associates. To her he
+could write; to her, when he was in London, he could talk; to her he
+could outpour all the jumble of faith, vanity, romance, egotism and
+poetry that was his very self, without thought of miscomprehension.
+And of late she had mastered the silly splenetics of childhood. He
+had an uncomfortable yet comforting impression that latterly she had
+developed an odd, calm wisdom, just as she had developed a calm,
+generous personality. The last time he had seen her, his quick
+sensitiveness had noted the growth from girl to woman. She was
+large, full-bosomed, wide-browed, clear-eyed. She had not worried
+him about other girls. She had reproved him for confessed follies in
+just the way that man loves to be reproved. She had mildly soared
+with him into the empyrean of his dreams. She had enjoyed
+whole-heartedly, from the back row of the dress-circle, the play to
+which he had taken her--as a member of the profession he had, in
+Jane's eyes, princely privileges--and on the top of the
+Cricklewood omnibus she had eaten, with the laughter and gusto of
+her twenty years, the exotic sandwiches he had bought at the
+delicatessen shop in Leicester Square. She was the ideal sister.
+
+And now she was gone, like a snow-flake on a river. For a long while
+it seemed absurd, incredible. He went on all sorts of preposterous
+adventures to find her. He walked through the city day after day at
+the hours when girls and men pour out of their honeycombs of offices
+into the streets. She had never told him where she was employed,
+thinking the matter of little interest; and he, in his careless way,
+had never inquired. Once he had suggested calling for her at her
+office, and she had abruptly vetoed the suggestion. Paul was too
+remarkable a young man to escape the notice of her associates; her
+feelings towards him were too fine to be scratched by jocular
+allusion. After a time, having failed to meet her in the human
+torrents of Cheapside and Cannon Street, Paul gave up the search.
+Jane was lost, absolutely lost--and, with her, Barney Bill. He
+went on tour again, heavy-hearted. He felt that, in losing these
+two, he had committed an act of base ingratitude.
+
+He had been four years on the stage and had grown from youth into
+manhood. But one day at three-and-twenty he found himself as poor in
+pence, though as rich in dreams, as at thirteen.
+
+Necessity had compelled him to take what he could get. This time it
+was a leading part; but a leading part in a crude melodrama in a
+fit-up company. They had played in halls and concert rooms, on pier
+pavilions, in wretched little towns. It was glorious July Weather
+and business was bad--so bad that the manager abruptly closed the
+treasury and disappeared, leaving the company stranded a hundred and
+fifty miles from London, with a couple of weeks' salary unpaid.
+
+Paul was packing his clothes in the portmanteau that lay on the
+narrow bed in his tiny back bedroom, watched disconsolately by a
+sallow, careworn man who sat astride the one cane chair, his hat on
+the back of his head, the discoloured end of a cigarette between his
+lips.
+
+"It's all very well for you to take it cheerfully," said the latter.
+"You're young. You're strong. You're rich. You've no one but
+yourself. You haven't a wife and kids depending on you."
+
+"I know it makes a devil of a difference," replied Paul,
+disregarding the allusion to his wealth. As the leading man, he was
+the most highly paid member of the disastrous company, and he had
+acquired sufficient worldly wisdom to know that to him who has but a
+penny the possessor of a shilling appears arrogantly opulent. "But
+still," said he, "what can we do? We must get back to London and try
+again."
+
+"If there was justice in this country that son of a thief would get
+fifteen years for it. I never trusted the skunk. A fortnight's
+salary gone and no railway fare to London. I wish to God I had never
+taken it on. I could have gone with Garbutt in The White Woman--
+he's straight enough--only this was a joint engagement. Oh, the
+swine!"
+
+He rose with a clatter, threw his cigarette on the floor and stamped
+on it violently.
+
+"He's a pretty bad wrong 'un," said Paul. "We hadn't been going a
+fortnight before he asked me to accept half salary, swearing he
+would make it up, with a rise, as soon as business got better. Like
+an idiot, I consented."
+
+His friend sat down again hopelessly. "I don't know what's going to
+become of us. The missus has pawned everything she has got, poor old
+girl! Oh, it's damned hard! We had been out six months."
+
+"Poor old chap!" said Paul, sitting on the bed beside his
+portmanteau. "How does Mrs. Wilmer take it?"
+
+"She's knocked endways. You see," cried Wilmer desperately, "we've
+had to send home everything we could scrape together to keep the
+kids--there's five of them; and now--and now there's nothing
+left. I'm wrong. There's that." He fished three or four coppers from
+his pocket and held them out with a harsh laugh. "There's that after
+twenty years' work in this profession."
+
+"Poor old chap!" said Paul again. He liked Wilmer, a sober, earnest,
+ineffectual man, and his haggard, kindly-natured wife. They had put
+on a brave face all through the tour, letting no one suspect their
+straits, and doing both him and other members of the company many
+little acts of kindness and simple hospitality. In the lower
+submerged world of the theatrical profession in which Paul found
+himself he had met with many such instances of awful poverty. He had
+brushed elbows with Need himself. That morning he had given, out of
+his scanty resources, her railway fare to a tearful and despairing
+girl who played the low-comedy part. But he had not yet come across
+any position quite so untenable as that of Wilmer. Forty odd years
+old, a wife, five children, all his life given honestly to his
+calling--and threepence half-penny to his fortune.
+
+"But, good God I" said he, after a pause, "your kiddies? If you have
+nothing--what will happen to them?"
+
+"Lord knows," groaned Wilmer, staring in front of him, his elbows on
+the back of the chair and his head between his fists.
+
+"And Mrs. Wilmer and yourself have got to get back to London."
+
+"I've got the dress suit I wear in the last act. It's fairly new. I
+can get enough on it."
+
+"But that's part of your outfit--your line of business; you'll
+want it again," said Paul.
+
+Wilmer had played butlers up and down the land for many years. Now
+and again, when the part did not need any special characterization,
+he obtained London engagements. He was one of the known stage
+butlers.
+
+"I can hire if I'm pushed," said he. "It's hell, isn't it? Something
+told me not to go out with a fit-up. We'd never come down to it
+before. And I mistrusted Larkins--but we were out six months.
+Paul, my boy, chuck it. You're young; you're clever; you've had a
+swell education; you come of gentlefolk--my father kept a small
+hardware shop in Leicester--you have"--the smitten and generally
+inarticulate man hesitated--it well, you have extraordinary
+personal beauty; you have charm; you could do anything you like in
+the world, save act--and you can't act for toffee. Why the blazes
+do you stick to it?"
+
+"I've got to earn my living just like you," said Paul, greatly
+flattered by the artless tribute to his aristocratic personality and
+not offended by the professional censure which he knew to be just.
+"I've tried all sorts of other things-music, painting, poetry,
+novel-writing--but none of them has come off."
+
+"Your people don't make you an allowance?"
+
+"I've no people living," said Paul, with a smile--and when Paul
+smiled it was as if Eros's feathers had brushed the cheek of a
+Praxitelean Hermes; and then with an outburst half sincere, half
+braggart--"I've been on my own ever since I was thirteen."
+
+Wilmer regarded him wearily. "The missus and I have always thought
+you were born with a silver spoon in your mouth."
+
+"So I was," Paul declared from his innermost conviction. "But," he
+laughed, "I lost it before my teeth came and I could get a grip on
+it."
+
+"Do you mean to say," exclaimed Wilmer, "that you're not doing this
+for fun?"
+
+"Fun?" cried Paul. "Fun? Do you call this comic?" He waved his hand
+comprehensively, indicating the decayed pink-and-purple wall-paper,
+the ragged oil-cloth on the floor, the dingy window with its dingier
+outlook, the rickety deal wash-stand with the paint peeling off, a
+horrible clothless tray on a horrible splotchy chest of drawers,
+containing the horrible scraggy remains of a meal. "Do you think I
+would have this if I could command silken sloth? I long like hell,
+old chap, for silken sloth, and if I could get it, you wouldn't see
+me here."
+
+Wilmer rose and stretched out his hand. "I'm sorry, dear boy," said
+he. "The wife and I thought it didn't very much matter to you. We
+always thought you were a kind of young swell doing it for amusement
+and experience--and because you never put on side, we liked you."
+
+Paul rose from the bed and put his hand on Wilmer's shoulder. "And
+now you're disappointed?"
+
+He laughed and his eyes twinkled humorously. His vagabond life had
+taught him some worldly wisdom. The sallow and ineffectual man
+looked confused. His misery was beyond the relief of smiles.
+
+"We're all in the same boat, old chap," said Paul, "except that I'm
+alone and haven't got wife and kids to look after."
+
+"Good-bye, my boy," said Wilmer. "Better luck next time. But chuck
+it, if you can."
+
+Paul held his hand for a while. Then his left hand dived into his
+waistcoat pocket and, taking the place of his right, thrust three
+sovereigns into Wilmer's palm. "For the kiddies," said he.
+
+Wilmer looked at the coins in his palm, and then at Paul, and the
+tears spurted. "I can't, my boy. You must be as broke as any of
+us--you--half salary--no, my boy, I can't. I'm old enough to be
+your father. It's damned good of you--but it's my one pride
+left--the pride of both of us--the missus and me--that we've never
+borrowed money--"
+
+"But it isn't borrowed, you silly ass," cried Paul cheerfully. "It's
+just your share of the spoils, such as they are. I wish to God it
+was more." With both hands he clasped the thin, ineffectual fingers
+over the coins and pushed the man' with his young strength out of
+the door. "It's for the kiddies. Give them my love," he cried, and
+slammed the door and locked it from the inside.
+
+"Poor old chap!" said he.
+
+Then he went through his pockets and laid the contents on the narrow
+mantel-piece. These were a gold watch and chain, a cornelian heart
+fixed to the free end of the chain, a silver cigarette case, a
+couple of keys, one sovereign, four shillings, three pennies and two
+half-pennies. A trunk already fastened and filled with books and
+clothes, and the portmanteau on the bed, contained the rest of his
+possessions. In current coin his whole fortune amounted to one
+pound, four shillings and fourpence. Luckily he had paid his
+landlady. One pound four and fourpence to begin again at
+three-and-twenty the battle of life on which he had entered at
+thirteen. He laughed because he was young and strong, and knew that
+such reverses were foreordained chapters in the lives of those born
+to a glorious destiny. They were also preordained chapters in the
+lives of those born to failure, like poor old Wilmer. He was
+conscious of the wide difference between Wilmer and himself. Good
+Heavens! To face the world at forty-three, with wife and children
+and threepence-halfpenny, and the once attendant hope replaced by
+black-vestured doom! Poor Wilmer! He felt certain that Wilmer had
+not been able to pay his landlady, and he felt that he had been mean
+in keeping back the other sovereign.
+
+The sudden loss, however, of three-fourths of his fortune brought
+him up against practical considerations. The more he had in his
+pocket when he arrived in London, the longer could he subsist. That
+was important, because theatrical engagements are not picked up in a
+hurry. Now; the railway fare would swallow a goodly number of
+shillings. Obviously it was advisable to save the railway fare; and
+the only way to do this was to walk to London. His young blood
+thrilled at the notion. It was romantic. It was also inspiring of
+health and joy. He had been rather run down lately, and, fearful of
+the catastrophe which had in fact occurred, he had lived this last
+week very sparingly---chiefly on herrings and tea. A hundred and
+fifty miles' tramp along the summer roads, with bread and cheese and
+an occasional glass of beer to keep him going, would be just the
+thing to set him up again. He looked in the glass. Yes, his face was
+a bit pinched and his eyes were rather too bright. A glorious tramp
+to London, thirty or forty miles a day in the blazing and beautiful
+sunshine, was exactly what he needed.
+
+Joyously he unpacked his trunk and took from it a Norfolk jacket
+suit and stockings, changed, and, leaving his luggage with his
+landlady, who was to obey further instructions as to its disposal,
+marched buoyantly away through the sun-filled streets of the little
+town, stick in hand, gripsack on shoulder, and the unquenchable fire
+of youth and hope in his heart.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MISS URSULA WINWOOD, hatless, but with a cotton sunshade swinging
+over her shoulder, and with a lean, shiny, mahogany-coloured Sussex
+spaniel trailing behind, walked in her calm, deliberate way down the
+long carriage drive of Drane's Court. She was stout and florid, and
+had no scruples as to the avowal of her age, which was forty-three.
+She had clear blue eyes which looked steadily upon a complicated
+world of affairs, and a square, heavy chin which showed her capacity
+for dealing with it. Miss Ursula Winwood knew herself to be a
+notable person, and the knowledge did not make her vain or crotchety
+or imperious. She took her notability for granted, as she took her
+mature good looks and her independent fortune. For some years she
+had kept house for her widowed brother, Colonel Winwood,
+Conservative Member for the Division of the county in which they
+resided, and helped him efficiently in his political work. The
+little township of Morebury--half a mile from the great gates of
+Drane's Court--felt Miss Winwood's control in diverse ways.
+Another town, a little further off, with five or six millions of
+inhabitants, was also, through its newspapers, aware of Miss
+Winwood. Many leagues, societies, associations, claimed her as
+President, Vice-President, or Member of Council. She had sat on
+Royal Commissions. Her name under an appeal for charity guaranteed
+the deserts of the beneficiaries. What she did not know about
+housing problems, factory acts, female prisons, hospitals, asylums
+for the blind, decayed gentlewomen, sweated trades, dogs' homes and
+Friendly Societies could not be considered in the light of
+knowledge. She sat on platforms with Royal princesses, Archbishops
+welcomed her as a colleague, and Cabinet Ministers sought her
+counsel.
+
+For some distance from the porch of the red-brick, creeper-covered
+Queen-Anne house the gravel drive between the lawns blazed in the
+afternoon sun. For this reason, the sunshade. But after a while came
+an avenue of beech and plane and oak casting delectable shade on the
+drive and its double edging of grass, and the far-stretching riot of
+flowers beneath the trees, foxgloves and canterbury bells and
+campanulas and delphiniums, all blues and purples and whites, with
+here and there the pink of dog-roses and gorgeous yellow splashes of
+celandine. On entering the stately coolness, Miss Winwood closed her
+sunshade and looked at her watch, a solid timepiece harboured in her
+belt. A knitted brow betrayed mathematical calculation. It would
+take her five minutes to reach the lodge gate. The train bringing
+her venerable uncle, Archdeacon Winwood, for a week's visit would
+not arrive at the station for another three minutes, and the two fat
+horses would take ten minutes to drag from the station the landau
+which she had sent to meet him. She had, therefore, eight minutes to
+spare. A rustic bench invited repose. Graciously she accepted the
+invitation.
+
+Now, it must be observed that it was not Miss Winwood's habit to
+waste time. Her appointments were kept to the minute, and her
+appointment (self-made on this occasion) was the welcoming of her
+uncle, the Archdeacon, on the threshold of Drane's Court. But Miss
+Winwood was making holiday and allowed herself certain relaxations.
+Her brother's health having broken down, he had paired for the rest
+of the session and gone to Contrexeville for a cure. She had
+therefore shut up her London house in Portland Place, Colonel
+Winwood's home while Parliament sat, and had come to her brother's
+house, Drane's Court, her home when her presence was not needed in
+London. She was tired; Drane's Court, where she had been born and
+had lived all her girlhood's life, was restful; and the seat in the
+shade of the great beech was cunningly curved. The shiny,
+mahogany-coloured spaniel, prescient of siesta, leaped to her side
+and lay down with his chin on her lap and blinked his yellow eyes.
+
+She lay back on the seat, her hand on the dog's head, looking
+contentedly at the opposite wilderness of bloom and the glimpses,
+through the screen of trees and shrubs, of the sunlit stretches of
+park beyond. She loved Drane's Court. Save for the three years of
+her brother's short married life, it had been part of herself. A
+Winwood, a very younger son of the Family--the Family being that of
+which the Earl of Harpenden is Head (these things can only be
+written of in capital letters)--had acquired wealth in the dark
+political days of Queen Anne, and had bought the land and built the
+house, and the property had never passed into alien hands. As for
+the name, he had used that of his wife, Viscountess Drane in her own
+right,--a notorious beauty of whom, so History recounts, he was
+senilely enamoured and on whose naughty account he was eventually run
+through the body by a young Mohawk of a paramour. They fought one
+spring dawn in the park--the traditional spot could be seen from
+where Ursula Winwood was sitting.
+
+Ursula and her brother were proud of the romantic episode, and would
+relate it to guests and point out the scene of the duel. Happy and
+illusory days of Romance now dead and gone! It is not conceivable
+that, generations hence, the head of a family will exhibit with
+pride the stained newspaper cuttings containing the unsavoury
+details of the divorce case of his great-great-grandmother.
+
+This aspect of family history seldom presented itself to Ursula
+Winwood. It did not do so this mellow and contented afternoon.
+Starlings mindful of a second brood chattered in the old walnut
+trees far away on the lawn; thrushes sang their deep-throated
+bugle-calls; finches twittered. A light breeze creeping up the
+avenue rustled the full foliage languorously. Ursula Winwood closed
+her eyes. A bumble-bee droned between visits to foxglove bells near
+by. She loved bumble-bees. They reminded her of a summer long ago
+when she sat, not on this seat--as a matter of fact it was in the
+old walled garden a quarter of a mile away--with a gallant young
+fellow's arms about her and her head on his shoulder. A bumble-bee
+had droned round her while they kissed. She could never hear a
+bumble-bee without thinking of it. But the gallant young fellow had
+been killed in the Soudan in eighteen eighty-five, and Ursula
+Winwood's heart had been buried in his sandy grave. That was the
+beginning and end of her sentimental history. She had recovered from
+the pain of it all and now she .Loved the bumble-bee for invoking
+the exquisite memory. The lithe Sussex spaniel crept farther on her
+lap and her hand caressed his polished coat. Drowsiness
+disintegrated the exquisite memories. Miss Ursula Winwood fell
+asleep.
+
+The sudden plunging of strong young paws into her body and a series
+of sharp barks and growls awakened her with a start, and, for a
+second, still dazed by the drowsy invocation of the bumble-bee, she
+saw approaching her the gallant fellow who had been pierced through
+the heart by a Soudanese spear in eighteen eighty-five. He was dark
+and handsome, and, by a trick of coincidence, was dressed in loose
+knickerbocker suit, just as he was when he had walked up that very
+avenue to say his last good-bye. She remained for a moment tense,
+passively awaiting co-ordination of her faculties. Then clear awake,
+and sending scudding the dear ghosts of the past, she sat up, and
+catching the indignant spaniel by the collar, looked with a queer,
+sudden interest at the newcomer. He was young, extraordinarily
+beautiful; but he staggered and reeled like a drunken man. The
+spaniel barked his respectable disapproval. In his long life of
+eighteen months he had seen many people, postmen and butcher boys
+and casual diggers in kitchen gardens, whose apparent permit to
+exist in Drane's Court had been an insoluble puzzle; but never had
+he seen so outrageous a trespasser. With unparalleled moral courage
+he told him exactly what he thought of him. But the trespasser did
+not hear. He kept on advancing. Miss Winwood rose, disgusted, and
+drew herself up. The young man threw out his hands towards her,
+tripped over the three-inch-high border of grass, and fell in a
+sprawling heap at her feet.
+
+He lay very still. Ursula Winwood looked down upon him. The shiny
+brown spaniel took up a strategic position three yards away and
+growled, his chin between his paws. But the more Miss Winwood
+looked, and her blue eyes were trained to penetrate, the more was
+she convinced that both she and the dog were wrong in their
+diagnosis. The young man's face was deadly white, his cheeks gaunt.
+It was evidently a grave matter. For a moment or so she had a qualm
+of fear lest he might be dead. She bent down, took him in her
+capable grip and composed his inert body decently, and placed the
+knapsack he was wearing beneath his head. The faintly beating heart
+proved him to be alive, but her touch on his brow discovered fever.
+Kneeling by his side, she wiped his lips with her handkerchief, and
+gave herself up to the fraction of a minute's contemplation of the
+most beautiful youth she had ever seen. So there he lay, a new
+Endymion, while the most modern of Dianas hung over him, stricken
+with great wonderment at his perfection.
+
+In this romantic attitude was she surprised, first by the coachman
+of the landau and pair as he swung round the bend of the drive, and
+then by the Archdeacon, who leaned over the door of the carriage.
+Miss Winwood sprang to her feet; the coachman pulled up, and the
+Archdeacon alighted.
+
+"My dear Uncle Edward"--she wrung his hand--"I'm so glad to see
+you. Do help me grapple with an extraordinary situation."
+
+The Archdeacon smiled humorously. He was a spare man of seventy,
+with thin, pointed, clean-shaven face, and clear blue eyes like Miss
+Winwood's. "If there's a situation, my dear Ursula, with which you
+can't grapple," said he, "it must indeed be extraordinary."
+
+She narrated what had occurred, and together they bent over the
+unconscious youth. "I would suggest," said she, "that we put him
+into the carriage, drive him up to the house, and send for Dr.
+Fuller."
+
+"I can only support your suggestion," said the Archdeacon.
+
+So the coachman came down from his box and helped them to lift the
+young man into the landau; and his body swayed helplessly between
+Miss Winwood and the Archdeacon, whose breeches and gaiters were
+smeared with dust from his heavy boots. A few moments afterwards he
+was carried into the library and laid upon a sofa, and Miss Winwood
+administered restoratives. The deep stupor seemed to pass, and he
+began to moan.
+
+Miss Winwood and the housekeeper stood by his side. The Archdeacon,
+his hands behind his back, paced the noiseless Turkey carpet. "I
+hope," said he, "your doctor will not be long in coming."
+
+"It looks like a sunstroke," the housekeeper remarked, as her
+mistress scrutinized the clinical thermometer.
+
+"It doesn't," said Miss Winwood bluntly. "In sunstroke the face is
+either congested or clammy. I know that much. He has a temperature
+of 103."
+
+"Poor fellow!" said the Archdeacon.
+
+"I wonder who he is," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"Perhaps this may tell us," said the Archdeacon.
+
+From the knapsack, carelessly handled by the servant who had brought
+it in, had escaped a book, and the servant had laid the book on the
+top of the knapsack. The Archdeacon took it up.
+
+"Sir Thomas Browne's Religio Medici and Urn Burial. On the flyleaf,
+'Paul Savelli.' An undergraduate, I should say, on a walking tour."
+
+Miss Winwood took the book from his hands--a little cheap reprint.
+"I'm glad," she said.
+
+"Why, my dear Ursula?"
+
+"I'm very fond of Sir Thomas Browne, myself," she replied.
+
+Presently the doctor came and made his examination. He shook a grave
+head. "Pneumonia. And he has got it bad. Perhaps a touch of the sun
+as well." The housekeeper smiled discreetly. "Looks half-starved,
+too. I'll send up the ambulance at once and get him to the cottage
+hospital."
+
+Miss Winwood, a practical woman, was aware that the doctor gave wise
+counsel. But she looked at Paul and hesitated. Paul's destiny,
+though none knew it, hung in the balance. "I disapprove altogether
+of the cottage hospital," she said.
+
+"Eh?" said the doctor.
+
+The Archdeacon raised his eyebrows. "My dear Ursula, I thought you
+had made the Morebury Cottage Hospital the model of its kind."
+
+"Its kind is not for people who carry about Sir Thomas Browne in
+their pocket," retorted the disingenuous lady. "If I turned him out
+of my house, doctor, and anything happened to him, I should have to
+reckon with his people. He stays here. You'll kindly arrange for
+nurses. The red room, Wilkins,--no, the green--the one with the
+small oak bed. You can't nurse people properly in four-posters. It
+has a south-east aspect"--she turned to the doctor--"and so gets
+the sun most of the day. That's quite right, isn't it?"
+
+"Ideal. But I warn you, Miss Winwood, you may be letting yourself in
+for a perfectly avoidable lot of trouble."
+
+"I like trouble," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"You're certainly looking for it," replied the doctor glancing at
+Paul and stuffing his stethoscope into his pocket. "And in this
+case, I can promise you worry beyond dreams of anxiety."
+
+The word of Ursula Winwood was law for miles around. Dr. Fuller,
+rosy, fat and fifty, obeyed, like everyone else; but during the
+process of law-making he had often, before now, played the part of
+an urbane and gently satirical leader of the opposition.
+
+She flashed round on him, with a foolish pain through her heart that
+caused her to catch her breath. "Is he as bad as that?" she asked
+quickly.
+
+"As bad as that," said the doctor, with grave significance. "How he
+managed to get here is a mystery!" Within a quarter-of-an-hour the
+unconscious Paul, clad in a suit of Colonel Winwood's silk pyjamas,
+lay in a fragrant room, hung with green and furnished in old, black
+oak. Never once, in all his life, had Paul Kegworthy lain in such a
+room. And for him a great house was in commotion. Messages went
+forth for nurses and medicines and the paraphernalia of a luxurious
+sick-chamber, and-the lady of the house being absurdly anxious--
+for a great London specialist, whose fee, in Dr. Fuller's quiet
+eyes, would be amusingly fantastic.
+
+"It seems horrible to search the poor boy's pockets," said Miss
+Winwood, when, after these excursions and alarms the Archdeacon and
+herself had returned to the library; "but we must try to find out
+who he is and communicate with his people. Savelli. I've never heard
+of them. I wonder who they are."
+
+"There is an historical Italian family of that name," said the
+Archdeacon.
+
+"I was sure of it," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"Of what?"
+
+"That his people--are--well--all right."
+
+"Why are you sure?"
+
+Ursula was very fond of her uncle. He represented to her the fine
+flower of the Church of England--a gentleman, a scholar, an ideal
+physical type of the Anglican dignitary, a man of unquestionable
+piety and Christian charity, a personage who would be recognized for
+what he was by Hottentots or Esquimaux or attendants of wagon-lits
+trains or millionaires of the Middle West of America or Parisian
+Apaches. In him the branch of the family tree had burgeoned into the
+perfect cleric. Yet sometimes, the play of light beneath the surface
+of those blue eyes, so like her own, and the delicately intoned
+challenges of his courtly voice, exasperated her beyond measure.
+"It's obvious to any idiot, my dear," she replied testily. "Just
+look at him. It speaks for itself."
+
+The Archdeacon put his thin hand on her plump shoulder, and smiled.
+The old man had a very sunny smile. "I'm sorry to carry on a
+conversation so Socratically," said he. "But what is 'it'?"
+
+"I've never seen anything so physically beautiful, save the statues
+in the Vatican, in all my life. If he's not an aristocrat to the
+finger tips, I'll give up all my work, turn Catholic, and go into a
+nunnery--which will distress you exceedingly. And then"--she
+waved a plump hand--"and then, as I've mentioned before, he reads
+the Religio Medici. The commonplace, vulgar young man of to-day no
+more reads Sir Thomas Browne than he reads Tertullian or the
+Upanishads."
+
+"He also reads," said the Archdeacon, stuffing his hand into Paul's
+knapsack, against whose canvas the stiff outline of a book revealed
+itself--"he also reads"--he held up a little fat duodecimo--
+"the Chansons de Beranger."
+
+"That proves it," cried Miss Winwood.
+
+"Proves what?"
+
+His blue eyes twinkled. Having a sense of humour, she laughed and
+flung her great arm round his frail shoulders. "It proves, my
+venerable and otherwise distinguished dear, that I am right and you
+are wrong."
+
+"My good Ursula," said he, disengaging himself, "I have not advanced
+one argument either in favour of, or in opposition to, one single
+proposition the whole of this afternoon."
+
+She shook her head at him pityingly.
+
+The housekeeper entered carrying a double handful of odds and ends
+which she laid on the library table--a watch and chain and
+cornelian heart, a cigarette case bearing the initials "P.S.," some
+keys, a very soiled handkerchief, a sovereign, a shilling and a
+penny. Dr. Fuller had sent them down with his compliments; they were
+the entire contents of the young gentleman's pockets.
+
+"Not a card, not a scrap of paper with a name and address on it?"
+cried Miss Winwood.
+
+"Not a scrap, miss. The doctor and I searched most thoroughly."
+
+"Perhaps the knapsack will tell us more," said the Archdeacon.
+
+The knapsack, however, revealed nothing but a few toilet
+necessaries, a hunk of stale bread and a depressing morsel of
+cheese, and a pair of stockings and a shirt declared by the
+housekeeper to be wet through. As the Beranger, like the Sir Thomas
+Browne, was inscribed "Paul Savelli," which corresponded with the
+initials on the cigarette case, they were fairly certain of the
+young man's name. But that was all they could discover regarding
+him.
+
+"We'll have to wait until he can tell us himself," said Miss Winwood
+later to the doctor.
+
+"We'll have to wait a long time," said he.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+THE London physician arrived, sat up with Paul most of the night,
+and went away the next morning saying that he was a dead man. Dr.
+Fuller, however, advanced the uncontrovertible opinion that a man
+was not dead till he died; and Paul was not dead yet. As a matter of
+fact, Paul did not die. If he had done so, there would have been an
+end of him and this history would never have been written. He lay
+for many days at the gates of Death, and Miss Winwood, terribly
+fearful lest they should open and the mysterious, unconscious shape
+of beauty and youth should pass through, had all the trouble
+promised her by the doctor. But the gates remained shut. When Paul
+took a turn for the better, the London physician came down again and
+declared that he was living in defiance of all the laws of
+pathology, and with a graceful compliment left the case in the hands
+of Dr. Fuller. When his life was out of danger, Dr. Fuller
+attributed the miracle to the nurses; Ursula Winwood attributed it
+to Dr. Fuller; the London physician to Paul's superb constitution;
+and Paul himself, perhaps the most wisely, to the pleasant-faced,
+masterful lady who had concentrated on his illness all the resources
+of womanly tenderness.
+
+But it was a long time before Paul was capable of formulating such
+an opinion. It was a long time before he could formulate any opinion
+at all. When not delirious or comatose, he had the devil of pleurisy
+tearing at the wall of his lung like a wild cat. Only gradually did
+he begin to observe and to question. That noiseless woman in coot
+blue and white was a nurse. He knew that. So he must be in hospital.
+But the room was much smaller than a hospital ward; and where were
+the other patients? The question worried him for a whole morning.
+Then there was a pink-faced man in gold spectacles, Obviously the
+doctor. Then there was a sort of nurse whom he liked very much, but
+she was not in uniform. Who could she be? He realized that he was
+ill, as weak as a butterfly; and the pain when he coughed was
+agonizing. It was all very odd. How had he come here? He remembered
+walking along a dusty road in the blazing sun, his head bursting,
+every limb a moving ache. He also vaguely remembered being awakened
+at night by a thunder storm as he lay snugly asleep beneath a hedge.
+The German Ocean had fallen down upon him. He was quite sure it was
+the German Ocean, because he had fixed it in his head by repeating
+"the North Sea or German Ocean." Mixing up delirious dream with
+fact, he clearly remembered the green waves rearing themselves up
+first, an immeasurable wall, then spreading a translucent canopy
+beneath the firmament and then descending in awful deluge. He had a
+confused memory of morning sunshine, of a cottage, of a
+hard-featured woman, of sitting before a fire with a blanket round
+his shoulders, of a toddling child smeared to the eyebrows with dirt
+and treacle whom he had wanted to wash. Over and over again, lately,
+he had wanted to wash that child, but it had always eluded his
+efforts. Once he had thought of scraping it with a bit of hoof-iron,
+but it had turned into a Stilton cheese. It was all very puzzling.
+Then he had gone on tramping along the high road. What was that
+about bacon and eggs? The horrible smell offended his nostrils. It
+must have been a wayside inn; and a woman twenty feet high with a
+face like a cauliflower--or was it spinach?--or Brussels
+sprouts?--silly not to remember--one of the three, certainly--
+desired to murder him with a thousand eggs bubbling up against rank
+reefs of bacon. He had escaped from her somehow, and he had been
+very lucky. His star had saved him. It had also saved him from a
+devil on a red-hot bicycle. He had stood quite still, calm and
+undismayed, in the awful path of the straddling Apollyon whose head
+was girt around with yellow fire, and had seen him swerve madly and
+fall off the machine. And when the devil had picked himself up, he
+had tried to blast him with the Great Curse of the Underworld; but
+Paul had shown him his cornelian heart, his talisman, and the devil
+had remounted his glowing vehicle and had ridden away in a spume of
+flame. The Father of Lies had tried to pass himself off as a
+postman. The memory of the shallow pretence tickled Paul so that he
+laughed; and then he half fainted in pleuritic agony.
+
+After the interlude with the devil he could recollect little. He was
+going up to London to make his fortune. A princess was waiting for
+him at the golden gate of London, with a fortune piled up in a
+coach-and-six. But being very sick and dizzy, he thought he would sit
+down and rest in a great green cathedral whose doors stood
+invitingly open . . . and now he found himself in the hospital ward.
+Sometimes he felt a desire to question the blue-and-white nurse, but
+it seemed too much trouble to move his lips. Then in a flash came
+the solution of the puzzle, and he chuckled to himself over his
+cunning. Of course it was a dream. The nurse was a dream-nurse, who
+wanted to make him believe that she was real. But she was not clever
+enough. The best way to pay her out for her deception was to take no
+notice of her whatsoever. So comforted, he would go to sleep.
+
+At last one morning he woke, a miserably weak but perfectly sane
+man, and he turned his head from side to side and looked wonderingly
+at the fresh and exquisite room. A bowl of Morning Glow roses stood
+by his bedside, gracious things for fevered eyes to rest upon. A few
+large photographs of famous pictures hung on the walls. In front of
+him was the Santa Barbara of Palma Vecchio, which he recognized with
+a smile. He had read about it, and knew that the original was in
+Venice. Knowledge of things like that was comforting.
+
+The nurse, noticing the change, came up to him and spoke in a
+soothing voice. "Are you feeling better?"
+
+"I think so "said Paul. "I suppose I've been very ill."
+
+"Very ill," said the nurse.
+
+"This can't be a hospital?"
+
+"Oh, no. It's the house of some very kind, good friends. You don't
+know them," she added quickly, seeing him knit a perplexed brow.
+"You stumbled into their garden and fainted. And they're very
+anxious for you to get well and strong."
+
+"Who are they?" asked Paul.
+
+"Colonel and Miss Winwood. T hey will be so glad to see you better--at
+least Miss Winwood will; the Colonel's not at home."
+
+She lifted his head gently and smoothed his pillows, and ordained
+silence. Presently the doctor came, and spoke kindly. "You've had a
+narrow shave, my friend, and you're not out of the wood yet," said
+he. "And you'll have to go slow and take things for granted for some
+time."
+
+Then came Miss Winwood, whom he recognized as the puzzling but
+pleasant nurse out of uniform.
+
+"I don't know how to thank you for taking me in, a stranger, like
+this," said Paul.
+
+She smiled. "It's Providence, not me, that you must thank. You might
+have been taken ill by the roadside far away from anybody.
+Providence guided you here."
+
+"Providence or Destiny," murmured Paul, closing his eyes. It was
+absurd to feel so weak.
+
+"That's a theological question on which we won't enter," laughed
+Miss Winwood. "Anyhow, thank God, you're better."
+
+A little later she came to him again. "I've been so anxious about
+your people--you see, we've had no means of communicating with
+them."
+
+"My people?" asked Paul, surprised.
+
+"Yes. They must be wondering what has become of you."
+
+"I have no people," said Paul.
+
+"No people? What do you mean?" she asked sharply, for the moment
+forgetful of the sick room. She herself had hundreds of relations.
+The branches of her family tree were common to half the country
+families of England. "Have you no parents--brothers or sisters--?"
+
+"None that I know of," said Paul. "I'm quite alone in the world."
+
+"Have you no friends to whom I could write about you?"
+
+He shook his head, and his great eyes, all the greater and more
+lustrous through illness, smiled into hers. "No. None that count. At
+least--there are two friends, but I've lost sight of them for
+years. No--there's nobody who would be in the least interested to
+know. Please don't trouble. I shall be all right."
+
+Miss Winwood put her cool hand on his forehead and bent over him.
+"You? You, alone like that? My poor boy!"
+
+She turned away. It was almost incredible. It was monstrously
+pathetic. The phenomenon baffled her. Tears came into her eyes. She
+had imagined him the darling of mother and sisters; the gay centre
+of troops of friends. And he was alone on the earth. Who was he? She
+turned again.
+
+"Will you tell me your name?"
+
+"Savelli. Paul Savelli."
+
+"I thought so. It was in the two books in your knapsack. A
+historical Italian name."
+
+"Yes," said Paul. "Noble. All dead."
+
+He lay back, exhausted. Suddenly a thought smote him. He beckoned.
+She approached. "My heart--is it safe?" he whispered.
+
+"Your heart?"
+
+"At the end of my watch-chain."
+
+"Quite safe."
+
+"Could I have it near me?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+Paul closed his eyes contentedly. With his talisman in his hand, all
+would be well. For the present he need take thought of nothing. His
+presence in the beautiful room being explained, there was an end of
+the perplexity of his semi-delirium. Of payment for evident devoted
+service there could be no question. Time enough when he grew well
+and able to fare forth again, to consider the immediate future. He
+was too weak to lift his head, and something inside him hurt like
+the devil when he moved. Why worry about outer and unimportant
+matters? The long days of pain and illness slipped gradually away.
+Miss Winwood sat by his bedside and talked; but not until he was
+much stronger did she question him as to his antecedents. The
+Archdeacon had gone away after a week's visit without being able to
+hold any converse with Paul; Colonel Winwood was still at
+Contrexeville, whence he wrote sceptically of the rare bird whom
+Ursula had discovered; and Ursula was alone in the house, save for a
+girl friend who had no traffic with the sick-chamber. She had,
+therefore, much leisure to devote to Paul. Her brother's scepticism
+most naturally strengthened her belief in him. He was her discovery.
+He grew almost to be her invention. just consider. Here was a young
+Greek god--everyone who had a bowing acquaintance with ancient
+sculpture immediately likened Paul to a Greek god, and Ursula was
+not so far different from her cultured fellow mortals as to liken
+him to anything else--here was a young Phoebus Apollo, all the
+more Olympian because of his freedom from earthly ties, fallen
+straight from the clouds. He had fallen at her feet. His beauty had
+stirred her. His starlike loneliness had touched her heart. His
+swift intelligence, growing more manifest each day as he grew
+stronger, moved her admiration. He had, too, she realized, a sunny
+and sensuous nature, alive to beauty--even the beauty of the
+trivial things in his sickroom. He had an odd, poetical trick of
+phrase. He was a paragon of young Greek gods. She had discovered
+him; and women don't discover even mortal paragons every day in the
+week. Also, she was a woman of forty-three, which, after all, is not
+wrinkled and withered eld; and she was not a soured woman; she
+radiated health and sweetness; she had loved once in her life, very
+dearly. Romance touched her with his golden feather and, in the most
+sensible and the most unreprehensible way in the world, she fell in
+love with Paul.
+
+"I wonder what made you put that Santa Barbara of Palma Vecchio just
+opposite the bed," he said one day. He had advanced so far toward
+recovery as to be able to sit up against his pillows.
+
+"Don't you like it?" She turned in her chair by his bedside.
+
+"I worship it. Do you know, she has a strange look of you? When I
+was half off my head I used to mix you up together. She has such a
+generous and holy bigness--the generosity of the All-woman."
+
+Ursula flushed at the personal tribute, but let it pass without
+comment. "It's not a bad photograph; but the original--that is too
+lovely."
+
+"It's in the Church of Santa Maria Formosa in Venice," said Paul
+quickly.
+
+He had passed through a period of wild enthusiasm for Italian
+painting, and had haunted the National Gallery, and knew by heart
+Sir Charles Eastlake's edition of Kugler's unique textbook.
+
+"Ah, you know it?" said Ursula.
+
+"I've never been to Venice," replied Paul, with a sigh. "It's the
+dream of my life to go there."
+
+She straightened herself on her chair. "How do you know the name of
+the church?"
+
+Paul smiled and looked round the walls, and reflected for a moment.
+"Yes," said he in answer to his own questioning, "I think I can tell
+you where all these pictures are, though I've never seen them,
+except one. The two angels by Melozzo da Forli are in St. Peter's at
+Rome. The Sposalia of Raphael is in the Breza, Milan. The Andrea del
+Sarto is in the Louvre. That's the one I've seen. That little child
+of Heaven, playing the lute, is in the predella of an altar-piece by
+Vittore Carpaccio in the--in the--please don't tell me--in the
+Academia of Venice. Am I right?"
+
+"Absolutely right," said Miss Winwood.
+
+He laughed, delighted. At three and twenty, one--thank goodness!--
+is very young. One hungers for recognition of the wonder-inspiring
+self that lies hidden beneath the commonplace mask of clay. "And
+that," said he--"the Madonna being crowned--the Botticelli--is
+in the Uffizi at Florence. Walter Pater talks about it--you know--in
+his 'Renaissance'--the pen dropping from her hand--'the
+high, cold words that have no meaning for her--the intolerable
+honour'! Oh, it's enormous, isn't it?"
+
+"I'm afraid I've not read my Pater as I ought," said Miss Winwood.
+
+"But, you must!" cried Paul, with the gloriously audacious faith of
+youth which has just discovered a true apostle. "Pater puts you on
+to the inner meaning of everything--in art, I mean. He doesn't
+wander about in the air like Ruskin, though, of course, if you get
+your mental winnowing machine in proper working order you can get
+the good grain out of Ruskin. 'The Stones of Venice' and 'The Seven
+Lamps' have taught me a lot. But you always have to be saying to
+yourself, 'Is this gorgeous nonsense or isn't it?' whereas in Pater
+there's no nonsense at all. You're simply carried along on a full
+stream of Beauty straight into the open Sea of Truth."
+
+And Ursula Winwood, to whom Archbishops had been deferential and
+Cabinet Ministers had come for, guidance, meekly promised to send at
+once for Pater's 'Renaissance' and so fill in a most lamentable gap
+in her education.
+
+"My uncle, the Archdeacon," she said, after a while, "reminded me
+that the great Savelli was a Venetian general--of Roman family;
+and, strangely enough, his name, too, was Paul. Perhaps that's how
+you got the name."
+
+"That must be how," said Paul dreamily. He had not heard of the
+great general. He had seen the name of Savelli somewhere--also
+that of Torelli--and had hesitated between the two. Thinking it no
+great harm, he wove into words the clamour of his cherished romance.
+"My parents died when I was quite young--a baby--and then I was
+brought to England. So you see"--he smiled in his winning way--
+"I'm absolutely English."
+
+"But you've kept your Italian love of beauty."
+
+"I hope so," said Paul.
+
+"Then I suppose you were brought up by guardians," said Ursula.
+
+"A guardian," said Paul, anxious to cut down to a minimum the
+mythical personages that might be connected with his career. "But I
+seldom saw him. He lived in Paris chiefly. He's dead now."
+
+"What a poor little uncared-for waif you must have been."
+
+Paul laughed. "Oh, don't pity me. I've had to think for myself a
+good deal, it is true. But it has done me good. Don't you find it's
+the things one learns for oneself--whether they are about life or
+old china--that are the most valuable?"
+
+"Of course," said Miss Winwood. But she sighed, womanlike, at the
+thought of the little Paul--(how beautiful he must have been as a
+child!)--being brought up by servants and hirelings in a lonely
+house, his very guardian taking no concern in his welfare.
+
+Thus it came about that, from the exiguous material supplied by
+Paul, Miss Winwood, not doubting his gentle birth and breeding,
+constructed for him a wholly fictitious set of antecedents. Paul
+invented as little as possible and gratefully accepted her
+suggestions. They worked together unconsciously. Paul had to give
+some account of himself. He had blotted Bludston and his modeldom
+out of his existence. The passionate belief in his high and romantic
+birth was part of his being, and Miss Winwood's recognition was a
+splendid confirmation of his faith. It was rather the suppressio
+veri of which he was guilty than the propositio falsi. So between
+them his childhood was invested with a vague semblance of reality in
+which the fact of his isolation stood out most prominent.
+
+They had many talks together, not only on books and art, but on the
+social subjects in which Ursula was so deeply interested. She found
+him well informed, with a curiously detailed knowledge of the
+everyday lives of the poor. It did not occur to her that this
+knowledge came from his personal experience. She attributed it to
+the many-sided genius of her paragon.
+
+"When you get well you must help us. There's an infinite amount to
+be done."
+
+"I shall be delighted," said Paul politely.
+
+"You'll find I'm a terrible person to deal with when once I've laid
+my hands on anybody," she said with a smile. "I drag in all kinds of
+people, and they can't escape. I sent young Harry Gostling--Lord
+Ruthmere's son, you know--to look into a working girls' club in
+the Isle of Dogs that was going wrong. He hated it at first, but now
+he's as keen as possible. And you'll be keen too."
+
+It was flattering to be classified with leisured and opulent young
+Guardsmen; but what, Paul reflected with a qualm, would the kind
+lady say if she learned the real state of his present fortunes? He
+thought of the guinea that lay between him and starvation, and was
+amused by the irony of her proposition. Miss Winwood evidently took
+it for granted that he was in easy circumstances, living on the
+patrimony administered during his boyhood by a careless guardian. He
+shrank from undeceiving her. His dream was beginning to come true.
+He was accepted by one of the high caste as belonging to the world
+where princes and princesses dwelt serene. If only he could put the
+theatre behind him, as he had put the rest, and make a
+stepping-stone of his dead actor self! But that was impossible, or
+at least the question would have to be fought out between himself
+and fortune after he had left Drane's Court. In the meanwhile he
+glowed with the ambition to leave it in his newly acquired
+splendour, drums beating, banners flying, the young prince returning
+to his romantic and mysterious solitude.
+
+The time was approaching when he should get up. He sent for his
+luggage. The battered trunk and portmanteau plastered with the
+labels of queer provincial towns did not betray great wealth. Nor
+did the contents, taken out by the man-servant and arranged in
+drawers by the nurse. His toilet paraphernalia was of the simplest
+and scantiest. His stock of frayed linen and darned underclothes
+made rather a poor little heap on the chair. He watched the
+unpacking somewhat wistfully from his bed; and, like many another
+poor man, inwardly resented his poverty being laid bare to the eyes
+of the servants of the rich.
+
+The only thing that the man seemed to handle respectfully--as a
+recognized totem of a superior caste--was a brown canvas case of
+golf clubs, which he stood up in a conspicuous corner of the room.
+Paul had taken to the Ancient and Royal game when first he went on
+tour, and it had been a health-giving resource during the listless
+days when there was no rehearsal or no matinee--hundreds of
+provincial actors, to say nothing of retired colonels and such-like
+derelicts, owe their salvation of body and soul to the absurd but
+hygienic pastime--and with a naturally true eye and a harmonious
+body trained to all demands on its suppleness in the gymnasium,
+proficiency had come with little trouble. He was a born golfer; for
+the physically perfect human is a born anything physical you please.
+But he had not played for a long time. Half-crowns had been very
+scarce on this last disastrous tour, and comrades who included golf
+in their horizon of human possibilities had been rarer. When would
+he play again? Heaven knew! So he looked wistfully, too, at his set
+of golf clubs. He remembered how he had bought them--one by one.
+
+"Do you want this on the dressing table?" The nurse held up a little
+oblong case.
+
+It was his make-up box, luckily tied round with string.
+
+"Good heavens, no!" he exclaimed. He wished he could have told her
+to burn it. He felt happier when all his belongings were stowed away
+out of sight and the old trunk and portmanteau hauled out of the
+room.
+
+Colonel Winwood came home and asked his sister pertinent questions.
+He was a bald, sad-looking man with a long grizzling moustache that
+drooped despondently. But he had a square, obstinate chin, and his
+eyes, though they seldom smiled, were keen and direct, like Miss
+Winwood's. Romance had passed him by long since. He did not believe
+in paragons.
+
+"I gather, my dear Ursula," said he in a dry voice, "that our guest
+is an orphan, of good Italian family, brought up in England by a
+guardian now dead who lived in France. Also that he is of
+prepossessing exterior, of agreeable manners, of considerable
+cultivation, and apparently of no acquaintance. But what I can't
+make out is: what he does for a living, how he came to be half-
+starved on his walking tour--the doctor said so, you remember--
+where he was going from and where he is going to when he leaves our
+house. In fact, he seems to be a very vague and mysterious person,
+of whom, for a woman of your character and peculiar training, you
+know singularly little."
+
+Miss Winwood replied that she could not pry into the lad's private
+affairs. Her brother retorted that a youth, in his physically
+helpless condition, who was really ingenuous, would have poured out
+his life's history into the ears of so sympathetic a woman, and have
+bored her to tears with the inner secrets of his soul.
+
+"He has high aspirations. He has told me of them. But he hasn't
+bored me a bit," said Ursula.
+
+"What does he aspire to?"
+
+"What does any brilliant young fellow of two or three and twenty
+aspire to? Anything, everything. He has only to find his path."
+
+"Yes, but what is his path?"
+
+"I wish you weren't so much like Uncle Edward, James," said Ursula.
+
+"He's a damned clever old man," said Colonel Winwood, "and I wish he
+had stayed here long enough to be able to put our young friend
+through a searching cross-examination."
+
+Ursula lifted her finger-bowl an inch from the doiley and carefully
+put it down again. It was the evening of Colonel Winwood's arrival,
+and they were lingering over coffee in the great, picture-hung and
+softly lighted dining room. Having fixed the bowl in the exact
+centre of the doiley, she flashed round on her brother. "My dear
+James, do you think I'm an idiot?"
+
+He took his cigar from his lips and looked at her with not
+unhumorous dryness. "When the world was very young, my dear," said
+he, "I've no doubt I called you so. But not since."
+
+She stretched out her hand and tapped his. She was very fond of him.
+"You can't help being a man, my poor boy, and thinking manly
+thoughts of me, a woman. But I'm not an idiot. Our young friend, as
+you call him, is as poor as a church mouse. I know it. No, don't
+say, 'How?' like Uncle Edward. He hasn't told me, but Nurse has--a
+heart-breaking history of socks and things. There's the doctor's
+diagnosis, too. I haven't forgotten. But the boy is too proud to cry
+poverty among strangers. He keeps his end up like a man. To hear him
+talk, one would think he not only hadn't a care in the world, but
+that he commanded the earth. How can one help admiring the boy's
+pluck and--that's where my reticence comes in--respecting the
+boy's reserve?"
+
+"H'm!" said Colonel Winwood.
+
+"But, good gracious, Jim, dear, supposing you--or any of us--
+men, I mean--had been in this boy's extraordinary position--
+would you have acted differently? You would have died rather than
+give your poverty away to absolute strangers to whom you were
+indebted, in the way this boy is indebted to us. Good God, jim"--
+she sent her dessert knife skimming across the table--"don't you
+see? Any reference to poverty would be an invitation--a veiled
+request for further help. To a gentleman like Paul Savelli, the
+thing's unthinkable."
+
+Colonel Winwood selected a fresh cigar, clipped off the end, and lit
+it from a silver spirit lamp by his side. He blew out the first
+exquisite puff--the smoker's paradise would be the one first full
+and fragrant, virginal puff of an infinite succession of perfect
+cigars--looked anxiously at the glowing point to see that it was
+exactly lighted, and leaned back in his chair.
+
+"What you say, dear," said he, "is plausible. Plausible almost to
+the point of conviction. But there's a hole somewhere in your
+argument, I'm sure, and I'm too tired after my journey to find it."
+
+Thus, as the stars in their courses fought against Sisera, so did
+they fight for Paul; and in both cases they used a woman as their
+instrument.
+
+Colonel Winwood, in spite of a masculine air of superiority, joined
+with the Archbishops and Cabinet Ministers above referred to in
+their appreciation of his sister's judgment. After all, what
+business of his were the private affairs of his involuntary guest?
+He paid him a visit the next day, and found him lying on a couch by
+the sunny window, clad in dressing gown and slippers. Paul rose
+politely, though he winced with pain.
+
+"Don't get up, please. I'm Colonel Winwood."
+
+They shook hands. Paul began to wheel an armchair from the bedside,
+but Colonel Winwood insisted on his lying down again and drew up the
+chair himself. "I'm afraid," said Paul, "I've been a sad trespasser
+on your hospitality. Miss Winwood must have told you it has scarcely
+been my fault; but I don't know how to express my thanks."
+
+As Paul made it, the little speech could not have been better.
+Colonel Winwood, who (like the seniors of every age) deplored the
+lack of manners of the rising generation, was pleased by the ever so
+little elaborate courtesy.
+
+"I'm only too glad we've pulled you round. You've had a bad time, I
+hear."
+
+Paul smiled. "Pretty bad. If it hadn't been for Miss Winwood and all
+she has done for me, I should have pegged out."
+
+"My sister's a notable woman," said the Colonel. "When she sets out
+to do a thing she does it thoroughly."
+
+"I owe her my life," said Paul simply.
+
+There was a pause. The two men, both bright-eyed, looked at each
+other for the fraction of a second. One, the aristocrat secure of
+his wealth, of his position, of himself, with no illusion left him
+save pride of birth, no dream save that of an England mighty and
+prosperous under continuous centuries of Tory rule, no memories but
+of stainless honour--he had fought gallantly for his Queen, he had
+lived like a noble gentleman, he had done his country disinterested
+service--no ambition but to keep himself on the level of the ideal
+which he had long since attained; the other the creation of nothing
+but of dreams, the child of the gutter, the adventurer, the
+vagabond, with no address, not even a back room over a sweetstuff
+shop in wide England, the possessor of a few suits of old clothes
+and one pound, one shilling and a penny, with nothing in front of
+him but the vast blankness of 'life, nothing behind him save
+memories of sordid struggle, with nothing to guide him, nothing to
+set him on his way with thrilling pulse and quivering fibres save
+the Vision Splendid, the glorious Hope, the unconquerable Faith. In
+the older man's eyes Paul read the calm, stern certainty of things
+both born to and achieved; and Colonel Winwood saw in the young
+man's eyes, as in a glass darkly, the reflection of the Vision.
+
+"And yours is a very young life," said he. "Gad! it must be
+wonderful to be twenty. 'Rich in the glory of my rising sun.' You
+know your Thackeray?"
+
+"'Riche de ma jeunesse,'" laughed Paul. "Thackeray went one better
+than Beranger, that time."
+
+"I forgot," said Colonel Winwood. "My sister told me. You go about
+with Beranger as a sort of pocket Bible."
+
+Paul laughed again. "When one is on the tramp one's choice of books
+is limited by their cubical content. One couldn't take Gibbon, for
+instance, or a complete Balzac."
+
+Colonel Winwood tugged at his drooping moustache and again
+scrutinized the frank and exceedingly attractive youth. His
+astonishing perfection of feature was obvious to anybody. Yet any
+inconsiderable human--a peasant of the Campagna, a Venetian
+gondolier, a swaggering brigand of Macedonia--could be
+astonishingly beautiful. And, being astonishingly beautiful, that
+was the beginning and end of him. But behind this merely physical
+attractiveness of his guest glowed a lambent intelligence, quick as
+lightning. There was humorous challenge in those laughing and lucent
+dark eyes.
+
+"Do you know your Balzac?" he asked.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Paul.
+
+"I wonder if you do," said Colonel Winwood. "I'm rather a Balzacian
+myself."
+
+"I can't say I've read all Balzac. That's a colossal order," said
+Paul, rather excited-for, in his limited acquaintance with
+cultivated folk, Colonel Winwood was the only human being who could
+claim acquaintance with one of the literary gods of his idolatry--
+"but I know him pretty well. I can't stand his 'Theatre'--that's
+footle--but the big things--'Le Pere Goriot,' 'La Cousine Bette,'
+'Cesar Birotteau'--what a great book 'Cesar Birotteau' is!--"
+
+"You're right," said Colonel Winwood, forgetful of any possible
+barriers between himself and the young enthusiast. "It's one of the
+four or five great books, and very few people recognize it."
+
+"'Le Lys dans la Vallee,'" said Paul.
+
+"There's another--"
+
+And they talked for half an hour of the Baron Nucingen, and
+Rastignac, and Hulot, and Bixiou, and Lousteau, and Gobsec, and
+Gaudissart, and Vautrin, and many another vivid personage in the
+human comedy.
+
+"That man could have gone on writing for a hundred years," cried
+Paul, "and he could have exhausted all the possibilities of human
+life."
+
+Colonel Winwood smiled courteously. "We have a bond in Balzac," said
+he. "But I must go. My sister said I mustn't tire you." He rose.
+"We're having a lot of people down here this week for the shooting.
+There'll be good sport. Pity you're not well enough to join us."
+
+Paul smiled. He had one of his flashes of tact, "I'm afraid," said
+he modestly, "that I've never fired off a gun in my life."
+
+"What?" cried the Colonel.
+
+"It's true."
+
+Colonel Winwood looked at him once more. "It's not many young men,"
+said he, "who would dare to make such a confession."
+
+"But what is the good of lying?" asked Paul, with the eyes of a
+cherub.
+
+"None that I know of," replied the Colonel. He returned to his chair
+and rested his hand on the back. "You play golf, anyhow," said he,
+pointing to the brown canvas bag in the corner.
+
+"Oh, yes," said Paul.
+
+"Any good?"
+
+"Fair to middling."
+
+"What's your handicap?" asked the Colonel, an enthusiastic though
+inglorious practitioner of the game.
+
+"One," said Paul.
+
+"The deuce it is!" cried the Colonel. "Mine is fifteen. You must
+give me a lesson or two when you pull round. We've a capital course
+here."
+
+"That's very kind of you," said Paul, "but I'm afraid I shall be
+well enough for ordinary purposes long before I'm able to handle a
+golf club."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"This silly pleurisy. It will hang about for ages!"
+
+"Well?"
+
+"I'll have to go my ways from here long before I can play."
+
+"Any great hurry?"
+
+"I can't go on accepting your wonderful hospitality indefinitely,"
+said Paul.
+
+"That's nonsense. Stay as long as ever you like."
+
+"If I did that," said Paul, "I would stay on forever."
+
+The Colonel smiled and shook hands with him. In the ordinary way of
+social life this was quite an unnecessary thing to do. But he acted
+according to the impulses common to a thousand of his type--and a
+fine type--in England. Setting aside the mere romantic exterior of
+a Macedonian brigand, here was a young man of the period with
+astonishingly courteous manners, of--and this was of secondary
+consideration--of frank and winning charm, with a free-and-easy
+intimacy with Balzac, of fearless truthfulness regarding his
+deficiencies, and with a golf handicap of one. The Colonel's hand
+and heart went out in instinctive coordination. The Colonel
+Winwoods of this country are not gods; they are very humanly
+fallible; but of such is the Kingdom of England.
+
+"At any rate," said he, "you mustn't dream of leaving us yet."
+
+He went downstairs and met his sister in the hall.
+
+"Well?" she asked, with just a gleam of quizzicality in her eyes,
+for she knew whence he had come.
+
+"One of these days I'll take him out and teach him to shoot," said
+the Colonel.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+THE shooting party came, and Paul, able to leave his room and sit in
+the sunshine and crawl about the lawn and come down to dinner,
+though early retirement was prescribed, went among the strange men
+and women of the aristocratic caste like one in a dream of bliss.
+Much of their talk, sport and personalities, was unintelligible;
+every man seemed to have killed everything everywhere and every
+woman seemed to know everybody and everybody's intimate secrets. So
+when conversation was general, Paul, who had killed nothing and knew
+nobody, listened in silent perplexity. But even the perplexity was a
+happiness. It was all so new, so fascinating. For was not this world
+of aristocrats--there were lords and ladies and great personages
+whose names he had read in the newspapers--his rightful
+inheritance, the sphere to which he had been born? And they did not
+always talk of things which he did not understand. They received him
+among them with kind welcome and courtesy. No one asked him whence
+he came and whither he was going. They took him for granted, as a
+guest of the Winwoods. Of course if Paul had seen himself on the way
+to rival the famous actor whose photograph in the window of the
+London Stereoscopic Company had inspired him with histrionic
+ambitions, he would have been at no pains to hide his profession.
+But between the darling of the London stage and a seedy member of a
+fit-up company lies a great gulf. He shrank from being associated
+with Mr. Vincent Crummles. One thing, however, of invaluable use he
+had brought with him from Theatreland--the dress suit which formed
+part of his stage wardrobe. There were other things, too, which he
+did not appreciate--ease of manner, victory over the lingering
+Lancastrian burr, and a knowledge of what to do with his feet and
+hands.
+
+One day he had a great shock. The house party were assembling in the
+drawing-room, when in sailed the great lady, the ever-memorable
+great lady, the Marchioness of Chudley, who had spoken to him and
+smiled on him in the Bludston factory. Fear laid a cold grip on his
+heart. He thought of pleading weakness and running away to the safe
+obscurity of his room. But it was too late. The procession was
+formed immediately, and he found himself in his place with his
+partner on his arm. Dinner was torture. What he said to his
+neighbours he knew not. He dared not look up the table where Lady
+Chudley sat in full view. Every moment he expected--ridiculous
+apprehension of an accusing conscience--Colonel Winwood to come
+and tap him on the shoulder and bid him begone. But nothing
+happened. Afterwards, in the drawing-room, Fate drove him into a
+corner near Lady Chudley, whose eyes he met clear upon him. He
+turned away hurriedly and plunged into conversation with a young
+soldier standing by. Presently he heard Miss Winwood's voice.
+
+"Mr. Savelli, I want to introduce you to Lady Chudley."
+
+The fear gripped him harder and colder. How could he explain that he
+was occupying his rightful place in that drawing-room? But he held
+himself up and resolved to face the peril like a man. Lady Chudley
+smiled on him graciously--how well he remembered her smile!--and
+made him sit by her side. She was a dark, stately woman of forty,
+giving the impression that she could look confoundedly cold and
+majestic when she chose. She wore diamonds in her hair and a broad
+diamond clasp to the black velvet round her throat.
+
+"Miss Winwood has been telling me what an awful time you've had, Mr.
+Savelli," she said pleasantly. "Now, whenever I hear of people
+having had pneumonia I always want to talk to them and sympathize
+with them."
+
+"That's very kind of you, Lady Chudley," said Paul.
+
+"Only a fellow-feeling. I nearly died of it once myself. I hope
+you're getting strong."
+
+"I'm feeling my strength returning every day. It's a queer new joy."
+
+"Isn't it?"
+
+They discussed the exhilaration of convalescence. It was a
+'wonderful springtide. They reverted to the preceding misery.
+
+"You're far luckier than I was," she remarked. "You've had a comfy
+English house to be ill in. I was in a stone-cold palazzo in
+Florence--in winter. Ugh! Shall I ever forget it? I don't want to
+speak evil of Italy to an Italian--"
+
+"I'm only Italian by descent," exclaimed Paul, with a laugh, his
+first frank laugh during the whole of that gloomy evening. And he
+laughed louder than was necessary, for, as it suddenly dawned upon
+him that he did not in the least recall to her mind the grimy little
+Bludston boy, the cold hand of fear was dissolved in a warm gush of
+exultation. "You can abuse Italy or any country but England as much
+as you like."
+
+"Why mustn't I abuse England?"
+
+"Because it's the noblest country in the world," he cried; and,
+seeing approval in her eyes, he yielded to an odd temptation. "If
+one could only do something great for her!"
+
+"What would you like to do?" she asked.
+
+"Anything. Sing for her. Work for her. Die for her. It makes one so
+impatient to sit down and do nothing. If one could only stir her up
+to a sense of her nationality!" he went on, less lyrically, though
+with the same fine enthusiasm. "She seems to be losing it, letting
+the smaller nations assert theirs to such an extent that she is
+running the risk of becoming a mere geographical expression. She has
+merged herself in the Imperial Ideal. That's magnificent; but the
+Empire ought to realize her as the great Motherheart. If England
+could only wake up as England again, what a wonderful thing it would
+be!"
+
+"It would," said Lady Chudley. "And you would like to be the
+awakener?"
+
+"Ay!" said Paul--"what a dream!"
+
+"There was never a dream worth calling a dream that did not come
+true."
+
+"Do you believe that, too?" he asked delightedly. "I've held to it
+all my life."
+
+Colonel Winwood, who had been moving hostwise from group to group in
+the great drawing-room, where already a couple of bridge tables had
+been arranged, approached slowly. Lady Chudley gave him a laughing
+glance of dismissal. Paul's spacious Elizabethan patriotism, rare--
+at least in expression--among the young men of the day, interested
+and amused her.
+
+"Have you dreamed all your life of being the Awakener of England?"
+
+"I have dreamed of being so many things," he said, anxious not to
+commit himself. For, truth to say, this new ambition was but a
+couple of minutes old.
+
+It had sprung into life, however, like Pallas Athene, all armed and
+equipped.
+
+"And they have all come true?"
+
+His great eyes laughed and his curly head bent ever so slightly.
+"Those worth calling dreams," said he.
+
+A little later in the evening, when on retiring to an early bed he
+was wishing Miss Winwood good night, she said, "You're a lucky young
+man."
+
+"I know--but--" He looked smiling inquiry.
+
+"Lady Chudley's the most valuable woman in England for a young man
+to get on the right side of."
+
+Paul went to bed dazed. The great lady who had recognized the divine
+fire in the factory boy had again recognized it in the grown man.
+She had all but said that, if he chose, he could be the Awakener of
+England. The Awakener of England! The watchword of his new-born
+ambition rang in his brain until he fell asleep.
+
+The time soon came when the prospective Awakener of England awoke to
+the fact that he must fare forth into the sleeping land with but a
+guinea in his pocket. The future did not dismay him, for he knew now
+that his dreams came true. But he was terribly anxious, more anxious
+than ever, to leave Drane's Court with all the prestige of the
+prospective Awakener. Now, this final scene of the production could
+not be worked for a guinea. There were golden tips to servants,
+there was the first-class railway fare. Once in London--he could
+pawn things to keep him going, and a Bloomsbury landlady with whom
+he had lodged, since the loss of Jane, would give him a fortnight or
+three weeks' credit. But he had to get to London-to get there
+gloriously; so that when the turn of Fortune's wheel enabled him to
+seek again these wonderful friends in the aristocratic sphere to
+which he belonged, he could come among them untarnished, the
+conquering prince. But that miserable guinea! He racked his brains.
+There was his gold watch and chain, a symbol, to his young mind, of
+high estate. When he had bought it there crossed his mind the silly
+thought of its signification of the infinite leagues that lay
+between him and Billy Goodge. He could pawn it for ten pounds--it
+would be like pawning his heart's blood--but where? Not in
+Morebury, even supposing there was a pawnbroker's in the place. He
+had many friends in his profession, scattered up and down the land.
+But he had created round himself the atmosphere of the young
+magnifico. It was he who had lent, others who had borrowed.
+Rothschild or Rockefeller inviting any of them to lend him money
+would have produced less jaw-dropping amazement. Even if he sent his
+pride flying and appealed to the most friendly and generous, he
+shrank from the sacrifice he would call upon the poor devil to make.
+There was only his beautiful and symbolic watch and chain. The
+nearest great town where he could be sure of finding a pawnbroker
+was distant an hour's train journey.
+
+So on the day before that for which, in spite of hospitable
+protestations on the part of Colonel and Miss Winwood, he had fixed
+his departure, he set forth on the plea of private business, and
+returned with a heavier pocket and a heavier heart. He had been so
+proud, poor boy, of the gold insignia across his stomach. He had had
+a habit of fingering it lovingly. Now it was gone. He felt naked--
+in a curious way dishonoured. There only remained his cornelian
+talisman. He got back in time for tea and kept his jacket closely
+buttoned. But in the evening he had perforce to appear stark and
+ungirt--in those days Fashion had not yet decreed, as it does now,
+the absence of watchchain on evening dress--and Paul shambled into
+the drawing-room like a guest without a wedding garment. There were
+still a few people staying in the house--the shooting party
+proper, and Lady Chudley, had long since gone--but enough remained
+to be a social microcosm for Paul. Every eye was upon him. In spite
+of himself, his accusing hand went fingering the inanity of his
+waistcoat front. He also fingered, with a horrible fascination, the
+dirty piece of card that took the place of his watch in his pocket.
+
+One must be twenty to realize the tragedy of it. Dans un grenier
+qu'on est bien a vingt ans! To be twenty, in a garret, with the
+freedom and the joy of it! Yes; the dear poet was right. In those
+"brave days" the poignancy of life comes not in the garret, but in
+the palace.
+
+To-morrow, with his jacket buttoned, he could make his exit from
+Drane's Court in the desired splendour--scattering largesse to
+menials and showing to hosts the reflected glow of the golden
+prospects before him; but for this evening the glory had departed.
+Besides, it was his last evening there, and London's welcome
+tomorrow would be none too exuberant.
+
+The little party was breaking up, the ladies retiring for the night,
+and the men about to accompany Colonel Winwood to the library for a
+final drink and cigarette. Paul shook hands with Miss Winwood.
+
+"Good night--and good-bye," she said, "if you take the early
+train. But must you really go to-morrow?"
+
+"I must," said Paul.
+
+"I hope we'll very soon be seeing you again. Give me your address."
+She moved to a bridge table and caught up the marking block, which
+she brought to him. "Now I've forgotten the pencil."
+
+"I've got one," said Paul, and impulsively thrusting his fingers
+into his waistcoat pocket, flicked them out with the pencil. But he
+also flicked out the mean-looking card of which he had been
+hatefully conscious all the evening. The Imp of Mischance arranged
+that as Miss Winwood stood close by his side, it should fall,
+unperceived by him, on the folds of her grey velvet train. He wrote
+the Bloomsbury address and handed her the leaf torn from the pad.
+She folded it up, moved away, turning back to smile. As she turned
+she happened to look downward; then she stooped and picked the card
+from her dress. A conjecture of horror smote Paul. He made a step
+forward and stretched out his hand; but not before she had
+instinctively glanced first at the writing and then at his barren
+waistcoat. She repressed a slight gasp, regarding him with steady,
+searching eyes.
+
+His dark face flushed crimson as he took the accursed thing,
+desiring no greater boon from Heaven than instant death. He felt
+sick with humiliation. The brightly lit room grew black. It was in a
+stupor of despair that he heard her say, "Wait a bit here, till I've
+got rid of these people."
+
+He stumbled away and stood on the bearskin rug before the fireplace,
+while she joined the lingering group by the door. The two or three
+minutes were an eternity of agony to Paul. He had lost his great
+game.
+
+Miss Winwood shut the door and came swiftly to him and laid her hand
+on his arm. Paul hung his head and looked into the fire. "My poor
+boy!" she said very tenderly. "What are you going to do with
+yourself?"
+
+If it had not been for the diabolical irony of the mishap he would
+have answered with his gay flourish. But now he could not so answer.
+Boyish, hateful tears stood in his eyes and, in spite of anguished
+effort of will, threatened to fall. He continued to look into the
+fire, so that she should not see them. "I shall go on as I always
+have done," he said as stoutly as he could.
+
+"Your prospects are not very bright, I fear."
+
+"I shall keep my head above water," said Paul. "Oh, please don't!"
+he cried, shivering. "You have been so good to me. I can't bear you
+to have seen that thing. I can't stand it."
+
+"My dear boy," she said, coming a little nearer, "I don't think the
+worse of you for that. On the contrary, I admire your pluck and your
+brave attitude towards life. Indeed I do. I respect you for it. Do
+you remember the old Italian story of Ser Federigo and his falcon?
+How he hid his poverty like a knightly gentleman? You see what I
+mean, don't you? You mustn't be angry with me!"
+
+Her words were Gilead balm of instantaneous healing.
+
+"Angry?"
+
+His voice quavered. In a revulsion of emotion he turned blindly,
+seized her hand and kissed it. It was all he could do.
+
+"If I have found it out--not just now," she quickly interjected,
+seeing him wince, "but long ago--it was not your fault. You've
+made a gallant gentleman's show to the end--until I come, in a
+perfectly brutal way, and try to upset it. Tell me--I'm old enough
+to be your mother, and you must know by this time that I'm your
+friend--have you any resources at all--beyond--?" She made
+ever so slight a motion of her hand toward the hidden pawn ticket.
+
+"No," said Paul, with his sure tact and swiftly working imagination.
+"I had just come to an end of them. It's a silly story of losses and
+what-not--I needn't bother you with it. I thought I would walk to
+London, with the traditional half-crown in my pocket"--he flashed
+a wistful smile--"and seek my fortune. But I fell ill at your
+gates."
+
+"And now that you're restored to health, you propose in the same
+debonair fashion to--well--to resume the search?"
+
+"Of course," said Paul, all the fighting and aristocratic instincts
+returning. "Why not?"
+
+There were no tears in his eyes now, and they looked with luminous
+fearlessness at Miss Winwood. He drew a chair to the edge of the
+bearskin. "Won't you sit down, Miss Winwood?"
+
+She accepted the seat. He sat down too. Before replying she played
+with her fan rather roughly--more or less as a man might have
+played with it. "What do you think of doing?"
+
+"Journalism," said Paul. He had indeed thought of it.
+
+"Have you any opening?"
+
+"None," he laughed. "But that's the oyster I'm going to open."
+
+Miss Winwood took a cigarette from a silver box near by. Paul sprang
+to light it. She inhaled in silence half a dozen puffs. "I'm going
+to ask you an outrageous question," she said, at last. "In the first
+place, I'm a severely business woman, and in the next I've got an
+uncle and a brother with cross-examining instincts, and, though I
+loathe them--the instincts, I mean--I can't get away from them.
+We're down on the bedrock of things, you and I. Will you tell me,
+straight, why you went away to-day to--to"--she hesitated--"to
+pawn your watch and chain, instead of waiting till you got to
+London?"
+
+Paul threw out his arms in a wide gesture. "Why--your servants--"
+
+She cast the just lighted cigarette into the fire, rose and clapped
+her hands on his shoulders, her face aflame. "Forgive me--I knew
+it--there are doubting Thomases everywhere--and I'm a woman who
+deals with facts, so that I can use them to the confusion of
+enemies. Now I have them. Ser Federigo's watch and chain. Nicht
+wahr?"
+
+Remember, you who judge this sensible woman of forty-three, that she
+had fallen in love with Paul in the most unreprehensible way in the
+world; and if a woman of that age cannot fall in love with a boy
+sweetly motherwise, what is the good of her? She longed to prove
+that her polyhedral crystal of a paragon radiated pure light from
+every one of his innumerable facets. It was a matter of intense joy
+to turn him round and find each facet pure. There was also much pity
+in her heart, such as a woman might feel for a wounded bird which
+she had picked up and nursed in her bosom and healed. Ursula was
+loath to let her bird fly forth into the bleak winter.
+
+"My brother and I have been talking about you--he is your friend,
+too," she said, resuming her seat. "How would it suit you to stay
+with us altogether?"
+
+Paul started bolt upright in his chair. "What do you mean?" he asked
+breathlessly, for the heavens had opened with dazzling
+unexpectedness.
+
+"In some such position as confidential secretary--at a decent
+salary, of course. We've not been able to find a suitable man since
+Mr. Kinghorne left us in the spring. He got into Parliament, you
+know, for Reddington at the by-election--and we've been muddling
+along with honorary secretaries and typists. I shouldn't suggest it
+to you," she went on, so as to give him time to think, for he sat
+staring at her, openmouthed, bewildered, his breath coming quickly--"I
+shouldn't suggest it to you if there were no chances for you
+in it. You would be in the thick of public affairs, and an ambitious
+man might find a path in them that would lead him anywhere. I've had
+the idea in my head," she smiled, "for-some time. But I've only
+spoken to my brother about it this afternoon--he has been so busy,
+you see--and I intended to have another talk with him, so as to
+crystallize things--duties, money, and so forth--before making
+you any proposal. I was going to write to you with everything cut
+and dried. But"--she hesitated delicately--"I'm glad I didn't.
+It's so much more simple and friendly to talk. Now, what do you
+say?"
+
+Paul rose and gripped his hands together and looked again into the
+fire. "What can I say? I could only go on my knees to you--and
+that--"
+
+"That would be beautifully romantic and entirely absurd," she
+laughed. "Anyhow, it's settled. Tomorrow we can discuss details."
+She rose and put out her hand. "Good night, Paul."
+
+He bowed low. "My dearest lady," said he in a low voice, and went
+and held the door open for her to pass out.
+
+Then he flung up his arms wildly and laughed aloud and strode about
+the room in exultation. All he had hoped for and worked for was an
+exit of fantastic and barren glory. After which, the Deluge--
+anything. He had never dreamed of this sudden blaze of Fortune. Now,
+indeed, did the Great Things to which he was born lie to his hand.
+Queerly but surely Destiny was guiding him upward. In every way
+Chance had worked for him. His poverty had been a cloak of honour;
+the thrice-blessed pawn ticket a patent of nobility. His kingdom lay
+before him, its purple mountains looming through the mists of dawn.
+And he would enter into it as the Awakener of England. He stood
+thrilled. The ambition was no longer the wild dream of yesterday.
+From the heart of the great affairs in which he would have his being
+he could pluck his awakening instrument. The world seemed suddenly
+to become real. And in the midst of it was this wonderful,
+beautiful, dearest lady with her keen insight, her delicate
+sympathy, her warm humanity. With some extravagance he consecrated
+himself to her service.
+
+After a while he sat down soberly and took from his pocket the
+cornelian heart which his first goddess had given him twelve years
+ago. What had become of her? He did not even know her name. But what
+happiness, he thought, to meet her in the plenitude of his greatness
+and show her the heart, and say, "I owe it all to you!" To her alone
+of mortals would he reveal himself.
+
+And then he thought of Barney Bill, who had helped him on his way;
+of Rowlatt, good fellow, who was dead; and of Jane, whom he had
+lost. He wished he could write to Jane and tell her the wonderful
+news. She would understand. . . . Well, well! It was time for bed.
+He rose and switched off the lights and went to his room. But as he
+walked through the great, noiseless house, he felt, in spite of
+Fortune's bounty, a loneliness of soul; also irritation at having
+lost Jane. What a letter he could have written to her! He could not
+say the things with which his heart was bursting to anyone on earth
+but Jane. Why had he lost Jane? The prospective Awakener of England
+wanted Jane.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ONE morning Paul, with a clump of papers in his hand, entered his
+pleasant private room at Drane's Court, stepped briskly to the long
+Cromwellian table placed in the window bay, and sat down to his
+correspondence.
+
+It was gusty outside, as could be perceived by the shower of yellow
+beech leaves that slanted across the view; but indoors a great fire
+flaming up the chimney, a Turkey carpet fading into beauty, rich
+eighteenth century mezzotints on the walls, reposeful
+leather-covered chairs and a comfortable bookcase gave an atmosphere
+of warmth and coziness. Paul lit a cigarette and attacked a pile of
+unopened letters. At last he came to an envelope, thick and faintly
+scented, bearing a crown on the flap. He opened it and read:
+
+DEAR MR. SAVELLI:
+
+Will you dine on Saturday and help me entertain an eminent
+Egyptologist? I know nothing of Egypt save Shepheard's Hotel, and
+that I'm afraid wouldn't interest him. Do come to my rescue. Yours,
+SOPHIE ZOBRASKA.
+
+Paul leaned back in his chair, twiddling the letter between his
+fingers, and looked smilingly out or, the grey autumn rack of
+clouds. There was a pleasant and flattering intimacy in the
+invitation: pleasant because it came from a pretty woman; flattering
+because the woman was a princess, widow of a younger son of a Royal
+Balkan house. She lived at Chetwood. Park, on the other side of
+Morebury, and was one of the great ones of those latitudes. A real
+princess.
+
+Paul's glance, travelling back from the sky, fell upon the brass
+date indicator on the table. It marked the 2nd of October. On that
+day five years ago he had. entered on his duties at Drane's Court.
+He laughed softly. Five years ago be was a homeless wanderer. Now
+princesses were begging him to rescue them from Egyptologists. With
+glorious sureness all his dreams were coming true.
+
+Thus we see our Fortunate Youth at eight-and-twenty in the heyday of
+success. If he had strutted about under Jane's admiring eyes, like a
+peacock among daws, he now walked serene, a peacock among peacocks.
+He wore the raiment, frequented the clubs, ate the dinners of the
+undeservingly rich and the deservingly great. His charm and his
+self-confidence, which a genius of tact saved from self-assertion,
+carried him pleasantly through the social world; his sympathetic
+intelligence dealt largely and strongly with the public affairs
+under his control. He loved organizing, persuading, casting skilful
+nets. His appeal for subscriptions was irresistible. He had the
+magical gift of wringing a hundred pounds from a plutocrat with the
+air of conferring a graceful favour. In aid of the Mission to
+Convert the Jews he could have fleeced a synagogue. The societies
+and institutions in which the Colonel and Ursula Winwood were
+interested flourished amazingly beneath his touch. The Girls' Club
+in the Isle of Dogs, long since abandoned in despair by the young
+Guardsman, grew into a popular and sweetly mannered nunnery. The
+Central London Home" for the Indigent Blind, which had been
+languishing for support, in spite of Miss Winwood's efforts, found
+itself now in a position to build a much-needed wing. There was
+also, most wonderful and, important thing of all, the Young England
+League, which was covering him with steadily increasing glory. Of
+this much hereafter. But it must be remembered. Ursula complained
+that he left her nothing to do save attend dreary committee
+meetings; and even for these Paul saved her all the trouble in
+hunting up information. She was a mere figurehead.
+
+"Dearest lady," Paul would say, "if you send me about my business,
+you'll write me a character, won't you, saying that you're
+dismissing me for incorrigible efficiency?"
+
+"You know perfectly well," she would sigh, "that I would be a lost,
+lone woman without you."
+
+Whereat Paul would laugh his gay laugh. At this period of his life
+he had not a care in the world.
+
+The game of politics also fascinated him. A year or so after he
+joined the Winwoods there was a General Election. The Liberals,
+desiring to drive the old Tory from his lair, sent down a strong
+candidate to Morebury. There was a fierce battle, into which Paul
+threw himself, heart and soul. He discovered he could speak. When he
+first found himself holding a couple of hundred villagers in the
+grip of his impassioned utterance he felt that the awakening of
+England had begun. It was a delicious moment. As a canvasser he
+performed prodigies of cajolery. Extensive paper mills, a hotbed of
+raging Socialism, according to Colonel Winwood, defaced (in the
+Colonel's eyes) the outskirts of the little town.
+
+"They're wrong 'uns to a man," said the Colonel, despondently.
+
+Paul came back from among them with a notebook full of promises.
+
+"How did you manage it?" asked the Colonel.
+
+"I think I got on to the poetical side of politics," said Paul.
+
+"What the deuce is that?"
+
+Paul smiled. "An appeal to the imagination," said he.
+
+When Colonel Winwood got in by an increased majority, in spite of
+the wave of Liberalism that spread over the land, he gave Paul a
+gold cigarette case; and thenceforward admitted him into his
+political confidence. So Paul became familiar with the Lobby of the
+House of Commons and with the subjects before the Committees on
+which Colonel Winwood sat, and with the delicate arts of
+wire-pulling and intrigue, which appeared to him a monstrously fine
+diversion. There was also the matter of Colonel Winwood's speeches,
+which the methodical warrior wrote out laboriously beforehand and
+learned by heart. They were sound, weighty pronouncements, to which
+the House listened with respect; but they lacked the flashes which
+lit enthusiasm. One day he threw the bundle of typescript across to
+Paul.
+
+"See what you think of that."
+
+Paul saw and made daring pencilled amendments, and took it to the
+Colonel.
+
+"It's all very funny," said the latter, tugging his drooping
+moustache, "but I can't say things like that in the House."
+
+"Why not?" asked Paul.
+
+"If they heard me make an epigram, they would have a fit."
+
+"Our side wouldn't. The Government might. The Government ought to
+have fits all the time until it expires in convulsions."
+
+"But this is a mere dull agricultural question. The Board of
+Agriculture have brought it in, and it's such pernicious nonsense
+that I, as a county gentleman, have to speak against it."
+
+"But couldn't you stick in my little joke about the pigs?" asked
+Paul pleadingly.
+
+"What's that?" Colonel Winwood found the place in the script. "I say
+that the danger of swine fever arising from this clause in the Bill
+will affect every farmer in England."
+
+"And I say," cried Paul eagerly, pointing to his note, "if this
+clause becomes law, swine fever will rage through the land like a
+demoniacal possession. The myriad pigs of Great Britain, possessed
+of the, devils of Socialism, will be turned into Gadarene swine
+hurtling down to destruction. You can show how they hurtle, like
+this--" He flickered his bands. "Do try it."
+
+"H'm!" said Colonel Winwood.
+
+Sorely against his will, he tried it. To his astonishment it was a
+success. The House of Commons, like Mr. Peter Magnus's friend, is
+easily amused. The exaggeration gave a cannon-ball's weight to his
+sound argument. The Government dropped the clause--it was only a
+trivial part of a wide-reaching measure--the President of the
+Board of Agriculture saying gracefully that in the miracle he hoped
+to bring about he had unfortunately forgotten the effect it might
+have on the pigs. There was "renewed laughter," but Colonel Winwood
+remained the hero of the half-hour and received the ecstatic
+congratulations of unhumorous friends. He might have defeated the
+Government altogether. In the daily round of political life nothing
+is so remarkable as the lack of sense of proportion.
+
+"It was the Gadarene swine that did it," they said.
+
+"And that," said Colonel Winwood honestly, "was my young devil of a
+secretary."
+
+Thenceforward the young wit and the fresh fancy of Paul played like
+a fountain over Colonel Winwood's and speeches.
+
+"Look here, young man," said he one day, "I don't like it. Sometimes
+I take your confounded suggestions, because they happen to fit in;
+but I'm actually getting the reputation of a light political
+comedian, and it won't do."
+
+Whereupon Paul, with his swift intuition, saw that in the case of a
+proud, earnest gentleman like Colonel Winwood the tempting
+emendations of typescript would not do. In what Miss Winwood called
+his subtle Italian way, he induced his patron to discuss the
+speeches before the process of composition. These discussions,
+involving the swift rapier play of intelligences, Colonel Winwood
+enjoyed. They stimulated him magically. He sat down and wrote his
+speeches, delightfully unconscious of what in them was Paul and what
+was himself; and when he delivered them he was proud of the
+impression he had made upon the House.
+
+And so, as the years passed, Paul gained influence not only in the
+little circle of Drane's Court and Portland Place, but also in the
+outer world. He was a young man of some note. His name appeared
+occasionally in the newspapers, both in connection with the Winwood
+charities and with the political machine of the Unionist party. He
+was welcomed at London dinner tables and in country houses. He was a
+young man who would go far. For the rest, he had learned to ride and
+shoot, and not to make mistakes about the genealogical relationships
+of important families. He had travelled about Europe, sometimes with
+the Winwoods, sometimes by himself. He was a young man of
+cultivation and accomplishment.
+
+On this fifth anniversary he sat gazing unseeingly at the autumn
+rack, the Princess's letter in his band, and letting his thoughts
+wander down the years. He marvelled how valiantly the stars in their
+courses had fought for him. Even against recognition his life was
+charmed. Once, indeed, he met at the house in Portland Place a
+painter to whom he had posed. The painter looked at him keenly.
+
+"Surely we have met before?"
+
+"We have," said Paul with daring frankness. "I remember it
+gratefully. But if you would forget it I should be still more
+grateful."
+
+The painter shook hands with him and smiled. "You may be sure I
+haven't the least idea what you're talking about."
+
+As for Theatreland, the lower walks in the profession to which Paul
+had belonged do not cross the paths of high political society. It
+lay behind him far and forgotten. His position was secure. Here and
+there an anxious mother may have been worried as to his precise
+antecedents; but Paul was too astute to give mothers over-much cause
+for anxiety. lie lived under the fascination of the Great Game. When
+he came into his kingdom he could choose; not before. His destiny
+was drawing him nearer and nearer to it, he thought, with slow and
+irresistible force. In a few years there would be Parliament,
+office, power, the awaking from stupor of an England hypnotized by
+malign influences. He saw himself at the table in the now familiar
+House of green benches, thundering out an Empire's salvation. If he
+thought more of the awakener than the awakening, it was because be
+was the same little Paul Kegworthy to whom the cornelian heart had
+brought the Vision Splendid in the scullery of the Bludston slum.
+The cornelian heart still lay in his waistcoat pocket at the end of
+his watch chain. He also held a real princess's letter in his hand.
+
+A tap at the door aroused him from his day-dream.
+
+There entered a self-effacing young woman with pencil and notebook.
+"Are you ready for me, sir?"
+
+"Not quite. Sit down for a minute, Miss Smithers. Or, come up to the
+table if you don't mind, and help me open these envelopes."
+
+Paul, you see, was a great man, who commanded the services of a
+shorthand typist.
+
+To the mass of correspondence then opened and read he added that
+which he had brought in from Colonel and Miss Winwood. From this he
+sorted the few letters which it would be necessary to answer in his
+own handwriting, and laid them aside; then taking the great bulk, he
+planted himself on the hearthrug, with his back to the fire, and,
+cigarette in mouth, dictated to the self-effacing young woman. She
+took down his words with anxious humility, for she looked upon him
+as a god sphered on Olympian heights--and what socially insecure
+young woman of lower-middle-class England could do otherwise in the
+presence of a torturingly beautiful youth, immaculately raimented,
+who commanded in the great house with a smile more royal and
+debonair than that of the master thereof, Member of Parliament
+though he was, and Justice of the Peace and Lord of the Manor? And
+Paul, fresh from his retrospect, looked at the girl's thin shoulders
+and sharp, intent profile, and wondered a little, somewhat
+ironically. He knew that she regarded him as a kind of god, for
+reasons of caste. Yet she was the daughter of a Morebury piano
+tuner, of unblemished parentage for generations. She had never known
+hunger and cold and the real sting of poverty. Miss Winwood herself
+knew more of drunken squalor. He saw himself a ragged and unwashed
+urchin, his appalling breeches supported by one brace, addressing
+her in familiar terms; and he saw her transfigured air of lofty
+disgust; whereupon he laughed aloud in the middle of a most
+unhumorous sentence, much to Miss Smithers' astonishment.
+
+When he had finished his dictation he dismissed her and sat down to
+his writing. After a while Miss Winwood came in. The five years had
+treated her lightly. A whitening of the hair about her brows, which
+really enhanced the comeliness of her florid complexion, a few more
+lines at corners of eyes and lips, were the only evidences of the
+touch of Time's fingers. As she entered Paul swung round from his
+writing chair and started to his feet. I "Oh, Paul, I said the 20th
+for the Disabled Soldiers and Sailors, didn't I? I made a mistake.
+I'm engaged that afternoon."
+
+"I don't think so, dearest lady," said Paul.
+
+"I am."
+
+"Then you've told me nothing about it," said Paul the infallible.
+
+"I know," she said meekly. "It's all my fault. I never told you.
+I've asked the Bishop of Frome to lunch, and I can't turn him out at
+a quarter-past two, can I? What date is there free?"
+
+Together they bent over the engagement book, and after a little
+discussion the new date was fixed.
+
+"I'm rather keen on dates to-day," said Paul, pointing to the brass
+calendar.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It's exactly five years since I entered your dear service," said
+Paul.
+
+"We've worked you like a galley slave, and so I love your saying
+'dear service,'" she replied gently.
+
+Paul, half sitting on the edge of the Cromwellian table in the bay
+of the window, laughed. "I could say infinitely more, dearest lady,
+if I were to let myself go."
+
+She sat on the arm of a great leathern chair. Their respective
+attitudes signified a happy intimacy. "So long as you're contented,
+my dear boy---" she said.
+
+"Contented? Good heavens!" He waved a protesting hand.
+
+"You're ambitious."
+
+"Of course," said he. "What Would be the good of me if I wasn't?"
+
+"One of these days you'll be wanting to leave the nest and--what
+shall we say?--soar upwards."
+
+Paul, too acute to deny the truth of this prophecy said: "I probably
+shall. But I'll be the rarissima avis, to whom the abandoned nest
+will always be the prime object of his life's consideration."
+
+"Pretty,"' said Miss Winwood.
+
+"It's true."
+
+"I'm sure of it," she said pleasantly. "Besides, if you didn't leave
+the nest and make a name for yourself, you wouldn't be able to carry
+on our work. My brother and I, you see, are of the older generation--you
+of the younger."
+
+"You're the youngest woman I know," Paul declared.
+
+"I shan't be in a few years, and my brother is a good deal older
+than I."
+
+"Well, I can't get into Parliament right away," said Paul. "For one
+thing, I couldn't afford it."
+
+"We must find you a nice girl with plenty of money," she said, half
+in jest.
+
+"Oh, please don't. I should detest the sight of her. By the way,
+shall you want me on Saturday evening?"
+
+"No--unless it would be to take Miss Durning in to dinner."
+
+Now Miss Durning being an elderly, ugly heiress, it pleased Miss
+Winwood to be quizzical. He looked at her in mock reproof. "Dearest
+lady that you are, I don't feel safe in your hands just now. I shall
+dine with the Princess on Saturday."
+
+An enigmatic smile flitted across Ursula Winwood's clear eyes. "What
+does she want you for?"
+
+"To entertain an Egyptologist," assured Paul. He waved his hand
+toward the letter on the table. "There it is in black and white."
+
+"I suppose for the next few days you'll be cramming hard."
+
+"It would be the polite thing to do, wouldn't it?" said Paul
+blandly.
+
+Miss Winwood shook her head and went away, and Paul happily resumed
+his work. In very truth she was to him the dearest of ladies.
+
+The Princess Zobraska was standing alone by the fireplace at the end
+of the long drawing-room when Paul was announced on Saturday
+evening. She was a distinguished-looking woman in the late twenties
+brown-haired, fresh-complexioned, strongly and at the same time
+delicately featured. Her dark blue eyes, veiled by lashes, smiled on
+him lazily as he approached; and lazily, too, her left arm stretched
+out, the palm of the hand downward, and she did not move. He kissed
+her knuckles, in orthodox fashion.
+
+"It is very good of you to come, Mr. Savelli," she said in a sweetly
+foreign accent, "and leave your interesting company at Drane's
+Court."
+
+"Any company without you, Princess, is chaos," said Paul.
+
+"Grand flatteur, va,--' said she.
+
+"C'est que vous Res irresistible, Princesse, surlout dans ce
+costume-la."
+
+She touched his arm with an ostrich feather fan. "When it comes to
+massacring languages, Mr. Savelli, let me be the assassin."
+
+"I laid the tribute of my heart at your feet in the most
+irreproachable grammar," said Paul.
+
+"But with the accent of John Bull. That's the only thing of John
+Bull you have about you. For the sake of my ears I must give you
+some lessons."
+
+"You'll find me such a pupil as never teacher had in the world
+before. When shall we begin?"
+
+"Aux Kalendes Grecques."
+
+"Ah que vous etes femme!"
+
+She put her hands to her ears. "Listen. Que-vous-etes-femme" she
+said.
+
+"Que-vous-etes-femme," Paul repeated parrotwise. "Is that better?"
+
+"A little."
+
+"I see the Greek Kalends have begun," said he.
+
+"Mechant, you have caught me in a trap," said she.
+
+And they both laughed.
+
+From which entirely foolish conversation it may be gathered that
+between our Fortunate Youth and the Princess some genial sun had
+melted the icy barriers of formality. He had known her for eighteen
+months, ever since she had bought Chetwood Park and settled down as
+the great personage of the countryside. He had met her many times,
+both in London and in Morebury; he had dined in state at her house;
+he had shot her partridges; he had danced with her; he had sat out
+dances with her, notably on one recent June night, in a London
+garden, where they lost themselves for an hour in the discussion of
+the relative parts that love played in a woman's life and in a
+man's. The Princess was French, ancien regime, of the blood of the
+Coligny, and she had married, in the French practical way, the
+Prince Zobraska, in whose career the only satisfactory incident
+history has to relate is the mere fact of his early demise. The
+details are less exhilarating. The poor little Princess, happily
+widowed at one-and-twenty, had shivered the idea of love out of her
+system for some years. Then, as is the way of woman, she regained
+her curiosities. Great lady, of enormous fortune, she could have
+satisfied them, had she so chosen, with the large cynicism of a
+Catherine of Russia. She could also, had she so chosen, have married
+one of a hundred sighing and decorous gentlemen; but with none of
+them had she fallen ever so little in love, and without love she
+determined to try no more experiments; her determination, however,
+did not involve surrender of interest in the subject. Hence the
+notable discussion on the June night. Hence, perhaps, after a few
+other meetings of a formal character, the prettily intimate
+invitation she had sent to Paul.
+
+They were still laughing at the turn of the foolish conversation
+when the other guests began to enter the drawing-room. First came
+Edward Doon, the Egyptologist, a good-looking man of forty, having
+the air of a spruce don, with a pretty young wife, Lady Angela Doon;
+then Count Lavretsky, of the Russian Embassy, and Countess
+Lavretsky; Lord Bantry, a young Irish peer with literary ambitions;
+and a Mademoiselle de Cressy, a convent intimate of the Princess and
+her paid companion, completed the small party.
+
+Dinner was served at a round table, and Paul found himself between
+Lady Angela Doon, whom he took in, and the Countess Lavretsky. Talk
+was general and amusing. As Doon did not make, and apparently did
+not expect anyone to make any reference to King Qa or Amenhotep or
+Rameses--names vaguely floating in Paul's brain--but talked in a
+sprightly way about the French stage and the beauty of Norwegian
+fiords, Paul perceived that the Princess's alleged reason for her
+invitation was but a shallow pretext. Doon did not need any
+entertainment at all. Lady Angela, however, spoke of her dismay at
+the prospect of another winter in the desert; and drew a graphic
+little sketch of the personal discomforts to which Egyptologists
+were subjected.
+
+"I always thought Egyptologists and suchlike learned folk were
+stuffy and snuffy with goggles and ragged old beards," laughed Paul.
+"Your husband is a revelation."
+
+"Yes, he's quite human, isn't he?" she said with an affectionate
+glance across the table. "He's dead keen on his work, but he
+realizes--as many of his stuffy and snuffy confreres don't--that
+there's a jolly, vibrating, fascinating, modern world in which one
+lives."
+
+"I'm glad to hear you say that about the modern world," said Paul.
+
+"What is Lady Angela saying about the modern world?" asked the
+Princess, separated from Paul's partner only by Count Lavretsky.
+
+"Singing paeans in praise of it," said Paul.
+
+"What is there in it so much to rejoice at?" asked the diplomatist,
+in a harsh voice. He was a man prematurely old, and looked at the
+world from beneath heavy, lizard-like eyelids.
+
+"Not only is it the best world we've got, but it's the best world
+we've ever had," cried Paul. "I don't know any historical world
+which would equal the modern, and as for the prehistoric--well,
+Professor Doon can tell us--"
+
+"As a sphere of amenable existence," said Doon with a smile, "give
+me Chetwood Park and Piccadilly."
+
+"That is mere hedonism," said Count Lavretsky. "You happen, like us
+all here, to command the creature comforts of modern wealthy
+conditions, which I grant are exceedingly superior to those
+commanded by the great Emperors of ancient times. But we are in a
+small minority. And even if we were not--is that all?"
+
+"We have a finer appreciation of our individualities," said the
+Princess. "We lead a wider intellectual life. We are in instant
+touch, practically, with the thought of the habitable globe."
+
+"And with the emotive force of mankind," said Paul.
+
+"What is that?" asked Lady Angela.
+
+Why Paul, after the first glance of courtesy at the speaker, should
+exchange a quick glance with the Princess would be difficult to say.
+It was instinctive; as instinctive as the reciprocal flash of mutual
+understanding.
+
+"I think I know, but tell us," she said.
+
+Paul, challenged, defined it as the swift wave of sympathy that
+surged over the earth. A famine in India, a devastating earthquake
+in Mexico, a bid for freedom on the part of an oppressed population,
+a deed of heroism at sea--each was felt within practically a few
+moments, emotionally, in an English, French or German village. Our
+hearts were throbbing continuously at the end of telegraph wires.
+
+"And you call that pleasure?" asked Count Lavretsky.
+
+"It isn't hedonism, at any rate," said Paul.
+
+"I call it life," said the Princess. "Don't you?"--she turned to
+Doon.
+
+"I think what Mr. Savelli calls the emotive force of mankind helps
+to balance our own personal emotions," said be.
+
+"Or isn't it rather a wear and tear on the nervous system?" laughed
+his wife.
+
+"It seems so to me," said Count Lavretsky. "Perhaps, being a
+Russian, I am more primitive and envy a nobleman of the time of
+Pharaoh who never heard of devastations in Mexico, did not feel his
+heart called upon to pulsate at anything beyond his own concerns. But
+he in his wisdom at his little world was vanity and was depressed.
+We moderns, with our infinitely bigger world and our infinitely
+greater knowledge, have no more wisdom than the Egyptian, and we see
+that the world is all the more vanity and are all the more
+overwhelmed with despair."
+
+"But--" said Paul.
+
+"But--" cried the Princess.
+
+Both laughed, and paused. Paul bowed with a slight gesture.
+
+"I am not overwhelmed with despair," the Princess continued.
+
+"Neither am I," said Paul.
+
+"I am keeping my end up wonderfully," said Lady Angela.
+
+"I am in a nest of optimists," Count Lavretsky groaned. "But was it
+not you, Lady Angela, who talked of wear and tear.
+
+"That was only to contradict my husband."
+
+"What is all this about?" asked the Countess Lavretsky, who had been
+discussing opera with Lord Bantry and Mademoiselle de Cressy.
+
+Doon scientifically crystallized the argument. It held the octette,
+while men-servants in powder and gold-laced livery offered poires
+Zobraska, a subtle creation of the chef. Lord Bantry envied the
+contemplative calm which unexciting circumstances allowed the
+literary ancient. Mademoiselle de Cressy advanced the feminist view
+in favour of the modern world. The talk became the light and dancing
+interplay of opinion and paradox common to thousands of
+twentieth-century dinner-tables.
+
+"All the same," said Count Lavretsky, "they wear you out, these
+emotive forces. Nobody is young nowadays. Youth is a lost art."
+
+"On the contrary," cried Mademoiselle de Cressy in French.
+"Everybody is young to-day. This pulsation of the heart keeps you
+young. It is the day of the young woman of forty-five."
+
+Count Lavretsky, who was fifty-nine, twirled a grey moustache. "I am
+one of the few people in the world who do not regret their youth. I
+do not regret mine, with its immaturity, its follies and subsequent
+headaches. I would sooner be the scornful philosopher of sixty than
+the credulous lover of twenty."
+
+"He always talks like that," said the Countess to Paul; "but when he
+met me first he was thirty-five--and"--she laughed--"and now
+voila--for him there is no difference between twenty and sixty.
+Expliquez-moi ca."
+
+"It's very simple," declared Paul. "In this century the thirties,
+forties, and fifties don't exist. You're either twenty or sixty."
+
+"I hope I shall always be twenty," said the Princess lightly.
+
+"Do you find your youth so precious, then?" asked Count Lavretsky.
+
+"More than I ever did!" She laughed and again met Paul's eyes.
+
+This time she flushed faintly as she held them for a fraction of a
+second. He had time to catch a veiled soft gleam intimate and
+disquieting. For some time he did not look again in her direction;
+when he did, he met in her eyes only the lazy smile with which she
+regarded all and sundry.
+
+Later in the evening she said to him: "I'm glad you opposed
+Lavretsky. He makes me shiver. He was born old and wrinkled. He has
+never had a thrill in his life."
+
+"And if you don't have thrills when you're young, you can't expect
+to have them when you're old," said Paul.
+
+"He would ask what was the good of thrills."
+
+"You don't expect me to answer, Princess."
+
+"We know because we're young."
+
+They stood laughing in the joy of their full youth, a splendid
+couple, some distance away from the others, ostensibly inspecting a
+luminous little Cima on the wall. The Princess loved it as the
+bright jewel of her collection, and Paul, with his sense of beauty
+and knowledge of art, loved it too. Yet, instead of talking of the
+picture, they talked of Lavretsky, who was looking at them
+sardonically from beneath his heavy eyelids.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A FEW days afterwards you might have seen Paul dashing through the
+quiet main street Of Morebury in a high dog-cart, on his way to call
+on the Princess. A less Fortunate Youth might have had to walk,
+risking boots impolitely muddy, or to hire a funereal cab from the
+local job-master; but Paul had only to give an order, and the cart
+and showy chestnut were brought round to the front door of Drane's
+Court. He loved to drive the showy chestnut, whose manifold
+depravities were the terror of Miss Winwood's life. Why didn't he
+take the cob? It was so much safer. Whereupon he would reply gaily
+that in the first place he found no amusement in driving woolly
+lambs, and in the second that if he did not take some of the devil
+out of the chestnut it would become the flaming terror of the
+countryside. So Paul, spruce in hard felt hat and box-cloth
+overcoat, clattered joyously through the Morebury streets, returning
+the salutations of the little notabilities of the town with the air
+of the owner not only of horse and cart, but of half the hearts in
+the place. He was proud of his popularity, and it scarcely entered
+his head that he was not the proprietor of his equipage. Besides, he
+was going to call on the Princess. He hoped that she would be alone:
+not that he had anything particular to say to her, or had any
+defined idea of love-making; but he was eight-and-twenty, an age at
+which desire has not yet failed and there is not the sign of a
+burdensome grasshopper anywhere about.
+
+But the Princess was not alone. He found Mademoiselle de Cressy in
+charge of the tea-table and the conversation. Like many Frenchwomen,
+she had a high-pitched voice; she also had definite opinions on
+matter-of-fact subjects. Now when you have come to talk gossamer
+with an attractive and sympathetic woman, it is irritating to have
+to discuss Tariff Reform and the position of the working classes in
+Germany with somebody else, especially when the attractive and
+pretty woman does not give you in any way to understand that she
+would prefer gossamer to such arid topics. The Princess was as
+gracious as you please. She made him feel that he was welcome in her
+cosy boudoir; but there was no further exchange of mutually
+understanding glances. If a great lady entertaining a penniless
+young man can be demure, then demure was the Princess Sophie
+Zobraska. Paul, who prided himself on his knowledge of feminine
+subtlety, was at fault; but who was he to appreciate the repressive
+influence of a practical-minded convent friend, quickly formative
+and loudly assertive of opinions, on an impressionable lady
+awakening to curiosities? He was just a dunderhead, like any one of
+us--just as much as the most eminent feminine psychologist
+alive--which is saying a good deal. So he drove away disappointed, the
+sobriety of the chestnut's return trot through Morebury contrasting
+oddly with the dashing clatter of the former journey.
+
+It was some time before he met the Princess again, for an autumn
+session of Parliament required migration to Portland Place. The
+Princess, indeed, came to London, shortly afterwards, to her great
+house in Berkeley Square; but it was not till late November that he
+was fortunate enough to see her. Then it was only a kiss of the hand
+and a hurried remark or two, at a large dinner-party at the
+Winwoods'. You see, there are such forces as rank and precedence at
+London dinner-parties, to which even princesses and fortunate youths
+have to yield.
+
+On this occasion, as he bent over her hand, he murmured: "May I say
+how beautiful you are to-night, Princess?"
+
+She wore a costume of silver and deep blue, and the blue intensified
+the blue depths of her eyes. "I am delighted to please monsieur,"
+she said in French.
+
+And that was their meeting. On parting she said again in French:
+"When are you coming to see me, fickle one?"
+
+"Whenever you ask me. I have called in vain."
+
+"You have a card for my reception next Tuesday?"
+
+"I have replied that I do myself the honour of accepting the
+Princess's gracious invitation."
+
+"I don't like London, do you?" she asked, allowing a touch of
+wistfulness to inflect her voice.
+
+"It has its charms. A row on the Serpentine, for instance, or a
+bicycle ride in Battersea Park."
+
+"How lovely it would be," she said, between laugh and sigh, "if only
+it could be kept out of the newspapers! I see it from here under the
+Fashionable Intelligence. 'The beautiful Princess Zobraska was
+observed in a boat on the ornamental water in Regent's Park with the
+well-known--tiens--what are you?--politician, say--with the
+well-known young politician, Mr. Paul Savelli.' Quel scandale,
+hein?"
+
+"I must content myself with kissing your finger tips at your
+reception," said Paul.
+
+She smiled. "We will find a means," she said.
+
+At her reception, an assemblage glittering with the diamonds and
+orders of the great ones of the earth, she found only time to say:
+"Come to-morrow at five. I shall be alone."
+
+Darkness descended on Paul as he replied: "Impossible, Princess.
+Colonel Winwood wants me at the House."
+
+The next morning, greatly daring, he rang her up; for a telephone
+stood on the Fortunate Youth's table in his private sitting-room in
+Portland Place.
+
+"It is I, Princess, Paul Savelli."
+
+"What have you to say for yourself, Paul Savelli?"
+
+"I am at your feet."
+
+"Why can't you come to-day?"
+
+He explained.
+
+"But tell Colonel Winwood that I want you"--the voice was
+imperious.
+
+"Would that be wise, Princess?"
+
+"Wise?"
+
+"Yes. Don't you see?"
+
+He waited for an answer. There was blank electric current whirring
+faintly on his ear. He thought she had rung off--rung off not only
+this conversation, but all converse in the future. At last, after
+the waiting of despair, came the voice, curiously meek. "Can you
+come Friday?"
+
+"With joy and delight." The words gushed out tempestuously.
+
+"Good. At five o'clock. And leave your John Bull wisdoril on the
+doorstep."
+
+She rang off abruptly, and Paul stood ruminating puzzlewise on the
+audacious behest.
+
+On Friday he presented himself at her house in Berkeley Square. He
+found her gracious, but ironical in attitude, very much on the
+defensive. She received him in the Empire drawing room--very stiff
+and stately in its appointments. It had the charm (and the intrinsic
+value) of a museum; it was as cosy as a room (under present
+arrangements) at Versailles. The great wood fire alone redeemed it
+from artistic bleakness. Tea was brought in by portentous, powdered
+footmen in scarlet and gold. She was very much the princess; the
+princess in her state apartments, a different personage from the
+pretty woman in a boudoir. Paul, sensitive as far as it is given man
+to be, saw that if he had obeyed her and left his John Bull wisdom
+on the doorstep, he would have regretted it. Obviously she was
+punishing him; perhaps herself; perhaps both of them. She kept a
+wary, appraising eye on him, as they talked their commonplaces.
+Paul's attitude had the correctness of a young diplomatist paying a
+first formal call. It was only when he rose to go that her glance
+softened. She laughed a queer little laugh.
+
+"I hear that you are going to address a meeting in the North of
+London next week."
+
+"That is so," said Paul; "but how can my unimportant engagements
+have come to the ears of Your Highness?"
+
+"I read my newspapers like everybody else. Did you not know that
+there were announcements?"
+
+Paul laughed. "I put them in myself. You see," he explained, "we
+want our Young England League to be as widely known as possible. The
+more lambs we can get into the fold, the better."
+
+"Perhaps if you asked me very prettily," she said, "I might come
+and bear you speak."
+
+"Princess!" His olive cheek flushed with pleasure and his eyes
+sparkled. "It would be an undreamed-of honour. It is such things
+that angels do."
+
+"Eh bien, je viendrai. You ought to speak well. Couldn't you
+persuade them to give the place a better name? Hickney Heath! It
+hurts the roof of one's mouth. Tiens--would it help the Young
+England League if you announced my name in the newspapers?"
+
+"Dear Princess, you overwhelm me. But--"
+
+"Now, don't ask me if it is wise." She smiled in mockery. "You print
+the names of other people who are supporting you. Mr. John Felton,
+M.P., who will take the chair, Colonel Winwood, M.P., and Miss
+Winwood, the Dean of Halifax and Lady Harbury, et cetera, et cetera.
+Why not poor Princess Sophie Zobraska?"
+
+"You have a good memory, Princess."
+
+She regarded him lazily. "Sometimes. When does the meeting begin?"
+
+"At eight. Oh, I forget." His face fell. "How can you manage it?
+You'll have to dine at an unearthly hour."
+
+"What does it matter even if one doesn't dine--in a good cause?"
+
+"You are everything that is perfect," said Paul fervently.
+
+She dismissed a blissful youth. The Princess Zobraska cared as much
+for the Young England League as for an Anti-Nose-Ring Society in
+Central Africa. Would it help the Young England League, indeed! He
+laughed aloud on the lamp-lit pavement of decorous Berkeley Square.
+For what other man in the world would she dine at six and spend the
+evening in a stuffy hall in North London? He felt fired to great
+achievement. He would make her proud of him, his Princess, his own
+beautiful, stately, royal Princess. The dream had come true. He
+loved a Princess; and she--? If she cared naught for him, why
+was she cheerfully contemplating a six-o'clock dinner? And why did
+she do a thousand other things which crowded on his memory? Was he
+loved? The thought thrilled him. Here was no beautiful seductress of
+suspect title such as he had heard of during his sojourn in the
+Gotha Almanack world, but the lineal descendant of a princely house,
+the widow of a genuinely royal, though deboshed personage. Perhaps
+you may say that the hero of a fairy-tale never thinks of the mere
+rank of his beloved princess. If you do, you are committing all
+sorts of fallacies in your premises. For one thing, who said that
+Paul was a hero? For another, who said this was a fairy-tale? For
+yet another, I am not so sure that the swineherd is not impressed by
+the rank of his beloved. You must remember the insistent, lifelong
+dream of the ragged urchin. You must also reflect that the heart of
+any high-born youth in the land might well have been fluttered by
+signs of peculiar favour from Princess Sophie Zobraska. Why' then,
+should Paul be blamed for walking on air instead of greasy pavement
+on the way from Berkeley Square to Portland Place? Moreover, as
+sanity returned to him, his quick sense recognized in his Princess's
+offer to support him, a lovely indiscretion. Foreign ladies of high
+position must be chary of their public appearances. Between the
+row-boat on the Serpentine and the platform in the drill hall,
+Hickney Heath, the difference was but one of degree. And for him
+alone was this indiscretion about to be committed. His exultation
+was tempered by tender solicitude.
+
+At dinner that evening--he was dining alone with the Winwoods--
+he said: "I've persuaded the Princess to come to our meeting on
+Friday. Isn't it good of her?"
+
+"Very good," replied Colonel Winwood. "But what interest can she
+take in the lower walks of English politics?"
+
+"It isn't English politics," said Paul. "It's world politics. The
+Princess is an aristocrat and is tremendously keen on the
+Conservative principle. She thinks our scheme for keeping the youth
+of the nation free from the taint of Socialism is magnificent."
+
+"H'm!" said the Colonel.
+
+"And I thought Miss Winwood would be pleased if I inveigled Her
+Highness on to the platform," said Paul.
+
+"Why, of course it's a good thing," assented the Colonel. "But how
+the deuce did you get her?"
+
+"Yes, how?" asked Miss Winwood, with a smile in her straight blue
+eyes.
+
+"How does one get anything one wants in this world," said Paul,
+"except by going at it, hammer and tongs?"
+
+A little later, when Paul opened the dining-room for her to pass
+out, she touched his shoulder affectionately and laughed. "Hammer
+and tongs to Sophie Zobraska! Oh, Paul, aren't you a bit of a
+humbug?"
+
+Perhaps he was. But he was ingenuous in his desire to shield his
+Princess's action from vain conjecture. It were better that he
+should be supposed, in vulgar phrase, to have roped her in, as he
+had roped in a hundred other celebrities in his time. For there the
+matter ended. On the other hand, if he proclaimed the lady's
+spontaneous offer, it might be subjected to heaven knew how many
+interpretations. Paul owed much of his success in the world to such
+instinctive delicacies. He worked far into the night, composing his
+speech on England's greatness to the beautiful eyes of his French
+Princess.
+
+The Young England League was his pet political interest. It had been
+inaugurated some years before he joined the Winwoods. Its objects
+were the training of the youth, the future electorate of England, in
+the doctrines of Imperialism, Constitutionalism and sound civicism,
+as understood by the intellectual Conservatives. Its mechanical aims
+were to establish lodges throughout the country. Every town and
+rural district should have its lodge, in connection wherewith should
+be not only addresses on political and social subjects, but also
+football and cricket clubs, entertainments for both sexes such as
+dances, whist-drives, excursions of archaeological and educational
+interest, and lantern (and, later, cinematographic) lectures on the
+wide aspects of Imperial Britain. Its appeal was to the young, the
+recruit in the battle of life, who in a year or two would qualify
+for a vote and, except for blind passion and prejudice, not know
+what the deuce to do with it. The octogenarian Earl of Watford was
+President; Colonel Winwood was one of a long list of
+Vice-Presidents; Miss Winwood was on the Council; a General Hankin,
+a fussy, incompetent person past his prime, was Honorary Secretary.
+
+Paul worked with his employers for a year on the League thinking
+little of its effectiveness. One day, when they spoke despairingly
+of progress, he said, not in so many words, but in effect: "Don't
+you see what's wrong? This thing is run for young people, and you've
+got old fossils like Lord Watford and General Hankin running it. Let
+me be Assistant Secretary to Hankin' and I'll make things hum."
+
+And thinking the words of the youth were wise, they used their
+influence with the Council, and Paul became Assistant Secretary, and
+after a year or two things began to hum so disconcertingly that
+General Hankin resigned in order to take the Presidency of the
+Wellingtonian Defence Association, and almost automatically Paul
+slipped into his place. With the instinct of the man of affairs he
+persuaded the Council to change his title. An Honorary Secretary is
+but a dilettante, an amateur carrying no weight, whereas an
+Organizing Secretary is a devil of a fellow professedly dynamic. So
+Paul became Organizing Secretary of the Young England League, and
+made things hum all the louder. He put fresh life into local
+Committees and local Secretaries by a paternal interest in their
+doings, making them feel the pulsations of the throbbing heart of
+headquarters. If a local lodge was in need of speakers, he exercised
+his arts of persuasion and sent them down in trainloads. He visited
+personally as many lodges as his other work permitted. In fact, he
+was raising the League from a jejune experiment into a flourishing
+organization. To his secret delight, old Lord Watford resigned the
+chairmanship owing to the infirmities of old age, and Lord Harbury,
+a young and energetic peer whom Paul had recently driven into the
+ranks of the Vice-Presidents, was elected in his stead. Paul felt
+the future of the League was assured.
+
+With a real Member of Parliament to preside, a. real dean to propose
+the vote of thanks, another Member of Parliament and two ex-mayors
+of the borough to add silent dignity to the proceedings, well-known
+ladies, including, now, a real Princess to grace the assembly, this
+meeting of the Hickney Heath Lodge was the most important occasion
+on which Paul had appeared in public.
+
+"I hope you won't be nervous," said Miss Winwood. on the morning of
+the meeting.
+
+"I nervous?" He laughed. "What is there to be nervous about?"
+
+"I've had over twenty years' experience of public speaking, and I'm
+always nervous when I get UP."
+
+"It's only because you persistently refuse to realize what a
+wonderful woman you are," he said affectionately.
+
+"And you," she teased, "are you always realizing what a wonderful
+man you are?"
+
+He cried with his sunny boldness: "Why not? It's faith in oneself
+and one's destiny that gets things done."
+
+The drill hall was full. Party feeling ran high in those days at
+Hickney Heath, for a Liberal had ousted a Unionist from a safe seat
+at the last General Election, and the stalwarts of the defeated
+party, thirsting for revenge, supported the new movement. If a child
+was not born a Conservative, he should be made one. That was the
+watchword of the League. They were also prepared to welcome the new
+star that had arisen to guide the younger generation out of the
+darkness. When, therefore, the Chairman, Mr. John Felton, M.P., who
+had held minor office in the last administration, had concluded his
+opening remarks, having sketched briefly the history of the League
+and intro duced Mr. Paul Savelli, in the usual eulogistic terms, as
+their irresistible Organizing Secretary, and Paul in his radiant
+young manhood sprang up before them, the audience greeted him with
+enthusiastic applause. They had expected, as an audience does expect
+in an unknown speaker, any one of the usual types of ordinary
+looking politicians--perhaps bald, perhaps grey headed, perhaps
+pink and fat--it did not matter; but they did not expect the
+magnetic personality of this young man of astonishing beauty, with
+his perfect features, wavy black hair, athletic build and laughing
+eyes, who seemed the embodiment of youth and joy and purpose and
+victory.
+
+Before he spoke a word, he knew that he bad them under his control,
+and he felt the great thrill of it. Physically he had the
+consciousness of a blaze of light, of a bare barn of an ungalleried
+place, of thickly-set row upon row of faces, and a vast confused
+flutter of beating hands. The applause subsided. He turned with his
+"Mr. Chairman, Your Highness, Ladies and Gentlemen," to the circle
+behind him, caught Miss Winwood, his dearest lady's smile, caught
+and held for a hundredth part of a second the deep blue eyes of the
+Princess--she wore a great hat with a grey feather and a
+chinchilla coat thrown open, and looked the incarnation of all the
+beauty and all the desires of all his dreams--and with a flash of
+gladness faced the audience and plunged into his speech.
+
+It began with a denunciation of the Little Englander. At that period
+one heard, perhaps, more of the Little Englander than one does
+nowadays--which to some people's way of thinking is a pity. The
+Little Englander (according to Paul) was a purblind creature, with
+political vision ice-bound by the economic condition of the
+labouring classes in Great Britain. The Little Englander had no
+sense of patriotism. The Little Englander had no sense of Empire. He
+had no sense of India, Australia, Canada. He had no sense of foreign
+nations' jealousy of England's secular supremacy. He had a distinct
+idea, however, of three nationalities; those of Ireland, Scotland
+and Wales. The inhabitants of those three small nations took
+peculiar pains to hammer that idea into his head. But of England he
+had no conception save as a mere geographical expression, a little
+bit of red on a map of Europe, a vague place where certain sections
+of the population clamoured for-much pay and little work. His dream
+was a parochial Utopia where the Irish peasant, the Welsh farmer and
+the Scottish crofter should live in luxury, and when these were
+satisfied, the English operative should live in moderate comfort.
+The Little Englander, in his insensate altruism, dreamed of these
+three nations entirely independent of England, except in the trivial
+matter of financial support. He wanted Australia, Canada, South
+Africa, to sever their links from him and take up with America,
+Germany, Switzerland--anybody so long as they did not interfere
+with his gigantic scheme for providing tramps in Cromarty with motor
+cars and dissolute Welsh shepherds with champagne. As for India, why
+not give it up to a benign native government which would depend upon
+the notorious brotherly love between Hindoo and Mussulman? If
+Russia, foolish, unawakened Russia, took possession of it, what
+would it matter to the miner of Merthyr Tydvil? As for England,
+provided such a country existed, she would be perfectly happy. The
+rich would provide for the poor--and what did anyone want further?
+Paul took up the Little Englander in his arms and tossed him in the
+air, threw him on the ground and jumped upon him. He cast his
+mutilated fragments with rare picturesqueness upon a Guy Fawkes
+bonfire. The audience applauded vociferously. He waited with a gay
+smile for silence, scanning them closely for the first time; and
+suddenly the smile faded from his face. In the very centre of the
+third row sat two people who did not applaud. They were Barney Bill
+and Jane.
+
+He looked at them fascinated. There could be no mistake. Barney
+Bill's cropped, shoe-brush hair was white as the driven snow; but
+the wry, bright-eyed face was unchanged. And Jane, quietly and
+decently dressed, her calm eyes fixed on him, was--Jane. These two
+curiously detached themselves against the human background. It was
+only the sudden stillness of the exhausted applause that brought him
+to consciousness of his environment; that, and a heaven-sent fellow
+at the back of the audience who shouted: "Go on, sonny!"
+
+Whereupon he plucked himself together with a swift toss of the head,
+and laughed his gay laugh. "Of course I'm going on, if you will let
+me. This is only the beginning of what I've got to tell you of the
+Englishman who fouls the nest of England--who fouls the nest of
+all that matters in the future history of mankind."
+
+There was more applause. It was the orator's appeal to the mass. It
+set Paul back into the stream of his argument. He forgot Barney Bill
+and Jane, and went on with his speech, pointedly addressing the
+young, telling them what England was, what England is, what
+Englishmen, if they are true to England, shall be. It was for the
+young, those who came fresh to life with the glories of England
+fresh in their memories, from Crecy to the Armada, from the Armada
+to Waterloo, to keep the banner of England flying over their topmost
+roofs.
+
+It was a fighting, enthusiastic, hyperbolic speech, glowing, as did
+the young face of the speaker, with the divine fire of youth. It
+ended triumphantly. He sat down to an ovation. Smiles and handshakes
+and words of praise surrounded him on the platform. Miss Winwood
+pressed his hand and said, "Well done." The Princess regarded him
+with flushed cheeks and starry eyes. It was only when silence fell
+on the opening words of the Dean of Halifax that he searched the
+rows in front for Barney Bill and Jane. They were still there.
+Impulsively he scribbled a few lines on a scrap of paper torn from
+his rough notes: "I must see you. Wait outside the side entrance for
+me after the meeting is over. Love to you both. Paul." A glance
+round showed him an attendant of the hall lurking at the back of the
+platform. He slipped quietly from his seat by the Chairman's side
+and gave the man the paper with directions as to its destination.
+Then he returned. just before the Dean ended, he saw the note
+delivered. Jane read it, whispered its contents to Bill and seemed
+to nod acquiescence. It was fitting that these two dear ghosts of
+the past should appear for the first time in his hour of triumph. He
+longed to have speech with them, The Dean of Halifax was brief, the
+concluding ceremonies briefer. The audience gave Paul a parting
+cheer and dispersed, while Paul, the hero of the evening, received
+the congratulations of his friends.
+
+"Those are things that needed saying, but we're too cautious to say
+them," remarked the Chairman.
+
+"We've got to be," said Colonel Winwood.
+
+"The glory of irresponsibility," smiled the Dean.
+
+"You don't often get this kind of audience," Paul answered with a
+laugh. "A political infants' school. One has to treat things in
+broad splashes."
+
+"You almost persuade me to be an Englishwoman," said. the Princess.
+
+Paul bowed. "But what more beautiful thing can there be than a
+Frenchwoman with England in her heart? Je ne demande pas mieux."
+
+And the Princess did not put her hands to her ears.
+
+The group passed slowly from the platform through a sort of
+committee room at the back, and reached the side entrance, Here they
+lingered, exchanging farewells. The light streamed dimly through the
+door on the strip of pavement between two hedges of spectators, and
+on the panelling and brass-work of an automobile by the curb. A
+chauffeur, with rug on arm, stepped forward and touched his cap, as
+the Princess appeared, and opened the door of the car. Paul,
+bare-headed, accompanied her across the pavement. Halt way she
+stopped for a second to adjust a slipping fur. He aided her quickly
+and received a bright smile of thanks. She entered the car--held
+out her hand for, his kiss.
+
+"Come and see me soon. I'll write or telephone."
+
+The car rolled away. The Winwoods' carriage drove up.
+
+It was a fighting, enthusiastic, hyperbolic speech, glowing with the
+divine fire of youth.
+
+"Can we give you a lift home, Paul?" asked Miss Winwood.
+
+"No thanks, dearest lady. There are one or two little things I must
+do before I go."
+
+"Good night."
+
+"Good night, Paul," said Colonel Winwood, shaking hands. "A
+thundering good speech."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+PAUL looked from side to side at the palely lit faces of the
+spectators, trying to distinguish Barney Bill and Jane. But he did
+not see them. He was disappointed and depressed, seized with a
+curious yearning for his own people. Vehicle after vehicle drew up
+and carried away the remainder of the platform group, and Paul was
+left in the doorway with the President and Honorary Secretary of the
+local lodge. The little crowd began to melt away. Suddenly his heart
+leaped and, after a hasty good night to the two officials, he sprang
+forward and, to their astonishment, gripped the hand of a bent and
+wizened old man.
+
+"Barney Bill! This is good. Where is Jane?"
+
+"Close by," said Bill.
+
+The President and Honorary Secretary waved farewells and marched
+away. Out of the gloom came Jane, somewhat shyly. He took both her
+hands and looked upon her, and laughed. "My dear Jane! What ages
+since we lost each other!"
+
+"Seven years, Mr. Savelli."
+
+"'Mr. Savelli I' Rubbish! Paul."
+
+"Begging your pardon," said Barney Bill, "but I've got a pal 'ere
+what I've knowed long before you was born, and he'd like to tell yer
+how he enjoyed your speech."
+
+A tall man, lean and bearded, and apparently very well dressed, came
+forward.
+
+"This is my old pal, Silas Finn," said Bill.
+
+"Delighted to meet you, Mr. Finn," said Paul, shaking hands.
+
+"I too," said the man gravely.
+
+"Silas Finn's a Councillor of the Borough," said Bill proudly.
+
+"You should have been on the platform," said Paul.
+
+"I attended in my private capacity," replied Mr. Finn.
+
+He effaced himself. Paul found himself laughing into Barney Bill's
+twinkling eyes. "Dear old Bill," he cried, clapping his old friend
+on the shoulder. "How are things going? How's the caravan? I've
+looked out for it on so many country roads."
+
+"I'm thinking of retiring," said Bill. "I can only do a few summer
+months now--and things isn't what they was."
+
+"And Jane?" He turned to her.
+
+"I'm Mr. Finn's secretary."
+
+"Oh," said Paul. Mr. Finn, then, was an important person.
+
+The drill hall attendant shut the door, and save for the street
+lamps they were in gloom. There was an embarrassed little silence.
+Paul broke it by saying: "We must exchange addresses, and fix up a
+meeting for a nice long talk."
+
+"If you would like to have a talk with your old friends now, my
+house is at your disposal," said Mr. Finn, in a soft, melancholy
+voice. "It is not far from here."
+
+"That's very kind of you--but I couldn't trespass on your
+hospitality."
+
+"Gor bless you," exclaimed Barney Bill. "Nothing of the kind. Didn't
+I tell yer I've knowed him since we was lads together? And Jane
+lives there."
+
+Paul laughed. "In that case--"
+
+"You'll be most welcome," said Mr. Finn. "This way."
+
+He went ahead with Barney Bill, whose queer side limp awoke poignant
+memories of the Bludston brickfield. Paul followed with Jane.
+
+"And what have you been doing?" he asked.
+
+"Typewriting. Then Bill came across Mr. Finn, whom he hadn't seen
+for years, and got me the position of secretary. Otherwise I've been
+doing nothing particular."
+
+"If you knew what a hunt I had years ago to find you," he said, and
+began to explain the set of foolish circumstances when they turned
+the corner of the drill hall and found a four-wheeled cab waiting.
+
+"I had already engaged it for my friends and myself," Mr. Finn
+explained. "Will you get in?"
+
+Jane and Paul and Mr. Finn entered the cab. Barney Bill, who liked
+air and for whom the raw November night was filled apparently with
+balmy zephyrs, clambered in his crablike way next the driver. They
+started.
+
+"What induced you to come to-night?" Paul asked.
+
+"We saw the announcement in the newspapers," replied Jane. "Barney
+Bill said the Mr. Paul Savelli could, be no one else but you. I said
+it couldn't."
+
+"Why?" he asked sharply.
+
+"There are heaps of people of the same name."
+
+"But you didn't think I was equal to it?"
+
+She laughed a short laugh. "That's just how you used to talk. You
+haven't changed much."
+
+"I hope I haven't," replied Paul earnestly. "And I don't think
+you've changed either."
+
+"Very little has happened to change me," said Jane.
+
+The cab lumbered on through dull, dimly lit, residential roads. Only
+by the swinging gleam of an occasional street lamp could Paul
+distinguish the faces of his companions. "I hope you're on our side,
+Mr. Finn," he said politely to his host, who sat on the small back
+seat.
+
+"I don't disagree with much that you said to-night. But you are on
+the side of wealth and aristocracy. I am on the side of the
+downtrodden and oppressed."
+
+"But so am I," cried Paul. "The work of every day of my life tends
+to help them."
+
+"You're a Conservative and I'm a Radical."
+
+"What do labels matter? We're both attacking the same problem, only
+from different angles."
+
+"Very likely, Mr. Savelli; but you'll pardon me if, according to my
+political creed, I regard your angle as an obtuse one."
+
+Paul wondered greatly who he could be, this grave, intelligent
+friend of Barney Bill's, who spoke with such dignity and courtesy.
+In his speech was a trace of rough accent; but his words were chosen
+with precision.
+
+"You think we glance off, whereas your attack is more direct,"
+laughed Paul.
+
+"That is so. I hope you don't mind my saying it. You were the
+challenger."
+
+"I was. But anyhow we're not going to be enemies."
+
+"God forbid," said Mr. Finn.
+
+Presently the cab stopped before a fairly large detached house
+standing back from the road. A name which Paul could not decipher
+was painted on the top bar of the gate. They trooped through and up
+some steps to the front door, which Mr. Finn opened with his
+latchkey. The first impression that Paul had on entering a wide
+vestibule was a blaze of gilt frames containing masses of bright,
+fresh paint. A parlour-maid appeared, and helped with hats and
+coats.
+
+"We are having a very simple supper, Mr. Savelli. Will you join us?"
+said Mr. Finn.
+
+"With the greatest pleasure," said Paul.
+
+The host threw open the dining-room door on the right. Jane and Paul
+entered; were alone for a few moments, during which Paul heard
+Barney Bill say in a hoarse whisper: "Let me have my hunk of bread
+and beef in the kitchen, Silas. You know as how I hates a fork and I
+likes to eat in my shirt sleeves."
+
+Paul seized Jane by the arms and regarded her luminously. He
+murmured: "Did you hear? The dear old chap!"
+
+She raised clear, calm eyes. "Aren't you shocked?"
+
+He shook her. "What do you take me for?"
+
+Jane was rebellious. "For what girls in my position generally call a
+'toff.' You---"
+
+"You're horrid," said Paul.
+
+"The word's horrid, not me. You're away up above us."
+
+"'Us' seems to be very prosperous, anyhow," said Paul, looking
+round him. Jane watched him jealously and saw his face change. The
+dining room, spaciously proportioned, was, like the vestibule, a
+mass of gilt frames and staring paint. Not an inch of wall above the
+oak dado was visible. Crude landscapes, wooden portraits, sea
+studies with waves of corrugated iron, subject pictures of
+childishly sentimental appeal, blinded the eyes. It looked as if a
+kindergarten had been the selecting committee for an exhibition of
+the Royal Academy. It looked also as if the kindergarten had
+replaced the hanging committee also. It was a conglomerate massacre.
+It was pictorial anarchy. It was individualism baresark, amok,
+crazily frantic. And an execrably vile, nerve-destroying
+individualism at that.
+
+Paul released Jane, who kept cool, defiant eyes on him.
+
+"What do you think of it?"
+
+He smiled. "A bit disconcerting."
+
+"The whole house is like this."
+
+"It's so new," said Paul.
+
+He looked about him again. The long table was plainly laid for three
+at the far end. The fare consisted of a joint of cold beef, a cold
+tart suggestive of apple, a bit of Cheshire cheese, and celery in a
+glass vase. Of table decoration of any kind there was no sign. A
+great walnut monstrosity meagrely equipped performed the functions
+of a sideboard. The chairs, ten straight-backed, and two easy by the
+fireplace, of which one was armless, were upholstered in saddlebag,
+yellow and green. In the bay of the red-curtained window was a huge
+terra-cotta bust of an ivy-crowned and inane Austrian female. There
+was a great fireplace in which a huge fire blazed cheerily, and on
+the broad, deep hearth stood little coloured plaster figures of
+stags, of gnomes, of rabbits, one ear dropping, the other ear
+cocked, of galloping hounds unknown to the fancy, scenting and
+pursuing an invisible foe.
+
+She watched him as he scanned the room.
+
+"Who is Mr. Finn?" he asked in a low voice.
+
+"Many years ago he was 'Finn's Fried Fish.' Now he's 'Fish Palaces,
+Limited.' They're all over London. You can't help seeing them even
+from a motor car."
+
+"I've seen them," said Paul.
+
+The argument outside the door having ended in a victory for the
+host, he entered the room, pushing Barney Bill gently in front of
+him. For the first time Paul saw him in the full light. He beheld a
+man sharply featured, with hair and beard, once raven-black,
+irregularly streaked with white--there seemed to be no
+intermediary shades of grey--and deep melancholy eyes. There hung
+about him the atmosphere of infinite, sorrowful patience that might
+mark a Polish patriot. As the runner of a successful fried fish
+concern he was an incongruity. As well, thought Paul, picture the
+late Cardinal Newman sharpening knife on steel outside a butcher's
+shop, and crying, "buy, buy," in lusty invitation. Then Paul noticed
+that he was oddly apparelled. He wore the black frock-coat suit of a
+Methodist preacher at the same time as the rainbow tie, diamond
+tie-pin, heavy gold watch-chain, diamond ring and natty spats of a
+professional bookmaker. The latter oddities, however, did not
+detract from the quiet, mournful dignity of his face and manner.
+Paul felt himself in the presence of an original personality.
+
+The maid came in and laid a fourth place. Mr. Finn waved Paul to a
+seat on his right, Barney Bill to one next Paul; Jane sat on his
+left.
+
+"I will ask a blessing," said Mr. Finn.
+
+He asked one for two minutes in the old-fashioned Evangelical way,
+bringing his guest into his address to the Almighty with an almost
+pathetic courtesy. "I am afraid, Mr. Savelli," said he, when he sat
+down and began to carve the beef, "I have neither wine nor spirits
+to offer you. I am a strict teetotaller; and so is Miss Seddon. But
+as I knew my old friend Simmons would be unhappy without his
+accustomed glass of beer--"
+
+"That's me," said Barney Bill, nudging Paul with his elbow.
+"Simmons. You never knowed that afore, did yer? Beg pardon, guv'nor,
+for interrupting."
+
+"Well, there's a jug of beer--and that is all at this hour, except
+water, that I can put before you."
+
+Paul declared that beer was delicious and peculiarly acceptable
+after public speaking, and demonstrated his appreciation by draining
+the glass which the maid poured out.
+
+"You wanted that badly, sonny," said Barney Bill. "The next thing to
+drinking oneself is to see another chap what enjoys swallering it."
+
+"Bill!" said Jane reprovingly.
+
+Barney Bill cocked his white poll across the table with the
+perkiness of a quaint bird--Paul saw that the years had brought a
+striation of tiny red filaments to his weather-beaten face--and
+fixed her with his little glittering eyes. "Bill what? You think I'm
+'urting his feelings?" He jerked a thumb towards his host. "I ain't.
+He thinks good drink's bad because bad has come of it to him--not
+that he ever took a drop too much, mind yer--but bad has come of
+it to him, and I think good drink's good because nothing but good
+has come of it to me. And we've agreed to differ. Ain't we, Silas?"
+
+"If every man were as moderate as you, and I am sure as Mr. Savelli,
+I should have nothing to say against it. Why should I? But the
+working man, unhappily, is not moderate."
+
+"I see," said Paul. "You preach, or advocate--I think you preach--total
+abstinence, and so feel it your duty to abstain yourself."
+
+"That is so," said Mr. Finn, helping himself to mustard. "I don't
+wish to bore you with my concerns; but I'm a fairly large employer
+of labour. Now I have found that by employing only pledged
+abstainers I get extraordinary results. I exact a very high rate of
+insurance, towards a fund--I need not go into details--to which
+I myself contribute a percentage--a far higher rate than would be
+possible if they spent their earnings on drink. I invest the whole
+lot in my business--their stoppages from wages and my
+contributions. I guarantee them 3 per cent.; I give them, actually,
+the dividends that accrue to the holders of ordinary stock in my
+company. They also have the general advantages of insurance--
+sickness, burial, maternity, and so forth--that they would get
+from an ordinary benefit society."
+
+"But that's enormous," cried Paul, with keen interest. "On the face
+of it, it seems impossible. It seems entirely uneconomic.
+Co-operative trading is one thing; private insurance another. But
+how can you combine the two?"
+
+"The whole secret lies in the marvellously increased efficiency of
+the employee." He developed his point.
+
+Paul listened attentively. "But," said he, when his host concluded,
+"isn't it rather risky? Supposing, for the sake of argument, your
+business failed."
+
+Mr. Finn held up the lean, brown hand on which the diamond sparkled.
+"My business cannot fail."
+
+Paul started. The assertion had a strange solemnity. "Without
+impertinence," said he, "why can't it fail?"
+
+"Because God is guiding it," said Silas Finn.
+
+The fanatic spoke. Paul regarded him with renewed interest. The
+black hair streaked with white, banging over the temples on the side
+away from the parting, the queerly streaked beard, the clear-cut
+ascetic features, the deep, mournful eyes in whose depths glowed a
+soul on fire, gave him the appearance of a mad but sanctified
+apostle. Barney Bill, who profoundly distrusted all professional
+drinkers of water, such as Mr. Finn's employees, ate his cold beef
+silently, in the happy surmise that no one was paying the least
+attention to his misperformances with knife, fork and fingers. Jane
+looked steadily from Paul to Silas and from Silas to Paul.
+
+Paul said: "How do you know God is guiding it?"
+
+At the back of his mind was an impulse of mirth--there was a touch
+of humorous blasphemy in the conception of the Almighty as managing
+director of "Fish Palaces, Limited"--but the nominal earthly
+managing director saw not the slightest humour in the proposition.
+
+"Who is guiding you in your brilliant career?" he asked.
+
+Paul threw out his hands, in the once practised and now natural
+foreign gesture. "I'm not an atheist. Of course I believe in God,
+and I thank Him for all His mercies--"
+
+"Yes, yes," said his host. "That I shouldn't question. But a
+successful man's thanks to God are most often merely conventional.
+Don't think I wish to be offensive. I only want to get at the root
+of things. You are a young man, eight-and-twenty--"
+
+"How do you know that?" laughed Paul.
+
+"Oh, your friends have told me. You are young. You have a brilliant
+position. You have a brilliant future. Were you born to it?"
+
+There was Jane on the opposite side of the table, entirely
+uninterested in her food, looking at him in her calm, clear way. She
+was so wholesome, so sane, in her young yet mature English
+lower-class beauty. She had broad brows. Her mass of dark brown hair
+was rather too flawlessly arranged. He felt a second's irritation at
+not catching any playfully straying strand. She was still the Jane
+of his boyhood, but a Jane developed, a Jane from whom no secrets
+were hid, a searching, questioning and quietly disturbing Jane.
+
+"A man is born to his destiny, whatever destiny may be," said Paul.
+
+"That is Mohammedan fatalism," said Mr. Finn, "unless one means by
+destiny the guiding hand of the Almighty. Do you believe that you're
+under the peculiar care of God?"
+
+"Do you, Mr. Finn?"
+
+"I have said so. I ask you. Do you?"
+
+"In a general way, yes," said Paul. "In your particular sense, no.
+You question me frankly and I answer frankly. You would not like me
+to answer otherwise."
+
+"Certainly not," said his host.
+
+"Then," Paul continued, with a smile, "I must say that from my
+childhood I have been fired with a curious certainty that I would
+succeed in life. Chance has helped me. How far a divine hand has
+been specially responsible, it isn't for me to conjecture. But I
+know that if I hadn't believed in myself I shouldn't have had my
+small measure of success."
+
+"You believe in yourself?"
+
+"Yes. And I believe in making others believe in me."
+
+"That is strange--very strange." Mr. Finn fixed him with his deep,
+sorrowful eyes. "You believe that you're predestined to a great
+position. You believe that you have in you all that is needful to
+attain it. That has carried you through. Strange!" He put his hand
+to his temple, elbow on table, and still regarded Paul. "But there's
+God behind it all. Mr. Savelli," he said earnestly, after a slight
+pause, "you are twenty-eight; I am fifty-eight; so I'm more than old
+enough to be your father. You'll forgive my taking up the attitude
+of the older man. I have lived a life such as your friends on the
+platform to-night--honorable, clean, sweet people--I've nothing
+to say against them--have no conception. I am English, of course--London
+born. My father was an Englishman; but my mother was a
+Sicilian. She used to go about with a barrel-organ--my father ran
+away with her. I have that violent South in my blood, and I've lived
+nearly all my days in London. I've had to pay dearly for my blood.
+The only compensation it has given me is a passion for art"--he
+waved his lean, bediamonded hand towards the horrific walls. "That
+is external--in a way--mere money has enabled me to gratify my
+tastes; but, as I was saying, I have lived a life of strange
+struggle, material, physical, and"--he brought down his free hand
+with a bang on the table--"it is only by the grace of God and the
+never-ceasing presence of Our Lord Jesus Christ by my side, that--
+that I am able to offer you my modest hospitality this evening."
+
+Paul felt greatly drawn to the man. He was beyond doubt sincere. He
+wore the air of one who had lived fiercely, who had suffered, who
+had conquered; but the air of one whose victory was barren, who was
+looking into the void for the things unconquerable yet essential to
+salvation. Paul made a little gesture of attention. He could find no
+words to reply. A man's deep profession of faith is unanswerable.
+
+"Ah," said Barney Bill, "you ought to have come along o' me, Silas,
+years ago in the old 'bus. You mightn't have got all these bright
+pictures, but you wouldn't have had these 'ere gloomy ideas. I don't
+say as how I don't hold with Gawd," he explained, with uplifted
+forefinger and cocked head; "but if ever I thinks of Him, I like to
+feel that He's in the wind or in the crickle-crackle of the earth,
+just near and friendly like, but not a-worrying of a chap, listening
+for every cuss-word as he uses to his old horse, and measuring every
+half-pint he pours down his dusty throat. No. That ain't my idea of
+Gawd. But then I ain't got religion."
+
+"Still the same old pagan," laughed Paul.
+
+"No, not the same, sonny," said Barney Bill, holding up his knife,
+which supported a morsel of cheese. "Old. Rheumaticky. Got to live
+in a 'ouse when it rains--me who never keered whether I was baked
+to a cinder or wet through! I ain't a pagan no more. I'm a crock."
+
+Jane smiled affectionately at the old man, and her face was lit with
+rare sweetness when she smiled. "He really is just the same," she
+said.
+
+"He hasn't changed much in forty years," said Mr. Finn.
+
+"I was a good Conservative then, as I am now," said Bill. "That's
+one thing, anyhow. So was you, Silas. But you had Radical leanings."
+
+Barney Bill's remark set the talk on political lines. Paul learned
+that his host had sat for a year or more as a Progressive on the
+Hickney Heath Borough Council and aspired to a seat in Parliament.
+
+"The Kingdom of Heaven," said he, not unctuously or hypocritically,
+but in his grave tone of conviction, "is not adequately represented
+in the House."
+
+Paul pointed out that in the House of Lords one had the whole bench
+of Bishops.
+
+"I'm not a member of the Established Church, Mr. Savelli," replied
+Mr. Finn. "I'm a Dissenter--a Free Zion'st."
+
+"I've heard him conduc' the service," said Barney Bill. "He built
+the Meeting House close by, yer know. I goes sometimes to try and
+get converted. But I'm too old and stiff in the j'ints. No longer a
+pagan, but a crock, sonny. But I likes to listen to him. Gorbli--
+bless me, it's a real bean feast--that's what it is. He talks
+straight from the shoulder, he does, just as you talked to-night.
+Lets 'em 'ave it bing-bang in the eye. Don't he, Jane?"
+
+"Bill means," she explained, with the shadow of a smile, for Paul's
+benefit, "that Mr. Finn is an eloquent preacher."
+
+"D'yer suppose he didn't understand what I meant Y' he exclaimed,
+setting down the beer glass which he was about to raise to his lips.
+"Him, what I discovered reading Sir Walter Scott with the cover off
+when he was a nipper with no clothes on? You understood, sonny.
+
+"Of course I did." He laughed gaily and turned to his host, who had
+suffered Barney Bill's queer eulogy with melancholy indulgence. "One
+of these days I should like to come and hear you preach."
+
+"Any Sunday, at ten and six. You would be more than welcome."
+
+The meal was over. Barney Bill pulled a blackened clay pipe from his
+waistcoat pocket and a paper of tobacco.
+
+"I'm a non-smoker," said Mr. Finn to Paul, "and I'm sorry I've
+nothing to offer you--I see little company, so I don't keep cigars
+in the house--but if you would care to smoke---" he waved a
+courteous and inviting hand.
+
+Paul whipped out his cigarette case. It was of gold--a present
+last Christmas from the Winwood fitting part of the equipment of a
+Fortunate Youth. He opened it, offered a cigarette to Barney Bill.
+
+"Garn!" said the old man. "I smokes terbakker," and he filled his
+pipe with shag.
+
+Mr. Finn rose from the table. "Will you excuse me, Mr. Savelli, if I
+leave you? I get up early to attend to my business. I must be at
+Billingsgate at half-past five to buy my fish. Besides, I have been
+preventing your talk with our friends. So pray don't go. Good-night,
+Mr. Savelli."
+
+As he shook hands Paul met the sorrowful liquid eyes fixed on him
+with strange earnestness. "I must thank you for your charming
+hospitality. I hope you'll allow me to come and see you again."
+
+"My house is yours."
+
+It was a phrase--a phrase of Castilian politeness--oddly out of
+place in the mouth of a Free Zionist purveyor of fried fish. But it
+seemed to have more than a Castilian, more than a Free Zionist
+significance. He was still pondering over it when Mr. Finn, having
+bidden Jane and Barney Bill good-night, disappeared.
+
+"Ah!" said Barney Bill, lifting up the beer jug in order to refill
+his glass, and checked whimsically by the fact of its emptiness.
+"Ah," said he, setting down the jug and limping round the table,
+"let us hear as how you've been getting on, sonny."
+
+They drew their chairs about the great. hearth, in which the idiotic
+little Viennese plaster animals sported in movement eternally
+arrested, and talked of the years that had passed. Paul explained
+once more his loss of Jane and his fruitless efforts to find her.
+
+"We didn't know," said Jane. "We thought that either you were dead
+or had forgotten us--or had grown too big a man for us."
+
+"Axing your pardon," said Barney Bill, taking his blackened clay
+from his lips and holding it between his gnarled fingers, "you said
+so. I didn't. I always held that, if he wasn't dead, the time would
+come when, as it was to-night, the three of us would be sitting
+round together. I maintained," he added solemnly after a puff or
+two, "that his heart was in the right place. I'm a broken-down old
+crock, no longer a pagan; but I'm right. Ain't I, sonny?" He thrust
+an arm into the ribs of Paul, who was sitting between them.
+
+Paul looked at Jane. "I think this proves it."
+
+She returned his look steadily. "I own I was wrong. But a woman only
+proves herself to be right by always insisting that she is wrong."
+
+"My dear Jane," cried Paul. "Since when have you become so
+psychological?"
+
+"Gorblime," said Barney Bill, "what in thunder's that?"
+
+"I know," said Jane. "You"--to Paul--"were good enough to begin
+my education. I've tried since to go on with it."
+
+"It's nothing to do with edication," said Barney Bill. "It's fac's.
+Let's have fac's. Jane and I have been tramping the same old
+high-road, but you've been climbing mountains--yer and yer gold
+cigarette cases. Let's hear about it."
+
+So Paul told his story, and as he told it, it seemed to him, in its
+improbability, more like a fairy-tale than the sober happenings of
+real life.
+
+"You've said nothing about the princess," Jane remarked, when he had
+ended.
+
+"The princess?"
+
+"Yes. Where does she come in?"
+
+"The Princess Zobraska is a friend of my employers."
+
+"But you and she are great friends," Jane persisted quietly. "That's
+obvious to anybody. I was standing quite close when you helped her
+into the motor car."
+
+"I didn't see you."
+
+"I took care you didn't. She looks charming."
+
+"Most princesses are charming--when they've no particular reason
+to be otherwise," said Paul. "It is their metier--their
+profession."
+
+There was a little silence. Jane, cheek on hand, looked thoughtfully
+into the fire. Barney Bill knocked' the ashes out of his pipe and
+thrust it in his pocket. "It's getting late, sonny."
+
+Paul looked at his watch. It was past one o'clock. He jumped up. "I
+hope to goodness you haven't to begin work at half-past five," he
+said to Jane.
+
+"No. At eight." She rose as he stretched out his hand. "You don't
+know what it is to see you again, Paul. I can't tell you. Some
+things are upsetting. But I'm glad. Oh, yes, I'm glad, Paul dear.
+Don't think I'm not."
+
+Her voice broke a little. They were the first gentle words she had
+given him all the evening. Paul smiled and kissed her hand as he had
+kissed that of the princess, and, still holding it, said: "Don't I
+know you of old? And if you suppose I haven't thought of you and
+felt the need of you, you're very much mistaken. Now I've found you,
+I'm not going to let you go again."
+
+She turned her head aside and looked down; there was the slightest
+movement of her plump shoulders. "What's the good? I can't do
+anything for you now, and you can't do anything for me. You're on
+the way to becoming a great man. To me, you're a great man already.
+Don't you see?"
+
+"My dear, I was an embryonic Shelley, Raphael, Garrick, and Napoleon
+when you first met me," he said jestingly.
+
+"But then you didn't belong to their--to their sphere. Now you do.
+Your friends are lords and ladies and--and princesses--"
+
+"My friends," cried Paul, "are people with great true hearts--like
+the Winwoods--and the princess, if you like--and you, and Barney
+Bill."
+
+"That's a sentiment as does you credit," said the old man. "Great
+true hearts! Now if you ain't satisfied, my dear, you're a damn
+criss-cross female. And yer ain't, are yer?' She laughed and Paul
+laughed. The little spell of intensity was broken. There were
+pleasant leave-takings.
+
+"I'll set you on your road a bit," said Barney Bill. "I live in the
+neighbourhood. Good-bye, Jane."
+
+She went with them to the front door, and stood in the gusty air
+watching them until they melted into the darkness.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+BETWEEN the young man of immaculate vesture, of impeccable manners,
+of undeniable culture, of instinctive sympathy with the great world
+where great things are done, of unerring tact, of mythological
+beauty and charm, of boundless ambition, of resistless energy, of
+incalculable promise, in outer semblance and in avowed creed the
+fine flower of aristocratic England, professing the divine right of
+the House of Lords and the utilitarian sanctity of the Church of
+England--between Paul, that is to say, and the Radical,
+progressive councillor of Hickney Heath, the Free Zionist dissenter
+(not even Congregationalist or Baptist or Wesleyan, or any
+powerfully organized Non-conformist whose conscience archbishops
+consult with astute patronage), the purveyor of fried fish, the man
+of crude, uncultivated taste, there should have been a gulf fixed as
+wide as the Pacific Ocean. As a matter of fact, whatever gulf lay
+between them was narrow enough to be bridged comfortably over by
+mutual esteem. Paul took to visiting Mr. Finn. Accustomed to the
+somewhat tired or conventional creeds of his political world, he
+found refreshment in the man's intense faith. He also found pathetic
+attraction in the man's efforts towards self-expression. Mr. Finn,
+who lived a life of great loneliness--scarcely a soul, said Jane,
+crossed his threshold from month's end to month's end--seemed
+delighted to have a sympathetic visitor to whom he could display his
+painted treasures. When he was among them the haunting pain vanished
+from his eyes, as sometimes one has seen it vanish from those of an
+unhappy woman among her flowers. He loved to take Paul through his
+collection and point out the beauties and claim his admiration. He
+had converted a conservatory running along one side of the house
+into a picture gallery, and this was filled with his masterpieces of
+pictorial villainy. Here Paul was at first astonished at recognizing
+replicas of pictures which hung in other rooms. Mr. Finn explained.
+
+"These," said he, "are the originals."
+
+Paul pondered over the dark saying for a moment or two until he came
+upon a half-finished canvas on an easel. It was the copy of a
+landscape on the wall. He turned questioningly to his host. The
+latter smiled.
+
+"I'm a bit of an artist myself," he said. "But as I've never had
+time for lessons in painting, I teach myself by copying good
+pictures. It's a Saunders"--a name unknown to Paul--"and a very
+good example. It's called Noontide. The cow is particularly good,
+isn't it? But it's exceedingly difficult. That fore-shortening--I
+can't get it quite right yet. But I go on and on till I succeed. The
+only way."
+
+Paul acquiesced and asked him where he had picked up his Saunders.
+Indeed, where had he picked up all the others? Not an exhibition in
+London would have admitted one of them. This "Saunders" represented
+a wooden cow out of drawing lying in the shade of a conventional
+tree. It was peculiarly bad.
+
+"I bought it direct from the artist," replied Mr. Finn. "He's an
+unrecognized genius, and now he's getting old, poor fellow. Years
+ago he offended the Royal Academy, and they never forgot it. He says
+they've kept him under all his life. I have a great many of his
+pictures." He looked admiringly at the cow for a while, and added:
+"I gave him four pounds ten for this one."
+
+Paul could not forbear saying, though his tone betrayed no irony: "A
+good price."
+
+"I think so," replied Mr. Finn. "That's what he asked. I could never
+haggle with an artist. His work is of the spirit, isn't it?"
+
+And Paul marvelled at the childlike simplicity of the man, the son
+of the Sicilian woman who went about with a barrel-organ, who,
+starting in the race on a level with Barney Bill, had made a fortune
+in the exploitation of fried fish. To disturb his faith in the
+genius of Saunders were a crime--as base a crime as proving to a
+child the non-existence of fairies. For Paul saw that Silas Finn
+found in this land of artistic illusion a refuge from many things;
+not only from the sordid cares of a large business, but perhaps also
+from the fierce intensity of his religion, from his driving and
+compelling deity. Here God entered gently.
+
+There was another reason, which Paul scarcely confessed to himself,
+for the pleasure he found in the older man's company. The veil which
+he had thrown so adroitly over his past history, which needed
+continuous adroitness to maintain, was useless in this house. Both
+Barney Bill and Jane had spoken of him freely. Silas Finn knew of
+Bludston, of his modeldom, of his inglorious career on the stage. He
+could talk openly once more, without the never-absent subconscious
+sense of reserve. He was still, in his own, eyes, the prince out of
+the fairy-tale; but Silas Finn and the two others alone of his
+friends shared the knowledge of the days when he herded swine. Now a
+prince out of a fairy-tale who has herded swine is a romantic
+figure. Paul did not doubt that he was one. Even Jane, in spite of
+her direct common sense, admitted it. Barney Bill proclaimed it
+openly, slapping him on the back and taking much credit to himself
+for helping the prince on the way to his kingdom. And Mr. Finn, even
+in the heat of political discussion or theological asseveration,
+treated him with a curious and pathetic deference.
+
+Meanwhile Paul pursued his own career of glory. The occasional
+visits to Hickney Heath were, after all, but rare, though distinct,
+episodes in his busy life. He had his parliamentary work for Colonel
+Winwood, his work for Miss Winwood, his work for the Young England
+League. He had his social engagements. He had the Princess Zobraska.
+He also began to write, in picturesque advocacy of his views, for
+serious weekly and monthly publications. Then Christmas came and lie
+found himself at Drane's Court, somewhat gasping for breath. A large
+houseparty, however, including Lord Francis Ayres, the chief
+Opposition Whip, threatened to keep him busy.
+
+The Princess drove over from Chetwood Park for dinner on Christmas
+Day. He had to worship from afar; for a long spell of the evening to
+worship with horrible jealousy. Lord Francis Ayres, a bachelor and a
+man of winning charm, as men must be whose function it is to keep
+Members of Parliament good and pleased with themselves and
+sheeplike, held the Princess captive, in a remote corner, with his
+honeyed tongue. She looked at him seductively out of her great,
+slumberous blue eyes, even as she had looked, on occasion, at him,
+Paul. He hated Lord Francis, set himself up against him, as of old
+he had set himself up against Billy Goodge. He was a better man than
+Frank Ayres. Frank Ayres was only a popinjay. Beneath the tails of
+his coat he snapped his fingers at Frank Ayres, while he listened,
+with his own agreeable smile, to Mademoiselle de Cressy's devilled
+gossip.
+
+He was very frigid and courtly when he bade the Princess good night
+at the door of her limousine.
+
+"Ah, que vous etes bete!" she laughed.
+
+He went to bed very angry. She had told him to his face that he was
+a silly fool. And so he was. He thought of all the brilliantly
+dignified things he might have said, if the relentless engine had
+not whirred her away down the drive. But the next morning Lord
+Francis met him in the wintry garden and smiled and held out a
+winning hand. Paul hid his hatred beneath the mask of courtesy. They
+talked for a few moments of indifferent matters. Then Frank Ayres
+suddenly said: "Have you ever thought of standing for Parliament?"
+
+Paul, who had been sauntering between flowerless beds with his
+companion, stood stock still. The Chief Whip of a political party is
+a devil of a fellow. To the aspiring young politician he is much
+more a devil of a fellow than the Prime Minister or any Secretary of
+State. If a Chief Whip breathes the suggestion that a man might
+possibly stand for election as a Member of Parliament, it means that
+at any suitable vacancy, or at a general election, be will, with
+utter certainty, have his chance as a candidate with the whole force
+of his party behind him. It is part of the business of Chief Whips
+to find candidates.
+
+"Of course," said Paul, rather stupidly. "Eventually. One of these
+days."
+
+"But soon?"
+
+"Soon?"
+
+Paul's head reeled. What did he mean by soon? "Well," Lord Francis
+laughed, "not to-morrow. But pretty soon. Look here, Savelli. I'm
+going to speak frankly. The party's in for a long period out of
+office. That's obvious. Look at the majority against us. We want the
+young blood--not the old hacks--so that when we come in again we
+shall have a band of trained men in the heyday of their powers. Of
+course I know--it's my business to know--what generally you have
+done for the Young England League, but I missed your speech at
+Flickney Heath in the autumn. You had an immense success, hadn't
+you?"
+
+"They seemed pleased with what I had to say," replied Paul modestly.
+"When did you hear about it?"
+
+"Last night."
+
+"The Winwoods are the dearest people in the world," said Paul,
+walking warily, "but they are prejudiced in my favour."
+
+"It wasn't the Winwoods."
+
+The beautiful truth flashed upon Paul.
+
+"Then it was the Princess Zobraska."
+
+The other laughed. "Never mind. I know all about it. It isn't often
+one has to listen to speeches at second-hand. The question is: Would
+you care to stand when the time comes?"
+
+"I should just think I would," cried Paul boyishly.
+
+All his jealous resentment had given place to exultation. It was the
+Princess who had told Frank Ayres. If she had been laying him under
+the spell of her seduction it was on his, Paul's, account. She had
+had the splendid audacity to recite his speech to the Chief Whip.
+Frank Ayres was suddenly transformed from a popinjay into an
+admirable fellow. The Princess herself sat enthroned more adorable
+than ever.
+
+"The only difficulty," said Paul, "is that I have to earn my
+living."
+
+"That might be arranged," said Lord Francis.
+
+So Paul, as soon as he found an opportunity, danced over to Chetwood
+Park and told his Princess all about it, and called her a tutelary
+goddess and an angel and all manner of pretty names. And the
+Princess, who was alone, poured for him her priceless Russian tea
+into egg-shell China tea-cups and fed him on English crumpets, and,
+in her French and feminine way, gave him the outer fringe of her
+heart to play with--a very dangerous game. She had received him,
+not as once before in the state drawing room, but in the intimacy of
+her own boudoir, a place all soft lights and cushions and tapestries
+and gleaming bits of sculpture. After tea and crumpets had been
+consumed, the dangerous game proceeded far enough for Paul to
+confess his unjust dislike of Frank Ayres.
+
+"Gros jaloux," said the Princess.
+
+"That was why you said que vous etes bete," said he.
+
+"Partly."
+
+"What were the other reasons?"
+
+"Any woman has a thousand reasons for calling any man stupid."
+
+"Tell me some of them at any rate."
+
+"Well, isn't it stupid of a man to try to quarrel with his best
+friend when he won't be seeing her again for three or four months?"
+
+"You're not going away soon?"
+
+"Next week."
+
+"Ohl" said Paul.
+
+"Yes. I go to Paris, then to my villa at Mont Boron. I have the
+nostalgia of my own country, you see. Then to Venice at Easter."
+
+I Paul looked at her wistfully, for life seemed suddenly very blank
+and dismal. "What shall I do all that time without my best friend?"
+
+"You will probably find another and forget her."
+
+She was lying back among cushions, pink and terra-cotta, and a round
+black cushion framed her delicate head.
+
+Paul said in a low voice, bending forward: "Do you think you are a
+woman whom men forget?"
+
+Their eyes met. The game had grown very perilous. "Men may remember
+the princess," she replied, "but forget the woman."
+
+"If it weren't for the woman inside the princess; what reason should
+I have for remembering?" he asked.
+
+She fenced. "But, as it is, you don't see me very often."
+
+"I know. But you are here--to be seen--not when I want you, for
+that would be every hour of the day--but, at least, in times of
+emergency. You are here, all the same, in the atmosphere of my
+life."
+
+"And if I go abroad I shall no longer be in that atmosphere? Did I
+not say you would forget?"
+
+She laughed. Then quickly started forward, and, elbow on knee and
+chin on palm, regarded him brightly. "We are talking like a couple
+of people out of Mademoiselle de Scudery," she said before he had
+time to reply. "And we are in the twentieth century, mon pauvre ami.
+We must be sensible. I know that you will miss me. And I will miss
+you too. Mais que voulez-vous? We have to obey the laws of the world
+we live in."
+
+"Need we?" asked Paul daringly. "Why need we?"
+
+"We must. I must go away to my own country. You must stay in yours
+and work and fulfill your ambitions." She paused. "I want you to be
+a great man," she said, with a strange tenderness in her voice.
+
+"With you by my side," said he, "I feel I could conquer the earth."
+
+"As your good friend I shall always be by your side. Vous voyez, mon
+cher Paul," she went on quickly in French. "I am not quite as people
+see me. I am a woman who is lonely and not too happy, who has had
+disillusions which have embittered her life. You know my history. It
+is public property. But I am young. And my heart is healed--and it
+craves faith and tenderness and--and friendship. I have many to
+flatter me. I am not too ugly. Many men pay their court to me, but
+they do not touch my heart. None of them even interest me. I don't
+know why. And then I have my rank, which imposes on me its
+obligations. Sometimes I wish I were a little woman of nothing at
+all, so that I could do as I like. Mais enfin, I do what I can. You
+have come, Paul Savelli, with your youth and your faith and your
+genius, and you pay your court to me like the others. Yes, it is
+true--and as long as it was amusing, I let it go on. But now that
+you interest me, it is different. I want your success. I want it
+with all my heart. It is a little something in my life--I confess
+it--quelque chose de tres joli--and I will not spoil it. So let
+us be good friends, frank and loyal--without any Scudery." She
+looked at him with eyes that had lost their languor--a sweet
+woman's eyes, a little moist, very true. "And now," she said, "will
+you be so kind as to put a log on the fire."
+
+Paul rose and threw a log on the glowing embers, and stood by her
+side. He was deeply moved. Never before had she so spoken. Never
+before had she afforded a glimpse of the real woman. Her phrases, so
+natural, so sincere, in her own tongue, and so caressive, stirred
+the best in him. The glamour passed from the royal lady; only the
+sweet and beautiful woman remained.
+
+"I will be what you will, my Princess," he said.
+
+At that moment he could not say more. For the first time in his life
+he was mute in a woman's presence; and the reason was that for the
+first time in his life love for a woman had gripped his heart.
+
+She rose and smiled at him. "Bons amis, francs et loyaux?"
+
+"Francs et loyaux."
+
+She gave him her hand in friendship; but she gave him her eyes in
+love. It is the foolish way of women.
+
+"May a frank and loyal friend write to you sometimes?" he asked.
+
+"Why, yes. And a frank and loyal friend will answer."
+
+"And when shall I see you again?"
+
+"Did I not tell you," she said, moving to the bell, for this was
+leave-taking--"that I shall be in Venice at Easter?"
+
+Paul went out into the frosty air, and the bright wintry stars shone
+down on him. Often on such nights he had looked up, wondering which
+was his star, the star that guided his destiny. But to-night no such
+fancy crossed his mind. He did not think of the stars. He did not
+think of his destiny. His mind and soul were drenched in thought of
+one woman. It had come at last, the great passion, the infinite
+desire. It had come in a moment, wakened into quivering being by the
+caressive notes of the dear French voice--"mais je suis jeune, et
+mon coeur est gueri, et il lui manque affreusement de la foi, de la
+tendresse, de--de"--adorable catch of emotion--"de l'amitie."
+Friendship, indeed! For amitie all but her lips said amour. He
+walked beneath the wintry stars, a man in a perfect dream.
+
+Till then she had been but his Princess, the exquisite lady whom it
+had amused to wander with him into the pays du tendre. She had been
+as far above him as the now disregarded stars. She had come down
+with a carnival domino over her sidereal raiment, and had met him on
+carnival equality. He beau masque! He, knowing her, had fallen
+beneath her starry spell. He was Paul Kegworthy, Paul Savelli, what
+you like; Paul the adventurer, Paul the man born to great things.
+She was a beautiful woman, bearing the title of Princess, the title
+that had haunted his life since first the Vision Splendid dawned
+upon him as he lay on his stomach eavesdropping and heard the words
+of the divinely-smelling goddess who had given him his talisman, the
+cornelian heart. To "rank himself with princes" had been the intense
+meaning of his life since ragged and fiercely imaginative childhood.
+Odd circumstances had ranked him with Sophie Zobraska. The mere
+romance of it had carried him off his feet. She was a princess. She
+was charming. She frankly liked his society. She seemed interested
+in his adventurous career. She was romantic. He too. She was his
+Egeria. He had worshipped her romantically, in a mediaeval, Italian
+way, and she had accepted the homage. It had all been deliciously
+artificial. It had all been Mademoiselle de Scudery. But to-day the
+real woman, casting off her carnival domino, casting off too the
+sidereal raiment, had spoken, for the first time, in simple
+womanhood, and her betraying eyes had told things that they had told
+to no other man living or dead. And all that was artificial, all
+that was fantastic, all that was glamour, was stripped away from
+Paul in the instant of her self-revelation. He loved her as man
+loves woman. He laughed aloud as his young feet struck the frozen
+road. She knew and was not angry. She, in her wonder, gave him leave
+to love her. It was obvious that she loved him to love her. Dear
+God! He could go on loving her like this for the rest of his life.
+What more did he want? To the clean man of nine-and-twenty,
+sufficient for the day is the beauty thereof.
+
+An inspired youth took his place at the Winwoods' dinner table that
+evening. The elderly, ugly heiress, Miss Durning, concerning whom
+Miss Winwood had, with gentle malice, twitted him some months
+before, sat by his side. He sang her songs of Araby and tales of far
+Cashmere--places which in the commonplace way of travel he had
+never visited. What really happened in the drawing room between the
+departure of the ladies and the entrance of the men no one knows.
+But before the ladies went to bed Miss Winwood took Paul aside.
+
+"Paul dear," she said, "you're never going to marry an old woman for
+money, are you?"
+
+"Good God, no! Dearest lady, what do you mean?"
+
+His cry was so sincere that she laughed.
+
+"Nothing," she said.
+
+"But you must mean something." He threw out his hands.
+
+"Are you aware that you've been flirting disgracefully with Lizzle
+Durning?"
+
+"I?" said Paul, clapping a hand to his shirt-front.
+
+"You."
+
+He smiled his sunny smile into the clear, direct eyes of his dearest
+lady--all the more dear because of the premature white of her
+hair. "I would flirt to-night with Xantippe, or Kerenhappuch, or
+Queen Victoria," said he.
+
+"Why?"
+
+He laughed, and although none of the standing and lingering company
+had overheard them, he gently led her to the curtained embrasure of
+the drawing-room window.
+
+"This is perhaps the biggest day of my life. I've not had an
+opportunity of telling you. This morning Frank Ayres offered me a
+seat in Parliament."
+
+"I'm glad," said Ursula Winwood; but her eyes hardened. "And so--
+Lizzie Durning--"
+
+He took both her elbows in his hands--only a Fortunate Youth, with
+his laughing charm, would have dared to grip Ursula Winwood's elbows
+and cut her short. "Dearest lady," said he, "to-day there are but
+two women in the world for me. You are one. The other--well--it
+isn't Miss Durning."
+
+She searched him through and through, "This afternoon?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Paul!" She withdrew from his grasp. In her voice was a touch of
+reproach.
+
+"Dearest lady," said he, "I would die rather than marry a rich
+woman, ugly or beautiful, if I could not bring her something big in
+return--something worth living for."
+
+"You've fold me either too much or too little. Am I not entitled to
+know how things stand?"
+
+"You're entitled to know the innermost secrets of my heart," he
+cried; and he told thereof as far as his love for the Princess was
+concerned.
+
+"But, my poor boy," said Ursula tenderly, "how is it all going to
+end?"
+
+"It's never going to end," cried Paul.
+
+Ursula Winwood smiled on him and sighed a little; for she remembered
+the gallant young fellow who had been killed in the Soudan in
+eighteen eighty-five.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+IT would never end. Why should it? Could a Great Wonder be merely a
+transient thrill? Absurd. Dawn followed night, day after day, and
+the wonder had not faded. It would never fade. Letter followed
+letter, each more precious than the last.
+
+She began with "Mon cher Paul." Then "Mon cher," then sometimes
+"Paul." She set the tone of the frank and loyal friendship in a
+style very graceful, very elusive, a word of tenderness melting away
+in a laugh; she took the friendship, pulled it to pieces and
+reconstructed it in ideal form; then she tied blue ribbon round its
+neck, and showed him how beautiful it was. She sat on the veranda of
+her villa and looked' out on the moonlit Mediterranean and wanted to
+cry--"J'avais enbie de Pleurer"--because she was all alone,
+having entertained at dinner a heap of dull and ugly people. She had
+spent a day on the yacht of a Russiarr Grand-Duke. "Il m'a fait une
+cour effrenee"--Paul thirsted immediately for the blood of this
+Grand-Duke, who had dared to make violent love to her. But when, a
+few lines farther on, he found that she had guessed his jealousy and
+laughed at it, he laughed too. "Don't be afraid. I have had enough
+of these people." She wanted une ame sincere et candide; and Paul
+laid the flattering unction to his own sincere and candid soul. Then
+she spoke prettily of his career. He was to be the flambeau
+eveilleur, the awakening torch in the darkness before the daybreak.
+But he musn't overwork. His health was precious. There was a blot
+and erasure in the sentence. He took the letter to the light,
+lover-wise, and looked at it through a magnifying glass--and his
+pulses thrilled when it told him that she had originally written,
+"Votre sante m'est precieuse," and had scrabbled out the "m." "Your
+health is precious to me." That is what her heart had said. Did
+lover ever have a dearer mistress? He kissed the blot, and the thick
+French ink coming off on his lips was nectar.
+
+And he began his letters with "My dear Princess;" then it was
+"Dearest Princess;" then "My Princess." Then she rallied him on the
+matter. It came to "Mais enfin j'ai un petit nom comme tout le
+monde." In common with the rest of humanity she had a Christian
+name--and she was accustomed to be called by it by her frank and loyal
+friends. "And they are so few." Paul heard the delicate little sigh
+and saw the delicate rise and fall of the white bosom. And again he
+fed on purple ink. So he began his next letter with "Dear Sophie."
+But he could not pour the same emotion into "Dear Sophie" as he
+could into "My Princess"--and "My Sophie" was a step beyond the
+bounds of frank and loyal friendship. So it came to his
+apostrophizing her as "Dear" and scattering "Sophies" deliciously
+through the text. And so the frank and loyal friendship went on its
+appointed course, as every frank and loyal friendship between two
+young and ardent souls who love each other has proceeded since the
+beginning of a sophisticated world.
+
+The first three months of that year were a period of enchantment. He
+lived supremely. The daily round of work was trivial play. He rose
+at seven, went to bed at two, crowded the nineteen hours of
+wakefulness with glorious endeavour. He went all over the country
+with his flambeau eveilleur, awakening the Youth of England, finding
+at last the great artistic gift the gods had given him, the gift of
+oratory. One day he reminded Jane of a talk long ago when he had
+fled from the studios: "You asked me how I was going to earn my
+living. I said I was going to follow one of the Arts."
+
+"I remember," said Jane, regarding him full-eyed. "You said you
+thought you were a poet--but you might be a musician or painter.
+Finally you decided you were an actor."
+
+He laughed his gay laugh. "I was an infernally bad actor," he
+acknowledged.
+
+Then he explained his failure on the stage. He was impatient of
+other people's inventions, wanting to play not Hamlet or Tom or Dick
+or Romeo or Harry, but himself. Now he could play himself. It was
+acting in a way. Anyhow it was an Art; so his boyish prophecy had
+come true. He had been struggling from childhood for a means of
+self-expression. He had tried most of them save this. Here he had
+found it. He loved to play upon a crowd as if they were so many
+notes of a vast organ.
+
+On this occasion Jane said: "And my means of self-expression is to
+play on the keys of a typewriter."
+
+"Your time hasn't come," he replied. "When you have found your means
+you will express yourself all the more greatly."
+
+Which was ingenious on the part of Paul, but ironically consoling to
+Jane.
+
+One week-end during the session he spent at the Marchioness of
+Chudley's place in Lancashire. He drove in a luxurious automobile
+through the stately park, which once he had traversed in the
+brakeful of urchins, the raggedest of them all, and his heart
+swelled with pardonable exultation. He had passed through Bludston
+and he had caught a glimpse of what had once been his brickfield,
+now the site of more rows of mean little houses, and he had seen the
+grim factory chimneys still smoking, smoking. . . . The little
+Buttons, having grown up into big Buttons, were toiling away their
+lives in those factories. And Button himself, the unspeakable
+Button? Was he yet alive? And Mrs. Button, who had been Polly
+Kegworthy and called herself his mother? It was astonishing how
+seldom he thought of her. . . . He had run away a scarecrow boy in a
+gipsy van. He came back a formative force in the land, the lover of
+a princess, the honoured guest of the great palace of the
+countryside. He slipped his hand into his waistcoat pocket and felt
+the cornelian heart.
+
+Yes, in the great palace he found himself an honoured guest. His
+name was known independently of his work for the Winwoods. He was
+doing good service to his party. The word had gone abroad--perhaps
+Frank Ayres had kindly spoken it--that he was the coming man. Lady
+Chudley said: "I wonder if you remember what we talked about when I
+first met you."
+
+Paul laughed, for she did not refer to the first meeting of all.
+"I'm afraid I was very young and fatuous," said he. "It was years
+ago. I hadn't grown up."
+
+"Never mind. We talked about waking the country from its sleep."
+
+"And you gave me a phrase, Lady Chudley--'the Awakener of
+England.' It stuck. It crystallized all sorts of vague ambitions.
+I've never forgotten it for five consecutive minutes. But how can
+you remember a casual act of graciousness to an unimportant boy?"
+
+"No boy who dreams of England's greatness is unimportant," she said.
+"You've proved me to be right. Your dreams are coming true--see, I
+don't forget!"
+
+"I owe you far more than you could possibly imagine," said Paul.
+
+"No, no. Don't. Don't exaggerate. A laughing phrase--that's
+nothing."
+
+"It is something. Even a great deal. But it's not all," said he.
+
+"What else is there?"
+
+"You were one of the two or three," he said earnestly, thinking of
+the Bludston factory, "who opened new horizons for me."
+
+"I'm a proud woman," said Lady Chudley.
+
+The next day, Sunday, old Lord Chudley dragged him into his own
+private den. He had a very red, battered, clean-shaven face and very
+red hair and side whiskers; and he was a very honest gentleman,
+believing implicitly in God and the King and the House of Lords, and
+Foxes, and the Dutch School of Painting, and his responsibility as a
+great landowner toward the two or three thousand human beings with
+whom he had business relations.
+
+"Look here, Savelli. I've looked into your League. It's a damned
+good thing. About the only thing that has been invented which can
+stem the tide of Socialism. Catch 'em young. That's the way. But you
+want the sinews of war. You get subscriptions, but not enough; I've
+seen your last balance sheet. You want a little army of--what the
+devil shall we call 'em?"
+
+"Big Englanders," Paul suggested at a venture.
+
+"Good. We want an army of 'em to devote their whole time to the
+work. Open a special fund. You and Ursula Winwood will know how to
+work it. What Ursula Winwood doesn't know in this sort of business
+isn't worth knowing--and here's something to head the list with."
+
+And he handed Paul a cheque, which after a dazed second or two he
+realized to be one for five thousand pounds.
+
+That was the beginning of the financial prosperity and the real
+political importance of the Young England League. Paul organized a
+great public dinner with the Leader of the Opposition in the chair
+and an amazing band of notables around the tables. Speeches were
+made, the Marquis of Chudley's patriotism extolled, and subscription
+lists filled up and handed to a triumphant organizing secretary.
+
+A powerful daily newspaper took up the cause and made strong appeal.
+The Lodges made simultaneous efforts in their respective districts.
+Money flowed into the League's coffers.
+
+When Parliament rose for the Easter recess Paul, the most tired, yet
+the most blissful, youth among the Fortunate, flew straight to
+Venice, where a happy-eyed princess welcomed him. She was living in
+a Palazzo on the Grand Canal, lent to her--that is the graceful
+Italian way of putting it--by some Venetian friends; and there,
+with Mademoiselle de Cressy to keep off the importunate, she
+received such acquaintance as floated from the ends of the earth
+through the enchanted city.
+
+"I have started by seeing as few people as I can," she said. "That's
+all on account of you, monsieur."
+
+He pressed her hand. "I hope we don't see a single soul we know as
+long as I'm here," he declared.
+
+His hope was gratified, not completely, but enough to remove grounds
+for lover's fretfulness. He passed idyllic days in halcyon weather.
+Often she would send her gondola to fetch him from the Grand Hotel,
+where he was staying. Now and then, most graciously audacious of
+princesses, she would come herself. On such occasions he would sit
+awaiting her with beating heart, juvenis fortunatus nimium, on the
+narrow veranda of the hotel, regardless of the domed white pile of
+Santa Maria della Salute opposite, or the ceaseless life on the
+water, or the sunshine, or anything else in Venice, his gaze fixed
+on the bend of the canal; and then at last would appear the tall
+curved prow, and then the white-clad, red-sashed Giacomo bending to
+his oar, and then the white tenda with the dear form beneath,
+vaguely visible, and then Felipe, clad like Giacomo and bending,
+too, rhythmically with the foremost figure. Slowly, all too slowly,
+the gondola would near the steps, and beneath the tenda would smile
+the dearest face in the world, and the cheeks would be delicately
+flushed and the eyes tender and somewhat shy. And Paul would stand,
+smiling too, a conquering young figure with green Marienbad hat
+tilted with ever so tiny a shade of jauntiness, the object of
+frankly admiring and curious glances from a lone woman or two on the
+veranda, until the gondola was brought up to the wave-washed steps,
+and the hotel porter had fixed the bridge of plank. Then, with
+Giacomo supporting his elbow, he would board the black craft and
+would creep under the tenda and sink on the low seat by her side
+with a sense of daring and delicious intimacy, and the gondola would
+glide away into fairyland.
+
+"Let us be real tourists and do Venice thoroughly," she had said. "I
+have never seen it properly."
+
+"But you've been here many times before."
+
+"Yes. But--"
+
+She hesitated.
+
+"Eh bien?"
+
+"Je ne peux pas le dire. Il faut deviner."
+
+"Will you forgive me if I guess right? Our great Shakespeare says:
+'Love lends a precious seeing to the eye.'"
+
+"That--that's very pretty," said the Princess in French. "I love
+much your Shakespeare."
+
+Whereupon Paul recognized her admission of the correctness of his
+conjecture; and so, with the precious vision they had borrowed, they
+went about tourist-wise to familiar churches and palaces, and
+everything they saw was lit with exceeding loveliness. And they saw
+the great pictures of the world, and Paul, with his expert
+knowledge, pointed out beauties she had not dreamed of hitherto, and
+told her tales of the painters and discoursed picturesquely on
+Venetian history, and she marvelled at his insight and learning and
+thought him the most wonderful man that had ever dropped,
+ready-made, from heaven. And he, in the flush of his new love, was
+thrilled by her touch and the low tones of her voice when she
+plucked him by the sleeve and murmured: "Ah, Paul, regardez-moi ca.
+It is so beautiful one wants to weep with joy."
+
+They spoke now half in French, half in English, and she no longer
+protested against his murderous accent, which, however, lie strove
+to improve. Love must have lent its precious hearing too, for she
+vowed she loved to hear him speak her language.
+
+In the great Council Chamber of the Ducal Palace they looked at the
+seventy-six portraits of the illustrious succession of Doges--with
+the one tragic vacant space, the missing portrait of Marino Faliero,
+the Rienzi of Venice, the man before his time.
+
+"It seizes one's heart, doesn't it?" said the Princess, with her
+impulsive touch on his sleeve. "All these men were kings--
+sovereigns of a mighty nation. And how like they are to one another--in
+this essential quality one would say they were brothers of a
+great family."
+
+"Why, yes," he cried, scanning the rows of severe and subtle faces.
+"It's true. Illuminatingly true."
+
+He slid up his wrist quickly so that his hand met hers; he held it.
+"How swift your perception is! And what is that quality--that
+quality common to them all--that quality of leadership? Let us try
+to find it."
+
+Unconsciously he gripped her hand, and she returned his pressure;
+and they stood, as chance willed it, alone, free from circumambulant
+tourists, in the vast chamber, vivid with Paul Veronese's colour on
+wall and ceilings, with Tintoretto and Bassano' with the arrogant
+splendour of the battles and the pomp and circumstance of victorious
+armies of the proud and conquering republic, and their eyes were
+drawn from all this painted and riotous wonder by the long arresting
+frieze of portraits of serene, masterful and subtle faces.
+
+"The common factor--that's what we want, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," she breathed.
+
+And as they stood, hand in hand, the unspoken thought vibrating
+between them, the memory came to him of a day long ago when he had
+stood with another woman--a girl then--before the photographs in
+the window of the London Stereoscopic Company in Regent Street, and
+he had scanned faces of successful men. He laughed--he could not
+help it--and drew his Princess closer to him. Between the
+analogous then and the wonderful now, how immense a difference! As
+he laughed she looked swiftly up into his face.
+
+"I know why you laugh."
+
+"No, my Princess. Impossible."
+
+"Mais oui. Tell me. All these great princes"--she swept her little
+gloved hand toward the frieze. "What is their common factor?"
+
+Paul, forgetful of his mirth, looked round. "'Indomitable will,"
+said be seriously. "Unconquerable ambition, illimitable faith. They
+all seem to be saying their creed. 'I believe in myself almighty,
+and in Venice under my control, and in God who made us both, and in
+the inferiority of the remnant of the habitable globe.' Or else: 'In
+the beginning God created Venice. Then He created the rest of the
+world. Then He created Me. Then He retired and left me to deal with
+the situation.' Or else: 'I am an earthly Trinity. I am myself. I am
+Venice. I am God.'"
+
+"It is magnificent!" she cried. "How you understand them! How you
+understand the true aristocratic spirit! They are all, what you
+call, leaders of men. I did not expect an analysis so swift and so
+true. But, Paul"--her voice sank adorably--"all these men lack
+something--something that you have. And that is why I thought you
+laughed."
+
+He smiled down on her. "Do you think I was measuring myself with
+these men?"
+
+"Naturally. Why should you not?" she asked proudly.
+
+"And what have I got that they lack?"
+
+"Happiness," said the Princess.
+
+Paul was silent for a while, as they moved slowly away to the
+balcony which overlooks the lagoon and San Giorgio Maggiore glowing
+warm in the sunshine, and then he said: "Yet most of those men loved
+passionately in their time, and were loved by beautiful women."
+
+"Their love was a thing of the passions, not of the spirit. You
+cannot see a woman, that is to say happiness, behind any of their
+faces."
+
+He whispered: "Can you see a woman behind mine."
+
+"If you look like that," she replied, with a contented little laugh,
+"the whole world can see it." And so their talk drifted far away
+from Doges, just as their souls were drifting far from the Golden
+Calf of the Frank and Loyal Friendship which Sophie the Princess had
+set up.
+
+How could they help it--and in Venice of all places in the world?
+If she had determined on maintaining the friendship calm and
+austere, why in Minerva's name had she bidden him hither? Sophie
+Zobraska passed for a woman of sense. None knew better than she the
+perils of moonlit canals and the sensuous splash of water against a
+gondola, and the sad and dreamy beauty which sets the lonely heart
+aching for love. Why had she done it? Some such questions must
+Mademoiselle de Cressy have asked, for the Princess told him that
+Stephanie had lectured her severely for going about so much in
+public alone with a beau jeune homme.
+
+"But we don't always want Stephanie with us," she argued, "and she
+is not sympathetic in Venice. She likes restaurants and people.
+Besides, she is always with her friends at Danielli's, so if it
+weren't for you I should be doing nothing all by myself in the
+lonely palazzo. Forcement we go about together."
+
+Which was all sophistical and nonsensical; and she knew it, for
+there was a mischievous little gleam in her eye as she spoke. But
+none the less, shutting her ears to the unsympathetic Stephanie, did
+she continue to show herself alone in public with the beautiful
+youth. She had thrown her crown over the windmills for a few happy
+days; for a few happy days she was feeding her starved nature,
+drinking in her fill of beauty and colour and the joy of life. And
+the pair, thus forcibly thrown together, drifted through the narrow
+canals beneath the old crumbling palaces, side by side, and hand in
+hand while Giacomo and Felipe, disregarded automata, bent to their
+oars.
+
+One afternoon, one mellow and memorable afternoon, they were
+returning from Murano. Not a breath of wind ruffled the lagoon. The
+islands in their spring verdure slumbered peacefully. Far away the
+shipping in the bacino lay still like enchanted craft. Only a
+steamer or two, and here and there the black line of a gondola with
+its standing, solitary rower, broke the immobility of things. And
+Venice, russet and rose and grey, brooded in the sunset, a city of
+dreams. They murmured words of wonder and regret. Instinctively they
+drew near and their shoulders touched. Their clasp of fingers
+tightened and their breath came quickly, and for a long time they
+were silent. Then at last he whispered her name, in the old foolish
+and inevitable way. And she turned her face to him, and met his eyes
+and said "Paul," and her lips as she said it seemed to speak a kiss.
+And all the earth was wrapped in glory too overwhelming for speech.
+
+It was only when they entered the Grand Canal and drew up by the
+striped posts of the palazzo that she said: "I have those Roman
+people and the Heatherfields coming to dinner. I wish I hadn't." She
+sighed. "Would you care to come?"
+
+He smiled into her eyes. "No, my Princess, not to-night. I should do
+silly things. To-night I will go and talk to the moon. To-morrow,
+when can I come?"
+
+"Early. As early as you like."
+
+And Paul went away and talked to the moon, and the next morning, his
+heart tumultuous, presented himself at the palazzo. He was shown
+into the stiff Italian drawing-room, with its great Venetian glass
+chandelier, its heavy picture-hung walls, its Empire furniture
+covered in yellow silk. Presently the door opened and she entered,
+girlish in blouse and skirt, fresh as the morning. "Bon jour, Paul.
+I've not had time to put on my hat, but--"
+
+She did not end, for he strode toward her and with a little laugh of
+triumph took her in his arms and kissed her. And so what had to be
+came to pass.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+I LOVE you too much, my Sophie, to be called the Princess Zobraska's
+husband."
+
+"And I love you too much, dear, to wish to be called anything else
+than Paul Savelli's wife."
+
+That was their position, perfectly defined, perfectly understood.
+They had arrived at it after many arguments and kisses and lovers'
+protestations.
+
+"Such as I am I am," cried Paul. "A waif and stray, an unknown
+figure coming out of the darkness. I have nothing to give you but my
+love."
+
+"Are there titles or riches on earth of equal value?"
+
+"But I must give you more. The name Paul Savelli itself must be a
+title of honour."
+
+"It is becoming that," said the Princess. "And we can wait a little,
+Paul, can't we? We are so happy like this. Ah!" she sighed. "I have
+never been so happy in my life."
+
+"Nor I," said Paul.
+
+"And am I really the first?"
+
+"The first. Believe it or not as you like. But it's a fact. I've
+told you my life's dream. I never sank below it; and that is why
+perhaps it has come true."
+
+For once the assertion was not the eternal lie. Paul came
+fresh-hearted to his Princess.
+
+"I wish I were a young girl, Paul."
+
+"You are a star turned woman. The Star of my Destiny in which I
+always believed. The great things will soon come."
+
+They descended to more commonplace themes. Until the great things
+came, what should be their mutual attitude before Society?
+
+"Until I can claim you, let it be our dear and beautiful secret,"
+said Paul. "I would not have it vulgarized by the chattering world
+for anything in life."
+
+Then Paul proved himself to be a proud and delicate lover, and when
+London with its season and its duties and its pleasures absorbed
+them, he had his reward. For it was sweet to see her in great
+assemblies, shining like a queen and like a queen surrounded by
+homage, and to know that he alone of mortals was enthroned in her
+heart. It was sweet to meet her laughing glance, dear
+fellow-conspirator. It was sweet every morning and night to have the
+intimate little talk through the telephone. And it was sweetest of
+all to snatch a precious hour with her alone. Of such vain and
+foolish things is made all that is most beautiful in life.
+
+He took his dearest lady--though Miss Winwood, now disclaimed the
+title--into his confidence. So did the Princess. It was very
+comforting to range Miss Winwood on their side; and to feel
+themselves in close touch with her wisdom and sympathy. And her
+sympathy manifested itself in practical ways--those of the woman
+confidante of every love affair since the world began. Why should
+the Princess Zobraska not interest herself in some of the
+philanthropic schemes of which the house in Portland Place was the
+headquarters? There was one, a Forlorn Widows' Fund, the presidency
+of which she would be willing to resign in favour of the Princess.
+The work was trivial: it consisted chiefly in consultation with Mr.
+Savelli and in signing letters. The Princess threw her arms round
+her neck, laughing and blushing and calling her delicieuse. You see
+it was obvious that Mr. Savelli could not be consulted in his
+official capacity or official letters signed elsewhere than in
+official precincts.
+
+"I'll do what I can for the pair of you," said Miss Winwood to Paul.
+"But it's the most delightfully mad and impossible thing I've ever
+put my hand to."
+
+Accepting the fact of their romance, however, she could not but
+approve Paul's attitude. It was the proud attitude of the boy who
+nearly six years ago was going, without a word, penniless and
+debonair out of her house. All the woman in her glowed over him.
+
+"I'm not going to be called an adventurer," he had declared. "I
+shall not submit Sophie to the indignity of trailing a despised
+husband after her. I'm not going to use her rank and wealth as a
+stepping-stone to my ambitions. Let me first attain an unassailable
+position. I shall have owed it to you, to myself, to anybody you
+like--but not to my marriage. I shall be somebody. The rest won't
+matter. The marriage will then be a romantic affair, and romantic
+affairs are not unpopular dans le monde ou l'on s'ennuie."
+
+This declaration was all very well; the former part all very noble,
+the latter exhibiting a knowledge of the world rather shrewd for one
+so young. But when would he be able to attain his unassailable
+position? Some years hence. Would Sophie Zobraska, who was only a
+few months younger than he, be content to sacrifice these splendid
+and irretrievable years of her youth? Ursula Winwood looked into the
+immediate future, and did not see it rosy. The first step toward an
+unassailable position was flight from the nest. This presupposed an
+income. If the party had been in power it would not have been
+difficult to find him a post. She worried herself exceedingly, for
+in her sweet and unreprehensible way she was more than ever in love
+with Paul. Meeting Frank Ayres one night at a large reception, she
+sought his advice.
+
+"Do you mind a wrench?" he asked. "No? Well, then--you and Colonel
+Winwood send him about his business and get another secretary. Let
+Savelli give all his time to his Young England League. Making him
+mug up material for Winwood's speeches and write letters to
+constituents about football clubs is using a razor to cut butter.
+His League's the thing. It can surely afford to pay him a decent
+salary. If it can't I'll see to a guarantee."
+
+"The last thing we see, my dear Frank," she said after she had
+thanked him, "is that which is right under our noses."
+
+The next day she went to Paul full of the scheme. Had he ever
+thought of it? He took her hands and smiled in his gay, irresistible
+way. "Of course, dearest lady," he said frankly. "But I would have
+cut out my tongue sooner than suggest it."
+
+"I know that, my dear boy."
+
+"And yet," said he, "I can't bear the idea of tearing myself away
+from you. It seems like black ingratitude."
+
+"It isn't. You forget that James and I have our little ambitions
+too--the ambition of a master for a favourite pupil. If you were a
+failure we should both be bitterly disappointed. Don't you see? And
+as for leaving us--why need you? We should miss you horribly.
+You've never been quite our paid servant. And now you're something
+like our son." Tears started in the sweet lady's clear eyes. "Even
+if you did go to your own chambers, I shouldn't let our new
+secretary have this room"--they were in what the household called
+"the office"--really Paul's luxuriously furnished private sitting
+room, which contained his own little treasures of books and pictures
+and bits of china and glass accumulated during the six years of
+easeful life--"He will have the print room, which nobody uses from
+one year's end to another, and which is far more convenient for the
+street door. And the same at Drane's Court. So when you no longer
+work for us, my dear boy, our home will be yours, as long as you're
+content to stay, just because we love you."
+
+Her hand was on his shoulder and his head was bent. "God grant,"
+said he, "that I may be worthy of your love."
+
+He looked up and met her eyes. Her hand was still on his shoulder.
+Then very simply he bent down and kissed her on the cheek.
+
+He told his Princess all about it. She listened with dewy eyes. "Ah,
+Paul," she said. "That 'precious seeing' of love--I never had it
+till you came. I was blind. I never knew that there were such
+beautiful souls as Ursula Winwood in the world."
+
+"Dear, how I love you for saying that!" cried Paul.
+
+"But it's true."
+
+"That is why," said he.
+
+So the happiest young man in London worked and danced through the
+season, knowing that the day of emancipation was at hand. His
+transference from the Winwoods to the League was fixed for October
+i. He made great plans for an extension of the League's, activities,
+dreamed of a palace for headquarters with the banner of St. George
+flying proudly over it, an object-lesson for the nation. One day in
+July while. he was waiting for Colonel Winwood in the lobby of the
+House of Commons, Frank Ayres stopped in the middle of a busy rush
+and shook hands.
+
+"Been down to Hickney Heath again? I would if I were you. Rouse 'em
+up."
+
+As the words of a Chief Whip are apt to be significant, Paul
+closeted himself with the President of the Hickney Heath Lodge, who
+called the Secretary of the local Conservative Association to the
+interview. The result was that Paul was invited to speak at an
+anti-Budget meeting convened by the Association. He spoke, and
+repeated his success. The Conservative newspapers the next morning
+gave a resume of his speech. His Sophie, coming to sign letters in
+her presidential capacity, brought him the cuttings, a proceeding
+which he thought adorable. The season ended triumphantly.
+
+For a while he lost his Princess. She went to Cowes, then to stay
+with French relations in a chateau in the Dordogne. Paul went off
+yachting with the Chudleys and returned for the shooting to Drane's
+Court. In the middle of September the Winwoods' new secretary
+arrived and received instruction in his duties. Then came the
+Princess to Morebury Park. "Dearest," she said, in his arms, "I
+never want to leave you again. France is no longer France for me
+since I have England in my heart."
+
+"You remember that? My wonderful Princess!"
+
+He found her more woman, more expansive, more bewitchingly
+caressing. Absence had but brought her nearer. When she laid her
+head on his shoulder and murmured in the deep and subtle tones of
+her own language: "My Paul, it seems such a waste of time to be
+apart," it took all his pride and will to withstand the maddening
+temptation. He vowed that the time would soon come when he could
+claim her, and went away in feverish search for worlds to conquer.
+
+Then came October and London once more.
+
+* * * * * *
+
+Paul was dressing for dinner one evening when a reply-paid telegram
+was brought to him.
+
+"If selected by local committee will you stand for Hickney Heath?
+Ayres."
+
+He sat on his bed, white and trembling, and stared at the simple
+question. The man-servant stood imperturbable, silver tray in hand.
+Seeing the reply-paid form, he waited for a few moments.
+
+"Is there an answer, sir?"
+
+Paul nodded, asked for a pencil, and with a shaky hand wrote the
+reply. "Yes," was all he said.
+
+Then with reaction came the thrill of mighty exultation, and,
+throwing on his clothes, he rushed to the telephone in his sitting
+room. Who first to hear the wondrous news but his Princess? That
+there was a vacancy in Hickney Heath he knew, as all Great Britain
+knew; for Ponting, the Radical Member, had died suddenly the day
+before. But it had never entered his head that he could be chosen as
+a candidate.
+
+"Mais j'y ai bien pense, moi," came the voice through the telephone.
+"Why did Lord Francis tell you to go to Hickney Heath last July?"
+
+How a woman leaps at things I With all his ambition, his astuteness,
+his political intuition, he had not seen the opportunity. But it had
+come. Verily the stars in their courses were fighting for him. Other
+names, he was aware, were before the Committee of the Local
+Association, perhaps a great name suggested by the Central Unionist
+Organization; there was also that of the former Tory member, who,
+smarting under defeat at the General Election, had taken but a
+lukewarm interest in the constituency and was now wandering in the
+Far East. But Paul, confident in his destiny, did not doubt that he
+would be selected. And then, within the next fortnight--for
+bye-elections during a Parliamentary session are matters of sweeping
+swiftness--would come the great battle, the great decisive battle
+of his life, and he would win. He must win. His kingdom was at stake--the
+dream kingdom of his life into which he would enter with his
+loved and won Princess on his arm. He poured splendid foolishness
+through the telephone into an enraptured ear.
+
+The lack of a sense of proportion is a charge often brought against
+women; but how often do men (as they should) thank God for it? Here
+was Sophie Zobraska, reared from childhood in the atmosphere of
+great affairs, mixing daily with folk who guided the destiny of
+nations, having two years before refused in marriage one of those
+who held the peace of Europe in his hands, moved to tense excitement
+of heart and brain and soul by the news that an obscure young man
+might possibly be chosen to contest a London Borough for election to
+the British Parliament, and thrillingly convinced that now Was
+imminent the great momentous crisis in the history of mankind.
+
+With a lack of the same sense of proportion, equal in kind, though
+perhaps not so passionate in degree, did Miss Winwood receive the
+world-shaking tidings. She wept, and, thinking Paul a phoenix,
+called Frank Ayres an angel. Colonel Winwood tugged his long,
+drooping moustache and said very little; but he committed the
+astounding indiscretion of allowing his glass to be filled with
+champagne; whereupon he lifted it, and said, "Here's luck, my dear
+boy," and somewhat recklessly gulped down the gout-compelling
+liquid. And after dinner, when Miss Winwood had left them together,
+he lighted a long Corona instead of his usual stumpy Bock, and
+discussed with Paul electioneering ways and means.
+
+For the next day or two Paul lived in a whirl of telephones,
+telegrams, letters, scurryings across London, interviews, brain-
+racking questionings and reiterated declarations of political creed.
+But his selection was a foregone conclusion. His youth, his absurd
+beauty, his fire and eloquence, his unswerving definiteness of aim,
+his magic that had inspired so many with a belief in him and had
+made him the Fortunate Youth, captivated the imagination of the
+essentially unimaginative. Before a committee of wits and poets,
+Paul perhaps would not have had a dog's chance. But he appealed to
+the hard-headed merchants and professional men who chose him very
+much as the hero of melodrama appeals to a pit and gallery audience.
+He symbolized to them hope and force and predestined triumph. One or
+two at first sniffed suspiciously at his lofty ideals; but as there
+was no mistaking his political soundness, they let the ideals pass,
+as a natural and evanescent aroma.
+
+So, in his thirtieth year, Paul was nominated as Unionist candidate
+for the Borough of Hickney Heath, and he saw himself on the actual
+threshold of the great things to which he was born. He wrote a
+little note to Jane telling her the news. He also wrote to Barney
+Bill: "You dear old Tory--did you ever dream that ragamuffin
+little Paul was going to represent you in Parliament? Get out the
+dear old 'bus and paint it blue, with 'Paul Savelli forever' in gold
+letters, and, instead of chairs and mats, hang it with literature,
+telling what a wonderful fellow P. S. is. And go through the streets
+of Hickney Heath with it, and say if you like: 'I knew him when' he
+was a nipper--that high.' And if you like to be mysterious and
+romantic you can say: 'I, Barney Bill, gave him his first chance,'
+as you did, my dear old friend, and Paul's not the man to forget it.
+Oh, Barney, it's too wonderful"--his heart went out to the old
+man. "If I get in I will tell you something that will knock you
+flat. It will be the realization of all the silly rubbish I talked
+in the old brickfield at Bludston. But, dear old friend, it was you
+and the open road that first set me on the patriotic lay, and
+there's not a voter in Hickney Heath who can vote as you can--for
+his own private and particular trained candidate."
+
+Jane, for reasons unconjectured, did not reply. But from Barney
+Bill, who, it must be remembered, had leanings toward literature, he
+received a postcard with the following inscription: "Paul, Hif I can
+help you konker the Beastes of Effesus I will. Bill."
+
+And then began the furious existence of an electioneering campaign.
+His side had a clear start of the Radicals, who found some hitch in
+the choice of their candidate. The Young England League leaped into
+practical enthusiasm over their champion. Seldom has young candidate
+had so glad a welcome. And behind him stood his Sophie, an inspiring
+goddess.
+
+It so happened that for a date a few days hence had been fixed the
+Annual General Meeting of the Forlorn Widows' Fund, when Report and
+Balance Sheet were presented to the society. The control of this
+organization Paul had not allowed to pass into the alien hands of
+Townsend, the Winwoods' new secretary. Had not his Princess, for the
+most delicious reasons in the world, been made President? He scorned
+Ursula Winwood's suggestion that for this year he would allow
+Townsend to manage affairs. "What!" cried he, "leave my Princess in
+the lurch on her first appearance? Never!" By telephone he arranged
+an hour for the next day, when they could all consult together over
+this important matter.
+
+"But, my dear boy," said Miss Winwood, "your time is not your own.
+Suppose you're detained at Hickney Heath?"
+
+"The Conqueror," he cried, with a gay laugh, "belongs to the
+Detainers--not the Detained."
+
+She looked at him out of her clear eyes, and shook an indulgent
+head. .
+
+"I know," said he, meeting her glance shrewdly. "He has got to use
+his detaining faculty with discretion. I've made a study of the
+little ways of conquerors. Ali! Dearest lady!" he burst out
+suddenly, in his impetuous way, "I'm talking nonsense; but I'm so
+uncannily happy!"
+
+"It does me good to look at you," she said.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+PAUL leaned back in his leather writing chair, smoking a cigarette
+and focussing the electioneering situation. Beside a sheet of
+foolscap on which he had been jotting down notes lay in neat piles
+the typewritten Report of the Forlorn Widows' Fund, the account book
+and the banker's pass book. He had sat up till three o'clock in the
+morning preparing for his Princess. Nothing now remained but the
+formal "examined and found correct" report of the auditors. For the
+moment the Forlorn Widows stood leagues away from Paul's thoughts.
+He had passed a strenuous day at Hickney Heath, lunching in the
+committee room on sandwiches and whisky and soda obtained from the
+nearest tavern, talking, inventing, dictating, writing, playing upon
+dull minds the flashes of his organizing genius. His committee was
+held up for the while by a dark rift in the Radical camp. They had
+not yet chosen their man. Nothing was known, save that a certain
+John Questerhayes, K. C., an eminent Chancery barrister, who had of
+late made himself conspicuous in the constituency, had been turned
+down on the ground that he was not sufficiently progressive. Now for
+comfort to the Radical the term "Progressive" licks the blessed word
+Mesopotamia into a cocked hat. Under the Progressive's sad-coloured
+cloak he need not wear the red tie of the socialist. Apparently Mr.
+Questerhayes objected to the sad-coloured cloak, the mantle of
+Elijah, M. P., the late member for Hickney Heath. "Wanted: an
+Elisha," seemed to be the cry of the Radical Committee.
+
+Paul leaned back, his elbows on the arms of his chair, his finger
+tips together, a cigarette between his lips, lost in thought. The
+early November twilight deepened in the room. He was to address a
+meeting that night. In order to get ready for his speech he had not
+allowed himself to be detained, and had come home early. His speech
+had been prepared; but the Radical delay was a new factor of which
+he might take triumphant advantage. Hence the pencil notes on the
+sheet of foolscap, before him.
+
+A man-servant came in, turned on the electric light, pulled the
+curtains together and saw to the fire.
+
+"Tea's in the drawing-room, sir."
+
+"Bring me some here in a breakfast cup--nothing to eat," said
+Paul.
+
+Even his dearest lady could not help him in his meditated attack on
+the enemy whom the Lord was delivering into his hands.
+
+The man-servant went away. Presently Paul heard him reenter the
+room; the door was at his back. He threw out an impatient hand
+behind him. "Put it down anywhere, Wilton, I'll have it when I want
+it."
+
+"I beg pardon, sir," said the man, coming forward, "but it's not the
+tea. There's a gentleman and a lady and another person would like to
+see you. I said that you were busy, sir, but--"
+
+He put the silver salver, with its card, in front of Paul. Printed
+on the card was, "Mr. Silas Finn." In pencil was written: "Miss
+Seddon, Mr. William Simmons."
+
+Paul looked at the card in some bewilderment. What in the name of
+politics or friendship were they doing in Portland Place? Not to
+receive them, however, was unthinkable.
+
+"Show them in," said he.
+
+Silas Finn, Jane and Barney Bill! It was odd. He laughed and took
+out his watch. Yes, he could easily give them half an hour or so.
+But why had they come? He had found time to call once at the house
+in Hickney Heath since his return to town, and then he had seen Jane
+and Silas Finn together and they had talked, as far as he could
+remember, of the Disestablishment of the Anglican Church and the
+elevating influence of landscape painting on the human soul. Why had
+they come? It could not be to offer their services during the
+election, for Silas Finn in politics was a fanatical enemy. The
+visit stirred a lively curiosity.
+
+They entered: Mr. Finn in his usual black with many-coloured tie and
+diamond ring, looking more mournfully grave than ever; Jane wearing
+an expression half of anxiety and half of defiance; Barney Bill,
+very uncomfortable in his well-preserved best suit, very restless
+and nervous. They gave the impression of a deputation coming to
+announce the death of a near relative. Paul received them cordially.
+But why in the world, thought he, were they all so solemn? He pushed
+forward chairs.
+
+"I got your postcard, Bill. Thanks so much for it."
+
+Bill grunted and embraced his hard felt hat.
+
+"I ought to have written to you," said Jane--"but---"
+
+"She felt restrained by her duty towards me," said Mr. Finn. "I hope
+you did not think it was discourteous on her part."
+
+"My dear sir," Paul laughed, seating himself in his writing chair,
+which he twisted away from the table, "Jane and I are too old
+friends for that. In her heart I know she wishes me luck. And I hope
+you do too, Mr. Finn," he added pleasantly--"although I know
+you're on the other side."
+
+"I'm afraid my principles will not allow me to wish you luck in this
+election, Mr. Savelli."
+
+"Well, well," said Paul. "It doesn't matter. If you vote against me
+I'll not bear malice."
+
+"I am not going to vote against you, Mr. Savelli," said Mr. Finn,
+looking at him with melancholy eyes. "I am going to stand against
+you."
+
+Paul sprang forward in his chair. Here was fantastic news indeed!
+"Stand against me? You? You're the Radical candidate?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+Paul laughed boyishly. "Why, it's capital! I'm awfully glad."
+
+"I was asked this morning," said Mr. Finn gravely. "I prayed God for
+guidance. He answered, and I felt it my duty to come to you at once,
+with our two friends."
+
+Barney Bill cocked his head on one side. "I did my best to persuade
+him not to, sonny."
+
+"But why shouldn't he?" cried Paul courteously--though why he
+should puzzled him exceedingly. "It's very good of you, Mr. Finn.
+I'm sure your side," he went on, "could not have chosen a better
+man. You're well known in the constituency--I am jolly lucky to
+have a man like you as an opponent."
+
+"Mr. Savelli," said Mr. Finn, "it was precisely so that we should
+not be opponents that I have taken this unusual step."
+
+"I don't quite understand," said Paul.
+
+"Mr. Finn wants you to retire in favour of some other Conservative
+candidate," said Jane calmly.
+
+"Retire? I retire?"
+
+Paul looked at her, then at Barney Bill, who nodded his white head,
+then at Mr. Finn, whose deep eyes met his with a curious tragical
+mournfulness. The proposal took his breath away. It was crazily
+preposterous. But for their long faces he would have burst into
+laughter. "Why on earth do you want me to retire?" he asked
+good-humouredly.
+
+"I will tell you," said Mr. Finn. "Because you will have God against
+you."
+
+Paul saw a gleam of light in the dark mystery of the visit. "You may
+believe it, Mr. Finn, but I don't. I believe that my war cry, 'God
+for England, Savelli and Saint George,' is quite as acceptable to,
+the Almighty as yours."
+
+Mr. Finn stretched out two hands in earnest deprecation. "Forgive me
+if I say it; but you don't know what you're talking about. God has
+not revealed Himself to you. He has to me. When my fellow-citizens
+asked me to stand as the Liberal candidate, I thought it was because
+they knew me to be an upright man, who had worked hard on their
+council, an active apostle in the cause of religion, temperance and
+the suppression of vice. I thought I had merely deserved well in
+their opinion. When I fell on my knees and prayed the glory of the
+Lord spread about me and I knew that they had been divinely
+inspired. It was revealed to me that this was a Divine Call to
+represent the Truth in the Parliament of the nation."
+
+"I remember your saying, when I first had the pleasure of meeting
+you," Paul remarked, with unwonted dryness, "that the Kingdom of
+Heaven was not adequately represented in the House of Commons."
+
+"I have not changed my opinion, Mr Savelli. The hand of God has
+guided my business. The hand of God is placing me in the House of
+Commons to work His will. You cannot oppose God's purpose, Paul
+Savelli--and that is why I beg you not to stand against me."
+
+"You see, he likes yer," interjected Barney Bill, with anxiety in
+his glittering eyes. "That's why he's a-doing of it. He says to
+hisself, says he, 'ere's a young chap what I likes with his first
+great chance in front of him, with the eyes of the country sot on
+him--now if I comes in and smashes him, as I can't help myself
+from doing, it'll be all u-p with that young chap's glorious career.
+But if I warns him in time, then he can retire--find an honourable
+retreat--that's what he wants yer to have--an honourable
+retreat. Isn't that it, Silas?"
+
+"Those are the feelings by which I am actuated," said Mr. Finn.
+
+Paul stretched himself out in his chair, his ankles crossed, and
+surveyed his guests. "What do you think of it, Jane?" said he, not
+without a touch of irony.
+
+She had been looking into the fire, her face in profile. Addressed,
+she turned. "Mr. Finn has your interests very deep at heart," she
+answered tonelessly.
+
+Paul jumped to his feet and laughed his fresh laugh. It was all so
+comic, so incredible, so mad. Yet none of them appeared to see any
+humour in the situation. There sat Jane and Barney Bill cowering
+under the influence of their crazy fishmongering apostle; and there,
+regarding him with a world of appeal in his sorrowful eyes, sat the
+apostle himself, bolt upright in his chair, an odd figure with his
+streaked black and white hair, ascetic face and
+Methodistico-Tattersall raiment. And they all seemed to expect him
+to obey this quaint person's fanatical whimsy.
+
+"It's very kind indeed of you, Mr. Finn, to consult my interests in
+this manner," said he. "And I'm most indebted to you for your
+consideration. But, as I said before, I've as much reason for
+believing God to be on my side as you have. And I honestly believe
+I'm going to win this election. So I certainly won't withdraw."
+
+"I implore you to do so. I will go on my knees and beseech you,"
+said Mr. Finn, with hands clasped in front of him.
+
+Paul looked round. "I'm afraid, Bill," said he, "that this is
+getting rather painful."
+
+"It is painful. It's more than painful. It's horrible! It's
+ghastly!" cried Mr. Finn, in sudden shrill crescendo, leaping to his
+feet. In an instant the man's demeanour had changed. The mournful
+apostle had become a wild, vibrating creature with flashing eyes and
+fingers.
+
+"Easy, now, Silas. Whoa! Steady!" said Barney Bill.
+
+Silas Finn advanced on Paul and clapped his hands on his shoulders
+and shouted hoarsely: "For the love of God--don't thwart me in
+this. You can't thwart me. You daren't thwart me. You daren't thwart
+God."
+
+Paul disengaged himself impatiently. The humour had passed from the
+situation. The man was a lunatic, a religious maniac. Again he
+addressed Barney Bill. "As I can't convince Mr. Finn of the
+absurdity of his request, I must ask you to do so for me."
+
+"Young man," cried Silas, quivering with passion, "do not speak to
+God's appointed in your vanity and your arrogance. You--you--of
+all human beings--"
+
+Both Jane and Barney Bill closed round him. Jane clutched his arm.
+"Come away. Do come away."
+
+"Steady now, Silas," implored Barney Bill. "You see it's no use. I
+told you so. Come along."
+
+"Leave me alone," shouted Finn, casting them off. "What have I to do
+with you? It is that young man there who defies God and me."
+
+"Mr. Finn," said Paul, very erect, "if I have hurt your feelings I
+am sorry. But I fight this election. That's final. The choice no
+longer rests with me. I'm the instrument of my party. I desire to be
+courteous in every way, but you must see that it would be useless to
+prolong this discussion." And he moved to the door.
+
+"Come away now, for Heaven's sake. Can't you realize it's no good?"
+said Jane, white to the lips.
+
+Silas Finn again cast her off and railed and raved at her. "I will
+not go away," he cried in wild passion. "I will not allow my own son
+to raise an impious hand against the Almighty."
+
+"Lor' lumme!" gasped Barney Bill, dropping his hat. "He's done it."
+
+There was a silence. Silas Finn stood shaking in the middle of the
+room, the sweat streaming down his forehead.
+
+Paul turned at the door and walked slowly up to him. "Your son? What
+do you mean?"
+
+Jane, with wringing hands and tense, uplifted face, said in a queer
+cracked voice: "He promised us not to speak. He has broken his
+promise."
+
+"You broke your sacred word," said Barney Bill.
+
+The man's face grew haggard. His passion left him as suddenly as it
+had seized him. He collapsed, a piteous wreck, looked wide of the
+three, and threw out his hands helplessly. "I broke my promise. May
+God forgive me!"
+
+"That's neither here nor there," said Paul, standing over him. "You
+must answer my question. What do you mean?"
+
+Barney Bill limped a step or two toward him and cleared his throat.
+"He's quite correct, sonny. Silas Kegworthy's your father right
+enough."
+
+"Kegworthy?"
+
+"Yes. Changed his name for business--and other reasons."
+
+"He?" said Paul, half dazed for the moment and pointing at Silas
+Finn. "His name is Kegworthy and he is my father?"
+
+"Yes, sonny. 'Tain't my fault, or Jane's. He took his Bible oath he
+wouldn't tell yer. We was afraid, so we come with him."
+
+"Then?" queried Paul, jerking a thumb toward Lancashire.
+
+"Polly Kegworthy? Yes. She was yer mother."
+
+Paul set his teeth and drew a deep breath--not of air, but of a
+million sword points, Jane watched him out of frightened eyes. She
+alone, with her all but life-long knowledge of him, and with her
+woman's intuition, realized the death-blow that he had received. And
+when she saw him take it unflinching and stand proud and stern, her
+heart leaped toward him, though she knew that the woman in the great
+chased silver photograph frame on the mantelpiece, the great and
+radiant lady, the high and mighty and beautiful and unapproachable
+Princess, was the woman he loved. Paul touched his father on the
+wrist, and motioned to a chair.
+
+"Please sit down. You too, please,"--he waved a hand, and himself
+resumed his seat in his writing chair. He turned it so that he could
+rest his elbow on his table and his forehead in his palm. "You claim
+to be my father," said he. "Barney Bill, in whom I have implicit
+confidence, confirms it. He says that Mrs. Button is my mother--"
+
+"She has been dead these six years," said Barney Bill.
+
+"Why didn't you tell me?" asked Paul.
+
+"I didn't think it would interest yer, sonny," replied Barney Bill,
+in great distress. "Yer see, we conspirated together for yer never
+to know nothing at all about all this. Anyway, she's dead and won't
+worry yer any more."
+
+"She was a bad mother to me. She is a memory of terror. I don't
+pretend to be grieved," said Paul; "any more than I pretend to be
+overcome by filial emotion at the present moment. But, if you are my
+father, I should be glad to know--in fact, I think I'm entitled to
+know--why you've taken thirty years to reveal yourself, and why"--a
+sudden fury swept him--"why you've come now to play hell with
+my life."
+
+"It is the will of God," said Silas Finn, in deep dejection.
+
+Paul snapped three or four fingers. "Bah!" he cried. "Talk sense.
+Talk facts. Leave God out of the question for a while. It's
+blasphemy to connect Him with a sordid business like this. Tell me
+about myself--my parentage--let me know where I am."
+
+"You're with three people as loves yer, sonny," said Barney Bill.
+"What passes in this room will never be known to another soul on
+earth."
+
+"That I swear," said Silas Finn.
+
+"You can publish it broadcast in every newspaper in England," said
+Paul. "I'm making no bargains. Good God! I'm asking for nothing but
+the truth. What use I make of it is my affair. You can do--the
+three of you--what you like. Let the world know. It doesn't
+matter. It's I that matter--my life and my conscience and my soul
+that matter."
+
+"Don't be too hard upon me," Silas besought him very humbly.
+
+"Tell me about myself," said Paul.
+
+Silas Finn wiped his forehead with his handkerchief and covered his
+eyes with his hand. "That can only mean telling you about myself,"
+he said. "It's raking up a past which I had hoped, with God's help,
+to bury. But I have sinned to-night, and it is my punishment to tell
+you. And you have a right to know. My father was a porter in Covent
+Garden Market. My mother--I've already mentioned--"
+
+"Yes--the Sicilian and the barrel organ--I remember," said Paul,
+with a shiver.
+
+"I had a hard boyhood. But I rose a little above my class. I
+educated myself more or less. At last I became assistant in a
+fishmonger's shop. Our friend Simmons here and I were boys together.
+We fell in love with the same girl. I married her. Not long
+afterward she gave way to drink. I found that in all kinds of ways I
+had mistaken her character. I can't describe your own mother to you.
+She had a violent temper. So had I. My life was a hell upon earth.
+One day she goaded me beyond my endurance and I struck at her with a
+knife. I meant at the bloodred instant to kill her. But I didn't. I
+nearly killed her. I went to prison for three years. When I came out
+she had vanished, taking you with her. In prison I found the Grace
+of God and I vowed it should be my guide through life. As soon as I
+was free from police supervision I changed my name--I believe it's
+a good old Devonshire name; my father came from there--the prison
+taint hung about it. Then, when I found I could extend a miserable
+little business I had got together, I changed it again to suit my
+trade. That's about all."
+
+There was a spell of dead silence. The shrunken man, stricken with a
+sense of his sin of oath-breaking, had Spoken without change of
+attitude, his hand over his eyes. Paul, too, sat motionless, and
+neither Jane nor Barney Bill spoke. Presently Silas Finn continued:
+
+"For many years I tried to find my wife and son--but it was not
+God's will. I have lived with the stain of murder on my soul"--his
+voice sank--"and it has never been washed away. Perhaps it will be
+in God's good time. . . . And I had condemned my son to a horrible
+existence--for I knew my wife was not capable of bringing you up
+in the way of clean living. I was right. Simmons has since told
+me--and I was crushed beneath the burden of my sins."
+
+After a pause he raised a drawn face and went on to tell of his
+meeting, the year before, with Barney Bill, of whom he had lost
+track when the prison doors had closed behind him. It had been in
+one of his Fish Palaces where Bill was eating. They recognized each
+other. Barney Bill told his tale: how he had run across Polly
+Kegworthy after a dozen years' wandering; how, for love of his old
+friend, he had taken Paul, child of astonishing promise, away from
+Bludston--
+
+"Do you remember, sonny, when I left you alone that night and went
+to the other side of the brickfield? It was to think it out," said
+Bill. "To think out my duty as a man."
+
+Paul nodded. He was listening, with death in his heart. The whole
+fantastic substructure of his life had been suddenly kicked away,
+and his life was an inchoate ruin. Gone was the glamour of romance
+in which since the day of the cornelian heart he had had his
+essential being. Up to an hour ago he had never doubted his
+mysterious birth. No real mother could have pursued an innocent
+child with Polly Kegworthy's implacable hatred. His passionate
+repudiation of her had been a cardinal article of his faith. On the
+other hand, the prince and princess theory he had long ago consigned
+to the limbo of childish things; but the romance of his birth, the
+romance of his high destiny, remained a vital part of his spiritual
+equipment. His looks, his talents, his temperament, his instincts,
+his dreams had been irrefutable confirmations. His mere honesty, his
+mere integrity, had been based on this fervent and unshakable creed.
+And now it had gone. No more romance. No more glamour. No more
+Vision Splendid now faded into the light of common and sordid day.
+Outwardly listening, his gay, mobile face turned to iron, he lived
+in a molten intensity of thought, his acute brain swiftly
+coordinating the ironical scraps of history. He was the son of Polly
+Kegworthy. So far he was unclean; but hitherto her blood had not
+manifested itself in him. He was the son of this violent and
+pathetic fanatic, this ex-convict; he had his eyes, his refined
+face; perhaps he inherited from him the artistic temperament--he
+recalled grimly the daubs on the man's walls, and his purblind
+gropings toward artistic self-expression; and all this--the
+Southern handsomeness, and Southern love of colour, had come from
+his Sicilian grandmother, the nameless drab, with bright yellow
+handkerchief over swarthy brows, turning the handle of a barrel
+organ in the London streets. Instinct had been right in its
+promptings to assume an Italian name; but the irony of it was of the
+quality that makes for humour in hell. And his very Christian
+name--Paul--the exotic name which Polly Kegworthy would not have
+given to a brat of hers--was but a natural one for a Silas to give
+his son, a Silas born of generations of evangelical peasants. His
+eyes rested on the photograph of his Princess. She, first of all,
+was gone with the Vision. An adventurer he had possibly been; but an
+adventurer of romance, carried high by his splendid faith, and
+regarding his marriage with the Princess but as a crowning of his
+romantic destiny. But now he beheld himself only as a base-born
+impostor. His Princess was gone from his life. Death was in his
+heart.
+
+He saw his familiar, luxurious room as in a dream, and Jane,
+anxious-eyed, looking into the fire, and Barney Bill a little way
+off, clutching his hard felt hat against his body; but his eyes were
+fixed on the strange, many-passioned, unbalanced man who claimed to
+be--nay, who was--his father.
+
+"When I first met you that night my heart went out to you," he was
+saying. "It overflowed in thankfulness to God that He had delivered
+you out of the power of the Dog, and in His inscrutable mercy had
+condoned that part of my sin as a father and had set you in high
+places."
+
+With the fringe of his brain Paul recognized, for the first time,
+how he brought into ordinary talk the habits of speech acquired in
+addressing a Free Zionist congregation.
+
+"It was only the self-restraint," Silas continued, "taught me by
+bitter years of agony and a message from God that it was part of my
+punishment not to acknowledge you as my son--"
+
+"And what I told you, and what Jane told you about him," said Barney
+Bill. "Remember that, Silas."
+
+"I remember it--it was these influences that kept me silent. But
+we were drawn together, Paul." He bent forward in his chair. "You
+liked me. In spite of all our differences of caste and creed--you
+liked me."
+
+"Yes, I was drawn to you," said Paul, and a strange, unknown note in
+his voice caused Jane to glance at him swiftly. "You seemed to be a
+man of many sorrows and deep enthusiasms--and I admit I was in
+close sympathy with you." He paused, not moving from his rigid
+attitude, and then went on: "What you have told me of your
+sufferings--and I know, with awful knowledge, the woman who was my
+mother--has made me sympathize with you all the more. But to
+express that sympathy in any way you must give me time. I said you
+had played hell with my life. It's true. One of these days I may be
+able to explain. Not now. There's no time. We're caught up in the
+wheels of an inexorable political machine. I address my party in the
+constituency to-night." It was a cold intelligence that spoke, and
+once more Jane flashed a half-frightened glance at him. "What I
+shall say to them, in view of all this, I don't quite know. I must
+have half an hour to think."
+
+"I know I oughtn't to interfere, Paul," said Jane, "but you mustn't
+blame Mr. Finn too much. Although he differs from you in politics
+and so on, he loves you and is proud of you--as we all are--and
+looks forward to your great career--I know it only too well. And
+now he has this deep conviction that he has a call from on High to
+ruin your career at the very beginning. Do understand, Paul, that he
+feels himself in a very terrible position."
+
+"I do," said Mr. Finn. "God knows that if it weren't for His
+command, I should myself withdraw."
+
+"I appreciate your position, perfectly," replied Paul, "but that
+doesn't relieve me of my responsibilities."
+
+Silas Finn rose and locked the fingers of both hands together and
+stood before Paul, with appealing eyes. "My son, after what I have
+said, you are not going to stand against me?"
+
+Paul rose too. A sudden craze of passion swept him. "My country has
+been my country for thirty years. You have been my father for five
+minutes. I stand by my country."
+
+Silas Finn turned away and waved a haphazard hand. "And I must stand
+by my God."
+
+"Very well. That bring; us to our original argument. 'Political
+foes. Private friends.'"
+
+Silas turned again and looked into the young man's eyes. "But father
+and son, Paul."
+
+"All the more honourable. There'll be no mud-throwing. The cleanest
+election of the century."
+
+The elder man again covered his face with both hands, and his black
+and white streaked hair fell over his fingers and the great diamond
+in his ring flashed oddly, and he rocked his head for a while to and
+fro.
+
+"I had a call," he wailed. "I had a call. I had a call from God. It
+was clear. It was absolute. But you don't understand these things.
+His will must prevail. It was terrible to think of crushing your
+career--my only son's career. I brought these two friends to help
+me persuade you not to oppose me. I did my best, Paul. I promised
+them not to resort to the last argument. But flesh is weak. For the
+first time since--you know--the knife--your mother--I lost
+self-control. I shall have to answer for it to my God--" He
+stretched out his arms and looked haggardly at Paul. "But it is
+God's will. It is God's will that I should voice His message to the
+Empire. Paul, Paul, my beloved son--you cannot flout Almighty
+God."
+
+"Your God doesn't happen to be my God," said Paul, once more
+suspicious--and now hideously so--of religious mania. "And
+possibly the real God is somebody else's God altogether. Anyway,
+England's the only God I've got left, and I'm going to fight for
+her."
+
+The door opened and Wilton, the man-servant, appeared. He looked
+round. "I beg your pardon, sir."
+
+Paul crossed the room. "What is it?"
+
+"Her Highness, sir," he said in his well-trained, low voice, "and
+the Colonel and Miss Winwood. I told them you were engaged. But
+they've been waiting for over half-an-hour, sir."
+
+Paul drew himself up. "Why did you not tell me before? Her Highness
+is not to be kept waiting. Present my respectful compliments to Her
+Highness, and ask her and Colonel and Miss Winwood to have the
+kindness to come upstairs."
+
+"We had better go," cried Jane in sudden fear.
+
+"No," said lie. "I want you all to stay."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+IN the tense silence of the few moments of waiting Paul passed from
+the boy to whom the earth had been a fairyland to the man grappling
+with great realities. In those few moments he lived through his past
+life and faced an adumbration of the future.
+
+The door was thrown open and the Princess appeared, smiling, happy,
+a black ostrich feather in her hat and a sable stole hanging loose
+from her shoulders; a great and radiant lady. Behind her came the
+Colonel and Ursula Winwood. Paul bent over the Princess's,
+outstretched hand.
+
+"A thousand pardons for keeping you waiting. I did not know you had
+come. I was engaged with my friends. May I have the honour of
+presenting them? Princess, this is Mr. Silas Finn, the managing
+director of Fish Palaces Limited. These are two very dear friends,
+Miss Seddon--Mr. Simmons. Miss Winwood--Colonel Winwood, may I?"
+
+He waved an introductory hand. The Princess: bowed; then, struck by
+their unsmiling faces and by Paul's strange manner, turned to him
+quickly.
+
+"'Qu'est ce qu'il y a?"
+
+"Je vais vous le dire."
+
+He pushed a chair. She sat down. Ursula Winwood sat in Paul's
+writing chair. The others remained standing.
+
+"Mr. Finn called to inform me that he has been adopted as the
+Liberal candidate for Hickney Heath."' "My felicitations," said the
+Princess.
+
+Silas bowed to her gravely and addressed Colonel Winwood.
+
+"We have been, sir--Mr. Savelli and I--for some time on terms of
+personal friendship in the constituency."
+
+"I see, I see," replied the Colonel, though he was somewhat puzzled.
+"Very polite and friendly, I'm sure."
+
+"Mr. Finn also urges me to withdraw my candidature," said Paul.
+
+The Princess gave a little incredulous laugh. Ursula Winwood rose
+and, with a quick protective step, drew nearer Paul. Colonel Winwood
+frowned.
+
+"Withdraw? In Heaven's name why?"
+
+Silas Finn tugged at his black-and-white-streaked beard and looked
+at his son.
+
+"Need we go into it again? There are religious reasons, which
+perhaps, Madam"--Silas addressed the Princess--"you might
+misunderstand. Mr. Savelli possibly thinks I am a fanatic. I can't
+help it. I have warned him. That is enough. Good-bye, Mr. Savelli."
+
+He held out his hand; but Paul did not take it. "You forget, Mr.
+Finn, that I asked you to stay." He clutched the sides of his jacket
+till his knuckles grew white, and he set his teeth. "Mr. Finn has
+another reason for wishing me not to oppose him--"
+
+"That reason you need never give," cried Silas in a loud voice, and
+starting forward. "You know that I make no claims whatsoever."
+
+"I know that," said Paul, coldly; "but I am going to give it all the
+same." He paused, held up his hand and looked at the Princess. "Mr.
+Silas Finn happens to be my father."
+
+"Good God!" gasped the Colonel, after a flash of silence.
+
+The Princess caught a quick breath and sat erect in her chair.
+
+"Votre Pere, Paul?"
+
+"Yes, Princess. Until half an hour ago I did not know it. Never in
+my life did I know that I had a father living. My friends there can
+bear witness that what I say is true."
+
+"But, Paul dear," said Miss Winwood, laying her kind fingers on his
+arm and searching his face, "you told us that your parents were dead
+and that they were Italians."
+
+"I lied," replied Paul calmly. "But I honestly believed the woman
+who was my mother not to be my mother, and I had never heard of my
+father. I had to account for myself to you. Your delicacy, Miss
+Winwood, enabled me to invent as little as possible."
+
+"But your name--Savelli?"
+
+"I took it when I went on the stage--I had a few years' obscure
+and unsuccessful struggle. You will remember I came to you starving
+and penniless."
+
+The Princess grew white and her delicate nostrils quivered.
+
+"Et monsieur votre pere--" she checked herself. "And your
+father, what do you say he is?"
+
+Paul motioned to Silas to speak.
+
+"I, Madam," said the latter, "am a self-made man, and by the
+establishment of fried-fish shops all over London and the great
+provincial towns, have, by the grace of God, amassed a considerable
+fortune."
+
+"Fried fish?" said the Princess in a queer voice.
+
+Silas looked at her out of his melancholy and unhumorous eyes.
+
+"Yes, Madam."
+
+"I have also learned," said Paul, "that my grandmother was a
+Sicilian who played a street-organ. Hence my Italian blood."
+
+Jane, standing by the door with Barney Bill, most agonized of old
+men, wholly nervous, twisting with gnarled fingers the broken rim of
+his hard felt hat, turned aside so that no one but Bill should see a
+sudden gush of tears. For she had realized how drab and unimportant
+she was in the presence of the great and radiant lady; also how the
+great and radiant lady was the God-sent mate for Paul, never so
+great a man as now when he was cutting out his heart for truth's
+sake.
+
+"I should like to tell you what my life has been," continued Paul,
+"in the presence of those who know it already. That's why I asked
+them to stay. Until an hour ago I lived in dreams. In my own fashion
+I was an honest man. But now I've got this knowledge of my origin,
+the dreams are swept away and I stand naked to myself. If I left
+you, Miss Winwood, and Colonel Winwood, who have been so good to
+me--and Her Highness, who has deigned to honour me with her
+friendship--in a moment's doubt as to my antecedents I should be
+an impostor."
+
+"No, no, my boy," said Colonel Winwood, who was standing with hands
+deep in trouser pockets and his head bent, staring at the carpet.
+"No words like that in this house. Besides, why should we want to go
+into all this?"
+
+He had the Englishman's detestation of unpleasant explanations.
+Ursula Winwood supported him.
+
+"Yes, why?" she asked.
+
+"But it would be very interesting," said the Princess slowly,
+cutting her words.
+
+Paul met her eyes, which she had hardened, and saw beneath them pain
+and anger and wounded pride and repulsion. For a second he allowed
+an agonized appeal to flash through his. He knew that he was
+deliberately killing the love in her heart. He felt the monstrous
+cruelty of it. A momentary doubt shook him. Was he justified? A
+short while ago she had entered the room her face alight with love;
+now her face was as stern and cold as his own. . Had he the right to
+use the knife like this? Then certainty came. It had to be. The
+swifter the better. She of all human beings must no longer be
+deceived. Before her, at supreme cost, he must stand clean.
+
+"It's not very interesting," said he. "And it's soon told. I was a
+ragged boy in a slum in a Lancashire town. I slept on sacking in a
+scullery, and very seldom had enough to eat. The woman whom I didn't
+think was my mother ill-treated me. I gather now that she hated me
+because she hated my father. She deserted him when I was a year old
+and disappeared; she never spoke of him. I don't know exactly how
+old I am. I chose a birthday at random. As a child I worked in a
+factory. You know what child-labour in factories was some years ago.
+I might have been there still, if my dear old friend there hadn't
+helped me when I was thirteen to run away. He used to go through the
+country in a van selling mats and chairs. He brought me to London,
+and found me a lodging with Miss Seddon's mother. So, Miss Seddon
+and I were children together. I became an artist's model. When I
+grew too old for that to be a dignified ocupation, I went on the
+stage. Then one day, starving and delirious, I stumbled through the
+gates of Drane's Court and fell at Miss Winwood's feet. That's all."
+
+"Since we've begun, we may as well finish and get it over," said
+Colonel Winwood, still with bent head, but looking at Paul from
+beneath his eyebrows. "When and how did you come across this
+gentleman who you say is your father?"
+
+Paul told the story in a few words.
+
+"And now that you have heard everything," said he, would you think
+me justified in withdrawing my candidature?"
+
+"Certainly not," said the Colonel. "You've got your duty to the
+Party."
+
+"And you, Miss Winwood?"
+
+"Can you ask? You have your duty to the country."
+
+"And you, Princess?"
+
+She met his challenging eyes and rose in a stately fashion.
+
+"I am not equal to these complications of English politics, Mr.
+Savelli," she said. She held herself very erect, but her lips
+trembled and tears were very near her eyes. She turned to Miss
+Winwood and held out her hand. "I am afraid we must postpone our
+discussion of the Forlorn Widows. It is getting late. Au revoir,
+Colonel Winwood--"
+
+"I will see you to your carriage."
+
+On the threshold she turned, included Paul in a vague bow to the
+company, and passed through the door which Colonel Winwood held
+open. Paul watched her until she disappeared--disappeared
+haughtily out of his life, taking his living heart with her, leaving
+him with a stone very heavy, very cold, dead. And he was smitten as
+with a great darkness. He remained quite still for a few moments
+after the door had closed, then with a sudden jerk he drew himself
+up.
+
+"Mr. Finn," said he, "as I've told you, I address my first meeting
+to-night. I am going to make public the fact that I'm your son."
+
+Silas put his hand to his head and looked at him wildly.
+
+"No, no," he muttered hoarsely--"no."
+
+"I see no reason," said Miss Winwood gently.
+
+"I see every reason," said Paul. "I must live in the light now. The
+truth or nothing."
+
+"Then obey your conscience, Paul," she answered.
+
+But Silas came forward with his outstretched hands.
+
+"You can't do it. You can't do it, I tell you. It's impossible."
+
+"Why?"
+
+He replied in an odd voice, and with a glance at Miss Winwood. "I
+must tell you afterwards."
+
+"I will leave you," she said.
+
+"Mr. Finn"--she shook hands with him--"I hope you're proud of
+your son." And then she shook hands with Jane and Barney Bill. "I'm
+glad to meet such old friends of Paul." And to Paul, as he held the
+door open, she said, her clear kind eyes full on him, "Remember, we
+want men in England."
+
+"Thank God, we've got women," said he' with lips from which he could
+not keep a sudden quiver.
+
+He closed the door and came up to his father standing on the
+hearthrug.
+
+"And now' why shouldn't I speak? Why shouldn't I be an honest man
+instead of an impostor?"
+
+"Out of pity for me, my son."
+
+"Pity? Why, what harm would it do you? There's nothing dishonourable
+in father and son fighting an election." He laughed without much
+mirth. "It's what some people would call sporting. As for me,
+personally, I don't see why you should be ashamed of owning me. My
+record is clean enough."
+
+"But mine isn't, Paul," said Silas mournfully.
+
+For the first time Paul bowed his head. "I'm sorry," said he. "I
+forgot." Then he raised it again. "But that's all over and buried in
+the past."
+
+"It may be unburied."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Don't you see?" cried Jane. "Even I can. If you spring your
+relationship upon the public, it will create an enormous sensation--it
+will set the place on fire with curiosity. They'll dig up
+everything they can about you--everything they can about him. Oh,
+Paul, don't you see.
+
+"It's up agin a man, sonny," said Barney Bill, limping towards them,
+"it's up agin a candidate, you understand, him not being a Fenian or
+a Irish patriot, that he's been in gaol. Penal servitude ain't a
+nice state of life to be reminded of, sonny. Whereas if you leaves
+things as they is, nobody's going to ask no questions."
+
+"That's my point," said Silas Finn.
+
+Paul looked from one to the other, darkly. In a kind of dull fierce
+passion he had made up his mind to clear himself before the world,
+to rend to tatters his garments of romance, to snap his fingers at
+the stars and destiny and such-like deluding toys, to stand a young
+Ajax defying the thunderbolts. Here came the first check.
+
+"If they found out as how he'd done time, they'd find out for why,"
+said Bill, cocking his head earnestly.
+
+As Paul, engaged in sombre thought, made no reply, Silas turned
+away, his hands uplifted in supplication, and prayed aloud. He had
+sinned in giving way to his anger. He prostrated himself before the
+divine vengeance. If this was his apportioned punishment, might God
+give him meekness and strength to bear it. The tremulous, crying
+voice, the rapt, fanatical face, and the beseeching attitude struck
+a bizarre note in the comfortable and worldly room. Supported on
+either side by Jane, helpless and anxious, and Barney Bill, crooked,
+wrinkled, with his close-cropped white hair and little liquid
+diamond eyes, still nervously tearing his hat-brim, he looked almost
+grotesque. To Paul he seemed less a man than a creation of another
+planet, with unknown and incalculable instincts and impulses, who
+had come to earth and with foolish hand had wiped out the meaning of
+existence. Yet he felt no resentment, but rather a weary pity for
+the stranger blundering through an unsympathetic world. As soon as
+there came a pause in the prayer, he said not ungently:
+
+"The Almighty is not going to use me as an instrument to punish you,
+if I can help it. I quite appreciate your point. I'll say nothing."
+
+Barney Bill jerked his thumb towards the chair where the Princess
+had been sitting:
+
+"She won't give it away?"
+
+Paul smiled sadly. "No, old man. She'll keep it to herself."
+
+That marked the end of the interview. Paul accompanied the three
+downstairs.
+
+"I meant to act for the best, Paul," said Silas piteously, on
+parting. "Tell me that I haven't made you my enemy."
+
+"God forbid," said Paul.
+
+He went slowly up to his room again and threw himself in his writing
+chair. His eye fell upon the notes on the sheet of foolscap. The
+Radical candidate having been chosen, they were no longer relevant
+to his speech. He crumpled up the paper and threw it into the
+waste-paper basket. His speech! He held his head in both hands. A
+couple of hours hence he would be addressing a vast audience, the
+centre of the hopes of thousands of his fellow countrymen. The
+thought beat upon his brain. He had had the common nightmare of
+standing with conductor's baton in front of a mighty orchestra and
+being paralyzed by sense of impotence. No less a nightmare was his
+present position. A couple of hours ago he was athrill with
+confidence and joy of battle. But then he was a different man. The
+morning stars, the stars of his destiny, sang together in the
+ever-deepening glamour of the Vision Splendid. He was entering into
+the lists of Camelot to fight for his Princess. He was the
+Mysterious Knight, parented in fairy-far Avilion, the Fortunate
+Youth, the Awakener of England. Now he was but a base-born young man
+who had attained a high position by false pretences; an ordinary
+adventurer with a glib tongue; a self-educated, self-seeking,
+commonplace fellow. At least, so he saw himself in his Princess's
+eyes. And he had meant that she should thus behold him. No longer
+was he entering lists to fight for her. For what hopeless purpose
+was he entering them? To awaken England? The awakener must have his
+heart full of dreams and visions and glamour and joy and throbbing
+life; and in his heart there was death.
+
+He drew out the little cornelian talisman at the end of his
+watch-chain and looked at it bitterly. It was but a mocking symbol
+of illusion. He unhooked it and laid it on the table. He would carry
+it about with him no longer. He would throw it away.
+
+Ursula Winwood quietly entered the room.
+
+"You must come down and have something to cat before the meeting."
+
+Paul rose. "I don't want anything, thank you, Miss Winwood."
+
+"But James and I do. So come and join us."
+
+"Are you coming to the meeting?" he asked in surprise.
+
+"Of course." She lifted her eyebrows. "Why not?"
+
+"After what you have heard?"
+
+"All the more reason for us to go." She smiled as she had smiled on
+that memorable evening six years ago when she had stood with the
+horrible pawn-ticket in her hand. "James has to support the Party. I
+have to support you. James will do the same as I in a day or two.
+Just give him time. His mind doesn't work very quickly, not as
+quickly as a woman's. Come," she said. "When we have a breathing
+space you can tell me all about it. But in the meantime I'm pretty
+sure I understand."
+
+"How can you?" he asked wearily. "You have other traditions."
+
+"I don't know about traditions; but I don't give my love and take it
+away again. I set rather too much value on it. I understand because
+I love you."
+
+"Others with the same traditions can't understand."
+
+"I'm not proposing to marry you," she said bluntly. "That makes a
+difference."
+
+"It does," said he, meeting her eyes unflinchingly.
+
+"If you weren't a brave man, I shouldn't say such a thing to you.
+Anyhow I understand you're the last man in the world who should take
+me for a fool."
+
+"My God!" said Paul in a choky voice. "What can I do to thank you?"
+
+"Win the election."
+
+"You are still my dearest lady--my very very dearest lady," said
+he.
+
+Her shrewd eyes fell upon the cornelian heart. She picked it tip and
+held it out to him on her plump palm.
+
+"Why have you taken this off your watch-chain?"
+
+"It's a little false god," said he.
+
+"It's the first thing yon asked for when you recovered from your
+illness. You said you had kept it since you were a tiny boy. See? I
+remember. You set great value on it then?"
+
+"I believed in it," said Paul.
+
+"And now you don't? But a woman gave it to you."
+
+"Yes," said Paul, wondering, in his masculine way, how the deuce she
+knew that. "I was a brat of eleven."
+
+"Then keep it. Put it on your chain again. I'm sure it's a true
+little god. Take it back to please me."
+
+As there was nothing, from lapping up Eisel to killing a crocodile,
+that Paul would not have done, in the fulness of his wondering
+gratitude, for his dearest lady, he meekly attached the heart to his
+chain and put it in his pocket.
+
+"I must tell you," said he, "that the lady--she seemed a goddess
+to me then--chose me as her champion in a race, a race of urchins
+at a Sunday school treat, and I didn't win. But she gave me the
+cornelian heart as a prize."
+
+"But as my champion you will win," said Miss Winwood. "My dear boy,"
+she said, and her eyes grew very tender as she laid her hand on the
+young man's arm, "believe what an old woman is telling you is true.
+Don't throw away any little shred of beauty you've ever had in your
+life. The beautiful things are really the true ones, though they may
+seem to be illusions. Without the trinket or what it stood for,
+would you be here now?"
+
+"I don't know," replied Paul. "I might have taken a more honest road
+to get here."
+
+"We took you to ourselves as a bright human being, Paul--not for
+what you might or might not have been. By the way, what have you
+decided as regards making public the fact of your relationship?"
+
+"My father, for his own reasons, has urged me not to do so."
+
+Miss Winwood drew a long breath.
+
+"I'm glad to hear it," she said.
+
+So Paul, comforted by one woman's amazing loyalty, went out that
+evening and addressed his great meeting. But the roar of applause
+that welcomed him echoed through void spaces of his being. He felt
+neither thrill nor fear. The speech prepared by the Fortunate Youth
+was delivered by a stranger to it, glowing and dancing eloquence.
+The words came trippingly enough, but the informing Spirit was gone.
+
+Those in the audience familiar with the magic of his smile were
+disappointed. The soundness of his policy satisfied the hard-
+headed, but he made no appeal to the imaginative. If his speech did
+not fall flat, it was not the clarion voice that his supporters had
+anticipated. They whispered together with depressed headshakings.
+Their man was not in form. He was nervous. What he said was right
+enough, but his utterance lacked fire. It carried conviction to
+those already convinced; but it could make no proselytes. Had they
+been mistaken in their choice? Too young a man, hadn't lie bitten
+off a hunk greater than he could chew? So the inner ring of local
+politicians. An election audience, however, brings its own
+enthusiasms, and it must be a very dull dog indeed who damps their
+ardour. They cheered prodigiously when Paul sat down, and a crowd of
+zealots waiting outside the building cheered him again as he drove
+off. But Paul knew that he had been a failure. He had delivered
+another man's speech. To-morrow and the day after and the day after
+that, and ever afterwards, if he held to the political game, he
+would have to speak in his own new person. What kind of a person
+would the new Paul be?
+
+He drove back almost in silence with the Colonel and Miss Winwood,
+vainly seeking to solve the problem. The foundations of his life had
+been swept away. His foot rested on nothing solid save his own
+manhood. That no shock should break down. He would fight. He would
+win the election. He set his lips in grim determination. If life
+held no higher meaning, it at least offered this immediate object
+for existence. Besides he owed the most strenuous effort of his soul
+to the devoted and loyal woman whose face he saw dimly opposite.
+Afterwards come what might. The Truth at any rate. Magna est veritas
+et praevalebit.
+
+These were "prave 'orts" and valorous protestations.
+
+But when their light supper was over and Colonel Winwood had
+retired, Ursula Winwood lingered in the dining room, her heart
+aching for the boy who looked so stern and haggard. She came behind
+him and touched his hair.
+
+"Poor boy," she murmured.
+
+Then Paul--he was very young, barely thirty--broke down, as
+perhaps she meant that he should, and, elbows sprawling amid the
+disarray of the meal, poured out all the desolation of his soul, and
+for the first time cried out in anguish for the woman he had lost.
+So, as love lay a-bleeding mortally pierced, Ursula Win wood wept
+unaccustomed tears and with tender fingers strove to staunch the
+wound.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+DAYS of strain followed: days of a thousand engagements, a thousand
+interviews, a thousand journeyings, a thousand speeches; days in
+which he was reduced to an unresisting automaton, mechanically
+uttering the same formulas; days in which the irresistible force of
+the campaign swept him along without volition. And day followed day
+and not a sign came from the Princess Zobraska either of condonation
+or resentment. It was as though she had gathered her skirts around
+her and gone disdainfully out of his life for ever. If speaking were
+to be done, it was for her to speak. Paul could not plead. It was he
+who, in a way, had cast her off. In effect he had issued the
+challenge: "I am a child of the gutter, an adventurer masquerading
+under an historical name, and you are a royal princess. Will you
+marry me now?" She had given her answer, by walking out of the room,
+her proud head in the air. It was final, as far as he was concerned.
+He could do nothing--not even beg his dearest lady to plead for
+him. Besides, rumour had it that the Princess had cancelled her town
+engagements and gone to Morebury. So he walked in cold and darkness,
+uninspired, and though he worked with feverish energy, the heart and
+purpose of his life were gone.
+
+As in his first speech, so in his campaign, he failed. He had been
+chosen for his youth, his joyousness, his magnetism, his radiant
+promise of great things to come. He went about the constituency an,
+anxious, haggard man, working himself to death without being able to
+awaken a spark of emotion in the heart of anybody. He lost ground
+daily. On the other hand, Silas Finn, with his enthusiasms, and his
+aspect of an inspired prophet, made alarming progress. He swept the
+multitude. Paul Savelli, the young man of the social moment, had an
+army of helpers, members of Parliament making speeches, friends on
+the Unionist press writing flamboyant leaders, fair ladies in
+automobiles hunting for voters through the slums of Hickney Heath.
+Silas Finn had scarcely a personal friend. But hope reigned among
+his official supporters, whereas depression began to descend over
+Paul's brilliant host.
+
+"They want stirring up a bit," said the Conservative agent
+despondently. "I hear old Finn's meetings go with a bang. They
+nearly raised the roof off last night. We want some roof-raising on
+this side."
+
+"I do my best," said Paul coldly, but the reproach cut deep. He was
+a failure. No nervous or intellectual effort could save him now,
+though he spent himself to the last heartbeat. He was the sport of a
+mocking Will o' the Wisp which he had taken for Destiny.
+
+Once on coming out of his headquarters he met Silas, who was walking
+up the street with two or three of his committee-men. In accordance
+with the ordinary amenities of English political life, the two
+candidates shook hands, and withdrew a pace or two aside to chat for
+a while. This was the first time they had come together since the
+afternoon of revelation, and there was a moment of constraint during
+which Silas tugged at his streaked beard and looked with mournful
+wistfulness at his son.
+
+"I wish I were not your opponent, Paul," said he in a low voice, so
+as not to be overheard.
+
+"That doesn't matter a bit," Paul replied courteously. "I see you're
+putting up an excellent fight."
+
+"It's the Lord's battle. If it weren't, do you think I would not let
+you win?"
+
+The same old cry. Through sheer repetition, Paul began almost to
+believe in it. He felt very weary. In his father's eyes he
+recognized, with a pang, the glow of a faith which he had lost.
+Their likeness struck him, and he saw himself, his old self, beneath
+the unquestioning though sorrowful eyes.
+
+"That's the advantage of a belief in the Almighty's personal
+interest," he answered, with a touch of irony: "whatever happens,
+one is not easily disillusioned."
+
+"That is true, my son," said Silas.
+
+"Jane is well?" Paul asked, after an instant's pause, breaking off
+the profitless discussion.
+
+"Very well."
+
+"And Barney Bill?"
+
+"He upbraids me bitterly for what I have said."
+
+Paul smiled at the curiously stilted phrase.
+
+"Tell him from me not to do it. My love to them both."
+
+They shook hands again, and Paul drove off in the motor car that had
+been placed at his disposal during the election, and Silas continued
+his sober walk with his committee-men up the muddy street. Whereupon
+Paul conceived a sudden hatred for the car. It was but the final
+artistic touch to this comedy of mockery of which he had been the
+victim. . . . Perhaps God was on his father's side, after all--on
+the side of them who humbly walked and not of them who rode in proud
+chariots. But his political creed, his sociological convictions rose
+in protest. How could the Almighty be in league with all that was
+subversive of social order, all that was destructive to Imperial
+cohesion, all that which inevitably tended to England's downfall?
+
+He turned suddenly to his companion, the Conservative agent.
+
+"Do you think God has got common sense?"
+
+The agent, not being versed in speculations regarding the attributes
+of the Deity, stared; then, disinclined to commit himself, took
+refuge in platitude.
+
+"God moves in a mysterious way, Mr. Savelli."
+
+"That's rot," said Paul. "If there's an Almighty, He must move in a
+common-sense way; otherwise the whole of this planet would have
+busted up long ago. Do you think it's common sense to support the
+present Government?"
+
+"Certainly not," said the agent, fervently.
+
+"Then if God supported it, it wouldn't be common sense on His part.
+It would be merely mysterious?"
+
+"I see what you're driving at," said the agent. "Our opponent
+undoubtedly has been making free with the name of the Almighty in
+his speeches. As a matter of fact he's rather crazy on the subject.
+I don't think it would be a bad move to make a special reference to
+it. It's all damned hypocrisy. There's a chap in the old French
+play--what's his name?"
+
+"Tartuffe."
+
+"That's it. Well, there you are. That speech of his yesterday--now
+why don't you take it and wring religiosity and hypocrisy and
+Tartuffism out of it? You know how to do that sort of thing. You can
+score tremendously. I never thought of it before. By George! you can
+get him in the neck if you like."
+
+"But I don't like," said Paul. "I happen to know that Mr. Finn is
+sincere in his convictions."
+
+"But, my dear sir, what does his supposed sincerity matter in
+political contest?"
+
+"It's the difference between dirt and cleanliness," said Paul.
+"Besides, as I told you at the outset, Mr. Finn and I are close
+personal friends, and I have the highest regard for his character.
+He has seen that his side has scrupulously refrained from
+personalities with regard to me, and I insist on the same observance
+with regard to him."
+
+"With all due deference to you, Mr. Savelli, you were called only
+the day before yesterday 'the spoiled darling of Duchesses'
+boudoirs.'"
+
+"It wasn't with Mr. Finn's cognizance. I've found that out."
+
+"Well," said the agent, leaning back-in the luxurious limousine, "I
+don't see why somebody, without your cognizance, shouldn't call Mr.
+Finn the spoiled minion of the Almighty's ante-chamber. That's a
+devilish good catch-phrase," he added, starting forward in the joy
+of his newborn epigram: "Devilish good. 'The spoiled minion of the
+Almighty's ante-chamber.' It'll become historical."
+
+"If it does," said Paul, "it will be associated with the immediate
+retirement of the Conservative candidate."
+
+"Do you really mean that?"
+
+It was Paul's turn to start forward. "My dear Wilson," said he, "if
+you or anybody else thinks I'm a man to talk through his hat, I'll
+retire at once. I don't care a damn about myself. Not a little
+tuppenny damn. What the devil does it matter to me whether I get
+into Parliament or not? Nothing. Not a tuppenny damn. You can't
+understand. It's the party and the country. For myself, personally,
+the whole thing can go to blazes. I'm in earnest, dead earnest," he
+continued, with a vehemence incomprehensible to Wilson. "If anybody
+doesn't think so, I'll clear out at once"--he snapped his fingers.
+"But while I'm candidate everything I say I mean. I mean it
+intensely--with all my soul. And I say that if there's a single
+insulting reference to Mr. Finn during this election, you'll be up
+against the wreck of your own political career."
+
+The agent watched the workings of his candidate's dark clear-cut
+face. He was very proud of his candidate, and found it difficult to
+realize that there were presumably sane people who would not vote
+for him on sight. A lingering memory of grammar school days flashed
+on him when he told his wife later of the conversation, and he
+likened Paul to a wrathful Apollo. Anxious to appease the god, he
+said humbly:
+
+"It was the merest of suggestions, Mr. Savelli. Heaven knows we
+don't want to descend to personalities, and your retirement would be
+an unqualifiable disaster. But--you'll pardon my mentioning it--
+you began this discussion by asking me whether the Almighty had
+common sense."
+
+"Well, has He or not?"
+
+"Of course," said Wilson.
+
+"Then we're going to win this election," said Paul.
+
+If he could have met enthusiasm with enthusiasm, all would have been
+well. The awakener of England could have captivated hearts by
+glowing pictures of a great and glorious future. It would have been
+a counter-blaze to that lit by his opponent, which flamed in all the
+effulgence of a reckless reformer's promise, revealing a Utopia in
+which there would be no drunkenness, no crime, no poverty, and in
+which the rich, apparently, would have to work very hard in order to
+support the poor in comfortable idleness. But beyond proving
+fallacies, Paul could do nothing--and even then, has there ever
+been a mob since the world began susceptible to logical argument?
+So, all through the wintry days of the campaign, Silas Finn carried
+his fiery cross through the constituency, winning frenzied
+adherents, while Paul found it hard to rally the faithful round the
+drooping standard of St. George.
+
+The days went on. Paul addressed his last meeting on the eve of the
+poll. By a supreme effort he regained some of his former fire and
+eloquence. He drove home exhausted, and going straight to bed slept
+like a dog till morning.
+
+The servant who woke him brought a newspaper to the bedside.
+
+"Something to interest you, sir."
+
+Paul looked at the headline indicated by the man.
+
+"Hickney Heath Election. Liberal Candidate's Confession.
+Extraordinary Scene."
+
+He glanced hurriedly down the column and read with amazement and
+stabbing pain the matter that was of interest. The worst had
+happened--the thing which during all his later life Silas Finn had
+feared. The spectre of the prison had risen up against him.
+
+Towards the end of Silas Finn's speech, at his last great meeting, a
+man, sitting in the body of the hall near the platform, got up and
+interrupted him. "What about your own past life? What about your
+three years' penal servitude?" All eyes were turned from the man--
+a common looking, evil man--to the candidate, who staggered as if
+he had been shot, caught at the table behind him for support and
+stared in greyfaced terror. There was an angry tumult, and the
+interrupter would have fared badly, but for Silas Finn holding up
+his hand and imploring silence.
+
+"I challenge the candidate to deny," said the man, as soon as he
+could be heard, "that his real name is Silas Kegworthy, and that he
+underwent three years' penal servitude for murderously assaulting
+his wife."
+
+Then the candidate braced himself and said: "The bare facts are
+true. But I have lived stainlessly in the fear of God and in the
+service of humanity for thirty years. I have sought absolution for a
+moment of mad anger under awful provocation in unremitting prayer
+and in trying to save the souls and raise the fortunes of my
+fellow-men. Is that all you have against me?"
+
+"That's all," said the man.
+
+"It is for you, electors of Hickney Heath, to judge me."
+
+He sat down amid tumultuous cheers, and the man who had interrupted
+him, after some rough handling, managed to make his escape. The
+chairman then put a vote of confidence in the candidate, which was
+carried by acclamation, and the meeting broke up.
+
+Such were the essential facts in the somewhat highly coloured
+newspaper story which Paul read in stupefied horror. He dressed
+quickly and went to his sitting-room, where he rang tip his father's
+house on the telephone. Jane's voice met his ear.
+
+"It's Paul speaking," he replied. "I've just this moment read of
+last night. I'm shaken to my soul. How is my father?"
+
+"He's greatly upset," came the voice. "He didn't sleep all night,
+and he's not at all well this morning. Oh, it was a cruel, cowardly
+blow."
+
+"Dastardly. Do you know who it was?"
+
+"No. Don't you?"
+
+"I? Does either of you think that I--?"
+
+"No, no," came the voice, now curiously tearful. "I didn't mean
+that. I forgot you've not had time to find out."
+
+"Who does he think it was?"
+
+"Some old fellow prisoner who had a grudge against him."
+
+"Were you at the meeting?"
+
+"Yes. Oh, Paul, it was splendid to see him face the audience. He
+spoke so simply and with such sorrowful dignity. He had their
+sympathy at once. But it has broken him. I'm afraid he'll never be
+the same man again. After all these years it's dreadful."
+
+"It's all that's damnable. It's tragic. Give him my love and tell
+him that words can't express my sorrow and indignation."
+
+He rang off. Almost immediately Wilson was announced. He carne into
+the room radiant.
+
+"You were right about the divine common-sensicality," said he. "The
+Lord has delivered our adversary into our hands with a vengeance."
+
+He was a chubby little man of forty, with coarse black hair and
+scrubby moustache, not of the type that readily appreciates the
+delicacies of a situation. Paul conceived a sudden loathing for him.
+
+"I would give anything for it not to have happened," he said.
+
+Wilson opened his eyes. "Why? It's our salvation. An ex-convict--
+it's enough to damn any candidate. But we want to make sure. Now
+I've got an idea."
+
+Paul turned on him angrily. "I'll have no capital made out of it
+whatsoever. It's a foul thing to bring such an accusation up against
+a man who has lived a spotless life for thirty years. Everything in
+me goes out in sympathy with him, and I'll let it be known all
+through the constituency."
+
+"If you take it that way," said Wilson, "there's no more to be
+done."
+
+"There's nothing to be done, except to find out who put up the man
+to make the announcement."
+
+"He did it on his own," Wilson replied warmly. "None of our people
+would resort to a dirty trick like that."
+
+"And yet you want me to take advantage of it now it's done."
+
+"That's quite a different matter."
+
+"I can't see much difference," said Paul.
+
+So Wilson, seeing that his candidate was more unmanageable than
+ever, presently departed, and Paul sat down to breakfast. But he
+could not eat. He was both stricken with shame and moved to the
+depths by immense pity. Far removed from him as Silas Finn was in
+mode of life and ideals, he found much in common with his father.
+Each had made his way from the slum, each had been guided by an
+inner light--was Silas Finn's fantastic belief less of an ignis
+fatuus than his own?--each had sought to get away from a past,
+each was a child of Ishmael, each, in his own way, had lived
+romantically. Whatever resentment against his father lingered in his
+heart now melted away. He was very near him. The shame of the prison
+struck him as it had struck the old man. He saw him bowed down under
+the blow, and he clenched his hands in a torture of anger and
+indignation. And to crown all, came the intolerable conviction, in
+the formation of which Wilson's triumphant words had not been
+necessary, that if he won the election it would be due to this
+public dishonouring of his own father. He walked about the room in
+despair, and at last halted before the mantelpiece on which still
+stood the photograph of the Princess in its silver frame. Suddenly
+he remembered that he had not told her of this incident in his
+family history. She too would be reading her newspaper this morning.
+He saw her proud lips curl. The son of a gaol-bird! He tore the
+photograph from its frame and threw it into the fire and watched it
+burn. As the paper writhed under the heat, the lips seemed to twist
+into sad reproach. He turned away impatiently. That romantic madness
+was over and done with. He had far sterner things to do than shriek
+his heart out over a woman in an alien star. He had his life to
+reconstruct in the darkness threatening and mocking; but at last he
+had truth for a foundation; on that he would build in defiance of
+the world.
+
+In the midst of these fine thoughts it occurred to him that he had
+hidden the prison episode in his father's career from the Winwoods
+as well as from the Princess. His checks flushed; it was one more
+strain on the loyalty of these dear devoted friends. He went
+downstairs, and found the Colonel and Miss Winwood in the
+dining-room. Their faces were grave. He came to them with
+outstretched arms--a familiar gesture, one doubtless inherited
+from his Sicilian ancestry.
+
+"You see what has happened. I knew all the time. I didn't tell you.
+You must forgive me."
+
+"I don't blame you, my boy," said Colonel Winwood. "It was your
+father's secret. You had no right to tell us."
+
+"We're very grieved, dear, for both your sakes," Ursula added.
+"James has taken the liberty of sending round a message of
+sympathy."
+
+As ever, these two had gone a point beyond his anticipation of their
+loyalty. He thanked them simply.
+
+"It's hateful," said he, "to think I may win the election on account
+of this. It's loathsome." He shuddered.
+
+"I quite agree with you," said the Colonel. "But in politics one has
+often to put up with hateful things in order to serve one's country.
+That's the sacrifice a high-minded man is called upon to make."
+
+"Besides," said Miss Winwood, "let us hope it won't affect votes.
+All the papers say that the vote of confidence was passed amid
+scenes of enthusiasm."
+
+Paul smiled. They understood. A little while later they drove off
+with him to his committee room in the motor car gay with his
+colours. There was still much to be done that day.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HICKNEY HEATH blazed with excitement. It is not every day that a
+thrill runs through a dull London borough, not even every election
+day. For a London borough, unlike a country town, has very little
+corporate life of its own. You cannot get up as much enthusiasm for
+Kilburn, say, as a social or historical entity, as you can for
+Winchester or Canterbury. You may perform civic duties, if you are
+public-spirited enough, with business-like zeal, and if you are
+borough councillor you may be proud of the nice new public baths
+which you have been instrumental in presenting to the community. But
+the ordinary man in the street no more cares for Kilburn than he
+does for Highgate. He would move from one to the other without a
+pang. For neither's glory would he shed a drop of his blood. Only at
+election times does it occur to him that he is one of a special
+brotherhood, isolated from the rest of London; and even then he
+regards the constituency as a convention defining. geographical
+limits for the momentary range of his political passions. So that
+the day when an electric thrill ran through the whole of Hickney
+Heath was a rare one in its uninspiring annals.
+
+The dramatic had happened, touching the most sluggish imaginations.
+The Liberal candidate for Parliament, a respected Borough
+Councillor, a notorious Evangelical preacher, had publicly confessed
+himself an ex-convict. Every newspaper in London--and for the
+matter of that, every newspaper in Great Britain--rang with the
+story, and every man, woman and child in Hickney Heath read
+feverishly every newspaper, morning and evening, they could lay
+their hands on. Also, every man, woman and child in Hickney Heath
+asked his neighbour for further details. All who could leave desk
+and shop or factory poured into the streets to learn the latest,
+tidings. Around the various polling stations the crowd was thickest.
+Those electors who had been present at Silas Finn's meeting, the
+night before, told the story at first-hand to eager groups. Rumours
+of every sort spread through the mob. The man who had put the famous
+question was an agent of the Tories. It was a smart party move.
+Silas Finn had all the time been leading a double life. Depravities
+without number were laid to his charge. Even now the police were
+inquiring into his connection with certain burglaries that had taken
+place in the neighbourhood. And where was he that day? Who had seen
+him? He was at home drunk. He had committed suicide. Even if he
+hadn't, and was elected, he would not be allowed to take his seat in
+Parliament.
+
+On the other hand, those in whose Radical bosoms burned fierce
+hatred for the Tories, spoke loud in condemnation of their cowardly
+tactics. There was considerable free-fighting in the ordinarily
+dismal and decorous streets of Hickney Heath. Noisy acclamations
+hailed the automobiles, carriages and waggonettes bringing voters of
+both parties to the polls. Paul, driving in his gaily-decked car
+about the constituency, shared all these demonstrations and heard
+these rumours. The latter he denied and caused to be denied, as far
+as lay in his power. In the broad High Street, thronged with folk,
+and dissonant with tram cars and motor 'buses, he came upon a
+quarrelsome crowd looking up at a window above a poulterer's shop,
+from which hung something white, like a strip of wall paper.
+
+Approaching, he perceived that it bore a crude drawing of a convict
+and "Good old Dartmoor" for legend. White with anger, he stopped the
+car, leaped out on to the curb, and pushing his way through the
+crowd, entered the shop. He seized one of the white-coated
+assistants by the arm. "Show me the way to that first-floor room,"
+he cried fiercely.
+
+The assistant, half-dragged, half-leading, and wholly astonished,
+took him through the shop and pointed to the staircase. Paul sprang
+up and dashed through the door into the room, which appeared to be
+some business office. Three or four young men, who turned grinning
+from the window, be thrust aside, and plucking the offending strip
+from the drawing-pins which secured it to the sill, he tore it
+across and across.
+
+"You cads! You brutes!" he shouted, trampling on the fragments.
+"Can't you fight like Englishmen?"
+
+The young men, realizing the identity of the wrathful apparition,
+stared open-mouthed, turned red, and said nothing. Paul strode out,
+looking very fierce, and drove off in his car amid the cheers of the
+crowd, to which he paid no notice.
+
+"It makes me sick!" he cried passionately to Wilson, who was with
+him. "I hope to God he wins in spite, of it!"
+
+"What about the party?" asked Wilson.
+
+Paul damned the party. He was in the overwrought mood in which a man
+damns everything. Quagmire and bramble and the derision of
+Olympus-that was the end of his vanity of an existence. Suppose he
+was elected--what then? He would be a failure-the high gods in
+their mirth would see to that--a puppet in Frank Ayres' hands
+until the next general election, when be would have ignominiously to
+retire. Awakener of England indeed! He could not even awaken Hickney
+Heath. As he dashed through the streets in his triumphal car, he
+hated Hickney Heath, hated the wild "hoorays" of waggon-loads of his
+supporters on their way to the polls, hated the smug smiles of his
+committee-men at polling stations. He forgot that he did not hate
+England. A little black disk an inch or two in diameter if cunningly
+focussed can obscure the sun in heaven from human eye. There was
+England still behind the little black disk, though Paul for the
+moment saw it not.
+
+Wilson pulled his scrubby moustache and made no retort to Paul's
+anathema. To him Paul was one of the fine flower of the Upper
+Classes to which lower middle-class England still, with considerable
+justification, believes to be imbued with incomprehensible and
+unalterable principles of conduct. The grand old name of gentleman
+still has its magic in this country--and is, by the way, not
+without its influence in one or two mighty republics wherein the
+equality of man is very loudly proclaimed. Wilson, therefore, gladly
+suffered Paul's lunatic Quixotry. For himself he approved hugely of
+the cartoon. If he could have had his way, Hickney Heath would have
+flamed with poster reproductions of it. But he had a dim
+appreciation of, and a sneaking admiration for, the aristocrat's
+point of view, and, being a practical man, evaded a discussion on
+the ethics of the situation.
+
+The situation was rendered more extraordinary because the Liberal
+candidate made no appearance in the constituency. Paul inquired
+anxiously. No one had seen him. After lunch he drove alone to his
+father's house. The parlour-maid showed him into the hideously
+furnished and daub-hung dining-room. The Viennese horrors of plaster
+stags, gnomes and rabbits stared fatuously on the hearth. No fire
+was in the grate. Very soon Jane entered, tidy, almost matronly in
+buxom primness, her hair as faultless as if it had come out of a
+convoluted mould, her grave eyes full of light. She gave him her
+capable hand.
+
+"It's like you to come, Paul."
+
+"It's only decent. My father hasn't shown up. What's the matter with
+him?"
+
+"It's a bit of a nervous breakdown," she said, looking at him
+steadily. "Nothing serious. But the doctor--I sent for him--says
+he had better rest--and his committee people thought it wiser for
+him not to show himself."
+
+"Can I see him?"
+
+"Certainly not." A look of alarm came into her face. "You're both
+too excited. What would you say to him?"
+
+"I'd tell him what I feel about the whole matter."
+
+"Yes. You would fling your arms about, and he would talk about God,
+and a precious lot of good it would do to anybody. No, thank you.
+I'm in charge of Mr. Finn's health."
+
+It was the old Jane, so familiar. "I wish," said he, with a smile--
+"I wish I had had your common sense to guide me all these years."
+
+"If you had, you would now be a clerk in the City earning thirty
+shillings a week."
+
+"And perhaps a happier man."
+
+"Bosh, my dear Paul!" she said, shaking her head slowly. "Rot!
+Rubbish! I know you too well. You adding up figures at thirty
+shillings a week, with a common sense wife for I suppose you mean
+that--mending your socks and rocking the cradle in a second-floor
+back in Hickney Heath! No, my dear"--she paused for a second or
+two and her lips twitched oddly--"common sense would have been the
+death of you."
+
+He laughed in spite of himself. It was so true.
+
+Common sense might have screwed him to a thirty shillings-a-week
+desk: the fantastic had brought him to that very house, a candidate
+for Parliament, in a thousand-guinea motor car. On the other hand--
+and his laughter faded from his eyes--the fantastic in his life
+was dead. Henceforward common sense would hold him in her cold and
+unstimulating clasp. He said something of the sort to Jane. Once
+more she ejaculated "Rot, rubbish and bosh!" and they quarrelled as
+they had done in their childhood.
+
+"You talk as if I didn't know you inside out, my dear Paul," she
+said in her clear, unsmiling way. "Listen. All men are donkeys,
+aren't they?"
+
+"For the sake of argument, I agree."
+
+"Well--there are two kinds of donkeys. One kind is meek and mild
+and will go wherever it is driven. The other, in order to get along,
+must always have a bunch of carrots dangling before its eyes. That's
+you."
+
+"But confound it all!" he cried, "I've lost my carrots--can't you
+see? I'll never have any carrots again. That's the whole damned
+tragedy."
+
+For the first time she smiled--the smile of the woman wiser in
+certain subtle things than the man. "my dear," she said, "carrots
+are cheap." She paused for an instant and added, "Thank God!"
+
+Paul squeezed her arms affectionately and they moved apart. He
+sighed. "They're the most precious things in the world," said he.
+
+"The most precious things in the world are those which you can get
+for nothing," said Jane.
+
+"You're a dear," said he, "and a comfort."
+
+Presently he left her and returned to his weary round of the
+constituency, feeling of stouter heart, with a greater faith in the
+decent ordering of mundane things. .A world containing such women as
+Jane and Ursula Winwood possessed elements of sanity. Outside one of
+the polling stations he found Barney Bill holding forth excitedly to
+a knot of working-men. He ceased as the car drove up, and cast back
+a broad proud smile at the candidate's warm greeting.
+
+"I got up the old 'bus so nice and proper, with all your colours and
+posters, and it would have been a spectacular Diorama for these 'ere
+poor people; but you know for why I didn't bring it out to-day,
+don't you, sonny?"
+
+"I know, dear old friend," said Paul.
+
+"I 'adn't the 'cart to."
+
+"What were you speechifying about when I turned up?"
+
+Barney Bill jerked a backward thumb. "I was telling this pack of
+cowardly Radicals that though I've been a Tory born and bred for
+sixty odd years, and though I've voted for you, Silas Finn, for all
+he was in prison while most of them were sucking wickedness and
+Radicalism out of Nature's founts, is just as good a man as what you
+are. They was saying, yer see, they was Radicals, but on account of
+Silas being blown upon, they was going to vote for you. So I tells
+'em, I says, 'Mr. Savelli would scorn your dirty votes. If yer feel
+low and Radical, vote Radical. Mr. Savelli wants to play fair. I
+know both of 'em,' I says, 'both of 'em intimately.' And they begins
+to laugh, as if I was talking through my hat. Anyway, they see now I
+know you, sonny."
+
+Paul laughed and clapped the loyal old man on the shoulder. Then he
+turned to the silent but interested group. "Gentlemen," said he, "I
+don't want to inquire on which side you are; but you can take it
+from me that whatever my old friend Mr. Simmons says about Mr. Finn
+and myself is the absolute truth. If you're on Mr. Finn's side in
+politics, in God's name vote for him. He's a noble, high-souled man
+and I'm proud of his private friendship."
+
+He drew Barney Bill apart. "You're the only Tory in the place who
+can try to persuade people not to vote for me. I wish you would keep
+on doing it."
+
+"I've been a-doing of it ever since the polls opened this morning,"
+said Barney Bill. Then he cocked his head on one side and his little
+eyes twinkled: "It's an upside-down way of fighting an election to
+persuade people not to vote for you, isn't it?"
+
+"Everything is topsy-turvy with me, these days," Paul replied: "so
+we've just got to stand on our heads and make the best of it."
+
+And he drove off in the gathering dusk.
+
+Night found him in the great chamber of the Town Hall, with his
+agent and members of his committee. Present too were the Liberal
+Agent and the members of the Liberal Committee. At one end of the
+room sat the Mayor of the Borough in robe and chain of office,
+presiding over the proceedings. The Returning Officer and his staff
+sat behind long tables, on which were deposited the sealed ballot
+boxes brought in from the various polling stations; and these were
+emptied and the votes were counted, the voting papers for each
+candidate being done up in bundles of fifty. Knots of committee-men
+of both parties stood chatting in low voices. In an ordinary
+election both candidates would have chatted together, in ninety-nine
+cases out of a hundred about golf, and would have made an engagement
+to meet again in milder conflict that day week. But here Paul was
+the only candidate to appear, and he sat in a cane-bottomed chair
+apart from the lounging politicians, feeling curiously an interloper
+in this vast, solemn and scantily-filled hall. He was very tired,
+too tired in body, mind and soul to join in the small-talk of Wilson
+and his bodyguard. Besides, they all wore the air of anticipated
+victory, and for that he held them in detestation. He had detested
+them the whole day long. The faces that yesterday had been long and
+anxious to-day had been wreathed in smirks. Wherever he had gone he
+had found promise of victory in his father's disgrace. Passionately
+the young man, fronting vital issues, longed for his own defeat.
+
+But for the ironical interposition of the high gods, it might have
+been so different. Any other candidate against him, he himself
+buoyed up with his own old glorious faith, his Princess, dazzling
+meteor illuminating the murky streets--dear God! what would not
+have been the joy of battle during the past week, what would not
+have been the intense thrill, the living of a thousand lives in
+these few hours of suspense now so dull with dreariness and pain! He
+sat apart, his legs crossed, a hand over his eyes. Wilson and his
+men, puzzled by his apparent apathy, left him alone. It is not much
+use addressing a mute and wooden idol, no matter how physically
+prepossessing.
+
+The counting went on slowly, relentlessly, and the bundles of fifty
+on each side grew in bulk, and Paul's side bulked larger than Silas
+Finn's.
+
+At last Wilson could stand it no longer. He left the group with
+which he was talking, and came to Paul. "We're far ahead already,"
+he cried excitedly. "I told you last night would do the trick."
+
+"Last night," said Paul, rising and stuffing his hands in his jacket
+pockets, "my opponent's supporters passed a vote of confidence in
+him in a scene of tumultuous enthusiasm."
+
+"Quite so," replied Wilson. "A crowd is generous and easily swayed.
+A theatrical audience of scalliwags and thieves will howl applause
+at the triumph of virtue and the downfall of the villain; and each
+separate member will go out into the street and begin to practise
+villainy and say 'to hell with virtue.' If last night's meeting
+could have polled on the spot, they would have been as one man.
+To-day they're scattered and each individual revises his excited
+opinion. Your hard-bitten Radical would sooner have a self-made man
+than an aristocrat to represent him in Parliament; but, damn it all,
+he'd sooner have an aristocrat than an ex-convict."
+
+"But who the devil told you I'm an aristocrat?" cried Paul.
+
+Wilson laughed. "Who wants to be told such an obvious thing? Anyhow,
+you've only got to look and you'll see how the votes are piling
+tip."
+
+Paul looked and saw that Wilson spoke truly. Then he reflected that
+Wilson and the others who had worked so strenuously for him had no
+part in his own personal depression. They deserved a manifestation
+of interest, also expressions of gratitude. So Paul pulled himself
+together and went amongst them and was responsive to their
+prophecies of victory.
+
+Then just as the last votes were being counted, an official
+attendant came in with a letter for Paul. It had been brought by
+messenger. The writing on the envelope was Jane's. He tore it open
+and read.
+
+Mr. Finn is dying. He has had a stroke. The doctor says he can't
+live through the night. Come as soon as you can. JANE.
+
+Outside the Town Hall the wide street was packed with people. Men
+surged tip to the hollow square of police guarding the approach to
+the flight of steps and the great entrance door. Men swarmed about
+the electric standards above the heads of their fellows. Men rose in
+a long tier with their backs to the shop-fronts on the opposite side
+of the road. In spite of the raw night the windows were open and the
+arc lights revealed a ghostly array of faces looking down on the
+mass below, whose faces in their turn were lit up by the more yellow
+glare streaming from the doors and uncurtained windows of the Town
+Hall. In the lobby behind the glass doors could be seen a few
+figures going and coming, committee-men, journalists, officials. A
+fine rain began to fall, but the crowd did not heed it. The
+mackintosh capes of the policemen glistened. It was an orderly
+crowd, held together by tense excitement: all eyes fixed on the
+silent illuminated building whence the news would come. Across one
+window on the second floor was a large white patch, blank and
+sphinx-like. At right angles to one end of the block ran the High
+Street and the tall, blazing trams passed up and down and all eyes
+in the trams strained for a transient glimpse of the patch, hoping
+that it would flare out into message.
+
+Presently a man was seen to dash from the interior of the hall into
+the lobby, casting words at the waiting figures, who clamoured
+eagerly and disappeared within, just as the man broke through the
+folding doors and appeared at the top of the steps beneath the
+portico. The great crowd surged and groaned, and the word was
+quickly passed from rank to rank.
+
+"Savelli. Thirteen hundred and seventy majority." And then there
+burst out wild cheers and the crowd broke into a myriad little waves
+like a choppy sea. Men danced and shouted and clapped each other on
+the back, and the tall facade of the street opposite the hall was
+a-flutter. Suddenly the white patch leaped into an illumination
+proclaiming the figures.
+
+Savelli--6,135.
+
+Finn--4,765.
+
+Again the wild cheering rose, and then the great double windows in
+the centre of the first floor of the Town Hall were flung open and
+Paul, surrounded by the mayor and officials, appeared.
+
+Paul gripped the iron hand-rail and looked down upon the tumultuous
+scene, his ears deafened by the roar, his eyes dazed by the
+conflicting lights and the million swift reflections from moving
+faces and arms and hats and handkerchiefs. The man is not born who
+can receive unmoved a frenzied public ovation. A lump rose in his
+throat. After all, this delirium of joy was sincere. He stood for
+the moment the idol of the populace. For him this vast concourse of
+human beings had waited in rain and mud and now became a deafening,
+seething welter of human passion. He gripped the rail tighter and
+closed his eyes. He heard as in a dream the voice of the mayor
+behind him: "Say a few words. They won't hear you--but that
+doesn't matter."
+
+Then Paul drew himself up, facing the whirling scene. He sought in
+his pockets and suddenly shot up his hand, holding a letter, and
+awaited a lull in the uproar. He was master of himself now. He had
+indeed words to say, deliberately prepared, and he knew that if he
+could get a hearing he would say them as deliberately. At last came
+comparative calm.
+
+"Gentlemen," said he, with a motion of the letter, "my opponent is
+dying."
+
+He paused. The words, so unexpected, so strangely different from the
+usual exordium, seemed to pass from line to line through the crowd.
+
+"I am speaking in the presence of death," said Paul, and paused
+again.
+
+And a hush spread like a long wave across the street, and the
+thronged windows, last of all, grew still and silent.
+
+"I will ask you to hear me out, for I have something very grave to
+say." And his voice rang loud and clear. "Last night my opponent was
+forced to admit that nearly thirty years ago he suffered a term of
+penal servitude. The shock, after years of reparation, of spotless
+life, spent in the service of God and his fellow-creatures, has
+killed him. I desire publicly to proclaim that I, as his opponent,
+had no share in the dastardly blow that has struck him down. And I
+desire to proclaim the reason. He is my own father; I, Paul Savelli,
+am my opponent, Silas Finn's son."
+
+A great gasp and murmur rose from the wonder-stricken throng, but
+only momentarily, for the spell of drama was on them. Paul
+continued.
+
+"I will make public later on the reasons for our respective changes
+of name. For the present it is enough to state the fact of our
+relationship and of our mutual affection and respect. That I thank
+you for electing me goes without saying; and I will do everything in
+my power to advance the great cause you have enabled me to
+represent. I regret I cannot address you in another place to-night,
+as I had intended. I must ask you of your kindness to let me go
+quietly where my duty and my heart call me to my father's
+death-bed."
+
+He bowed and waved a dignified gesture of farewell, and turning into
+the hall met the assemblage of long, astounded faces. From outside
+came the dull rumbling of the dispersing crowd. The mayor, the first
+to break the silence, murmured a platitude.
+
+Paul thanked him gravely. Then he went to Wilson. "Forgive me," said
+he, "for all that has been amiss with me to-day. It has been a
+strain of a very peculiar kind."
+
+"I can well imagine it," said Wilson.
+
+"You see I'm not an aristocrat, after all," said Paul.
+
+Wilson looked the young man in the face and saw the steel beneath
+the dark eyes, and the Proud setting of the lips. With a sudden
+impulse he wrung his hand. "I don't care a damn!" said he. "You
+are."
+
+Paul said, unsmiling: "I can face the music. That's all." He drew a
+note from his pocket. "Will you do me a final service? Go round to
+the Conservative Club at once, and tell the meeting what has
+happened, and give this to Colonel Winwood."
+
+"With pleasure," said Wilson.
+
+Then Paul shook hands with all his fellow-workers and thanked them
+in his courtly way, and, pleading for solitude, went through the
+door of the great chamber and, guided by an attendant, reached the
+exit in a side street where his car awaited him. A large concourse
+of people stood drawn up in line on each side of the street,
+marshalled by policemen. A familiar crooked figure limped from the
+shadow of the door, holding a hard felt hat, his white poll gleaming
+in the shaft of light. "God bless you, sonny," he said in a hoarse
+whisper.
+
+Paul took the old man by the arm and drew him across the pavement to
+the car. "Get in," said he.
+
+Barney Bill hung back. "No, sonny; no."
+
+"It's not the first time we've driven together. Get in. I want you."
+
+So Barney Bill allowed himself to be thrust into the luxurious car,
+and Paul followed. And perhaps for the first time in the history of
+great elections the successful candidate drove away from the place
+where the poll was declared in dead silence, attended only by the
+humblest of his constituents. But every man in the throng bared his
+head.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+"HE had the stroke in the night," said Barney Bill suddenly.
+
+Paul turned sharply on him. "Why wasn't I told?"
+
+"Could you have cured him?"
+
+"Of course not."
+
+"Could you have done him any good?"
+
+"I ought to have been told."
+
+"You had enough of worries before you for one day, sonny."
+
+"That was my business," said Paul.
+
+"Jane and I, being as it were responsible parties, took the liberty,
+so to speak, of thinking it our business too."
+
+Paul drummed impatiently on his knees.
+
+"Yer ain't angry, are you, sonny?" the old man asked plaintively.
+
+"No--not angry--with you and Jane--certainly not. I know you
+acted for the best, out of love for me. But you shouldn't have
+deceived me. I thought it was a mere nervous breakdown--the strain
+and shock. You never said a word about it, and Jane, when I talked
+to her this morning, never gave me to dream there was anything
+serious amiss. So I say you two have deceived me."
+
+"But I'm a telling of yer, sonny--"
+
+"Yes, yes, I know. I don't reproach you. But don't you see? I'm sick
+of lies. Dead sick. I've been up to my neck in a bog of falsehood
+ever since I was a child and I'm making a hell of a struggle to get
+on to solid ground. The Truth for me now. By God! nothing but the
+Truth!"
+
+Barney Bill, sitting for-ward, hunched up, on the seat of the car,
+just as he used to sit on the footboard of his van, twisted his head
+round. "I'm not an eddicated person," said he, "although if I hadn't
+done a bit of reading in my time I'd have gone dotty all by my lones
+in the old 'bus, but I've come to one or two conclusions in my, so
+to speak, variegated career, and one is that if you go one in that
+'ere mad way for Truth in Parliament, you'll be a bull in a china
+shop, and they'll get sticks and dawgs to hustle you out. Sir Robert
+Peel, old Gladstone, Dizzy, the whole lot of the old Yuns was up
+against it. They had to compromise. It's compromise"--the old man
+dwelt lovingly, as usual, on the literary word--"it's compromise
+you must have in Parliament."
+
+"I'll see Parliament damned first!" cried Paul, his nerves on edge.
+
+"You'll have to wait a long time, sonny," said Barney Bill, wagging
+a sage head. "Parliament takes a lot of damning."
+
+"Anyhow," said Paul, not eager to continue the argument, but
+unconsciously caught in the drift of Barney Bill's philosophy, "my
+private life isn't politics, and there's not going to be another lie
+in my private life as long as I live."
+
+The old man broke a short silence with a dry chuckle. "How it takes
+one back!" he said reflectively. "Lor lumme! I can hear yer speaking
+now--just in the same tone--the night what yer run away with me.
+Yer hadn't a seat to yer breeches then, and now you've a seat in
+Parliament." He chuckled again at his joke. "But"--he gripped the
+young man's knee in his bony clasp--"you're just the same Paul,
+sonny, God bless yer--and you'll come out straight all right. Here
+we are."
+
+The car drew up before Silas Finn's house. They entered. Jane,
+summoned, came down at once and met them in the dreadful
+dining-room, where a simple meal was spread.
+
+"I haven't heard--" she said.
+
+"I'm in."
+
+"I'm glad."
+
+"My father--?" he asked curtly.
+
+She looked at him wide-eyed for a second or two as he stood, his
+fur-lined coat with astrachan collar thrown open, his hand holding a
+soft felt hat on his hip, his absurdly beautiful head thrown back,
+to casual glance the Fortunate Youth of a month or two ago. But to
+Jane's jealous eye he was not even the man she had seen that
+afternoon. He looked many years older. She confessed afterwards to
+surprise at not finding his hair grey at the temples, thus
+manifesting her ordered sense of the harmonious. She confessed, too,
+that she was frightened--jane who, for any other reason than the
+mere saving of her own skin, would have stolidly faced Hyrcanean
+tigers--at the stern eyes beneath the contracted brows. He was a
+different Paul altogether. And here we have the divergence between
+the masculine and the feminine point of view. Jane saw a new avatar;
+Barney Bill the ragged urchin of the Bludston brick-fields. She
+shifted her glance to the old man. He, standing crookedly, cocked
+his head and nodded.
+
+"He knows all about it."
+
+"Yes, yes," said Paul. "How is my father?"
+
+Jane threw out her hands in the Englishwoman's insignificant
+gesture. "He's unconscious--has been for hours--the nurse is up
+with him--the end may come any moment. I hid it from you till the
+last for your own sake. Would you care to go upstairs?"
+
+She moved to the door. Paul threw off his overcoat and, followed by
+Barney Bill, accompanied her. On the landing they were met by the
+nurse.
+
+"It is all over," she said.
+
+"I will go in for a moment," said Paul. "I should like to be alone."
+
+In a room hung like the rest of the house with gaudy pictures he
+stood for a short while looking at the marble face of the
+strange-souled, passionate being that had been his father. The lids
+had closed for ever over the burning, sorrowful eyes; the mobile
+lips were for ever mute. In his close sympathy with the man Paul
+knew what had struck him down. It was not the blow of the nameless
+enemy, but the stunning realization that he was not, after all, the
+irresistible nominee of the Almighty. His great faith had not
+suffered; for the rigid face was serene, as though he had accepted
+this final chastisement and purification before entrance into the
+Eternal Kingdom; but his high pride, the mainspring of his fanatical
+life, had been broken and the workings of the physical organism had
+been arrested. In those few moments of intense feeling, in the
+presence of death, it was given to Paul to tread across the
+threshold of the mystery of his birth. Here lay stiff and cold no
+base clay such as that of which Polly Kegworthy had been formed. It
+had been the tenement of a spirit beautiful and swift. No matter to
+what things he himself had been born--he had put that foolishness
+behind him--at all events his dream bad come partly true. His
+father had been one of the great ones, one of the conquerors, one of
+the high princes of men. Multitudes of kings had not been so
+parented. Outwardly a successful business man and a fanatical
+Dissenter--there were thousands like Silas Finn. But Paul knew his
+inner greatness, the terrific struggle of his soul, the warrings
+between fierce blood and iron will, the fervent purpose, the lofty
+aspirations and the unwavering conduct of his life of charity and
+sorrow. He stretched out his hand and with his finger tips lightly
+touched the dead man's forehead. "I'm proud to be your son," he
+murmured.
+
+Then the nurse came in and Paul went downstairs. Barney Bill waylaid
+him in the hall, and led him into the dining-room. "Have a little
+food and drink, sonny. You look as if yer need it--especially
+drink. 'Ere." He seized a decanter of whisky--since Paul's first
+visit, Silas had always kept it in the house for his son's,
+comforting--and would have filled the tumbler had not Paul
+restrained him. He squirted in the soda. "Drink it down and you'll
+feel better."
+
+Paul swallowed a great gulp. "Yes," he agreed. "There are times when
+it does help a man."
+
+"Liquor is like a dawg," said Bill. "Keep it in subjection, so to
+speak, and it's yer faithful friend."
+
+"Where's Jane?" Paul asked.
+
+"She's busy. Half the borough seem to be calling, or telephoning"--
+and even at that moment Paul could hear the maid tripping across the
+hall and opening the front door--"I've told her what occurred. She
+seemed half skeered. She's had a dreadful day, pore gal."
+
+"She has indeed," said Paul.
+
+He threw himself into a chair, dead beat, at the end of emotional
+strain, and remained talking with the old man of he scarce knew
+what. But these two--Jane and the old man--were linked to him by
+imperishable ties, and he could not leave them yet awhile in the
+house of death. Barney Bill stirred the fire, which blazed up,
+making the perky animals on the hearth cast faint and fantastic
+shadows.
+
+"It's funny how he loved those darned little beasts, isn't it now? I
+remember of him telling me as how they transported him into magic
+something--or the other--medi--he had a word for it--I dunno--"
+
+"Mediaeval?"
+
+"That's it, sonny. Mediaeval forests. It means back of old times,
+don't it? King Arthur and his Round Table--I done a bit of
+reading, yer know." The old man took out pouch and pipe. "That's
+what drew us together, sonny, our taste for literature. Remember?"
+
+"Can I ever forget?" said Paul.
+
+"Well, he was like that too. He had lots of po'try in him--not the
+stuff that rhymes, yer know, like 'The Psalm of Life' and so forth,
+but real po'try. I wish I could tell yer what I mean--" His
+face was puckered into a thousand wrinkles with the intellectual
+effort, and his little diamond eyes gleamed. "He could take a
+trumpery common thing like that there mug-faced, lop-eared hare and
+make it stand for the medi-what-you-call-it-forest. I've said to
+him, 'Come out with me on the old 'bus if you want green and
+loneliness and nature.' And he has said--I recollect one talk in
+particular--he said, 'I'd love to hear' something about a pipe--
+I'm getting old, sonny--"
+
+"The Pipes of Pan?" Paul suggested.
+
+"The very words. Lor lumme! how did you guess it?" He paused, his
+fingers holding the lighted match, which went out before he could
+apply it to his tobacco. "Yus. 'The Pipes of Pan.' I don't know what
+it means. Anyway, he said he'd love to hear them in the real forest,
+but duty kept him to bricks and mortar and so he had to hear them in
+imagination. He said that all them footling little beasts were
+a-listening to 'em, and they told him all about it. I remember he
+told me more about the woods than I know myself--and I reckon I
+could teach his business to any gamekeeper or poacher in England. I
+don't say as how he knew the difference between a stoat and a weasel--he
+didn't. A cock-pheasant and a hen-partridge would have been
+the same to him. But the spirit of it--the meaning of it--he
+fair raised my hair off--he knew it a darned sight better nor I.
+And that's what I set out for to say, sonny. He had po'try in him.
+And all this"--he swept an all-inclusive hand--"all this meant
+to him something that you and I can't tumble to, sonny. It meant
+something different to what it looked like--ah!" and impatient at
+his impotence to express philosophic thought, he cast another
+lighted match angrily into the fire.
+
+Paul, high product of modern culture, sat in wonder at the common
+old fellow's clarity of vision. Tears rolled down his cheek. "I
+know, dear old Bill, what you're trying to say. Only one man has
+ever been able to say it. A mad poet called Blake.
+
+ 'To see a world in a grain of sand,
+ And a heaven in a wild flower;
+ Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
+ And eternity in an hour'."
+
+Barney Bill started forward in his chair and clapped his hand on the
+young man's knee. "By gum! you've got it. That's what I was
+a-driving at. That's Silas. I call to mind when he was a boy--
+pretty dirty and ragged he was too--as he used to lean over the
+parapet of Blackfriars Bridge and watch the current sort of swirling
+round the piers, and he used to say as how he could hear what the
+river was saying. I used to think him loony. But it was po'try,
+sonny, all the time."
+
+The old man, thus started on reminiscence, continued, somewhat
+garrulous, and Paul, sunk in the armchair by the fire, listened
+indulgently, waiting for Jane. She, meanwhile, was occupied upstairs
+and in the library answering telephone messages and sending word out
+to callers by the maid. For, on the heels of Paul, as Barney Bill
+had said, many had come on errand of inquiry and condolence and all
+the news agencies and newspapers of London seemed to be on the
+telephone. Some of the latter tried for speech with the newly elected
+candidate whom they understood to be in the house, but Jane denied
+them firmly. She had had some training as a politician's private
+secretary. At last the clanging bell ceased ringing, and the maid
+ceased running to and from the street door, and the doctor had come
+and given his certificate and gone, and Jane joined the pair in the
+dining-room. She brought in from the hall a tray of visiting cards
+and set it on the table. "I suppose it was kind of them all to
+come," she said.
+
+She sat down listlessly in a straight-backed chair, and then, at a
+momentary end of her fine strength suddenly broke into tears and
+sobs and buried her head on her arms. Paul rose, bent over her and
+clasped her shoulders comfortingly. Presently she turned and blindly
+sought his embrace. He raised her to her feet, and they stood as
+they had done years ago, when, boy and girl, they had come to the
+parting of their ways. She cried silently for a while, and then she
+said miserably: "I've only you left, dear."
+
+In this hour of spent effort and lassitude it was a queer physical
+comfort, very pure and sweet, to feel the close contact of her
+young, strong body. She, too, out of the wreck, was all that he had
+left. His clasp tightened, and he murmured soothing words.
+
+"Oh, my dear, I am so tired," she said, giving herself up, for her
+part also, to the foolish solace of his arms. "I wish I could stay
+here always, Paul."
+
+He whispered: "Why not?"
+
+Indeed, why not? Instinct spoke. His people were her people and her
+people his. And she had proved herself a brave, true woman. Before
+him no longer gleamed the will-o'-the-wisp leading him a fantastic
+dance through life. Before him lay only darkness. Jane and he, hand
+in hand, could walk through it fearless and undismayed. And her own
+great love, shown unashamed in the abandonment of this moment of
+intense emotion' made his pulses throb. He whispered again: "Why
+not?"
+
+For answer she nestled closer. "if only you could love me a little,
+little bit?"
+
+"But I do," said Paul hoarsely.
+
+She shook her head and sobbed afresh, and they stood in close
+embrace at the end of the room by the door, regardless of the
+presence of the old man who sat, his back to them, smoking his pipe
+and looking, with his birdlike crook of the neck, meditatively into
+the fire. "No, no," said Jane, at last. "It's silly of me. Forgive
+me. We mustn't talk of such things. Neither of us is fit to--and
+to-night it's not becoming. I have lost my father and you are only
+my brother, Paul dear."
+
+Barney Bill broke in suddenly; and at the sound of his voice they
+moved apart. "Think over it, sonny. Don't go and do anything rash."
+
+"Don't you think it would be wise for Jane to marry me?"
+
+"Ay--for Jane."
+
+"Not for me?"
+
+"It's only wise for a man to marry a woman what he loves," said
+Barney Bill.
+
+"Well?"
+
+"You said, when we was a-driving here, as you are going to live for
+the Truth and nothing but the Truth. I only mention it," added the
+old man drily.
+
+Jane recovered herself, with a gulp in the throat, and before Paul
+could answer said: "We too had a talk to-day, Paul. Remember," her
+voice quavered a little--"about carrots."
+
+"You were right in essence," said Paul, looking at her gravely. "But
+I should have my incentive. I know my own mind. My affection for you
+is of the deepest. That is Truth--I needn't tell you. We could
+lead a happy and noble life together."
+
+"We belong to two different social classes, Paul," she said gently,
+again sitting in the straight-backed chair by the table.
+
+"We don't," he replied. "I repudiated my claims to the other class
+this evening. I was admitted into what is called high society,
+partly because people took it for granted that I was a man of good
+birth. Now that I've publicly proclaimed that I'm not--and the
+newspapers will pretty soon find out all about me now--I'll drop
+out of that same high society. I shan't seek readmittance."
+
+"People will seek you."
+
+"You don't know the world," said he.
+
+"It must be mean and horrid."
+
+"Oh, no. It's very just and honourable. I shan't blame it a bit for
+not wanting me. Why should I? I don't belong to it."
+
+"But you do, dear Paul," she cried earnestly. "Even if you could get
+rid of your training and mode of thought, you can't get rid of your
+essential self. You've always been an aristocrat, and I've always
+been a small shop-keeper's daughter and shall continue to be one."
+
+"And I say," Paul retorted, "that we've both sprung from the people,
+and are of the people. You've raised yourself above the small
+shop-keeping class just as much as I have. Don't let us have any
+sham humility about it. Whatever happens you'll always associate
+with folk of good-breeding and education. You couldn't go back to
+Barn Street. It would be idiotic for me to contemplate such a thing
+for my part. But between Barn Street and Mayfair there's a refined
+and intellectual land where you and I can meet on equal ground and
+make our social position. What do you say?"
+
+She did not look at him, but fingered idly the cards on the tray.
+"To-morrow you will think differently. To-night you're all on the
+strain."
+
+"And, axing yer pardon, sonny, for chipping in," said the old man,
+holding up his pipe in his gnarled fingers, "you haven't told her as
+how you loves her--not as how a young woman axed in marriage ought
+to be told."
+
+"I've spoken the Truth, dear old friend," said Paul. "I've. got down
+to bed-rock to-night. I have a deep and loyal affection for Jane. I
+shan't waver in it all my life long. I'll soon find my carrot, as
+she calls it--it will be England's greatness. She is the woman
+that will help me on my path. I've finished with illusions for ever
+and ever. Jane is the bravest and grandest of realities. To-night's
+work has taught me that. For me, Jane stands for the Truth. Jane--"
+
+He turned to her, but she had risen from her chair, staring at a
+card which she held in her hand. Her clear eyes met his for an
+instant as she threw the card on the table before him. "No, dear.
+For you, that's the Truth."
+
+He took it up and looked at it stupidly. It bore a crown and the
+inscription: "The Princess Sophie Zobraska," and a pencilled line,
+in her handwriting: "With anxious inquiries." He reeled, as if
+someone had dealt him a heavy blow on the head. He recovered to see
+Jane regarding him with her serene gravity. "Did you know about
+this?" he asked dully.
+
+"No. I've just seen the card. I found it at the bottom of the pile."
+
+"How did it come?"
+
+Jane rang the bell. "I don't know. If Annie's still up, we can find
+out. As it was at the bottom, it must have been one of the first."
+
+"How could the news have travelled so fast?" said Paul.
+
+The maid came in. Questioned, she said that just after Paul had gone
+upstairs, and while Jane was at the telephone, a chauffeur had
+presented the card. He belonged to a great lighted limousine in
+which sat a lady in hat and dark veil. According to her orders, she
+had said that Mr. Finn was dead, and the chauffeur had gone away and
+she had shut the door.
+
+The maid was dismissed. Paul stood on the hearthrug with bent brows,
+his hands in his jacket pockets. "I can't understand it," he said.
+
+"She must ha' come straight from the Town Hall," said Barney Bill.
+
+"But she wasn't there," cried Paul.
+
+"Sonny," said the old fellow, "if you're always dead sure of where a
+woman is and where a woman isn't, you're a wiser man than Solomon
+with all his wives and other domestic afflictions."
+
+Paul threw the card into the fire. "It doesn't matter where she
+was," said he. "It was a very polite--even a gracious act to send
+in her card on her way home. But it makes no difference to what I
+was talking about. What have I got to do with princesses? They're
+out of my sphere. So are Naiads and Dryads and Houris and Valkyrie
+and other fabulous ladies. The Princess Zobraska has nothing to do
+with the question."
+
+He made a step towards Jane and, his hand on her shoulder, looked at
+her in his new, masterful way. "I come in the most solemn hour and
+in the crisis of my life to ask you to marry me. My father, whom
+I've only learned to love and revere to-night, is lying dead
+upstairs. To-night I have cut away all bridges behind me. I go into
+the unknown. We'll have to fight, but we'll fight together. You have
+courage, and I at least have that. There's a seat in Parliament
+which I'll have to fight for afterwards like a dog for a bone, and
+an official position which brings in enough bread and-butter--"
+
+"And there's a fortune remarked Barney Bill.
+
+"What do you mean?" Paul swung round sharply.
+
+"Yer father's fortune, sonny. Who do yer suppose he was a-going to
+leave it to? 'Omes for lost 'orses or Free Zionists? I don't know as
+'ow I oughter talk of it, him not buried yet--but I seed his will
+when he made it a month or two ago, and barring certair legacies to
+Free Zionists and such-like lunatic folk, not to speak of Jane ere
+being left comfortably off, you're the residuary legatee, sonny--
+with something like a hundred thousand pounds. There's no talk of
+earning bread-and-butter, sonny."
+
+"It never entered my head," said Paul, rather dazed. "I suppose a
+father would leave his money to his son. I didn't realize it." He
+passed his hand over his eyes. "So many things have happened
+to-night. Anyhow," he said, smiling queerly, in his effort to still
+a whirling brain, "if there are no anxieties as to ways and means,
+so much the better for Jane and me. I am all the more justified in
+asking you to marry me. Will you?"
+
+"Before I answer you, Paul dear," she replied steadily, "you must
+answer me. I've known about the will, just like Bill, all the time--"
+
+"She has that," confirmed the old man.
+
+"So this isn't news to me, dear, and can't alter anything from me to
+you."
+
+"Why should it?" asked Paul. "But it makes my claim a little
+stronger."
+
+"Oh, no," she replied, shaking her head. "It only--only confuses
+issues. Money has nothing to do with what I'm going to ask you. You
+said to-night you were going to live for the Truth--the real naked
+Truth. Now, Paul dear, I want the real, naked Truth. Do you love
+that woman?"
+
+At her question she seemed to have grown from the common sense,
+clear-eyed Jane into a great and commanding presence. She had drawn
+herself to her full height. Her chin was in the air, her generous
+bust thrown forward, her figure imperious, her eyes intense. And
+Paul too drew himself up and looked at her in his new manhood. And
+they stood thus for a while, beloved enemies.
+
+"If you want the Truth--yes, I do love her," said he.
+
+"Then how dare you ask me to be your wife?"
+
+"Because the one is nonsensical and illusory and the other is real
+and practical."
+
+She flashed out angrily: "Do you suppose I can live my woman's life
+on the real and practical? What kind of woman do you take me for? An
+Amelia, a Patient Griselda, a tabby cat?"
+
+Paul said: "You know very well; I take you for one of the
+greatest-hearted of women. I've already said it to-night."
+
+"Do you think I'm a greater-hearted woman than she? Wait, I've not
+finished," she cried in a loud voice. "Your Princess--you cut her
+heart into bits the other day, when you proclaimed yourself a
+low-born impostor. She thought you a high-born gentleman, and you
+told her of the gutter up north and the fried-fish shop and the
+Sicilian organ-grinding woman. She, royalty--you of the scum! She
+left you. This morning she learned worse. She learned that you were
+the son of a convict. What does she do? She comes somehow--I don't
+know how--to Hickney Heath and hears you publicly give yourself
+away--and she drives straight here with a message for you. It's
+for you, the message. Who else?" She stood before Paul, a flashing
+Jane unknown. "Would a woman who didn't love you come to this house
+to-night? She wouldn't, Paul. You know it! Dear old Bill here, who
+hasn't moved in royal circles, knows it. No, my dear man," she said
+regally, "I've given you all my love--everything that is in me--
+since I was a child of thirteen. You will always have it. It's my
+great joy that you'll always have it. But, by God, Paul, I'm not
+going to exchange it for anything less. Can you give me the same?"
+
+"You know I can't," said Paul. "But I can give you that which would
+make our marriage a happy one. I believe the experience of the world
+has shown it to be the securest basis."
+
+She was on the point of breaking out, but turned away, with clenched
+hands, and, controlling herself, faced him again. "You're an
+honourable and loyal man, Paul, and you're saying this to save your
+face. I know that you would marry me. I know that you would be
+faithful to me in thought and word and act. I know that you would be
+good and kind and never give me a moment's cause for complaint. But
+your heart would be with the other woman. Whether she's out of your
+sphere or not--what does it matter to me? You love her and she
+loves you. I know it. I should always know it. You'd be living in
+hell and so should I. I should prefer to remain in purgatory, which,
+after all, is quite bearable--I'm used to it--and I love you
+enough to wish to see you in paradise."
+
+She turned away with a wide gesture and an upward inflexion of her
+voice. Barney Bill refilled his pipe and fixed Paul with his
+twinkling diamond eyes. "It's a pity, sonny--a dodgasted pity!"
+
+"We're up against the Truth, old man, the unashamed and naked
+truth," said Paul, with a sigh.
+
+Jane caught Paul's fur-lined coat and hat from the chair on which he
+had thrown it and came to him. "It's time for you to go and rest,
+dear. We're all of us exhausted."
+
+She helped him on with the heavy coat, and for farewell put both her
+hands on his shoulders. "You must forget a lot of things I've said
+to-night."
+
+"I can't help remembering them."
+
+"No, dear. Forget them." She drew his face down and kissed him on
+the lips. Then she led him out to the front door and accompanied him
+down the steps to the kerb where the car with its weary chauffeur
+was waiting. The night had cleared and the stars shone bright in the
+sky. She pointed to one, haphazard. "Your star, Paul. Believe in it
+still."
+
+He drove off. She entered the house, and, flinging herself on the
+floor by Barney Bill, buried her head on the old man's knees and
+sobbed her brave heart out.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+THE next morning amazement fluttered over a million breakfast tables
+and throbbed in a million railway carriages. For all the fierceness
+of political passions, parliamentary elections are but sombre
+occurrences to the general public. Rarely are they attended by the
+picturesque, the dramatic, the tragic. But already the dramatic had
+touched the election of Hickney Heath, stimulating interest in the
+result. Thousands, usually apathetic as to political matters, opened
+their newspapers to see how the ex-convict candidate had fared. They
+read, with a gasp, that he was dead; that his successful opponent
+had proclaimed himself to be his son. They had the dramatic value of
+cumulative effect. If Paul had ever sought notoriety he had it now.
+His name rang through the length and breadth of the land. The early
+editions of the London afternoon papers swelled the chorus of amazed
+comment and conjecture. Some had even routed out a fact or two,
+Heaven knows whence, concerning father and son. According to party
+they meted out praise or blame. Some, unversed in the law, declared
+the election invalid. The point was discussed in a hundred clubs.
+
+There was consternation in the social world. The Duchesses' boudoirs
+with which Paul had been taunted hummed with indignation. They had
+entertained an adventurer unawares. They had entrusted the sacred
+ark of their political hopes to a charlatan. Their daughters had
+danced with the offspring of gaol and gutter. He must be cast out
+from the midst of them. So did those that were foolish furiously
+rage together and imagine many a vain thing. The Winwoods came in
+for pity. They had been villainously imposed upon. And the Young
+England League to which they had all subscribed so handsomely--
+where were its funds? Was it safe to leave them at the disposal of
+so unprincipled a fellow? Then germs of stories crept in from the
+studios and the stage and grew perversely in the overheated
+atmosphere. Paul's reputation began to assume a pretty colour. On
+the other hand, there were those who, while deploring the deception,
+were impressed by the tragedy and by Paul's attitude. He had his
+defenders. Among the latter first sprang forward Lord Francis Ayres,
+the Chief Whip, officially bound to protect his own pet candidate.
+
+He called early at the house in Portland Place, a distressed and
+anxious man. The door was besieged by reporters from newspapers,
+vainly trying to gain, entrance. His arrival created a sensation. At
+any Tate there was a headline "Opposition Whip calls on Savelli."
+One or two attempted to interview him on the doorstep. He excused
+himself courteously. As-yet he knew as much or as little as they.
+The door opened. The butler snatched him in hurriedly. He asked to
+see the Winwoods. He found them in the library.
+
+"Here's an awful mess," said he, throwing up his hands. "I thought
+I'd have a word or two with you before I tackle Savelli. Have you
+seen him this morning?"
+
+"Oh, yes."
+
+"Well, what do you think about it?"
+
+"I think," said Ursula, "that the best thing I can do is to take him
+away with me for a rest as soon as possible. He's at the end of his
+tether."
+
+"You seem to take it pretty calmly."
+
+"How do you expect us to take it, my dear Frank?" she asked. "We
+always expected Paul to do the right thing when the time came, and
+we consider that he has done it."
+
+The Chief Whip smoothed a perplexed brow. "I don't quite follow.
+Were you, vulgarly speaking, in the know all the time?"
+
+"Sit down, and I'll tell you."
+
+So he sat down and Miss Winwood quietly told him all she knew about
+Paul and what had happened during the past few weeks, while the
+Colonel sat by his desk and tugged his long moustache and here and
+there supplemented her narrative.
+
+"That's all very interesting," Ayres remarked when she had finished,
+"and you two have acted like bricks. I also see that he must have
+had a devil of a time of it. But I've got to look at things from an
+official point of view."
+
+"There's no question of invalidity, is there?" asked Colonel
+Winwood.
+
+"No. He was known as Paul Savelli, nominated as Paul Savelli, and
+elected as Paul Savelli by the electors of Hickney Heath. So he'll
+sit as Paul Savelli. That's all right. But how is the House going to
+receive him when he is introduced? How will it take him afterwards?
+What use will he be to the party? We only ran him because he seemed
+to be the most brilliant of the young outsiders. We hoped great
+things of him. Hasn't he smashed up himself socially? Hasn't he
+smashed up his career at the very beginning? All that is what I want
+to know."
+
+"So do I," groaned Colonel Winwood. "I didn't have a wink of sleep
+last night."
+
+"I didn't either," said Ursula, "but I don't think it will matter a
+row of pins to Paul in his career."
+
+"It will always be up against him," said Ayres.
+
+"Because he has acted like a man?"
+
+"It's the touch of Ruy Blas that I'm afraid of."
+
+"You must remember that he wasn't aware of his relation to the dead
+man until the eve of the election."
+
+"But he was aware that he wasn't a descendant of a historical
+Italian family, which everyone thought him to be. I don't speak for
+myself," said Ayres. "I'm fond of the chap. One can't help it. He
+has the charm of the great gentleman, confound him, and it's all
+natural. The cloven hoof has never appeared, because I personally
+believe there's no cloven hoof. The beggar was born well bred, and,
+as to performance--well--he has been a young meteor across the
+political sky. Until this election. Then he was a disappointment. I
+frankly confess it. I didn't know what he was playing at. Now I do.
+Poor chap. I personally am sympathetic. But what about the
+cold-blooded other people, who don't know what you've told me? To
+them he's the son of an ex-convict--a vendor of fried fish--I
+put it brutally from their point of view--who has been
+masquerading as a young St. George on horseback. Will he ever be
+forgiven? Officially, have I any use for him? You see, I'm
+responsible to the party."
+
+"Any party," said Ursula, "would be a congregation of imbeciles who
+didn't do their best to develop the genius of Paul Savelli."
+
+"I'm fond of Paul," said Colonel Winwood, in his tired way, "but I
+don't know that I would go as far as that."
+
+"It's only because you're a limited male, my dear James. I suppose
+Caesar was the only man who really crossed the Rubicon. And the fuss
+he made about it! Women jump across with the utmost certainty. My
+dear Frank, we're behind Paul, whatever happens. He has been
+fighting for his own hand ever since he was a child, it is true. But
+he has fought gallantly."
+
+"My dear Miss Winwood," said Frank Ayres, "if there's a man to be
+envied, it's the one who has you for his champion!"
+
+"Anyone, my dear Frank, is to be envied," she retorted, "who is
+championed by common-sense."
+
+"All these fireworks illuminate nothing," said Colonel Winwood. "I
+think we had better ask Paul to come down and see Frank. Would you
+like to see him alone?"
+
+"I had rather you stayed," said Frank Ayres.
+
+A message was sent to Paul, and presently he appeared, very pale and
+haggard.
+
+Frank Ayres met him with outstretched hand, spoke a courteous word
+of sympathy, apologized for coming in the hour of tragic
+bereavement.
+
+Paul thanked him with equal courtesy. "I was about to write to you,
+Lord Francis," he continued, "a sort of statement in explanation of
+what happened last night--"
+
+"Our friends have told me all, I think, that you may have to say."
+
+"I shall still write it," said Paul, "so that you can have it in
+black and white. At present, I've given the press nothing."
+
+"Quite right," said Frank Ayres. "For God's sake, let us work
+together as far as the press is concerned. That's one of the reasons
+why I've forced myself upon you. It's horrible, my dear fellow, to
+intrude at such a time. I hate it, as you can well imagine. But it's
+my duty."
+
+"Of course it is," said Paul. There was a span of awkward silence.
+"Well," said he, with a wan smile, "we're facing, not a political,
+but a very unimportant party situation. Don't suppose I haven't a
+sense of proportion. I have. What for me is the end of the world is
+the unruffled continuance of the cosmic scheme for the rest of
+mankind. But there are relative things to consider. You have to
+consider the party. I'm sort of fly-blown. Am I any use? Let us talk
+straight. Am I or am I not?"
+
+"My dear chap," said Frank Ayres, with perplexed knitting of the
+brows, "I don't quite know what to say. You yourself have invited me
+to talk straight. Well! Forgive me if I do. There may be a
+suggestion in political quarters that you have won this election
+under false pretences."
+
+"Do you want me to resign my seat?"
+
+The two men looked deep into each other's eyes.
+
+"A Unionist in is a Liberal out," said Frank Ayres, "and counts two
+on division. That's one way of looking at it. We want all we can get
+from the enemy. On the other hand, you'd come in for a lot of
+criticism and hostility. You'd have to start not only from the
+beginning, but with a handicap. Are you strong enough to face it?"
+
+"I'm not going to run away from anything," said Paul. "But I'll tell
+you what I'm prepared to do. I'll resign and fight the constituency
+again, under my real name of Kegworthy, provided, of course, the
+local people are willing to adopt me--on the understanding,
+however, that the party support me, or, at least, don't put forward
+another candidate. I'm not going to turn berserk."
+
+"That's a sporting offer, at any rate. But, pardon me--we're
+talking business--where is the money for another election to come
+from?"
+
+"My poor father's death makes me a wealthy man," replied Paul.
+
+Miss Winwood started forward in her chair. "My dear, you never told
+us."
+
+"There were so many other things to talk about this morning," he
+said gently; "but of course I would have told you later. I only
+mention it now"--he turned to the Chief Whip--"in answer to your
+direct and very pertinent question."
+
+Now between a political free-lance adopting a parliamentary career
+in order to fight for his own hand, as all Paul's supporters were
+frankly aware that he was doing, and a wealthy, independent and
+brilliant young politician lies a wide gulf. The last man on earth,
+in his private capacity, to find his estimate of his friends
+influenced by their personal possessions was the fine aristocrat
+Lord Francis Ayres. But he was a man of the world, the very
+responsible head of the executive of a great political party. As
+that executive head he was compelled to regard Paul from a different
+angle. The millions of South Africa or the Middle West might vainly
+knock at his own front door till the crack of doom, while Paul the
+penniless sauntered in an honoured guest. But in his official room
+in the House of Commons more stern and worldly considerations had to
+prevail.
+
+"Of course I can't give you an answer now," said he. "I'll have to
+discuss the whole matter with the powers that be. But a seat's a
+seat, and though I appreciate your Quixotic offer, I don't see why
+we should risk it. It's up to you to make good. It's more in your
+own interest that I'm speaking now. Can you go through with it?"
+
+Paul, with his unconquerable instinct for the dramatic, hauled out
+the little cornelian heart at the end of his watch-chain. "My dear
+fellow," said he. "Do you see that? It was given to me for failing
+to win a race at a Sunday-school treat, when I was a very little
+boy. I didn't possess coat or stockings, and my toes came out
+through the ends of my boots, and in order to keep the thing safe I
+knotted it up in the tail of my shirt, which waggled out of the seat
+of my breeches. It was given to me by a beautiful lady, who, I
+remember, smelled like all the perfumes of Araby. She awakened my
+aesthetic sense by the divine and intoxicating odour that emanated
+from her. Since then I have never met woman so--so like a scented
+garden of all the innocences. To me she was a goddess. I overheard
+her prophesy things about me. My life began from that moment. I kept
+the cornelian heart all my life, as a talisman. It has brought me
+through all kinds of things. Once I was going to throw it away and
+Miss Winwood would not let me. I kept it, somewhat against my will,
+for I thought it was a lying talisman. It had told me, in the
+sweet-scented lady's words, that I was the son of a prince. Give me
+half an hour to-morrow or the day after," he said, seeing a puzzled
+look in Frank Ayres's face, "and I'll tell you a true psychological
+fairy tale--the apologia pro vita mea. I say, anyhow, that lately,
+until last night, I thought this little cornelian heart was a lying
+talisman. Then I knew it didn't lie. I was the son of a prince, a
+prince of men, although he had been in gaol and spent his days
+afterwards in running emotional Christianity and fried-fish shops.
+His name was Silas. Mine is Paul. Something significant about it,
+isn't there? Anyhow"--he balanced the heart in the palm of his
+hand--"this hasn't lied. It has carried me through all my life.
+When I thought it failed, I found it at the purest truth of its
+prophecy. It's not going to fail me now. If it's right for me to
+take my seat I'll take it--whether I make good politically, or
+not, is on the knees of the gods. But you may take it from me that
+there's nothing in this wide world that I won't face or go through
+with, if I've set my mind to it."
+
+So the child who had kicked Billy Goodge and taken the spolia opima
+of paper cocked hat and wooden sword spoke through the man. As then,
+in a queer way, he found himself commanding a situation; and as
+then, commanding it rightfully, through sheer personal force. Again,
+at a sign, he would have broken the sword across his knee. But the
+sign did not come.
+
+"Speaking quite unofficially," said Frank Ayres, "I think, if you
+feel like that, you would be a fool to give up your seat."
+
+"Very well," said Paul, "I thank you. And now, perhaps, it would be
+wise to draw up that statement for the press, if you can spare the
+time."
+
+So Paul made a draft and Frank Ayres revised it, and it was sent
+upstairs to be typed. When the typescript came down, Paul signed and
+dispatched it and gave the Chief Whip a duplicate.
+
+"Well," said the latter, shaking hands, "the best of good luck!"
+
+Whereupon he went home feeling that though there would be the deuce
+to pay, Paul Savelli would find himself perfectly solvent; and
+meeting the somewhat dubious Leader of the Opposition later in the
+day he said: "Anyhow, this 'far too gentlemanly party' has got
+someone picturesque, at last, to touch the popular imagination."
+
+"A new young Disraeli?"
+
+"Why not?"
+
+The Leader made a faint gesture of philosophic doubt. "The mould is
+broken," said he.
+
+"We'll see," said Frank Ayres, confidently.
+
+Meanwhile, Paul returned to his room and wrote a letter, three words
+of which he had put on paper--"My dear Princess"--when the
+summons to meet the Chief Whip had come. The unblotted ink had dried
+hard. He took another sheet.
+
+"My dear Princess," he began.
+
+He held his head in his hand. What could he say? Ordinary courtesy
+demanded an acknowledgment of the Princess's message of inquiry. But
+to write to her whom he had held close in his arms, whose lips had
+clung maddeningly to his, in terms of polite convention seemed
+impossible. What had she meant by her message? If she had gone
+scornfully out of his life, she had gone, and there was an end on't.
+Her coming back could bear only one interpretation--that of Jane's
+passionate statement. In spite of all, she loved him. But now,
+stripped and naked and at war with the world, for all his desire, he
+would have none of her love. Not he. . . . At last he wrote:
+
+PRINCESS,--A thousand grateful thanks for last night's gracious
+act--the act of the very great lady that I have the privilege of
+knowing you to be.
+
+PAUL SAVELLI.
+
+He rang for a servant and ordered the note to be sent by hand, and
+then went out to Hickney Heath to see to the burying of his dead. On
+his return he found a familiar envelope with the crown on the flap
+awaiting him. It contained but few words:
+
+PAUL, come and see me. I will stay at home all day.
+
+SOPHIE.
+
+His pulses throbbed. Her readiness to await his pleasure proved a
+humility of spirit rare in Princess Sophie Zobraska. Her hands were
+held out towards him. But he hardened his heart. The fairy-tale was
+over. Nothing but realities lay before him. The interview was
+perilous; but he was not one to shirk danger. He went out, took a
+cab and drove to Berkeley Square.
+
+She rose shyly as he entered and advanced to meet him. He kissed her
+hand, but when he sought to release it he found his held in her warm
+clasp. "Mon Dieu! How ill you are looking!" she said, and her lips
+quivered.
+
+"I'm only tired."
+
+"You look so old. Ah!" She moved away from him with a sigh. "Sit
+down. I suppose you can guess why I've asked you to come," she
+continued after a pause. "But it is a little hard to say. I want you
+to forgive me."
+
+"There is nothing to forgive," said Paul.
+
+"Don't be ungenerous; you know there is. I left you to bear
+everything alone."
+
+"You were more than justified. You found me an impostor. You were
+wounded in everything you held sacred. I wounded you deliberately.
+You could do nothing else but go away. Heaven forbid that I should
+have thought of blaming you. I didn't. I understood."
+
+"But it was I who did not understand," she said, looking at the
+rings on her fingers. "Yes. You are right. I was wounded--like an
+animal, I hid myself in the country, and I hoped you would write,
+which was foolish, for I knew you wouldn't. Then I felt that if I
+had loved you as I ought, I should never have gone away."
+
+"I thought it best to kill your love outright," said Paul.
+
+She lay back on her cushions, very fair, very alluring, very sad.
+From where he sat he saw her face in its delicate profile, and he
+had a mighty temptation to throw himself on his knees by her side.
+
+"I thought, too, you had killed it," she said.
+
+"Still think so," said Paul, in a low voice.
+
+She raised herself, bent forward, and he met the blue depths of her
+gaze. "And you? Your love?"
+
+"I never did anything to kill it."
+
+"But I did."
+
+"No, you couldn't. I shall love you to the hour of my death." He saw
+the light leap into her eyes. "I only say it," he added somewhat
+coldly, "because I will lie to you no longer. But it's a matter that
+concerns me alone."
+
+"How you alone? Am not I to be considered?"
+
+He rose and stood on the hearthrug, facing her. "I consider you all
+the time," said he.
+
+"Listen, mon cher ami," she said, looking up at him. "Let us
+understand one another. Is there anything about you, your birth or
+your life that I still don't know--I mean, anything essential?"
+
+"Nothing that matters," said Paul.
+
+"Then let us speak once and for all, soul to soul. You and I are of
+those who can do it. Eh bien. I am a woman of old family, princely
+rank and fortune--you--"
+
+"By my father's death," said Paul, for the second time that day, "I
+am a rich man. We can leave out the question of fortune--except
+that the money I inherit was made out of a fried-fish shop business.
+That business was conducted by my father on lines of peculiar
+idealism. It will be my duty to carry on his work--at least"--he
+inwardly and conscientiously repudiated the idea of buying fish at
+Billingsgate at five o'clock in the morning--"as far as the
+maintenance of his principles is concerned."
+
+"Soit," said the Princess, "we leave out the question of fortune.
+You are then a man of humble birth, and the rank you have gained for
+yourself."
+
+"I am a man of no name and of tarnished reputation. Good God!" he
+blazed out suddenly, losing control. "What is the good of torturing
+ourselves like this? If I wouldn't marry you--before--until I
+had done something in the front of the world to make you proud of
+me, what do you think I'll do now, lying in the gutter for every one
+to kick me? Would it be to the happiness of either of us for me to
+sneak through society behind your rank? It would be the death of me
+and you would come to hate me as a mean hound."
+
+"You? A mean hound?" Her voice broke and the tears welled up in her
+eyes. "You have done nothing for me to be proud of? You? You who did
+what you did last night? Yes, I was there. I saw and heard. Listen!"
+She rose to her feet and stood opposite to him, her eyes all stars,
+her figure trembling and her hands moving in her Frenchwoman's
+passionate gestures. "When I saw in the newspapers about your
+father, my heart was wrung for you. I knew what it meant. I knew how
+you must suffer. I came up straight to town. I wanted to be near
+you. I did not know how. I did not want you to see me. I called in
+my steward. 'How can I see the election?' We talked a little. He
+went and hired a room opposite the Town Hall. I waited there in the
+darkness. I thought it would last forever. And then came the result
+and the crowd cheered and I thought I should choke. I sobbed, I
+sobbed, I sobbed--and then you came. And I heard, and then I held
+out my arms to you alone in the dark room--like this--and cried:
+'Paul, Paul!"' Woman conquered. Madness surged through him and he
+flung his arms about her and they kissed long and passionately.
+
+"Whether you do me the honour of marrying me or not," she said a
+while later' flushed and triumphant, "our lives are joined
+together."
+
+And Paul, still shaken by the intoxication of her lips and hair and
+clinging pressure of her body, looked at her intensely with the eyes
+of a man's longing. But he said: "Nothing can alter what I said a
+few minutes ago--not all the passion and love in the world. You
+and I are not of the stuff, thank God, to cut ourselves adrift and
+bury ourselves in some romantic island and give up our lives to a
+dream. We're young. We're strong. We both know that life is a
+different sort of thing altogether from that. We're not of the sort
+that shirks its responsibilities. We've got to live in the world,
+you and I, and do the world's work."
+
+"Parfaitement, mon bien aime." She smiled at him serenely. "I would
+not bury myself with you in an Ionian island for more than two
+months in a year for anything on earth. On my part, it would be the
+unforgivable sin. No woman has the right, however much she loves
+him, to ruin a man, any more than a man has the right to ruin a
+woman. But if you won't marry me, I'm perfectly willing to spend two
+months a year in an Ionian island with you," and she looked at him,
+very proud and fearless.
+
+Paul took her by the shoulders and shook her, more roughly than he
+realized. "Sophie, don't tempt me to a madness that we should both
+regret."
+
+She laughed, wincing yet thrilled, under the rude handling, and
+freed herself. "But what more can a woman offer the man who loves
+her--that is to say if he does love her?"
+
+"I not love you?" He threw up his hands--"Dear God!"
+
+She waved him away and retreated a step or two, still laughing, as
+he advanced. "Then why won't you marry me? You're afraid."
+
+"Yes," he cried. "It's the only thing on this earth that I'm afraid
+of."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"The sneers. First you'd hate them. Then you'd hate and despise me."
+
+She grew serious. "Calme-toi, my dearest. just consider things
+practically. Who is going to sneer at a great man?"
+
+"I the first," replied Paul bitterly, his self-judgment warped by
+the new knowledge of the vanities and unsubstantialities on which
+his life had been founded. "I a great man, indeed!"
+
+"A very great man. A brilliant man I knew long ago. A brave man I
+have known, in spite of my pride, these last two or three awful
+weeks. But last night I knew you were a great man--a very great
+man. Ah, mon Paul. La canaille, whether it lives in Whitechapel or
+Park Lane, what does it matter to us?"
+
+"The riff-raff, unfortunately," said Paul, "forms the general
+judgment of society."
+
+The Princess drew herself up in all her aristocratic dignity. "My
+Paul well-beloved," said she, "you have still one or two things to
+learn. People of greatness and rank march with their peers, and they
+can spit upon the canaille. There is canaille in your House of
+Lords, upon which, the day after to-morrow, you can spit, and it
+will take off its coronet and thank you--and now," she said,
+resuming her seat on the sofa, among the cushions, "let us stop
+arguing. If there is any more arguing to be done, let us put it off
+to another occasion. Let us dismiss the questions of marriage and
+Ionian islands altogether, and let us talk pleasantly like dear
+friends who are reconciled."
+
+And with the wit of the woman who loves and the subtlety of the
+woman of the world she took Paul in her delicate hands and held him
+before her smiling eyes and made him tell her of all the things she
+wanted to know. And so Paul told her of all his life, of Bludston,
+of Barney Bill, of the model days, of the theatre, of Jane, of his
+father; and he showed her the cornelian heart and expounded its
+significance; and he talked of his dearest lady, Miss Winwood, and
+his work on the Young England League, and his failure to grip in
+this disastrous election, and he went back to the brickfield and his
+flight from the Life School, and his obsessing dream of romantic
+parentage and the pawning of his watch at Drane's Court; and in the
+full tide of it all a perturbed butler appeared at the door.
+
+"Can I speak a word to Your Highness?"
+
+She rose. The butler spoke the word. She burst out laughing. "My
+dear," she cried, "it's past nine o'clock. The household is in a
+state of agitation about dinner. We'll have it at once, Wilkins."
+
+The butler bowed and retired.
+
+The Princess laughed again. "Of course you'll stay. I left Stephanie
+at Morebury."
+
+And Paul stayed to dinner, and though, observing the flimsy compact,
+they dismissed the questions of Ionian islands and marriage, they
+talked till midnight of matters exceedingly pleasant.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+SO the lovers were reconciled, although the question of marriage was
+farther off than ever, and the Princess and Miss Winwood wept on
+each other's shoulders after the way of good women, and Paul
+declared that he needed no rest, and was eager to grapple with the
+world. He had much to do. First, he buried his dead, the Princess
+sending a great wreath and her carriage, after having had a queer
+interview with Jane, of which neither woman would afterwards speak a
+word; but it was evident that they had parted on terms of mutual
+respect and admiration. Then Paul went through the task of settling
+his father's affairs. Jane having expressed a desire to take over
+the management of a certain department of the business, he gladly
+entrusted it to her capable hands. He gave her the house at Hickney
+Heath, and Barney Bill took up his residence there as a kind of old
+watch-dog. Meanwhile, introduced by Frank Ayres and Colonel Winwood,
+he faced the ordeal of a chill reception by the House of Commons and
+took his seat. After that the nine-days' wonder of the scandal came
+to an end; the newspapers ceased talking of it and the general
+public forgot all about him. He only had to reckon with his
+fellow-members and with social forces. His own house too he had to
+put in order. He resigned his salary and position as Organizing
+Secretary of the Young England League, but as Honorary Secretary he
+retained control. To assure his position he applied for Royal
+Letters Patent and legalized his name of Savelli, Finally, he
+plunged into the affairs of Fish Palaces Limited, and learned the
+many mysteries connected with that outwardly unromantic undertaking.
+
+These are facts in Paul's career which his chronicler is bound to
+mention. But on Paul's development they exercised but little
+influence. He walked now, with open eyes, in a world of real things.
+The path was difficult, but he was strong. Darkness lay ahead, but
+he neither feared it nor dreamed dreams of brightness beyond. The
+Vision Splendid had crystallized into an unconquerable purpose of
+which he felt the thrill. Without Sophie Zobraska's love he would
+have walked on doggedly, obstinately, with set teeth. He had proved
+himself fearless, scornful of the world's verdict. But he would have
+walked in wintry gloom with a young heart frozen dead. Now his path
+was lit by warm sunshine and the burgeon of spring was in his heart.
+He could laugh again in his old joyous way; yet the laughter was no
+longer that of the boy, but of the man who knew the place that
+laughter should hold in a man's life.
+
+On the day when he, as chairman, had first presided over a meeting
+of the Board of Directors of Fish Palaces Limited, he went to the
+Princess and said: "If I bring with me 'an ancient and fish-like
+smell, a kind of, not of the newest, Poor-John,' send me about my
+business."
+
+She bade him not talk foolishly.
+
+"I'm talking sense," said he. "I'm going through with it. I'm in
+trade. I know to the fraction of a penny how much fat ought to be
+used to a pound of hake, and I'm concentrating all my intellect on
+that fraction of a penny of fat."
+
+"Tu as raison," she said.
+
+"N'est-ce-pas? It's funny, isn't it? I've often told you I once
+thought myself the man born to be king. My dreams have come true.
+I am a king. The fried-fish king."
+
+Sophie looked at him from beneath her long lashes. "And I am a
+princess. We meet at last on equal terms."
+
+Paul sprang forward impulsively and seized her hands. "Oh, you dear,
+wonderful woman! Doesn't it matter to you that I'm running
+fried-fish shops?"
+
+"I know why you're doing it," she said. "I wouldn't have you do
+otherwise. You are you, Paul. I should love to see you at it. Do you
+wait at table and hand little dishes to coster-mongers, ancien
+regime, en emigre?"
+
+She laughed deliciously. Suddenly she paused, regarded him
+wide-eyed, with a smile on her lips.
+
+"Tiens! I have an idea. But a wonderful ideal Why should I not be
+the fried-fish queen? Issue new shares. I buy them all up. We
+establish fish palaces all over the world? But why not? I am in
+trade already. Only yesterday my homme d'affaires sent me for
+signature a dirty piece of blue paper all covered with execrable
+writing and imitation red seals all the way down, and when I signed
+it I saw I was interested in Messrs. Jarrods Limited, and was
+engaged in selling hams and petticoats and notepaper and furniture
+and butter and--remark this--and fish. But raw fish. Now what
+the difference is between selling raw fish and fried fish, I do not
+know. Moi, je suis deja marchande de poissons, voila!"
+
+She laughed and Paul laughed too. They postponed, however, to an
+indefinite date, consideration of the business proposal.
+
+As Paul had foreseen, Society manifested no eagerness to receive
+him. Invitations no longer fell upon him in embarrassing showers.
+Nor did he make any attempt to pass through the once familiar doors.
+For one thing, he was proud: for another he was too busy. When the
+Christmas recess came he took a holiday, went off by himself to
+Algiers. He returned bronzed and strong, to the joy of his Sophie.
+
+"My dear," said Miss Winwood one day to the curiously patient lady,
+"what is to come of it all? You can't go on like this for ever and
+ever."
+
+"We don't intend to," smiled the Princess. "Paul is born to great
+things. He cannot help it. It is his destiny, I believe in Paul."
+
+"So do I," replied Ursula. "But it's obvious that it will take him a
+good many years to achieve them. You surely aren't going to wait
+until he's a Cabinet Minister."
+
+The Princess lay back among her cushions and laughed. "Mais non. It
+will all come in woman's good time. Laissez-moi faire. He will soon
+begin to believe in himself again."
+
+At last Paul's opportunity arrived. The Whips had given him his
+chance to speak. His luck attended him, in so far that when his turn
+came he found a full House. It was on a matter of no vital
+importance; but he had prepared his speech carefully. He stood up
+for the first time in that strangely nerve-shaking assembly in which
+he had been received so coldly and in which he was still friendless,
+and saw the beginning of the familiar exodus into the lobbies. A
+sudden wave of anger swept through him and he tore the notes of his
+speech across and across, and again he metaphorically kicked Billy
+Goodge. He plunged into his speech, forgetful of what he had
+written, with a passion queerly hyperbolic in view of the subject.
+At the arresting tones of his voice many of the withdrawing members
+stopped at the bar and listened, then as he proceeded they gradually
+slipped back into their places. Curiosity gave place to interest.
+Paul had found his gift again, and his anger soon lost itself
+completely in the joy of the artist. The House is always generous to
+performance. There was something novel in the spectacle of this
+young man, who had come there under a cloud, standing like a
+fearless young Hermes before them, in the ring of his beautiful
+voice, in the instinctive picturesqueness of phrase, in the winning
+charm of his personality. It was but a little point in a Government
+Bill that he had to deal with, and he dealt with it shortly. But he
+dealt with it in an unexpected, dramatic way, and he sat down amid
+comforting applause and circumambient smiles and nods. The old
+government hand who rose to reply complimented him gracefully and
+proceeded of course to tear his argument to tatters. Then an
+ill-conditioned Socialist Member got up, and, blundering and
+unconscious agent of Destiny in a fast-emptying House, began a
+personal attack on Paul. Whereupon there were cries of "Shame!" and
+"Sit down!" and the Speaker, in caustic tones, counselled relevancy,
+and the sympathy of the House went out to the Fortunate Youth; so
+that when he went soon afterwards into the outer lobby--it was the
+dinner hour--he found himself surrounded by encouraging friends.
+He did not wait long among them, for up in the Ladies' Gallery was
+his Princess. He tore up the stairs and met her outside. Her face
+was pale with anger.
+
+"The brute!" she whispered. "The cowardly brute!"
+
+He snapped his fingers. "Canaille, canaille! He counts for nothing.
+But I've got them!" he cried exultingly, holding out clenched fists.
+"By God, darling, I've got them! They'll listen to me now!"
+
+She looked at him and the sudden tears came. "Thank God," she said,
+"I can hear you talk like that at last."
+
+He escorted her down the stone stairs and through the lobby to her
+car, and they were objects of many admiring eyes. When they reached
+it she said, with a humorous curl of the lip, "Veux-tu m'epouser
+maintenant?"
+
+"Wait, only wait," said he. "These are only fireworks. Very soon
+we'll get to the real thing."
+
+"We shall, I promise you," she replied enigmatically; and she drove
+off.
+
+One morning, a fortnight later, she rang him up. "You're coming to
+dine with me on Friday, as usual, aren't you?"
+
+"Of course," said he. "Why do you ask?"
+
+"Just to make sure. And yes--also--to tell you not to come till
+half-past eight."
+
+She rang off. Paul thought no more of the matter. Ever since he had
+taken his seat in the House he had dined with her alone every Friday
+evening. It was their undisturbed hour of intimacy and gladness in
+the busy week. Otherwise they rarely met, for Paul was a pariah in
+her social world.
+
+On the Friday in question his taxi drew up before an unusual-looking
+house in Berkeley Square. An awning projected from the front door
+and a strip of carpet ran across the pavement. At the sound of the
+taxi, the door opened and revealed the familiar figures of the
+Princess's footmen in their state livery. He entered, somewhat
+dazed.
+
+"Her Highness has a party?" he asked.
+
+"Yes, sir. A very large dinner party."
+
+Paul passed his hand over his forehead. What did it mean? "This is
+Friday, isn't it?"
+
+"Of course, sir."
+
+Paul grew angry. It was a woman's trap to force him on society. For
+a moment he struggled with the temptation to walk away after telling
+the servant that it was a mistake and that he had not been invited.
+At once, however, came realization of social outrage. He surrendered
+hat and coat and let himself be announced. The noise of thirty
+voices struck his ear as he entered the great drawing-room. He was
+confusedly aware of a glitter of jewels, and bare arms and shoulders
+and the black and white of men. But radiant in the middle of the
+room stood his Princess, with a tiara of diamonds on her head, and
+beside her stood a youngish man whose face seemed oddly familiar.
+
+Paul advanced, kissed her hand.
+
+She laughed gaily. "You are late, Paul."
+
+"You said half-past, Princess. I am here to the minute."
+
+"Je te dirai apres," she said, and the daring of the intimate speech
+took his breath away.
+
+"Your Royal Highness," she turned to the young man beside her--and
+then Paul suddenly recognized a prince of the blood royal of England--
+"may I present Mr. Savelli."
+
+"I'm very pleased to meet you," said the Prince graciously. "Your
+Young England League has interested me greatly. We must have a talk
+about it one of these days, if you can spare the time. And I must
+congratulate you on your speech the other night."
+
+"You are far too kind, sir," said Paul.
+
+They chatted for a minute or two. Then the Princess said: "You'll
+take in the Countess of Danesborough. I don't think you've met her;
+but you'll find she's an old friend."
+
+"Old friend?" echoed Paul.
+
+She smiled and turned to a pretty and buxom woman of forty standing
+near. "My dear Lady Danesborough. Here is Mr. Savelli, whom you are
+so anxious to meet."
+
+Paul bowed politely. His head being full of his Princess, he was
+vaguely puzzled as to the reasons for which Lady Danesborough
+desired his acquaintance.
+
+"You don't remember me," she said.
+
+He looked at her squarely for the first time; then started back.
+"Good God!" he cried involuntarily. "Good God! I've been wanting to
+find you all my life. I never knew your name. But here's the proof."
+
+And he whipped out the cornelian heart from his waistcoat pocket.
+She took it in her hand, examined it, handed it back to him with a
+smile, a very sweet and womanly smile, with just the suspicion of
+mist veiling her eyes.
+
+"I know. The Princess has told me."
+
+"But how did she find you out--I mean as my first patroness?"
+
+"She wrote to the vicar, Mr. Merewether--he is still at
+Bludston--asking who his visitor was that year and what had become
+of her. So she found out it was I. I've known her off and on ever
+since my marriage."
+
+"You were wonderfully good to me," said Paul. "I must have been a
+funny little wretch."
+
+"You've travelled far since then."
+
+"It was you that gave me my inspiration," said he.
+
+The announcement of dinner broke the thread of the talk. Paul looked
+around him and saw that the room was filled with very great people
+indeed. There were chiefs of his party and other exalted personages.
+There was Lord Francis Ayres. Also the Winwoods. The procession was
+formed.
+
+"I've often wondered about you," said Lady Danesborough, as they
+were walking down the wide staircase. "Several thin happened to mark
+that day. For one, I had spilled a bottle of awful scent all over my
+dress and I was in a state of odoriferous misery."
+
+Paul laughed boyishly. "The mystery of my life is solved at last."
+He explained, to her frank delight. "You've not changed a bit," said
+he. "And oh! I can't tell you how good it is to meet you after all.
+these years."
+
+"I'm very, very glad you feel so," she said significantly. "More
+than glad. I was wondering . . . but our dear Princess was right."
+
+"It seems to me that-the Princess has been playing conspirator,"
+said Paul.
+
+They entered the great dining-room, very majestic with its long,
+glittering table, its service of plate, its stately pictures, its
+double row of powdered and liveried footmen, and Paul learned, to
+his amazement, that in violation of protocols and tables of
+precedence, his seat was on the right hand of the Princess.
+Conspiracy again. Hitherto at her parties he had occupied his proper
+place. Never before had she publicly given him especial mark of her
+favour.
+
+"Do you think she's right in doing this?" he murmured to Lady
+Danesborough.
+
+It seemed so natural that he should ask her--as though she were
+fully aware of all his secrets.
+
+"I think so," she smiled--as though she too were in the
+conspiracy.
+
+They halted at their places, and there, at the centre of the long
+table, on the right of the young Prince stood the Princess, with
+flushed face and shining eyes, looking very beautiful and radiantly
+defiant.
+
+"Mechante," Paul whispered, as they sat down. "This is a trap."
+
+"Je le sais. Tu est bien prise, petite souris."
+
+It pleased her to be gay. She confessed unblushingly. Her little
+mouse was well caught. The little mouse grew rather stern, and when
+the great company had settled down, and the hum of talk arisen, he
+deliberately scanned the table. He met some friendly glances--a
+Cabinet Minister nodded pleasantly. He also met some that were
+hostile. His Sophie had tried a dangerous experiment. In Lady
+Danesborough, the Maisie Shepherd of his urchindom, whose name he
+had never known, she had assured him a sympathetic and influential
+partner. Also, although he had tactfully not taken up that lady's
+remark, he felt proud of his Princess's glorious certainty that he
+would have no false and contemptible shame in the encounter. She had
+known that it would be a joy to him; and it was. The truest of the
+man was stirred. They talked and laughed about the far-off day.
+Incidents flaming in his mind had faded from hers. He recalled
+forgotten things. Now and then she said: "Yes, I know that. The
+Princess has told me." Evidently his Sophie was a conspirator of
+deepest dye.
+
+"And now you're the great Paul Savelli," she said.
+
+"Great?" He laughed. "In what way?"
+
+"Before this election you were a personage. I've never run across
+you because we've been abroad so much, you know--my husband has a
+depraved taste for governing places--but a year or two ago we were
+asked to the Chudleys, and you were held out as an inducement."
+
+"Good Lord!" said Paul, astonished.
+
+"And now, of course, you're the most-discussed young man in London.
+Is he damned or isn't he? You know what I refer to."
+
+"Well, am I?' he asked pleasantly.
+
+"I'm glad to see you take it like that. It's not the way of the
+little people. Personally, I've stuck up for you, not knowing in the
+least who you were. I thought you did the big, spacious thing. It
+gave me a thrill when I read about it. Your speech in the House has
+helped you a lot. Altogether--and now considering our early
+acquaintance--I think I'm justified in calling you 'the great Paul
+Savelli.'"
+
+Then came the shifting of talk. The Prince turned to his left-hand
+neighbour; Lady Danesborough to her right. Paul and the Princess had
+their conventional opportunity for conversation. She spoke in
+French, daringly using the intimate "tu"; but of all sorts of
+things--books, theatres, picture shows. Then tactfully she drew the
+Prince and his neighbour and Lady Danesborough into their circle,
+and, pulling the strings, she at last brought Paul and the Prince
+into a discussion over the pictures of the Doges in the Ducal Palace
+in Venice. The young Prince was gracious. Paul, encouraged to talk
+and stimulated by precious memories, grew interesting. The Princess
+managed to secure a set of listeners at the opposite side of the
+table. Suddenly, as if carrying on the theme, she said in a
+deliberately loud voice, compelling attention: "Your Royal Highness,
+I am in a dilemma."
+
+"What is it?"
+
+She paused, looked round and widened her circle. "For the past year
+I have been wanting Mr. Savelli to ask me to marry him, and he
+obstinately refuses to do so. Will you tell me, sir, what a poor
+woman is to do?"
+
+She addressed herself exclusively to the young Prince; but her
+voice, with its adorable French intonation, rang high and clear.
+Paul, suddenly white and rigid, clenched the hand of the Princess
+which happened to lie within immediate reach. A wave of curiosity,
+arresting talk, spread swiftly down. There was an uncanny, dead
+silence, broken only by a raucous voice proceeding from a very fat
+Lord of Appeal some distance away:
+
+"After my bath I always lie flat on my back and bring my knees up to
+my chin."
+
+There was a convulsive, shrill gasp of laughter, which would have
+instantly developed into an hysterical roar, had not the young
+Prince, with quick, tactful disregard of British convention, sprung
+to his feet, and with one hand holding champagne glass, and the
+other uplifted, commanded silence. So did the stars in their courses
+still fight for Paul. "My lords, ladies and gentlemen," said the
+Prince, "I have the pleasure to announce the engagement of Her
+Highness the Princess Sophie Zobraska and Mr. Paul Savelli. I ask
+you to drink to their health and wish them every happiness."
+
+He bowed to the couple, lifted his glass, and standing, swept a
+quick glance round the company, and at the. royal command the table
+rose, dukes and duchesses and Cabinet Ministers, the fine flowers of
+England, and drank to Paul and his Princess.
+
+"Attrape!" she whispered, as they got up together, hand in hand. And
+as they stood, in their superb promise of fulfilment, they
+conquered. The Princess said: "Mais dis quelque chose, toi."
+
+And Paul met the flash in her eyes, and he smiled. "Your Royal
+Highness, my lords, ladies and gentlemen," said he, while all the
+company were racking their brains to recall a precedent for such
+proceedings at a more than formal London dinner party; "the Princess
+and myself thank you from our hearts. For me this might almost seem
+the end of the fairy-tale of my life, in which--when I was eleven
+years old--her ladyship the Countess of Danesborough" (he bowed to
+the Maisie of years ago), "whom I have not seen from that day to
+this, played the part of Fairy Godmother. She gave me a talisman
+then to help me in my way through the world. I have it still." He
+held up the cornelian heart. "It guided my steps to my dearest lady,
+Miss Winwood, in whose beloved service I lived so long. It has
+brought me to the feet of my Fairy Princess. But now the fairy-tale
+is over. I begin where the fairy-tales end"--he laughed into his
+Sophie's eyes--"I begin in the certain promise of living happy
+ever afterwards."
+
+In this supreme hour of his destiny there spoke the old, essential
+Paul, the believer in the Vision Splendid. The instinctive appeal to
+the romantic ringing so true and so sincere awoke responsive chords
+in hearts which, after all, as is the simple way of hearts of men
+and women, were very human.
+
+He sat down a made man, amid pleasant laughter and bowings and
+lifting of glasses, the length of the long table.
+
+Lady Danesborough said gently: "It was charming of you to bring me
+in. But I shall be besieged with questions. What on earth shall I
+tell them?"
+
+"The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth," he replied.
+"What do the Princess and I care?"
+
+Later in the evening he managed to find himself alone for a moment
+with the Princess. "My wonderful Sophie, what can I say to you?"
+
+She smiled victoriously. "Cry quits. Confess that you have not the
+monopoly of the grand manner. You have worked in your man's way--I
+in my woman's way."
+
+"You took a great risk," said he.
+
+Her eyes softened adorably. "Non, mon Paul, cheri. C'etait tout
+arrange. It was a certainty."
+
+And then, Paul's dearest lady came up and pressed both their hands.
+"I am so glad. Oh, so glad." The tears started. "But it is something
+like a fairy-tale, isn't it?"
+
+Well, as far as his chronicler can say at present, that is the end
+of the Fortunate Youth. But it is really only a beginning. Although
+his party is still in opposition, he is still young; his sun is
+rising and he is rich in the glory thereof. A worldful of great life
+lies before him and his Princess. What limit can we set to their
+achievement? Of course he was the Fortunate Youth. Of that there is
+no gainsaying. He had his beauty, his charm, his temperament, his
+quick southern intelligence--all his Sicilian heritage--and a
+freakish chance had favoured him from the day that, vagabond urchin,
+he attended his first and only Sunday-school treat. But personal
+gifts and favouring chance are not everything in this world.
+
+On the day before his wedding he had a long talk with Barney Bill.
+
+"Sonny," said the old man, scratching his white poll, "when yer used
+to talk about princes and princesses, I used to larf--larf fit to
+bust myself. I never let yer seen me do it, sonny, for all the time
+you was so dead serious. And now it has come true. And d'yer know
+why it's come true, sonny?" He cocked his head on one side, his
+little diamond eyes glittering, and laid a hand on Paul's knee.
+"D'yer know why? Because yer believed in it. I ain't had much
+religion, not having, so to speak, much time for it, also being an
+old crock of a pagan--but I do remember as what Christ said about
+faith--just a mustard seed of it moving mountains. That's it,
+sonny. I've observed lots of things going round in the old 'bus.
+Most folks believe in nothing. What's the good of 'em? Move
+mountains? They're paralytic in front of a dunghill. I know what I'm
+talking about, bless yer. Now you come along believing in yer
+'igh-born parents. I larfed, knowing as who yer parents were. But
+you believed, and I had to let you believe. And you believed in your
+princes and princesses, and your being born to great things. And I
+couldn't sort of help believing in it too."
+
+Paul laughed. "Things happen to have come out all right, but God
+knows why."
+
+"He does," said Barney Bill very seriously. "That's just what He
+does know. He knows you had faith."
+
+"And you, dear old man?" asked Paul, "what have you believed in?"
+
+"My honesty, sonny," replied Barney Bill, fixing him with his bright
+eyes. "'Tain't much. 'Tain't very ambitious-like. But I've had my
+temptations. I never drove a crooked bargain in my life."
+
+Paul rose and walked a step or two.
+
+"You're a better man than I am, Bill."
+
+Barney Bill rose too, rheumatically, and laid both hands on the
+young man's shoulders. "Have you ever been false to what you really
+believed to be true?"
+
+"Not essentially," said Paul.
+
+"Then it's all right, sonny," said the old man very earnestly, his
+bent, ill-clad figure, his old face wizened by years of exposure to
+suns and frosts, contrasting oddly with the young favourite of
+fortune. "It's all right. Your father believed in one thing. I
+believe in another. You believe in something else. But it doesn't
+matter a tuppenny damn what one believes in, so long as it's worth
+believing in. It's faith, sonny, that does it. Faith and purpose."
+
+"You're right," said Paul. "Faith and purpose."
+
+"I believed in yer from the very first, when you were sitting down
+reading Sir Walter with the bead and tail off. And I believed in yer
+when yer used to tell about being 'born to great things!"
+
+Paul laughed. "That was all childish rubbish," said he.
+
+"Rubbish?" cried the old man, his head more crooked, his eyes more
+bright, his gaunt old figure more twisted than ever. "Haven't yer
+got the great things yer believed yer were born to? Ain't yer rich?
+Ain't yer famous? Ain't yer a Member of Parliament? Ain't yer going
+to marry a Royal Princess? Good God Almighty! what more d'yer want?"
+
+"Nothing in the wide, wide world!" laughed Paul.
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of The Fortunate Youth, by William J. Locke
+
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